The Gazette
Saturday, October 26, 1901
Cleveland, Ohio
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ALLIED PRINTING
TRADE SCHOOL COUNCIL
CLEVELAND
THE GAZETTE is the oldest, and has the largest bona fide circulation, double that of any newspaper in the interest of Afro-Americans, published in the state of Ohio, and comparison with any will immediately establish its rank as one of the NEWSIEST AND BEST in the country.
Again we remind those in charge of the republican state campaign and local canvasses, particularly in Cleveland, Columbus and Springfield, that the less said about the Ruthven matter the better it will be. The condition it made is bad enough without being any further aggravated.
In criticising Senator Ben Tillman and mob law, Editors Pledger and Fortune have said nothing for which they should be criticized by any member of the race. Those who have criticized them are only trying to cater to prejudiced southern whites and their traitorous northern allies, and have only succeeded in evidencing a lack of manhood and race interest.
Messrs. Barnett and Fortune and all others who are looking to congress for legislation against mob law are wasting time, whether they are wrong or right in so doing. The fact in, we are far more likely to secure legislation against the evil from some of the state assemblies, and the proper thing to do is for our people to take advantage of such openings wherever they are found, just as has been done in Ohio.
President Roosevelt should stop appointing South Carolina democrats to federal positions and recognize the loyal black and white republicans of that state, as well as elsewere in the south. Republicans of the north do not elect presidents with a view of creating a democratic office-holding class (under republican administrations) in the south or elsewhere. There are in that section plenty of capable and deserving black and white republicans for every position at President Roosevelt's disposal.
We very much fear that President Roosevelt's entertainment of Booker T. Washington, while perfectly right and proper, will eventually prove the latter's undoing, as far as his great educational work is concerned. The prejudiced southern white people are vindictive and will punish some one for the social distinction conferred upon Mr. Washington and the race by the president. They are now trying to vent their spleen upon our entire race and the president through the medium of the southern press and its northern prejudiced sympathizers, and will not be satisfied with the results. Privately, or rather sectionally, they will quietly work upon Washington and his great school. Some years will elapse before the effect will be noticed in a general way. This is to be regretted as much as the president's action in inviting an Afro-American to dine and counsel with him is to be commended.
Senator J. B. Foraker, in a political speech Monday evening in the Opera House at Findlay, said among other things, in speaking of the Roosevelt-Washington incident, that he would rather dine with a Negro than with many southern senators he had met, and that he could sit close to them with just as much comfort. It does not surprise us to learn of this expression of sentiment, because it is just what those who know Senator Foraker expect. Indeed, it makes clear one of the reasons why the writer, as a member of the Seventy-second general assembly of Ohio in 1896, took pleasure in casting one vote for his election to the United States senate. The Hon. W. R. Stewart, of Youngstown, the other Afro-American member of the legislature at that time, also helped to make Mr. Foraker a United States senator, and we believe for similar reasons. We have always regarded the senator as one of the truest and best friends the race has.
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT WRONG
President Roosevelt will never "make every southerner respect the republican party" by appointing democrats to office which should be filled by republicans, either black or white. If every federal office in the south was given to the democrats it would only be additional reason why southerners should not and would not "respect the republican party." Such action even upon the part of the president of the United States is not calculated to win the respect of friend or enemy, political or otherwise. The Afro-American republicans of the north are not going to continue, at least in such large numbers as heretofore, helping the republican party to win national contests when they know that their brethren in the south, who constitute about four-fifths of the republican party of that section, are to be "turned down" when it comes to appointment to office, that white democrats may be appointed, even for the purpose of
making "every southerner respect the republican party." Good citizen have and will have objection to any such pernicious policy, and we are astonished that the New York Age has the temerity to make a statement to the contrary. There are enough of the right kind of republicans, and of color, too, in the south to fill every office in that section at the disposal of the president. If there were not, ignoring and turning them down in favor of white democrats, is not the way to make them, or build up the republican party. Ever since the close of the war republican presidents have appointed democrats to federal offices in the south, precious few of whom fail to return to active service in the democratic party at the conclusion of their term of office, if not before. We fail to remember a single conciliatory policy with that section of this country that has not resulted in abject failure. Nevertheless, one republican administration after another continues to try the same experiment. It is now high time to call a halt unless the powers that-be desire to hasten the disintegration of the republican party at the north, at least so far as its Afro-American contingent is concerned.
MORE SOUTHERN FOLLY.
Before another century shall have passed, unless some terrible retribution shall come upon the south, it will have discovered its own assinity. The stupid outcry about an Afro-American dining at the White House amounts to simply nothing. It has not added anything politically to the interest of the Negro, nor has it impaired the dignity and safety of the government a scintilla. Rather let it be to the lasting shame of the nation that the founders of this republic, struggling to maintain the principles of the Protestant faith, had ever drawn the color-line. As though God Almighty can be tampered with or beguiled into a compromise with a malignant and unholy bargain to persecute and torture his own creatures, professed white Christians of America in basest hypocrisy have the efrontery to raise an impious yell against a black man dining with his host. These very southern howlers once in rebelleion against this government are a disgrace to civilization and a stumbling block to the nation. They were wrong in their maintenance of human slavery, they were wrong in their support of the Dred Scott decision, they were wrong in their long and cruel persecutions of the Negro, they were wrong in the bloody and murderous practices of the two last decades, and to-day they are wrong in their spiteful and unspeakable determination to unman and degrade a fellow man. Vile and implacable in their purpose to hound the black man out of existence, they neglect living issues, to arouse a spirit of dissension and strife against the defenseless Negro. Already the Afro-American is warned to expect the worst of outrages. Unfaithful to every obligation and duty to this government, prejudiced southerners declare in defiance of the constitution and the laws that this is a white man's government. Despite the unquestioned reality that all Afro-Americans are citizens before the law, they intrude their state rights' doctrine, nullify the rights of the black man, organize mobs and incite a friendish war upon the government which should shield and protect Afro-Americans. Astute, crafty and designing, they assail and denounce the head of the nation in the very presence of the growing sentiment and ready concessions in their favor. Shocking, too, to know that while all the world recognizes the humanity and manhood of the Negro and accord him those amenities deservedly his, these soulless and heartless men of the south, ever watchful and willing to hew him down, sally forth to demand his humiliation and degradation. All over the world white men may be found eating at the same table with Negroes, then why so much ado about nothing? We warn the people of the south that sooner or later their own stubborn folly must recoil upon themselves.
Gem City News.
Dayton, O.—Miss Mary Alexander's funeral was held last Tuesday afternoon at McKinley church.—Miss Jennie Lane, guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. Lane, left last week for Cincinnati to spend a week with relatives.—Mrs. Shelton spent last week in Xenia.—Miss Rial, of New Vienna, is Mr. and Mrs. G. Howard's guest.—Mr. Howard Grayson entertained last week in honor of his cousin, Miss Lane.—Rev. Collins has returned for another year.—Mr. Manual was buried last Tuesday from St. Marguerite's mission. He was a member of the Knights of Tabor.—Rev. Robinson preached at Eaker St. church last Sunday morning and evening.—Communion will be held at Zion Baptist church Sunday afternoon.—Mr. Charles Moore, of Cincinnati, visited his brother, J. Moore, last week.—Mrs. Reynolds entertained at dinner Sunday evening.—Miss Forest Singleton entertained Wednesday evening.
New Brighton, Pa., Brevities.
Mrs. Calma, of the east, is here.—Miss Margaret Turner, of Edworth, visited here Sunday.—Mr. and Mrs. Smith and daughter, of Mt. Pleasant, were guests of Mrs. Richard Brown, in Bridgewater.—Prof. Roberson, of Rochester, was the guest of Mrs. Thomas Woodson Sunday in Beaver Falls.—Quite a number from Beaver Falls will attend Zion conference at Allegheny to-morrow.—Rev. Hawkins, pastor of Zion church, Bridgewater, left Tuesday for conference in Allegheny. It is hoped that he will be returned.—Mrs. Frazier, of Allegheny, visited Mrs. Caliman Sunday.—The Second Baptist church, of Beaver Falls, held communion Sunday.—An entertainment will be given at Rochester on the 25th.
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.
Beginning Saturday, October 5th on above days the Nickel Plate road will sell round trip tickets to Buffalo at $3.00. Return limit five days after day of sale. Ticket office 189 Superior street, Tel. Main 218.
E. A. AKERS, G. P. & T. A.
Cleveland, O.
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1901.
NEW STYLES IN CANDIES.
The Day of Sticks and Jaw-Breakers Has Passed and Penny Novelties in Favor.
Is the stick candy doomed? Is the "Gooseberry Ball" dead beyond hopes of resuscitation? Has the day of the "jawbreaker" passed beyond recall?
Hundreds upon thousands of good Philadelphiaians whose youthful memories are sweetened in the thought of those indigestible pleasures will be sorry to hear the "yes" which must answer each question. Thirty years, 15, years, even, have wrought a revolution in the confections of childhood. Just as the old glass jar on the shelf has been replaced by the plateglass showcase, so have the candy marbles and cocoanut cakes of 1875 or 1880 been supplanted by the "penny novelties" of the present progressive day, says the Philadelphia Press.
"Give the children the pennies and we'll look after the pounds," is the revised reading of the old proverb which seems to have been written in the hearts of the modern manufacturer. In the turning out of penny goods alone his name has come to be legion and his sales amount to millions of dollars a year. Where the trade in this country was once to be measured by from 10,000 to 12,000 pounds a month it has now grown to such dimensions that Philadelphia alone calls for more than that amount on an average day. Where once there was no export trade at all there is now a steadily increasing demand in scores of foreign markets for the American made-penny candy.
One of the leading jobbers of Philadelphia, speaking of this great growth, said: "To an outsider such a demand as this is surprising, but it is very easy to prove its truth. My mailing lists show that there are about 1,400 candy stores in Philadelphia and the towns within a radius of 75 miles, which is my territory. Approximately 1,000 of these handle penny goods. Say that the average daily sales are three dollars, which means about 15 pounds, and there are your daily totals: Three thousand dollars and 15,000 pounds, or something like $900,000 and 4,500,000 pounds a year. I know it sounds incredible, but my own books for 1900 show sales well over 1,000,000 pounds, and I do about one-fourth of the business here."
And this is all in "penny novelties." Marshmallow hearts and sugary flowers, peanut taffy in cakes, and "fudge" invitingly balanced on the end of a stick, saws and planes in chocolate, dolls and bananas of taffy, these are the wares dear to childhood to-day, which have supplanted the old-time "sticks" of lemon, peppermint and maple.
Yet these former favorites have not utterly disappeared. They still are made and still are sold, especially in the west and south. It is only in the greater popularity of the comparatively recent "novelty" that they are overshadowed and belittled. The jujube paste holds out the best of them all, but even it maintains its place only because it has bowed to a change in its outward and visible form—the tablet has become a tiny man, whose market value is just one-fifth of a cent.
WAITING FOR THE OWNERS.
Many Umbrellas and Other Articles Left Behind by Guests of Hotels.
"It is surprising how forgetful some persons are when traveling," said the clerk of a well-known hotel, in this city, reports the New York Times.
"In proof of what I say we have over 100 umbrellas in the property room, whose owners have carelessly gone off and forgotten to take them with them. The majority are high-priced umbrellas. We cannot, of course, undertake to advertise for their owners, but we keep them for a period of six months, and then place the lot in the hands of the auctioneer.
"Umbrellas, however, are not the only things that are left behind in this hotel by forgetful guests," continued the clerk. "One gentleman, who had been stopping here for several-weeks, went off the other day in a hurry and left his false teeth on the bureau. He telegraphed, shortly after, of his loss, and we mailed the forgotten 'crunchers' to his address.
"One of the chambermaids discovered a valuable gold watch and chain under the pillow while making one of the beds the other day. The occupant of the room had left that same morning. He has not yet informed us of his loss, and as we do not know his address we are unable to communicate with him.
"The most extraordinary thing, however, that has ever been found in this hotel—in fact, in any hotel, I dare say—was left by a lady guest. It was a hot-water bag filled with ten-dollar gold pieces, among which was a will written on a piece of white wrapping paper, bequeathing the amount ($700) to a relative. The lady never returned for the money or communicated with us in any way. We wrote to the name and place she had given on the register book, but the letter was returned unclaimed. We finally communicated with the legatee, after holding the money for six months, and, after satisfying ourselves that the legatee was the person named in the will, we handed over the money. The most curious thing about that lost property was the fact that it was not concealed in the room in any way, such as under the pillow or mattress, but was found hanging by a cord to one of the bed supports."
In the lost property room of this hotel was seen every conceivable thing in the way of wearing and traveling apparel. There was, also, jewelry of all kinds, and pocketbooks containing money and valuable papers.
All these articles were neatly arranged, with the names of their owners affixed. The clerk stated that the total value of this lost property is somewhere in the neighborhood of $800—a strong evidence of the forgetfulness of the traveling public.
Railroads Across Death Valley.
Two lines of road have been surveyed across the much-written-about Death Valley of Southern California, which will reach a country beyond it rich in silver, gold; copper ores, borax and nitrate.
Utah has more than doubled its manufacturing plants since 1890, the number increasing from 530 to 1,400.
HIGH TAX ON WIVES.
A Bishop's Scheme for Putting an End to Polygamy Among African Natives.
The missionaries in South Africa recently held a convention in Natal. Among the questions that claimed their attention was that of polygamy among the natives. They discussed the practicability of making a crusade against this custom. Many of them declared that the practice was condemned not only by moral but also by business considerations. The bishop of Mashonaland asserted that the country might find in polygamy the real reason for the very inconvenient dearth of labor in the mines, says the New York Sun.
The native father looks upon his daughter merely as so much merchandise. He will cheerfully part with her if he can get what he considers to be her value in cattle. The girl is sold to her future husband for from five to fifty head of cattle, according to her beauty as that quality is estimated among the natives. An exceedingly fat girl is very beautiful indeed, and brings the highest price in the matrimonial market.
The father of a family who raises a large number of daughters is certain to become rich. The more wives he has the more daughters are in prospect; thus it is highly desirable to have quite a number of wives. The young man who agrees to sell his labor for a stipulated time in the gold or diamond mines has only one thought, and that is to get some money with which he may purchase cattle and exchange them for a wife.
When he has secured this desirable object he will do no more work for the white man till he wants more wives. In the course of time he will have daughters to sell and then he will do no more work at all. His wives will do all the field work, his daughters will bring in more cattle and his herds will grow also by natural increase. Between wives, daughters and cattle he will be able to lead a life of gentlemanly leisure.
The bishop of Mashonaland proposed a plan which, if carried into effect, would, in his opinion, put an end to polygamy. He would have the government view all wives, except the first, as articles of luxury and tax them in a progressive scale. Wife No. 1 should be exempt from taxation, but the husband should pay a tax of $25 a year for the luxury of having wife No. 2 in his family, $50 a year for wife No. 8, $100 a year for wife No. 4, and so on. It is evident that at this rate it would take a very long purse or a very well-stocked cattle yard to keep the native home adorned with a goodly number of wives.
The convention did not commit itself to this or any other plan for doing away with polygamy, and it remains to be seen what the white legislators of South Africa will think of the novel scheme suggested by the bishop of Mashonaland.
DRUMMER'S HOODOO VOTES.
Traveling Salesman of Boston Has Voted for But Three Presidents, and All Were Assassinated.
Thomas Millard, a Boston traveling man, says that never again will he vote in a presidential election. He considers himself a "hoodoo." Mr. Millard, talking of the assassination of President McKinley, according to the Louisville Courier-Journal, said: "In all my life, and I am 60 years old, I have voted for only three presidents, and, gentlemen, I swear to you that I'll never vote for another." "What's the matter? Can't you pick winners?" laughingly queried one of crowd. "I voted for Lincoln and he was assassinated. The next man I voted for was Garfield and the same thing happened to him. McKinley was the last one, and you know what befell him."
Everybody seemed interested and the traveling man continued: "That is only half the story. I never have cast but three votes. When Mr. Lincoln was first elected I stayed away from the polls. Then I joined the army of the north and was wounded. When he was elected for his second term I cast my ballot for him. He was assassinated. Well, I didn't vote for several years after that. There was always something that didn't suit me. One time the platform was wrong, another time I didn't like the candidates. But when Garfield was nominated I was enthusiastic. He was a personal friend of mine and I went to the polls early. That night I was the proudest man in the country; it tickled my vanity to know that my friend was elected. Then he was shot. I began to think. Only twice had I voted and both times my favorites were murdered. Of course, I didn't hold myself responsible.
"On the day of the next presidential election I was out on the road. The next time I was displeased with something or other and did not vote. So it went until last November. Things were pretty warm all over the country and I thought I'd give McKinley a little lift. Then I thought of what had befallen my two other candidates, and I debated a long time whether I would vote, but I finally decided that I was a fool to think of those things, and I voted just to show myself that I had overcome my superstition.
"And the first thing thing I said when I heard that the president was shot was: 'Don't you vote again.'"
Whisky in the Highlands.
Whisky in the Highlands.
"Whisky is almost as good for sore heels as it is for bagpipes when the leather gets too hard," says an English sportsman, writing of the Scottish highlands. "The highlander who drank the whisky supplied to soften the leather, and explained that 'she likes it bleawed in.' understood no better than the average gillie that internal application was a salve for outward wounds. Whisky is the medicine of the country, as well as the luxury, but it is rather a surprise to an Englishman going north for the first time to see how they take it. No highlander ever thinks of mixing water with his favorite drink, at least not until after he has drank the whisky. When this has been done he will walk over to a spring, if there is one, as there always should be at a well-selected lunch place, and lie down and have a good pull at the water, if the day is a hot one, but never first."—Chicago Daily News.
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The above is the name of a book received at this office recently from B. N. Austin, G. P. A. of the B. & O. Ry., with offices at Chicago. The entire October number has been devoted to a memorial to President McKinley. The volume contains a composite editorial carefully constructed from editorials of leading newspapers; a composite sermon from noted divines and a composite eulogy from many touching tributes of prominent citizens; also McKinley's last speech at Buffalo and appropriate poems. A splendid portrait of the late president is also given. The "Book of the Royal Blue" is published monthly by the passenger department of the B & O. Ry., and the publishers are to be commended on the concise and interesting manner in which the memorial edition has been gotten out.
The German View Correct.
President Roosevelt is to be congratulated on the common sense stand he took on the Negro question (Booker Washington). The southern people and their northern sympathizers must learn that the Negro citizen has the same rights as the white. It is not the Negro's fault that he is here in this country, and we have no right to look upon him as a human being, second class, or to treat him as such. Cleveland Waechter & Anzeiger, October 21, 1901.
SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY.
Among the 282 medical journals published in the United States, 28 are devoted exclusively to hygiene. A German naturalist says that in case of an early spring a single pair of field mice may, by the end of the autumn, be the proud ancestors of 200 mice. Of 100 units of work done in Great Britain, 13 are accomplished by manpower unaided by machinery. In the United States only four per cent. of work is done by man-power. British medical journals of high authority insist that ozone can be artificially produced at reasonable expense to purify the air in tunnels, sewers and other places in London.
The results achieved in Germany with the open-air treatment of consumption have been so remarkable that the number of special hospitals has rapidly increased to 60, with 5,000 beds.
Sir William Crookes has just announced to the Royal society an element of a pale brown color which he calls victorium. It ranks between yttrium and terbium and has an atomic weight of 17 and a spectrum in the ultra-violet region. In order to examine the spectrum an apparatus has been constructed which will measure to the one hundred thousandths of an inch.
A Strasburg aeronaut says he has seen an eagle at the height of 3,000 meters and again a pair of storks and a buzzard 900 meters above the sea level. On March 10, 1890, some aeronauts observed a lark flying at the height of 1,000 meters; on July 18, 1899, another balloon met a couple of crows at an altitude of 1,400 meters. These, however, are exceptions. Birds are hardly ever seen above a height of 1,000 meters; even above 400 meters they are not frequent.
FRIGHTENED HIS ILLS AWAY.
Suffered with an Affliction of Spine for Fifteen Years and Then Was Miraculously Cured.
"There are not a few recorded cases of chronic diseases and physical deformities being cured by fright or some violent emotion," said an old New Orleans resident, recently, while gossiping with his friends at the St. Charles, relates the Times-Democrat, "but I have read or heard nothing more extraordinary than a recent occurrence in north Louisiana. By comparison the most extravagant alleged faith cures appear commonplace. A Mr. Hampton had been a cripple for 15 years. He had an affliction of the spine and was unable to walk.
"He was carried about from place to place by a large, powerful-limbed negro, who carried him as he would a sack of corn. Mr. Hampton would put his arms around the negro's neck. One night two laborers, who belonged to a gang which was repairing the railroad track in the vicinity, planned to steal a pig. They knew one of the farmers had butchered three pigs, and that the dressed animals were hanging in a barn. One of the men sneaked into the building to get a porker while the other waited in the roadside to keep lookout.
"It was an exceedingly dark night, and, as it happened, Mr. Hampton and his negro were returning home. Suddenly, out of the dark, loomed the form of the black servant with his charge on his back. The waiting accomplice to the pig thief thought it was his partner returning with his greasy booty, and cried out in smothered tones: "Is he fat?" The negro was superstitious, as his race is wont to be, and he thought it was a ghost. He jumped about ten feet, and Mr. Hampton was shaken off his back. The negro was a faithful fellow under ordinary circumstances, but in his fear all ties were forgotten, and he ran down the road. Mr. Hampton was greatly frightened himself, and made a supreme effort to follow the deserter. Strange to say, he succeeded in using his limbs, and ran 200 yards before stopping. None of the country doctors could explain the phenomenon, but it is a fact that he was completely cured."
The McKinley of Coleraine. Dernock house, County Antrim, the home of the McKinley family in Ireland before their emigration to America, is still standing. On an old stone slab by the hall door the initials of the McKinley of a century and a half ago are thus inscribed: "W. McK., 1765." In the insurrection of 1798 arms and ammunition were found by the military in Dernock house, and a William McKinley, a namesake and granduncle of the late president, was arrested, brought to Coleraine, where he was tried by court-martial, convicted and sentenced to death. He was shot in the market place of Coleraine, and was buried in the churchyard of Dernock, where there is a headstone still in good preservation over his grave.—London Leader.
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SPECIAL GRAND OFFER. Send us One Dollar and mention this paper, and we will send you three large boxes of HARTONA HAIR GROWER AND STRAIGHTENER, two large bottles of HARTONA FACE BLEACH, and one large box of HARTONA NO-SMELL, which removes all disagreeable odors caused by Perspiration of the Feet, Arm-Pits, &c. Goods will be sent securely sealed from observation. Write your name and post-office and express office address very plainly. Money can be sent in Stamps or by Post-Office Money Order, or enclosed in Registered Letter or by Express. Address all orders to:
AGENTS WANTED in Every Town and City. Liberal Salary Paid.
AN-AMERICAN
between CLEVELAND and BUFFALO
MERS CITY OF BUFFALO AND CITY OF
traveling without doubt, in all respects, the finest and fast
traveling public in the United States.
ME CARD—DAILY—APRIL 15th to DEC.
m. Arrive Buffalo 6:30 a.m. | Leave Buffalo 8 p.m. Arrive
national service during July and August
DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY.
8:00 a.m. | Leave Buffalo
6:00 p.m. | Arrive Cleveland
Wednesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays 5 p.m. Arrive
days, Wednesdays and Fridays 5 p.m. Arrive
al Standard Time. Orchestra Accompanies Each
e at Buffalo with trains for all Eastern and Canadian
points West and Southwest.
for tickets via C. & B. Line. Send four cents for
STATES CLEVELAND TO BUFFALO AND NIAGARA,
ALSO BUFFALO TO CLEVELAND.
F. HERMAN, General Passenger Agent, Cleveland
C. L. LACY
WITH
Sigler Brother
Pan-Am
Between CLEW
STEAMERS CITY OF BU
Both together being without doubt, in all
the interest of the traveling public in the Uni
TIME CARD-DAILY-
Leave Cleveland 8 p. m. Arrive Buffalo 6:30 a. m.
ADDITIONAL SERVICE L
DAILY EXC
Leave Cleveland.....8:00 a. m.
Arrive Buffalo.....6:00 p. m.
Leave Cleveland Tuesdays, Thursdays and
Leave Buffalo Mondays, Wednesdays and
All Central Standard Time.
Connections made at Buffalo with trains
for Detroit and all points West and Southwest
Ask ticket agents for tickets via C. & B.
SPECIAL LOW RATES CLEVELAND TO
SATURDAY NIGHT, ALSO BUFFALO TO
W. F. HERMAN, General
C. L.
The Sigler
Both together being without doubt, in all respects, the finest and fastest that are run in the interest of the traveling public in the United States.
TIME CARD-DAILY-APRIL 15th to DEC. 1st.
Leave Cleveland 8 p. m. Arrive Buffalo 6:30 a. m. | Leave Buffalo 8 p. m. Arrive Cleveland 6:30 a. m.
ADDITIONAL SERVICE DURING JULY AND AUGUST
DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY.
Leave Cleveland.....8:00 a. m. Leave Buffalo.....8:00 a. m.
Arrive Buffalo.....6:00 p. m. Arrive Cleveland.....6:00 p. m.
Leave Cleveland Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays 5 p. m. Arrive Buffalo 5:30 a. m.
Leave Buffalo Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays 5 p. m. Arrive Cleveland 5:30 a. m.
All Central Standard Time. Orchestra Accompanies Each Steamer.
Connections made at Buffalo with trains for all Eastern and Canadian points, at Cleveland for Detroit and all points West and Southwest.
Ask ticket agents for tickets via C. & B. Line. Send four cents for illustrated pamphlet.
SPECIAL LOW RATES CLEVELAND TO BUFFALO AND NIAGARA FALLS EVEN
SATURDAY NIGHT, ALSO BUFFALO TO CLEVELAND.
MFG. AND WHOLESALE JEWELERS,
Will be pleased to have his friends and customers on him when in need of
Watches, Diamonds, Jewelry, Clockware, Table Cutlery, Umbrellas, Opera Glasses and Spectacles
Testing and fitting difficult eyes a specialty. Watches and Jewelry notices by skillful workmen. Old Jewelry made to look equal to new guaranteed. All kinds of first-class Engraving promptly executed patronage. Orders by mail promptly attended to.
Will make prices on all goods as low as the lowest.
Nos. 52 and 54 Euclid Ave. CLEV
are pleased to have his friends and customers on him when in need of
Diamonds, Jewelry, Clock, Table Cutlery, Umbrellas, Opera Glasses and Spectacles
ing difficult eyes a specialty. Watches and Jewelry new workmen. Old Jewelry made to look equal to new kinds of first-class Engraving promptly executed by mail promptly attended to.
Services on all goods as low as the lowest.
54 Euclid Ave. CLEV
Will be pleased to have his friends and customers call on him when in need of
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 shore notice by skilful 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
TRADE-MARK. I
BEFORE USING
HARTONA
TRADE-MARK.
AFTER USING
HARTONA
C B
LINE
(INCORPORATED)
TRADE-MARK.
AFTER USING
MARTONA
beautiful, soft,
oema, and all
and Prema-
LIGHTENS THE
anywhere on
the skin of a
will turn the
TONA FACE
Blackles, Black-
absolutely
25c. and 50c.
and your money
read. Write to
of more than
used and are
the Dollar and
paper, and
GROWER
TONA FACE
MELL, which
of the Feet,
action. Write
every plainly.
Money Order, or
TRADE-MARK.
BEFORE USING
HARTONA
Route UFFALO. OF ERIE.
4
ee
WISS LAURA HOWARD,
PE Tal Cael
ul iy
Lydia Eee Vegetable
—.. After the Best Doc-
ters Failed To Help Her.
Dran Mrs. Prvxnax : —I can thank
mieten. ss
Sa.
tkwew one day how I would feel the
ment. I was nervous and had no qj
petite, neither could I sleep aeante
sights. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg-
e@table Compound, used in con-
Ganetion with your Sanative Wash, did
‘mere for me than all the medicines
sume €he skill of the doctors. For eight
‘gaunt I have enjoyed perfect, health.
werily believe that most of the doc-
‘ers are guessing and experimenting
‘wiiem they try to cure a woman with
amassortment of complications, such as
snize; but you do not guess. How I
‘wish ‘all suffering women could only
‘know of your remedy ; there would be
Seem suffering I know.”—Lavra How-
443 Newberry Ave., Chicago, IIL.
Sethe fort if abord testimonial le not genuine,
‘Mrs. Pinkham invites all wo-
amem who are ill to write her for
m@vico. Address Lynn, Mass,
@@iving full particulars.
—_—_—_—__——_—
Jaen of am Saasavés
& pin is a smal! object compared to
spehimney, and its usefulness to man-
Mid is a different nature. Thera
— mothing wonderful about this
arti@le, but Harry A. Houseal, a
‘Biuifimore engraver, has accomplished
‘tie difficult feat of engraving all of
Ye letters of the alphabet on the
ead of an ordinary pin. Mr. Houseal
‘Tiward that the feat could be done, but
inabted the statement and started
«maf. te prove whether or not it was
fur. He was surprised to find that
‘Be made better progress than ho ex.
(pected, and, after two failures, suc.
emeded in the third attempt. ‘The
‘Gime occupied in the feat was about
am hour and a half. The engraver
wt ground the pin head until it had
am fiat surface. The letters, which are
alli capitals, are engraved in two con-
qwntric circles—those from A to Q be-
im the first and those from R. ta
= in the second. ‘The space
wikich was left in the center of the
‘Gwe circles is occupied by the charac-
ter & Mr. Houseal is 25 years old
amd is an expert in his line.—Golden
Dsys. Bee a Ro
‘Gee Ghee
jae alo ee
a ts po tos had _ foaid ~~ ae
4 of the sluggani, who, he said, need
om only the — of a worthy motive to be-
ame a useful member of society. ‘Now,
tthem, boys,” he asked, in a more animated
wmmmner, “what is the matter with the slug-
sagged” “He's all right,” yelled the boys, in
Montreal Star.
“T am tired of this monkey business,” ex.
Gaswed the irritable citizen.’ Then he'went
ss ;
doae=indianapolis News. net om fe
‘What literature needs is a man who can
yerite an undramatizable novel. —Hagtford
SECURITY,
Carter’s
Little Liver Pills,
JheFol
Ss
pei GET SOAKED
Go ///, «ER's
Ves —fie=i
ee Fis apy
PY Ske
easy mee
arama sa
WER CO. BOSTON P
MATISM 233°dcsc
eT
CURRENT TOPICS.
ey eee Fees A i omen) ar, eee er ee oe ye
000. ’
A first-class telescope costs $100,00¢
to build, and $90,000 to heuse appro:
priately.
Tf you write 30 words'a minute your
pen is traveling at the rate of 300
yards an hour.
Not six per cent of all the women
in America spend as much money as
$50 a year on their clothes.
‘The rearing of worms and manufac-
ture of silk were completely broken
up in America by the revolution.
Most of the world’s rosaries are
made at Loreto, in Italy. ‘Thirty-five
women manufacture 35,000 resaries a
year.
Artificial butterflies are being man-
ufactured in large quantities in Eu-
rope and palmed off on collectors as
genuine specimens.
Carroll D. Wright, United States
commissioner of labor, has been elect-
ed a member of the international in-
stitute of sociology.
The late Judge Jeremiah Wilson, of
Washington, was the author of the
present system of government for the
District of Columbia.
The United States government’ has
accepted an invitation to send dele-
gates to the international navigation
congress to be held at Dusseldorf, Ger-
many, in June and July, 1902.
Since 1815 the Rothschild family has
raised for Great Britain $1,000,000,000.
for Austria $250,000,000, Germany
$200,000,000, Italy — $300,000,000, and
large sums for other countries.
In place of wedding cake in Hol-
land, wedding sweets are given—
| “bruid-zuikers,” they are called. They
are handed round by children, and
are served in flower-trimmed baskets.
Out of 12,000,000 American families the
lineome of 4,000,000 of these families
jis less than $400 each per year, and
| the incomes of nearly 80 per cent of
the entire number are less than $1,000
each per year.
It is related of Hall Caine, the nov-
elist, that he once worked in the Lax-
| ey lead mines, in the Manx moun-
j tains, in place of a young man who
| ras ill, to keep the young fellow’s
position for him.
Plucky Galveston has more than re-
covered from the hurricane visitation
of a year ago. The city has not only
helds its trade during the year, fol-
lowing the disaster, but has made en-
vouraging increases,
The neatest town in the world is
Brock, in Holland. So tidy are the in-
habitants that they won't allow
horses in the streets. It contains a
population of 2,700, and the chief in-
dutry is the making of Edam cheese.
At is no longer correct to say “exe-
etttive mansion.” This is a recent de-
cision. All of the stationary of the
White House har been changed and
where the words “Executive Mansion”
have been used, “White House” has
been substituted.
One of the most important industries
of the Bahama islands is the gather-
| Ing of pink pearl# It is the only place
in the world where these pearls arc
found. The pearls, when perfect, bring
very high prices, it is said, ranging
from $50 to $5,000,
‘The recent census in Bombay shows
® population of 779,000, or a decrease
of 50,000 in 10 years. The loss was
| caused by the exodus on account of
the plague. The central provinces of
Tndia lost 1,100,000 population in the
same time. India, under British rule,
continues to be the home of famine.
London has started a movement
against blinkers for horses, which in
most cases are useless and harmful to
the sight of the animals. Most of the
| great railroad companies and one of
| the tramway lines have done away
with them, so that now, it is stated,
30,000 horses are working without
blinkers.
The young king of Spain, who i
nearly sixteen years of age, will be-
gin presently a series of visits to the
courts of Europe and will make his
debut in the world as a finishing touch
to his royal education. Next May he
ascends the throne. He has been care-
fully educated and knows English,
French and German as well as Span-
ish.
One would think that the identity
of the architect of such a superbly de-
signed building as the Cologne cath-
edral could not possibly be lost to the
world. But it is. The cathedral took
centuries to build, and many arebi-
tects have modelled parts of it aecord-
ing to their own ideas, The result is
the most beautiful cathedral in the
world.
| The heroic equestrian statue of Rob
‘ert E. Lee in Richmond, Va., is believ-
ed to have hundr&is ot pounds of
honey concealed inside of it. For
months bees have been going in and
out of the parted lips of both the hu-
man and the animal figure. The in-
a were first seen there last sum-
mer, and doubtless have been making
j honey ever since. :
The London sehool board has open-
ed in Paddington the first of a series
of special schools for the education
of cripples The children are taken
to and from their homes in an am-
Dulance provided by their board, and
a midday meal is supplied in the
school, :
Raoul Pictet, the Swiss inventor
and chemist, has effected a remarka-
ble discovery concerning an extensive
scale for commercial purposes. The in-
ventor has been engaged for three
years upon his invention at his labora-
‘tory in Geneva, where he is professor
7 I y - \ 8
E GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, 0O., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1901.
STARTLING FACTS ABOUT Willing to Go. Rest for the Dowels.
SUGAR. The procession came to a halt. No matter what ails you, headache to a
- | “Now, sir,” said the leader of the band | cancer, you will never get well until your
ee of regulators to the » arthless lonfer whom | bowels are put right. Cascarets help nature, WN
[Aaa good eal has recently op- | ee ted fared and feature eed were | cure Yon wus eos eae ea| a
peared in print regarding the con- | ever we see you here cgain we'll hang you!” cents to start getting your, health back. OUR
sumption of sugar, and as the im-| oy te rah ai at Os re hed Re oedy [up ia metal hoses every ableteas CCC CFS
portance of this article as a food, in about a hundred yards from here to the | stamped on it. Beware of imitations. ey
which every individual is concerned, | township line. Would you mind carryin’ me ——__-____
th t y?2”—Ch : Popular Belle. 4
ts Apparehtly wot isufficentiy. under. | Te? *he wart; —Chicego Tribune Won lek co: oc hs a eee a
stood, the following facts and figures Fall Wear. Jack—You bat. Why, she actually has fe
e Z Chrysanthemums and the chrysanthemum | four silk pillows stuffed with hair from four S
furnished to us by the well-known | style of wearing the bair on football fielde | different football players. — Philadelphia RAS
sugar statisticians, Messrs. Willett | will soon be equally popular—Baltimore | Record. Bac
wie era | arate a
and Gray (91 Wall street, New York), |“ st NE aS
Every To Cure a Cold in One Day a
who are the publishers of the weekly | man who scold anes mond some, other | Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Al! Rim
Statistical Sugar Trade Journal, | Globe. druggistsrefund money'fit failsto cure. 2c. Bo
[must necessarily be of great inte | ——————————————— i TT oe Bt
est to all our readers: BS
See
RAW SUGAR. —_—_—,, — ff pC
se 40ns.
Total consumption, U. S.,
1900 (Willett and Gray).:2,219,847
Add 6.34 per cent., average
‘annual increase in con-
sumption last 19 years... 140,738
Consumption for 1901. ..2,950,589
Of which: ‘Tons.
Louisiana pro-
GUCES «..-eeeee +--+ 350,000
"Beet (domestic) pro-
AUCES «eee 0-2 +150,000
Hawaii (free) pro-
Auces o........--- 350,000
Porto Rico’ (free)
produces ........-150,000 1,000,000
1,300,585
Paying duty at an aver- ’
‘age of say $36 per tor. $45,981,000
(Equivalent “to $0 per
ton in Granulated.)
(Price increased because
of tariff, $36 per ton.)
Total consumption, 2,-
360,585 tons @ $26..-...041 $54,981,060
Additional, people taxed
‘annually’ and pay to
Provide the 4 millions
OF TEVENUC veseeseereeee {$88,000,000
Viz.:
To Louisiana planters on 20,000
tons at $36 per ton. ......-..+.+...+.$12,800,000
To domestic beet planters on 160,-
000 tons at $36 per ton.............. 6,400,000
To Hawaii planters on 350,000 tons
at $26 per ton.............+-022-+5.5 12,600,000
To Porto Rico planters on 150,000
toms at $36 per ton... ceccerrereee 6,400,000
Remove duty ard the whole $84,-
981,060 acerues to the public. On
October 8, the quotation for Cuba
Centrifugal sugar, 96 per cent. test,
free on board Cuba, was 1.96 cents
per pound, and the duty on same
amounted to 1.685 cents per pound,
which is equivalent to 86 per cent.
ad valorem.
(Signed) WILLETT & GRAY,
91 Wall street, New York.
The Real Thing.
“Uncle Tom, what is charity?”
“Charity, Tommy, is finding good ex.
‘euses for the faults of people we don’t like.”
—Detroit Free Press.
You Can Get Allen's Foot-Ease FREE.
Write to-day to Allen S. Olmsted, Le
Roy, N. Y., fora FREE sample of Allen’s
Foot-Ease,’a powder. — It cures sweating,
damp, swollen, aching feet. Makes new or
_ shoes easy. Always use it to Break in
few Shoes. At all druggists and shee
stores; 25c.
Imperative.
Jaggles—Why do they start the organ as
— as the ie is i 8 a
aeiaee , to wake up the congrega-
tion.—Judge.
Check Coughs, Colds and Croup
With Hoxsie’s Croup Cure. Noopium. 50cts.
‘The difference between a man who has
money and a man who hasn't is that the
‘one is judged by what he is; the other by
what he appears.—N. Y. Herald.
_I do not believe Piso’s Cure for Consump-
Cee ao a for coughs fod a
john F. 5 ty Si , Ind., Fi
John F. Boyer, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb.
A Fancinator.
Agnes—Does he talk sensibly?
Ethel—Not at all! He is simply delight-
ful!—Puck.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES are fast
to sunlight, washing and rubbing.
Revenge is the abject pleasure of an ab-
ject mind.—Juvenal.
Men will not freeze to you because you
are cold-hearted—Ram’s Horn.
The most forbidding person on earth is a
girl that won't smile—Atchison Globe.
age
He who wishes to secure the good of oth-
ers has already secured his own.—Confu-
cius.
oss ee
If you don’t see what you want don’t ask
for it. You are apt to get a substitute—
Puck.
—+—__
He that easily believes rumors has the
principle within him to augment rumors.—
jane Porter.
pti
Don’t buy what you don’t need until you
have more money than you need.—United
Presbyterian.
f UEESE See
No man can be provident of his time who
ie not prudent in the choice of his compan-
ions.—Jeremy Taylor.
——
The superiority of some men is merely
local. They abel ie because their asso-
ciates are Little—Johnson,
aS
You are pretty sure to have your opinion
respected if you eritieise a singer's vcice to
azother-ainser—Atchison’ ‘Gloke,
Why They Gushed.—‘But his letters are
eo gushing,” they protested to the fair
young oor who was corresponding with a
sentimental yout). “I know they are,” she
said, “but you must remember that he
writes with a fountain pen.”—Baltimore
American, ~
—_—_—+—
Flowery Language.—“It’s too bad you're
out of feahign’ said the two dozen _per-
fumed violets, tauntingly, to the two dozen
Jacqueminot roses, “Your stems aren't the
right length, either. You rose too early;
You'd betier leave and go back to your bed.”
“Pooh,” said the Pik th there were six
more of you you'd like 30 scents.”—
Town Tovics.
+
a |
Se ™
Yo Nie
aes
Aes
The Past GUARANTEES
The Future
‘The Fact That
St.Jacobs Oil
Has cured thousands of cases of
Rheumatism, Gout, Lumbago,
Neuralgia, Sciatica, Sprains,
Bruises and other bodily aches
and pains is a guarantee that it
‘will cure cther cases. It is safe,
ete aas, aes
magic.
:
Conquers Pain
Price, asc and soc.
SOLD BY ALL DEALERS IN MEDICINE
Sozodont
Tooth Powder 25°
Good for Bad Teeth
Not Bad for Good Teeth
NOV. 30"
aS) Sea
Wy Fly
SZ wig
by * Upseerscr
Up” eo TAs.
x 5 - &
a eat
pao
eee
Nazar el
\ es
iy fn
CU a) yp |
go | ow
mums itera
‘MATCH BOX ©
( = Fm
ASH C=——_N
ie ES)
bed XL
Re aC oe a
Willing to Go.
The procession came to a halt.
“Now, sir,” said the leader of the band
of pera siots to the worthless loafer whom
they had tarred and feathered and were rid-
ing out of town ona rail, “you can git! Tf
ever we see you here cgain we'll hang you!”
“Gentlemen,” plaintively replied the man
on the rail, “I’m willin’ to go, but ft’s only
about a hundred yards from here to the
township line. Would you mind carryin’ me
the rest o’ the way ?””—Chicago Tribune.
Fall Wear,
Chrysanthemums and the chrysanthemum
style of wearing the hair on football fields
will soon be equally popular.—Baltimore
Herald.
vey loafer hangs around some other
man who would otherwise work.—Atchison
*TOBACCK
a FROM
?
“STAR
a
HORSE SHOE
“ ”
SPEARHEAD
“ ’
STANDARD NAVY
co rT)
6 - ”
PIPER HEIDSIECK
Se 99
BOOT JACK
ie UJ
DRUMMOND NATURAL LEAF
5 ”
OLD PEACH& HONEY
“ ae”
’ ROBBY SPUN ROLL
6“ ”
JOLLY TAR
E.RICE. GREENVILLE
66 oF
GRANGERTW!ST
2 Geuwcer Twsr lhes being equal to one of others mentioned.
“Good Luck,” «Cross Bow,” «Old Honesty,”
ee ae ea
Cross Tie,” « Ole Varginy.” 3
TAGS MAY BE ASSORTED IN SECURING PRESENTS.
Our new illustrated
CATALOGUE OF PRESENTS
ee
containing Tags, and send wy so Presents to
= @ ill
Best for the Dowels.
No matter what ails you, headache to a
cancer, you will never get well until your
bowels are put right. Cascarets help nature,
cure you without a gripe or pain, produce
easy, natural movements, cost you just 1¢
cents to start getting your health back.
Cascarets Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put
‘up in metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C.
stamped on it. Beware of imitations.
Popular Belle.
Tom—And you say she is a great belle?
Jack—You bet. Why, she actually has
four silk pillows stuffed with hair from four
different football players. — Philadelphia
Record.
To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. AM
druggistsrefund money if it failsto cure. 2he.
wwe z ‘a f
; a ea at
Your) 3 ae “
ahead UNIO : See ee
- - ; : #
ras ES 3.50 SH¢ wae A %e #
PAA JOR OFS' | Aes
y. J 6500: a
fo A re ry L Dos
Le fel —y" 7, | Boose Sem IS
oS 3 fae Vere @ Tari Eee Pe :
BS Ta pb? BE oes bor siyte, comgor Seascusshoane >
le. Allother oa of W. 1. Dongias ofa Century :
BS i f i other takes sold at and glad $8.00 and $3.0 Ee r=
et Ae v apenas bea prices: excelled aes
Be 4 Cieaeceegse Fe ve
A fe eh auainciion than olber cnet aS ¥
Bo ES Seite ¥
Ban 2 ot ‘so high ee aere patation f Ser
Bo 8 oe oy eee oe ~
eA Bea Donel Sccnftmonay is tue We raya been piace =
Pe eke By Doeiserate siey inthe W fe Dauglan $0 se
Saree HY, fneeeerent ao hae $0 ant "
Bes = aes teeta PAW \
- Sree eet ct, ae ifaearn tant Ge a < 5
BS Mek rasan oe wert Fant Colon 3
SZ tem a3 ho Sa Sates Srv eae sos PAY
aes Eola be 3 Downion vores Sree eg”
5 ay —— hoon tore Ameri ee
i a aces ate a ey in Americar cities pelt Cxrateo
E -—) =o Pompebeaten nares ing darect fr Feea
is oo pet sta oh. Decghas cheer witht from factory]
. 7) By Sonat no teamped en Nanton, Sonean eas
. TN on, Feenbe of sien Seta
es Galea ee rriage. Take Soa
ii ; beavy, medi eat ee ae oon ake mene ~
Siig WX. Do saat tet: paseo Se net
sink senoincsen OD ee LEN 4
-~ Mass XGEY
FAVORITE HYMNS
« PRESIDENT
McKINLEY:
Nearer, MY Gad To Thee
ABSOLUTELY FREE
AL THE WORDS, ALL THE MUSIC. |
McKinley Music Go,, SAvAcing Son Ae
NEW STORY BY ZANGWILL.
You will find ft in the
November “Number ‘of
410 STORY BOOK.
‘Ten complete stories by famous living authors
for Lo conte “Amone November comtrioutors
Sto israstZangwi t authorof “Cbileren of tar
Gheno;" Henry Tyrrell, editor of “Judge;”
Gericude -Potier Tranisls, author of The
Gertrude Pouce Tranigis, author of | Phe
Dorothy Dix, Sara Beagmont Kennedy, Julie
Teuitt Biehop and cehers, wl buys a years
subscription. 12 numbers. 120 stories ieee than
Toure per story, send ftw. ae ATOR Y
BOOK, 167 Dearborn Street, CHICAGY, 1
PENSIONS ‘on age, disability and Widowhood: P-L.
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