The Gazette
Saturday, March 31, 1900
Cleveland, Ohio
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THE GAZETTE.
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'@S Scoomclass matter.
All communications should be addressed:
H.G SMITH,
‘Baitor and Proprietor Tax Gazerre,
‘Case Library Building, Cleveland, Ohio.
‘Member Ohio Legisiature, { 1804 to 1508
a re
CLEVELAND, OHIO, MARCH 31, 1900
THE GAZETTE Is the oldest, and,
‘bas the largest bona fide circulation,
double that of any newspaper in the
taterest of Afro-Americans, published
tm the state of Ohie, and comparison
with any will immediately establish
its rakk as one of the NEWSIEST
AND BEST in ‘the country.
Sr egemereers
Remember house bill No. 369.
a
WHAT HAVE YOU DONE?
—_—_—
Ohio's civil rights and anti-lynching
Jaws will be strengthened. Are you
helping to do this?
—_—_—_—_—
Our women cam do much if they will.
Call on the legislators in your county
at once.
eine
H. B. 369 and H. B. 629! Remem-
ber them and see your members of
the legislature at once.
eee
Tell your member or members of
the legislature that it must pass and
that they must vote for it.
Help stamp out mob violence in
grand old Ohio. Tell your legislators
that our people demand thet they vote
for house bill No. 369.
‘There is work for all! Read our
Columbus letter in to-day’s Gazette if
you wish to be pleased and also learn
more of what is expected of you, Ohio
readers.
Seen
Every man, woman and youth in the
‘state can and should assist in the pas-
sage of H. B. No. 369. It will strength-
en Ohio's anti-lynching law and is the
kind of legislation most needed. Do
your duty!
ene
‘There are a number of our readers
who, if they will, can very materially
‘assist us in locating agents and cor-
respondents. We sincerely trust that
‘they will do so promptly without
waiting longer. Does this mean you,
‘weader?
| €all on your member of the legisla-
ture, at once, and interest him in
house bill No. 369 which seeks to
strengthen our Ohio anti-lynching law.
Let our ministers and leaders in all
jthe Ohio communities be especially
active. Don’t delay.
Sete meme
\ Our bills amending and strengthen-
4mg Ohio's anti-lynching and civil
mights laws are on the calendar of the
thouse of representatives, and will
‘come up for consideration next week.
‘They are house bills No. 369 and 629.
See your members of the legislature at
once in their interest. Be sure to
teall your senator or senators’ at-
‘tention to them, also.
es
{NO SURRENDER OF POLITICAL
y RIGHTS.
' The Indianapolis Journal published
‘the opinion of two of our race leaders
‘whose expressions at this time de-
mand consideration. The one advises
colored people to abandon politics en-
itirely, to refrain from voting at all
sand ito devote their attention wholly to
jebtaining a practical and useful edv-
ation. The other urges that the Ne-
‘goes in the south shall divide their
vote and that such action on their
wart would contribute materially to
the solution of the race problem. We
‘do not overlook the fact that in all
communities may ‘be found kind and
generous men in the democratic party
avho would gladly redress the thou-
leands of grievances emanating from
‘hat party and which to-day weigh so
theavily upon the race. Knowing that
‘these wrongs do exist and that south-
em democracy is the source of our
yeuffering, it would seem to be a wise
jand Christian act on the part of all
good men friendly to the Negro to
yeever their relations with that party,
sumite their influence and support in
weconstructing or building up a new
arty which designs the alleviation of
{the condition of humanity everynwhere.
In face of the fact that the demo-
weratic party has been and is to-day
jthe uncompromising enemy of the Ne-
gro and still seeks to opnress and cir-
‘eumscribe him im the exercise of his
personal and political privileges, we do
mot see the wisdom of the Afro-Amer-
écan abandoning polities entirely, nor
of dividing his vote with the demo-
erates. No man can Gonsistently sur
gender his own convictions of right
mor yield his manhood to another
«without becoming a party to tthe be-
‘trayal of his own birthright—liberty—
and becoming a traitor to the God
‘that made him. We are to obey God
gather than man, and it would be gross
erimivality for any living mortal to
‘barter away and sacrifice the dearest
eon of life for the sake of a tempo-
gary peace. Every man, be he black
wr white, egardless of conditions is
required to do what duty and con-
cienee demand. No man does his
duty who violates the mandates of
is own conscience, and no man is
morally right who yields his ow con-
sietions and bows to the behest of any
party seeking the degradation and
distranchisement of a weaker race.
Let the Negro decline to exercise the
right of the ballot or let him share his
vote, eompromisingly with the de-
mands’ of the south, let him like a
fawning cur yield his vote to the dic-
tates of « master band, how long will
it be before these masters would de-
mand the last vestige of right amd lib-
erty and consign the whole race to
helplessness? We do not agree -wilthi
either one of the great leaders in the)
position they takeon this question. Men,
must first do right at any peril and;
leave the consequences with God. We
canmot hope to better our condition
politically or materially by abusing
our own privileges. We are today
engaged in a holy contest for social
and political elevation. If we falter
now or barter away the sacred jewel
just within our grasp we can only
share in terrible judgments which al-
ready await those who have so long
scourged us. The government has
enfranchised the Negro and he stands
@ recognized citizen before the law,
‘then what would it avail us to aban-
don the right of suffrage under the
law, or what would it profit us to cast
our votes contrary to our best hopes
and aspirations? But it is conceded
that the republican party is the party
af freedom and progress and in all
matters of legislation it looks to the
elevation and agrandizement of every
race and people. Can we afford to
antagonize the great issues of this
party and make terms with the other
party which means the subversion of
free government and ‘the blessed heri-
tage of our great and growing insti-
tutions. We would be necessarily
called to confront and oppose the
very party which has established lib-
erty and inaugurated all the reform
movements in our land, Though op-
position and hardships confronts the
Afro-American, yet let him exercise
his manhood, prove himself a brave
and loyal citizen and do what pleases
him asa man and @ brother. He can
not vote with democracy unless he
shares in all the crimes and evils of
that party, renounces the great prin
ciples of republicanism and forever re:
pudiates the sublime doctrines as con
tained in the amendments to our fed.
eral constitution. We live for ow
children and our posterity. Let. the
Negro vote as a freeman, vote upor
principle, vote for right and justice
vate with his conscience, and against
every empty expediency, against an)
time-serving policy or measure to en
slave and vote for things which mak
for the lasting security and equality
of rights among men.
” Gov. Stanley, of Kansas, will recom-
mend to the next legislature the
restoration of capital punishment
when that penalty is fixed by the
jury, leaving the governor only to
execute the judgment. Numerous
murders of recent occurrence in thc
state have influenced the governor to
take this course.
Word comes from Berlin that Nan-
sen is preparing a new expedition and
expects to leave in two months’ time.
This may be regarded as a notifica-
tion to those of us who have not read
“Farthest North” that it may be well
to hurry up in order to be ready to
appreciate and enjoy “Still Farther
North” when the explorer returns.
anes
Michael Connolly, whe leaves the
New York state penitentiary next
September, after serving 20 years for
highway robbery, will receive $8,000
by his father’s will, provided that dur-
ing the five years following his im-
prisonment he behaves like a good
citizen. In case he does not become
a good citizen the $8,000 is to go to
the state. It was no fault of that fa-
ther that his boy went astray!
‘The ordinance bureau of the United
States navy is now experimenting
with a new explosive called “marsite.”
This new explosive, which is said to
have wonderful power, can only be
exploded by the combined force of
percussion and concussion. Now some
one will invent an armor that will
resist its force. Thus the fight has
gone on for centuries between armor
and armament, and so it will go on
until the end of all things.
Before his election to congress Jos-
leph ©. Sibley, of the Twenty-seventh
Pennsylvania district, declared that
in the event of his success he would
divide his salary for the entire term
among the five hospitals of his dis-
trict. In accordance with this prom-
ise he has given $1,000 each to the
institutions named. When he repre-
sented the Twenty-sixth district he
divided his salary among the labor or-
ganizations of Erie and Crawford
rey
In the Hawaiian islands, according
to the latest reports, there are 21,616
Chinese. Of these 15 are doctors; mer-
chants and traders number 822, in-
cluding 3 women; 1,356 are clerks and
salestnen, 18 of these women; of me-
chanics there are 220; mariners, 15
lonly;) fishermen, 294; drivers and
teamsters, 105. In the country, apart
from Honolulu, there are 36 Chinese
leoffee planters, 93 ranches, 718 rice
planters, 2 of them women; of farm-
ers and agriculturists 1,278, and, the
laborers number 10,941. There are no
Chinese lawyers.
Se EEEnE
Statistics of the number of species
lof animals now known to exist on
land and sea show a total of 400,000,
while there are 150,000 kinds of plants.
Insects alone furnish 203,000 species,
lot which 120,000 are coleoptera, with
lepidoptera, 50,000, and hymenoptera,
138,000. Birds number 13,000, fish 12,-
000, reptiles 8,300, of which 1,640 are
serpents, 300 being venomous.. The
amphibians are 1,300 in number,
spiders, 20,000; mollusks, 50,000;
worms, 8,000; echinoderms, 3,000. The
Museum of Natural History at Berlin
lcontains 200,000 species,
If China can save herse:f from total
disintegration for a few years longer
there is some hope that she may take
her place among the wealthy and
prosperous nations of the world. Now
that outsiders are being permitted to
learn something of the interior of the
country it is found that the mineral
wealth in those vast regions is enor-
mous. All that is needed is a progres
sive administration to take advantage
lof the benefits which nature has ¢0
lavishly bestowed. The carving up of
China has been accomplished thus far
because she is weak and a debtor.
Se EE
Emigration to the United States
from Germany was almost twice as
large during February of this year aa
it was during the same month last
year, The number in February of
‘this year was'7,221, whilo last year it
es
Tev. Judson Titsworth, pastor of
Eigptth Congregational church, Mil-
waulte, is reading a novel of his own
production to his evening coarrega-
tions. It aims to preach the gospel
in the stery of a young man’s con-
version. -
aaa :
Luecheni, the murderer of Empress
Elizabeth, is again in solitary confine-
ment. He tried to stab the superin-
tendent of the prison where he is con-
fined with a sharp instrument he had
made out of a can opener. The rea-
son for the attack was the refusal of
unusual privileges.
People marvel a2 the mechanism
of the human body with its 208 bones
and 60 arteries, But man is simple
in this respect compared with the
‘earp . That remarkable fish moves no
fewer than 4,386 bones and muscles
every time it breathes. It has 4,320
veins, to say nothing of its 99 mus-
ae
Many documents of the last two
centuries belonging to the Paris mu-
nicipality which were believed to have
been destroyed in the Hotel de Ville
fire during the commune have been
found in the lumber rooms of the do-
main department. Over 3,000 classi-
fied volumes have been recovered ak
ready. One contains the original of
the will of Ninon de I'Enclos.
Hawaiians call their chief islands
Hahywy-ee; we say Hah-wy-ee. Oth-
er proper ways of giving well known
Hawaiian names are: O-ah-hu, Ho-
no-lulu, Mow-ee (Maui), Kow-aye
(Kauai), Ne-e-how (Niihau), Hee-lo
(Hilo), La-hy-na (Lahaina), Koh-hah-
la (Kohala). Vowels are as in Italian,
and deserves much care; Hawaiians
‘pay litle attention to. consonants.
| The colonization season has opened
promisingly in the south, and sindus-
trial agents say the year will be a
record breaker for immigration. Many
new mills and factories are being lo-
cated along the lines of southern rail-
roads, and new industries are con-
stantly developing. Large colonies
are also coming south, and thousands
of people are taking advantage of the
home seekers’ excursions.
A change in the quality of straw
hats for the Cuban and Porto Rican
trade is reported by dealers this sea-
son. The goods are to be mostly of
bright striking colors. Two years
ago hats of this character were rare-
ly seen in Cuba, all the women wear-
ing black then, either for personal
mourning or as an evidence of sor-
row over Spanish rule. The change
in fashions indicate the happier con-
Gitiane Wiieh niorat) inthe idaod,
The women of Marmaton, Kan., five
miles west of Ft. Scott, have organ:
ized themselves into a band of labor.
ers for the’ building of the United
Brethren church there. Twelve of
them donned old clothes the other
day and began the work of excavat
ing for the foundations. Enough
money to build the charch could not
be raised, so the women determined
to take up the work and do it them
selves rather than let the project. be
abandoned.
Gen. Edward Moody MeCook, whe
has been compelled to seek a refuge
in the soldiers’ home at Yountville,
Cal., belongs to the historic “fighting
McCooks,” almost a score of whom
have been military men of renown.
The general is the son of the late
John McCook, and was born at Steu-
benville, O., in 1835, He was the fifth
and seventh governor of Colorado,
and was active in the territorial legis-
lature of Kansas at the time when the
ginteot Kankau was formed.
| Italy’s sanitary precautions are in-
terfering with the jubilee pilgrimages.
A train load of 361 Marseilles pilgrims
was stopped at the frontier and in-
formed that every one must be vacci-
nated before entering Italy. The pil-
grims refused to submit, and were
sent back to Marseilles. ‘The govern-
ment officials declare that the meas-
ure is due to the prevalence of small-
pox in Southern France, but the cler-
icals maintain that it is devised solely
to annoy intending visitors to Rome.
ee erin eons HRA dce Ahi
John D. Rockefeller, the Standard oil
Croesus, and certainly no other New
York millionaire is personally so lit-
tle in evidence as he. Nearly every
day he puts in a lengthy period at his
office in lower Broadway, and even
the days he is absent are usually.
passed in business pursuits elsewhere.
There is, therefore, color of truth in
the report that he recently sighed for
a man to look after his interests, of-
fering to pay an annual salary of $1,-
Pike dam ‘cine paiialing
The first shipment of steel ever
made from the south to the north
left Birmingham the other day when
a train of 21 cers, carrying 462 tons
of steel billets, departed over the
Southern railway for Worcester, Mass.
The steel was made at the new mil-
lion-dollar plant of the Alabama Steel
and Ship Building Co. at Ensley,
which began operations in January
last, and was consigned to the Amer-
ican Steel and Wire Co. It will be
used in the manufacture of wire.
A German authority has recently
announced the discovery of a tree in
the forests of Central India which has
most curious characteristics. The
leaves of the tree are of a highly sen-
sitive nature, and so full of electricity
that whoever touches one of them
receives an electric shock. It has a
very singular effect upon a magnetic
needle, and will influence it at a dis-
tance of even 70 feet. The electrical
strength of the tree varies according
to the time of day, it being strongest
at midday and weakest at midnight.
‘ha Suis eenettnes ten: Garers dtenneenr.
An official report of the Russian
bureau of statistics, in the depart-
ment of Paskov, shows that some of
the peasants in times of scarcity
hibernate in the manner of animals.
They lie in bed, or, as it is called in
Russia, “lejka.” The bed is made on
a flat stove, and all they do is to re-
plenish the steve and support life
by a diminished ration of black bread
dipped in water. They try to keep
as immovabie as possible so as not to
waste their energy or neat. The hut
is dark and silent throughout the
winter.
ND, 0O., SATURDAY, MARCH 31, 1900.
[Continued from first page.] | et fe
Bellefontaine.—Harvey Payne is sick,
Rev. J. H. Smith preachéd at Pickeles-
town Sunday.—E. §. Jackson and Jen-
nie Jackson are sick.—Robert Goins
was home from Columbus Sunday.—
Hazel and Harry Boyd have ‘the
mumps.—The Odd Fellows are holding
their fair this week at Hendrick’s hall.
Findlay.— Misses Carrie and Blanche
Brown entertained the New Century
cirele Wednesday afternoon. Miss
Emma Stewant won a beautiful pin
tray for naming the most authors.
Grant Johnsen was a guest and fa-
vored them with vocal and instrumen-
tal music. Pine apple sherbet and
cake were served.—Mesdames F.C,
Brown, W. M. Hansbarger and M. R.
Poweil served the Mite society Friday
evening.—Grant Johnson; sang at the
B. and R. Sunday.—Mr. Fountain and
Miss Maibel White visited Miss L. W.
White Sunday.—A surprise was given
Grant Johnson aind Miss Laura John-
son at their home. When Grant’ re-
turned home in the evening he found
about 60 friends assembled. The even-
ing was spent in games and music,
and refreshments were served.—Mr.
and Mrs, Daniel Guy served a six
o'clock dinner to Grant Johnson, Miss
Effie Schuman and Blanche Rhodes.—
Mr, and Mrs, N. M. Hamsbarger en-
tertained Sunday in honor of G. U.
Johnson.
Dayton.—Rev. Davis, of Wilberforce,
preuched at Eaker Street church Sun-
day morning.—Mrs. Amanda Hender-
son died suddenly Sunday afternoon
and was buried Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs.
Tandy, of Lexington, Ky., attended
her funeral.—Messrs. Brooks and Bai-
Jey entertained the Whist club ‘Tues-
day evening.—Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Baylor entertained Monday evening in
honor of their erystal anniversary. A
handsome china closet was presented
them. Miss Mayme Jones made the
presentation speech.Miss Della But-
Jer has returned from Xenia—The
Fleur de Lis club were entertained in
Xenia Friday by Misses Evans, Gaines
and Holland.—Miss Susie Carpeniter, of
Hamilton, attended the Baylor recep-
tion.—Sam Williams and Miss Marla
Williams were in Xenia Monday.—
Hazard Dandson and Miss Susie Car-
peter were married Tuesday evening.
Cambridge.—Tbe Helping Hand so-
ciety of the A. M. E. church will give
a rag social to-night.—Mrs. Mary Har-
grave visited in Columbus.—The Help-
ing Hand society held its first anniver-
sary at Mrs. Jane Turner's, March 22.
Toasts were responded to by those
present and refreshments were served.
—Messrs. James Berry and Leroy
Pickett spent Sunday in Zanesville —
Messrs. Chureh Singer and Carl Ear-
ly, of Washington, visited here Sun-
day. Church Singer will move here
soon,—Miss Beulah Watkins has been
ill—Benjamin Joice gave a toast on
“Women” at the, anniversary of the
Helping Hand society—Miss Blanche
Karly, of Washington, is the guest
of Miss Beckie Lett.—Quarterly meet-
ing will be held Sunday, April 7, at
the A. M. E. chureh.—Mrs. Logwood
entertained the Helping Hand society
Monday evening, Mrs. Mitchell en-
tentained. them Tuesday evening and
Mrs. Benjamin Joice entertained Fri-
day evening.—Other Lett, of Cumber-
land, is visiting his daughters, Mrs,
John Wooten and Miss Beckie Lett.
Lockland.—The Masons held their
first installation last Saturday evening
‘at Mt. Zion church, and after yembers
were installed supper was served at
Mrs. Andrew Jackson's, on Mulberry
street.—The Sunday school of Mt.
Zion church has Regun to improve in
numbers. Rey. Childs preached there
at 11d. m. and Rev. Wyatt, of Cincin-
nati, at 3 and 7:30.—Revs. Turner and
Statesman, of Lexington, Ky.,
preached at the Ay M, E. ehurch last
Sunday at 11 a.m.’ Henry Parker en-
tertained ‘them at, dinner.—The crys
‘tal wedding reception of Mr. and Mrs.
Erastus Daniel wag held at the Daniel
lub house on Maple street, last Thurs-
day evening. There were 125 guests,
among them being Mr. and Mrs. Tay-
lor, of Covington; Mr. Edward Minnis
and Miss Leona Travis, of Cincinnati;
Mr. and Mrs. Grapt Dudley, of Glen-
dale, and Mr. and Mrs. Hyde.—At the
wedding reception of Mr. and Mrs,
Norton Whitehead, in Wyoming, the
hostess’ dress was of heavy white sill
with white gros grain ribbon, and she
carried a bouquet of beautiful flowers.
Mrs. Mary Deprad wore a black sil!x
dress trimmed with pink silk and gar-
natured with lace. Mr. Lunsford, of
Cincinnati, was attired in full dress
suit. Mr, Minnis,.of Cincinmaiti, and
Miss Leona Travis were among the in-
vited. Mrs, Charles Mitchell's dress
was of black silk and lace. Mrs,
Esther Merritt wore a black crepon
trimmed with lace. Mrs. Rev. Cole-
man wore a black silk with whike lace.
All the gentlemen appeared in full
dress suit.
Cuban Schools Multiply.
New York, March 30.—Prof. Frye
superintendent of spublie schools | in
Cuba, who arrived here Thursday, dis.
cussing the results of his work ir
Cuba said: “On March 1 we had 3,09:
schools in operation, with 130,000 chil
dren enrolled. I appointed Cubar
teachers becausé it was necessary te
teach in Spanish, and because they
helped to support many needy fami
lies. We hope to add English to ou
course of study, and night schools for
adults have already been started.’
Mr. Frye has come to the United States
to arrange a trip for 1,000 of these
teachers to this country next summer
Steamer and Four Lives Lost,
Santo Domingo, , March 30.—The
French steamer Georges Croise, bound
to Cuba with cattle and 80 passengers,
is sunk outside this port, The steam-
er New York, which has arrived here,
rendered her assistance. Only four
lives were lost by the sinking of the
steamer. The only boat on board the
Georges Croise was used by her cap-
tain and officers to save themselves,
the surviving passengers and crew be-
ing saved by the steamer New York.
It is said that the loss of the steamer
was caused by her officers leaving her
ports open.
Denounced Boers as Slavcholders.
Philadelphia, March 30—At Thurs
day’s session of the Delaware Metho-
dist conference a resolution denoune-
ing the Boers as slaveholders was
adopted. The conference is composed
ot colored preachers and laymen of
Delaware, Maryland and a portion of
Pennsylvania. "The slavery complained
of is the apprenticeship system in
vogue in the Boer republic,
di eeieh MUR ts
Calais, Me.. March; 30.—Fred Rey-
molds, a wood chopper at Red Beach, a
town about ten miles from here, while
insane yesterday killed his w'te aad
one son with ap ax, injured another
son seriously and burned the honse.
Reynolds then ran up'the street fgur-
ishing the 1x, but wag taken into cus-
tody. ‘
‘What Newspaper Do You Read?
ARE YOU A SUBSCRIBER OF
THE GAZETTE?
W NOT, SEND IN YOUR SUBSCRIPTION AT ONCE
IT IS THE OLDEST!
(ESTABLISHED IN 1883),
And has the largest bona fide circulation, double
that of any journal in the interest of Afro-
Americans, published in the State of Ohio.
Comparison with any will immediately
establish its rank as one of the
NEWSIEST AND BEST
IN THE COUNTRY.
NOW
$1000 REWARD.
DR. SHEA,
Se ir er rok cont Bi Aine Tents
tells who and when you will marry, also o}
business, journeys. Iswsuits, absent’ friends,
health or anything you wish to know, no mat=
ter what it is. “He can call up your spirit
friends and show them to you. ‘Can make
them rap all around the room. He asks no
questions: don't ask you to write the names
for him. Don't try to pump you in any way,
but tells you right oft. He is thoroughly en-
dorsed by leading Spiritualists everywhere;
received from them a gold medal and special
license to practice his wonderful powers; cre
dentials no one else can show; can give thou-
sands of references to both white and colored
patrons. ‘Twenty-five years practice—seven
in Broolslyn—will show you that he can do all
he tells of. Can tell you what business is best
for you and where. “Can tell you how to win
speedy marriage with one you love. How to
be successful in all your doings, in short
what is best to do. “He succeeds when all
others fail. Positive help and satisfaction or
no pay. Call and see. You will tind it lucky
to consult this reflned Christian gentleman.
He has a medicine that will cure drunkenness;
can be given patients not knowing it. Thou-
sands through him are now
Rich, Happy and Successful
in all their undertakings, while those who neg-
lect his advice are still laboring against pov-
erty and adversity. Through his perfect knowl
edge of chemistry he can impart to you a se-
eret that will overcome your enemies and win
you friends. His aid and advice have often
been solicited; the result has always been the
securing of speedy and happy marriage and
all your wishes. In love affairs he never fails,
He has the secret of winning the affections of
the opposite sex.
Ivis the curse of Spiritualism that in all
large cities there are a class of men and women
who claim powers they do not possess. They
have neither gifts, credentials nor references.
Surely the colored people are not so wanting in
Sense as to throw their time and money away
on such. DR. SHEA refers to the Hon. Charles
Miller, ‘capitalist, 2481 Atlantic avenue; the
Hon. Wm. Denmore, architect and builder. 47
Cleveland avy. and Arthur Sewell, ship
builder, South Brooklyn. All have known
him for'the past seven yeurs. He gives a tree
test of his power to all. ‘The Doctor has prac-
ticed five years in New Orleans, St. Louis,
Memphis "and Louisville; ‘understands
thoroughly the diseases, spells or influences the
Tace is subject to. He is now and always has
been a true friend to the colored people and
always had a large patronage from them.
Please Read the Following:
“BROOKLYN, June 3, 1892.—This is to certify
came to New York from Albany. I was a
Stranger in a strange city out of work and
out of money. had no luck in anything I
undertook. What to do I did not know. A
friend advised me to go and see Dr. Shea. “I
did; he told me the cause of all my trouble;
he took me in and treated me like a brother.
‘Through him I got a good position that very
week. I had been to others; they took mi
money and did me no good. I bless the day 1
first met Dr. Shea. Iwould advise all in bad
luck, sick or in trouble, to go to him at once.
Sincerely, ALBERT AYERS, 237 Atlantic
avenue.”
“BROOKLYN, Aug. 15, 1891.—This is to certity
that my husband had gone away and been
absent two years, I mourned for him night
and day. gave, him up as dead. “Hearing of
the wonderful thiags DR SHEA wus doing,
Tresolved to consult him. “He toldme my hus:
band was alive and weil and where he was;
told me he would come home and when. To
my joy all of itcame true. He is home now:
came back like one from the dead. I also wish
to say that this month I lost the sum of #20.
Tam a poor woman and I was most insane. 1
went to DR. SHEA and he told me I would find
iy money and to my intense joy I did find it
as he told me. I thank God there fs aman so
gifted in our midst thet ean help people and
tell them what to do. Sincerely, Mrs. MARY
MILLER, South Plainfield, New Jersey,
(DE SHEA can show thousands such'ae the
above.
DOCTOR SHEA
has been carefully educated in the Homeopa-
hie and Eclectic Medical Schools of Medicine
His success is wonderful in curing paralysis,
Rheumatism, Asthma, Sore Byes, Tumors, Can-
gers, Constipation, 'Ague, Dyspepsia, “Tape
‘Worm, Liver Complaints,’ Deafness, Cacarrh,
Dropsy, Piles, Nervous Debility, Hear. Dis-
ease, Consumption, Diseases of Women and
Children, Fits, Kidney Diseases and .ilstrange
‘and mysterious diseases which cchers don't
understand. All diseases, no matier what they
may be. Nothing but honorable treatment.
; He will honestly tell if you can be cured. Has
all new remedies and new successes. Has had
ample experience in public hosyitals and priv-
ate clinics. No trifling with buman life. “Call
at once. Do not delay. Diplomas hang in par-
lors. Isa registered physician.
A new remedy for rheumatism just discov.
ered, not a liniment. Hopeless cases and
those that others cannot cure solicited ta
call. A perfect and radical cure warranted.
Fat folks made thin, the childless made
parents.
All letters must contain one dollar, two
stamps, age, lock of hair. Charges for medi-
cal treatment only.
“CLOSED SUNDAY.”
651 Fulton St., Brooklyn, New York.
‘Mention this paper.
Read what a Leading Minister, Rev. J. W. Gezaway of
Pittsburg, Pa., says:
THE GAZETTE.
The most healthful signs of life and 9 highly useful career are indicated tm
the existence of the above-named paper. Sihat it is a paper of Brain and Culture
can not be doubted when the fact is remembered that in ite columns are found
communications from the wisest and best minds of our race. It is a paper
FOR THE PEOPLE it represents. and can be relied upon as a friend of @
colored man, though his face may be of ebony hue. Tua Gazerrz isa isu:
demonstration of what can be done by the oung men of our race. The
ditor ts a young man who, by dist of INDUSTRY sad ECONOMY and FAIR
DEALING, has succeeded in grins, to the colored people of Ohio and the
sountry a PAPER WORTHY THE PATRONAGE OF ALL. Having been a
reader of Tus Gazetre since its first appearance: and having watched ite:
course, I feel that in justice to the paper, the editor and the race, | should pee
ppon the people generally, to support the paper that is PRACTICALL|
lentified with the COLOR! le, and is in Tarmeny with the interests am@
success of all without regard O‘Somaplezion. J. W. GAZaAWaY.
IS AOKNOWLEDGED TO B&B
Devoted to the Interests of the Race,
FT ADVOCATES AN IMPROVEMENT IN OUR ,
EDUCATIONAL,
MORAL AND
FINANCIAL CONDITIONS,
And is neutral in nothing that advances er impedes
the Progress of the Race. *
Besides Correspondence from All Parts of the
Country, Portraits and Biographical Sketches, In-
teresting Serials, Editorials, ODD FELLOW, MASONIC
and other Lodge News, it gives from week to weak
a General News Summary of
THE RACE’S DOINGS,
Which alene is worth the price of the paper,
Sample Copies Seni Free
To any addross, upon application. .
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
Be Reise SS | ISR lice spe pees =
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dire EL. C. SMITH,
“THE GAZETTE,”
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NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS.—Subscribers not receiving THE GAZETTE regularly should notify us AT ONCE. We desire every copy delivered promptly.
We advise our patrons to carefully examine THE GABETTE's advertisements before making purchases. Business men who advertise in this paper should be liberally patronized by Afro-Americans. The fact that they advertise is assurance that they want your trade. Local reading notices (advertisements) ten cents a line (six words to a line.)
CLEVELAND. SATURDAY. MARCH 31. 1900.
WHERE "THE GAZETTE" IS SOLD.
PUSHAW'S News Store, Cuyahoga Building opposite the Post Office. Open Sunday.
N. HEXTER's News Depot, City Hall Building, cor. Wood and Superior streets. Open Sunday.
S. H. MOODY's News Store, No. 387 Superior street, second west of Bond street. Open Sundays also.
GOODMAN'S News Depot, 586 Central avenue cor. Sterling avenue. Open Sunday.
ALLIED PRINTING
TRADE COUNCIL
CLEVELAND
Carroll Scott was in Oberlin Sunday.
Leroy Douglass and several others will spend Easter in Oberlin.
Miss Flossie Douglass entertained a few friends Thursday evening.
Miss Nettie Jones contemplates going to Washington, D. C., next month.
Mr. Louis Bolden, of Baltimore, is visiting his brother, Mr. J. L. Bolden.
Miss Florence Dunjill has been offered the organistship of one of our churches. She will most likely accept.
Messrs. Clarence White, violinist, and J. Gerald Tyler, pianist, of Oberlin conservatory, will be given a testimonial benefit at Woodliff hall about May 21st. Both are most promising students.
John Nichols, colored janitor at the Salvation army lodging house on Michigan street, and Stephen Kelley, a shoemaker, who was a todder at the house, Saturday night, were arrested Sunday on the charge of disturbance. Kelley would not get out of bed Sunday morning when Nicholas wanted him to. A fight followed.
Miss Myrtle Means entertained several gentlemen friends at dinner Sunday.
The "Robeda" club entertained at cards last week Tuesday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Randolph, on Perry street. The first prize was won by Mr. H. J. Embry and Mrs. Thomas Flemming.
The "Old Young" Pedro club is the most recent organization among the young married people of the city. Mr. Louis Buchanan will entertain the club as soon as he has recovered from his attack of la grippe.
Mr. Arthur Gohs, who was compelled to undergo a serious operation recently at Lakeside hospital; is able to be out again.
Mrs. Gertrude Hauk-Jones, of Pittsburg, is visiting her mother, Mrs. Gaines.
Dame Rumor says that Mr. Charles Lobert will lead one of our fairest young ladies to the hymeneal altar in June.
As the result of the efforts of two of our most influential citizens who appeared before the board of pardons recently James Newby was released from the workhouse.
An enjoyable "Lenten tea" was given at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Young on Beechwood street, Thursday evening, for the benefit of St. Andrew's mission.
John Jones, a bold swindler, was arrested one day last week for obtaining whisky from several drug stores on orders signed with forged names.
At St. John's A. M. E. church tomorrow the pastor will preach morning and evening. Sunday school at 9:30 a.m. and Y. P. S. C. E. at 6:30 p. m. The trustees will have their grand rally May 13 to raise $625, their entire indebtedness. Easter will be appropriately celebrated. The Sunday school will have its exercises at 3 p. m. and a special musical and literary program is being arranged for the evening service.
Mr. Dennis Stokes, of Forest street, is again quite ill.
Andrew Edwards has been sick during the past two weeks.
Mr. Mason H. Brown died at his home on Central avenue last Sunday at 2 p. m. His funeral took place at Mt. Zion church Tuesday at 2 p. m.
Mr. James Jordan was elected sergeant-at-arms of the republican executive committee in the place of Walter Brooks.
A sacred cantata will be given by Mt. Zion church choir sometime in May.
The "District Skule at Blueberry Corners" will be given the first week in May for the benefit of the trustees of St. John's church.
Miss Ada Christian, of Brooker avenue, left last week for Canada.
nue, left last week for Canada.
Mr. J. E. Reed, of Giddings avenue,
who has been sick since last Friday,
was able to resume his work Thursday,
March 29th.
Cory M. E. church, on Forest street, caught fire Sunday evening, March 25, at 5 p. m. The fire was the result of a defective flue, and the church was damaged to the extent of $450. It will be impossible to conduct services in the church until the latter part of April, and the congregation, therefore, will hold services in Forest Street armory until repairs are made. Services will be held at 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. each Sunday. Rev. Langford has returned from conference held in Covington, Ky., and will serve another year. The congregation were very glad to have him return, as he has served very acceptably and the church has prospered remarkably during his two years as pastor. This will be the third year of his pastorate.
The Monday night club met at I. E. Oliver's, 61 Blaine street, March 19th, and spent a pleasant time. The next meeting will be held at Robert Tindull's, 51 Forest street.
The Marquette social club will give its first grand public ball at Woodliff hall, Monday evening, April 2. Music will be furnished by the Buckeye quartette.
Whether the occupant is in debt for his house or his land or has bought on a contract, he is an owner. Every householder is either an "owner" or a "tenant." It is believed that one of the most gratifying facts to be developed by the census will be the greatly increased number of the colored race who have succeeded in becoming owners of their homes.
Dr. Taylor practices all branches of modern dentistry. Office 155 Central avenue.
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY, MARCH 31, 1900.
Gilliam and Howland invite their many friends and patrons to attend their Easter dance at Woodliff hall Monday evening, April 16th. Admission, gentlemen, 35 cents; ladies, 25 cents. John Mitchell has consented to take charge of the music of St. Andrew's church. A meeting will be held at the church for the first rehearsal Thursday evening, April 5th. Bishop W. A. Leonard will make his annual visit Tuesday night, April 3rd, at which time he will administer the apostolic rite of confirmation and preach. All are invited. Miss Cora Emery, of Massillon, spent Sunday in the city.
Miss Carrie Brown, of Ft. Wayne, Ind., who has been visiting in this city, returned to her home Monday, after a pleasant visit. Her many friends wish her a safe journey.
The local published in our last issue announcing the expulsion from Zion church, 434 Central avenue, of Mrs. Amanda Buller, Mr. William Givens and H. P. Derritt, the latter "for misappropriating church money," was brought to The Gazette office by Rev. E. J. Carter, pastor of the church. We regret exceedingly the publication of this local, and would not have permitted it had the editor of the paper been in the city. The Gazette knows nothing as to the conditions referred to, and does not desire, nor will it permit, aspersions to be cast upon the character of any person without full knowledge of the conditions and a proper realization of the justice of such publications.
The editor of The Gazette takes pleasure in acknowledging receipt of an invitation to attend the wedding of Miss Cora Anne Lee and Mr. Joseph E. Verse, Thursday, April 5, at the A. M. E. church, Cadiz, Ohio.
A K. of P. sermon was preached by Rev. E. D. Dandridge, pastor of Shiloh Baptist church Sunday at 2 o'clock. To-morrow will be communion Sunday, and there will also be baptizing in the evening. Srevices were held in the Sunday school room Sunday for the first time since the recent conflagration.
There was one accession to Zion church, 434 Central avenue, Sunday. The board of bishops of the church has recently ordered a payment to be made on the church.
See our legislators in the interest of house bill No. 369. Don't fail.
The members of the Cuyahoga delegation in the legislature are: Senators Dodge and Elmer; Representatives Breck, Phare, Davis, Roberts, Glenn, Mackenzie, Tilden and Smith. See all but the last one.
Our readers who believe in race progress should not fail to patronize W. B. Gibson's restaurant and Sigler Bros.' jewelry store, where Mr. C. L. Lacey is employed.
If you desire The Gazette delivered at your residence by carrier, send a card to Arthur Markowitz, 147 Scovill avenue.
Bookkeeper's Story was Vague.
Lansing, Mich., March 30.—David S. Carnegie, a bookkeeper in a Detroit savings bank, testified Thursday in the trial of Gen. Marsh as to the deposits made by the wife of Col. Eli R. Sutton, of Detroit, one of the indicted men, shortly after an alleged unlawful payment of $25,000 to Gens. White and Marsh, who were Sutton's political associates. Carnegie's testimony was rather vague and a subpena was issued for the teller who received the deposits in question. A purchase by Marsh of stock in a knitting concern in Grand Rapids was shown by succeeding witnesses.
Overcome by Gas in a Tunnel.
New York, March 30.—A new source of danger manifested itself Thursday in the Manunkachunk tunnel on the Lackawanna railroad in New Jersey. When passenger train No. 4 was passing through the tunnel both the engineer and fireman were overcome by gas and dropped unconscious at their posts. When the train emerged the conductor realized that something was wrong and found the men senseless in the cab. He acted as engineer until Oxford was reached. There the men revived.
A Battle with Outlaws
Gallup, N. M., March 30.—A bloody battle between a sheriff's posse and a gang of desperadoes occurred Wednesday near Navajo Springs, 60 miles wst of GaHup, in which two of the posse, Gus Gibbons and Frank Lesuere, were killed. Five of the outlaws were captured, two badly wounded. Three escaped and are being followed. It is charged that the gang had been stealing cattle.
Davis Remains in Jail.
Frankfort, Ky., March 30. After another day of fruitless search for bondsmen Capt. John Davis, charged with complicity in the murder of Gov. Goebel, is still behind the bars at the county jail. is friends say that he could secure the bond were it not that men qualified to act as his bondsmen do not want their names connected with the case.
Investigation Abandoned.
New York, March 30.—The grand jury has abandoned its investigation into the alleged wrecking of the Third Avenue Railroad Co. This fact was announced Thursday by Assistant District Attomey Unger, who said he had advised that body to discontinue the inquiry because there is nothing to show the violation of any criminal law.
Born in a Palace.
Havana, March 30.—Mrs. Wood, wife of the governor general, gave birth to a ten-pound girl at the palace yesterday. The records of Havana do not show the birth there of any other governor general's child. Under the Spanish regime the wife of a governor general invariably left for Spain that the child might be born there.
The Nickel Plate Road
Offers to the traveling public a great convenience by the sale of the Central Passenger Association Mileage Ticket, which, besides the Nickel Plate is honored for passage on thirty-six other roads. Apply any agent. No. 48
The Nickle Plate Road.
Has become a member of the Central Passenger Association Mileage Ticket Bureau, and all mileage tickets properly issued by any line, a member of that Bureau, are valid for use on that road in the same manner as on other roads, members of that Bureau. No. 30
Mileage Tickets
Of the Central Passenger Association are good on the Nickel Plate Road between Buffalo, Chicago or intermediate stations. 32
Central Passenger Association Mileage Tickets
Are accepted for passage on all trains of the Nickel! Plate Road. No. 31
THE TEEMING WEST.
The Prairie Lands of Western Canada Being Filled with Excellent Settlers.
The salient fact that presents itself in taking a bird's-eye view of the Canadian West, is that of intense activity in every department. Whether the glance be turned upon the district east of Winnipeg, the Red River Valley south or north, the Dauphin and M. & N. W. district, the Southwestern, or whether it take in the great central division along the main line of the C. P. R. stretching away out to the Rockies and from there bending north and south to Prince Alberta and Edmonton, Meleod and Lethbridge—whether the examination be made in any of these directions the same activity, growth and hopefulness is observable.
The Canadian west is not only a good place to locate permanently, but it is also a good place to invite their relatives and friends to come to. This is the spirit that seems to animate the west at the present time and its effects are to be seen on every hand. To enumerate the towns where handsome and substantial blocks and residences have gone up this year would be simply to give a list of the towns and villages along the railway lines. And this movement has not been confined to these centers of population, but in many cases it has been overshadowed by the improvement in farm buildings.
So far as one can see, this is no passing phase, no repetition of any temporary boom following a period of good crops and fair prices. It is a movement more spontaneous, more general, more marked than anything that has gone before, and seems to indicate that the Great West, like Samson, bursting the encompassing bands, has awakened to a period of activity and development that will surpass anything we have known in the past and which will only be paralleled by the opening out of some of the most fertile of the western states of the union.
Look at some of the figures. Over a thousand schools in Manitoba and the number going up by leaps and bounds. Something like five hundred schools in the Territories. Winnipeg as representing the gateway of the west, the third city in the Dominion in regard to bank clearings, postal business and probably in regard to customs: the custom return at Winnipeg running about thirty to forty per cent. greater month by month than in the fiscal year of 1897-8, the largest previous year for actual business entries, when over $900,000 was paid through the Winnipeg office for duty. The C. P. R. and Canada Northwest land sales together running over $1,500,000 for the year. These, and a thousand more signs show how the west has leaped into new life.
This is an inspiring and cheering spectacle, but it brings with it great responsibilities. The business men realize this, the banks realize it, and have spread their agencies through every bustling little town clear out to the coast, the churches realize it, and one denomination alone has opened an average of about thirty new stations in each of the past two years, and will increase this in the year now entered upon, the government departments realize it, and there is talk of redistribution and additional members. The educational branches realize it and new schools are springing up everywhere. Over 12,000 settlers came in from the United States alone last year, and these with the people who came in from the east prove the most rigorous Westerners. They lose no time in developing their farms, in filling their grazing lands with stock and in every district is to be found evidences of thrift and prosperity.
INDIANS IN MEDICINE DANCE.
Yakima Tribe on Reservation Near Toppenish, Wash., Engage in Ancient Rites.
Yakima Indians on the reservation near Toppenish, Wash., gave a medicine dance. Half of the tribe, including Chief White Swan is civilized. Old customs and dances have long been abolished.
Two hundred Indians gathered unknown to the chief and performed the rites. The dance lasted seven days. Seven candidates for the place of medicine man underwent severe tests of endurance.
Every day the candidates would torture themselves. Fire brands were applied to the bare skin until the flesh dropped from the bones. Gashes were out on the back and breast. The one who withstood these self-inflicted tortures longest won the position. The new medicine man Running Coyote, is almost dead from exertion and torture, and is being tenderly nursed, while the unsuccessful dancers are permitted to recover or die without attention.
Shrewd Photographer.
Photographer (to young lady)—There is no need of telling you to look pleasant, miss. Such a face cannot be otherwise than pleasant. Young Lady (graciously)—I will take two dozen, sir, instead of one dozen—Ohio State, journal.
SAGE OF SAWHAW SAYS
A man is not supposed to abbreviate his shortcomings.
Some people are always doing their best to do their worst.
The man who always wants favors is the last to get them of.
War's wrinkled front may be due to patronizing a poor laundry.
In some society it takes a fortune of six figures to keep in form.
It is well to leave windfalls out of our anticipations. The fruit is usually bruised.
A man should have no secrets from his wife unless he has a blind pocket in every coat.
We can always see considerable poetry about the hard work other people have to do.
Married men seldom try to dissuade others from wedding. Both happiness and misery love company.—Chicago Dispatch.
The Irish writer, Seumas MacManus, disposed of short stories to almost every standard American magazine during his visit to this country.
MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS.
Kansas has 807 newspapers, 51 of them being dailies.
One pound of cork will support a man of ordinary size in the water.
man of ordinary size in the water. Originally the common or domestic goat was a native of the highlands of Asia. Compared to the waters of the Dead sea, those of the Salt Lake are comparatively fresh. Our new possession, Costa Rica, supplies the best and largest bananas that come to the United States. Without winds, heat and moisture could not be distributed over the face of the earth, and without the two man could not exist. In the various public institutions of the District of Columbia, 2,600 colored people are employed who draw an annual compensation of about $1,000,000.
Burlington, N. Y., will not collect any taxes this year, the saving on appropriations having gone on so long that the township has sufficient funds to run all departments.
The town of South Newmarket, N. H., is offered a $10,000 public library on condition that its name be changed to Newfields, a title recommended as shorter and more suitable.
A gigantic mushroom, weighing three pounds, was recently found in Sonoma county, Cal. The top was 40 inches in circumference and the stem 11 inches long and two inches thick.
TRANS-ATLANTIC TRAVELERS
Furnished Special Attendants by the Pennsylvania System.
The bureau of attendants for trans-Atlantic travelers established in Jersey City and New York (city twenty years ago by the Pennsylvania System, has proven a great convenience to persons making European trips and to tourists arriving in America at that port. It will be particularly convenient for visitors to the Paris Exposition because the departure docks of most of the Atlantic Steamship Lines are convenient to the new Jersey City Passenger Station of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. The bureau consists of experienced agents whose duties are to meet passengers arriving in Jersey City and New York over the Pennsylvania Lines and assist them in arranging for trans-Atlantic trips via any of the steamship lines by conducting them to steamships and aiding in preparations for a trip abroad. These agents will provide cabs operated by the Pennsylvania System and aid passengers with their baggage. They are fully posted on matters pertaining to steamships leaving New York, and arrangements can be made through for procuring steamship tickets in advance.
They also meet incoming steamships to aid travelers in shaping details for continuing journeys from New York over the Pennsylvania Lines by furnishing tickets, arranging for the transfer of baggage from steamship doors and the often massed by customary spectors, and having the same checked through to destination. They will reserve sleeping car accommodations and relieve persons of the foregoing details, making themselves useful as attendants and guides free of charge.
Further information on the subject may be obtained by addressing the nearest Pennsylvania Lines Ticket Agent, or C. L. KIMBALL, Assistant General Passenger Agent, Cleveland, Ohio. Apr 1
AGENTS WANTED
Enclose 2c stamp for reply, and we will send particulars telling how you can make from $75 to $150 per month, and also be presented with afine Gold Watch. Address
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Legal Notice.
STATE OF OHIO.
CUYAHOGA COUNTY, ss { In the Probate Court.
Charles Bundy, as admin-
istrator of the estate of
Moses Simmons, deceased.
vs.
The Society for Savings,
Maria Thompson and the
Unknown heirs of Henry
Simmons, of David Sim-
mons, of Simmons
and of Ferrebe Greenfield,
respectively, deceased.
Maria Thompson, who resides at Goldsboro, in Wayne county, N.C., Carolina, and the unknown heirs of Henry Simmons, Dr. Simmons, of George Simmons, and Fernie Greenfield, respectively, deceased, heirs at law of Moses Simmons, deceased, will take notice that Charles Bundy, as administrator of the estate of Moses Simmons, deceased, on the ninth day of March, A. D. 1900, filed his petition in the Probate Court within and for the County of Cuyahoga, and State of Ohio, alleging that the personal estate of said decedent is insufficient to pay his debts and the charges of administering his estate; that he died seized in fee simple of the following described real estate, situate in the City of Cleveland, County Cuyahoga, and State of Ohio, to-wit.,—known as James M. Hort's sub-division, located in No. 37 in said city, and together makes a frontage of 30 feet upon the westerly line of Sterling avenue, and extends in rear to Laurel street 148 and 3-12 feet in depth. That the said defendant, the Society for Savings, holds a mortgage lien on said real estate by virtue of a certain mortgage executed to it as mortgagee by the said decedent during his life time, dated November 14, 1894, and recorded in Vol. 595, page 509, of Cuyahoga County records, that the account occurred by said mortgage is Five Hundred Dollar, exhibited in A. attached to said petition. That the taxes for 1899 are unpaid and are a lien on said real estate. That it would be for the best interests of the estate of the said Moses Simmons to sell said real estate at private sale for the reason that the character and location of said property leads plaintiff to believe that he could sell the same for a greater sum at private sale than at public auction.
The prayer of said petition is that the plaintiff may be authorized to sell said real estate to pay debts, at a private sale, according to the statute in such case made and provided. The persons first above mentioned will further statute notice that they have been made parties defendant to said petition, and that they are required to answer the same on or before the 12th day of May, A. D. 1900. CHAS. BUNDY. Administrator as aforesaid. March 9, 1900. ALEX. H. MARTIN. Attorney.
A.
CLAIRVOYANT.
MRS. MARTH, the world-renowned and highly celebrated business and test TRANCE CLAIRVOYANT, reveals everything. No imposition. Can be consulted on all affairs of life. Business, Love and Marriage a specialty. Every mystery revealed, also, of absent, deceased and living friends. Removes all trouble and estrangements, unites the sepulchre and causes speed, marriage and challenge to an edification who, exceed her in her startling revelations of the past, present and future events of one's life. Remember, she will not for any price flatter you; you may rest assured you will gain facts without nonsense. She can be consulted upon all affairs of Life, Love, Courtship, Marriage, Friends, etc., with description of future companion. She is very accurate in describing missing friends, enemies, etc. Her advice should be shared with lawsuits, contested wills, divorce and appraisal is valuable and reliable. She reads your destiny—good or bad; she withholds nothing.
MRS. MARTH, born with a double veil, is a seventh daughter, tells your entire life—past present and future—in a DEAD TRANCE; has the power of any two clairvoyants you ever met. She tells whether your present sweetness is true to you and marry you; if you have sweetheart, she will tell you when you will have, and his name, business and date of acquaintance. Clairvoyantly ALL YOUR FUTURE will be written in an honest, clear and plain manner, and in a dead trance. Mothers should know the success of their husbands and children; young ladies should be married to their husbands; intended husband. Do not keep company, marry or go into business until you know all; do not let sillious scruples prevent your consulting.
Madame is she only one in the world who can tell you the FULL NAME of your future husband, with age and date of marriage, and tells whether the one you love is true or false. Reader, do you ever notice that some people succeed when you work hard, but what they do they seem to prosper, while others, yourself may-be, have such a hard time to get along, and no matter how hard they try, they find at the end of the year they are no better off than when they started. This is because they have not consulted the right people, successes people, people with probabilities, have been to one of the genuine Mediums and obtained advice. If you are unsuccessful in business, have bad luck, things go wrong with you, then you should consult Mrs. Marth. She will tell you what your trouble is, as she understands the spells and evil influences. She has spent years helping others, successes brought thousands to success. For advice by $1.00. All letters must contain stamps.
MRS. M. B. MARTH.
246 West 31st. Street,
Hours: 10 A. M. to 8 P. M. Sittings.
Mention THE GAZETTE.
Trains on all roads run on Standard Time which is the same as BALL'S CITY TIME.
CLEVELAND,
CINCINNATI,
CHICAGO &
ST. LOUIS
NY
BIG FOUR ROUTE
Solid vestibule trains run daily to Columbus,
Dayton, Cincinnati, Indianapolis, St. Louis.
Parlor Car and Wagner Sleeping Cars. Best
line in the West, South and Southwest. Ticket
office, 116 Euclid Ave. Bell Tel. Main 910. Home
Tel. 853.
*Daily. Depart.
No. 11. Southwestern Limited. *30 am
No. 3. Col. & Cn. Express. 7 15 am
No. 33. Col. Cn. Express. *11 40 am
No. 35. Ind. & St. Louis Express. 12 00 m
No. 27. Columbus Accommodation. 4 00 pm
No. 37. Col. & Cn. Express. *30 pm
*Daily. Arrive.
No. 28. Col. & Cn. Express. *6 45 am
No. 26. Galion Al. Accommodation. *2 45 am
No. 36. Ind. & St. Louis Express. *2 55 pm
No. 46. Columbus & Cn. Express. *2 55 pm
No. 24. Wellington Accommodation. 6 35 pm
No. 2. Col. & Cn. Ind. Express. 9 25 pm
No. 18. Southwestern Limited. *1 50 am
Nos. 11 and 18 do not stop at Erie Ry.
depot. No. 37, leaving at 8:30 p.m., has local
sleeper for Cincinnati. Nos. 33 and 46 have
dining cars.
For tickets call on D. JAY COLLVER, city
passenger and ticket agent, No. 116 Euclid
Ave. Colonial Areade, Cleveland, O.
WAREN, LINCH.
G. R. & T. A. Cincinnati, O.
NICKEL PLATE.
The New York,Chicago & St. Louis RR
All trains stop at Euclid avenue, Broadway and Pearl street. City ticket office 189 Superior street. Tel. Main 218. All trains arrive and depart from Van Buren St., Union Passenger Station, Chicago.
Eastward. Arrive. Depart.
No. 6. Standard Express... 9 55 am 10 12 am
No. 4. Eastern Express... 2 06 am 2 16 am
No. 2. Nickel Plate Ex... 8 12 pm 8 22 pm
Westward. Arrive. Depart.
No. 1. Western Express... 4 46 am 4 46 am
No. 5. Standard Express... 7 00 pm 7 20 pm
No. 3. Nickel Plate Ex... 11 13 am 11 20 am
Local Freight... *3 50 pm *6 40 am
*Daily, except Sunday. All express daily. Through sleepers on all trains, Chicago, Buffalo, New York, and Boston. Unexcelled dining cars and depot restaurants operated by the company.
---
THE GLEVELAND. TERMINAL & VALLEY R. R. GO.
Depot foot of South Water street. City office. 241 Superior street.
Baltimore, Philadelphia *10 30 am* *3 25 pm
+ New York. *12 10 pm* *11 00 am*
+Daily except Sunday. *Daily.
Pulman hall palace vestibule sleeping cars between Cleveland and Chicago, also between Cleveland and Philadelphia.
J. E. GALBRAITH. Traffic Manager.
Cleveland, Lorain & Wheeling R'y.
VALLEY DEPOT. Depart. Arrive.
Cleve. & Wheeling Ex..... 7 10 am 11 40 am
Cleve. & Wheeling Ex..... 1 00 pm 7 15 pm
Cleve. Uhrichsville Ae..... 5 10 pm 8 20 am
Sunday trains between Cleveland and
Uhrichsville arrive at 9:55 a. m. and 7:15 p.
m. Depart at 7:10 a. m. and 6:25 p. m.
BEFORE AFTER
OZO
King of all HAIR
An Honest O
Reme
Money Returned
Positively straightens knotty, knapped hair. No injurious hot irons are necessary the work alone, and the use does not have straight. Once straightened it stays stitched the treatment, doing it good in every way itching, running, scally humilating running grow long, straight, soft, fine and beads a box. Four boxes does the work offer. Cut out this advertisement and send to you immediately four boxes of Refiner, which makes rough skin soft and shades. Also one bottle of Skin Food, which patches, tan, liver spots, small-pox pits, look young and the young look younger. include one package of anti odor, which from the human body, such as feet, armpit womb diseases, sore and frosted feet, $3.50, we will send you on receipt of o
AFTER
BEFORE.
OZONO
of all HAIR DRESSES
Honest Guarantee
Remedy.
By Returned if Dissatisfied
lightens knotty, knappy, kinky, stubborn,
as hot irons are necessary to produce this,
and the use does not have to be kept up after
straightened it stays straight, and washing
it good in every way. Cures dandruff,
especially humilating running scalp diseases.
Right, soft, fine and beautiful as an April
boxes does the work. Ozono cannot fail
as advertisement and send to us with one
mediately four boxes of Ozono, one bottle
lakes rough skin soft and brightens up
bottle of Skin Food, which removes wrinkles,
spots, small-pox pits, birth marks, etc.
You young look younger. We will also, to a
stage of anti odor, which removes all smell,
body, such as feet, armpits, etc. Cures sor-
core and frosted feet, etc. This grand
aid you on receipt of one dollar to intro-
BEFORE AFTER BEFORE. AFTER
King of all HAIR DRESSINGS
An Honest Guaranteed Remedy.
Money Returned if Dissatisfied.
Positively straightens knotty, knappy, kinky, stubborn, harsh, refractory hair. No injurious hot irons are necessary to produce this effect. Ozono does the work alone, and the use does not have to be kept up after the hair becomes straight. Once straightened it stays straight, and washing the hair hastens the treatment, doing it good in every way. Cures dandruff, baldness and all itching, running, scally humilating running scalp diseases. Causes the hair to grow long, straight, soft, fine and beautiful as an April morning. Price, 50 cents a box. Four boxes does the work. Ozono cannot fail. Read our grand offer. Cut out this advertisement and send to us with one dollar and we will send to you immediately four boxes of Ozono, one bottle of Electrical Skin Refiner, which makes rough skin soft and brightens up black skin severa shades. Also one bottle of Skin Food, which removes wrinkles, freckles, moth patches, tan, liver spots, small-pox pits, birth marks, etc. It makes the aged look young and the young look younger. We will also, to show our liberality, include one package of anti odor, which removes all smells and odors arising from the human body, such as feet, armpits, etc. Cures sore throat and mouthwomb diseases, sore and frosted feet, etc. This grand combination, worth $3.50, we will send you on receipt of one dollar to introduce honest goods.
Register your letters; it protects you.
BOSTON CHEESE
411 N.
RICHMOND
A LAKE
WITHOUT
CREAM
LOSS TO KI
ON CHEMICAL
411 N. 23,
RICHMOND, VA.
LADY
WITHOUT CARN.
CREAM HANDY
LOSS TO KNOW WHAT
BOSTON CHEMICAL CO..
WITHOUT CARNATION
CREAM HANDY IS AT A
LOSS TO KNOW WHAT TO USE
MEYER & GLEIM
C. L. LACY WITH Sigler Brother
C. L. I. WITH The Sigler B
The Sigler Brothers Co., MFG. AND WHOLESALE JEWELERS.
Will be pleased to have his fi
on him when he
Watches, Diamonds, Jew
ware, Table Cutlery,
Opera Glasses are
Testing and fitting difficult eyes a specialty. W
notice by skillful workmen. Old Jewelry made
guaranteed. All kinds of first-class Engraving
patronage. Orders by mail promptly attended to.
Will make prices on all goods as low
Nos. 52 and 54 Euolid Ave.,
WEBSTER'S INTER
WEBSTER'S
INTERNATIONAL
DICTIONARY
A Dictionary
Biography, Geog
are pleased to have his friends and customers on him when in need of
Diamonds, Jewelry, Clocks, Table Cutlery, Umbrellas, Opera Glasses and Spectacles
difficult eyes a specialty. Watches and Jewelry men. Old Jewelry made to look equal to new ones of first-class Engraving promptly executed. Mail promptly attended to.
places on all goods as low as the lowest.
54 Euclid Ave., CLE
WEBSTER'S INTERNATIONAL D
A Dictionary of ENGLISH,
Biography, Geography, Fiction,
Watches, Diamonds, Jewelry, Clocks, Silverware, Table Cutlery, Umbrellas, Canes, Opera Glasses and Spectacles.
Testing and fitting difficult eyes a specialty. Watches and Jewelry neatly repaired on short notice by skillful workmen. Old Jewelry made to look equal to new. All goods and work guaranteed. All kinds of first-class Engraving promptly executed. I kindly solicit your patronage. Orders by mail promptly attended to.
WEBSTER'S INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY
A Dictionary of ENGLISH, Biography, Geography, Fiction, etc.
What better investment could be made than in a copy of the International? This royal quarto volume is a vast storehouse of valuable information arranged in a convenient form for hand, eye, and mind. It is more widely used as standard authority than any other dictionary in the world. It should be in every household.
Also Webster's Collegiate Dictionary with a Scottish Glossary, etc. "First class in quality, second class in size."
G. & C. MERRIAM CO., Publishers, Springfield, Mass., U.S.A.
Valley JJ & Way Stations.
Wheeling & Chicago .....
Akron, Canton & Chicago
Akron, Canton & Wheeling
Akron, Canton & Chicago
Akron, Canton & Betta
Pittsburgh, Washington
Mention this paper, please.
Ticket Offices at Station, Euclid Av., Woodland
Av., and Weddell House corner.
Through Trains run as follows by Central Time.
*Daily. +Daily except Sunday.
From Cleveland to Leave. Arrive
Pittsburg & Bellaire. +7 00am +12 10pm
Salem & Pittsburg. *8 00am *8 30pm
Philadelphia & New York. *2 10pm *11 30pm
Baltimore & Washington. *2 10pm *11 30pm
Pittsburg, Bellaire & East. *3 10pm *6 25pm
Ravenna & Alliance. *3 10pm *8 30pm
Ravenna & Alliance. *5 10pm *8 30pm
Philadelphia & New York. *11 10pm *4 30pm
Baltimore & Washington. *11 10pm *4 30pm
Wellsville & Pittsburg. *11 10pm *4 30pm
MT. VERNON & PAN-HANDLE ROUTE.
From Cleveland to Leave Arrive
Columbus & Cincinnati... *8 35am *5 40pm
Orrville & Columbus... *8 35am *5 40pm
Orrville & Millersburg... *8 10pm *12 10pm
Columbus & Cincinnati... *7 35pm *7 30am
BEFORE. AFTER.
OUR DRESSINGS
Guaranteed remedy.
If Dissatisfied.
Copy, kinky, stubborn, harsh, refractory hair to produce this effect. Ozono does not be kept up after the hair becomes straight, and washing the hair hastens day. Cures dandruff, baldness and all naming scalp diseases. Causes the hair to be beautiful as an April morning. Price, 50 Ozono cannot fail. Read our grand hand to us with one dollar and we will of Ozono, one bottle of Electrical Skin and brightens up black skin severally which removes wrinkles, freckles, moth birth marks, etc. It makes the aged. We will also, to show our liberality, which removes all smells and odors arising pits, etc. Cures sore throat and mouth etc. This grand combination, worth one dollar to introduce honest goods.
CHEMICAL CO.,
7. 23,
ND, VA.
CARNATION
M HANDY IS AT A
NOW WHAT TO USE
PREPARE IT. LACY, WITH Brothers Co.,
friends and customers call
in need of
Jewelry, Clocks, Silver-
, Umbrellas, Canes,
and Spectacles.
Watches and Jewelry neatly repaired on short
to look equal to new. All goods and work
promptly executed. I kindly solicit your
ow as the lowest.
CLEVELAND, O.
INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY
y of ENGLISH,
ography, Fiction, etc.
WITH
3
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That Contain Mercury,
as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is often ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally, and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free.
Sold by Druggists, price 75c per bottle.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
Signi@cant Signal
"I was amused," said Cawker to Cumso, "at what a returned Klondiker told me of the customs of the gold mines."
"Interesting and funny, were they?" "He said that in his shanty six men slept together. They all lay in a row, like spoons in a case, facing one way, to keep warm. When one of them became tired of lying on one side he would call out 'Lawyer,' and they would all turn at once."
"Why did they use the word 'lawyer?'"
"That meant 'Lie on the other side.'" — Judge.
"Did I understand you to say that one of your ancestors fought during the revolution?" "Yes, my great-great-great-grandfather fell at Bunker kopje." — Cleveland Plain Dealer.
From Washington
How a Little Boy Was Saved.
Washington, D. C.—"When our boy was about 16 months old he broke out with a rash which was thought to be measles. In a few days he had a swelling on the left side of his neck and it was decided to be mumps. He was given medical attendance for about three weeks when the doctor said it was scrofula and ordered a salve. He wanted to lance the sore, but I would not let him, and continued giving him medicine for about four months, when the bunch broke in two places and became a running sore. Three doctors said it was scrofula, and each ordered a blood medicine. A neighbor told me of a case somewhat like our baby's which was cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla. I decided to give it to my boy and in a short while his health improved and his neck healed so nicely that I stopped giving him the medicine. The sore broke out again, however, whereupon I again gave him Hood's Sarsaparilla and its persistent use has accomplished a complete cure." MRS. NETTIE CHASE, 47 K St., N. E.
GRAIN-O THE FOOD DRINK.
A scientific preparation of pure grains, looking and tasting like coffee and costing one-fourth as much.
Try Grain-O to-day.
All grocers; 15c. and 25c.
"My wife has been pimples on her face, but she has been taking CASCARETS and they have all disappeared. I had been troubled with constipation for some time, but after taking the first Cascaret I have had no trouble with this aliment. We cannot speak too highly of Cascarets." FRED WARTMAN.
5708 Germantown Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.
CANDY CATHARTIC
Cascarets
TRADE MARK REGISTERED
REGULATE THE LIVER
Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 25c. 50c.
CURE CONSTIPATION.
Storling Remedy Company, Chicago, Montreal, New York. 514
NO-TO-BAC Sold and guaranteed by all drug gists to CURE Tobacco Habit.
DO YOU
COUGH
DON'T DELAY
TAKE
KEMP'S
BALSAM
THE BEST
COUGH
CURE
At Cures Coughs Cold, Group, Sore Throat Influenza, Whoooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma. A certain cure for Consumption in first stages. Enriched with Vanilla. You will see the excelent after after taking the first dose. Sold by dealers everywhere. Price, 25 and 50 cents per bottle.
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3 & 3.50 SHOES UNION MADE.
Worth $4 to $6 compared with other makes.
Indorsed by over 1,000,000 wearers.
The膏剂 have W. L. Douglas name and price stamped on the back. It no substitute claimed to be as good. Your dealer should keep them — if not, we will send a pair on receipt of price and 25c. extra for carriage. State kind of leather, size, and width, plain or cap toe. Cat. free. W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO. Brockton, Mass.
Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup
Positively cures coughs, colds in the chest or lunga and incipient consumption! Always reliable. It is splendid for children. Tastes good. Doses are small, 25c.
WANTED CAPITAL
to manufacture most saleable food in use. Profits one-quarter. Highest references given.
C. MADISON SMITH, FORT PLAIN, N. Y.
DROPSY
NEW DISCOVERY; gives quick relief and cures worm cases.
Book of testimonials and 10 days' treatment Free.
Dr. H. H. GREEN'S SONS, Box D, Atlanta, Ga.
PISO'S CURE FOR
WHERE WHEN ALL FAILS.
Bee Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use in time. Sold by drugsists.
CONSUMPTION
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY, MARCH 31, 1900.
The very first requirement of the primitive man is food, the next, clothing, the next shelter and then he passes from the requirements of the purely animal body to those of a little higher plane and demands light and heat and companionship. In the process of evolution the very first evidence of a development beyond the animal stage, in which man was a carnivorous beast of prey, killing and devouring, raw, animals less strong than himself, was the employment of fire for heat, for light, and later for cooking. It is strange that nature should have so fashioned adult man that he cannot
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The new substance "Carbide" in appearance resembles dark granite, and
perature hasmoths burn grimite and ordinarily crushed the pieces average about the size of egg coal. Carbide is inert, will not burn, is non inflammable and can be handled in any quantity with perfect safety. Calcium Carbide is produced by the fusion and reduction in an electric furnace of a mixture of finely ground and intimately mixed lime and coke.
There have been passed and pronounced safe by the Boards of Fire Insurance over eighty different kinds of generators for producing Acetylene from the union of Calcium Carbide and water, and the sales of Calcium Carbide for a single day have been in excess of 360 tons.
When it is considered that less than four years ago there was not an Acetylene generator on the market and the very name Acetylene itself was unknown outside of technical chemical laboratories, this progress seems truly marvelous and is explainable only by the fact that Acetylene is truly an extraordinarily brilliant, cheap, safe and satisfactory light, that it possesses many advantages not common to any other artificial illuminant, and that it reaches and appeals to a class of isolated consumers in villages and on farms away from gas and electric mains and supplies—a long and sorely felt want.
Acetylene is produced by the simple combination of calcium carbide and water, the former is now procurable readily and at small cost. Any mechanic can install the generator. Any member of the family can manipulate it. It causes no odor, soot, or smoke. The flame from the Acetylene is clear and brilliant, the very essence of light. Owing to its richness it is consumed in very small burners. An Acetylene flame the size of a thumb nail gives as much light as an ordinary flame from city gas thirteen times as large.
Widow of Magician Hermann to Marry a Wealthy Russian Captain.
It is probable that Mrs. Adelaide Hermann, widow of Hermann the magician, may be a Russian baroness, Baron Ivan Svenorak Orskevitch, of the Russian cavalry, holding the position of captain and large of wealth, is mentioned as the man who is to marry the charming widow.
Back of all this there is a romance. The baron is a widower. Hermann and his wife visited Russia. They were entertained by Baron Orskevitch, who was charmed with the magician's wife. The Hermanns left Russia and Hermann, in the height of his career, died. For some weeks Mrs. Hermann has played in vaudeville theaters in the far west.
The baron found time to run over from Russia to San Francisco and come east, closely following Mrs. Hermann to New York. When she came back she wore a magnificent diamond and sapphire ring. To a close friend she confided that the ring meant an engagement.
We make way for the man who boldly pushes past us.—Bovee.
Men are as old as they feel, and women as they look.—Italian Proverb.
No woman can be handsome by the force of features alone, any more than she can be witty only by the help of speech.—Hughes.
Adversity is sometimes hard upon a man; but for one man who can stand prosperity, there are a hundred that will stand adversity.—Carlyle.
I look for power in the man; he affirms the dignity of the law; but the woman rules, and she will continue to rule, through grace alone.—Schiller.
A traveler at Sparta, standing long upon one leg, said to a Lacedaemonian: "I do not believe you can do as much." "True," said he, "but every goose can." —Plutarch.
No nobler feeling than this, of admiration for one higher than himself, dwells in the breast of man. It is to this hour, and at all hours, the vivifying influence in man's life.—Carlyle.
Gen. Wheeler has brought home a collection of Philippine curios valued at a considerable sum.
CURRENT TOPICS.
America has seventeen oleomargarine factories.
A $100,000 cotton mill is to be built at Madison, Ga.
New York has a co-operative cigarette makers' union.
Plans are in progress for an exposition at Charleston, S. C.
A free medical dispensary has been opened in Chinatown, San Francisco.
Capital invested in farming in this country is estimated at $16,000,000,000.
The Virginia Coal, Iron & Coke Co. will soon put two more furnaces in blast.
It is estimated that 3,000 marriages are daily performed throughout the world.
Queen Victoria has had a handsome automobile regularly attached to her stables.
A combination of the lime manufacturers of the south is on the point of completion.
Mineral production in the United States this year will reach a value of nearly $1,000,000,000.
Contracts have been let for the construction of a $125,000 cotton factory at Kosciusko, Miss.
Austria-Hungary has declined to mediate between Great Britain and the South African republics.
Denmark's islands in the West Indies cost the government $75,000 a year more than their revenue.
The Boers are said to consider the appointment of Lord Roberts a great compliment to the Transvaal.
The cotton acreage of Central Arkansas will be decreased this season on account of the scarcity of labor.
A hosiery mill will be established at Chattanooga, Tenn., with a capital of $30,000. It will employ 100 hands.
at Chattanooga, Tenn., with a capital of $30,000. It will employ 100 hands. The Southern Sawmill & Lumber Co., of Robeson county, N. C., has been incorporated with a capital of $500,000. The first Indian schools were established about 20 years ago. Today there are over 200 of these schools. Former residents of the Transvaal, if captured by Boers, are treated not as prisoners of war, but as ordinary convicts. Many British families have every member of them in the male line engaged fighting at the front in her majesty's service.
The British empire is forty times larger than the German empire, and sixteen times larger than all the French dominions.
The Little Rock Northern railroad has been incorporated in Arkansas. It is proposed to build a road from Little Rock to Springfield, Mo.
Montana is said to have mined $40,-000,000 worth of copper last year. This breaks the gold or silver record of any state in the union.
Gov. Rollins, of New Hampshire, is something of a mountain-climber, and there is no difficult peak in his state which he has not ascended.
Meat is very dear in Havana to the retail buyer. The price for beef is about thirty-five cents a pound, and it is very poor beef at that.
If the conductor of a street car in Hamburg carries even one passenger for whom there is no seat he is subject to a fine of 60 cents. Mrs. Grant, the widow of the general, leads a very busy life, and is at present collecting for publication a number of her husband's letters.
It is likely that the million dollar' worth of bonds to be sold for the erection of the new Mississippi statehouse will all be taken in that state. The bonds will bear 4 per cent. interest and are not taxable.
The new Carnegie company, resulting from the settlement of the differences between Andrew Carnegie and Henry C. Frick, has been incorporated. The capital stock is $160,000,000, and has all been subscribed.
One of the houses in which Dante is asserted to have written the "Inferno" has just been sold at Mulazzo in the mountains near Spezzia. The town belonged to the Marquises Malaspina, who protected the poet in one stage of his wanderings.
In San Francisco the board of health has created the position of assistant city physician, with a salary of $100 a month, and put it in the hands of Dr. Beatrice Hinkle. Her duties will be the care of sick women and children in the public institutions.
The German reichstag has just voted an appropriation of 175,000 marks to the government for experiments in the employment of automobiles in the army. It is highly possible that in a short time the system will be tried for moving heavy pieces of artillery.
Col. Hodges, of Perry county, Georgia, says the peach crop is all right. The Elbertas and one or two other varieties were damaged slightly by the recent freeze, but the damage done to the peeches is hardly enough to relieve the trees of the immense amount of peaches they would have. President Kruger is almost a total abstainer, and at banquets where wine is drunk he always has a glass of milk before him, with which he pledges the toast. The Erie canal, in addition to paying cost of construction, maintenance and operation, has paid over $360,000,000 of freight money within the limits of the state.
There is a Negro in the city of Albany, N. Y., who claims to be eligible o the society of the Sons of the Revolution. He is professor Charles M. Van Buren, and is a Descendant of Crispus Attucks.
The famine in India extends over a territory five hundred thousand square miles, in other words over an area four times greater than that of the British isles.
Within a radius of four miles of Rushville, Neb., there are no fewer than nine prairie dog "towns," covering as much as 3,500 acres of pasture, which is rendered almost useless.
In Java a small state exists which is entirely controlled by women, with the single exception of the sovereign, who is a man. He is, however, entirely dependent on three women who form his state council.
LIGHT.
adult man that he cannot pass as much of the time in sleep as she has given over to darkness, and it is to correct this fault in his structure that for all time man has devoted a large part of his energies towards producing means for artificial illumination which would lengthen the day and shorten the night.
The demand for light is as natural a demand as that for food. An evidence of the fact that this is a natural demand, is the rapidity with which any industry supplying a satisfactory light grows. Perhaps the largest industrial concerns in the world are engaged in the work of dispelling the darkness after the sun has ceased to shine.
A marvelous new chemical compound which when brought in contact with water would give off a gas possessing fifteen times the illuminating value of ordinary gas, was discovered by accident at a small North Carolina village on May 4th, 1892. Nothing was done with the discovery until 1895, when a company to exploit it was formed. Since then its growth and development has been without parallel in the industrial history of America.
MAY BECOME A BARONESS.
PRACTICAL PHILOSOPHY.
LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE TABLETS
WILL CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY
A STATE STREET SCENE ON A STORMY DAY.
NOTE—Laxative Bromo-Quinine which is advertised on the large banner over State Street, Chicago, as represented above, is the only exclusive cold prescription sold by every druggist in the United States, Canada and in England. This is the signature of the inventor and plainly appears on every box of the genuine article. It is sold for 25c a box, and all druggists refund the money if it fails to cure.
EASILY TOLD.
It occurred in Judge Lawlor's court a few days ago. There was a murder trial on and a policeman named Riley was on the witness stand relating the details of the tragedy. Said Mr. Ferral, who was acting as defendant's counsel:
"How many minutes after the shooting did the man die, Mr. Riley?"
"Two minutes, sir," answered the witness without the least hesitation.
"You seem positive about the time," remarked Mr. Ferral, with the air of one who has the upper hand. "Now, I'm going to test your ability to judge time. I will hold my watch here for two minutes. When you think the time is up, say when."
The defendant's counsel held the watch on the witness and stood examining the hand carefully. The policeman, however, did not seem to be worried at all at the tax upon his mental apparatus. He sat staring vacantly about the room, and at the exact second when the two minutes had expired, remarked: "Now!" and smiled like a tickled sphinx.
Mr. Ferral was staggered at the uncanny accuracy of the witness, and Gen. Solomon, who was prosecuting, was delighted proportionately at his opponent's discomfiture. He chuckled in a comfortable German way, during the rest of the session. At the noon recess he called Riley to him, and, slapping him on the shoulder, said: "Officer Riley, you vass a vondr! How dit you do it, hein?" "Do it!" replied Riley, pointing to a big redwood clock on the opposite wall, "why, that was dead easy!" Riley will be promoted—San Francisco
Riley will be promotel—San Francisco News Letter.
No Wonder He Smelled It
A commercial traveler whose wife is one of those women who borrow trouble indiscriminately had occasion to make a trip east recently.
His wife was very anxious about him and felt certain that he would fall a victim to smallpox, which was reported to be prevalent in the city to which he was going. She begged him to carry a little lump of asafetida in his pocket to ward off contagion.
Naturally he objected and positively refused to be made the permanent abode of such a persistent odor.
When he came home from his trip he said to his wife:
"It is wonderful, the power of the imagination. Why, don't you know I imagined that I smelled asafetida the whole time I was gone!"
"It wasn't imagination at all," quietly replied the wily little woman. I sewed a bit of asafetida in the corner of your coat before you went away!"—Memphis Scimitar.
The doomed man had a last request to make. "Pray do not tell my parents," he implored, "that I was hanged!" "What shall we say killed you, then?" we asked, suspecting nothing. "The drops!" cried the wretched fellow, with a loud laugh.—Detroit Journal.
First Results:
He—What's the matter, dear? You look as if there was something troubling you. She—There is. I've joined a "Don't Worry" club, and I don't know how in the world I am going to pay my dues.—Yonkers Statesman.
Lane's Family Medicine.
Moves the bowels each day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick headache. Price 25 and 50c.
"Trigby, does your club play whist regularly?" "No; the women talk regularly, and we men play whist when conversation flags."—Indianapolis Journal.
I have used Piso's Cure for Consumption both in my family and practice.—Dr. G. W. Patterson, Inkster, Mich., Nov. 5, 1894.
Everyone thinks he works for a man who is mighty unappreciative.—Atchison Globe.
You can ride a broken horse, but it is different with a broken wheel.—Golden Days.
McSwatters (at the end of a poker game) — "How will you account for this 50 to your wife?" McSwitters — "I own an automobile, and I'll put this loss as 'gasoline.'" — Syracuse Herald.
"How comes it a woman of such proud lineage is married to a man of humble birth?" "Well, I understand they are not rich enough to afford an ancestry for both of them." — Detroit Journal.
McJigger — "That's a funny thing." Thingumbob — "What is it?" McJiggers — "Miss Passey was an old maid before she married, and now that her husband is dead she has become a young widow." — Philadelphia Press.
---
Wistful Willis—"Lopers is a low-caste tramp, a disgrace t' de perfession." Sorrowful Sam—"Wot's he been doin'?" Wistful Willis—"De las' time I saw him he said dat he wus scourin' de country."—Syracuse Herald.
Mrs. Pilkins—"Why don't that horrid man, Swiller, across the street sober up; he's been on a spree a week?" Mr. Pilkins—"Swiller is a philosopher—if he sobers up he knows he'll have a headache."—Ohio State Journal.
Bourbon—"Our friend Lusher has the chickenpox." Brandee—"Get out! Don't try to tell me that about a man of his age." Bourbon—"He's got it, all right. The doctor says he drank too many cocktails."—Baltimore American.
When a girl is out in company, she cuts a weazened little old oyster in four pieces, indicating that her mouth is so small she can't swallow it otherwise. When she is at home with her family she will swallow oysters as big as soup plates with gracefulness and ease.—Atchison Globe.
Mrs. Brown—"So you are a widow a second time, Mrs. Middleroad!" Mrs. Middleroad—"Yes, and it's too bad. I have got so used to the name Middleroad that I hate to have to give it up for some other name, for I don't think there's another marriageable Middleroad in this vicinity Isn't it awful?"—Boston Transcript.
Old as the Hills
are the pains and aches of
RHEUMATISM
NEURALGIA
SCIATICA
Sure as taxes is the cure of them by
St. Jacobs Oil
An amateur philanthropist took charge of a Sunday school class of Chinamen on the East side. The members were zealous to learn, and the intelligent responses of his favorite pupil caused the teacher to glow with pride. After some months this pupil began walking part of the way home with the teacher, and one Sunday afternoon, in a burst of confidence, he said, earnestly: "I want to thank you for you kind to poor heathen. I know English now pretty good. I got place to work as interpreter gambling house. I put you on good thing!"—N. Y. Mail and Express.
Give the Children a Drink
called Grain-O. It is a delicious, appetizing, nourishing food drink to take the place of coffee. Sold by all grocers and liked by all who have used it, because when properly prepared it tastes like the finest coffee but is free from all its injurious properties. Grain-O aids digestion and strengthens the nerves. It is not a stimulant but a health builder, and children, as well as adults, can drink it with great benefit. Costs about 1/4 as much as coffee. 15 and 25c.
Kent Awake Listening
"Her husband has developed a habit of talking in his sleep, and it's driving her crazy."—Philadelphia Press.
**You Can Get Allen's Foot-Ease FREE.**
Write to-day to Allen S. Olmsted, Leroy, N. Y., for a FREE sample of Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder to shake into your shoes. It cures chilblains, sweating, damp, swollen, aching feet. It makes New or tight shoes easy. A certain cure for Corns and Bunions. All druggists and shoe stores sell it. 25c.
The man who cracks his fingers several times while nailing down the carpet knows what it is to take pains with his work.—Philadelphia Record.
Dropsy treated free by Dr. H. H. Green's Sons, of Atlanta, Ga. The greatest dropsy specialists in the world. Read their advertisement in another column of this paper.
There are some women who always use the same kind of judgment in allowing a poor steak to be passed off on them that they exercised years ago in selecting a husband. Atchison Globe. Happy Women
who have been relieved of painful menstruation by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, are constantly writing grateful letters to Mrs. Pinkham.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
cured them. It always relieves painful periods and no woman who suffers should be without this knowledge.
Nearly all the ills of women result from some derangement of the female organism. Mrs. Pinkham's great medicine makes women healthy; of this there is overwhelming proof. Don't experiment. If you suffer get this medicine and get Mrs. Pinkham's free advice. Her address is Lynn, Mass.
Is what Mrs. Archie Young of 1817 Oaks Ave., West Superior, Wis., writes us on Jan. 25th, 1900. "I am so thankful to be able to say that your SWANSONS' '5 DROPS' is the best medicine I have ever used in my life. I sent for some last November and commenced using it right away and it helped me from the first dose. Oh, I cannot explain to you how I was suffering from neuralgia. It seemed that death was near at hand. I thought no one could be worse. I was so very weak that I hardly expected to live to see my husband come back from his daily labor. But now I am free from pain, my cheeks are red, and I sleep well the whole night through. Many of my friends are so surprised to see me looking so well that they will send for some of your '5 DROPS,'"
RHEUMATISM "I have been afflicted with rheumatism for 2 years. I was in bed with it when I saw your advertisement in a paper, recommending SWANSONS' '5 DROPS' very highly. I thought I would try it. It has completely cured me, but I like it so well that I want two more bottles for fear I will get into the same fix I was before I sent for '5 DROPS,'" writes Mr. Alexander Futrell of Vannale, Ark., Feb. 6th, 1900.
Is the most powerful specific known. Free from opiates and perfectly harmless. It gives almost instantaneous relief, and is a positive cure for Rheumatism, Sciatica, Dystonia, Dysphagia, Tardarrh, La Grippie, Group, Sleepiness, Nervousness, Nervous and Neuralgic Headaches, Earache, Toothache, Heart Weakness, Dropy, Malaria, Creeping Numbness, etc., etc.
30 DAYS to enable sufferers to give "5 DROPS" at least a trial, we will send a 25c sample bottle, prepaid by mail for 10c. A sample bottle will contain you also. Leave bottle on desk for 8. Sold by us and agents. AGENTS WANTED in New Territory. Write us to-day.
SWANSONS RHEUMATISM CURE CO. 160 to 161 St. CHICAGO, IL.
Interested in lighting your home, store, church or other buildings? If so, send us your name and address on a postal card and we will mail you a booklet containing full information regarding the new artificial light—ACETYLENE; and tell you how simple it is to install ACETYLENE GENERATORS, and how economically you can light a building.
To California Quickly and Comfortably
Via Chicago, Union Pacific and North-Western Line. "The Overland Limited" leaves Chicago daily 6:30 P. M., arrives San Francisco the afternoon of third day, and Los Angeles next morning. No change of cars. All meals in dining cars. Buffet, smoking and library cars, with barber. "The best of everything." "The Pacific Express" leaves Chicago daily 10:30 P. M., with first-class and through tourist sleepers to California. Personally conducted excursions every Thursday. All agents sell tickets via Chicago & North-Western R'y. For full information and illustrated pamphlet apply to W. B. Kniskern, 22 Fifth ave, Chicago, Ill.
Fond of Horse.
Hoax—Klumsy is very fond of horses, isn't he?
Joax—If he is it's something new.
"Well, I saw him out riding the other day, and he had both arms around the horse's neck."—Philadelphia Record.
MARCH AND APRIL
Are the Most Disagreeable Months of the Year in the North.
In the South, they are the pleasantest and most agreeable. The trees and shrubs put forth their buds and flowers; early vegetables and fruits are ready for eating, and in fact all nature seems to have awakened from its winter sleep. The Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company reaches the Garden Spots of the South, and will on the first and third Tuesdays of March and April sell round trip tickets to all principal points in Tennessee, Alabama, Georgia and West Florida, at about half rates. Write for particulars of excursions to P. Sid Jones, D.P.A., in charge of Immigration, Birmingham, Ala., or Jackson Smith, D.P.A., Cincinnati, O.
Out of the Ocasion
Mrs. Flyabout—Oh, dear me! I suppose I must give up something during lent.
Mr. Flyabout—Why not give up talking so much?
"What! And have you get gay and worldly? Well, hardly."—Judge.
Coughing Leads to Consumption.
Kemp's Balsam will stop the Cough at once. Go to your druggist to-day and get a sample bottle free. Large bottles 25 and 50 cents. Go at once; delays are dangerous.
Great Social Forces.
We believe it will be found that, next to electricity, flattery is the greatest force in the world.—Atchison Globe.
To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c.
There is a disease among cattle known as big jaw; many people catch it.—Atchison Globe.
O, How Happy I am to BE FREE from
Is what Mrs. Archie Young of 1817 Oaks Ave. "I am so thankful to be able to say that your SW have ever used in my life. I sent for some last N it helped me from the first dose. Oh, I cannot ex. It seemed that death was near at hand. I thought I hardly expected to live to see my husband come from pain, my cheeks are red, and I sleep well the so surprised to see me looking so well that they
RHEUMATISM "I have been affe with it when I saw SWANSONS
5
DROPS
[TRADE MARK.]
SWANSON RHEUMATIC CURE CO.,
ARE YOU A FARMER, M.
Interested in lighting your hings? If so, send us your name, we will mail you a booklet containing the new artificial light—ACETYLENE it is to install ACETYLENE nomically you can light a building.
Address Buckeye,
Dealers in ACETYLENE GENERAL
8 Canby Bldg., DAYTOT
1101 New England Bldg.
83 N. High Street, COI
$100.00
IN CASH GIVEN AWAY
Send Us No Money.
We want a few honest boys and girls, and housewives who have a few spare moments during the day, to help us advertise
USAPEPULE,
a ten-cent medicine for indigestion.
We will pay liberally, drop us a postal.
EUKEKA MEDICINE COMPANY,
Dept. A.
Providence, R. I.
In 3 or 4 Years an Independence Is Assured
If you take up your homes in Western Canada, the land of plenty. Illustrated pam hliets, giving experience of farmers who have become wealthy through the sale of delegates, etc., and full information as to reduced railway rates can be had on application to the
ROMO QUININ
LETS
OLD IN ONE D
ABSOLUTE SECURITY.
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills.
Must Bear Signature of
Grant Good
See Fac-Simile Wrapper Below.
Very small and as easy
to take as sugar.
CARTER'S
LITTLE
LIVER
PILLS.
FOR HEADACHE.
FOR DIZZINESS.
FOR BILIOUSNESS.
FOR TORPID LIVER.
FOR CONSTIPATION.
FOR SALLOW SKIN.
FOR THE COMPLEXION
Prices
25 Cents
Purely Vegetable.
GENUINE
MUST HAVE SIGNATURE.
CURE SICK HEADACHE.
C. B. Goldthwaite, Dr. Drugist, Troy,
Ala., wrote, February 28, 1893.
"FOR GRANULATED EYELIDS,
I would not take $500.00 for the good
has done my son, who had been in care of a physician for 15 months."
Lotion Soap
Prevents and assists, in curling sore eyes,
and sore eyelids. At druggists only.
READERS OF THIS PAPER
DESIRED TO BUY ANYTHING
ADVERTISED IN ITS COLUMNS
SHOULD INSIST UPON HAVING
WHAT THEY ASK FOR, REFUSING
ALL SUBSTITUTES OR IMITATIONS.
ROOFING The best Red Rope Roofing for lc. per sq.ft.; cape and nail included. Substitutes for plaster. Samples free. THE FAY MANILLA ROOFING CO., CAMDEN, N. J.
A. N. K.-C 1806
WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISEERS please state that you saw the Advertisement in this paper.
E
AY