The Gazette

Saturday, October 15, 1904

Cleveland, Ohio

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Member Ohio Legislature, 1894 to 1896. 1896 to 1898. 1900 to 1902. TRADE SHORE COUNCIL CLEVELAND THE OAZETTE 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. For the benefit of a writer in an Indianapolis exchange, we will say that Miss Rachel Walker is an Ohio girl, a native of Cleveland, and has been very successfully studying and singing in Europe (not in New York) for four or five years or more. And now it is announced that the great B. & O. railroad has given Maryland's "Jim Crow" car law a "jolt" that is in a fair way to establish a splendid precedent for other like corporations in southern states having similar laws. May the good work continue. We are much pleased to note the fact that our good friend, Editor Frank H. Warren, of the Detroit Informer, has swung his paper into line for Roosevelt and Fairbanks. Brother Warren is one of the most prominent Afro-American democrats. He announces his intention to support the rest of the candidates on the democratic ticket this fall. This we regret. That Alabama democratic congressman by the name of Heflin whose flagrant and uncalled for abuse of our people was published in The Gazette of last week, is another one of the southern blatherskites of the Tillman, Graves, Vardaman, Hobson stripe. A general distribution throughout the north among Afro-Americans of their malicious attacks upon the race will do the republican cause more good this month than all the spell-binders and literature to be furnished and other efforts to be exerted. SOUTHERN RACE HATRED. View the situation as we may, yet there is an undying hatred in the heart of the southern white man that ferments a growing disposition to crush and destroy the weaker race. Only the law which says "Thus far shalt thou go and no further," to-day serves as a restraining force to check the fury of embittered animosity while even the law is of little avail. Why, oh why! should such an unnatural propensity control the human heart in an age of Christian light, of civilization and progress? Why should a people professing all the hallowed endowments of spiritual and religious life surrender themselves to a passion, the vilest and most brutal of animal instinct? A harmless and inoffensive people are smitten, spurned and despised all the day long, that one needs pause and wonder why this inhuman and man-hating spirit that looks with the venom of the viper upon the poor and humble outcast of the world. There are those who are ever ready to condone this spirit of persecution against Afro-Americans and insist that leaders of the race might well find matters about which to write and speak without agitating this question. But this is the vital question before Americans, and it appeals to the judgment and humanity of every good citizen to bestir himself for the life and liberty of the people. At no period in the history of the Negro in this country has there been a patient willingness on the part of our white neighbor in the north to hear and concern himself in regard to the brutal and unprovoked outrages perpetrated against our people of the south. But the evidence is daily at hand and none so blind that he who runs may read. The question of race equality is confronted and opposed at every instance by the southern white man, and in that opposition today is meant the right to abuse and degrade the black man with impunity and if the slightest protest is offered against the outrage, the bugbear of social equality is made the issue. In almost every town and city in the south the most worthy Afro-American citizen may be insulted, knocked down and kicked, and if the matter is carried into court, he is at once charged with putting himself on an equality with white men, or he is branded as an impudent Negro attempting to dispute for rights upon terms with a southern gentleman. As men born with the instincts of noble manhood, Afro-Americans in obedience to a natural impulse can but repel unjust assaults made upon them in the spirit of cowardly meanness. But if he dares to contend for the sacred right of justice and fair play he is beaten and mobbed with impunity. Every day facts attest the shamefulness of this terrible and alarming truth. Prof. S. G. Marcus, a most amiable and excellent gentleman and a recent teacher in the "Colored" schools of Memphis, Tenn., was quietly passing along on Main street and quite unexpectedly was knocked down by a ruffian in the presence of hundreds of white citizens. Mr. Marcus was quite conscious of having given offense to no one, yet not a voice from lookers on offered a word in protestation against the act. Had the professor attempted to resent the outrage or to stand in his own defense the mob would have sought his life. Now, why at all was this dastardly assault made; why should a peaceable, well-behaved citizen, living in his own country and under his own government, be thus treated? We answer simply because he belongs to an oppressed race. And, when we tell of these things, tell what we know, there are clever, Christian white people of the north who are ever ready to condone the evil and to palliate in some way the wrong and if possible place our people under blame. Thousands of Christian white people in the north at once busy themselves and justify a toleration of these outrages by placing the blame upon the Negro. But let the matter be reversed and black men show themselves thus cruel and unfair in their dealings with our white neighbor and blood would flow like a resistless tide from every street and corner. In many of the public squares of our southern cities Afro-Americans are now scourged and driven out even on the Lord's day of rest. They go to the magistrates' courts to look after their friends and kindreds who perchance were arrested on account of some misdemeanor and are themselves seized and sent to the workhouse as vagrants. What, too, is extremely shocking is the attempt of Afro-American attorneys to see after their clients and are arrested. Mr. Peter Beasely, an Afro-American lawyer, of Memphis, Tenn., appeared at the station house to look after an old woman held in confinement. He was denied the right for the time being. The attorney insisted on seeing his client then and was knocked down by the patrolman and beaten almost to insensibility. He entreated his assailant to desist his blows and was finally locked up on the charge of disorderly conduct. Under existing circumstances while this intensity of race hatred is so defiantly demonstrating itself redress is impossible. Watson on Democracy Roosevelt stands in the open and dares Parker, defiantly, almost mockingly, and Parker meekly stays out of the fight. It is curious to note that Mr. Parker does not once mention the name of Jefferson, Jackson, or any other great democrat. Judge Parker pleads for greater favors to the manufacturers. Great God! Are they never going to get enough? That Cleveland crowd is hungry; it has been "out" a long time; woe unto the people when that predatory band get their clutches upon the government again! Harrison reduced the public debt by a quarter billion dollars, and Cleveland was not long in adding more than Harrison had taken away. What other party ever unloaded all of its principles at one quick throwdown as they did at St. Louis?—Extract from Watson's letter of acceptance. Gov. Vardaman's State "Broke." The great state of Mississippi after an uninterrupted democratic reign of over two generations finds it has $1.56 in the treasury. This is the state of Vardaman and John Sharp Williams, who are now having so much to say about the lack of republican ability to financially steer the ship of state at Washington.—Alabamian. And this enormous sum has been reduced to 76 cents with the teachers of the state waiting for past due salaries and school closed to the children of those whose toil has made that rotten borough what it is. And the country knows that if Parker is elected, Vardaman or Williams may be the financial head of the government and put this great country in the same fix they have Mississippi. The people will not make fools of themselves, however.—Mobile, (Ala.) Weekly Press. The B. & O. R. R. Vs. Maryland's "Jim Crow" Car Law Baltimore, Md.-The B. & O. railroad has suspended the "Jim-Crow" law of this state. It is asserted upon very competent authority that the federal laws which govern interstate commerce render of no avail the "Jim Crow" act passed by the Maryland legislature last winter. Afro-Americans from other states traveling into and through Maryland over the B. & O. need not change their seats unless they want to: Upon the advice of attorneys the railroad company has instructed conductors not to molest Afro-American interstate passengers. If the Pennsylvania road will take similar action Maryland and Gorman will be effectively rebuked. It is said, that it has. President Roosevelt's Testimony. "I know of the bravery and character of the Afro-American soldier. He saved my life at Santiago, and I have had occasion to say so in many articles and speeches. The Rough Riders were in a bad position when the Ninth and Tenth cavalry came rushing up the hill, carrying everything before them. The Afro-American soldier has the faculty of coming to the front when he is needed most. In the civil war he came 400,000 strong, and I believe he saved the union."—President Roosevelt. Ex-Gov. Black to Defend Hannah Elias. New York City.—Former Gov. Frank S. Black has been engaged as associate counsel to defend Mrs. Hannah Elias, the Afro-American, in the suit instituted by John R. Platt, the aged millionaire, to recover $700,000, which he alleges was extorted from him by threatening to expose their relations. It is said that Black received a retaining fee of $15,000. The suit is now on the regular calendar of the supreme court, and it is not likely to be reached for trial for at least two years. "Sure!" "A man who is good enough to shed his blood for his country is good enought to be given a square deal afterwards."—Theodore Roosevelt. THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1904. NEWS NOTES. NEWS NOTES. DOINGS IN THE BUSY WORLD CHRONICLED. Items Gathered from the Different Sections of the United States and Foreign Lands. It has been decided that the United States government shall not at this time intervene in the administration of the Congo state as requested by the distinguished memorialists who recently petitioned to the president to investigate King Leopold's administration of affairs there. Charles L. Knobedler, of New York, has received from the French government a medal for bravery. The honor was conferred for saving people in peril of death by drowning in 1901 and for courageous conduct at a fire in Neufchateau, in 1903. For abusive language from the conductor of a Brooklyn trolley car and a refusal to give 20 cents change, a woman has secured damages of $1,000 from the company. James Wilson and a nephew, both from Pennsylvania, who were traveling in Yellowstone Park, came suddenly upon a bear in a timbered part of the park which attacked them. The boy was crushed to death and Wilson was so badly torn and bitten that he died soon after. Preliminary surveys by engineers in the employ of the city of New York are being made and reports have been submitted to the aqueduct commissioners to increase the yield of the Croton watershed by building therein another enormous reservoir nearly seven miles long and which, it is estimated, would store more than ten thousand million gallons for use in Manhattan. Five submarine torpedo boats built in Massachusetts have been shipped by rail from Jersey City. "West of Chicago" is the destination expressed upon the way bill. Valued at nearly $4,000,000 the torpedo boats occupied 17 new steel flat cars and six box cars, the appearance of the entire train being not unlike the caravan of a circus. The boats were shipped in sections. Secret service operative John E. Washer, who was on duty at Oyster Bay during the summer and who was brought to western Pennsylvania to hunt alleged counterfeiters, has arrested six persons charged with counterfeiting in the last two weeks. Fire has destroyed the theatre at Basel. It was the finest play hhouse in Switzerland, but only four blackened walls remain. Robbers dynamited the bank at Freeland, Ind., and it is reported secured $20,000. The safe was blown open and looted and the entire side of the bank building was blown out. J. Isaac Bickel and his son were struck by a train on the Pennsylvania railroad at Muhlenberg station, near Reading, Pa. The son was killed and the father sustained injuries from which he died. The Monongahela works of the American Sheet and Tin Plate Co. at Pittsburg will resume operations. Five hundred men will be given employment. The plant has been closed down since July 26. Gen. Matt W. Ransom, former United States senator and minister to Mexico under Cleveland's last administration, is dead. The end came at his home, Garysburg, Northampton county, North Carolina. Fresh trouble has broken out in German Southwest Africa. The Withois tribesmen, who had hitherto been faithful to the Germans, are in revelt. Explosions occurred in an ammunition factory at Siegburg, Prussia, in which three persons were killed and eight others injured. It is supposed the explosions were due to a short circuit in a wire in an electric loader. Henry B. Metcalf, prohibitionist candidate for governor of Massachusetts and the candidate of the party for vice president in 1900, is dead. He was 75 years old. Mrs. John Angell, who created a sensation a few years ago by bringing suit against the heirs of Jay Gould, saying she was the widow of the multimillionaire and demanding a share of his property, is dead at Rouse's Point, N. Y. The suit was discontinued in 1897 and one woman who had participated in promoting the case was found guilty of attempted blackmail. Mrs. Angell admitted she had never seen Jay Gould. The annual report of Gen. George B. Davis, judge advocate general, to the secretary of war shows the total number of trials by general court-martial during the year to have been 4,249, being 1,026 less than in the preceding year. Secretary Hay and Sir Chentung Liang Cheng have begun to lay the foundation for a new Chinese exclusion treaty and it is expected that the convention will be ready for submission to the senate at the approaching session. The treaty will, it is understood, replace all existing law on the subject. As the result of a fire which completely destroyed an amusement resort near the world's fair grounds and communicated to the roof of the Forest Park hotel, 350 guests in the latter building were aroused from their sleep and hurried from the building. Sparks also fell in the live stock forum of the world's fair and it was only by prompt work that the firemen succeeded in preventing a general conflagration. At Manila the mass meeting of Filipinos called to consider Philippine independence has been postponed. Teodoro Sandico, a former member of Aguinaldo's cabinet, who in 1899 signed the order for the massacre of all foreigners and Americans in Manila, and former Gov. Reyes, of Arba province, and about 1,500 Filipinos, most of them clerks, gathered at the appointed time, but did not organize. Believing he had been deceived by his wife, Alfred Fryer, manager of a hay and produce company, shot her fatally in their home at Newark, N. J. Fryer then turned the revolver on himself and blew out his brains. Contraband of war is to be carried by the Japanese steamer America Maru when she sails from San Francisco for the Orient. The vessel will go crammed to her hatch combings with freight, the most of which will be carried at the risk of the Japanese government. Material to make powder in large quantities will be included in the cargo of the steamer and she will carry a large shipment of steel. Miss Bessie Wilson, who was drowned at Virginia Beach recently, was the youngest daughter of the late William L. Wilson, former postmaster general, instead of his niece, as at first reported. A dead body supposed to be that of Martin Norther, of Benton Harbor, Mich., was found near Hobart, Mich., with a bullet hole through the head. Norther left Benton Harbor a few days ago to sell a horse. He since wrote his wife he had sold the horse and was on his way home. All evidence points to murder and robbery. The district court at Bozeman, Mont., has admitted the will of J. N. Tilton to probate. The income from the estate will, in accordance with the provisions of the will, be used for the adequate celebration of the Fourth of July in Bozeman. The Prussian ministers of public works, the interior and commerce have rejected a petition for the erection of "skyscrapers" in Prussian cities. The First national bank of Claysville, Pa., has closed its doors in consequence of a run. National Bank Examiner C. W. Robinson has been appointed receiver. Albert J. Adams, the former policy king of New York, has been released from Sing Sing prison after having served nearly 18 months of a one-year and nine months sentence. The employees of the Reading (Pa.) Eagle have received $50,000, which the late owner of the paper, Jesse G. Hawley, willed to them. The amounts received range from $100 to $8,000. Grove Hurlbut, one of the most remarkable characters in the Berkshires, is dead at his home in Pittsfield, Mass. Hurlbut was 84 years old. He could neither read nor write, but amassed a fortune estimated at $100,000 through shrewd trading. The secretary of the interior has issued an order directing that the 130,000 acres of unsold lands of the Red Lake Indian reservation in Minnesota be placed on sale immediately under homestead entry at $4 per acre. Fred J. Keferty, of Atlantic City, N. J., indicted for killing John Biddle in a quarrel over the latter's wife last May, has committed suicide in jail at May's Landing, N. J., by cutting his throat. Keferty boarded with Biddle. The latter became jealous, a quarrel arose and he was shot to death. The United States brig Boxer, the first of her class, was successfully launched at the Portsmouth (N. H.) navy yard recently. The Boxer is to be used as a training ship by the naval academy at Annapolis. A terrible storm swept the coast of Honduras for three days beginning September 29. The city of Puerto Cortez suffered great damage and all settlements from that city to Ceiba were badly damaged. Several enormous landslides were reported. The banana crop is reported ruined. Acting under instructions from the coroner, the police have taken into custody Rudolph Fritsche, who keeps a little saloon at 723 Tenth avenue, New York City. Fritsche is charged only with being a suspicious person, but the police say that in his saloon, it is suspected, whisky was sold which contained poison, and that this whisky is responsible for the many deaths that have occurred in the neighborhood recently. Gen. Crozier, chief of ordinance of the army, has received reports of tests of a bullet proof cloth, the conclusion of all of which is, that the weight, discomfort and expense, together with the only partial protection afforded by this armor, render its use for the individual soldier prohibitive. Catherine, 2 years old, daughter of ex-Mayor Schuyler Colfax, is dead at South Bend, Ind., the result of being fed impure milk. Another daughter died from the same cause. While riding home from school on his bicycle at Chicago, 14-year-old Frederick Woodrich was run down by an automobile and fatally injured. Since January 1 of this year 80 automobile accidents have occurred in Chicago. Nearly every one is attributed to reckless scorching. In some cases the machines that maimed or injured persons in their course were speeding at the rate of 30 or 40 miles an hour. Three fatalities are included in the list. An evangelist movement to embrace all the slum sections of Greater New York, to be inaugurated within a month, at a midnight mass meeting in some centrally located theatre, has been announced by Rev. Newell Dwight Hillis, of Plymouth church, Brooklyn. It has been decided to give the greatest dog show ever held in the west during the opening month of the Lewis and Clark exposition. Burglar's blew open the postoffice safe at Wabash, Minn., and escaped with nearly $700 in cash and about $500 in stamps. Col. James P. Averill, national junior vice commander of the Grand Army of the Republic, is dead at his home in Atlanta, Ga. Schwartz, Schiffer & Co., glove manufacturers, with a factory at Glowersville, N. Y., have been petitioned into bankruptcy. It is one of the leading firms in the trade and the liabilities are reported to be $500,000. C. J. Cassimus, a wealthy retired fruit dealer, was run over and killed by a street car in North Montgomery, Ala. Eye witnesses say the man deliberately walked upon the tracks. The body was horribly mangled. Jealousy on the part of a boy $2\frac{1}{2}$ years old against his baby sister, one month old, led to the death of the latter at the hands of the boy. The tragedy occurred in the family of Nicholas Robinson at Nyack, N. Y. The boy crushed his sister's head with a blow from a statuette. At Peoria, Ill., the jury in the Corrington will case, in which the heirs sought to break the will, returned a verdict giving the estate to the heirs. The will of the deceased bequeathed the entire Corrington estate of $250,000 for the establishment of a university. Winnipeg, Man., was visited recently by the worst fire in its history. In two hours two of the most important business blocks were destroyed, entailing losses estimated at nearly $700,000. No lives were lost. Dr. Leo Vogel, secretary of the Swiss legation at Berlin, who has been appointed Swiss minister at Washington, will be the youngest diplomat of his rank at the American capital. He is 41 years old. Two million Dutch cheese are reported to have been purchased at Gouda, Holland, on behalf of the Japanese government, for the use of the army. Coins belonging to a collection from Portland, Ore., have been sold at auction in New York City for nearly $7,000. There were only 561 pieces in all, the prize of the collection being an American silver dollar coined in 1804. Collectors came from many cities to bid on this rare piece and it fell into the possession of a Chicago man for $1,100. All Over the World PEOPLE ARE ARRANGING TO VISIT THE St. Louis World's Fair PENNSYLVANIA "Look at the Map" VANDALIA World's Fair Short Lines Correspondents Wanted. The old reliable Gazette desires an active agent and correspondent in every city and town in Ohio and neighboring states having a number of Afro-American residents. We are especially desirous of hearing from persons in the following cities: Zanesville, Springfield, Plaqua, Bellaire, Galipolis, Cambridge, Lima, Toledo, Portsmouth, Circleville, Delaware, Hamilton, Sandusky and other places where we have none. Write to the editor of The Gazette, Blackstone building, Cleveland, O., and terms will be sent promptly. Our readers can oblige us greatly by sending the address of any good person or persons in any of the cities named above or others, to whom we can write relative to the matter. Lowest Excursion Fares Over Pennsylvania Lines Ever Offered to Any World's Fair are in effect this month, tickets to St. Louis being sold as low as a cent a mile, on advertised coach excursion days. Excursion tickets good fifteen days, sixty days and the season are on sale daily. Obtain details from Geo. W. Weedon, D. P. A., 1 Euclid avenue, Cleveland, Ohio. HOME-SEEKERS' EXCURSIONS To South and Southeast via Pennsylvania Lines For full information about Home-seekers' special low fares to points in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North and South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia, apply to Geo. W. Weedon, D. P. A., Cleveland, O. Travelers' Reasons For Taking Pennsylvania Lines To St. Louis World's Fair: First-class service insures pleasant trip. Excursion fares to St. Louis daily. Only a few weeks more of the World's Fair. Consult Geo. W. Weedon, D. P. A., No. 1 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, O. St. Louis World's Fair For rates, time of trains, and information concerning hotel accommodations, call at city ticket office, No. 1 Euclid avenue, or address Geo. W. Weedon, district passenger agent. Penn. Ry., Cleveland. WONDERFUL DISCOVERY Curly Hair Made Straight By TAKEN FROM LIFE: This wonderful hair pomade is the only safe preparation in the world that makes kinky or curly hair straight as shown above. It non-removes hair straightening out or breaking off. cures dandruff and makes the hair grow long and silky. Sold over forty years and used by thousands. Warranted for straightening kinky hair. Beware of imitations. Get the Original Ozonized Ox Marrow as the genuine never fails to bring it that healthy, life-like appearance so much desired. A toilet necessity for ladies, gentlemen and children. Elegantly perfumed. It is the best and most economical. It is not possible for anybody to produce a preparation equal to it. Full directions with every product. And dealers or send us 50 cents for one bottle or $1.40 for three bottles. We pay all express charges. Send postal or express mail to us. We make sure you paper when ordering. Write your name and address plainly to OZONIZED OX MARROW CO., 76 Wabash Ave., Chicago, Illinois. Please mention this paper (THE GAZETTE when writing. SPECIAL INDUCEMENT DURING OCTOBER. 448 CENTRAL AVE. ```markdown ``` Teeth Extracted positively WITHOUT pain. During OCTOBER we will give you 10 per sent, discount on all work over $1.00, providing you cut this advertisement out and bring it with you. This offer expires October 31st. We are not competing with cheap advertising scientists, but with first-class dental offices at less cost to you. EXAMINATION AND EXTRACTING FREE Hours: 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. by: Sunday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Cuy. phone: Central 3392. [Picture of a woman with a hat, surrounded by an ornate border]. $ \sigma $ For the benefit of those who wish to have their life read by the world's greatest life reader, one that can tell you all that you wish to know, give you luck, change your life from evil to good, reunite the separated, restore a lost love, draw to you your sweetheart, husband or wife, make people do as you wish them. In fact this wonderful WOMAN is the Greatest on Earth. Now if you want to find out what your future life will be and what your past has been, and want to have it changed from evil to good, send at once to this wonderful medium. Send lock of hair, date of your birth and 25 cents in silver, and receive your life written from cradle to grave. Do not send postage stamps. Address all letters to MRS. DR. WHITE. 1917 E. Pratt St. Baltimore, Md. BLACK SKIN REMOVER. REGISTERED IN PATENT OFFICE U.S. BEFORE AFTER A Wonderful Face Bleach. AND HAIR STRAIGHTENER. both in a box for $1, or three boxes for $2. Guaran'ted to do what we say and to be the "best in the world." One box is all that is required if used as directed A WONDERFUL FACE BLEACH A WONDERFUL FACE BLEACH. A PEACH-LIKE complexion obtained if used as directed. Will turn the skin of a black or brown person into two shades lighter, and a mulatto person perfectly in forty-eight-hour shade or two will be noticeable, but not turn the skin in spots but bleaches out when maintaining beautiful without continual use. Will remove wrinkles, freckles, dark spots, plumps or bumps or black heads, making the skin very soft and smooth. Small pox pits, tan, liver spots removed without harm to the skin. When you get the color you wish, stop using the preparation. THE HAIR STRAIGHTENER that goes in every one dollar box is enough to make anyone's hair grow long and straight, and keeps it from falling out. Highly perfumed and makes the hair soft and easy to comb. Many of our customers say one of our dollar boxes is worth ten dollars, yet we sell it for one dollar a box. THE NO-SMELL thrown in free. Any person sending us one dollar in a letter or Post-Office money order, express money order or registered letter, we w.l. send it through the mail postage prepaid; or if you want it sent C. O. D., it will come by express. 25c. extra. In any case where it fails to do what we claim, we will return the money or send a box free of charge. Packed so that no one will know contents except receiver. CRANE AND CO., 11 West Jackson Street. Richmond, Va. THE BEST ICE CREAM, SODA WATER, FLOWERS, CANDIES, Cigars AND Light Lunch AT I. B. BOWMAN'S, No. 569 Central Avenue, OPPOSITE LAUREL ST. J. A. ROGERS, FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER, 474 Central Ave. State License, No. A 304. Central 3399. Cleveland, O. CARRIAGES FOR ALL PURPOSES. d 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 special. Every mystery, revealed also, also becomes a special. Removes all trouble and estrangements, unites the separated and causes speedy marriages. $1,000 challenge to any medium who can exceed her in her startling revelations of the past, present and future events of one's life. Remember, she will not for any price face the consequences of her faults 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 upon sickness, change in business, and specialization in business, especially in valuable and reliable. She reads your deathy - 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 over met. She tells whether your present sweetheart will be true to you and if he will marry you; if you have no 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 plain manner, and in dead trees. Mother might know the success of their husbands and children: young ladies should know everything about their sweethearts and intended husband. Do not keep company, marry or go into business until you know all: do not let silly religious serpies prevent your consulting. Macamie is the 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. Header, do you ever notice that some people seem to have good luck all the time, and no matter how lucky you are, 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 Medium, while the successful people, in all Mediums, have been 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 distressed persons and has brought thou Box 958. Indian Territory. Frank W. King, UNDERTAKER AND ARTERIAL EMBALMER, Illinois License, No. 1229; Ohio State License, No. 573. Class A. W. W. GEE, ASSISTANT. OFFICE AND RESIDENCE. 662 CENTRAL AVE. Carriages Furnished for All Occasions. Phone. Cuy. Central 3732 W. PATRONIZE THE "Gem" Restaurant, No. 91 Sheriff St. James W. Crawford, Proprietor. SPLENDID MEALS SERVED! One Meal, 20c.; Seven Meals, $1. TRAVELERS' REGISTER Trains on all roads run on Standard Time. NICKEL PLATE. The New York, Chicago & St. Louis R.R. TICKET OFFICES: 28 Public Sq., 531 Pearl St. and Stations. Eastbound. Daily 2 4 6 Pearl St. Station...8 15pm 1 50am 7 55pm Broadway Station...8 30pm 2 05am 8 20pm Eucled Av. Station...8 47pm 2 18am 8 36am Westbound. Daily 1 3 5 Eucled Av. Station...6 01am 11 05am 7 23pm Broadway Station...6 25am 11 26am 7 50pm Pearl St. Station...6 30am 11 31am 7 55pm Cleveland Union Station. Pennsylvania Lines Foot of Bank Street. TICKET OFFICES at Union Station, Eucled Av. and Woodland Av. Stations. New City Ticket Office, Eucled Av. Cor. Public Sq. THROUGH TRAINS RUN AND FOLLOWS CENTRAL TIME Daily. (Daily except Sunday) From Cleveland to Leave. Arrive. Pittsburg & Bellaire.....*7 00 am *11 20 am Salem & Pittsburg.....*8 00 am *8 30 pm Salem & Pittsburg.....*5 00 pm *11 30 am Philadelphia & New York.....*5 00 pm *11 30 am Baltimore & Washington.....5 00 pm *11 30 am Pittsburg, Bellaire & East.....*11 00 pm *4 30 pm Baltimore & Washington.....*11 00 pm *4 30 pm Atlanta Accommodation.....*5 05 pm *8 00 pm Pitts, Phila, & New York.....*11 30 pm *5 00 am Baltimore & Washington.....*11 30 pm *5 00 am Akron, Columbus & Clin.....*8 10 am *6 00 pm Indianapolis & St. Louis.....*8 10 am *6 00 pm Millersburg & Columbus.....*12 05 pm *12 00 pm Col. Clin. Ind. & St. Louis.*8 00 pm *7 30 am "THE ST. LOUIS LIMITED" VIA "Big-4 Route." Leaves—CLEVELAND, 5:00 P. M. (Daily). Arrives—INDIANAPOLIS, 11:45 same night. Arrives—ST. LOUIS, 3:30 A. M. next morning. Arrives—KANSAS CITY, 5 15 next afternoon. Arrives—DENVER, 11 A. M. second morning. With Fine Vestibule Coaches, Drawing Room and Buffet sleeping Cars to Indianapolis and St. Louis. One of the fastest and finest trains in the country. 5 Fast Trains to Columbus, 4 to Columbus, with Sleeping and Dining Cars. Local sleepers to Columbus and Cheinanin on train No. 25, leaving at 9:30 every night. *Daily*: Trains from and to Cleveland. Leave. Arrive. Col. Cin. Ind. & St. Louis' D'15 5:35 a.m. 1:40 a.m. Col. Intermediate & Intermediate. 6:00 a.m. 1:15 a.m. Col. Cin. Col. Cin. 7:25 a.m. 10:30 a.m. *Col. Spring'15* Col. Cin. 12:35 p.m. 3:00 p.m. Indianapolis & St. Louis. 1:15 p.m. 2:30 p.m. *Exp. Fl.* Ind. Peo. St. Louis' 5:09 p.m. 3:01 p.m. *30th.* Cen. L'd. Col. Col. 7:25 a.m 7:40 p.m Gallon to Cleveland. 9:30 a.m. To Gallon and columbus. 4:00 p.m. *Col. Spring' Day.* Col. 7:25 a.m. 1:15 p.m. Exposition Flyer 7:25 a.m. and 1:15 p.m. Limited trains don't stop at South Water Street. Get Tickets at Big Four Office. 116 EUCLID AVE Phone Main 911. LOCAL DEPARTMENT 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 GAZETTE's advertisements before making purchases. Business men who advertise in this paper should have the patronage of Afro-Americans. The fact that they advertise is assurance that they want it. Local reading notices (advertisements) ten cents a line (six words in a line). Cleveland, Saturday, Oct. 15, 1904. Purchase "The Gazette" at PUSHAW'S News Store, Cuyahoga Building. Open Sunday. GOODMAN'S News Depot, No. 586 Central avenue, cor. Sterling avenue. Open Sunday. BOWMAN'S CANDY STORE AND ICE CREAM PARLOR, No. 580 Central Ave. near Sterling Ave. Open Sunday. F. VALENTINE'S Grocery Store. No. 366 Central Ave., between Perry and Harmon St.' ADAMS & HAWKINS' Barber Shop, No. 452 Erie St. N. HEXTER'S News Depot, City Hall Building, cor. Wood and Superior streets. Open Sunday. S. H. MOODY'S News Store. No. 387 Superior treet, second door west of Bond street. Open Sundays also. FOR RENT—ROOMS—Two nicely furnished rooms for rent at No. 397 Central avenue, across the street from Charity hospital. Convenient for two gentlemen each. Mrs. R. Crowler has returned from St. Louis. Nothing does the work so beautifi- ally as Crown of Glory Hair Pomade. If you want "the news," you have to read The Gazette; so subscribe for it. Mrs. C. S. Royal, of No. 215 Craw- ford road, formerly of Blaine street is visiting in Fremont. The alleged Rover Safety Rack Co. seems to have gone "roving" for good. More anon—possibly next week. It will be startling, too. John H. Mason, of Allen street, died Monday. Funeral Wednesday at 2 p. m. from St. John's church, Rev. J. M. Gilmere officiating. Miss Dazalia Underwood and Mrs. E. F. Montgomery leave Friday for New Castle, Pa., to participate in a concert of the Paul Lawrence Dunbar Reading circle. O. Wilkerson and C. George, of Painesville, and Mr. Bryant, of Wickliff, were in the city Sunday. Nelson Morgan spent Sunday evening and Monday in Wickliff. Mr. Henry Baltimore, of Camden, N. J. was in the city last week, the guest of his brother-in-law, John A. Fields, No. 282 Central avenue. He was en route to Virginia for a visit. William Nelson Williams, of No. 472 Woodland avenue, died Sunday, Oct. 9. Funeral Wednesday. The remains were placed in the family tomb at Evergreen cemetery, Painesville. Undertaker Frank W. King returned Thursday morning from Chicago in excellent health, in spite of the fact that he was seriously ill with rheumatism most of the time while there. See Mr. J. H. Marcus' advertisement elsewhere in this paper. He has in his employ as a salesman Chas. H. Sealès, one of our hustling young men. Mr. Marcus handles only the best of goods, and at the most reasonable prices. Messrs. Ed. Turner, of Quebec street, and Fred Sampson, of Sterling avenue, spent four days in Chicago, returning the first of the week very enthusiastic over their trip. Ed says he saw many styles of hose. Ask him which kind? Booths were opened at 8 a. m. Thursday for the first day of registration. They were open until 9 p. m., with the exception of a respite from 2 to 4 p. m. Other registration days will be next Thursday, Oct. 20, and Friday and Saturday, Oct. 28 and 29. Rev. J. M. Gilmere has been returned to St. John's church for another year, Rev. W. J. Johnson, of St. James' church, East End, placed on the superannuated list, and Rev. W. T. Maxwell appointed his successor by the recent Troy A. M. E. conference. Round trip tickets to points in southern and southeastern states at considerable less than the one way rate are on sale via Pennsylvania lines on November 15th. For full information about rates, time of trains, etc., write or call on Geo. W. Weedon, D. P. A., Cleveland, O. C. Gibbs, who was found with a hole in his head last week Wednesday evening on the corner of Brownell street and Euclid avenue, and who was said to have dropped dead with heart disease, was evidently knocked in the head by foot-pads. He was taken to Cincinnati Friday for burial. Mr. Ernest O. Orsburn has resigned his position as secretary of the Y. M. C. A. at Chattanooga, Tenn., and is en route to Chicago via Lexington and Frankfort, Ky., where he visited Drs. Robinson and Hunter and Underwood, formerly of this city, Cincinnati and Springfield, where he visited other friends. George A. Myers, of the Hollenden house barber shop, sustained serious injuries through a fall down the stairs of a Euclid avenue residence Wednesday night. Myers fell from the top of the flight to the bottom, fracturing his left leg in several places and also sustaining a fracture of his right leg. He was removed to Huron Street hospital, where the broken legs were set. Joe Soskin, the merchant tailor at No. 522 Prospect street, near Perry street, makes the finest and best fitting suits from $15 up and pants from $3 up. He also does cleaning, pressing and repairing in the most thorough and satisfactory manner. If you want to be pleased and at the most reasonable figures, give him a call at once. See his advertisement elsewhere in this paper. The 8 a. m. and 4 p. m. trips of the Cleveland touring car have been discontinued, but the other trips will be run the same for some time to come. The beauties of fall are to be seen on many of these trips and this time of the year is certainly about the most delightful in which to see the beauties of the Forest City and the suburbs. The car leaves daily at 10 a. m., 12 noon and 2 p. m. About two hours are consumed on each trip. Services at St. Andrews' Mission Sunday; baptism at 10:30, holy communion at 11 and Sunday school at 12 noon. Evening prayer and sermon on the "Holy Bible" at 7:30. Good music at all the services. Mrs. Vanbrankle is now organist. A new organ has been recently purchased and is much appreciated. A new society has been organized called the Loyal Workers. Mrs. Todd is president; THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1904. Mrs. J. H. Jackson, vice president; Mrs. Robbins, secretary and treasurer. Because she didn't reciprocate his love, an Afro-American by the name of Jackson, for whom the police are looking, attempted to kill Jennie Thomas on Sterling avenue last week Thursday evening. Miss Thomas is employed on Kennard street and started to visit a friend. The fellow caught up with her on Sterling avenue. After declaring his love, he pulled a revolver. The woman ran and he began to shoot. The street was well filled with pedestrians and it seemed a miracle that no one was hit. E. W. Sellers, who has been visiting his mother and brothers, of Arlington street, for about ten days, left for his home in Montezuma, Ga., on Wednesday for a brief stay. "E" says those Georgia "Crackers" are especially bad just now as a result of their hatred of President Roosevelt. They dislike particularly and greatly his friendly attitude towards our people. "E" says it was a culmination of the animosity of the "Crackers" in his immediate neighborhood that compelled him to make his recent visit here. He contemplates returning to Cleveland at an early date with his family to reside. The New York American Transcript, an Afro-American democratic weekly or rather campaign paper had the following in its issue of Oct. 8: "Mr. Daniel S. Young, a prominent democrat, also secretary and general manager of the Kenmore club, of Cleveland, Ohio, paid a visit to New York a few days ago in the interest of the democratic cause in Cleveland. Mr. Young is a prosperous business man, conducting one of the largest catering establishments in Cleveland. Mr. Young states that the colored people of his city have great faith in Mayor Tom L. Johnson. He further states that Mr. Johnson is their friend and is willing at all times to come to their rescue." The "Emancipation committee's" report shows that instead of $300, as currently reported last week, the Old Folks' Home was netted only $100 as a result of the recent celebration at the armory. By far a larger crowd was in attendance at this affair than was present at the charity ball, given earlier in the year at the same place for the benefit of the Old Folks' Home, which netted over $181 for the home in addition to the very nearly $40 which Blue, Fleming, Crawford & Co. got. The report of the recent celebration shows that $12.75 was paid for printing posters, dodgers, "etc." and $3 for distributing the posters and dodgers; $35 for the armory; $7 for horses and carriages; $36 for music; stamps, etc., $2.85, and badges, 70 cents, making the total expenses only $97.30. And only $100 cleared for the home. After all that "big crowd" at the armory meant mighty little in dollars and cents no the Old Folks' Home, according to the report of the Emancipation celebration committee. Will our people ever wake up? James Franklin Perkins and Mary Elizabeth Taylor, daughter of Mrs. Florence C. Taylor, of No. 499 Lake street, were married Wednesday evening at the bride's residence by Rev. W. J. Johnson of St. James' church, in the presence of about two hundred guests. Both of the young people are well known and well liked. The result was one of the swellest social functions of recent years. The bride was attired in white Persian lawn trimmed with Valenciennes lace. She carried white carnations. The bridesmaid, Miss Viola Perkins, wore white India linen trimmed with Mexican lace. She carried pink carnations. Miss Bertha Blue played Menndelsohn's wedding march and the Episcopal ring service was used. The best man, Wm. Perkins, was a brother of the groom. The decorations, and they were beautiful too, were palms and smilax. The favors were: The bride's gift to the bridesmaid, a gold watch pin with initials. The groom's favor, a stick pin. The caterer in charge, McNaughton. There were many out-of-town guests from Duluth, Pittsburg, Youngstown, etc. The presents were numerous, costly and beautiful. Repeated careful scannings of the financial report of the recent Emancipation celebration at Forest Street armory issued by the committee, fail to tell where a good deal of the money went—if current report and rumors are to be credited. One is that $35 was paid to the Hon. John C. Dancy, principle speaker of the occasion, part of which was to cover the cost of his railroad transportation. We heard that the county republican executive committee had agreed to stand this item of expense, but according to the statement of a member of the committee, it was taken out of the celebration's receipts. The impression seems to be pretty general that even if there were 100 free admissions or even 150 or 200, the large crowd in attendance at the celebration that evening should have netted the Old Folk's Home at least $200 or $300, to say the least, instead of only $100. If the committee paid Dancy $35, as a member of it alleges, why was not that and other items of expense included in the financial report issued by the committee? The alleged payment of this money was one of the many excuses for the small amount of money netted the Old Folk's Home. There are all kinds of rumors as to the hundreds of people in attendance at the armory that evening and the hundreds of dollars received as a result of the sale of admission tickets. There ought to be an official investigation of that "charitable celebration" by some of our prominent citizens with a little backbone. Up to going to press, only $83 of that $100 had reached the Old Folks' Home officials, so they say. As to Discrimination at Keith's Theatre. Several weeks ago we wrote Mr. B F. Keith, of Boston, Mass., manager of a number of theatres throughout the country, including the one on Prospect street, this city, all known as Keith's theatres, sending him a copy of the issues of our paper of September 10 and 24, containing local items that announced the alleged mistreatment of Afro-Americans who had purchased seats on the floor of the local theatre. We could not believe the treatment being accorded our people, according to the many rumors, reports and statements of individuals who claim to have been so outrageously insulted and mistreated, was known to Mr. Keith, because in his eastern theatres it is a well known fact that as a rule his patrons are treated according to their ability to pay, behavior and generally fair appearance, without refer- ence to class or color. It seems that the gentleman very promptly took up the matter with the manager of his local theatre, R. H. McLaughlin, who on Saturday wrote the editor of The Gazette a letter requesting copies of the issues referred to. Of course we sent them to him, with the following letter: Oct. 10, 1904. Mr. R. H. McLaughlin, Keith's Theatre, Prospect Street, City: Dear Sir,—I send you herewith the two copies of my paper you asked for in your communication of October 8, and just received. Permit me to say that several other like complaints have been brought to this office since the publications of September 10 and 24, which I have not noted, because I still hoped that some one in authority at Keith's local theatre would see the injustice of it, as well as the legal responsibilities it entailed, and put a stop to it. A Mr. Scott, employed at Stone's shoe store, called and told me that he and his wife or lady company had been so insulted and mistreated that he had retained an attorney and purposed starting suit, and that others intended doing likewise. Yours truly, HARRY C. SMITH What the outcome of our correspondence with Messrs. Keith and McLaughlin will be remains to be seen. We hope to be able to announce it in our next issue. Devore Confesses His Crime. Woodsfield, O., Oct. 11.—Earl L. Devore, bookkeeper of the First national bank, arrested Sunday by Postoffice Inspector Craighead, charged with having taken a $5,000 money package from the safe of the postoffice, next room to the bank, has confessed the crime. The safe in the postoffice had formerly been used by the bank and Devore knew the combination. The postmaster in a conversation with Devore told him of the receipt of the package and that night the postoffice was entered and the money taken by the combination of the safe being worked. The money was found in Devore's trunk. Wagner Must Pay the Fine. Columbus, O., Oct. 12. The supreme court yesterday reversed the decision of the circuit court of Ross county in the case of the state of Ohio, village of Kingston, against Albert Wagner. The defendant in error was arrested for violating the Beal law and was fined $100 and costs. The circuit court reversed the common pleas court on the grounds that but 201 votes were cast when the town went dry, and 101 were for the proposition, which, it was alleged, was not a majority. The supreme court, however, thought otherwise and Wagner will have to pay the fine. Stands for Human Liberty "If I could be absolutely assured of my election as president by turning my back on the principles of human liberty as enunciated by Abraham Lincoln, I would be incapable of doing it and unfit for president if I could be capable of doing it. I do not expect to be elected president by those who would close the door of hope against the Afro-American as a citizen. If I am elected to this high office it must be on my record as the executor of the law without favors or discriminations. President Roosevelt. Killed His Children. Cleveland, Oct. 11. — Bohumil Schnepp, a Bohemian, 41 years old, killed his two children, Emma and John, 4 and 3 years old respectively, late Monday afternoon by shooting them through the head. Schnepp then went to Woodland cemetery where his wife, who died a year ago, is buried, and shot himself in the head. Schnepp will probably live. The motive for the crime was despondency and ill health. Schnepp has been ill for some months and has been able to work only part of the time. Incorporations. Columbus, O., Oct. 11.—Incorporations yesterday: Cleveland-Scranton Oil Co., Cleveland, capital $500,000. Crystal Manufacturing Co., Cleveland, change of name to Sanitary Supply Co. National Sign Co., Cleveland, capital $25,000. Purity Bottling Co., Sandusky, increase of capital from $10,000 to $25,000. People's Savings and Loan Co., Flushing, increase of capital from $100,000 to $200,000. Dayton Cremation Co. Friendship Park Co., Toledo, capital $12,000. Walcott Calls Fight Off. San Francisco. Cal.—Joe Walcott, the wetterweight champion, has declared off his match at Seattle and is on his way to Boston with his manager, Billy Pierce. Walcott hurt one of his hands in the fourth round in his recent fight with Joe Gans, which will keep him out of the game for two months at least. Billy Pierce will try and arrange a match with Walcott and Jack ("Twin") Sullivan when they come east. Must Elect an Auditor. Columbus, O., Oct. 12.—Secretary of State Laylin has ruled that an election for city auditor must be held in Springfield at the coming election. The present city auditor was appointed to fill a vacancy prior to the last legislative session which amended the election laws. The auditor resigned in August, but was reappointed with the expectation that he could hold over a year. Laylin holds that an election is necessary in November. Was Badly Beaten and Robbed. Upper Sandusky, O., Oct. 11.—Nathan Baum, a farmer of near Belle Vernon, was found in his barn Monday morning unconscious and bleeding at the nose and ears. A mark as from a blow was found over his right eye. His pocketbook, containing $75. is missing and two trunks in his room were broken open and ransacked. A Run on a Bank. Canton, O., Oct. 11.—An idle rumor that the Dime Savings bank lost $75., 000 by the failure of the Aultman Co. started a run on the bank Monday. All creditors were promptly paid. The bank officials say the bank carried no paper of the Aultman Co. and has incurred no loss. Peter Sells' Will Is Probated. Peter Sells Will is Probated. Columbus, O., Oct. 11.—The will of Peter Sells, the showman, probated Monday, leaves the bulk of his fortune to his only daughter, Florence Sells. Fifteen thousand dollars are distributed between three aunts. Gaitree Is Acquitted. Cincinnati, Oct. 12.—William B. Gatfree, ex-superintendent of rural free delivery for the Sixth district, who was indicted by the federal grand jury on a charge of embezzling $54, was yesterday found not guilty. 12 JOHN S. HALL, WATCHMAKER JEWELER. REPAIRING A SPECIALTY. 629 Central Ave., CLEVELAND, 0. The only Afro-American jewelry store in the city. Headquarters for Whiskey. Cloverfield, 12 Years Old.....$1 a qt. Birch Rye Whiskey, 8 Years Old.....75c a qt. Including a Quart of Wine. Julius H. Marcus, 421 Superior St. Cleveland, O. of Glory comade s, Softens. easy to handle. beauty's sake. c. Large bottles 50c. and be convinced. CO., Box 21, and, O. UNPARALLELED NIGHT SERVICE. NEW STEAMERS "CITY OF BUFFALO" "CITY OF ERIE" 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 INCLUDING BUNDAY LEAVE Cleveland 8 P.M. Buffalo 6:30 A.M. Buffalo 8 " Cleveland 6:30 " CENTRAL STANDARD TIME ORCHESTRA ACCOMPANIES EACH STEAMER Connectious made at Buffalo with trains for all Eastern and Canadian points, at Cleveland for Toledo, Detroit and all points West and Southwest. Tickets reading over L.S.A.M.S.R.y, will be accepted on this Company's Steamers without extra charge. Special Low Rates Cleveland to Buffalo and Ningara Falls every Saturday Night, also Buffalo to Cleveland. Ask Ticket Agents for tickets via C. & B. Line. Send four cents for illustrated pamphlet. W. F. HERMAN, G. P. A., Cleveland, Ohio. C. L. LAOY, WITH Sigler Brothers Co., Crown of Glory Hair Pomade Straightens, Softens. Makes the hair easy to handle. Try it for Beauty's sake. Trial treatments 10c. Large bottles 50c. Order to-day and be convinced. THE OSBORNE CO., Box 21, Cleveland, O. The Sigler Brothers Co., MFG. AND WHOLESALE JEWELERS. Will be pleased to have him on him who Watches, Diamonds, Jewelry, Table Cutlery, Opera Glasses Touting and fitting difficult eyes a special notice by skilful workmen. Old jewelry made guaranteed. All kinds of first-class Engraving patronage. Orders by mail promptly attended. Will make prices on all goods as No. 29 Euclid Ave., ANNOUNCING A WONDERFUL THE GAZETTE Magazine AN ASTROLOGICAL By ZA are pleased to have his friends and customers call on him when in need of Diamonds, Jewelry, Clocks, Silver-Table Cutlery, Umbrellas, Canes, Opera Glasses and Spectacles. ing difficult eyes a specialty. Watches and Jewelry neatly reuplied on short orimen. Old Jewelry made to look equal to new. All goods and works of first-class Engraving promptly executed. I kindly solicit your mail promptly attended to. res on all goods as low as the lowest. 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 short 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. NOUNCEMENT WONDERFUL OFFER. GAZETTE Delivered to You Magazine of Mysteries Deliver ROLOGICAL DELINEATION OF YOU By ZAMAEL, The Greatest L ANNOUNCEMENT EXTRAORDINARY!! Magazine of Mysteries Delivered to You for One Year, AN ASTROLOGICAL DELINEATION OF YOUR LIFE By ZAMAEL, The Greatest Living Astrological Seer, WERE YOU BORN Between December 23d and January 20th, included? If so, you were born in Capricorn. You are high-minded and self-confident; lover of the beautiful; love literature and science; public-spirited; independent and a natural leader; executive and aspiring. You are liable to become blue and depressed. Read carefully this advertisement and see how you can get your horoscope cast by the world's greatest astrologer, Zamael. WERE YOU BORN Between January 21st and February 19th, included? If so, you were born in Aquarius. You are a good judge of human nature; are fitted to deal with the public; are conservative; are fond of public entertainments; are a good companion; are practical. Zamael, the Great Seer, in your horoscope will show you how to achieve great success. You are inclined to be nervous, and have gloomy forebodings. It is absolutely necessary that you should have your horoscope. This advertisement tells you how you can get it. WERE YOU BORN Between February 20th and March 21st, included? If so, you were born in Pisces. You are sensible and thoughtful; anxious to gain knowledge; have mechanical ability; are positive in your opinions; when determined are successful. You can become very successful if you will follow the advice that Zamael will give you in your horoscope. Wealth, health and happiness come to all Pisces people when they listen to the Mystic Astrologers. Send $2.00 for our paper for one year, a year's subscription to The Magazine of Mysteries and an astrological delineation of your life. WERE YOU BORN Between March 22d and April 20th, included? If so, you were born in Aries. You are earnest and sincere: full of life and activity; can do wonderful things if you study occult and psychic forces. The horoscope that Zamael will prepare for you can help you in a wonderful way. We are offering in this advertisement to have this world-famous astrologer prepare a horoscope for you, send you our paper for one year, and The Magazine of Mysteries one year, all for $2.00. WERE YOU BORN Between April 21st and May 21st, included? If so, you were born in Taurus. You live in the realm of sensations and emotions too much; very fond of good living; can acquire great wealth if you go about it right. Zamael tells you how to become fortunate and happy. Learn how to get great occult powers. Send $2.00 immediately and get our paper for one year. The Magazine of Mysteries for one year, and your horoscope cast by the great astrologer, Zamael. --- --- NOW READ CAREFULLY. Our great offer to you is to send you our paper for one year, The Magazine of Mysteries for twelve months, and give you an Astrological Delineation of your life, all for $2.00. This is certainly n, tremendously liberal proposition, as our paper alone would cost you $2.00 for that length of time, the year's subscription to The Magazine of Mysteries (that wonderful magazine teaching Health, Wealth and Happiness) costs $1.00, and an Astrological Delineation varies in cost from $1.00 to $25.00, according to the reputation and ability of the astrologer. The horoscopes which we offer you are prepared by Zamael, one of the world's greatest living astrologers. Remember, we are offering to send to your home our paper for one year, The Magazine of Mysteries for twelve months and have your Future Told By The Great Astrological Seer, Zamael, All for $2.00. ASTROLOQY IS AN EXACT SCIENCE. It is the science that shows the young man or the young woman in what trade, occupation or profession they will best succeed. It points the way for the parent to educate their children and develop their natural capabilities. It keeps the old and young from making mistakes, and protects all against disease. Every living human being should have their horoscope cast by a reliable astrologer. We now place in your hands the opportunity of securing this horoscope, and we hope that you will grasp it. Every person is born in or under one of the twelve signs of the Zodiac and is thus influenced throughout life by the planetary conditions at the time of birth. In the horoscope which Zamael will prepare for you, he will give your natural tendencies and indicate what you should do to make life a success and to guard against disease. If you are now taking our paper and have paid for any time in advance, we will extend your subscription for one year and will also see that your subscription to that wonderful and interesting publication, the Magazine of Mysteries, is started immediately, and that your Astrological Delineation will reach you without delay. Be careful to give the exact date of your birth, mentioning the year and month and place of your birth. THE MAGAZINE OF MYSTERIES is the most wonderfully interesting monthly magazine of the Twentieth Century. It is entirely new and is the only publication of its kind in the world. It gives to all the knowledge of Perfect Health, Happiness and the Secret of Prosperity. We know that you will be interested and pleased with this wonderful magazine. The success and popularity of The Magazine of Mysteries is really phenomenal. The publication is only about one year and a half old, and in that short space of time it has secured one of the largest paid subscription lists of any monthly magazine in the world. We want you to be sure to understand our liberal offer. If you will immediately fill in the coupon in this advertisement and mail it to us promptly together with $2.00, we will send you our paper for one year, we will send you the Magazine of Mysteries for one year, and we will send you an Astrological Delineation prepared by the world's famous astrologer, Zamael. Address Subscription Dept., The Gazette, Blackstone Bldg., Cleveland, O. Gentlemen: I herewith accept your Great Offer, and enclose you $2.00 to pay for our paper one year, the MAGAZINE OF MYSTERIES for one year and an Astrological Delineation of my life by the world-famous astrologer, Zamael. You're truly DINNER FI OM 11 A. M. to 2:30 P. M. A Specialty Made of Short Orders and Home Boiled Dinners. Meals at all Hours. 31 Chestnut St. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT. Beli 'Phone E 1262 L. C & B LINE WITH CLEVELAND, O. WERE YOU BORN WERE YOU BORN Between May 22d and June 21st, included? If so, you were born in Gemini. You have a vivacious, restless and anxious nature; intensely aspiring and energetic; suffer much at times because you do not know how to use your wonderful occult powers. Mysticism is your realm. The full astrological delineation prepared by the astrologer, Zamael, will show you how to command the unseen forces which will bring to you health and happiness. JOE SOSKIN, MERCHAN Suits from $ Pant CLEANING, PRESS Tel. No. C No. 522 Prospect Cleveland Brewi Ernst Mueller, President. Jacob Kuebler, First Vice-President. Simon Fi 1100-1118 Amer MERCHANT TAIR from $15 up. Pants from $1 NG, PRESSING and REP Tel. No. Central 3512 L. 2 Prospect St., Cleveland THE veland & Sandu Brewing Co. Keller, President. John M. Leicht, Second V ebler, First Vice-Pres. Herman C. Baehr, Sec. a Simon Fishel, Gen. Mgr. -1118 American Trust Buil MERCHANT TAILOR. Suits from $15 up. THE Cleveland & Sandusky Brewing Co. Ernst Mueller, President. John M. Leicht, Second Vice-Pres. Jacob Kuebler, First Vice-Pres. Herman C. Baehr, Sec. and Treas. Simon Fishel, Gen. Mgr. CLEVELAND, O. EXTRAORDINARY BOV. Every Member of Your Friends Are Person for One Year, led to You for One Year. OUR LIFE Divining Astrological Sees CAREFULLY. And you our paper for one year, The and give you an Astrological Delineation are tremendously liberal proposition, as our that length of time, the year's sub- that wonderful magazine teaching Health, an Astrological Delineation varies in cost ation and ability of the astrologer. The led by Zamael, one of the world's greatest ing to send to your home our paper for seve months and have your Future Told all for $2.00. SIENCE. It is the science that shows the occupation or profession they will best suc- cate their children and develop their natu- m making mistakes, and protects all against have their horoscope cast by a reliable opportunity of securing this horoscope, person is born in or under one of the sequenced throughout life by the planetary horoscope which Zamael will prepare for you, indicate what you should do to make life a have paid for any time in advance, we and will also see that your subscription to the Magazine of Mysteries, is logical Delineation will reach you without of your birth, mentioning the year and ES is the most wonderfully Inter- wentleth Century. It is entirely of its kind in the world. It gives health, Happiness and the Secret will be interested and pleased the success and popularity of The Maga- publication is only about one year and has secured one of the largest paid sub- the world. and our liberal offer. If you will imme- ment and mail it to us promptly together for one year, we will send you the and we will send you an Astrological astrologer, Zamael. Address Blackstone Bldg., Cleveland, O. cleveland, Ohio. cept your Great Offer, and enclose per one year, the for one year and an Astrological famous astrologer, Zamael. truly, TELEPHONE MAIN 1269. During Brewing Co., Cleveland Brewing Co., Phoenix Brewing Co., The Bohemian Brewing Co., The Columbia Brewing Co., The Baehr Brewing Co., The Star Brewing Co., The Union Brewing Co., The Barrett Brewing Co., The Kuebler-Stang Brewing The Schlather Brewing RAORDINARY My Member of Your Family and Us Are Personally Interested. The Gehring Brewing Co., The Cleveland Brewing Co., The Phoenix Brewing Co., The Bohemian Brewing Co., The Columbia Brewing Co., The Bachr Brewing Co., The Star Brewing Co., The Union Brewing Co., The Barrett Brewing Co., The Kuebler-Stang Brewing Co. The Schlather Brewing Co. YOV. Every Member of Your Family and All Your Friends Are Personally Interested. . . . WERE YOU BORN Between June 22d and July 23d, included? If so, you were born in sign of Cancer. You have a sympathetic and emotional love nature; are model housewives or husbands; love home and family; can amass fortune and be very happy if you will give attention to psychic and occult powers. The full astrological delineation that we give, as per this advertisement, will give you the mystic way of having fortune and health. --- --- 15 up. s from $3 up ING and REPAIRING ntral 3512 L. St., Cleveland, & Sandusky ng Co. John M. Leicht, Second Vice-Pres. Herman C. Baehr, Sec. and Treas. el, Gen. Mgr. can Trust Building E MAIN 1269. Co., Co., ing Co., ing Co., ing Co., ing Co., Brewing Co., Att Brewing Co., Kuebler-Stang Brewing Co. The Schlather Brewing Co. DINARY!! Your Family and All nally Interested. . . ALL ONLY $2.00 Between November 23d and December 22d, included? If so, you were born in Sagittartus. You are earnest, honest, frank, jovial, fearless, combative, generous, friendly; very sympathetic and outspoken; you detest deception; are quick-tempered and impulsive. Be careful to curb your anger. You are often misunderstood. The astrological delineation that we offer you in this advertisement will help you, and will point the way to success and fortune. Send $2.00 for our paper for one year, The Magazine of Mysteries one year, and have your fortune told by Zamael. WERE YOU BORN Between October 24th and November 22d, included? If so, you were born in Scorpio. You have great vital forces; capable of endurance, have magnetic and hypnotic powers which ought to be developed in a scientific way. The most helpful men and women come out of this sign, and the world should rejoice every time a Scorpio person is born. The astrological delineation that we are offering in this advertisement will be of untold value to you. WERE YOU BORN Between September 24th and October 23d, included? If so, you were born in Libra. You are modest and retiring; your inner nature is receptive, intuitional, sensitive and poetical; you are naturally persistent and competent; your foresight and judgment are excellent, and you can win success if you follow closely the advice given by Zamael, in the astrological delineation that we offer in this advertisement. WERE YOU BORN Between August 24th and September 23d, included? If so, you were born in Virgo. You have a cool, calm, confident bearing; you ought to be very successful, as you can excel in anything you undertake. You have everything to live for and can have prosperity and happiness by following strictly the advice of Zamael in the horoscope we offer to give you in this advertisement. Send us $2.00 to-day. It will pay you to do so. WERE YOU BORN WERE YOU BORN Between July 24th and August 23d, included? If so, you were born in Leo. You are jovial, sympathetic, free and friendly, kind and loving. Be careful and guard against selfishness. Your will power is very strong, and the horoscope prepared by the famous Zamael will show you how to develop and apply it properly. Read this advertisement and take advantage of this grand opportunity to get an astrological delineation of your life. --- 3 are a (KE A “THIN RED LINE.” Seuks’ Red Flannel Underwear Looked Like a. String of Coral Beads. ®omabody told Mr. Jenks that red flannel Morn next to toe skin would cure tre ruews amatiem from which he suffered. So he pur- @aased weveral sets of red flannel undergar aan Sete him that the hrm Gvarauteed the goods in evety particular. About two weeks later, says the New York ‘Bumes, Mr. Jenks revisited the shop, sought euk the proprietor and told his woetul story, “The goods are the best in the house,” de- stared tue proprietor. “Of course,” he said, a tae reasonable tone used on unreasou: able persons, “of course the shirts may have ahrunk or faded a little—” Shrunk! Faded!” bellowed Mr. Jenks “What do you think my wife said to me when 1 came down to breakiast yesterday ‘with one of them on?” ‘Tae proprietor looked bored._ ~Weu, sir,” said the aggriéved Jenks, “obs lacked et mea pninuterand then sata, “What is that little red line round your neck, John? It isn’t the baby’s string of coral "beads, is it?’” a . Just Wanted to Arrive. After Eugene Field’s return from his first ‘erp to Kurope, where he “spent his patri- mony Jike a prince,” and before he went to Wenver, he had a little close personal ex- Perience with hard times. One day he walked into a leading St. Louis hotel, and, musaring ‘himself before: the register, in’ acribed his name in his well-known copper- late chivography. The clerk had never Gas itn, but Ke read the name with « quick glance, and said: “Do you wish a foom, ifr, Field?” “No,” wasthe ausnes, Dinner? jo.” ‘Then may I ask what you do what?" continued the clerk. “I just wanted to arrive,” replied Field, solemnly; “1 had not arrived at a good hotel for many months. I feel better. Thank you,” and he ‘talked out with long, heavy strides—San Hvancisco, Argonaut. eee on Kansas City Southern Ry. Special Excursion Sept, 13, 20 and 27, Oct. 4 and 18, 1908, t Arkansas, Indian ‘Territory, Louisiana and Texas, very low one way and round ‘tip rates. e For further information, write to 8. G. Warner, G. P.& T. A. K.C.S. Ry., Kansas Gaz, Mo. Ree PO EOE SY __*Pat,” said the philanthropist of the mighborhood, “there is not a living cres- Bare but what appreciates kindness.” i exes your pardon, sor, but "my nose wore as sttaight a» ony man's till f troved te brush off a horse Rory tot was stingin’ the hind leg of a mule.”—Detroit Free Press. certains 1 am sure Piso's Care for Consumption saved my life three years ago.—Mrs. Thos Robbins, Norwich, N. ¥.- Feb. 17,1900. A good deal of the money that makes Mbuomare go is invested in’ wild oate— ack, ALL BROKEN DOWN. Wo Sleep—WNo Appetite—Just a Continaal Backache. Joseph McCauley, of 144 Sholto St., Ghicago, Sachem of Tecumseh Lodge, says: “Two years ago my health was com- pletely broken down. \ My back ached and was so lame that at times I was hardly able to dress mysel?, Dost my-appetiteand was unable to sleep. There seemed to be y There seemed to be Says: “iwo years ago my health was com- pletely broken down. \\ My back ached and was so lame tbat at £ times I was hardly able to dress myself. I lost my appetite and was unable to sleep. There seemed to be ins no relief until I took Doan’s Kidney Pills, but four boxes of this remedy effected a complete and permanenteure. If suffering humanity ‘knew the value of Doan’s Kidney Pills, ‘they would use nothing else, as it is the nly positive cure I know.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Sxwrs COUGH DON’T... DELAY TAKE a BL alae BALSAM : ses RS cee : ee ee Hera oe eaten eee cher ele ts tonne Western Canada’s Magnificent Crops ——=for 1904-—— sae f Dre! ANE a Notas The oat and baries will paren sbundantiy.< eater tart produse fot the growing of which the a Simatois unsurpassed, | EOC ™ a PSS. Amerivans have settled in daring the past three years. ‘Thousands of free H: steads of 160 sitevatinbis ia the best eyeieuturelcietricta. ‘tt has been that tbe United Stat ih sacotonmpete wheat wichls a very few youre Secures farm io Canada and become one of those Who will help produce it. t tion to SUPRRINTENDES eettbatom Ocewa tenets; orto FM. WONILANS, Law Dniling, Telede, Obie, “Authorized Canadian Goveroment Agent. WORTH-SOUTH- EAST WEST ‘YOU Wibk FIND ie 715 ex : WATERPROOF OlLED ChOTHING EVERYWHERE. RT The best matcrias shilled workmen and} st TOWERS shack Colsted es fonous the world over They are made in| TOWERS | secs porec menses pm |e LL OTHERS eaters u - Strawberry and Vegetable Dealers pa gas B™Ea MAKESISC" = PILESE = A Jersey mosquito caused the death of @ barber named Rosho Dorso at Har- rison. William P. Steele, of Princeton, Md., died a few months ago while setting up &@ monument over his wife’s grave. ‘The stone fell, crushing his head and chest. Emanuel Beveler, of Sterling, Il!., cut ‘his throat on his high collar. He was riding a bicycle, and in trying to avoid @ passing horse was thrown. In his fall his collar cut his throat. . While carrying a keg of beer intended THE UNITED STATES WILL SOON KNOCK AP THE DOORS OF CANADA FOR WHEAT. A Crop of 60,000,000 Bushels of ‘Wheat Will Be the Record of 1904. ‘The results of the threshing in Western Canada are not yet com- pleted, but from information at hand, it is safe to say that the average per acre will be reasonably high, and a fair estimate will place the total yield of wheat at 60,000,000 bushels. At pres- ent prices this will add to the wealth of the farmers nearly $60,000,000. Then think of the immense yield of oats and barley and the large herds of cattle, for all of which good prices will be “paid. i The following official ‘telegram was sent by Honorable Clifford Sifton, Min- ister of the Interior, to Lord Strath- cona, High Commissioner for Can- ada:— “Am now able to state definitely that under conditions of unusual diffi- Kenney, in Northwest a fair average crop of wheat of good quality has been “reaped and is new secure from sub- ‘stantial damage. The reports of in- Jury by frost and rust were grossly ex- aggerated. The wheat of Manitoba and Northwest Territories will aggre- gate from fifty-five to sixty million bushels. The quality is good, and the price is ranging around one dollar per bushel.” Frank H. Spearman, in the Saturday Evening Post, says:— “When our first transcontinental railroad was built, learned men at- tempted by isothermal demonstration to prove that wheat could not profit- ably be grown north of where the line was projected; but the real granary of the world lies up to 300 miles north of the Canadian Pacific railroad, and the day is not definitely distant when the United States will knock at the doors of Canada for its bread. Rail- road men see such a day; it may be hoped that statesmen also will see it, and arrange their reciprocities while they may do so gracefully. Americans already have swarmed into that far country and to a degree have taken the American’ wheat field with them. Despite the fact that for years a little Dakota station on the St. Paul road —Eureka—held the distinction of be- ing the largest primary grain market {n the world, the Dakotas and Minne- Sota will one day yield their palm to lair tei UNEARTH DEN OF SNAKES. French Workmen Find Nest of Rep tiles and Kill Over Four Hundrec of Them, A remarkable find of snakes has been made by a contractor whose mer are engaged in repairing some cana gates near Moulins, France. On lifting his coat from the groun¢ a serpent dropped from it and slic away under a large stone. He called to his men, who raised the stone, anc discovered no fewer than 23 adders which were immediately killed. The workmen then began to demol. isk part of the bank, with the result that in the course of the afternoor they discovered and killed no les: than 406 venomous snakes and viper: the smallest of which was ten inche: fong—within a space of 20 yards. Over 160 snakes’ eggs were also found; but mindful of the fact that the finder was entitled to a premium of three pence a snake, the artful workmen hatched out the eggs instead of destroying them. Altogether, they received sev. en or eight pounds for the dead rep. tiles. New Train-Runnina Record, The Paris - Lyons - Mediterranean Railway company will start on No- vember 1 an extra rapid day train, which will cover the 670 miles be- tween Paris and Nice in 12 hours and 34 minutes. The company maintains that such a long distance at such a high and continuous average rate of speed has never been accomplished in any country. At present the rec- ord is held by the Twentieth Century limited, between New York and Chi- cago, which covers the distance of 1,000 miles in 20 hours. THE POPE'S PHYSICIAN ENDORSES AN AMERIOAN REMEDY. Meet His Expectations. Dr. Lapponi, the famous physician to the Vatican, whose name has recently come so greatly to the front on account of his unremitting attention to His Holiness, the late Pope Leo XIII, and the high esteem and confidence with which he is regarded by the present Pope, His Holiness Pius X, is a man of commanding genius. He is more than amere man of science; he is a man of original and independent mind. Un- trammeled by the “etiquette” of the medical profession and having used Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People in his practice with good results, he freely avows the facts and endorses the value of this remedy with au authority which no one will venture to question. Dr. Lapponi’s Letter. “¥ certify that I have used Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills in four cases of the simple anemia of develop- ment. After a few weeks of treat- ment, the result came fully up tomy | ee For that reason t not fail in the future to extend _ the use of this laudable preparation . mot only in the treatment of other forms of the category of anemia or chiorosis, but also in cases of ueuras- eae on like.” ‘: ) GroserPe LaPpont, ‘ Via dei Gracchi 332, Rome. The “‘simpleanemia of development,* referred to by Dr. Lapponi, is of course, that tired, languid condition of young girls, whose development to womanhood is tardy and whose health, at that period, | is so often imperiled. His opinion of the value of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People at that time is of the highest scientific authority, and it con- firms the many published cases in which anemia and other diseases of the blood, as well as uervous diseases such as ner- yous prostration, neuralgia, St. Vitus’ dance, paralysis and locomotor ataxia have been cured by these pills. They are’commended to the public for their efficiency in making new*blood and strengthening weak nerves. After gach an endorsement they will be ac- cepted by the medical and scientifie world at their full value. E GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, 0O., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1904. } ° ° ADOPTED BY INDIANS. Tate Autumn Fashieckdi Paris |... | History In The Present Modes AKIS.—We are quite autum- nal over here in our choice of colorings. Darkest brown, shaded into brightest cop- per color, terra cotta and curious brick red shades FELCH LOL IE A is ees AKIS.—We are quite autum- nal over here in our choice of colorings. Darkest brown, shaded into brightest cop- per color, terra cotta and curious brick red shades 1 are conspicuous at some of the best houses. I say some advisedly, because each leading firm seems to have a specialty. I go to one in the Rue de la Paix, and I am told that the “Directoire” style is the feature of the autumn fashions, and that smoke and stone gray will be the favorite color; but a few doors farther on a tailor of equal fame informs me that the bolero is still to be worn and that browns and reds are the colors most in vogue. Yet another visit and I hear of a tight sleeve with very little fulness at the Ss el : JM peat EY \ ile ig a ih, (ROMA Pica A LOUIS XV. EVENING GOWN. Made of rose silk, mousseline de sole, lace and velvet ribbon. cuff; and in direct contrast I find some- where else a beautiful mode with a Tu- dor sleeve ending in a big puff at the elbow. The truth of it is the best cou- turieres are taking advantage of the revival of historical dressing and are adapting various modes to suit their individual clients and thus one firm Says one thing and a second another. And on the whole we see really exquis- ite productions. I think all are agreed on one point, and this is that faced cloth holds a foremost place on the list of fashion- ‘able materials. A week ago at the races there were still a few summery fabrics to be seen, but light, fine-faced cloths struck the real note of autumn. Many of these cloths are unlined, and fall by the weight of their folds; but such a tremendous amount of stuff is put into some skirts that it is neces- sary to use cloths of the lightest tex- ture. The many pleatings, tuckings and ruchings used on these cloth dresses are specimens of fine hand- stitchery; if they were not very well arranged they would be clumsy in the extreme, Velvet and soft chenille balls and silk buttons are among the favorite trim- mings and dainty little taffeta em- broideries are used for waistcoats as 1k ‘G \ iN Bs wk , y Hera co Va ina ts le es aS g: Ray tes GE pi ae Se s Ne 2s eae SE Nee SH A Na ee fp AK | fe alii Wh \ vv IL Jasoy Gol A DAINTY WAIST. HOSE among us who study the details of the new mod- els realize that modern de- signers are remaining more or less faithful to history. We see many revivals of de- tatle which were features of a tails which were features of the modes in vogue many years ago. Sleeves alone offer igamense food for ‘reflection. A year ago we tried very hard, without much success, to keep them voluminous, now, apparently, we are going to the other extreme and are adopting the short shoulder instead of the long one, and a curiously narrow effect instead of a wide, drooping effect across the chest. It is not, however, compulsory to adhere faithfully to de- tails of this sort, for they always bear alteration. Early models are generally more or less exaggerated and are toned down with good eifecc afterwards. But at the moment several features strike us. First the short shoulder I have al- ready mentioned, then the long three- quarter coat of various periods, the Directoire coat, the early Victorian red- ingote, the sleeveless jacket, the very full skirt and the velvet trimmnigs of the early Victorian era. For evening wear we cee again the Louis XVI. pointed court bodice in contrast to the loose Josephine robe. The Marie An- toinette styles also remain with us and fichus are as much beloved by the young as by the old. The trotteuse skirt is offered in many BY STRANGE ACCIDENTS. ‘Well as more gorgeous passementerie and gimp. A lot of coarse lace is being used with the fine-faced cloth dresses, chiefly Maltese or yak, dyed to match the frock in color. For instance, a bright shade of navy-faged cloth is made with a bolero showing insertions of medal- lions of heavy Maltese lace, dyed to the same shade, and decorated with velvet buttons in different sizes; the bolero is edged with little chenille balls and is fitted tightly into the back with a deeply swathed corsage of velvet, falling loose in the front over a waist coat of shaded blue and green velvet embroidery azu a soupcon of lace. The | Skirt is: prettilly pleated in at the hips jand is decorated with buttons round the feet where it is very full; it is worn over a soft brocade petticoat. Then I have seen a brown corduroy cloth, made in plain but very smart tailor style; the sleeves are very grace: ful and not quite tight. ihe cuffs and revers are of copper-colored embroid- ery. The basque is full and is Jonger in the front than at the back, finished with brown braid, three rows of which appear on the plain but long, full skirt. With this is worn a delightful tricorne hat in brown chenille, decorated with | shaded autumnal roses to tone with the | gilet of the same faded brown and cop per tones. t I must tell you of an afternoon toi- lette de visite in olive green cloth, the skirt is trimmed with graduated bands of brown and > een taffeta; this is worn with a bolero of cioth, decorated with the bands of taffeta, loose in the front and fitting at the sides and back into a tight, beautifully shaped band of green suede; beneath this bolero is a dainty blouse of cambric and the hat is of shaded velvet and plumes, Beautiful brocades will be seen in the toilette de visite and taffeta is by no means passe. We shall see fur trimmings later on, especially on the new paletots. Paquin is making a special feature of beautiful stoles of silver fox, and this is so becoming a fur. Lovely bo- leros are made of chinchilla and Direc- toire coats in velvet are trimmed with sable and ermine. There are very few capots worn; but small eighteenth century hats seem to daily becoming more popular, with big plumes at the side, while large Direc- toire hats will accompany the gowns of that period. Beautiful models of Louis XVI. bro- cades are favorite evening dresses and Worth is showing some wonderful ex- amples in bright and faded shades of vieux rose. ‘The Princess robe will, { think, gain favor both in cloth and velvet. As a rule the Parisian, for the street at any rate, likes quiet colorings and neat dressing. The neat tailor-made coats with short basques show quite plain sleeves with velvet collars and cuffs. There are many pleated skirts worn, and these are a little longer than those of last winter. Tweed and plaid skirts are to be seen in the Bois in the morning, with coats of plain cloth to harmonize in tone. Carriage wraps are gorgeous, and here chinchilla will be tremendously used in conjunction with painted chiffon, beautiful velvet and priceless laces. ANNETTE GIRVY. varieties, mostly box-pleated or kilted. It is longer than that of last winter, but still takes the upward tilt at the back. We have altered the corset but little of late; we have not lengthened the waist at the back, though it is long in front im accordance with the court bodice. To revert to the illustration in the hat I am one of the pretty and popu- lar simple shapes which do admirably for many occasions. This hat, which ‘is in pale French gray felt, shows the ‘new high crown, and is mounted on a deep velvet bandeau, which is not, however, visible. It is trimmed with soft taffeta ribbon, arranged in loops, and an extraorainarily chic note is struck by a cluster of velvet grapes. The arrangement of this ribbon does equally well on straw as on felt, but it is too late to purchase straws now, and I only suggest it for doing up an old hat. The hat sketched is pretty and becoming, and its simple lines de- note good taste. The blouse shows a pretty and modish design made up in green velvet. I~ : WAR | feeyZe | Vs) )) (ND ay) YY We Se Te eh ial | ait ah ] 4 i in W fs ua § : Wy Wy, ft, 3 f v4 YSSG’ tf ¢ A SIMPLE HAT SHAPE. The yoke and chemisette can be made either in lace, or in soft ecrue muslin, embroidered with white. The lower part of the sleeve should also be of lace or soft embroidered muslin to corre. spond, while in front there is a pretty trimming formed of straps and loops of green velvet. ELLEN OSMONDE. Right Under Her Very Nose. “He kissed you right before my face!” “Yes'm; right before mine, tuo.”— Houston Post. for a picnic in Reading, Pa., one day re- cently Elmer Kerchoff stumbled over a wire. The keg slippe¢ so suddenly that the jar disclocated his neck. Margaret Kirchbaum died of eating hot potatoes. She was in a hurry to go out and gulped several hot potatoes. She died in great agony. The autopsy showed that her throat and the lining of her stomach had been so badly burned that the swelling had caused her to choke to death. The newest hats are made of finest washable lawn and are put together in such a manner that they can be taken apart and washed. For Infants Children in Bears Use The for Signaturg Over Thirty Years of 2-4 ©" The Kind You Have Always Bought MEXICAN A MEXICAN Mustang Liniment | Mustang Liniment for Man, Beast or Poultry. cures Cuts, Burns, Bruises, ADOPTED BY INDIANS. Miss Jameson, of Rochester, N. Y., Becomes One of the Deer Clan of Senecas—Ceremony of Initiation. The unusual and picturesque cere- ‘mony of being adopted by an Indian ee iss the novel experience that came during last summer to one Rochester, N. Y., young women. Miss Mary Jameson, the pastor's assistant at the Third Presbyterian church of Rochester, recently returned from her summer home at Lotus Point, Lake Erie, which is seven miles from the Cattaraugus reserva- | ton. There for the last few summers Miss Jameson has been accustomed to visit the Indians and conduct ser- vices for them on occasional Sundays. ‘Because of her interest in, them and her friendship, which they have ob- served for several summers, the In- dians asked if they might not adopt her and give her an Indian name. | Accordingly, the day was set and pie. Indian rites were gone through with that initiated her into one of their clans. She was adopted into the Deer clan of the Seneca tribe of the Iroquois nation and given the name of Ah.wae-agwas, a name mean- ing “Picking flowers out of the water.” On her consenting to become their sister, two tall Indians stood one each side of her and discoursed at length in the language of the Senecas to the assembled company of Indians. Then one of them took her by the hand and walked her up and down between the rows of Indians, singing an Indian song, after which he conducted her to her seat and announced that hence- forth she was Ah-wae-agwas, their sister. A few days after the ceremony she was visited at her cottage by a com- pany of Indians, who presented her with an ancient Indian silver brooch, Each tribe of the Iroquois is divided into eight clans known as Wolf, Bear, Beayer, Turtle, Deer, Snipe, Heron and Hawk, and each tribe is a sort of secret fraternity, in which the mem- bers stand by each other in sorrow or Joy. |__A strange rule among the clans {s that members o: the same clan can- not marry. The children belong to tife clan of the mother. They not only call her mother, but they call all her sisters mother, and they call all her sisters’ children brothers and sisters. Pare te the neasun ten ie nok epares in their own clan. If marriages are unhappy, the parties are at liberty to marry again, and the mother has the sole right to the disposal of the chil- rrr A NEW FLYING MACHINE. Brazilian Rival of Prof. Langley Will Test His Contrivance Shortly—No Balloon Used. A flying machine designed by the Brazilian Alvarez has been completed in London and w'll be tested shortly. It consists of two winglike aeroplanes 40 feet in length from tip to tip, with a total surface of 400 square feet. These are attached to a bamboo framework by wire. The motor is two horse-power, run by petroleum, and there are two pro- pellers five feet in diameter, and two rudders, one with an up and down motion and one which moves from right to left. The entire machine weighs 150 pounds, No balloon of any kind is used. The machine will be taken aloft 5,000 feet by a balloon and then released. It is asserted that when the problem of supplying sufficient motor power is solved the duration of the machine's flight will be no less certain than the ‘run of a motor car. Lose Whiskers in Race with Death. | A wild ride through the blazing for- ests from the Hastings Sawmill com- ‘pany, near Sliaman, B. C., cost every ‘man on the train his whiskers and many of them lost their hair and clothes. They ran a race with death, and their escape was marvelous. | The price of structural iron is the lowest in four years. i you find meat and bread too expensive for you, try structural iron.—In- dianapolis News. eS | A Chicago man has taken out a patent on a new-fangled bread-basket. Whether this is for the use of bakers or dyspeptics the specifications fail to specify —Puck. A Jersey City nine-year-old boy, arrested for throwing potatoes at pedestrians ana breaking a window, was eentenced by the judge to be taken to the public bathhouse and washed. Horrible! igo “It do seem,” said Uncle Eben, “dat some migaty disagreeable people manages to prosper. Maybe it's because dey doesn’ ‘waste so much time bein’ sociable an’ tellin’ funny stories.”—Washington Star. eee “Don’t vou think helacks aplomb?” asked Mrs. Oldcastle. “Well,” replied her hostess, “I don’t know, but at the dinner the other night it did seem to be as though he couldn’t get enough peaches,”—Chicago Record-Her- “What mo’ does you want,” asks a colored philosopher, “than cotton ter clothe you, corn ter feed you, a shelter, wen it's rainin’, en a fiddle ter make you dance w’en you feels lonesome ?”’—Atlanta Const tution. See In looking over the effects of a Massachu- setts millionaire recently, his executors, who had bandled vast sums uatil they grew to scem rather commonplace, “discovered per- sonal Disa iritherto ‘unknown, to the amount of a million anda half.” ‘The inci- dent helps one to realize how Jarge a large fortune is. And yet the emotions of these executors were only such as poor folk may experience. Who has not known the joyful surprise of finding a dime or a nickel in an unused pocket —Youth’s Companion. Two Kinds. “In polities, aren’t you?” “Yes.” “H’m! Are you a point-with-pride or « Giew-with elecm?”-—Pack. ye J ee PR Ie, aa . tf hives SEP. fy j <5 a See i ROR a ee! : apes d ee ee Z RS eas Es ‘2 ong Gy 2 a As ih ae nS) > f ay "4 3 re d ; j i Ry ey. : Fees | Vier ca mI om 4 by vial ou ae aan ye TR Tee { fy i f a lt ye sae nS ee ae | 1 Ng OP Oi ee a 4 Me Co ree ae 4 NAM gD gS PE EF Ak ttre, BME ES SSF RUA RETIN SS, EP PIES EE PER REEL Fs of ff Pee st Pf ph ai pppe ds PL EL os Fe PRs, ae / / i { iy tees ff Young women may avoid much sick- . ness and pain, says Miss Alma Pratt, if they will only have faith in the use of s 4 ? Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. “Dear Mrs. Pryxrast:—I feel it my duty to tell all young women now much Lydia E. Pinkham’s wonderful Vegetable Compound has done for me. I was completely run down, unable to attend school, and did not care for any kind of society, but now I feel like a new person, and have gained seven pounds of flesh in three months. “T recommend it to all young women who suffer from female weak- ness.” — Miss Atma Pratt, Holly, Mich. % FREE MEDICAL ADVICE TO YOUNG GIRLS." All youn; ae at this period of life are earnestly invited to write Mrs. Pini ham for advice; she has guided in a motherly way” hundreds of young women; her advice is freely and cheerful, given, and her address is Lynn, Mass. Judging from the letters she is receiving from so many young girls Mrs, Pinkham believes that our girls are often pushed altogether too near the limit of their endurance nowadays in our public schools and seminaries. Nothing is allowed to interfere with studies, the girl must be pushed to the front and graduated with honor; often physical collapse follows, and it takes years to recover the lost vitality,— often it is never recovered. Be Whssnas Dtitenmn Gilet Saws ts Tints “Dear Mrs, Prinknam:—I wish to thank you for the help and Db efit I have received through the use of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vet table Compound and Liver Pills. When I was about sevent Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Cenpcand is the one sure rem- edy to be relied upon at this important period in a young girl’s life; with it she can go through with oaunaee and safety the work she must accomplish, and fortify her phy:ical well being so that her future life may be insured against Bickness and suffering, if we cannot forthwith inal 1 SH Ho feats ites it pena teratetcetepalsecom | ee“ ‘Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass, _ AAW ,L.DOUGLAS A UNION FOR A 2? sis $3.50 SHOES 5 Ha be Re fo Douglas makes more ‘eo yo BRS wb and sells aren :| ae $2.50 shoes than any othor manufacturer LO RN tema “eect eer Tari i Gecaune fe erect Baty SER EGR “Sou ticidtnerence beiweed tho thats hats ta'my factory ated Py STR my EE f° iia Ee ey TS'asR Tae ity Hold ile het dh ace wear totes 8 Ea i) find are’of sreaiet intrinsic value than any other $8.0 é cee Pi ‘gn the market to-day, aud why the sales tor the year ending s ead Suiy 2, 1904, were § ry e) Slee $6,263,040.00. S i ” oe aa W. 1. untees their value ty stamping bis name § Lae 2) 9s og ERR i) 8 paar na 2 . ‘Superior rin Fit, Comfort and Wear, B Ce et 3 “ Thave worn W.. at 0 shoes for the Jatt beioe vonre 3 m PE, winabestceseiaeetonn aed ten oe or tn, fort A a tm KB) a aae apeeieonees ae Mes ex ‘W. L. Douglas uses Corona Coltskin in his $3.50 ene NY Le ‘shoes. Corona Colt is couceded to be the fines. SN 2 Hi Patent Leather made. THE uN ay ; Fie sux ron caTatoouE orvive Foie, imvraovrions WORLDS OO oS i ow fo ONDER bY Mate GREATEST SHOE MAKER W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Macs. —-—] sie Se a RANGES 8 OS THE RELIABLE MAKE I SS S ae Correctly built of the right materials, they <i eAlcoe f} Save fuel and give years of satisfact , eS) OD cervice, Sueeteesll squsamentn By yar 609) | j ee | CATALOG FREE \(t=eesenmvee The Born Steel Range C 1 es eee m oteel hange Go. S ten I ay Originators of the Steef Range, Po CLEVELAND, - - OHIO (AEN ea Ny Vig earn) i eee ia CS eZ ) Historic Spot for Sale. A British camp, dating back prior to the Roman invasion, is advertised for sale. It has an area of 20 acres, and is more than 300 feet above the sea level. It served the troops of Caesar, the Saxons, Ethelred, Alfred the Great, and the soldiers of Cromwell. The pro- prietor asks $500 an acre. $$$ — — 4 Thildeen Se a, bee VAs oe ee ee ee en ee hard, but the doctor thought different and’ prescribed tonics, which I took iy the quart without relief. Reading one day in the paper of Mrs. Pinkham’s great cures, and finding the Sy naue described an- swered mine, I decided I would give Lydia |E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a trial. Idid not say a word to the doctor; I bought it apeltaun took it according to directions regularly for two months, and I found that I precaally improved, and that all pains left me, and I was my old self once more. — Litiim E, Sinciam, 17 E. 22d St., Chicago ILL” Big Four Route To oe St. Louis “The Way of the World” to the World’s Fair For information as to rates, hotels and boarding houses, address nearest Big Four Agent, or WARREN J. LYNCH, @. P. and T. Agent, Cincinnati, 0. A.N. K.-C ae 2043 PTT nt | Sane nts | 2 MeN EL aeln) i dea