The Gazette
Saturday, July 15, 1905
Cleveland, Ohio
Page text (machine-generated)
THE
TWENTY-SECOND YEAR. NO. 50.
HOUSE GOWNS AND OTHER GOWNS
ALONG GRACEFUL LINES.
THE busiest of women rest all over a few moments every day, that they may keep on with their busying in an energetic and able consisting of two puffs and a de frill. For a really summery appearan we prefer a less fussy design.
At the moment the shops are selli batiste and other thin patterns
manner—and also because a bit of rest is so grateful to the truly energetic, the woman that works with her might instead of potters. And when a woman rests, has time to think, she wants to do it in a garment that will not distract from the refreshing success of toil. Wherefore, we have corsets removed, petticoat unhampering, the outer dress luxuriously. And everything should correspond. slippers be of the easiest and lightest, corsets removed, petticoat unhampering, the outer dress luxuriously. One may take the social cup with boudour friends attired in short silk petticoat and tea-sack. Such a petticoat is short and shows the gay, coquettish slipper plainly, fits nicely about the hips, is very frilly and voluminous at the bottom. Sacks are of a variety, and all charming when notunchy in the back. As a rule they are short and have a girlish appearance, and as a rule the sack matches the skirt. If the petticoat is of silk, a sack like it is very pretty, although one of white net or transparent material also is very pretty. Often with the lingerie waist a lingerie petticoat is worn, and this is a dainter fashion. The sack may either sport a yoke or have trimming to stimulate one.
The long negligee gown may be on the Empire order or the Watteau style. And now the Japanese kimono slowly vanishes from favor, being superseded by a Chinese coat, a queer, shapeless thing that is neither long nor short. But it is made of beautiful silk, and richly embroidered. This coat is thick, and warm enough to be worn in the winter, as well as on a cool summer day.
The present liking for elbow sleeves and square neck comes in well for the negligee, as very simple ones having these features possess a certain amount of style. The sleeve shown in the figure without the coat is very popular,
THE TRIM GIRL OF TODAY
THE TRIM GIRL OF TODAY
Now the summer girl must be neat and trig, rather than blowsy and trying to wear an exaggerated holiday air. She must be careful of her appearance, eschew untidy hair and rumpied apparel. She may play all she likes out of doors, but she must wear a veil to keep rebellious locks in place, she may keep off tan from arms and hands with long gloves. Maybe it is because she has to live up to her hat, such a neat little affair as it is. It sits closely down on smoothly coiled hair, trimmings and
part of the brim sometimes come well down over the back. The turbans seem universally becoming, may be said to be the most popular feature of this season's millinery. Our design shows an attractive and rather unusual model, with trimming fore and aft.
It is worth while to consider that a woman is able to get up her summer outfit from cheap materials in a highly satisfactory way. In winter thick stuffs must be high-priced to be presentable, but summer materials of low price are often extremely pretty. We have in mind some pretty chambrays and cotton volles in the way of suits that are as pretty as need be. They cost but a few cents a yard, it takes but a few yards to make them; and there for a trifle one gets one's gowns. Employ a dressmaker at home—if you can't make them yourselves—and in a trice you will have trocks of good style. Wear shoes, belts and stocks of
T
N
consisting of two puffs and a deep frill. For a really summery appearance we prefer a less fussy design.
At the moment the shops are selling batiste and other thin patterns at prices much reduced, and now is a good time to buy and make one's summer negleige. Until the hot weather is really upon us we do not seem to know what is the best way to make the summer costumes. All fashions are settled by now; we have had full opportunity to see what is worn.
To turn from house dresses. A lovely traveling dress recently brought to our notice consisted of Russian-blue poplin a waist of pongee in the same shade. It was all so cool and comfortable looking and a suit that would so easily shed dust. It seemed just the thing for summer travel.
There is nothing smarter for country wear this summer in the way of shirt-waist suits than the ones made of calico. Their first cost is slight—but the laundry bills! For the girl that wants to look on at athletic sports but take no part herself, the white serge suit is a favorite. White linen is a craze this year, some girls are aiming to appear in it the summer through; a tailor suit of moderate weight for day time, the thinnest of handkerchief linen for evenings. Linens are declared to be in fashion for all occasions save traveling.
Slowly we are learning to appreciate the little cape wraps of silk and other light-weight materials. Sometimes lace is used for the cape, sometimes linen is employed, again thin cloth. They are so convenient to throw on of a summer evening, and really are more becoming than the boa of such long service. Of shot silk they suggest ye olden days, and are as picturesque and becoming as the old-fashioned trippers worn by our grandmothers. Gilt belts are worn, and when good, are quite expensive. Narrower belts are promised, and it is more than probable this fall we shall have the princess effect, the waist fitting over the skirt without the use of a bodice or belt of any sort.
late mode, wear one of the trim small turbans above eulogized, and you will be what the summer girl should be above all else—dainty and fresh.
Many of the wash shirt-waist suits come in three pieces; the shirt-waist suit itself and a bit of a summer coat; oftenest a bolero, with wide elbow sleeves or close-fitting suits.
For dressier wear, silk is in favor, a little silk bolero suit and a variety of walstes would provide madam for almost any occasion the season might present. Two hats are enough; the small one for tailor suits, the larger, more elaborate for afternoon and evenings. However, we find many that approve of the turban for all hours of the day, it is such a novelty they are too fond of it to give it up solely for outing and simpler costumes.
Electric Traction Wins
Electric Traction Wins.
Since the world's fair test in Chicago, when a steam engine in a tug of war contest succeeded in dragging an electric locomotive back, the development later has steadily progressed until it is used at all times where the electric locomotive assumes superiority. It has been so greatly increased in size, weight and power that recent tests prove it to be more than able to hold its own. Between a specially selected Pacific type steam passenger engine and the latest model of electric locomotive the latter came out well ahead in all of the trial runs. In addition the weight of the trains behind the locomotives was 56 tons greater for the electric factor than for its competitor, although the greater weight of the steam locomotive made the total weight of the trains approximately equal.
Mr. Knox—You don't want to meet Mrs. Gaybird, you say?
Mrs. Knox—No, I pick my friends.
"Well, she's just the sort of woman you and your friends would like to pick to pieces."—Philadelphia Press.
Worth Much.
"They say worth makes the man," philosophized Uncle Allen Sparks,
"but nowadays he has to be worth a million to be much of a man."—Chicago Tribune.
In Union There is Strength.
Good Picking.
Worth Much.
CLEVELAND O., SATURDAY, JULY 15, 1905.
FRESH OHIO NEWS.
Written by The Gazette's Regular Correspondents—Personal, Political, Social, Church, Literary, and Lodge Notes of Interest.
Massillon—Rev. H. W. Edwards, of this city, writes The Gazette that he is "very ill with malarial fever."
Oberlin—Quarterly meeting at Rust church Sunday—Miss Blanch Moore, of Lorain, visited Mrs. Stewart last week—Mr. Madison Cowan, his son, James, and daughter, Pathe, were in Cleveland last week—Mr. Quincy De France is visiting his mother, Mrs. De France—Roy Godette and Clarence won most of the prizes July 4.—Mr. Lawson will visit his old home in the southern part of the state—Mr. T. Jones will spend the summer at Chauquaita, N. Y.—Bessie Collins, of Elyria, visited Jaieta Quinn July 4.
Warren.—A reception was given in Foresters' hall tuesday evening. Dainty refreshments were served. Among the guests from out of town were: Mr. and Mrs. Squires, Columbus; bus. and Mrs. Burns, Sharon, and Robert Heath, Akron. Several were present from Youngstown. — Fred Bailey, of Cleveland, visited his parents Sunday. — Olive Ormes spent the 7th in Youngstown. — Ethel Mountain will leave for Cleveland Sunday to spend the summer with relatives. — Otis Hawkins, of Franklin, Pa. is the guest of Katie Milton. — Edna Wooten, of Pahawne, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Ormes. — Wanda Wawne is visiting Youngstown last week. — Mrs. Thomas Green entertained the Misses Malone, Milton, Davis and Mr. J. W. Davis, of Youngstown, Thursday evening. — Olive West is spending a week with her uncle in Cleveland. — Jesse Ormes left for Jacksonville Wednesday evening.
Ravenna—Master Turner and Alvin Alexander, of Akron, visited their aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Byrd, Sunday, returning in the evening accompanied by their grandmother, Mrs. C. Alexander, and Master Oscar Lewis—Mrs. Mary B. Lewis visited in Cleveland several weeks in 1981, and will William, of Pittsburg, are spending the summer with Mrs. L. A. David—Mr. John Cox has moved his family to Cleveland—Mrs. W. C. Sutton and daughter, Mattie, Mrs. Sampson and Mrs. Mary B. Lewis are spending the summer at Sandy Lake. L. E. Jackson, T. Young and Miss Mable Moore spent Monday in Akron, the guest of Mrs. C. Pligrim—Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Johnson, of Lorain, spent the week of the 4th with Mr. Johnson's mother and brothers, returning Tuesday—Funk Rokoubou spent Sunday in Akron with Miss Mable Moore his sister, Mrs. R. Sinclair—Mrs. A. T. Johnson has moved to 169 East Beverly street—[Mall news on Mondays. Ed.]
Akron—Mrs. Mamie Riddle, of Canton, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. T. Anderson; also her brother, Mr. E. Smith, of Massillon. A luncheon was served in his honor—Mr. and Mrs. Alexander left for Duluth, Minn., on the steamer Northwest. They will return about September 1. Mrs. Jennie Dallas and children, of Columbus, recently visited her sister, Mrs. J. R. Jackson—Mrs. H. Lyon is able to be out again—Miss Sadie Mann spent the 4th in Cleveland—Mrs. Z. W. Mitchell returned Sunday from Dayton. She was a delegate to the Women's Federation meeting, representing Akron ladies—R. M. Brown, of New Brighton, will attend business college here and will stop with Mr. and Mrs. Z. W. Mitchell—Mrs. Fanny Christian and her baby daughter died on Thursday and Sunday evening respectively. She leaves a husband and ten sons to mourn her loss. Funeral Saturday. Rev. R. A. Jones officiated. The Second Baptist church will open a camp-meeting at Creston, July 16.—[Mail news on Mondays. Ed.]
Mt. Vernon.—Mr. John Liggins and daughters, Alice and Mamie, of Mansfield, spent the 4th with Mr. and Mrs. J. Lathrans.—Mr. George Kees, of East Liverpool, visited Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Booker on the 4th.—Mr. Eugene Crawford, of Mansfield, spent last Tuesday here.—Miss Ethel Simmons has been quite sick. Neuralgia.—Mr. Clyde Turner is visiting Cadiz, Blaire and Smithfield.—Mr. Jackson Tate is still quite ill.—Miss Hazel Moxley, of Bellefontaine, was the guest of Mrs. Jennie Davis on the 4th.—Mrs. Jennie Davis is visiting in Glenville.—A party of young people had a delightful outing at Banning's Isle.—Mrs. Margaret Hackley left last week for Cleveland, Windsor and Chatham, Canada.—Mr. Fred Gaskins has had a bad attack of asthma and heart trouble. The two Misses Johnson, of Newark, were guests of the Misses Beulah Jones and Mary Croson early this week.—Mrs. Ralph Martin is improving.—Correspondent will please mail news letter on Mondays always. Not later in the week. Ed.
Cadiz.-Mr. Archie Strothers spent last week in Connellsville, Pa.-Mr. John Ballard is home from school for the summer.-Mr. and Mrs. James Smith were in Canton attending the reception of Mr. and Mrs. Blockran. Quarterly meeting was held at the A.M. E. church Sunday. Quite a number spent the 4th in Scio.-Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Lucas have returned from Newark.-Chriles Robinson, of Mastillon, spent the 4th with Miss Fletcher.-The K. of P. have a lawn fete at the school house the 4th.-Mr. Smithers and Miss Payne, of Wellsville, were married the 4th by Rev. Blackburn.-Mr. and Mrs. Sheaffers, of Cleveland, spent the 4th in Cadiz.-Rev. J. W. Johnson is visiting in Columbus.-The W. C. T. U. will hold a
GAZETTE.
gospel service at the First Baptist church Sunday.—Miss Alma White is visiting in Pittsburg.—Austin Wallace and Gracie, accompanied by Clarenza Harriet, spent last week in Pittsburg.—Dewitt Cunningham spent Sunday with Miss Laura White.—A large crowd attended the out-door meeting at the Old Ladies' Home Sunday.
*Salem.*—A surprise was tendered Mrs. Felix Williams July 5 in honor of her birthday. Those present: Mrs. John Green, Miss Sadie Green, Mrs. R. L. Jones, Mrs. T. H. Cyrus, Miss Minnie Stringfellow and Mrs. Sophia Jackson. Mrs. Williams received some very pretty presents.—The Masons of Massillon, Canton and this place will hold their second annual Lattice Hall fellowship of Miss Minnie Stringfellow, of whose mother has been visiting her sister, Mrs. R. L. Jones, returned home Thursday.—Mr. Edgar Buckingham returned from Lima Lake.—Robert Green, who spent the Fourth with his sister, returned to Cleveland Friday.—Jacob H. Venerable, formerly of this city but now of Ft. Wayne, Ind., spent the Fourth here with relatives.—Allen Endeavor league meeting was well attended. The next will be led by Miss Bessie Simpson.—The social given Saturday evening at Zion church was not a financial success.—Mr. Aaron Jackson, who spent the Fourth here, returned to Pittsburgh Sunday, where George Plater was working. George Plater, of Cleveland, is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Phil Plater.
Findlay—Mrs. Elthyn Collins left Monday for Detroit to spend the summer.—Mrs. Fred Poindexter, Mrs. Ball, Frank and Asey Poindexter, Wille Meadows, Ed Adams, Al Ramsey and four children spent the 4th with friends and relatives.—Eva Johnson and Amanda Banks are guests of Mrs. C. E. Wilson.—Mrs. Bertha Butler and little daughter, Ruth are visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Allen.—The W. M. M. society met at Mrs. A. R. Cooper's Friday evening.—Mrs. A. B. Woods entertained 14 Wednesday from 2 to 4 and Mrs. Day, of Lifen, spent the 4th with friends.—Oswald spent the 4th with his parents.—Mrs. B. F. Allen and daughter Jlara, spent the 4th in Detroit.—Mrs. Mattle Robinson left Monday for Mucknac Island.—Miss Minnie Dyer sent Sunday in Cincinnati.—Mrs. M. Davy left Wednesday for home, Marysville.—Miss Alice Simms has arrived from a month's visit with friends in Wilberforce, Xenia, Bellefortaine and Augusta, Ky.—Mrs. Lizzie Bowen, of Willisburg, Ky.—Mrs. Lizzie Bowen, of Willisburg, Ky.—Mrs. Hansburger, of Kensington, spent Sunday with Miss Emma Powell.—Mrs. George Edmonson, of Fostoria, spent the 4th with Mrs. Thomas.—Mrs. C. H. Johnson entertained Miss Emma Powell and Mr. Childers at dinner Sunday.—Mrs. Shelton, of Columbus, spent Sunday with her brother, Mr. Allen Lee.
East Liverpool—Lawyer White, of Sclo, was the guest of Miss Myrtle Booker last week.—Winfrey Evans, Robert Vaughn and Clarence Smith spent the 4th in Cleveland—Miss Alice Washington, of Allegheyn, is visiting Miss Pearl Smith, of the East End—John and George and Miss Martha Miller, of Cadiz, and niece Bernice, visited their sister, Mrs. P. T. Brown, July 4.—Miss Eva Brown was ill last week.—Mr. and Mrs. John Mosby, of Lisbon, and Tom Mosby, of Pittsburg, are visiting their mother,—Mrs. Sadie Robinson, of Steubenville, is here visiting.—Mr. Alfred McEntree and little son, John, are visiting his parents in Berryville, Va.—Mr. Chester Ormes, of Monessen, spent the Fourth with his parents.—Miss Jessie Dillard, of Lisbon, is visiting her sister, Mrs. Walter Allen.—Mrs. Frank Ormes is much improved.—A large crowd attended the dance in Steubenville on the Fourth from here were: Blanche Williams, Eydh Ormes, Myrtle Booker, Alice Minnis, Lottie Kess, Bessie Scott and Mrs. Helen Keys, Coalston, Hilary Keys, Robert Lacey, red Books, Taylor Keys, Fred Allen, The United and Dale Mickaway.—The United league met at Mrs. Lillian Smith's, of Wellsville, last week.—Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Richardson and children, of Wellsville, spent the Fourth with his parents near Alliance.—Mr. George Ormes spent a few days in Sandusky.—Mrs. Bell Prior is ill.
Mansfield—Henry Davis, of Cleveland, is here visiting relatives.—Mrs. Nellie Preston is well.—Robert Spencer has a very sore eye.—Daisy Mitchell. of Marion, is here for the summer.—Mrs. Poindexter has returned from Kenton.—Mr. Liggins, Mary and Alice Liggins were in M. Vernon, guests of Mrs. Jere Latham, the 4th.—Mary and Stella Hicks were entertained at luncheon Sunday evening by Miss Pointer.—Mr. W. Blair Dummore has purchased nice property on Crouse street to rent.—Ms. Emily Thomas is getting a divorce from her husband, Henry Thomas.—Miss Anna Smith, daughter of Mrs. Emily Thomas, was married to William C. Brocksmore, of Canton, recently. They came from Canton, went to the Rev. J. J. Dummore (white). He failed to have a license, so they had to get one here. The bride was dressed in white with a blue bow in her hair and carried a bouquet of red roses.—S. Daisy Barker is expected home this week, accompanied by Alice Howard.—Rev. B. A. Powell is better. He lives a mile from the church. A very hard rain came up Sunday evening at church time. Those who live across from and around the church sat at home waiting for the pastor to come and light up.—Thomas Payton is ill at Sandusky soldiers' home.—Miss Davis returned to Cleveland.—Grand rally July 23. Please hand the agent news on Sunday or Monday morning for the "old reliable," the best race paper in this section of the country.
$1.50 Excursion to Youngstown and
Mahoning Valley Points
Via Erie R. R. Sunday, July 23, 7:30
Wilson Willace, 7:40.
IT'S DECENCY!
And Not Color that Should Fix the Standards for All Peoples.
The Improvement of the Afro-American Greatly Handicapped by "Jim Crow" Cars and Like Contemptible Discrimination—A "Key-Note"—Aristocracy of Decency.
Rev. A. F. Beard, D. D., secretary of the American Missionary association, New York, in the magazine of the association recently said: "The Negroes will never improve if the worst traits of the least industrious and moral of the race are accepted as fixing the standards for all who have the misfortune to be born black. There has been too much of the wholesale classification of Negroes, and its result has been to deceive and obstruct in every possible way the tendencies to progress which a wiser policy would have fostered and stimulated. People may call the west 'wild and wooley', and away from cultivation it is, but it is everywhere broad and free, and those who are seeking homes for themselves and their children like this. The south has more than its share of poor land, and is handicapped by its restricted social condition. This sheds some light upon the question of immigration in the southern rural parts of one country. The Negro farmer will always be beekeeping." Jim Crow cars are justified for Jim Crow people. People who herd, should herd together. This south and north, and everywhere.
"The president of the United States has one word—decent"—which he is extremely fond of using . . . Well, there should be an aristocracy of decency, people uncouth, ragged, unclean and smelly, whatever their color, belong in Jim Crow cars. The iniquity is, in relegating people who are 'decent' to the companionship of those who are not. It is not a right thing for a railroad company in the north to put unwashed immigrants in the city, but it is not the people. It certainly is wrong to compel those who are irreproachable in person and character to travel among those who are not, simply because of race or color. In New Orleans the other day I was interested in the fact that the trolley cars have sections 'for white' and sections 'for colored'. The division is not for the clean and unclean, but for the colored and uncolored. A gentleman of slight color who lives in an excellent residence on a main avenue in New Orleans has under his direction a number of white men a shade whiter than he, who rejoices in the success of a report to him, but he cannot ride to his place of business in the same section of the trolley with them.
"Let us hope for the day when discriminations shall be made on President Roosevelt's basis. It is a great injustice which generalizes a people into a common class and ranks the highest with the lowest. White people do not do it for themselves. White people have their degenerates and their unregenerates, their bank-robbing bank president and absconding cashiers, idlers, tramps and reprobates of all sorts, but they are not the white race. On the other hand, those of the Negro race who are educated, industrious and self-respecting are pulled down with the help of an entirely different class of the race. They carry the weight of it on their souls. They are made to bear the reputation of those who are low down."
"NIAGARA MOVEMENT."
Representative Afro-Americans From Fifteen States in Conference at Fort Erie—Prof. Du Bois Leader of the Work.
Buffalo, N. Y., July 13.—Representative men of the race from fifteen states are in conference at the Fort Erie Beach Hotel and have formed a permanent organization for the improvement of the condition of our people to be known as "The Niagara Movement." The officers of the society are: Prof. W. E. DuBois, of Atlanta, Ga., general secretary, and Hon. George H. Jackson, of Cincinnati, treasurer. The conference opened Tuesday with 51 members in
PROF. W. E. B. DU BOIS.
attendance. Meetings were held Tuesday, Wednesday and today, which resulted in the adoption of a series of resolutions for the improvement of the Negro. The movement is national in scope and is started in opposition to the theories of Booker T. Washington, who advises the colored man in the south to confine himself to work and let the affairs of state alone. The members of the new society favor manhood suffrage, and hope by means of the new movement to accomplish their ideals. Prof. Du
SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS.
Bois, the general secretary, is well-known as the author of "The Soul of Black Men." He has lectured in this city before the Equality club and at the Westminster church on Delaware avenue. The platform of the Ningara movement follows:
Freedom of speech and criticism; an unfettered and unsubsidized race press; manhood suffrage; the abolition of all caste distinctions based simply on race and color; recognition of human brotherhood as a practical present creed; the recognition of the highest and best human training as the monoply of no class or race; a belief in the dignity of manual toil; united effort to realize these ideals under courageous leadership. The Niagara movement will hold annual meetings. The work of the organization will consist of appointing a committee in each state to co-operate with congressmen and legislators to secure just legislation for the colored people, and the committees will from time to time issue literature and reports on the progress of the work. Those in attendance at the meeting are:
MR. JAMES R. SNYDE
F. H. M. Murray, Alexandria, Va.
J. S. Madden, Chicago, Ill.; Robert H Bonner, Fall River, Mass.; the Rev G. R. Waller, Baltimore, Md.; H. L. Bailey, Washington, D. C.; Emery T Morris, Cambridge, Mass.; Clement G. Morgan, Esq, Boston, Mass.; Rev Byron Gunner, Newport, R. I; Rev H. W. Scott, Woburn, Mass.; Prof W. E. B. DuBois, Atlanta, Ga.; Capt H. A. Thompson, New York, N. Y.; J. Max Barber, Atlanta, Ga.; F. L. McGhee, Esq, St. Paul, Minn.; Isaad Bradley, Kansas City, Kan.; George H. Woodson, Oskalaloa, ia.; B. S. Smith, Kansas City, Kan.; Dr. C. Ebentley, Chicago, Ill.; Prof W. Hichards, Washington, D. C.; Prof W. H. H. Hart, Washington, D. C.; J. R. L. Diggs, Richmond, Va.; Rev Frazier Frazier, Brooklyn, Y.; M. F. Zerhack, Washington, D. C.; Hon. George H. Jackson, Checinati, O.; A. F. Herndon, Atlanta, Ga.; Hon. J. C. Smith, Cleveland, O.; W. J. Carter, Esq, Harrisburg, Pa.; R. Hill, Nashville, Tenn.; E. B. M. Trotter, Boston, Mass.; E. B. Jourdain, New Bedford, Mass.
At the close of the conference this afternoon the following committees were appointed: An interstate committee on condition and needs committee of economic opportunity, finance committee, committee on organization, committee on the press and public opinion, committee on health protection, committee on legal defense and civil rights, committee on education, committee on crime, rescue and reform. An evening session Thursday lasting past midnight, closed the three days' meeting.
A CHAUTAUQUA.
"Champion City" Personals, Church and Social Institutions
Other Items
Springfield, O.—Miss Elizabeth Williams has returned from Toledo, Mrs. Effie Willis, of St. Paul, is visiting her mother, Mrs. Sarah Chapman, Mrs. Jno. Hagan entertained Thursday evening in honor of her guest, Mrs. Mattie Guy-Todd,—Mrs. James Stafford's funeral was held at the Second Baptist church Monday afternoon.—Mrs. Carrie Henry is convalescing.—Mrs. Mrs. Kolb and Mrs. Florence Kolb, of St. Paul, are visiting their mother, Mrs. Keimer,—Mr. James Knoell, aged 47, was buried from the Second Baptist church Tuesday afternoon.—Miss Patterson, of Birmingham, Ala., is the guest of Mrs. Edwin Butler.—The choir of St. John's church gave a successful entertainment Thursday night. Rev. Woodson preached at the Second Baptist church Sunday afternoon.—Mr. Charles Reynolds is home for the vacation.—Allie Mass, of Chicago, is the guest of Mrs. Munn-Jones, Jessie Page, of Xenia, spent Sunday—Jessies Metcalf, Winn, Robert Walker, Henry Linden, S. L. Cochran, Samuel Buffman and Maxey attended the Federation in Dayton last week.—Miss Clara Linden is visiting in New York.—Mrs. Simon' Hilton entertained 30 Monday afternoon at a three-course luncheon.—Mrs. Ell Hagan and Mrs. Richard Cotton spent Sunday in Dayton.—A musical Wednesday evening at Center Street M. E. church.—The Central Y. M. C. A. is preparing a Chaucaqueta for the fair grounds.—Mrs. Lyons and granddaughter, Marie Portis, spent Sunday in Columbus.—Corinne Lewis, of Urbana, was the guest of Mrs. Charles Frye last week.—Mrs. Wm. Dickson is visiting in Dayton.
Lockland and Wyoming, O., Notes.
Miss Jessie Smith left last week to visit in Dayton, Wilberforce, Xenia, Cedarville, Urbana and Lima..Mr. Charles Turner, clerk at Williams' grocery, visited Columbus Sunday..Mrs. Merritt's 12 year old son died last week Wednesday. Consumption..
Mr. Thomas has been taking pictures here for two weeks. He is doing creditable work and many have taken advantage of this opportunity..
Miss Jones, a student of Eckstein institute, Cane Springs, Ky., is spending her vacation here relatives. She' is clerking at Mitchell's grocery. On July 12 the K of P. gave a large park at Stix park. Rev. J. C. Turner will conduct camp meeting at Glendale from the 12th to the 27th.
Notice to Correspondents.
Notice to Correspondents.
Correspondents must mail all letters for publication on Monday of each week, and always place their names and that of their city and town on the outside of the wrapper about returned copies. Unless this is done proper credit cannot be given you. Advertisements, lists of names, wedding presents, etc. obituary notices, reservation forms and inquiries for relatives must be at the rate of ten cents a line, words to a line. Our rates for display advertisements will be sent on application. Send postal note and not stamps during the warm weather.
MR. JAMES R. SNYDER.
Foreman of the Recent Grand Jury,
Succeeding a Ex-Confederate Colo-
nel and an Ex-County Official.
We take pleasure in giving above an excellent portrait of one of our best known local citizens—an exceptionally loyal and active worker—Mr. James R. Snyder. It is not our intention at this time to give a biographical sketch of him, but simply to call the attention of our many readers to his recent splendid work in behalf of the race in the Mignaud-Morrison case. One Morris Mignaud or Mignard, a French-American and an alleged active worker in the Friend's church of this city, was arrested in April or May on the charge of rape committed upon a little colored girl of about 12 years and his baird fixed at $3,000. This the baird worked for, mandated to the county jail, where he remained for many weeks, being bound over to the grand jury. For about a week after the organization of that august body, the ex-Confederate colonel was foreman, being succeeded by an ex-county official, who held the position a trifle longer. Although the only Afro-American member of the jury, Mr. Snyder was selected to succeed him as foreman and retained as such until the adjournment a few weeks ago, serving about three times as long as both of his predecessors. When the Mignaud case was brought to the attention of the jury it was considered briefly and set aside for a future date, and when taken up again the vignage world of Mr. Snyder, thus freeing the man, this his attention of the proceedings that the attention of the editor of the案. The Gazette was called to the case. He enlisted the assistance of Revs. J. M. Glmere, E. D. Dandridge and J. M. Dickerson, pastors of three of our local churches. By some quick and active work we were able to secure at the hands of the grand jury another consideration of the case, with the result that a secret indictment was returned against Mignaud and the fellow rearrested. In an article which will follow this at an early date full particulars will be given. At this time, however, we wish to call attention to Mr. Snyder's mastery effort before the grand jury, which did more to bring about the desired result than anything else. The assistant county prosecutor, who was in the jury room, as the legal advisor of that August body, characterized Mr. Snyder's eloquent and impassioned appeal for indictment as one of the grandest best arguments he ever heard made a jury by one of its members. For many hours he held them practically spellbound result that the same body which but a few weeks prior to that date had voted no indictment in the Mignaud case, reversed the verdict with but two dissenting votes, one of these being that of the ex. Confederate colonel. Too much praise cannot be showered upon our loyal fellow citizen and brother, Mr. Snyder, for his splendid work, because it was a masterly effort in behalf of virtuous womanhood. Neither white nor black women must ever feel that is any laxity in the law when it comes to such crimes, even if our women or girls are the victims.
Morgantown, W. Va. Items
Morgantown, W. Va., items.
William Parker and Iona Blue were married at the A. M. E. parsonage July 6. The K. of P. and other friends screened them. The bride and groom responded with fine addresses. O.-Mr. Henry Thomas, of Mansfield, O.-visiting his nephew, A. H. Brown. "The young folk gave an enjoyable basket picnic in Rich Wood's." S. S. conveys in Hannah Temple July 17 to 19. Mrs. Hannah Hamilton returned Sunday from Zaneville O.-Jones chapel is being enlarged. Wm. Cross and Sheff Robinson were in Fairmount July 4. "Miss Walker, of Uniontown, Pa., is visiting her sister, Mrs. B. W. Anderson. Mrs. Sarah Edwards, Mrs. Hannah Lacy, Mrs. Sallie Jones and children, Mr. Henry Jones, Mary, Blanche and Beulah Smith and Alfred Rhoades were in Uniontown July 4. The first two remained awhile. Andy Young and Okey Henderson were in Fairmount that day, and Gabe Holland, Jr., was in Brownsville, Pa.
OF LOCAL INTEREST.
Our next issue will contain a full report of the recent Dayton meeting of our State Women's Federation. The editor of The Gazette, Prof. W. H. H. Hart, of Washington, D. C., and others addressed the "Niagara Movement" on Thursday. Mrs. Lee, of Washington, D. C., manager of Loyola Unifm, who is a student of one of our University educational institutions, dropped dead early evening. She had been ill some time. Miss Hallie Q. Brown defeated Mrs Carrie Clifford for the presidency of the Ohio Federation of Afro-American Women's clubs at the annual meeting held in Dayton last week.
ee
THE GAZETTE
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‘AN\communications should be addressed:
HARRY G SMITH,
Ealtor and Proprietor Tax GazerTe
Blackstone Bullding. Cleveland. Obia
Hoe 101008
Member Onto Legislature, | ite to ine
. 1900 to 10
peererer eee
en
MEADE a a coUNCIy
Soe
Cleveland, Saturday, July 15, 1905.
THE GAZETTE is the cidest, 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
ite rank as one of the NEWSIEST
‘AND BEST in the country.
An Arkansas Afro-American by the
name of Carter, who had won the
place in a. civil service examination,
‘was recently appointed a clerk in the
postoflice at Greenwood, Miss, the
home of Gov. Vardaman, a satellite of
Senator Ben Tillman when the “race
question” is the theme. When Carter
Yeached Greenwood from Pine Blut,
“a few of the leading citizens” (white,
of course,) “talked” him out of his in-
tention to accept the place. We kre
assured by the Associated Press rep-
Tesentative in that miserable Missis-
sippi town that “there was no gun
play or attempted violence, but after
talking toa few of the citizens of
Greenwood, Carter concluded that this
atmosphere would not conduce to his
health, and, tendering his resignation,
rettrned to Pine Bluff.” Here is an.
other clear and flagrant case of Intimi-
dation which interfered in the govern-
ment service. That it was slight, is 2
matter of no moment. It was unwar-
ranted interference and that ‘ought
not be tolerated ‘from any source, to
say nothing of such a denial of citl-
zen’s rights, especially when an effort
is being made to conserve the inter-
ests of the government. This Is not
the first instance of the kind, either.
‘What is to be done in such cases? The
president is the man of all men to
‘answer this question, and the man of
all men abundantly able, and we be-
Ueve perfectly willing to do so. It {s
certainly high time a halt was called.
LET US SOMETIMES FORGET.
‘The eminent Henry Dickson, of the
“Dickson School of Memory,” Chicago
has well said, “We are no greater in
tellectually than our memory. All
success In life depends upon memor}
for the reason that the faculty o
memory controls all the other facul.
ties of the brain. In fact that faculty
fs the seat of the mind.” Memory is
the governing function of the mind
‘and {t should be so trained as to bring
out those hidden talents which sc
often ‘are never awakened in our
mental being. We take no exception
to the metliods of memory training sc
ably set forth by the learnéd Prof.
Dickson, We warmly endorse all his
teachings and recommend his school
to the hopeful student, for he advises
that this faculty must be controlled
nd directed. So without any Inten.
ton of differing from this wonderful
teacher of memory training, may we
not ask, is there not danger of re.
membering too much and remember-
ing too well? In cultivating Bnd de-
veloping this function of the, mind
may we not find it impossible to for-
‘get something which we should .not
Femember and in training the mem.
ory to reproduce thought, is It pos.
sible for us to forget whiat we do not
gare to remember? May hot the exer-
‘cise of will-power and the concentra.
tion of thought become so thoroughly
Aeveloped as to leave the individual
Rolston 0 (think what de does no
‘want to think. It seems as tmpor
to forget some things as to remember
others. To know how to forget as
well as to remember, seems to be
equally essential. No man has ever
Decome great without learning to for-
get. We are to disrobe our mental
powers of whatever may encumber
‘or depress the soul, and this cannot
be done unless we have learned tc
forget and c'smiss the disagreeable
‘object from the memory. We are to
train ourselves to erase from the
memory’ all shadows and fears if we
‘would reach the goal of our ambitfon.
We cannot succeed in life unless we
Jearn to forget, Sombre clouds may
drift across our minds, awakening
memories of a sad and darkened past,
Dut they must be dispelled ere the
nervous impulse weaken in its proper
chapnel, and despair selzes the man.
Uely things will happen, but it is al-
ways dest not to remember them.
Bad and vicious men hardly ever for.
get an injury, because they nurse
thelr ugly passions, are resentful and
will not forget a wrong. But all men
desire to be cheerful and happy, and
the best way to succeed and prolong
Iife 1 to forget ignoble things and
drive out from the memory. all
fuireds all. coomatmbate snd ‘ic,
thing that tends to degrade and be.
ttle true manhood. No man shall
nurse a spirit of bickering and wrath,
nor allow himself to be turned from
the pursuit of pure and lofty atms.
But if he fails to overlook the little,
petty perturbations that disturb the
mind, he is sure to fail in the sceom.
plishment of great ends. Would we
be great und magnanimous In life,
would we be generous, manly and
forgiving, then let vs forget the
Wrongs we sometimes encounter, for-
get those injuries done us in human
weakness and make our lives 2 me-
morial of good unto others, We can-
not afford to waste our lives in pining,
we can not afford to nurse our griev-
ances. The habit is a bad one and it
will make us miserable and the more
Wretched while we live. A noble
task awaits us and we should hold
ourselves in readiness to do the bet-
ter part. ‘Tis sweet to remember the
good and bedutiful; but oh! let us
live not under the clouds, not in sor-
rowing and despondency, but in the
pure sunlight of the early dawn where
fond memory lifts the soul into the
beatitudes of the bright and illimitable
beyond.
Bishops Arnett and Walters Insulted.
Baltimore, Md—The Christian En-
deavor convention here last week
was quite an affair. The trustees
were much incensed at what they
term an evidence of southern preju-
dice. Among the delegates were
Bishop Alexander Waiters, of New
Jersey, and Bishop B. W. Arnett, of
Ohio. ‘These gentlemen occupied ‘the
most prominent places on the plat-
form at the various meetings. At a
meeting of the trustees at the Bell-
videre hotel, they were refused per-
mission to go up in the front elevators,
and were compelled to use the back
elevators, used by servants. They
took the matter very sensitively. In
London they dined with lords. *
A Damade- Bult te Bettied.
Cleveland, July 12, — Patrolman
John Klaamyer’s suit for $15,000
against George E. Wagar, now in the
penitentiary for the murder of his
brother, was settled in Judge Law-
Tence’s court Tuesday. Wagar’s inter-
ests were represented by his cousin,
Mars Wagar. The policeman received
several thousand dollars; how much
was not disclosed. Klaamyér’s suit
grew out out of a shooting affray on
January 24. George Wagar, after kill-
ing his brother, John, barricaded him-
self in the house. Klaamyer went to
arrest him and received @ bullet from
4 44-calibre revolver in the abdomen.
For weeks he lay hovering ‘between
life and death.
Mr. Cooper's Invention,
Findlay expects to have a factory to
manufacture the “electrical shoe” in-
vented by Mr. A. R. Cooper, of that
city. ‘The shoe has an electrical at-
tachment, generating a pronounced
current through the entire system.
One teacher who has worn the shoes
vouches for the disappearance of ten-
der and swollen feet and an ability
to leave the school room after the
day's work as fresh and full of vitality
ag when she entered in the morning,
and able to walk several miles with.
out fatigue.
mat: Silk taaaa Gok.
Columbus, O.—A. L. Reeves (white)
2 guard at the Ohio penitentiary from
Ashtabula county, is at the Protestant
hospital with a badly pounded head.
Anthony Smith, a Vine street Afro-
American, lay in wait for Reeves at
North Columbus and beat the prison
guard over the head with a hickory
club, until the weapon was worn out,
Vecause, as Smith alleges, Reeves has
been trying to pay attention to the
assailant’s wife. Warden Gould is in-
vestigating and Reeves may be drop-
ped as a prison guard.
Experts Will Open the Safe.
Elyria, 0., July 12,—The big safe of
Meach brothers at Rochester, O., will
be opened by an expert. In May. 1902,
robbers tried to break into this safe,
but they were prevented by Jarvis
Meach, who shot four of the thugs,
killing two. John Meach, the last of
the three, died a few days ago without
revealing the combination of the safe
or the amount of {ts treasure. 0. W.
Babcock and J. T, Haskell were yes.
terday appointed by the probate court
administrators rad authorized to open
the safe. The bonds of the adminfs.
trators were fixed at $80,000.
Gane. Wider Made w New Record:
qycommbus, O., July 11—Capt. C. A.
Winder, inspector of rifle practice In
the Ohio national guard, made a re-
markable record at rifle practice on
the Newark rifle range Saturday, mak-
ing six bullseyes at 500 yards, shoot-
Ing each tlme at a different target, all
within 20 seconds, Army regulations
for rapid firing in range practice re-
auire only five shots in 20 seconds.
Winder's feat of six shots in two-
thirds that time is believed to have
never deed equalled
Mercer, Pa., Topics.
Mrs. Crosby Richard and daughter,
Florence, spent the 4th at Cambridge
Springs —Madames Lewis and Robin-
son spent the 4th in 8. Sharon—Rev.
Holmes and wife spent the 4th with
Mr. and Mrs. James Allen.—Mrs, Tom
Brown and family are visiting Mrs.
Joe Coleman, of Sharon.—Plummer
Henderson and Madaline Brown spent
the 4th in Sharon—Rachel Davis, of
Washington, D.C. is here for the
summer.
pease
"Additional K. P. Grand Ledge Notes.
Urbana, Q.—A balance of more than
$4,000 is "In the K.P. grand lodge
treasury. ‘There were 119 delegates at
the recent grand lodge meeting held
here, J. E, Guy will be marshal at the
ext annual meeting, to be held in
Zanesville next year. | The delegates
‘were very well pleased with the en-
tertainments given during thelr stay
here. The ladies were just excellent,
especially those at 1059 8, Main street.
Siatsiid ok Mahbebintn Harbor.
Ashtabula, O., July 12.—Forest D.
Russell, aged 42, son of Rev. Mr. Rus.
sell, of Vermillion, 0., walked off the
dock into the river near the Seaman's
Bethel at the Harbor and was drown.
ed. His body has not been recovered.
‘Rustel's actions prior to the drowning
indicated that he contemplated com.
mitting suicide.
‘Shot His Sweetheart and Suicided.
Wooster, ©., July’ 10.—Joseph Shaf-
fer on Saturday night shot and fatally
wounded Miss Lizzie Montandon, his
sweetheart, and then shot and killed
himself. “The shooting followed a
quarrel in which Shaffer accused her
of receiving attentions from other
Se Sens
Weevil Did Much Damage.
Columbus, O., July 10.—Reports to
the state board of agriculture from
various parts of the state indicate that
the work of the weevil in the wheat
crop this year bas been particularly
destructive. In somo localities the
yield has-been reduced one-third.
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, 0., SATURDAY, JULY 15, 1905.
|, _f Sows eevorion | NEWS NOTES La aroty Und ean tla,
ee ee ee eanele| ae ee ee eee ener | Gos
Youngstown, O.—The mother of
President Loubet of France died re-
cently at the age of 92. The relation
of these two persons was most inter-
esting and suggests some lessons
that are not found in the ordinary
relation of son and mother. Mme.
Loubet was a market woman and re-
fused to give up her occupation and
go to live with her son after he was
elected president. - Previous to his
election as president, February 18,
1899, Mr. Loubet had enjoyed a most
brilliant career. President Loubet has
proven himself to be one of the most
remarkable productions of French life
and is extremely popular, especially
with the common people throughout
France. After his exaltation he did
‘not forget his peasant birth, and
above all he did not forget his peas-
ant mother. It is sald he would go
‘and see her often and sit by her side
in the market place. And here is the
glory of a republican form of govern.
ment. He was president in. spite of
his lowly birth and dignified the of-
fice with tras werit. In his mother
he recognized the dignity of honest
toil and no helghts to which he at-
tained ever separated him from her.
‘The son was an honor to his mother
and in her commonplace occupation
the mother was an honor to her son.
And what's more beautiful and in-
‘spiring thap the picture of a presi-
‘dent of a great republic seated by the
side of his peasant mother. in the
market place? Here's a lesson of
hope and encouragement to every boy,
however poorly born and whatever
his environments. Here's a lesson to
the manly man—whateyer is the sta-
tion in life none should make him for-
get his mother. No man deserves so
much the contempt of the public as
he who imagines that he has ascended
to a point where his parents, what-
ever their station, are beneath him.
‘The public applauds and recognizes
no action on the part of an individual
more quickly than the devotion of a
child to his parents. Verily, if we
honor father and mother, not only life
will be long, but from the public will
come a constant and unstinted ap-
proval—Hon. H. C. Smith, editor of
‘The Gazette, was in the city and
Sharon, Pa., the first of the week.—
Hon. W. R. Stewart returned from
Chicago Sunday. He leaves soon for
St. Louis to visit his wife, who is
slightly improved in, health. She is
visiting her father, Prof. Peter H.
‘Clark:end ‘other relatives.
A Bunch of incorporations.
Columbus, O., July _13.—Incorpora~
tions yesterday: The R. J. Sefton Co,
Cleveland, dry goods, capital $15,000.
‘The Mutual Drug Co., Cleveland, capl-
tal $50,000. ‘The Diamond Coal Co,
Cleveland, capital $60,000. ‘The Helter:
Skelter Amusement 'Co., Cleveland,
capital $20,000, ‘The Lorain Transit
Co,, Lorain, lake vessels, capital $15,-
000. ‘The Alma Clay Co, Canton, capl-
tal $15,000. ‘The City "Brewing Co.,
Stoubenyjlle, capital $250,000. The
Alliance Fertilizer €o., Aliance,
amendment permitting domipany to s-
sue 100 shares of preferred stock, par
value $100 a share. The U. S. Cooper-
age Co., Lorain, name changed from
the Buchanan Cooperage Co. and cap)-
tal stock Feduced from $75,000 to $25,-
000,
Columbus, O., July 14,—Incorpora-
tions yesterday: The Thomas H.
Geer Co., insurance agencies, Cleve-
land, capital $20,000, The Central
Cartage and Storage Co., Cleveland,
name changed to the East End Mov-
ing and Storage Co. The B. F. Good-
rich Co., Akron, capital stock increas-
edfrom $5,000,000 to $10,000,000. ‘The
Federal Casket Co,, Bellaire, capital
$600,000. The Toledo Plow Co., To-
ledo, capital $28,000. ‘The Toledo tron
Castings Co., Toledo, capital $25,000.
ens eekinuind incre: OF ciratt>
Lorain, O., July 13—Rumors of a
civic sensation when the grand jury
gets to considering evidence in con.
nection with the prosecution of
saloonkeepers for violating the Sun-
day and liquor laws are flying thick
and fast. It has been declared that
the evidence would disclose that city
officials have profited directly. Capt.
R. J. Cowley, president of the Good
Government ieague and chairman of
the committee now investigating how
the liquor and Sunday laws are being
enforced, said Wednesday that infor-
mation highly damaging to certain of-
ficials had been uncovered and would
be given to the grand jury.
Was Drugged and Robbed in 2 Hotel.
Cincinnati, July 12—Enticed to a
room at thé Grand hotel, under the
pretext of talking over a mining
stock proposition with a guest at the
hotel, who passed as a mining promo-
ter, George Yatfe, a saloonkeeper, was
made the victim of one of the boldest
robberies that have been reported. to
the police for a long time. Yaffe came
to his senses in the hotel room, after
lying in a stupor all day, to find that
he had been drugged and robbed of
$163 and a diamond ring worth $200.
Will Ask for a Change of Venue,
Coshocton, 0., July 19.—Attorneys
for Ben. Dickerson, accused of the
murder of Mrs. Simon Hughes, at
Coopersdate, announce that they will
ask fora change of venue, alleging
sentiment against the man in this
county and fear of a strong lobby it
tried here. If granted, the change will
probably be made to’ Licking, Mus-
‘Sieeads cots tnntion.
+ Meet in Zanesville in 1906. .
Canton, O., July 13—The grand en-
campment of Obio Odd Fellows closed
the business session Wednesdiy. The
next annual session will be held in
Zanesville, the third Tuesday in July,
1906. Reports showed the financial
condition better than ever before, but
there was a decrease in membership
during the past year.
‘That “Niagara Movement” is one
‘of the most important of recent years.
it has many of our best educated and
Jeading men as members and bids fair
to meet the most urgent demand of
the hour from a race viewpoint.
Watch our next issue for additional
information relative to the splendid
meeting.
Less Work for Railroad Shopmen.
Lorain, O., July 14—The 300 em-
ployes of the B. & O. shops here have
been notified of a cut in working
hours of from ten to nine, with all of
Saturday off. in the locomotive and
ear repair departments work is slack.
Mrs. John P. Green arrived the
first of the week from Washington,
D. C: John will come on later!
NEWS NOTES
OF INTEREST
Happenings of the Last Five Days
Narrated in Few Words
as Possible.
AT HOME AND IN FOREIGN LANDS
ffarat Arlene he reascen ls
This Bury World So that They —
Can Digest the Con-
tents in a Few
Minutes,
eter
The Tokio correspondent of the
London Daily ‘Telegraph declares that
Gen. Lineviteh has sentenced several
Russian officers to death for eireu-
lating seditious circulars, and the
Paper's Japanese correspondent at
Moji, Japan, asserts that all Poles and
Jews in Lineviteh's army are jauti-
hows and are constantly surrender-
ing 90 as to enjoy a pleasant captivity
as prisoners of the Japanese.
With the Japanese flag hoisted for
the rst time on Russian soil after 18
months of war, the importance of the
landing on: the island of Sakhalin is
generally admitted. Complete occu-
Pation of the island 1s regarded at St.
Petersburg as a foregone conclusion,
The plenipotentiaries of Russia and
Japan have agreed upon Portsmouth,
N.H., as the meeting place for the
sessions of the peace conference to
be held outside of Washington. ‘The
sessions will be held in the govern-
ment navy yard at Portsmouth, in the
new building Just completed ihere.
‘niet alee.
Fourteen miners were killed and a
number injured by an explosion in a
colliery at Anderiues, Belgium,
Fire in the umber yard district of
the South End of Boston did about
$200,000 damage to yards and whart-
age property.
Failures for the week ended July
7 In the United States were 160 against
206 the corresponding week last year,
and in Canada 21. against 12 last year.
Lon Beard, a negro who had been
arrested on the charge of assaulting
Mrs. Chester Crawford, of Normandy,
Ky., was lynched.
The police of Riga, Russia, have
arrested 35 terrorists who are held
responsible for the preparation of
bombs and attacks on the police.
‘Two persong were shot, one prob.
ably fatally, Ida fight between mobs
of whites and:negroes in New York
City.
Two blocks of Goldfields (Nev.)
business and residence section have
deen totally destroyed by fire, entail
ing @ loss of $200,000.
Orville Glassford, aged 21 years,
and his brother, Leed Glassford, aged
16, were drowned in the Belle river
at’ Memphis, Mich. while swimming,
In a pistol duel between Green
‘Murrell and Harvey Rice on Indian
creek, in Owsley county, Ky., Murrell
was ' killed and Rice seriously
‘wounded,
‘Two brothers, Fred and Justin Finn,
aged 15 and 12. years respectively,
‘were drowned in the Winnipesaukee
river at Laconia, N. H., while swim-
ming.
A score of firemen were seriously
burned or overcome by smoke during
@ fire which destroyed the upper
floors of a seven-story factory build.
ing in New York City.
‘The total losses through the out.
break at Odessa are estimated at
$5,000,000. ‘The insurance companies
refuse the payment of claims, alleging
that the state is responsible.
Bight sticks of dynamite with fuses
attached and wrapped in carpet_ were
found under the tles of the Reiber
street crossing of the Baltimore &
‘Ohio railroad at New Castle, Pa.
‘Wilbur Sanders, one of Montana's
most filustrfous ' citizens, _ pioneer,
lawyer, leader of the Vigilantes and
former United States senator, died
at Helena, aged 72 years.
Judge Cochran, of the United States
district court at’ Marysville, Ky., has
taken jurisdiction in the Caleb Pow.
ers case. ‘This means that the case
will be tried in the federal court.
‘The law passed by the Kansas legis.
lature last winter appropriating $410.
000 to build an oil refinery at Peru,
has been declared unconstitutional
by the state supreme court.
While runniig at the rate of 60
miles an hour eastbound New York
fast mail train on the Big Four col-
lided with a westbound freight train
which was pulling onto a siding at
Oakall, five miles west of Green
Castle, Ind. Fireman Tippy was fa.
tally “injured and Engineer A. M.
Garner was seriously hurt.
Owing to the alleged carelessness
of Allen Hall, a sawmill engineer, Hall
and two other men are dead and
Couch’s sawmill at Golightly, Ala, is a
wreck because of a boiler explosion.
‘The engine was blown 75 yards and
every drop of water in a well eight
feet deep drawn out.
At Ironton, Mo., a gang of 20 mask.
ed men overpowered and bound Sher-
{ff Marshall, forced their way into the
county jail ‘and fired several shots at
‘William and Arthur Spaugh, prisoners
held on the charge of having mur.
dered Sheriff Polk. Neither of the
Spaughs was seriously wounded.
Frank M. Fuller, of Connellsville,
Pa., secretary of the commonwealth of
Pennsylvania, is dead from apoplexy.
‘The Japanese courts have sentenced
Bougouln, a French subject, to ten
years’ hard labor for violation of mili
tary secrets.
‘While the treasurer of a show at
Coney Island was counting the day's
recelpts, two men who had been hang.
ing about the’ box office reached in
through the window and énatched two
packages each containing $250. The
treasiirer shouted for help and several
Policemen pursued the thieves through
the crowd and {nto an adjacent
swamp, where the two men are hiding.
‘Ten persons were prostrated and
rendered unconscious by a stroke of
lightning in Prospect park, Brooklyn,
N.Y.
Pete Dowling, the one time famous
left-hand pitcher, is dead at La Gre.
nada, Ore.) Dowling was accidentally
killed by being run over by a train.
Default judgments have been grant.
ed by Judge Dillon, cf the common
pleas court at Columbus, ©, in favor
Of the state of Ohio ageinst 36 Ohio
corporations in suits fled by the sec.
retary of state to enforce the payment
of the Willis law tax and added pen.
alties for failure to report and pay
Nhe same. aggregating $1,002,788.
correspondent says that the Norwe-
ian throne has been offered to Prince
Charles of Denmark, second son of
Crown Prince Frederick.
J. H, ‘Thomas, proprietor of a cloth-
ing store at Natrona, Pa., shot and
Killed an unknown burglar whom he
found entering his store through a
window.
John W. Wooten, a lawyer, was
sentenced in New York City to Sing
Sing prison for grand larceny in the
first degree for stealing a $2,003
check from David Rothschild.
‘An unsuccessful attempt to rob the
United States Express Co.'s transfer
wagon between the Lake Shore and
the Lake Erle stations was made at
Laporte, Ind., by two highwaymen.
The tunnel under the Harlem river
[at New York City was formally
Opened for public traffic by a train
which left One Hundred and Bightieth
stroet and the Boston road recently.
Charged wit “juggling” the cotton
report Secretary Wilson has dismissed
Edwin S. Holes, assistant statist
cian in the department of agriculture
from office.
Pickpockets took possession of a
street car in New York City and by
locking the rear door, robbed the pas-
Sengers on the back platform at thelr
leisure.
Roll Cardwell, 35 years of age, was
called to the ‘door of his home in
Coalmont,. Ind.. and shot to death.
‘There is'no clue to his assassin.
Cardwell as far as is known had no
enemies,
Fight men were blown to pleces and
two otliers were injured by the pre-
mature explosion of a big blast of
rock powder on the Pennsylvania
railroad’s improvements near New
Cumberland, Pa.
John Lee, of Wilkesbarre, Pa., who
was recently discharged from an in-
sane asylum as cured, cut his cousin,
James Farrell's, throat with a razor
|He then cut his own throat. Both
(died instantly.
| Nine people were injured, one of
them fatally, at the corner of Fort
and Hastings streets, Detroit, when a
Trumbull avenue car crashed into a
wagon load of people returning from
a drive about Belle Isle park.
Sweden 1s taking precautionary
measures on the frontier to offset the
“reported threatening attitude of Nor-
way. The Swedish treasury has bor-
[rowea $6,500,000 to pay extraordinary
expenditures,
| Eleven log drivers were drowned
in Chippewa river at Little Fails dam,
[Chippewa Falls, Wis, when they lost
control of the batteau in which 16
jother men had safely crossed the
‘river. The batteau swamped.
Maddened by the refusal of Anna
Jenilek, his 15-year-old sweetheart, to
marry him, John Irarnock, a Slavish
miner, murdered the girl at her home
near Creeks{de, Pa, and then tried
to end his own life.
The Westminster Volunteers won
the Sir Howard Vincent shield, defeat.
ing the Seventh Regiment of New
York team by the narrow margin of
ten points after the closest competi.
tion ever seen at Bisley, England.
Forest fires are threatening Lick
observatory on Mount Hamilton, 30
miles from. San Jose, Cal. ‘The pro-
fessors at the observatory have tele.
phoned, asking that the governor call
out the militia to fight the flames
Excessive heat caused many deaths
in New York City and New England
recently. A deluge struck Brooklyn,
portion of Manhattan and suburban
towns in sew Jersey, flooding streets.
Bulldings were struck by lightning.
‘The temperature dropped.
‘The Now York state legislature in
Joint session recently began the for-
mal hearing of the charges against
Justice Warren B. Hooker, of the
State supreme court, these charges
constituting the alleged “cause” for
his removal from office.
On the request of Secretary of
State Swanger, of Missouri, Judge
McElhinney has appointed ex-Judge
Seldon P. Spencer receiver for the
People’s United States bank, of St.
[Foute, against whieh fraud “order
has been issued by the federal postal
[aurnorties,
Field Marshal Lord Roberts created
a sensation in the house of lords at
[London recently when in a lengthy
speech he said that the military
force of Great Britain was inadequate,
imperfectly trained and totally unfit
to uphold Great Britain as a first
class. power.
Paxinosa Inn, a famous summer
resort hotel on the summit of Wrig-
adt mountain, near Easton, Pa., was
destroyed by ‘Are. Loss $150,000: in-
surance $20,000. None of the guests
‘or help was injured, but some lost
‘their clothing and jewelry.
Bob McCoy, a ranchman residing on
the Big Horn river above Thermopo-
Us, Wyo., has been killed by assas-
sins who decoyed him to a deserted
eabin and shot him in the back as he
was about to enter. His body was
then weighted with stones and sunk
in the river.
Five men were seriously burned
during a fire-fighting performance at
Coney Island, N. Y. Flames, instead
of pouring out of a window at which
the men were stationed, were driven
by a “back draft” into thelr faces.
‘The men leaped to the ground, « dis.
tance of 25 feet. Some of them are be-
leved to be fatally injured.
Count Cassini, the retiring Russian
ambassador to the United States, has
sailed from New York for Europe.
Mrs. Helen L. Johnson, mother of
Mayor Tom 1. Jonson, of Cleveland,
is dead at her home in Brooklyn, N. Y.
She had been ill several months.
Jean Hess, the well known traveler
and author of an important work on
|3oroceo, who is credited with great
personal influence over the sultan, ts
quoted in a Paris dispatch with the
statement that Germany bas made_a
seeret agreement with the sultan for
‘the dosatvustion of tio sictta-ca the
Philadelphia.
‘As the result of an explosion at the
shaft of the Taylor Coal and Coke Co.
at Searight, Pa., five men were killed
and four injured, one fatally.
‘The third trial of Dr. George R.
Koch, the New Ulm dentist charged
with ihe murder of Dr, L. A. Gebhardt,
& fellow practitioner, began in the
district court at Mankato, Minn.
John Alexander Dowie recently had
all banktuptey proceedings against
him dismissed in the United States
istrict court at Chicago by Judge
Bethea.
Three bloody encounters between
troops and striking shoemakers in
which about 20 persons were killed or
wounded, occurred in Warsaw, Rus-
sian Poland
In a trip from Los Angeles to Chi-
cago, a distance of 2,265 miles, a spe-
cial train on the Santa Fe road made
the distanee in 45 hours, breaking all
previous records.
Maj. Gen. Count Shouvaloff, prefect
of police, Moscow, was assassinated
while receiving petitions. One of the
petitioners drew a revolver and fired
five times at the prefect, who fell
dead.
When Mrs. Charles M, Oelrichs re-
turned to her cottage at Newport, R.
I, recently, after an absence of two
hours, she’ discovered that jewelry
valued at $10,000 had been taken from
her dressing case.
‘A desperate battle between moon-
shiners and federal officers was fought
in the Elkhorn, Ky., district. One of
the moonshiners was killed, one fa-
tally and another dangerously wound-
ed. One of the officers was shot.
Philip’ Vaiverdi and Edward H.
Wood, ward committeemen convicted
of conspiracy to pad the assessor's
list in the First ward of Philadelphia,
were sentenced by Judge Carr to nine
months’ fmprisonment and to pay @
fine of $1,000.
Exeter hall in London was the scene
recently of another world gathering
of Christians, when the congress of
Baptists, including _ representatives
from every country in the world ex-
cept Palestine and Java, was opened,
New York police headquarters has
received information that an unknown
yacht had been sunk off Dobbs Ferry
by a steamer flying the Swedish flag.
The Dobbs Ferry police reported that
several persons were drowned.
An explosion of firedamp in No. 2
pit of the United National Colliery
Co. at Wattstown, in the Rhonda yal-
ley, the center of the great Welsh coal
fields, is belleved to have resulted in
the loss of 126 lives.
Postmaster General Cortelyou an-
nounced the appointment of Steven-
son A. Williams, of Belair, as member
of the republican national committee
for Maryland, to fill the vacancy
caused by the resignation of ex-Uni-
ted States Senator Louis E, MeComas,
‘The monthly crop report of the de-
partment of agriculture shows the
following percentages of condition:
Corn 87.2, winter wheat 82.7, spring
wheat 91.0, oats 92.1, barley 91.5. ‘The
acreage of corn is given at $4,001,000,
an increase of 2,080,000.
Davis Collins, a negro who was con-
vieted of attempted criminal assault
on Miss Hogg at a special term of the
Copiah county) court and sentenced
to ten years in the penitentiary, was
killed on the way to prison at Jack-
son, Miss., by Mr. Dickey, a brother-
in-law of Miss Hogs.
‘The flag of St. Andrew again floats
over the battleship Kniaz Potemkin,
The formal surrender of the mutinous
crew occurred after a series of nego-
lations between the Roumanian au-
thorities and the leaders of the mutt
A British squadron has arrived at
Brest, France, for a series of naval
festivities in which the French and
British sailors will partietpate. Much
significance fs attached to the visit, as
being the first fraternizing of these
navies for many years.
In order to test the capacity for
work of Italians, Chinese and Japanese
and also the ‘contract method of
handling laborers, the Panama canal
commission has decided to import 2,-
000 men of each nationality for a 500-
day contract, subject to renewal.
John Costello, a merchant of New
York City, has been fatally stabbed at
his summer home on Staten Island.
Ho was entertaining a number of
guests and left the house to resent re-
marks made by passers-by, one ot
whom is believed to have stabbed him.
‘Three saloons in West street, in tht
heart of the business section of Iola,
Kan. were wrecked by dynamite.
Much damage was done to dther prop-
erty in the vielnity. The loss Is esti-
mated at $100,000. ‘The dynamite was
exploded apparently by some temper-
ance reformer.
A crowd of 20,000 persons which
tured out to weleome President
Roosevelt made the closing day of the
National Educational __assoclation’s
convention at Asbury Park, N, J., the
most impessive of all the great educa-
tional meetings. The president made
two speeches.
Rodney B. Swift, formerly head of
the experimental ‘department of the
MeCormick branch of the Internation.
al Harvester Co., has filed a sult in
Chicago against the company demand.
ing an accounting, and demands that
the court force the company to cease
taking rebates from railroad com.
panies, and also compel the company
to rettirn to the railroads moneys sald
by Swift to have been illegally ex-
(racted from the railroads in the past.
‘The Trousers Makers’ union, of New
York City, has struck for an advance
of wages, a ten-hour work day and
recognition of the union. ‘There are
S,000 trousers makers out In 250 shops.
William B. Lyons, former chief of
police of Baltimore and for many
vears one of the best known detectives
in the country, is dead at the age of
Correspondents Wanted.
‘The old reliable Gazette desires am
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 hear—
ing from persons in the following
cities: Zanesville, Springfield, Troy,
Dayton, Cambridge, Lockland, Canton,
‘Bellaire, Gallipolis, Cambridge, Lima,
‘Toledo, Portsmouth, Circleville. Ken-
‘ton, Hamilton, Sandusky, O.; Wheel-
fing and Parkersburg, W. Va. and
other places where we have none.
Write to the editor of The Gazette,
Blackstone building, Cleveland, 0.,
and terms will be sent promptly. Our
readers can oblige us greatly by send-
ing the address of any good person or
persons in any of the titles named
above or others, to whom we cam
write relative to the matter.
Erie R, R—“Pittsburg Short Line.”
‘The recent addftions to the already
frequent service of the Brie between
Cleveland and Pittsburg has worked
wonders in the way of travel between
these two cities, in fact brings them
almost within speaking distance you
might say. Short mileage, double
track and a perfect physical condi-
tion of road bed as well as superior
equipment, enable the Erle to main
tain @ complete service of seven fast:
through daily trains in each direction
between Cleveland and Pittsburg.
‘The cafe dining cars too are quite a
feature. One of these cars cost.
$27,000 to build and was on exhibi~
tion at the St. Louis Fair. ot
CHEAP SUMMER TRIPS.
To Various Points via Pennsylvania
Lines.
Exeursion tickets will be sold via
Pennsylvania Lines as follows:
‘To Winona Lake, Ind., May 10th to
September 20th, inclusive, account
‘Winona assembly.
To Portland, Ore,, June Ist to Oc-
tober ‘15th, inclusive, account Lewis
and Clark ‘Centennial Exposition.
Cool Spots in Warm Weather,
Write us and we will send you #
dooklet containing list of Summer
Boarding Houses, Camping and Fish-
ing Grounds, Hotels and other attrac
tive places on the line of the Nickel
Plate Road. B.A. Akers, C. P. and ‘T-
A., Cleveland, ©., or B. F. Horner, G-
P/A., Cleveland 0., 28 Public Square.
(627)
$1.00 for the Round Trip Via Nickel
Plate Road.
Every Sunday parties of five or
more can obtain tickets at $1.00 for
each person to any point within 100
miles from selling station. Call om
Agent or address B. A. Akers, C. P-
and T. A. Cleveland, 0, 28 Public
Square. (626)
$3.00 Niagara Falls and Toronto Ex-
cursion—Erie R. R.
Via Lake Chautauqua, Thursday, July
20,8 p.m., Willson Ave. 8:10 p. m-
Good 5 days—Toronto $1.50, Alex. Bay
$7.00 extra. Pullman Standard and
Tourist Sleepers. Call at No. 9 Bu-
lid Avee. or Station.
Special Low Rates to Chautauqua
Lake and Return
July 7th and 28th vie Nickel Plate
road. Long return limit, Full in-
formation of agent or address B.A.
Akers, C. P. & T. A., 28 Public Sq._
Cleveland, 0. (609),
Niagara Falls and Toronto. $3.00 Ex-
cursion.
Via Erie R. R. and Lake Chautauqua,
July 20, 8 p. m., Willson Ave, 8:10.
Good 5 days. “Toronto $1.50, Alex. Bay
$7.00 extra,
TRAVELERS’ REGISTER
‘Tralos on all roads run on Stendard Time
TeetoiriCacages S¢ Louis RR,
TICKER OFFICES, Puble Sq, 1 Pear
Easivnued Duly
Peurl St Staiion....8 16pm 1 Sam 7 Sham
Bicaaway Siatioisk wpa 2 Gem § Sees
Bocto'as. Siaclon om Steel baa
Westbound. "Dally. 15
Eucld Av, Station .0 Vita i am —7 Pop
Broadway Station’ 8 Stam Ht siam 7 sibe
Peart St Station...6 sum Ht Stam 1 Sep
TICKET ovIcES,
ERIE Ro. lp mucha Aves
Pla Se water Be, Ste:
Walthon ave. ta
SAa ba eee Tae
Yourgiown:& Prabang kaw wm Pop
Rew York a Pitburs | Sipain| 630 Dam
How York Plugsburg. 20°" / 2:48 pant go
Neununton’s Pitsbrg | 9:50 pn eto Sn
Youngstown & Plutsbune"/ £38 pen yg)
Younestown & Pittsburg .| 6:00 pin) £38 BO
Rew one damescome | gine bi 133 am
Simemown a Pittaorg:. 0/0 2) 938 bs
. D Cleveland Union Station.
Foot of Bank Street
ees Orrices sf Usion Station, Euclid Ay, an
\Wroatiand ty, Getionar nt AY ond
Rescoarien ea Ae peels See Donets
Dales “balls eases aaa
yee
Pittsburg & Beltaire ...... 7 00am 411 em
Renamer Gee gee
eee ries Sanaa
Bmeaatens sac seee see
fuerte. tem “pee
Phonan ue eee eee
Seineyemeats ieee eee
susgecmesine tees soe
Enea eercentees Seen
See wees Seem
fimeatese tus cis 2ae
eons sae ose
Ss ceeeasr Sere
“THE ST. LOUIS LIMITED”
via
“Big-4 Route.”
\earee-CUEVECAND 8:0 FM. (ough,
‘eter SRIRAM ont
feite- wheter e & Miser ere.
Serer BAERS CHY anes sermon
ia Pros, Vere Src mares,
per Stace, over «ene
Least one Soman core
Ppcaimnies i consiieca siaeeuee
cigtauierin siento Bias a
tomers ate a eens etna teat
iat SERRE tes Sse
bat
‘Trainatrom endo Cevelana. Leave, oety?
Romeronenateceraena, Leora, aime
SiGe Reece aeeee ee
Stik nares eee Lo ee
Hehabecaths be Gee be dg be
SExp PL. Ind. Peo. St Louls sos por Sais
Shae Eee, Se bone ram Palin
Seow Vee
Seneca co aaa eee
hii eel tas Sila ee
Perr arts a
striate Che yea aera
(Cen Tickers os Be Pest Oies ii
FS hs i slid
MGTICR 0 SUBSCRIBER —Subecrivers To
Weare TE GAtErrs regulary anowtt coun
SAT ONCE We desire every cone a aout?
Promptly.
eis Aine our patrons to caretully examine
Pet Gamersw's sdversioomone sory mae
Bopcees,dhannegaimen wnoaayecrs cee
per should Rave the patronage of kine te
Kite “ve tact ant ae ‘dvortiee lo assur.
fence that they want i,
JLecal reading notices (advertisements) ton
Senta tine (six words in igre"
Sieveland, Saturday, July 15, 1905.
“
Purchase “The Gazette” at
BusmAw's News Store, Cysnogs Bulding,
Open Sanday
Soopwaite News Depos, Xoo Centra
venue cor Steringaremie’ Open Susi
XB Bowaarrs Stone, No, fo Central Ave
‘opposite Laurel street Open Sunsse
B Vauasrisie Grocery" Stare, No._0
Central Ave, Hetween Pert) ant ftms Soe
ADAMS & Hawnins' Barber Shop, Not
zine St .
X. HEXEN News Depot. No. 261 Bon
‘teen, near corner of Superior street Opes
Sunday.
5. Moon's News Store, No. 27 Superio
‘tees second Goor meat or ont nroor "Spe
maoe ee.
Bue. | Dew Gules be tnek sa Nea ent
For \Rent—Five furnishe
eres oe
Street. Rent "reasonable. Call at
Trained Nurse—Professional train.
ed nurse. a graduate and practical mas.
Seuise; Swedish movements; face and
Scalp massage a specialty. Will call
at any private home to give treatment.
‘Terms reasonable. 'Phone, Central
2271 W, or call at No. 323 Central ave-
nue.
Teachers Wanted.—Those of Chris-
tian character, able to do the best
work. Only first class need apply.
For plano, higher branches, dressmak.
‘ing, millinery, domestic science,
shorthand and ‘printing. Prof. E.: W.
B. Curry, president of the Curry
school, Urbana, 0.
Ernest 0. Orsburn left yester
ene yesterday fo
Mr. D. C.,Fisher, of Lorain, was in
the city last week.
Pay your subscription if you owe
The Gazette and oblige us.
Miss Cora Emery, of Massillon, 1¢
spending a few days in the city.
Emest 0. Orsburn arrived in the
elty last week Friday from Cincinnati
‘Miss Mayme Trice. of Wheeling, 1
visiting Mrs. Katherine Summerville
‘of 277 Brownell street.
Mrs. Blanche Richards, of Cincin.
nati, guest of Mrs, Ed Daw, left Mon.
ay evening for Detroit.
A party of 12 ladies left at 10:30 a
m. Wednesday to attend the Mite Mis.
sionary convention at Lima.
Jas. H. Starkey has been appointec
Aistrict deputy by Dr. 8. 8. Jordon, o
Chillicothe, grand chancellor of the K.
‘of P. of Ohio.
‘Mrs. John Mann, of 168 Central ave
nue, entertained at dinner last Sunday
Mrs, M. EB. Lewis and Mrs. J. W
Hackiey, of Mt. Vernon, O.
Mr. Thomas Redman, of Wheeling
stopped over to see his sister, Mrs
Ida Bumery, of 108 Bolivar street
‘while enroute to Mt. Clemens.
Matthews, of Harvard, made three
hits for Burlington in the two game:
‘on the Fourth. Cote (white), of Yale
id not get a hit in his two games with
Plattebure.
‘The editor of The Gazette left Sat
‘urday for Youngstown and Sharon
Pa,, returning Monday evening. Thurs.
day he spent in Buffalo and at Ft
“Erie, Canada,
No separate kindergartens or set.
tlement ‘houses for our people only
are wanted from this municipality
Just remember this please and pas:
the word along the line.
‘Miss Cora Jackson, a former rest
dent of this city, a teacher in the Bal
Bmore, Mc. colored Wpigh_ sehool
visiting her father, My J. H. Jackson
of Hackman street. She is. stopping
‘at Mr. and Mrs, Chas. Hayes, of No
(617 Sterling avenue.
‘The editor ofThe Gazette acknowl
edges the receipt of an invitation t
Attend the Bachelors’ annual outin
on the steamer “Francis J. Torrance’
to Moss Side park, Pittsburg, July 27
and thoroughly appreciates the same
‘We hope it 1s possible for us to bi
present.
‘Mrs. Sarah C. Cook is entertaining
hher sister, Mrs. Mary E. Lewis, 0
Mt. Vernon, and sister-in-law, Mrs
J, W. Hackley. ‘They are on thei
Way to visit in Detroit and Windsor
The Misses Beauford and McNary, 0
Chicago, are also guests of Mrs. Cook
41 Scovill avenue.
‘Mr, James Weaver and Mr. Clarenc:
Brown, delegates from Western Re
‘serve lodge 42, K. of P., to the granc
Jodge at Urbana, were entertained b;
Mrs. Schaver, 1059°Main street, durin
‘the ‘session. | Mrs. Shaver is a ver;
excellent hostess. She was ably as
fisted by her very entertaining sister
Mri. Carrie Lee, of Champaign, Ml
*3ickey.”
‘A pleasing reception was tendere
Mrs, ‘Mary Church-Terrell_ Tuesda:
evening at the Alta House by the Hia
Watha club. Over 100 were in at
Yendance to meet this lady who ha
made such an impression upen al
publics, both here and abroad. _Afte
2 program rendered by Miss Black
well, pianist; Miss Underwood, so
prano; Mr. F, Hackley, tenor; Mis
Emma Tolbert, In recitation, and Mrs
Minter, accompanist, Mrs. Cliffor
gade remarks and Mrs. Terrell close
with 2 fitting comment upon th
Bonors tendered her. Refreshment
were served in the dining room.
‘St. Andrew's Sunday-school held it
picnic at Wade park’ on Tuesday 0
This week. All sorts of games an
amusements were indulged in. Thi
jindergarten children, under the di
yection of Mrs. McElroy, helped to en
festain with @ flagdrfll. The winner:
Of the foot races were as follows
For 4-year-old boys—Wm. Tood first
Wilbur Cooper second. For 7-year-ol
Qoys—Harold Young first, Wm. Straw
er second. For 12-year-old. boys-
Wm. Wooten first, Walter Smith sec
‘ond. Boys’ long distance—Wm. Woot
Ch. first, Walter Smith-second, Kar
‘road third. Fred Seeling, last year’
‘champion, won against Wm. Wooter
‘These two boys are promising youn
sprinters. For 6-year-old giris—Am:
Wright first, Madeline Nooks second
For S-year-old. girls—Reba Doct
frst, Helen Wright second. For 10
year-old girls—Corinne Letcher firs
Zora Jackson second, For 12-year-ol
giris—Mary Jefferson first, Mario
sirls—Mary Lane first, Gladys Smith
second, One of the ‘most exciting
Faces was the women's race. Mrs.
Walter Wright, jr., affer a second con-
test with Miss Carter, who tied her in
the first race, won with lots of space
to spare. It was a ‘splendid. sprint.
Mrs. McElroy. was second in this race
a8 first contested. Services at St.
Andrew's Sunday morniags only dur-
Ing duly and August. Sunday-schoo!
at 12 m. Good music by vested cholr
‘at the 10:80 service,
FE ahg Balla ects cases chane eb. 10
‘the police court last week ‘Thursday
and were finished the day following
‘(Priday.) The result: Rev. E. D.
Dandridge, sentenced to $1 and 10
days; G. L. Randolf $1 and 20 days;
R. J. Callahan $25 and cost. These
sentences were suspended as long as
there were no further disturbances fr
the church necessitating calting the
[police, Letcher Dunn and Ousles
(Parks! were bound over to the grand
Jury charged with cutting to wound:
ball $300 in each ease. Leé Holston
charged with disturbance, was dis
charged. Judge Whalen said as a re
sult of the preponderance of evidenc
| proaucea in the cases he | though
that Rev. E. D. Dandridge was the
eause of all the trouble in the churct
and that he would advise him to re
sign and leave for the sake of har
mony in the community and peace fr
the congregation. The judge coulé
hhave blamed the Baptist association
some and not been far amiss.
LEGAL NOTICE.
| David M. Pease, whose residence is
unknown, but if said David M. Pease
ibe dead, then the unknown heirs, ex-
Jecutors or administrators of said Da-
vid M. Pease, whose names and rest
denees are unknown to this plaintiff:
Josiah W. Woleatt, whose residence is
unknown, but if sald Josiah W. Wol-
cott be dead, then the unknown heirs,
executors or administrators of sald
Josiah W. Wolcott, whose names and
residences are unknown to this plain-
tif; Martha Steele, whose residence is
unknown, but if said Martha Steele
be dead then the unknown heirs, ex-
ecutors or administrators of said Mar-
tha Steele, whose names and rest-
dences are unknown to this plaintiff:
Abner L. Steele, whose residence {a
unknown, but if sald Abfer L. Steele
be dead, then the unknown heirs, ex.
ecutors or administrators of said) Ab-
ner L.. Steele, whose names and resi-
denees are unknown to this plaintiff;
Hattle N. Russell,,whose residence is
unknown, but if said Hattie N. Rus.
sell be dead, then the unknown heirs
executors oF administrators of said
Hattie N. Russell, whose names and
residences ‘are unknown to this plain.
tiff, will take notice that on the—
day of July, A. D., 1905, Lizzle Kireh.
ner filed her petition in the Court of
Common Pleas of Cuyahoga County,
Ohio, being case No. —— against
the aforesaid persons as defendants,
in which the plaintift prays that her
title may be quieted to the following
deseribed premises:
First Parcel: Situated In the Town-
ship of Chagrin Falls, County of Cuya-
hoga, and State of Ohio, and known
as being part of Lot 10, formerly Solon
‘Township, Tract'1, Township 6, Range
10, and bounded and deseribed' as fol-
lows: Beginning in the center of the
highway on the south line of said lot
10, being also at the southeast corner
ot and conveyed “by Jacob H. Russell
by deed recorded in Vol. 183, Page 69
of Cuyahoga County Records; thence
north elght degrees west along the
center of said road 10 chains, 8 links;
thence north 53 degrees, 45 west
along the center of said highway 2
chains, $2 links to the line of lands
conveyed to Charles T. Blakeslee by
deed in Vol. 148, Page 120 of Cuya-
[Moga County: Records, being known as
the Griffith's MIN property; thence
northeasterly along. the line of land
£0 conveyed to Blakeslee to the south.
jerly bank of the Chagrin River;
[thence up the bank of said river fol
lowing the meanderings thereot to the
south line of said lot No. 10; thence
west along the south line of said lot
10, to the place of beginning, contain.
ing 11. acres of land, excepting how-
ever, therefram one acre of land in
the ‘southwest corner of above de-
seribed tract being § rods north and
|south, and 20 rods east and west, and
being’ same premises ‘conveyed by
|Jonm 7. Smith “and wife to Martha
|Bteele by deed recorded in Vol. 34,
| Page 186 of Cuyahoga County Records.
| Second Parcel: Situated in the
| Township and County and State afore.
{sald and known as being part of said
lot No. 10, bounded and described as
follows: Beginning in the center of
the highway on the south line of sald
lot No. 10,-being also at the southeast
comer of land conveyed to Jacob H.
Russell by deed recorded in Vol. 123,
Page 69 in Cuyahoga County Records,
thence north along the center of said
Highway 8 rods; thence east and
| aratiel with ‘the south tine of sald
lot 10, 20 rods; thence southerly and
parallel with the sald highway § rods
to the south Ine of said lot 10, thence
West on sald south line 20 rods to the
place of beginning, containing one
aere but excepting therefrom out of
the northwest comer a piece of land
36 feet in width north and south by
60 feet In depth east and west, being
the premises conveyed to ‘Josiah
Pelmer to the Board of Education of
Chagrin Falls Township by deed re.
corded in Vol. 360, Page 59 of Cuys.
hoga County Records, be the same
more or less and subject to all legal
highways,
Sald petition recites that the plain.
tiff is the owner in fee simple and is
Jin possession of sald premises, that
sald defendants claim some interest
or estate In sald premises adverse to
the right of title of said plaintiff and
|eets forth the nature of said alleged
claims as fully as they are known ‘to
|}said plaintif™: said petition asks that
sald defendants be required to set up
their alleged clatms In sald_ premises
and that the same be declared null
and void, and all proper corrections
made; sald defendants are required
to answer said petition on or before
— “tar of September, A. D., 1905,
or judgment may be taken against
them.
LIZZIE KIRCHNER,
Plaintit
By C. W. SWARTZEL,
net
$4.25 Pittsburg and Return $
maeeles Mae Bs,
_ Via Erie R. R. the short, double
‘rar line. ‘Tickets are on sale Aug
18 and 19 and are good for return un-
Uf Aug. 28 inclusive. You have you
cacice of seven fast through dails
trains in each direction on the Erie
Call at $ Euclid avenue or Station.
at
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, .0., SATURDAY, JULY 15, 1905.
= | = ee. N. Y., News. ; ———_ | AN EYE OPENER! | J
eA. M. B. church will give a
mene ner nda er || THE CLEVELAND & BUFFALO « |) 4 SELU RINGER)" ui
m-|Collins has joined the choir—The || @—— ae
my [gaine has ing hcl || © gq. TRANSITCOMPANY |, Co
ace | River-Hurst park Wednesday.—Mr. L. OB Pee eSTNS
nt. | Price, of Bulfalo, was here recenty.— D2) 9 ))\ CLEVELAND
Mrs. G. H, Burghardt visited her aunt, .
St.| Mrs Hil, last week. Also. Mra. Mar SY and BUFFALO : Ss
ar; |tha Pope—atr. Frank Jackson is stil “WHILE YOU. SLEEP” HOURBON OLIGARGHY
001 | sick.—Mrs. Susie Mason is {ll—Mrs. 0 “*" STEAMERS: |
oir | Lester Clemons has one of the fresh | errand Sabine etic eh
alr children—Mr. John | Logan, of | CITY OF BUPFAL | BY JOSEPH C. MANNING,
jin | Bradford, Pa. was the guest of ‘Mr. “crry OF ERIE” lexander Cily, Ala.
tay |and Mrs! Jerome. Halthcock one day || py esther mtn, wnat dune i,t || ‘Alexander os ae al
ing |lest week.—Mr. S. Naylor has return. || (igri or inctnising public i the ||, Senet ten cents to the auther and get r
D.{ed from Pittsburg—Raymond Haith. || ‘* i qned gens MPT this GREAT little race book | .
10|}cock and Sewell Jackson are sick.— |} +11 -ARD INCLUDING SUNDAY rer ee as
ye: |Mre ‘Wm; Johndon’ and children, ot || Gwe anauye | PATRONIZE |
ese | Coaderspart. Fa, are visiting in Al. Cleveland 8 p.m. Burfa-2 6:30 a.m. |) TOK
jens.—-Mr. Henty Jobneon will go to :
“el demece Heas Schram i go || gale Spm. Ceind 6020. | | THE ae:
the |Johnson, who ts seriously ill—Mrs. || oneweerna necompanite EACH STEAMER " Se
jey | Henry Smith visited Mrs, W. W. Vir-| | comectonn watese pena with trie | “Cem ! estauirant | AL
ey Hiaia eat weoke -aiaster Carl Stewart |] siviancees tnt Coonan tten Secting *
ate returned. home. | ior Pied Bera oad a at wet o 4]
on, ——_— eet rag oye S- 4S By el be acca F
onl halal sete eee GE SECS deruses ito exis cope: No. 91 Sheriff St. | *y
Pore iy 1 Serna. Ge, ee Seton,
acenod rt. Sallie ‘Taylors funeral
uly tne Chas. Devine, Mr and
Mrs, Jno. Stevemon, “Mr. and alee.
James Payne, of Cinclanai, 0, were
here Sunday.—W. A. Schropshire, of
Monterey, Mex, i here~-Rev. ©. F
David, PB, was here Monday—-Atr
Salle Taylor, a faithful Christan and
‘ember ef the Good Samaritan lodge
who ied uly st Josephs os
Bilal was the dauanter of Mee. Nan:
nie Hightower and sister of W. H.
Hightower. The funeral was held
July 7. Burial in the new cemetery.
whe Odd Fellows are. beautifying
err nal,
Rochester, Pa, Doings.
Drs, Mary Wheeler tft Tuesday fo
Homestead, an delegate (0 the S. 8
convention:—Aitas "Margaret" Boar
Giea at Crow's Hun ater © short i
nent | Tueretions-ate Andre
Hatcher "left Wednesday. for Eno
‘Valles, Pa. to work om a dairy farm
“ite ‘Wiliam, Ford again able
be abovt-Miae Marcela Dutier tt
‘uenday for the SS. convention. Sh
tn secretary Sara. Bean i vil
tng her nce, Miss Mary Bean, of Nes
Brighton
SS
In the court of William Francis, a
Justice of the peace in and for Brook.
lyn township, Cuyahoga county, Ohio,
on the 10th day of June, 1905, said
justice issued’ an order of attachment
in the case of Chas. Hesse, plaintiff,
ys. E.R. Collier, defendant, for the
sum of $23.81 and $20 probable costs
of action. Said case will be for hear-
ing on the 7th day of August, 1905, at
2p. m,, sharp.
CHAS, HESSE,
Plaintitr
A Brakeman Suicides.
Unrichsvitie, O., July 11.—Harry
Tweed, a brakeman on the Pan.
Handle, committed suicide, shooting
himself through the head at his home.
While walking (o the Dennison rail-
road yards to work on the night of
July 4 he was sandbagged and acted
queerly since.
$1.50 Erie R. R. Excursion $1.50
Sunday, July 23, to Garrettsville. War-
ren, Niles, Youngstown, Hubbard,
Sharon, Sharpsville—7:30 a. m., Will-
eae wane ot
WONDERFUL 3
> WONDERFUL :
3
t DISCOVERY :
Curly Hair Made Straight By §
; ;
| Ge
SAMA. Alas
: FORD'S ORIGINAL.
OZONIZED OX MARROW
; ane nintet name mie Pisces
bea eee ge
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gh Soon ee
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Wiegeeeteceed abtiees pitsisie
eat
eet tscccs hte me’ cas oss
Send your laundry to
EUREKA
STEAM LAUNDRY.
LEATHERMAN & GREEN.
First-Class Work.
We cal for and deliver i
994 Payne Ave., Cleveland, 0.
Bel, East 15:03. Both phones
Herculean Club
Pleasant Glub Rooms and Cafe
Cin saaiid umoorences
470 Central Ave.
JAS, A. STERRET, Pres, and Mgr.
Cuy. phone 7362 W.
He eherherfertecberbeefecterterteetecterteetectecteete ctertertectecterte se.
= Bey So SR eR Gi aE”
A ‘
; | AMERICA’S MOST NOTED HAIR | °
>
——CULTURIST—. :
‘
J &
5 ep IS the title won by Madam T. E.
a Oy Stumm, of Philadelphia. Her is
x E. aE treatment of the scalp and the re-
. Kees sults produced by her None Such :
i. Scalp Food in makinglong, straight :
and beautiful hair grow upon bald
= heads and on heads where the hak 4
t+ Com. was falling out have been wonder- 4
* Se? ful. Her treatments and herreme- 4
H Beforeusing Mme:Stumm’s | dies make the hair grow and flour- -#
: reparations
Ae Earley at ig %
: She will treat you by mail or in person. :
Madam Stumm’s Twenty-Five Years’ Experience in 4
= large cities with the people of both races has given her ex-
cellent opportunity to study and treat all local’ troubles of
the scalp and her extraordinary success puts her in lead of
all others. 4
~ Ather fine and beautifully fitted eo -
¢ up parlors, she has an able corps of pro- SOX 4
* fessional assistants and treats hundreds ae 4
* of persons weekly. Her factory is kept o's 4
+ busy filling orders daily. | ——
Letters testifying to the wonderful *
* results are coming in by the thousands. | 4
* ‘Send for Her Remedies. They dothe |Z » 4
work every time and are being tried the | ec 2
, world over. | sttimns Preparetions 3
* None Such Scalp Food tesserae: 4
¢ out the wrinklesin the hair and starts «new growth, 4
7 Send $1.00 fortwo months’ treatment, postage prepaid. 4
‘+ Stumm’s Orange Flower Skin Food “222,25 4
h ker lemaingidad billige Metineaehcend bias) pica Jon
‘ : pune
. Stumm’s Velvet Liquid Powder “?icii..*h% :
— 50c. per Bottle,
‘ Send Postal Money Order, Express Order or Register- 4
ted letter addressed to 4
| Mme T.5.stumm =;
+ 529 So. Sixteenth Street, Philadelphia, Pa,
; —
Ea aha ahs ofa ofa af ahs ahs ae ofa oe ope ape ape dfe che oe ofecte of ahi cfs faahe
THE CLEVELAND & BUFFALO «
@€ TRANSIT COMPANY
a CONNECTING
(G15) cieverano
and BUFFALO
WHILE YOU SLEEP”
UNPARALLELED MONT SERPCE™NEW STUAMERS
“CITY OF BUFFALO”
Rs ky ae
Ie lietet of the trating pic the
ie eano-Balty meiUaINe SUNDAY
Cleveland 8 p.m, Burte2 6:30 a.m.
Buffalo 8 p.m. Cleveland 6:30 a.m.
cognections made tt fale with texto for
PSS Bagh ata its Wed tse
eae nce ene eet
Spec ioe bate clea fo Bataie cot
ec e
eae cea ft eee eater
W.F. HERMAN, 6. P. A, Cleveland, Ohio
GEE & WILLS,
FUNERAL DIRECTORS,
Corriages.and Ambulances Fur-
nished for All Occasions.
W.W. Gee, 2, Mien hove u
J. WalterWills, o5°,fsr! &
Bell Phone North 1185 L.
MR. HENRY T.EVANS’
IDEAL RESTAURANT
; Specialy Mode of Sto Orders ond Home
Boiled Dinners. Meals ol oll Hours.
REGULAR DINNERS, 25 GENTS,
2 "Meals Served Sunday, also.
31 Chestnut St.
; THE,
Five Cent Restaurant,
No. 53 Quebec St.
An Uptlo-Dote Restaurant in Every Way,
Tee
LEWIS W. PORTER, Proprietor.
AN EYE OPENER!
A a RINGER
“RISEAND REIGN CF TH
BORO LACH
= ATONE
THE
“Gem” Restaurant,
I No, 91 Sheriff St.
| James W. cravitd, Proprietor.
eee MEALS SERVED!
One Meal, 20¢.; Seven Meals, 81.
| bec
—_.~
aw i or” oy
~ Sie
CLAIRVOYANT.
MRS. MARTH. tho world-reacwned and
highly. gplebraved tuners and teat” TRANCE
CLAIRVOYANT, reveals gvorvining. So tc:
Fealtgn, Cam g6comsulted oh all atten
Tre Sain, ove ah Marriages Api
prery pater} revealed, alco, ef town, de:
ecuned “and. living “friends.” “Removes ni
froubie and eatrangemesin, uattes ihe acy:
sreted’ and causen speedy" marriages” #10)
fe*her urding revelations ot the paste pret=
fer teal avare’evente of one site! Remon
fay rest” asqured. you will gain facts without
Sovscnte, She ‘egn''De. cenavited “upon ai
Eintrs ot, Life, ove,” Courtanip. Marriage
Filente te, ith ‘severitin of future sa
Elaning ‘tienda’ “chetien te et eaviee
pen fleknens. change is" business. journeys,
vaults contented wile: dlvoree tad apect:
Jation ta valuathe ard reliable. ‘She reads vour
esting” good or bad she withbolge nosbine,
SERS statert, bore! wit aout el fn
Frere. 2nd ature in BEAD TRANCE: Tras
fe poter of any two" clairvoyante you ever
Bee PENS (ha thet’ fos” bao
Bete wi te, rue. to, You and tt ne pill
Soe wail “eit you" when’ you, ‘will Dave:
ing, Bie! name, “aiaees” ad" aate’ of ac:
FinuateeCatrrarantiy ic, Youn 0:
SURE willbe wridien th an heneaty cleat
ipa. pisin manner, una ‘in “s deud* vance
Hoiadre anowid" Wiow" tne atecest of thet
Rowbaude’end cnlldren: ‘young. inden abould
Know evoryibing about Welt Swectienrte and
Intended Rusband. Do net Keep. ‘eee:
Barry or go nto. uaineas uaull pou koowr al,
{erect le iy religious serupiu proven ut
Macame is the onlyone in the world who
can tell you the FCLE NAME of your future
Sosvane! with ‘age and date of marriage, aud
{ells whether he one you love is true oF false
‘Header, do you ever noties that some people
agent have reodiuck else the, and atte
Others, yovitelt mey-Be. Thave auch & Bard
thet fet len, nd ao ionter now bata they
{i they Gad at tho-ond of the your ter ate
te better of than whoo ‘they started. That ix
Sfceune ey tayo ot commuted the att
robabllties, hava been to one of the onuine
Ricaioms and obtained advice.
1.239 are uemuceestl in Cuninens, Daye bad
Ee Rast Gus Yon areata
Jour tioutie isras she usaeTstante de apes
Hee gultnguetine “Moo ar pert yore tag
rensedperagna aud has” Urought thoes
sande to succens. For advice ty lover 1.00
‘Ti ieuersuae contain stamps
MRS. M. B. MARTH,
CHICKASHA,
Box 958. Indian Territory.
INCLUDING MEDICAL, DENTAL AND PHARMACEUTIC COLLEGES.
INCORPORATED 1807.
| THInTy-RIGHT SESSION will Begin October 2nd, 1908, and sontings
“eight months. STUDENTS MATRICULATED FOR DAY INSTRUCTION
ONLY.
_ Four-Yeare’ Graded Course in MEDICINE.
| Three. Years’ Graded Course in DENTAL SURGERY.
| Three. veara! Graded Course in PHARMACY.
Inatruction is given by didactic lectures, quizzes, clinics and pratticat
laboratory demonstrations, Well equipped laboratories in all departments.
Unexcelled hospital facilities. All studente must register before Octo-
ber 14, 1905.
| For further information or catalogue, apply to
F.4d. Shadd, A. My M. D,, Secretary. 901 R Street, N. W., Washington, D.C.
coc. iL. LLACW,
wir
THE SIGLER BROS. CO.,
MFG. AND WHOLESALE JEWELERS,
will be pleased to have his friends and customers call on him
when in need of i
Watches, Diamonds, Jewelry, Clocks, Silver-
ware, Table Cutlery, Umbrellas, Canes,
Opera Glasses and Spectacles.
Teatng and Aiting ditculterer a specialty, Watches and Jewelry neatly repaired on chore
Gvaranteed’ "All Kinds of Atst-oince ‘eegraving ‘prompuy'oxocuied,” Tae Toe
Fatronage Griers by moll romps attended te
Will make prices on all goods a low as the lowest.
No. 29 Euclid Ave., CLEVELAND, 0.
REDUCED. PRICES
Suits, Overcoats, Pants
and Fancy Vests,
The Best Work,
eh tage llnn
Joe Soskin, 522 Prospect St.
THE 7
|
(| |
eveland & Sandusky |
|
: |
)
1
Ernes: Mueller, President. John M. Leicht, First Vice-Prea. |
Carl F. Schroeder, Asst. Sec. & Treas. {
1100-1118 American Trust Building,
CLEVELAND, oO.
TELEPHONE MAIN 1269,
Just a ‘Trial
Convinced.
SPECIAL
MOCHA AND JAVA
ae ee
- A.J.S.POOL’S |
RES TAURANT
1 Sc Note Sot es
ile Dies et a hu,
eet sca a
18 Bl 3, Sh
Avert iT CATE
3
QUR “QUEEN OF SONG”
Madam MarieSelika
CAN BE ENGAGED FOR
CONCERTS,
Recitals, &c.
No. 506 South 11th Street,
Philadelphia, Pa.)
J. A. ROGERS,
FONERAL DIRECTOR
EMBALMER,
ee
JOHN 8. HALL, .
WATCHMAKER 2 JEWELER.
wy cain "cau
Four Facts For Sick Women To Consider
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Has an Unequaled Record of Cures—Mrs. Pinkham's Advice Is Confidential, Free, and always Helpful
FIRST—That almost every operation in our hospitals performed upon women becomes necessary through neglect of such symptoms as backache, irregular heartbeat, displacements of the uterus, pain in the side, burning sensation in the stomach, bearing-down pains, nervousness, dizziness and sleeplessness.
SECOND—The medicine that holds the record for the largest number of absolute cures of female illis is Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It regulates strengthens and cures diseases of the female organism as anything else can
For thirty years it has been helping women to be strong, curing backache, nervousness, kidney troubles, all uterine and ovarian inflammation, weakness and displacements, regulating menstruation perfectly and overcomprehensively, and being invaluable in preparing for childbirth and the change of life.
THIRD — The great volume of unsolicited and grateful testimonials on file at the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, Mass., many of which are from time to time published by permission, give absolute evidence of the value of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Mrs. Pinkham's advice.
FOURTH — Every alling woman in the United States is asked to accept the following invitation. It is free, will bring you health and may save your life.
Mrs. Pinkham's Standing Invitation to Women--Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to promptly communicate with Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. All letters are received, opened, read and answered by women only. From symptoms given, your trouble be located and the quickest and sweet way of recovery advised. Out of the vast volume of experience in treating female ill Mrs. Pinkham probably has the very knowledge that will help your case. Surely, any woman, rich or poor, is very foolish if she does not take advantage of this generous offer of assistance.
BACK TO NATURE
Return to the old time wholesome wheat food of our fore-fathers.
Buy a package of EGG-O-SEE and use it tomorrow morning.
When you dip your spoon into its golden-brown flakes you will realize that AT LAST there is a delicious tempting dish made from the whole wheat.
EGG-O-SEE is made from the perfect grains of the choicest white wheat, containing ALL THE VITAL ELEMENTS that make for buoyant health and good digestion.
It is Nature's perfect food, and satisfies your craving for "something good to eat."
Perfect digestion means life power, energy and a robust well being. Attain it by eating EGG-O-SEE.
EGG-O-SEE is sold in air-tight, inner-lined packages, insuring purity and freshness.
BEST FOOD IN SUMMER
If you can find a grocer who does not sell EGG-O-SEE send us his name in the form of this periodical and we will send you a full-size package prepaid. Address,
EGG-O-SEE
THE EGG-O-SEE CO.
Quincy, Ill.
Positively cured by these Little Pills. They also relieve Distress and Digestion and Tooth Heath Eating. A perfect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue, Pain in the Side, PORPID LIVER. They
CARTERS LITTLE IVER PILLS.
PAXTINE
TOILET
ANTISEPTIC
FOR WOMEN
treated with filps peculiar to their sex, used as a douche is marvelously successful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs, discharges urine, indiscriminates local sources, curaecurecorba and nasal catarrh.
Paxing in powder form to be dissolved in pure water is used in the manufacture of medicinal and economical than liquid antiseptics for all TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES
Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free.
THE R. A. TUXTON COMPANY
BOSTON, MASS.
IN GREAT VARIETY
FOR SALE AT THE
LOWEST PRICES BY
A.N.KELLEGG NEWSPAPER CO.
72 W. Adams Street, CB1C800
MIGRATION OF THE "DOES"
The "Ross" Also Departing—Other Names of Later Note Taking Their Places.
From Brooklyn borough courts is reported a large increase in the number of "John Does." The excess of "Does" in Brooklyn, too, says a local authority, is the result of an accident that the disappearance from the Mansion of Martha Roe and "Roes." In the old English courts, when the name of a plaintiff was unknown, the custom was to describe him as "John Doe." When the defendant's name was described as "Riehl Roe." In the criminal case the name of an unidentified male prisoner was entered as "John Doe" and of a female prisoner as "Jane Roe." In civil cases with women appearing as principals, the name of the defendant was any other, for the female plaintiff, and "Jane Roe" for the female defendant.
In Manhattan the colloquial use of the word "dough" has a slang designation for wealth. John Doe has been called "John Doe," describing a man of money. John Doe has come for money. John Doe has been named "John Doe" has been giving place in the criminal courts to "Walter Jones." John Doe has been allied in legal papers in court; "Jane Doe" has been superseded by "Kate Best."
Affronted Authority
"So your wife does not approve of baseball. "No," answered Mr. Meckton. "Henrietta can't stand it to see any more man bossing you around. You want the wimp the Washington Star."
Arriving at a Verdict
Kushequa, Pa., - July 10.—(Special)—In this section of Pennsylvania there is a growing belief that for such Kidney Diseases as leucomatism and Lame Back Disorders, there is a possibility that Dodd's Kidney Pills. This belief grows from such cases as that of Mrs. M. L. Davison of this place. She tells the story "I have suffered from Rheumatism for thirty years and find that Dodd's Kidney Pills have done me more good than any other pill." Mrs. Davison only bothered with Lame Back and I can only say that my back hasn't bothered me since I took Dodd's Kidney Pills." I have only two doses, only two boxes of Dodd's Kidney Pills, the result would be considered wonderful if it were not that others are reporting it as a cure for Rheumatism. I arrived at a verdict that "Dodd's Kidney Pills are the one cure sure for Rheumatism."
The Difference.
"In the Society Islands, when a man dies they whitewash his body."
"The road itself is a marvel of engineering, and the 85-pound rails, with rock ballast, promises the highest degree of speed and safety."
It is highly improbable that the world will ever again see a time when it will not consider itself on the threshold of a new era.—Puck.
TORTURING, DISFIGURING
Humors, Eczemas, Itchings, Inflammations, Burnings, Scalings and Chafings Cured by Cuticura.
The agonizing itching and burning of the skin, as in eczema; the frightful scaling, as in psoriasis; the loss of hair and crusting of the scalp, as in scalled head; the facial disagreements, as in pimples and ringworm; the awful suffering of infants, and the toxicity of workout burpies as in milk crust, tetter and salt rheum; all demand a remedy of almost superhuman virtues to successfully cope with them. That Cuticura Soap, Ointment and are such stands proven beyond all doubt by the testimony of the civilized world.
We all would a 'a been richer ef we'd only be wiser; but maybe we'd been bulldheaded with no appetite. -Atlanta Constitution.
General Weakness.
Nervous Prostration, Easily Tired, Pains
Aches, etc., are signs of some deep-seaed
trouble and ought to be corrected at once.
Pushchuck-Kuroo is the best Tonic, Blood
Cure. We've written in the world also
Cures Indigestion, Misuse and Heart
Kidney Troubles. Dr. Pushchuck, Chicago
If nature ever made a mistake, it was
when she made a good canteleton and a
bad canteleton look exactly alike—Toledo
Blade.
Do not believe Piso's Cure for Consumption has an equal for coughs and colds—J. F. Boyer, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15, 1920.
A paradox: Some people do a great deal
but others do more and don't do so much
—Chicago Record-Herald.
If you use Ball Blue, get Red Cross Ball
Blue, the best Ball Blue. Large 2 oz.
package only 5 cents.
In the beginning the woman sits down
and waits for a husband; in the end she
sits up and waits for him;—Life.
CONSTANT ACHING.
Back aches all the time. Spoils your appetite, wearies the body, worries the mind. Kidneys cause it all and Doan's kidney Pills relieve
Ade Whisk
You Eat
H. B. McCarver, of 201 Cherry St., Portland, Ore., inspector of freight for the Trans-Continental Co., says: "I used Doan's Kidney Pills for backache and other symptoms of kidney trouble which had annoyed me for months. I think a cold was responsible for the whole trouble. It seemed to settle in my kidneys. Doan's Kidney Pills rooted it. It is several months since I used them, and up to date there has been no recurrence of the trouble." Doan's Kidney Pills are for sale by all dealers, price 50 cents per box Foster-Milburn Co. Buffalo, N. Y.
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY, JULY 15, 1905.
MARKETING POTATO CROPS
How the Railroads Made It Possible for the Growers to Get Fair Prices
In line with the classic case of the oyster shipppers, cited by President Hadley, of Yale University, in his book on Railroad Transportation, is the case of the Arooostook potato growers brought by President Tuttle, of the Boston and Maine Railroad before the Senate Committee on Interstate Commerce. Nothing could better show how a railroad works for the interest of the localities which it serves. A main dependence of the farmers of the Arooostook region is the potato crop, aggregating annually eight to ten million bushels which find a market largely in Boston and the adjacent thickly settled regions of New England. The competition of cheap water transportation from Maine to all points along the New England coast keeps railroad freight rates on these potatoes always at a very low level. Potatoes are also a considerable output of the truck farms of Michigan, their normal market being obtained in and through Detroit and Chicago and other communities of that region.
Not many years ago favoring sum and rains brought a tremendous yield of potatoes from the Michigan fields. At normal rates and prices there would have been a glut of the customary markets and the potatoes would have rotted on the farms. To help the potato growers, the railroads from Michigan made unprecedentedly low rates on potatoes to every reachable market, even carrying them in large quantities to a place so remote as Boston. The Arooostook growers had to reduce the price on their potatoes, and even then could not dispose of them unless the Boston and Maine railroad reduced its already low rate, which it did. By means of these low rates, making possible low prices, the potato crops of both Michigan and Maine were finally marketed. Everybody eats potatoes, and that year everybody had all the potatoes he wanted.
While the Michigan railroads made rates that would have been ruinous to the railroads, had they been applied to the movement of all potatoes at all times, to all places, they helped their patrons to find markets then. The Boston and Maine Railroad suffered a decrease in its revenue from potatoes, but it enabled the Arostock farmers to market their crop and thereby to obtain money which they spent for the varied supplies which the railroads brought to them. If the making of rates were subject to Governmental adjustment, such radical and prompt action could never have been taken, because it is well established that if a rate be once reduced by a rail company, it cannot be restored through the red tape of Governmental procedure. If the Michigan railroads and the Boston and Maine Railroad had been subjected to Governmental limitation they would have felt obliged to keep their rates, as do the railroads of France and England and Germany under Governmental limitation, and let the potatoes rot.—Exchange.
OVER THE OCEAN
Four-fifths of Zulukland has been declared unfit for European habitation by the British delimitation commission. "To calm public excitement" the Hungarian Jockey club has paid the debts of a Buda-Pesth bookmaker, who lost $41,500 over the Austrian derby.
A British board of trade return shows that during 1904 453,877 emigrants left the United Kingdom, nearly half of whom went to the British colonies. Twenty-six per cent, of the number went to Canada.
Three rare specimens of male tree fern, Osmunda regalis, of more than 1,000 years' growth, have been procured for the imperial botanic gardens of St. Petersburg from the virgin forests on the Black sea coast, near Adler.
Mrs. Frederick Krupp, widow of the famous gunmaker, has given 200,000 marks for a convalescent laborer's home, to celebrate the fifth anniversary of the opening of the great Gruson works, near Madgeburg, Germany.
The Egyptian government has decided upon postponing—and this may mean abandoning—the scheme for raising the Assuan dam, and thereby increasing the supply for the irrigation of the country in the summer, and has taken this decision mainly because two mathematicians in London have developed a new theory regarding the stresses upon masonry dams.
"Smoking races" are the latest development of student life in Germany. They are usually at drinking bouts and form a novel feature of these occasions. Hugs pipes are made specially for this purpose, having a capacity of from one to three ounces of tobacco. All pipes must be identical in shape and construction and are filled with the same quantity of tobacco to a grain.
Unique was the wedding which took place at a village near Dover, England, the other day, the bridegroom being a gentleman engaged in China, who had inserted a matrimonial advertisement in a London journal, resulting in a correspondence and exchange of photos with the daughter of a professional gentleman in the Kentish village. The bridegroom has traversed the thousands of miles separating China from Kent to claim the bride.
EDUCATIONAL MATTERS
The income of Oxford university is slightly under £70,000 a year. Swedish school children under the guidance of their teachers annually plant about 600,000 trees. Prof. Mollisch, of Frague, says that photographs can be taken by the light emitted by raw potatoes and hard-boiled eggs. Dr. William Royal Stokes and Dr. John S. Fulton, of the Maryland board of health, insist that they have discovered a curative serum for typhoid fever, after a four-years' search. Prof. Guisepe Levi, of Milan, will soon visit Paris to demonstrate before the Academy of Medicine his new cure for tuberculosis by means of iodine injections, the composition of which is a secret. He claims that 40 to 50 infections will bring about a complete cure.
Got All He Had
Sponger—I just met Dyer down the street.
Plunger—Then there is no use of my asking him for a loan—Judge.
HANGED BUNCH OF RIOTERS
Twenty-four Leaders of the Uprising at Odessa Were Executed in Various Prisons.
TREPOFF GETS MANY WARNINGS
The "Worst Hated Man in Russia" Is Told in Letters that He Will Be Assassinated — Terrorists Planned to Blow Up Czar's Palace.
Odessa, July 14.—Twenty-four leaders of the recent disturbances here were hanged yesterday in various prisons. Another batch of 17 will be publicly executed upon the arrival here of Gen. Ignatief.
The battleship Georgi Pobledonosa tetz has arrived here with a fresh crew for the purpose of taking 67 mutineers to Sevastopol for trial by court-martial.
Of 202 persons arrested and charged with robbery or incendiarism in connection with the recent riots here, 74 were acquitted owing to lack of evidence and 28 were sentenced to six weeks' imprisonment, the time to include the two weeks which they have already passed in prison. The extraordinary outcome of these trials has aroused much comment. It is openly asserted that it is a political demonstration against the military government and furnishes evidence of the conflict going on between the municipality and the government, as the judges are elected by the people. St. Petersburg, July 14—The assassin of Prefect of Flect Shuvaloff, of Moscow, has been identified as a former school teacher of St. Petersburg named Rulikovsky, who was actively connected with the political agitation and is believed to have belonged to the terrorist organization.
After the prisoner's escape from the police station where he had been confined as a political suspect some days previous to the assassination of the prefect, Shuvaloff set all the police of Moscow at work to effect his recapture. The prisoner in the meantime shaved off his beard and while the police were searching for him everywhere the man went to the prefect's office and committed the crime for which he will now be tried. The bullets of the revolver used by the prisoner were filled with poison. The crowd in the ante-room of the prefecture set upon the assassin, who was dragged into the street and terrified. The resignation of M. Boulignis as minister of the interior is expected daily. Gen. Treepoff, the assistant minister of the interior, will probably be his successor.
The terrorists have recently renewed their warnings against Gen. Trepoff with ominous persistence. The general is constantly in receipt of letters signed by the executive committee of the fighting organization informing him that his hour has come. A remarkable feature of all the communications is that the writers say that no safewards will await to avert his impending death. At the same time they tell him he need not be afraid to go abroad in the streets. They add: “Your sentence will be executed in your own room. You will die in your bed.” The police have discovered elaborate preparations for blowing up the castle of lilmskoje, near Moscow, where the czar with the imperial family intended to take a brief residence in the fortress, the most defended for his majesty's use a subranean passage is said to have been found leading to a cellar where 250 pounds of dynamite lay concealed. The police have made many arrests.
PRIZES ARE AWARDED
Cleveland and Toledo Lodges of Elks
Get $500 Apiece.
Buffalo, N. Y., July 14.—The Elks
committee on parade prizes has an-
nounced its decisions as follows:
Best appearing lodge in parade—
Toledo lodge, No. 53, first prize of
$500; Detroit lodge, No. 34, second
prize of $100, and silk banner.
Most unique uniform—Single prize
$500, awarded Cleveland lodge, No. 18
Greatest mileage, $500—El Paso
Texas, lodge.
Lodge accompanied by the greatest
number of ladies, $500—Bridgeport,
Conn. Lodge.
Lodge having greatest number in
line, nearby lodges barred, $500—
Erie, Pa. lodge No. 67.
Lodge having greatest number of
men in line, home lodges barred—
Rochester, first; Lockport, second.
A. Destructive Tornado.
Fairfax, S. D., July 14.—One person was killed and 14 injured, two probably fatally, by a tornado which swept a portion of the Rosebud reservation yesterday. At least three small towns were struck by the storm. Roy Meceney, 26, of Rosebud, Eight persons were injured at Herrick and several buildings destroyed. At Burke six people were injured, including James Jensen, his wife and baby.
Witte Will be Chief Peacemaker.
St. Petersburg, July 14.—Emperor Nicholas has signed the appointment of M. Witte, president of the committee of ministers, to be chief plenipotentiary to represent the Russian government in the peace negotiations to be conducted in the United States. The appointment clothes M. Witte with plenary powers.
Eight Men Killed.
Oakland, Cal., July 14—William Dwyer and seven Chinese were killed Thursday by an explosion at the Giant powder works, ten miles from here
Died from Lockjaw.
Bay City, Mich., July 14—Herman Bartels is the first Fourth of July lockjaw victim here. The boy died Thursday from lockjaw which developed seven days after he injured his hand with a toy pistol. He suffered terribly and was under the influence of anesthetics for two days.
A Victim of the Toy Pistol Dies
Cumberland, Md., July 14—John,
the 12-year-old son of John D. Bowen,
o. this city, died aft night of lock-
age. He was born in 1828 and
died during a fire, joy, ploy, o. July 14.
A. BATTLE WITH OUTLAWS.
Men Who Had Murdered a Detective
Got the Worst of a Fight with a
Posse of Kansas Citizens.
Winfield, Kan, July 13—C. S. Cahoon, of Kansas City, a Santa Fe Railway detective, was shot and killed at Cedarvale yesterday by two outlaws, who were shot down later by a posse of citizens. Newtown, seven miles from Cedarvale. One of the outlaws, Ed Madigan, of Ponca City, Okla, was killed instantly by the posse. The other, William Chadburn, of this city, was fatally wounded.
Madigan and Chadburn held up and robbed six traveling men at the Brettun hotel at Winfield on Sunday night and escaped. At Cedarvale, Tuesday night, Detective Calhoun encountered both of the outlaws on the street. Not being positive of their identification, Calhoun secured the city marshal and one of the traveling men who was robbed. All then started in a carriage in search of the outlaws. Early yesterday the party drove past the men in a side street. The traveling man identified them, and the trio in the carriage were just in the act of making a stand when either Madigan or Chadburn opened fire. Calhoon was shot through the heart and the outlaws made their escape temporarily. The marshal and the traveling man, taken by surprise, were unable to fire a shot in return.
Calhoun's body was taken to an undertaker's room. The town was quickly aroused. The outlaws stole two horses and started for Hewins. While a posse was gathering at Cedarvale, word was wired ahead to Hewins, where the deputy sheriff summoned a posse of 20 armed men. Within two hours the outlaws rode up to a hardware store at Hewins, secured a rifle and a revolver and started out of town on a gallop. Just as Madigan and Chadburn were leaving the main street the posse opened fire from the windows of a store. The robbers returned the fire and a hive of pillage ensued. Finally, Madigan fell from horse, being almost instantly. Another soldier brought Chadburn to the ground. During the exchange of shots J. M. Pope, a member of the posse, received a slight wound in the foot.
POLITICS AND BOODLE
New York Legislators Will Ask a Newspaper Man to Prove Statements Reflecting on Them.
Albany, N. Y., July 13.—A sensational turn was given Wednesday afternoon to the joint session of the state legislature which is investigating charges against Supreme Court Justice Warren B. Hooker, when John B. Stanchfield made an appeal on behalf of Justice Hooker from the inferences contained in a newspaper article.
Mr. Stanchfield called attention to an article which he said appeared in the New York Press of yesterday, some excerpts from which he read. Among other things the article said:
"It cannot be denied that powerful influences are at work to keep Justice Hooker on the supreme court bench.
There is both politics and boodle in this movement. Republicans and democrats are concerned in it. Gov. Higgins' goal not just to be a bit disturbed by the cloud of scandal hanging over the legislature."
The article also declared with reference to the test roll call on Tuesday in the assembly on the rule of evidence that "it was seen early in the call that defeat was about to come for the proposition to restrict the evidence to the code rules. Immediately Hooker's lawyers began to lobby among the members of the assembly. When the roll call was completed the vote was 49 to 47 against. The clerks, instead of announcing the vote, waited until further lobbying was done." Stanchfield condemned the statement in strong terms and declared that all Hooker asked was fair play. Senator Raines stated that diligent inquiry had failed to elicit the name of the writer of the article. Upon his motion a subpena was ordered issued, to compel the attendance "forth-with" of the editor of the paper to give testimony as to the origin of the charges and the writer of the article.
AN OCEAN TRAGEDY.
Twelve People on a Small Schooner
Were Murdered by a Negro.
New Orleans, La., July 13.—The Norwegian steamer Bratten, Capt. H. Holm, from Cebla, Honduras, reports a startling tragedy on the small trading schooner Olympia, bound from Utilla for Truxillo, to purchase cattle, a crew and passengers, 13 in all, who were murdered by a car man. Robert McGill, except one passenger, a young woman, who escaped by swimming ashore after having been struck on the head with an car.
McGill is a resident of Utilla. He shot all of his victims. He forced one of the crew of the schooner to scuttle her. McGill then shot him and escaped in a dory. He was subsequently captured at El Provenor, Honduras. The captain of the Olympia had $1,400 in his account. McGill had stowed himself away on board with the intention of robbing the captain and then swimming ashore. Among his victims were one woman and two children.
Elks to Meet in Denver Next Year,
Buffalo, N. Y., July 13.—The twentieth annual reunion of the Order of Elks will be held in Denver in 1906. One ballot decided that at the grand lodge meeting yesterday. Denver received twice as many votes as Dallas, Tex. Fifty thousand Elks marched in the big parade Wednesday.
A Big Cut in Salaries.
New York, July 13.—Sweeping reductions in the salaries of officials and employees of the Equitable Society completed yesterday by Chairman Morton.
Fatal Explosion of Natural Gas
Pittsburgh, July 13.—As a result of an explosion of natural gas yesterday in the residence of Thomas Dillon, Mrs. Margaret Dillon was killed and seven other people injured. Two houses were completely wrecked and two others badly damaged.
Lives Were Lost in a Collision.
New York, July 13.—Three lives were lost in a night when the steam launch Norman was sunk in collision with a vessel supposed to have been a tramp steamship in the Hudson river.
Say Plainly to Your Grocer
That you want LION COFFEE always, and he, being a squars man, will not try to sell you anything else. You may not care for our opinion, but
of housekeepers who have used LION COFFEE
for over a quarter of a century?
Is there any stronger proof of merit, than the
Lion-head on every package.
Save these Lion-heads for valuable premiums.
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE
WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio.
Lewis and Clark
Exposition
$56½ Chicago to Portland and
return every day this summer
The first great exposition of the resources and the products of the Great Northwest will be held at Portland, Oregon, this summer. Portland is best reached via the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway
Choice of routes is offered. Via St. Paul and Minneapolis—the route of The Pioneer Limited—via Omaha and Ogden—the route of The Overland Limited—or via Omaha and Denver, past the wonderful panorama of Rocky Mountain scenery. Another good route is via Kansas City and the Southwest Limited. It is a good time now to plan your trip.
F. A. MILLER,
General Passenger Agent, Chicago.
All Good Housewives
want their clothes clean and pure white. To get this result always use on washday
Red Cross Ball Blue
ATAXIA FOUR YEARS
FOLLOWS MALARIA CONTRACTED IN
SPANISH-AMERICAN WAR.
Victim I had been Helpless When He
Tried Dr. Williams' Pink Fills, but
W was Cured Four Months.
Because he did not know that there is
a remedy for ataxia, Mr. Ariel endured
four years of weakness, pain and
the misery of thinking his case incurable.
"At the outbreak of the Spanish-
American war," he says, "I went with
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into camp at Chickamauga, and while
there my system became thoroughly
poisoned with malaria. When I was
mustered out, I carried that disease
home with me. After a while locomotor
ataxia appeared."
"I first noticed a pain in my ankles and knee pain, followed by a numb feeling in my legs. At times I had to drag myself around; my legs would shake or become perfectly dead. I had constant trouble in getting about in the dark. I kept a light burning in my room at night as I could not balance myself in the darkness. Even with the aid of a light I wobbled, and would reach out and catch hold of chairs to prevent myself from falling?" "How long were you a sufferer?" "Four years in all. During the last three years I was confined to bed, sometimes for a week, against for three or four weeks at a time. When I was lying down the pain in my back was frequently so severe that I had to be helped up and put in a chair to get a little relief. I had considerable pain in my knees no control over my kidneys. The worst of all was the doctor could give me no hope of recovery." "How were you out?"
"I read that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills had cured locomotor ataxia and one or two friends spoke to me about them. In the fall of 1903 I began to take them for myself and I had not used more than one box before I found that the pains in my knees and ankles were greatly relieved. Four months afterward I became a perfectly well man, and I am today enjoying the health." Mr. Edward H. Ariel lives at No. 43 Powow street, Amesbury, Mass. Every sufferer from locomotor ataxia should try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills without delay. Any druggist can supply them.
Too Human
There is a proverb: "If you're fond of her worship, never make a pilgrimage to see the hero."
"A sweet girl graduate" who called on her favorite author said of him, afterward, "He was on the front porch in his shirt sleeves. Oh, he seemed so terribly human!" - Atlanta Constitution.
Ladies Can Wear Shoes
One size smaller after using Allen's Foot
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achting feet. At all Drugsbags, 25c. Acce-
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Address A. S. Olmsted. Le Roy, N. Y.
Garbage and garage are something alke
in spelling, but not altogether alke in
smiling—St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
Yellow clothes are unsightly. Keep them
white with Red Cross Ball Blue. All
grocery sells large 2 oz. package, 5 cents.
It's the economical man who never
wastes any words—N. Y. Times.
Say Plainly to
That you want LION C
being a squarer man, will
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What About the United
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Is there any stronger pro
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SOLD BY GROCER
Lewis and
Exposition
MILLIONS OF WOMEN
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Assisted by Cuticura Ointment,
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PISO CURE FOR CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use in time. Sold by druggists.
CONSUMPTION
to Your Grocer
ON COFFEE always, and he,
will not try to sell you any-
y not care for our opinion, but
United Judgment of Millions
to have used LION COFFEE
er of a century?
per proof of merit, than the
Confidence of the People
and ever increasing popularity? LION COFFEE is carefully selected at the plantation, shipped direct to our various factories, where it is skilfully roasted and carefully packed in sealed packages—unlike loose coffee, which is exposed to germs, dust, insects, etc. LION COFFEE reaches you as pure and clean as when it left the factory. Sold only in 1 lb. packages.
on every package. leads for valuable premiums. CERS EVERYWHERE WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio.