The Gazette

Saturday, June 6, 1908

Cleveland, Ohio

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TWENTY-FIFTH YEAR. NO. 45. 1 These are styles suitable to be carried out in almost any woolen material of not too thick a texture. The first and second show the back and front of same bodice; it has a tight fitting lining on which is arranged back and front deep points of figured silk. That in front is attached to right side of lining, then hooked over to the left, as the fastening of lining is down the center front. The back piece is fixed on the lining. The back material is slightly full at waist, both sides and fronts. The sleeve puffs are of material, the tight under-sleeve of silk. The braces are of the material finely tucked horizontally, then mounted on a plain lining, the edges bound with crosswise silk like vest. The fronts cross below the waist, the ends finishing under the deep-point bands. Silk cord and pompons form a trimming. Materials required; $2\frac{1}{4}$ yards 44 inches wide, $1\frac{1}{4}$ yards lining, $1\frac{1}{4}$ yard silk 22 inches wide. The materials aligns illustrate a rather simpler style tucked each side front to front, and at back to the waist. The deep oval opening is strapped at edge with the material, the vest being white fine cloth braided. The sleeves are tucked in the upper part, the tight under-sleeve matches the vest. Materials required: $2\frac{1}{2}$ yards 46 inches wide, $1\frac{1}{2}$ yard white cloth, about 8 buttons, and $1\frac{1}{2}$ yard lining. IN WICCH PROCESSE SINCE 1810 These are styles suitable to be carried of not too thick a texture. The first and same bodice; it has a tight fitting lining of deep points of figured silk. That in front then hooked over to the left, as the fast front. The back piece is fixed on the lining. The material is slightly full at waist puffs are of material, the tight under-sleeve material finely tucked horizontally, then bound with crosswise silk like vest. The ends finishing under the deep-pointed bar trimming. Materials required: 2½ yards 44 inch silk 22 inches wide. The other drawings illustrate a rat front to the bust, and at back to the waist at edge with the material, the vest being w are tucked in the upper part, the tight un Materials required: 2½ yards 46 inch buttons, and 1½ yard lining. METHODS OF PERFUMING HATS. Paper Box Lined with Silk Perhaps the Most Effective. The perfumed hat fad grows apace, and every milliner has her own way of doing it. "The essential thing," says one milliner, "is any kind of a box. But it must be large enough to hold the hat without crushing the feathers. One woman used a little tin ice chest which had been unused for a long time and was free from smell. A big white paper box can be set inside the tin one. Then comes the matter of scenting the paper box, which must be lined with alk. "The most successful scented hat box I ever saw was made of paper and there were four inside pieces of silk which served to line it. They could be removed. When filled with scent they were simply overpowering and the paper hat box was a bower of the richest sachet. And into this the hat was placed. "The cover was put on the paper box and the whole thing was set away in the tin chest. The chest being air-tight held the scents within. And so the hat became scented. It held its scent even in the wind for three months." PARISIAN "FLUFFY RUFFLES." A woman in a long dress and a large hat holds a parasol. Plaited corselet skirt and jaquette of putty-colored cloth; waistcoat of black satin, and simple straw hat with gray and blue wings. Toilet Vinegar. Here is a toilet vinegar which is simple enough to make: Lavender flowers, seven ounces; alcohol, eight fluid ounces; diluted acetic acid, 58 fluid ounces. THE GAZETTE Filet Covers Are Pretty and by No Means Hard to Make. The woman who does not confine the cushions of her summer divans entirely to madras and washable cottonts should have one of the new fillet pillow covers which are much easier to make than they look. The pillows should be quite small and flat, about the size used in baby coaches and the covers made of alternate squares of fillet and hand embroidered linen, edged with Cluny lace, should button on that they may be often washed. Select for the linen squares an openwork design in which eyelet work predominates; use only enough of the satin stitch to make stems or a few dots. Do not have too much work on these squares; the main thing is to have them quite open to show the colored silk or mercerized pillow cover beneath. Even easier is one of the covers made from an entire fillet square that just fits the pillow. The cover may be alike on both sides, or, if that is too expensive, the underside may be of sheer lawn or of inexpensive fillet net. Some of the imitation fillet squares are very good looking and if dyed with tea to a creamy tint will make charming sofa pillows at comparatively little cost. Sometimes these covers are finished with a narrow overcased seam; more often they have an edge of Cluny put on flat, without gathering. The combination of these two laces is particularly effective. The Outdoor Girl's Gloves Unless you are a typical outdoor girl with a large income, do not invest in chamois shoes. The athletic girl who drives a great deal likes this large loose glove for rough wear, but they are not a good investment for the typical summer girl. They make the hand look large, and while they wash as clerks guarantee they will, like the chamois skin you use for cleaning windows, they have weak spots and wash through on the latter. A good silk glove is a far better investment, but do not be invigiled into buying brilliant blues, greens, purples and rose colors to match your silk or linen frock. White or soft shade of tan are in better taste; black gloves are hot in summer and should be worn by those in mourning only. The Cameo Popular. Cameos seem to be with us to stay. According to a recent fashion note, they are even being utilized for the drop earrings that are fashionable just at present, and the dainty effects are to be found in large and small pins, in belt buckles and in bracelets. Perhaps there is no more effective use for the cameo than in a bracelet set in jet or old gold. One beautiful design noted in one of the shops recently was wide carved jet setting for a most delicately carved cameo. Then there are large brooches which are exquisitely outlined, and even hatpins. That the cameo is extremely popular is demonstrated by the many imitations some of them exceedingly good, which are to be found. ESTABLISHED AUGUST 25, 1883 AND ISSUED EVERY WEEK ON TIME SINCE. INVOKES RACEVOTE SENATOR FORAKER TELLS AFRO- AMERICANS TO DEMAND SUP- PORT OF BILL! TO PLEDGE ALL CANDIDATES I QUOTES PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT AS COMPARING THE BLACK SOLDIER TO MURDER. ED 2007 BOOK The Senator Tells of the Necessity of Getting Sufficient Support to Pass His Soldier Bill Over Roosevelt's Veto—"The Afro-American's D.C." Washington, D.C.—Should our voters of the country follow the advice of Senator Foraker they will make Brownville a political issue in the campaign next fall and support for president and vice president and representative in congress only each candidate as pledge themselves to support him by abstaining from the army our innocent troops dismissed without honor by the president on account of the alleged "shooting up" of the Texas town in August, 1906. As those know who followed the course of the debate on the Brownville case in the senate this session, two bills were introduced—one by Mr. Foraker, providing for the reinstatement of the men without condition, because they were guiltless of the charge against them and the other Senator Warmer of Missouri, permitting them to back into the army if able to convince the president of their innocence. An Impossibility! Postponed Until December. Mr. Foraker made an effort to get a vote on his bill before the end of the session, but the senate managed to postpone action until next winter, agreeing to take it up the middle of December. Several days ago the Ohio senator received a letter from John E. Milholland of New York, chairman of the executive committee of the Constitution league of the United States, asking for information concerning the action of the senate. Senator Foraker has made public his reply, and in it incorporated some of the language used by the president in a letter to Senator William Alden Smith of Michigan, which the latter refused to put into the record at the request of Senator Foraker. In that letter, according to Senator Foraker, the president said he was entitled to no more sympathy than Guiteau, who shot President Garfield, or Czolgosz, who assassinated President McKinley deserved. Senator Foraker's Letter. Mr. Foraker's letter to Mr. Milholland is as follows: "Dear Sir: I have your letter of May 18, and do not know how better to answer your inquiry in regard to the postponement of the Brownsville bill than by quoting from a letter written by me a day c or two ago to Mr. Richard D. White of Cambridge, Mass, in answer to a similar inquiry. "On this point I said to Mr. White: "With the president active in his opposition, personally importuning senators, I was unable to get a vote, even if I succeeded in getting the bill passed. I was unable to pass the bill if I did get a vote most I could get assurances of only thirty-five votes, and some of those were wavering. It was necessary to have forty-seven. Vote Then Meant Defeat Vote then meant Deck. "A vote at this time, therefore, meant death and end of all restoring the soldiers. Posthumous was better because, in the first place, it could not be worse; and, in the second place, it keeps the subject alive and in a practical form for consideration during the present campaign. The whole country knows that the Brownsville subject has been narrowed down to a question of py bill, which means complete restoration, or the Warner bill, which means the Warner bill of the president may see fit to show that, I am satisfied, would be very little, if anything. "As late as April 24 he wrote to Senator William Alden Smith of Michigan that he thought many, if not all, the soldiers guilty, and that there was no more excuse for them than there would be for sympathy with Czoligosz or Guiteau, and that my bill meant only to force a lot of murders back into the army, and that he wrote to me that I passed the bill to veto it, and if we passed it over his veto he would refuse to enforce it. Sure of Success Later. "I have no doubt of passing the bill in December, because enough Republicans have promised me that if I would allow the bill to go over until then they would at that time vote with me to pass it, but in view of the president's frame of mind, and his expressed purpose to veto the bill, we must, if possible, have a two-thirds vote, and this brings up a feature of the situation that will. I hope, enable us to get this additional strength. "If the bill had been voted upon and defeated at this session the colored voters of the country would not have any means of showing their displeasure, except by voting against the party in a spirit of revenge. "Now, with the bill postponed, they have at least a living issue, and they have this standing of Republican candidates for office, including our candidates for vice president, and all other candidates for re-election to the senate and to the house of representatives, that they will pledge themselves to support the Foraker bill. Can Aid Race and Soldiers. "In this way the 10,000,000 colored people of the United States can great THE CHURCH OF THE NATIONAL SCHOOL OF CHRISTIAN WORSHIP HOW ST. JOHN'S NEW CHURCH WILL LOOK WHEN COMPLETED. THE CORNERSTONE TO BE LAID SUNDAY WITH PROPER CEREMONY. ly help, not only the soldiers, but the whole race by causing themselves to be felt and appreciate as they never have been before. When they come to realize their opportunity I think they will all be proud to take a direct and effective part in what should be to them a labor of love. I am a firm believer in the intervention of Divine Providence in the affairs of men. While postponement was to me a bitter and reluctant conclusion, yet I feel that, after all, it was of God's ordering, and that in due time we shall all see and appreciate that what now appears to be so disappointing and discouraging is for the best." "Hagging is a sign of loss from my letter to Mr. White will answer your inquiry, and that the answer may be satisfactory. I remain, very truly yours, etc., J. B. FORAKER." FRESH NEWS CHRONICLED LETTERS FROM MANY OHIO CITIES AND TOWNS SENT BY OUR OWN CORRESPONDENTS. Personal, Social, Ledge, Church, Library and Other Notes of Interest folk were in Smithfield and Mr. Mrs. R. R. Cooper visited their ter Sunday. Rev. D. D. Lewis was the same day. Steubenville—The W. R. C. Mrs. Phillips Tuesday—Miss mie Hazelwood and Bessie Ch have returned from Cadiz—Mr. ames Browning of Chicago to the gry Homer Lyons—Miss White and Mrs. Jessie Emory dz were here Wednesday and d Wheeling—Mr. and Mrs. Harr liams of Toronto were here day—Mrs. Chauncey Viney, Hazelwood and Mr. Jean B spent the 30th in Pittsburg—Mrs. Smithfield, guests of her E. Harris—Miss Ada Jones of burg spent May 30 here—Miss tha and Georgia A. Guyder spent 30th in Chester—Mrs. Mollie YEAR'S WORK AT TUSKEGEE A Former President of Liberia and Hon. Charles W. Anderson of New York City Among Speakers—Many Graduates. Tuskegee, Ala.—The recent twenty-seventh annual commencement of Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute was a brilliant affair. The number of students enrolled this year is about the same as last year and for several years past. The boarding students have reached 1,621—1,085 young men, 536 young women. Counting students in Tuskegee town night school and the town cooking school, with children enrolled, in the "children's house" or training school for teachers, the total number is very near the 2,000 mark. Charles W. Anderson. Thirty-eight states and territories and twenty-one foreign countries have been represented. Alabama leads with 498, Georgia 200, other states with 50 and over; Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas. From Central and South America the West Indies and Africa the number of students and interest is steadily increasing. People are now showing the largest increase. Five are present from Africa and one from Japan. An interesting feature of commencement week has been the presence of the envoys from the republic of Liberia, Africa, Hon. G. W. Gibson, a former president of the republic, and Secretary of State J. J. Dorren; Vice-President Charles B. Dunbun, attorney, and Charles Branch, secretary. All except President Gibson were both Liberia and he has been since he was three years old. The annual address by Hon. Charles W. Anderson of New York, an Ohio boy, was most happy in every respect. It aroused the greatest enthusiasm on the part of all present, and will be long remembered. Eighty-eight received diplomas from the normal department. Eighty-seven received a certificate for the completion of some trade, making a total of 175 diplomas and certifications. number won both diplomas and diplomas in some received two certifications. In a very few words Dr. Booker T. Washington presented them, urging upon each one to find as quickly as possible his work and to put both body and soul into it. FRESH NEWS CHRONICLED LETTERS FROM MANY OHIO CITIES AND TOWNS SENT BY Personal, Social, Lodge, Church, Literary and Other Notes of Interest. Washington C. H.—Mrs. Easton of Columbus visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ford.—Mrs. A. H. Ross visited relatives in Dayton Saturday.—Mrs. Phyllis Bunch and her niece, Miss Estella Daniels of Dayton, visited the former's mother, Mrs. Polly Jones, Sunday.—Mrs. Bernice Hill of Kalaazoo, Mich., is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Cunningham. Lima.—St. Paul's Literary society's sacred musical Sunday evening was very good.—Mr. Virgil Byrd has returned from the University. Young was called to Jacksonville, Ill., this week by his mother-in-law's illness.—Mrs. Minnie Jamison of Columbus lectured at St. Paul's church Tuesday.—The Ladies' auxiliary met at Mrs. Hattie Harrison's and an enjoyable time was had.—The Cleolian club met with Mrs. Anna and Mrs. John Clark on Wednesday at the latter's.—Mr. and Mrs. Harrison visited in St. Mary's Sunday.—Miss Laura McGee has returned from Kansas.—Rev. Dr. Bunday, P. E., was here Monday en route to Delphos. Mt. Vernon—Mrs. H. C. Curry was in Mansfield last week attending the sixtieth birthday anniversary of Mrs. Jones—Mrs. Chas. Turner and children, Everet and Marie, left Thursday to visit Mrs. Sarah Harris of Barrington, Mrs. John Wheeling is visiting Mrs. Latherns, Sunday was woman's day at Wayman chapel—Mrs. Mary Thomas is improving—Mrs. Linder of Springfield gave a fine lecture to the court of Calanthe Thursday evening.—Rev. Hackley has returned to Windsor, Canada—Miss Jale Blake, who had a pin lodge in her throat Thursday evening, has recovered from a broken arm. Mrs. Bounle Sharp returned last week. Miss Elma Blake has returned to Washington, C. H. Portsmouth—Rev. McCumer preached the U. B. F. annual sermon at Findley Street church Sunday afternoon. A large attendance.—Rev. A. Haley preached at Pleasant Green church Sunday.—Rev. Marquette and family have moved to Bellefontaine, where he has a charge. Mr. Fred Minor's sister, Marjorie, and Allen S. S. retain the banners. The former has the monthly emblem. Mrs. A. McFarland entertained the Sewing circle Monday evening. Its bazaar will be held on the 11th. The young folk under the direction of Messrs. Payne and Deering will give an excellent program. The lesson of Walmut will visit her parents, Mrs. Wm. Rose—Allen chapel was well attended all day Sunday. Lorain—"Rev." McHenry Winters has left town. Good riddance! Other cities and town should be on the lookout for him. We believe him an impostor—Mr., and Mrs. Ed. Taylor visited his father Sunday week—Mr. Albert Pasey is visiting relatives in New York and New Jersey. Stars at Mrs. Brown's. The banned at Pierce's hall Tuesday evening was a success. Do not miss a copy of the Gazette—Mrs. Lela Cooper has returned home—Mrs. E. J. Smith dined Mrs. E. Smith and two daughters one evening last week. She and Mrs. A. Little were entertained. Friday Mrs. E. Smith—Coy Rex has purchased a horse wagon—Clark Freeman is ill—Leona has returned. A number of young folk were in Smithfield and Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Cooper visited their daughter Sunday. Rev. D. D. Lewis was out the same day. Steubenville.—The W. R. C. met at Mrs. Phillips Tuesday.—Misses Mamie Hazelwood and Bessie Christian have returned from Cadiz.—Mr. Clarence Brown of Cadiz is the guest of Mrs. Homer Lyons.—Miss Kizzle White and Mrs. Jessie Emory of Cadiz were here Wednesday and went to Wheeling.—Mr. and Mrs. Harry Williams of Toronto were here Thursday.—Miss Chauney Vine.—Miss Hazelwood and Jebrown spent the 30th in Pittsburg.—Mr. and Mrs. Elle Guyder spent May 30 in Smithfield, guests of her sister, Mrs. E. Harris.—Miss Ada Jones of Pittsburg spent May 30 here.—Misses Bertha and Georgia A. Guyder spent the 30th in Chester.—Mrs. Mollie Cawd, Mr. Oscar Winters of Wheeling, Mr. W. Evans, W. Matthews and J. Viney of East Liverpool spent the 30th here.—Mr. Alfred Webster, and Mrs. L. Martin spent the 30th in Pittsburg.—Mr. W. Evans and Geo Viney went to Smithfield Sunday. A number of K. P.'s were there to hear the annual sermon.—Mr. Sam Leech of Zanesville was here Sunday.—Mr. Kate LaBlanche of Cleveland is visiting her parents.—Mr. Harry Carter went to Wheeling Sunday. Youngstown.—A number from Salaem, Warren, New Castle and Lisbon were in town Saturday.—Mrs. James Vactor of Pittsburg visited Mr. and Mrs. A. Vactor.—Mr. Walter Brokensbaur returned from Philadelphia Monday and is visiting his daughter, Mrs. Cora West.—Mr. Saunders will continue rink on Monday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday, "home week."—Mrs. C. West is bookkeeper for Stoney & Co. and Miss Mary Lincoln is employed in the tailoring department of the same firm, Mr. and Mrs. H. Burton have a little daughter, born Monday.—Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Reed of Cleveland are guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. Hudson.—The W. M. M. s. annual sermon was preached Sunday at 3 p. m. by Rev. Blackburn. There was a large attendance. The next meeting at Mrs. E. Kennedy's on the 11th.—ames Heath has entered the fish business.—Mrs. Barrett of Kittanning, Pa. mother of the Barrett boys of his city.—Mrs. G. M. Porter of Palatine.—Mrs. Missida Davis, Frank Hall, Henry Richardson, Mrs. Walker and Mr. Burton are ill.—Leave your order with the agent for The Gazette. Cadiz.-Mrs. Emma Thomas and Miss Rachel Smith of Canton were guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Smith a few days last week.-Misses Bessie Christian and Miss Hazel Wood of Steubenville were guests of Leola Mason last week.-Miss Cira Redman and Mrs. Binglear were married May 5 by Rene Clingleton Madison entertained at dinner Sunday Miss Flaire Dulling, Clara White, Messrs. George White and Norris Freeman.-Mrs. Sarah Lucas of Springfield and Miss Mary Williams of Emerson were guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Lucas, Sr., last week.-J. E. Smith and D. O. Mason delivered fine orations and received hearty applause. The guests of Mrs. Binglear and the Ironsides, Jr., Calzal spilled in a double-header here May 30. Score, 9 to 15, in favor of the Giants and 6 to 3, in favor of the Ironsides.-Riggle White and Jessie Emory spent Thursday in Wheeling.-Allen Endeavor held a union service Sunday evening.-Mr. and Mrs. Jas, Harris, Mr. and Mrs. C. Miller and Mr. and Mrs. George West spent Sunday in Steubenville. Major I. Riggs of Steubenville, S. C. of the staff of gave a fine address at the hall last Friday evening.-A. J. Brooks has sold his restaurant. -SmithOn account of the illness of Rev. Kinney of Mt. Pleasant the K. of P.'s annual sermon was preached by Rev. M. M. Brown of Steubenville. The service was largely attended from Steubenville, Mt. Mclellan, McCrady, Dillonville, Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ramsey and Hopedea were guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Veney.-Mr. Spotwood of Dillonville, T. Jackson and family, Mr. IN UNION THERE'S STRONGER and Mrs. F. Fields, Logan Jackson and family were guests of Mrs. Thomas Jackson —Mr. and Mrs. D. West of Hopedale, B. Bex and R. Jones were guests of Mrs. James Carter —Mr. Fred Christian and family were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell —Mr. James G. Guy, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Carr, G. Viney, Harry Jackson and wife Mr. and Mrs. Guyder, Mr. and Mrs. D. P. Mitchell of Dillcnville were guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Harris —Mr. J. Lyle and family of Richmond, Mr. E. Smith and family, Wm. West, Chas. Thompson and family were entertained by D. Ferguson and Mr. E. Smith and Mrs. J. Powell; Mr. S. Lyons and Mrs. A. West by Mr. and Mrs. Edward W. —Major Arthur J. Riggs of Springfield lectured to a very attentive audience Wednesday evening. He is a fine speaker and certainly knows how to hold the people —Mr. Geo. Harris and family visited in Mrs. last week. —Mr. Reed, Mrs. Alice Washington, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Smith were entertained by D. W. Bigsby. Miss Ida Ford and Mrs. Alice Munts are sick "JIM CROW" CHURCH PLAN. A Pastor Very Properly Objects to the Move to Put Afro-American Churches Under Missions. Pittsburgh, Pa.—The general assembly of the United Presbyterian church became involved in an animated discussion Tuesday of the racial question while considering the report of the board of Freedmen's missions, presented by Rev. Dr. J. W. Witherspoon, corresponding secretary of the board. Dr. J. W. Witherspoon, the president of the church, in the north, said Rev. Dr. D. S. Little. "What we do want is the church of Jesus Christ. The white and black attend our public schools together. Then why should they not attend God's house together?" This remark was called out by a resolution providing that Afro-American members of the United Presbyterian church were placed under the care of the presbyterian which they reside and that their churches be taken over by the board of home missions, the same as dependent white congregations. Rev. Dr. Carson, the moderator, explained that the intent of the resolution was to shepherd the Afro-American churches of the north as churches rather than as individual members. Rev. Dr. Carson said he understood the need people at the north prefer this plan. The resolution was adopted. (New York Sun, May 27, 1908.) The Negro mass meeting at Cooper Union last evening called by Bishop Derrick to show that the colored voters were not against Mr. Taft DID NOT RESULT IN ANY GREAT OUTPOURING OF NEGROES OR IN ANY GREAT DEMONSTRATION FOR MR. TAFT. WHILE THE SPEAKERS WERE ALL FOR TAFT THE CROWD WAS FOR FORAKER. SENATOR DICK ON SENATOR FOR AKER. Washington, D. C.—Recently Senator Dick, Ex-Senator Chandler, and others addressed a mass meeting at Galbraith A. M. E. church. Both praised Senator Foraker highly. "The sacrifice Senator Foraker has made in taking the part of the Negro in the Brownville affair, and the work he has imposed upon the clerics Senator Dick," make him worthy to rank as a fitting successor to that noble statesman from Massachusetts, Charles Summer." "Senator Foraker wants to see justice done the Negroes," exclaimed former Senator Chandler, "because, having fought side by side with colored soldiers in the civil war when he was a lieutenant, he knows that they are being treated with respect." Senator Dick also said the Republican party did not write the plank in the Ohio platform which ignored the fifteenth amendment. "If the Negro voter proves a traitor today and deserts his valiant support, Senator Foraker," said R. R. Horner, "the Negro does not deserve suffrage. But I do not believe there is one who will betray his trust. There is no one who can be colored man to vote the Democratic ticket if the Republican party meets us half way and refuses to nominate Taft or Roosevelt." Olean, N. Y., Notes G. H. Hall of Buffalo preached an able sermon at the A. M. E. church Sunday.—The Church Debt society elected the following officers last week: G. A. Ross, president; Lester Clemons, vice president; T. H. Barnes, secretary; Mrs. Sarah Hill, treasurer. Mr. Hall gave an interesting lecture with views Friday evening.—Mrs. Clemons and little daughters were in Rochester, and Mrs. Jefome Haircock in Buffalo Sunday.—Mr. Clarence Deldge, Phillipsburg, Pa., visited Miss Sophia Brooks recounting a Mossie in York attending a Mossie in meeting Miss Arlene Horncek is visiting in Franklin.—Rev. Boston of Friendship was here Monday.—Mr. and Mrs. Archie Clemons of Portville have moved here.—Mr. Lee Clemons has returned from Belfast.—Mrs. George Burghardt is visiting in Canada. Bradford, Pa., Brevities. The literary society will give a musical June 9 at Hazelton hall—Mrs. Johnson and Miss Jenkins spent two days in Buffalo—The Silver Link club met at Mrs. Banks'. Luncheon was served. Miss Jenkins was the best student in the Enty has returned from the south. Miss Bula Draper is expected home this week to spend her vacation. Miss Edna Collins is visiting in Olean. Mrs. Harry Davis was there last week. Mr. Shackles and Mrs. Johnson are visiting. Jones gave a dinner in honor of Miss Martha Smith of Hamilton, Canada. The Modern Trolley By GUY WETMORE CARRYL Naturally, there is only one person for whom I am qualified to speak, but so far as he is concerned, he infinitely prefers to walk rather than to stand—which latter, all said and done, is about all that riding amounts to nowadays. That does not alter the fact, however, that, with the coming of automobiles and rapid transit of one kind or another, Shank's Mare is going out of fashion, together with other equines. Modern society is well-nigh as shy of using its legs as it is of talking about them; and presently, if we go on at this rate, these hitherto useful appendages will have become, before we know it, merely rudimentary and our arms abnormally developed and strengthened as a result of hanging on straps, as are those of our alleged ancestors, the anthropoid ape, as a result of hanging on branches. I use the word "alleged" advisedly. Surely there is little enough to be proud of in the contemplation of the average family tree, without chasing back some millions of years for the purpose of populating it with the unsympathetic and avowedly plain-featured chimpanzee! We may have descended from the branches but from the anthropoid ape? Perish the thought! Admitting the need of public conveyances, which one is compelled to do so long as babies, bundles and locomotor ataxia continue to flourish, is not to admit the need of their manifold inconveniences. For it is manifest that we are working out the problem of transit by the process of multiplication of the public to be provided for and of addition, if not subtraction, of the accommodations. That is no kind of arithmetic. Already, rapid transit is walking with a limp. Sooner or later it will be going around on one leg. E pluribus unum is a very noble sentiment. The same cannot be said of plures in uno—particularly if the uno be a public conveyance We Americans are notoriously good-natured and long-suffering, but there is such a thing as carrying good nature to the extreme. At present it is pertinent to inquire whether we are prepared to stand anything and everything from the companies who pretend to transport us in comfort from one place to another. Apparently we are; and the mightier the company, and the more modern the conveyance, the more we stand. The which is no mere idle figure of speech. But let us lay bitterness aside. For to recommend a more consistent and constant use of our legs does not of necessity mean that we should be eternally kicking. Let us, on the contrary, strive to see wherein lies the compensation for the discomfort attendant upon the intimate proximity of unlimited numbers of our fellow-men. This will most certainly not prove to be a mere wild goose chase. Whatever it may be in the way of injustice, a discomfort and an imposition, your crowded trolley is a feefield field for the study of human nature. Primarily, it teaches you that, whatever your lack of beauty may be, it cannot compare with that of others. If it is true that beauty is only skin deep, it is plain that beauty, like the eel, has become used to being skinned. The operation has been performed, with consummate efficacy and dispatch, upon the faces of an overwhelming majority of those who one meets in the average trolley. This is undeniably true, but none the less unchallable. After all, they can't help it, the poor things! But, then, after all, one can't help being unchallable. It's more comfortable than the other thing. Charity, you know, suffereth all things. That's a pretty hard load on the shoulders of charity! To come back to our fellow-troller-ers—place aux dames! The ladies—bless 'em—are not to be judged by appearances. Were they, we should arrive at the conclusion that not one in fifty of those who board a trolley has the most remote conception of where she is going, or how to get there. They scramble on with an eagerness which seems to suggest that this particular car is the last which will ever pass, and when they have recovered breath (I am merely a man: I cannot know how this is done in the case of a woman, but it seems to be accomplished by turning her vell up across her nose), they appeal to the conductor: "Does this car go to Asterisk avenue?" "Yes, madam." "Oh, pahaw! Please let me off at the next corner!" They depart with an air of wronged innocence, leaving their fellow-passengers consumed with curiosity to know whether their object in getting on was to be taken somewhere as a surprise, an object at once defeated by learning the name of their destination. Such evidence of instability is fatal to contemplated matrimony, and someone is always contemplating matrimony—even in a trolley. The latter has confirmed more bachelors than the supposedly sage advice of Punch. Provided she remains, the fair passenger has to consider the question of annexing a seat, for a trolley with a seat already available is a trolley unworthy of the name. The woman of experience makes a rapid survey of the field. At once to be eliminated from her calculation are the Italian laborer, the fat man with a newspaper, and the Irish woman's child. The first wouldn't if he could, the second couldn't if he would, and the mother of the third has something for which she has not paid. All three are satisfied. They have no further ambition; and it is the class without ambition which is not apt to rise, or cause to rise. There remains the awkward youth, with ill-fitting clothes, searching a well-worn Euclid with near-sighted eyes. It is harder to give up Euclid than his seat, but he does both, with a sigh. He is never so near-sighted that he cannot see a woman standing. There remains, also, the man escorting another woman. He yields his place promptly. He does not dare to retain it. And this is the only instance in which one woman has cause to be grateful for what another woman will think! Falling these, there remain yet others. The white-haired gentleman with an old-fashioned air; the employee of the road, who has no right to be there at all; the well-brought-up little boy; and the nervous old lady, who is looking over her shoulder to see if she has passed her street, and is liable to get off at any moment. All these are possibilities, if not probabilities; but if it is to be by deliberate sacrifice, and not mere chance, that our lady gets her seat, she must be pretty, or white-haired, or burdened with a baby. Otherwise, she stands not the ghost of a show. Apropos of the fair sex, how extraordinarily hard it is to find! Even in connection with the remote gold fields of the Klondike, the fact that a pocket has been discovered calls for extended notice in the daily press! But a woman's pocket is an old, old joke, and too true to be good. One wonders, nevertheless, whether they ever read the alleged comic journals. It is in the highest degree improbable that they do. Else how were it possible for them to continue, year after year, getting on and off backwards, searching desperately for their pockets, and clamoring for the privilege of paying each other's fars—things which every observant eye is watching for, and which happen as inevitably as sunrise. These peculiarities form a solid foundation for the jests reared upon them, and a solid foundation is precisely what most jokes lack. The mother-in-law, the young wife's biscuit, the impossible janitor, the sleeping policeman, the dime novel of the messenger boy, etc., etc, ad infinitum, have to a great extent passed out of the world of reality as material for festing. What ever they may have been, now, at "Does This Car Go to Asterisk Avenue?" least, they are dead—laughed to death—and the scribe who has recourse to them is frankly a distorter of fact. But the woman in the public conveyance is perennial. She continues to do the same convulsive things over and over, shamelessly, and apparently in profound innocence of the fact that she is a humorous entity. No, evidence she skips the jester's column! Those desiring to make an elevated train will find the following recipe useful: Take one trolley car, multiply its capacity by four and its contents by eight, pack tightly and leave to simmer. Yes, it is the trolley all over—four times over—with three unintelligible youths instead of one bleating the incomprehensible names of ought-to-be familiar localities; and in some sense it is the declaration of independence as well. For here "all men are created equal"—in sharpness of elbow and heaviness of foot. And "all men are endowed with inalienable rights"—in particular, the right to make every one else consumedly uncomfortable, in consideration of a five-ceat fare! Here, however, quotation from the immortal document ceases to be applicable. Reference in this connection to "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness" would be sarcasm too painful to be pardonable. What a comment upon the inexhaustible patience and forbearance of humankind, this means of transport, compared to which a cattle train is a very Pullman vestibulated limited for comfort! "There is a friend that sticketh closer than a brother," said wise old Solomon. He was quite right. There is. It is the man on the next strap. Fashion in Wedding Musi Fashion in Wedding Music. A musician who has played at many fashionable weddings says that for curious selections the musical programs of this season's weddings vie with the output of the opera houses. "The music generally is first class," he said. "In fact, some of the best concerts in town have been given at big weddings, but many of the pieces played have been so radically different from the old-fashioned nuptial composition as to shock the brides of ten or even five years ago. Apparently the days have gone by when the 'Lohengrin' and Mendelsohn wedding marches, with 'Oh, Promise Me' or 'The Sweet Story Ever Told,' thrown in for good measure were considered sufficiently melodious for a girl to be married by. This season's marriage service demands a very elaborate musical program. All the masters of harmony have been ransacked for appropriate selections. Bach, Beethoven, Mozart, and the modern composers contribute to the musical feast. The program at one wedding contained a number that was marked 'by request,' which seemed about the last cry in wedding music." THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY, JUNE 6, 1908. Practical Fashions LADIES' DRESSING-SACK. Paris Pattern No. 2091. All Seams Allowed.—This stylist dressing-sack or breakfast-jacket is developed in broad-fray dotted Swiss. The broad plastron collar lends an air of chic to the garment, and is pointed at the back and on the shoulders. It is inserted near the edge with Valenciennes, and the outer edge is trimmed with Valenciennes edging. The wide turn-back elbow cuffs are inserted and edged in the same manner as the plastron collar. The pattern is in four sizes—32, 36, 40 and 44 inches bust measure. For 36 bust the sack requires 3½ yards of material 27 inches wide, 2½ yards 36 inches wide, or 2¼ yards 42 inches wide; 3½ yards of insertion, 4½ yards of edging and ½ yard of ribbon to trim. To procure this pattern send 10 cents to "Pattern Department," of this paper to name and address plainly, and be sure to include the following: NO. 2091. SIZE..... NAME..... TOWN..... STREET AND NO..... STATE.... CHILD'S DRESS. Paris Pattern No. 2374, All Seams Allowed—The development of this simple frock is in white batiste. The full body portion is gathered to the yoke, which is cut square at the back, and continues in a wide princess panel down the front. The sleeves are full elbow puffs gathered into narrow embroidered armbands of the material, or of lace insertion, and finished with a narrow ruffe of lace edging. The yoke, princess panel and flounce are trimmed with the narrow insertion; the latter being finished with the edging. The princess panel and back yoke are embroidered in a design of lovers' knots and small eyelets, and the neckband should match the armbands. The pattern is in five sizes—one-half to four years. For a child of two years the dress, as in front view, requires $1\frac{1}{2}$ yard of lawn 36 inches wide, with five-eighths yard of allover embroidery 18 inches wide, $4\frac{1}{2}$ yards of insertion and $5\frac{1}{2}$ yards of edging to trim. To procure this pattern send 10 cents to "Pattern Department," of this paper. Write name and address plainly, and be sure to give size and number of pattern. NO. 2374. SIZE..... NAME..... TOWN..... STREET AND NO..... STATE..... All Wear Just Thirteen Garments. The president of a mixed Thirteen club concluded a recent address thus: child concluded a recent address thus: “And now, ladies and gentlemen, I beg to announce a graffitty discover- ment.” The girl must just 13 gummies. Males and females alike, our garments number just 13. A man wears two shoes, two socks, one undershirt, one pair of drawers, one shirt one collar, one tie, one pair of trousers, one vest, one coat one hat. Total, 13. A woman wears two shoes, two stock- ings, one undervest, one chemise, one corset, one pair of er—unmention- ables, one petticoat, one skirt, one bodice, one belt one hat. Total, 13. Twenty-four hands beat together in boisterous applause. San Diego's Harbor. So completely sheltered and so completely land locked is the harbor that within the entrance, which is only 1,500 feet wide, there are over 22 square miles of anchorage ground for vessels of ordinary draught. There is a depth of water over the outer bar, some five miles outside the entrance, of 55% feet, and there is a depth at the pier head line of 51% feet. The channel depth is greater than any harbors of this country save that of Boston, which is 36% feet; Portland, Me., which is 39% feet; Portsmouth, N. H., which is 49 feet, and San Francisco, which is 39 1/5 feet. Mrs. Della Mcanes, 228 E. Front St. Maysville, KV. kvs. "Sixteen years aga I began to notices sharp pain in the kidneys and a bearing down sensation through the hips. dull headache and dizzy spells. Drops appeared, and my feet and ankles swelled so I could not get my shoes on. ago I began to notice sharp pain in the kidneys and a bearing down sensation through the hips, dull headache and dizzy spells. Drops appeared, and my feet and ankles swelled so I could not get my shoes on. I was in misery, and had despaired of ever getting cured when I decided to try Doan's Kidney Pills. One box helped me so much that I kept on until entirely cured." Sold by all dealers, 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn C., Buffalo, N. Y. "MR. DOOLEY" ON FUNERALS. Joyous Occasion in City Boy's Life, According to Humorist. "Whin I was a little boy, I classed fun'rals among't the greatest iy me ad- ventures. They give me a ride in a hack through parts iv town that i'd niver seen before an' out into th' countryway that i niver wint except I was invited to a fun'ral, an' I had joyful company an' something to eat different r'm what I got at home. Lookin' back on how I felt whin I was a kid, I can't remember that any dist relation relation made himself unpopular with us by dyn'n. Even if I wasn't let go to a fun'ral there was something exciting about it. It stirred up th' neighborhood. There was something to talk about. Ivrybody asked: 'Did he leave anything?' as if th' poor man got out their good clothes an' dusted off their high hats. On th' day iv th' fun'ral all't child'er iv th' neigh- hood gathered around th' house an' envied their little playmates that had th' luck to lose a fond parent.'—F. P. Dunne, in American Magazine. EXPANSIVE RECEPTACLE. "Dear me! what an awful toothache youmust have!" Kid (thickly)—Toothache nuthin'! I ain't got no pockets in dis suit of clothes, an' have to carry me baseball in ane mouth! In the Same Boat. "We get some sad cases," said the attendant at the Lumpton lunatic asylum to the interested visitor, and opened the door of the first cell. Inside was a man sitting on a three-legged stool, gacing vacantly at the wall. "His is an unhappy story," said the attendant. "He was in love with a girl, but she married another man, and he lost his reason from grief." They stole out softly, closing the door behind them, and proceeded to the next innate. This cell was thickly padded, and the man within was stark, staring mad. "Who is this?" inquired the visitor. "This's?" repeated the attendant. "This is the other man!"—Tatler. Triumph of Mind. Victim of Delusion—Doctor, I'm awfully afraid I'm going to have brain fever. Doctor—Pooh, pooh, my dear friend! That's all an illusion of the senses. There is no such thing as fever. You have no fever, you have no br—h'm—no material substance upon which such a wholly imaginary and suppositions thing as a fever could find any base of operation. Victim—Oh, doctor, what a load you have taken from my—from my—I have a mind, haven't I, doctor? THE FIRST TASTE Learned to Drink Coffee When a Baby. If parents realized the fact that coffee contains a drug—caffeine—which is especially harmful to children, they would doubtless hesitate before giving the bables coffee to drink. "When I was a child in my mother's arms and first began to nibble things at the table, mother used to give me sips of coffee. As my parents used coffee exclusively at meals I never knew there was anything to drink but coffee and water. "And so I contracted the coffee habit early. I remember when quite young, the continual use of coffee so affected my parents that they tried roasting wheat and barley, then ground it in the coffee-mill, as a substitute for coffee. "But it did not taste right and they went back to coffee again. That was long before Postum was ever heard of. I continued to use coffee until I was 27, and when I got into office work, I began to have nervous spells. Especially after breakfast I was so nervous I could correctly attend to my correspondence. "At night, after having coffee for supper, I could hardly sleep, and on rising in the morning would feel weak and nervous. "A friend persuaded me to try Postum. My wife and I did not like it at first, but later when boiled good and strong it was fine. Now we would not give up Postum for the best coffee we ever tasted. "I can now get good sleep, am free from nervousness and headaches. I recommend Postum to all coffee drinkers. "There's a Reason." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Wellville." In ads. Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human interest. KNEW WHAT THE JOB MEANS. Angry Citizen Put Ordeal Up to Street Car Company. Not long ago there entered the office of the superintendent of a trolley line in Detroit an angry citizen, demanding "justice" in no uncertain terms. In response to the official's gentle inquiry touching the cause of the demand, the angry citizen explained that on the day previous as his wife was boarding one of the company's cars, the conductor thereof had stepped on his spouse's dress, tearing from it more than a yard of material. "I can't see that we are to blame for that," protested the superintendent. "What do you expect us to do, get her a new dress?" "No, sir, I do not," rejoined the angry citizen, brandishing a piece of cloth. "What I propose is that you people shall match this material."—Harper's Weekly. BAD ITCHING HUMOR. Limbs Below the Knees Were Raw— Feet Swollen—Sleep Broken— Cured in 2 Days by Cuticura. "Some two months ago I had a humor break out on my limbs below my knees. They came to look like raw beefsteak, all red, and no one knows how they itched and burned. They were so swollen that I could not get my shoes on for a week or more. I used five or six different remedies and get no help, only when applying the burning was worse and the itching less. For two or three weeks the suffering was intense and during that time I did not sleep an hour at a time. Then one morning I tried a bit of Cuticura. From the moment it touched me the itching was gone and I have not telt a bit of it since. The swelling went down and in two days I had my shoes on and was about as usual. George B. Farley, 50 South State St., Concord, N. H., M-y 14, 1907." Labor Saying Device "Yes, stree," said the freckled lad proudly, "my dad's a genius, he is." "That so?" responded the weary coffee-mill agent. "Wall, I should say so. Dad noticed that every time the old hound came around Sunday mornings he began wagging his stumpy tail." "Anything unusual in that, sonny?" "No, not for the hound, mister, but dad got up the idea of attaching a shoe brush and a whisk broom to Bowser's tail. Now when dad is ready to go to meetin' his shoes are shined and the legs of his trousers are dusted without his moving a finger. By gosh! Dad's got as much brains as a furrin diplomat." Self-Denial. Margie is six years old and her fami- family are Presbyterians. Some of Margie's little friends are Episcopalians, and Margie was much impressed with their Leonten sacrifices. On Ash Wednesday she announced that she would eat no candy for 40 days. A few hours later saw Margie with a large peppermint stick. "Why, Margie," said her friend, "I thought you had given up candy for Lent." "I did mean to," admitted Margie, "but I've changed my mind. I'm giving up profane language."—Montreal Herald. There is more in this section of the country than an other diseases put together, and until the last few years doctors promoted it to local disease and to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. To cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. And therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Cure Curb, manufactured by F.J. Cheney of Ohio, it is built conditionally in the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoon. It acts directly on the blood supply of the heart and hundreds dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send F.J. Cheney & CO, Toledo, Ohio. Address: E. J. CHENY & CO., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by: Catherine Family Plans for constatation. Eccentricities of Genius "Genius is freakish. It is claimed that the brilliant Dr. Johnson used to touch every post in his pathway." "I know one of them geniuses." "And does he touch every post he comes across?" "No; he touches every friend he comes across, or everlastingly tries to—"Louisville Courier-Journal. Important to Mothers. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it The Kind You Have Always Bought Doubting It. "Sir," said the imperial ruler of all the Russians, "do you realize what a gulf of inequality yawns between ordinary humanity and an autocrat?" "Dear me!" answered the dowmatte in mild surprise. "Is this gulf proposition a carchasm?" Youth the Time to Build Wisely. Youth is the best time for the building of character and the forming of principle, and the future depends on the decisions and actions of the present.—Rev. G. Denton. Ancient City of Thebes The city of Thebes had a hundred gates and could send out at each gate 10,000 fighting men and 200 charlots—in all, 1,000,000 men and 2,000 charlots. It Cures While You Walk Allen's Foot-Ease is a certain cure for hot, sweating, calcus, and swollen, aching feet. Sold by all Druggists. Price 25c. Don't accept any substitute. Trial package FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS FOR ALL KIDNEY DISEASES FOR BREUMATISM FOR BRIGHT'S DISEASE FOR DIABETES, BACKACH AT 375 "Guaranteed." NEEDED A LONG STEM. "Wot did you do wid dat breakfast food de lady up at dat house gave you?" "It's in me pipe. I'm smokin' it!" "Helpful Hints" That Hinder. by our mothers are now proved utterly useless, if not more harmful than helpful. For instance, no one now uses moist tea to clean a carpet or rug, because of the inevitable staining. And salt used on a carpet collects dampness and rusts the tacks. Newspapers, dampened and torn, answer the purpose much more satisfactorily. Rugs should be shaken from the sides, for the strain of the weight on the end is very apt to loosen the weft. FITS. St. Vitts' Dance and Nervous Diseases perforate the skin with a mild cream. Send for FREE $3.00 trial bottle and treatise. Dr. K. H. Kline, Ld. 631 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa. It takes a concocted man to make a continuous hit—with himself. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup. For children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation, pain, curts wind colds. a bottle. Gentleness is invincible.—Marcus Aurelius. HELPFUL ADVICE II You won't tell your family doctor the whole story about your private illness — you are too modest. You need not be afraid to tell Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., the things you could not explain to the doctor. Your letter will be held in the strictest confidence. From her vast correspondence with sick women during the past thirty years she may have gained the very knowledge that will help your case. Such letters as the following, from grateful women, establish beyond a doubt the power of LYDIA E.PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND to conquer all female diseases. Mrs. Norman B. Barndt, of Allentown, Pa, writes: "Ever since I was sixteen years of age I had suffered from an organic derangement and female weakness; in consequence I had dreadful headaches and I had been told by a civilian said I must go through an operation to get well. A friend told me about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and I took it and wrote you for advice, following your directions to a doctor. I am today a well woman, and I am ready all my friends of my experience." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing-down feeling, fatulency, indigestion, dizziness, or nervous prostration. CARTERS LITTLE IVER PILLS. THE NEW YORK Positively curbed by these little Pills. They also relieve Dizziness from Dyspnea, Ingestion and Too Heavy for Drinking, and aid for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Cooted Tongue, Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER placed anybwrs nets. Nets. Nets. convenient, cheap, convenient, cheap. Absolutely suit, or tip over suit, or tip over a tjingh a tjingh a tjingh of all bwrs of all bwrs or more. WIDOWS<u>under NEW LAW obtained</u> PENSIONS <u>DORIS,</u> Washington, D.C. Luxir Semua Cleanses the System Effectu- ally. Dispels Colds and Head- aches due to Constipation; Acts naturally, acts truly as a Laxative. Best for Men, Women and Children - Young and Old. ren-Young and Old To get its Beneficial Effects Always buy the Genuine which has the full name of the Com- FIG SYRUP CO. by whom it is manufactured, printed on the front of every package. SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS, one size only, regular price $50 per bottle. WARM WEATHER THE GREAT KIN GUME Cuticura PREPARED BY Cuticura SOAP MEDIGINAL AND TOILET PRICE 25 CENTS For Preserving, Purifying and Beautifying the Skin, Scalp, Hair, and Hands, for Sunburn, Heat Rash, Chafings, and for all the purposes of the Toilet. Sold throughout the world. Deposit: London, 27, Charterhouse No. 4; Paris, 5, Nine de la Paix; Australia, 1, Sydney; New Zealand, 2, Auckland; China, Hong Kong Drug Co., Japan, Muruya, Nishinomiya, Japan; United States, 1, San Francisco, etc.; Russia, Farrein (Aptek), Moscow; U. B. A., Potter Drug & Chem Corp., Jode Prop., Boston, KewTree, Cultura Booked on the Skin. 160 Acre FARMS IN Western Canada FREE 160 Acres Grain-Growing Land FREE. 40 to 60 Acres Grain-Growing Land FREE. 40 to 90 Buches Oats to the Acre. 35 to 50 Buches Barley to the Acre. 40 to 90 Buches Oats to the Acre. FREE. Good Laws with Low Taxation. Good Laws with Low Taxation. Schools and Church Companies and Low Rates. Satisfactory Markets for all Productions. Chances for Profitable Investments. Some of the choice of grain-producing land in Sacramento and Alberta may now be acquired in such a beautiful and prosperous sections under the Revised Homestead Regulations by which entry may be made by proxy (on certain conditions), by the father, mother, son, daughter, brother or sister of intending home- Entry fee in each case is $10.00. For pamphlet, "Last Best West," particulars as to rates, routes, best time to go and where to locate, apply to H. M. WILLIAMS Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean and free from unhealthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. A germicidal, disin- fusing toilet requisite of exceptional ex- cellence and economy. Invaluable or仁烫amed eyes, throat and nasal and oral tissues. In drug and toilet stores, 50 cents, or by mail postpaid. Large Trial Sample germicidal, disinfecting and deodorizing toilet requisite of exceptional excellence and economy. Invaluable for inhaled eyes, nasal spray, and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet stores, 50 cents, or by mail postpaid. Large Trial Sample with "HEALTH AND BEAUTY" BOOK GENT FREE THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Mass. HERE IS A CHANCE to double your money twice a year, perhaps oftener. If you can spare any sum from $5 up, write me for a trial offer. WITH G. W. Stubbs, Albuquerque, N.M. NOTARIES and JUSTICES HANDLING PENSION should write for cash Co., Washington, D.C. (Over 21 years experienced.)