The Gazette
Saturday, September 26, 1908
Cleveland, Ohio
Page text (machine-generated)
TWENTY-SIXTH YEAR. NO. 9.
IN UNION
THERE IS STRENTH
THE GREAT COMPOSER
S. COLERIDGE TAYLOR SIMPLY SKINS A PREJUDICED VIRGINIAN.
IN AN ENGLISH MAGAZINE
Lying Attacks Exposed—Malicious Misrepresentation Showed Up—Unjust and Unfair Criticism Completely Wiped Out—Splendid!
"Reynolds," a widely-read English magazine, recently published two articles on the race question in America. One writer, C. Kelly (white), a Virginian. This article was marked by the usual misrepresentations. The other was written by S. Coleridge Taylor, upon the request of the editor of "Reynolds." Mr. Taylor wrote the following headed: "In Defense of the Nero":
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S. COLERIDGE-TAYLOR
"The remarks on the Negro problem in America made by Mr. Walter C. Kelly (the Virginia judge) in a recent issue of 'Reynolds' present a curiously one-sided view; I may say a distorted view, for it is that of a southerner, and therefore especially a prejudiced one, going much further than the ordinary white. I should like to place before the readers of 'Reynolds, some other aspects of the, for it has other aspects. Circumstances, one going much further than the ordinary white, no special facilities for probing it. And I may here take advantage of the opportunity to correct a mistake about myself which has gained currency. It has been stated again and again that I was born in the West Indies. This is not the case. I was born in London, in Red Lion street to be precise. My father was an African medical man, my mother English, and my whole surroundings and education, I need hardly add, have been English, also my first visit to the States, when it may be remembered, I conducted a series of concerts, and, if I may say so without immodesty, was very successful. The fact that I was English, and that American, seemed to do away with the race prejudice that does undoubtedly exist, and I was welcomed and accepted, and I was denied, necessarily as if I had been entirely, instead of only partly, white. However, I do not want to linger over these personal details save in so far as they explain why, during my visits to the States, my opportunities of judging the problem have been of an unusual kind. For I mingled freely with both black and white communities, getting a much more intimate knowledge of the problem to a white. And I assert confidently that, save perhaps so far as certain parts of the south may be concerned, Mr. Kelly's statements and opinions as to the Negro race are entirely misleading. I myself have seen Negro communities, lawyers, doctors, etc. I have visited their homes, and found them living in the same style, with the same comforts and elegances as white men of the same financial standing. Of course, the Negroes of the States, the Negroes; but, class for class, their mode of living practically differs in respect from that of the whites. Negroes in large numbers attended my concerts. At Washington I think the audiences, very large ones, were about equally divided. Wherever I went Negroes came to hear the music. That shows, even making allowances for racial sympathy, that the Negroes predeciates music. For must be remembered my series of concerts were devoted to the best music, and it is scarcely conceivable that a race, so hopelessly inferior as Mr. Kelly makes them out to be, would be attracted by programs devoted to the great composers. In addition, it must not be forgotten that the prices of soats were fairly high. It argues, therefore, a fair standard, material, necessary for the success of the different cities of the States, should have been able to pay to attend; as well as a fair standard of education and of artistic appreciation that they should have been willing to expend their money in this way. Somehow I am irresistibly reminded of the old music, and it is hopelessly inferior as Mr. Kelly makes them out to be, would be attracted by programs devoted to the task of making things unpleasant, for the white man. Whereas, as everybody knows, there never would have been a Negro question if the whites had not deliberately brought blacks over from Africa for purposes of slavery. So that the question is entirely of their making, and they should bear the responsibility for the unpleasant, instead of whining about the Negro's double dose of original sin. And, let me add here by way of parenthesis, it is extremely doubtful if America to-day would or could be in its present advanced and thriving position had it not been built up in the early days by black labor.
THE GAZETTE
SPANISH WAR VETERANS
The Annual Encampment Enlivened with Several Skirmishes.
Boston, Mass.—The Fifth Annual Encampment of the United Spanish War Veterans was held here September 1, 2 and 3, and was marked by several exciting scenes and considerable disorder. A skirmish came when it was sought to draw the color line. When the matter of declaring Admiral George J. Washington, D. C., an "unattached camp," was called up, a scene of excitement ensued. Commander Piper, of Thomas camp, who is an Afro-American letter carrier of Washington, got the floor. He declared that Afro-American veteran soldiers and sailors were only seeking and did demand full recognition as American soldiers and sailors, who had tendered their services and their lives to the government when they were sent to a foreign foe. He was cheered when he asked that the members of his camp be recognized as Spanish War Veterans as a concrete right, and be attached to the Department of the District of Columbia. National Commander Hale left the chair, and declared that Thomas camp was not associated with the Department of the District of Columbia, but was not associated with the Department then adopted by a majority vote designating Thomas camp as an unattached camp, and requiring it to report and pay its per capita taxes to the national headquarters.
This Man Espouses His Rescuer's Politics
Springfield, Ill.—Eugene W. Chaffin has added at least one vote to the Prohibition total by his rescue of an Afro-American hard pressed by the mob here during the riots. Wesley L. Edwards, who was saved, has been arrested in the possession of the secretaries of state, and announced that he would follow Mr. Chaffin's banner for the rest of the campaign.
ESTABLISHED AUGUST 25, 1883 AND ISSUED EVERY WEEK ON TIME SINCE.
CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1908.
THEY DARE NOT TELL PLAIN TRUTH
"NATIONAL INDULGENCE IN THE PERILOUS LUXURY OF RACE PREJUDICE."
LYNCHING, LOGICAL SEQUENCE!
"The Lesson of Springfield"—Race Prejudice, a Moloch—it is a Liar—Kill it—No Compromise with Such a Pest—The Cosmopolitan Dinner a Right Move—A Strong Article.
Among the numerous comments on the horrors recently enacted at Springfield, III, every moral is drawn except the one most obvious and most important of all. The southern papers find their grief considerably mitigated, owing to the fact that this outrage took place in a northern state. The northern papers talk wisely about the rigid and impartial enforcement of law, and that their hands with an attitude of duty fully performed. Not one of them dares to tell the plain truth, which is that the present villain, like so many in the past and so many more yet to come, is the strictly logical sequence of national indulgence in the perilous luxury of race prejudice, and the constant formation of evil passions in the ever receptive mob. It is high time to put the guilt where it belongs. Men who are continually fanning the flames of racial antipathy are undoubtedly sarcere in their abhorrence of such crimes as that of Springfield; yet it is certain that without the race hatred inspired by their teachings, these things would speedily cease to be. Whatever the immediate cause or progenitor of such crimes, that the inflamed mob quickly extends its cowardly attack to such members of the hated race as can readily be reached.
The cure for these evils can easily be named, imbus much as it is identical with the cure for most other national sins. In brief, it may be designated as fundamental right thinking. When the principle of equal human rights regardless of race or color, shall leave all society, from the highest to the lowest, we shall not be obliged to apologize for such outrages as that which occurred in the United States, Russia, and a few odd corners of Europe, where a bitter race or religious animosity prevails, that lynchings and mob massacres are possible in the twentieth century. Kill race prejudice, and we shall have no cause for humiliation over the existence of such flendish barbarism in our country as cannot be even compre hended in England, France or Germany. Let this vicious principle live and spread, and we shall still be compre hended to see that States unranked low in the United States justify by the nations of the old World. There is no other remedy, and no excuse for not adopting this one.
Race prejudice is a Moloch, which ever demands to be fed with blood. It is antithetic to all the higher ideals of our civilization, and in strict opposition to every fundamental principle of democracy. All real progress requires the human brotherhood: race prejudice aims to annihilate the spirit of fraternity in mankind. Civilization breeds gentleness and courtesy; race prejudice stimulates roughness and violence. Democracy opens wide the door of opportunity to all men; race prejudice slams the door in the face of those who are victims of a mere act in its repudiation is despicably mean in its repudiation of the morality of fair play. It is a liar from the beginning, falsifying the plainest facts of science, repudiating the most obvious lessons of history, hypocritically trampling on the clearest teachers of the religion its apologists falsely pretend to accept and obey. It is uniformly a persecutor. Knowing its own inherent vileness, it lives in perpetual dread of exposure, and uses the midnight assassin in all ages to stifle the voice of truth. In the centers of race prejudice, free speech is a thing unknown. Tar and feathers, the scourge and the arms of the midnight assassin, are its appropriate means of enforcing the decrees. Being an evil tree, it inevitably brings forth evil fruit. There can be no comedy in the foolishness in trucking to its insolence, we have already paid dearly. The time has come for a radical change of attitude.
The dinner of the Cosmopolitan society, which brought together in fraternal fellowship a number of members of the white and colored races for the earnest consideration of great national issues which concern both races may now be seen to have been involved in these matters aroused in menaments aroused in the organs of race prejudice in the south and the still meaner trucklers to a false sentiment in the north, proved this. To draw the fire of the enemy and learn his actual location, is often of vital importance in military strategy. We now know, beyond a perennial court that a race invasive; that its essence is virulent hate; that it demands absolute and humiliating surrender of principle from all who cherish a nobler human ideal; that its loud-mouthed pretense of seeking to safeguard racial purity is merely a mask to hide the hideous visage of oligarchic despotism. We must have always found their account in setting human beings against one another by means of race and caste divisions. It is a very old game, and one that has often been successful. As long as it prevails, a fearful stumbling block lies in the path of all social and economic progress. We must fight our reform efforts, race, color, creed and social station, before we may hope to win it for any. To begin a campaign for human rights
and handicap ourselves at the outset by narrowing our interest to the welfare of one race alone, is to invite and deserve defeat.
It is not sufficient, however, to support legislation which shall open equal opportunities to all races. Such legislation already prevails in Illinois, and yet the Springfield outrages took place. The seat of race prejudice is their own mine, until it is thoroughly lost in the lack of Springfields. True democracy demands that we rate every individual in strict accordance with personal merit entirely ignoring all accidents of birth and color. As long as we lump together as necessarily inferior, socially or in any other respect, all the members of any given race, regardless of their role in the development, we have not grasped the democratic ideals. This ought to be a plaititude so obvious as to render its repetition unnecessary; but unfortunately it is recognized only by the tiny handful who have evolved to the point of doing their own thinking. The cultured snobbery, which merely distorts the reality, coldly disarranges the efforts of members of the Parish race to aspire to honorable recognition, is the same spirit which slavishly copied by less cultured classes, filters down from stratum to stratum, until in the coarser-veined mob it enquires in violent outbreaks at the slightest pretext. To one degree, the must begin at the top. This is the way which has never been tried, and which alone is fundamental. It lies within ourselves to begin. The enemies of race prejudice must take the aggressive, and fight the monster wherever it rears its ugly head. Let us quit truckling and apologizing, and stand for justice. We must not whether it gives offense or not. The spirit of Garrison and Phillips is needed to-day, to complete the work left half done when their mighty spirits passed on.
Remember Springfield!
JAMES F., MORTON JR., (white.)
Negro with a Capital "N."
Negro with a Capital "N."
We are sometimes asked by why spell Smith with a capital "N" when so few other publications do so. We do it for the same reason that we spell Smith with a capital "S." Just as "smith" was once a common descriptive term indicative of occupation and came thence to be a family name, so "negro" a common descriptive term indicating the color of a certain race, has come to be a race name. This is a kind of transformation through which many words have gone, from common to common ones—as from smith to Smith or reversely from to boycott. When these transpositions of meaning take place, they ought to be indicated by the ordinary rules of capitalization, simply as a matter of good literary form. We should as soon think of writing "mr. smith" as a name of a common one, more conventionally, but that is not a sufficient reason for disregarding it. In some connections it has a significance of respect which may make its misuse offensive. The spelling of Negro with a little "n" may well be offensive to sensitive persons of that race, and we see no other reason for refusing to capitalize the word than a positive intention to offend or indifference to giving offense, unless it be ignorance of English usage. We are therefore glad to note that at least one periodical of the first edition of this book usually follows our rule as to the word Negro. Has not this word become as truly a proper name as German, Jew or Quaker?
The Color Tone of Righteousness
The Color Tone of Righteousness.
To the intelligence and conscience of those of our good white friends who are Democrats down to the color line, but no further, we commend these true words from a Negro, S. Laing Williams, whose democracy, illusion of the office, race limitations; "There are some things about which there can be no compromise. A righteous man is neither white nor black. He is simply a righteous man."—Chicago Public.
QUIET BUT PRETTY WEDDING.
The Bride and Groom's Presents to the Maid of Honor and Best Man.
Ann Arbor, Mich.—Miss Leota F. Heuson and Mr. Alex. L. Turner were quietly married here on the 16th. The house was beautifully decorated with flowers, plants, etc. Miss Eva J. Lewis of Hornell played the Lohengrin wedding march. L. E. Gray, Jr. of Bavanna, best friend, O. G. Fields of Toledo, matron of honor, Rev. A. L. Harris of Toledo affiliated, assisted by Rev. Woodward of this city. Mr. and Mrs. Turner left for Detroit en route east for a ten day trip, and will be at home after October 1, at 517 Catherine street, this city. The bride presented her matron of honor with an exquisite ring of saibires and moonstones, and a golden silver bracelet. O. Miss Lewis, who presided at the piano, and Mr. Turner presented his best man with a magnificent ruby stud as a souvenir of the occasion. Mr. and Mrs. Turner received some valuable and beautiful presents. The out of town guests were: John R. Pulress, Allegheny; Mrs. H. H. Proctor, Mrs. Byrd Lewis, Mrs. E. Parker, Rara Lewis, Mrs. J. Ypsilantil; Miss Hattie Barrler, of Detroit; Mrs. Emma Moore, of Alliance; Miss Harriet Johnson, of Cleveland, and Mrs. S. Holliday, of Akron.
White Brutes Riot.
Mt. Clemens, Mich.—A repetition of riots of five years ago here was feared last week as a result of an attack upon Wilbur Barry, chef of a local hotel, who recently married a white girl. Wednesday night a gang of white brushes attacked him. He was rescued by the police, while the crowd wrecked Barry's house with stones.
"The Helping Hand" society will give "a feast in the wilderness" at Mrs. I. A. Collard, 2245 East Forty-second Street on Tuesday evening. Mrs. George A. Clark of 1124 Scovill area, royally entertained the society at their last meeting. Its fall and winter work will be opened by the "feast."
FREY
Copyright 1957 by C. D. Frey.
SENATOR JOSEPH BENSON FORAKER.
Our Great and Good Friend Maliciously Attacked by Hearst, Roosevelt and Taft — Brownsville Again.
An old maxim of law tersely puts the quintessence of a fair trial into the maxim "Audiatur et altera pars," i. e., "the other party should also be heard." It will be well for those tasty judges of the charges, of the odoriferous Hearst papers, against Senator Foraker to take cognizance of the fact that this accused man promised to give his version of the subject under consideration to the public, and all just and decent men should and will hold back their judgment until this has fully been done. The American people, white and black, are not all unjust, malicious or envious men, glad at the "downfall" of one of their great ones. The worst feature of the press opinions Hearst's "yellow brigade" is so eager to impress on the people, is the "glee" with which some journals place the matter before their readers. None are worse morally in this respect than the organs of a Brooklyn Democratic boss and an Ohio Republican boss "which try to level even the president of the United States down to their own lowness by asserting" that the president's eyes "will be luminous with glee and that he will have a sardonic laughter." Let us hope for his own sake, and his country's no less, that this judgment does wrong to Mr. Roosevelt, who cannot morally afford to "stoop as low" as the "organs" to "conquer an opponent." Of course the Brownysville affair is drawn into the matter by the "organs" in question, and probably by other mental and moral sophists. But that is a thing apart and will have to be judged on its merits by themselves, regardless of the character of its judges. To draw it into the matter simply opens up a view into the small souls and narrow intellects of certain malevolent people. [And Roosevelt's publication of Tuesday, places him in this class—Ed.]
JACOB EGBERTH (White). Chicago, Ill., Sept. 20, 1908.
LETTERS FROM MANY OHIO
CITIES AND TOWNS
SENT BY
OUR OWN CORRESPONDENTS.
Personal, Social, Lodge, Church, Literary and Other Notes of Interest.
McIntyre—Sarah West of Cleveland visited her parents last week. She returned home Sunday—E. J. Smith and family visited his brother Saturday at Emerson—Mrs. Burns West and Miss Were were in Steubenville last week—Rev. and Mrs. R. B. Cooper and Mr. and Mrs. B. W. were guests of Mrs. Parks Forest Sunday—Rev. Lewis and E. J. Smith started for conference at Dayton Tuesday—Mary Cooper of Smithfield, Irene and Lizzie Washington were here Sunday.
Correspondents must mail all letters for publication at their main postoffice sufficiently early on Monday (or Sunday) of each week to have them reach The Gazette office on Tuesday morning, and, always, alike their names and that of their city or town on the outside of the wrapper about returned copies. Unless this latter is done, proper credit cannot be given
SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS.
you. Lists of names, wedding presents, etc., obituary notices, speeches, resolutions, poetry, inquiries for relatives and advertisements of all kinds, including items announcing entertainments to be held in the near future, evidence of the rate of ten cents a line, six words to a line. Our rates for display advertisements will be sent on application. Send postal note and not stamps during warm weather. M. T vernon.—Mr. Frank Turner left on the 14th for Atlantic City.—Miss Emma Sites is convalescing.—Mrs. Harry Lathers returned on the 14th from Mansfield.—Mrs. Stewart entered the school.—Mrs. Jones on Tuesday afternoon in honor of Medesdas Patengall and Busby, who returned to Zanesville Tuesday.—The Elks gave an entertainment Friday evening.—Mrs. Jackson of Youngstown returned home Saturday.—Mrs. Mamie Page Johnson of Delaware visited her old friends here Sun Clyde.—Among a nice string of fish Clyde was caught in a 3½-pound black bass.—Mrs. H. C. Curry went to Utica Sunday.—Mrs. Stewart is in Springfield visiting her sick sister.—Miss Bonnie Sharp, who visited Cleveland on the 13th, returned the next day after her sister, Mrs. Powell, who is ill. Her father went with her the last time.—Mrs. Stewart is in Springfield and other central points.—Rev Tate leaves the 22nd for the annual conference at Dayton.
Smithfield—Rev. William Randall, who was in Steubenville last week, preached an excellent farewell seminary Sunday evening and left Monday for conference at Dayton. Mr. William Washington lost a good horse last week and was unable to go to the Wolf Run last week —Miss Ida Ford is visiting in Steubenville.
IN UNION
THE 4TH STREET
Mademes E. Powell and Hargrave attended Mrs. Susan Johnson's funeral at Cadiz.—Mr. and Mrs. K. Stewart and Mr. Moore of Bradley attended services at the A. M. E. church Sunday—John Veney is slowly convalescing from a bad bee sting—Mr. Co. will continue business in the jones building—RV. W. H. Veney visited in Hopedale, and Mr. Carter and family Saturday—Miss E. Cart and Miss Smith are guests of Mrs. James Carter—E. J. Smith and family passed through here last week en route to Mt. Pleasant—Rev. Cooper was here last week.—Mr. Ors. Munz will soon move his family to a new building—RV. D. Christian Harrie is quite ill—Miss Salle Harrie was called to Pittsburgh Saturday by the death of Mr. Loman Peterson.
Youngstown.—Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Bradshaw are rejoicing over twins.—Mr. and Mrs. Charles Reeves returned Saturday after their wedding tour and will reside at North avenue and Burke street. The reception in their honor Monday evening in Dishart hall was a most-enjoyable affair. The evening was spent in chatting and singing. Mrs. Hanna was served. Music was furnished by the Imperial orchestra. There were 30 couples present. A number attended the Canfield fair this week.—Miss Lena Ford left Monday for Wilberforce college.—T. E. Green, esq., delivered an address on higher education and Mr. Christopher Hamilton spoke on educational education at the educational meeting in Oak Hill Avenue Sunday afternoon, with each program presented by the choir furnished excellent music all day. The pastor left Monday morning for conference at Dayton. The birthday party held in the church Friday evening was a success. Supper was served at the conclusion of the program.—Miss Hazel Harper left Monday for Wilberforce university and Mrs. H. Harper went to Toledo to visit.—Mrs. N. Finney returned Friday from Rochester, Pa.—Mr. Harry Thomas is visiting relatives in Wheeling and Mr. Hempel of Jersey City, N. J., is visiting A. H. Berry.—Mr. Albert Horton, who was injured by the Erie railroad last week is still confined.
Steubenville.—Mrs. A. Taylor, Mrs. B. J. Guyder's guest, has returned to Conway, Pa.—Charles Davis and Nellie Leech went to Pittsburgh Tuesday.—Ida Ford of Smithfield is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Carter.—Al. Roberson of Wheeling is visiting his mother.—Randall of Smithfield was the guest of Mrs. and adkins given at Mrs. L. R. Mercer's was quite a success.—Mrs. William Bailey and little daughter, Estelle, of Monongahela City are visiting her parents. Fred Matthews, a Cleveland college student, lectured at the A. M. E. church Thursday evening.—Mrs. and Mrs. Elmer White left Sunday to visit his parents in Dayton. His mother visited her mother. The son of Martins Ferry was here Thursday.—Mrs. E. Cook has returned from Selma.—Mrs. V. Baltimore entertained the W. R. club Tuesday evening.—Rev. J. S. Jackson left Tuesday for conference at Youngstown.—Grace Christian is slowly improving.—Mr. and Mrs. Homer Layne have returned from Wheeling.—Mary T. Winfield of Pittsburg was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. H. Williams last week of little and Mary Gakee of Pittsburg visited her mother.—Mary T. Winfield of Pittsburg was in Wheeling.—Frank Smith and Mr. Thompson of Youngstown spent a week here and in ironton.—Mary J. Fletcher of Pittsburg has returned home. She visited her sister, Mrs. Al. Johnson.—Mrs. Lloyd Martin left Saturday for home (Fairmount). Clarkshire and Buckhannan.—Mrs. Guyder is visiting Mrs. Taylor visited her Spencer home was here Friday. Tibs of Eau Liverpool was here Friday. Mrs. Grace Walker and little daughter, Hildegarde, of Uniontown are visiting her parents. Mrs. I. Asbury, who visited her sister, Mrs. A. J. Guy, has returned to Washington, Pa.—Maria Bigsby and Mrs. Edward West were here recently.—Miss E. C. West was in Smithfield Sunday.—Mrs. A. Smith has returned here.—Mrs. Bertha Freeman and Sarah B. Freeman on Saturday at Master Ellsworth Grass raised the most money for Educational day and was rewarded with a fine picture painted by J. H. Berry, man, the card writer.—Mr. George Viney, who was kicked by his horse, has about recovered.
"The Black Man's Portion."
The Pledmont (N. C.) Advocate, a paper published at Salisbury, N. C., by and for colored people, said in its last issue: "The recent state convention of Republicans in Charlotte was quite an ideal affair from the standpoint of the followers of the illy-white prophete, who was there except to assist in the election of one to carry water to super-heated delegates of the white variety. Nothing to suggest that there are 30,000 black voters in the Old North State." At one stage of the proceedings of the convention a black fringe of onlookers were observed on the back row of the center section of the balcony. It was a black office, The Star of Zion, colored, of this city, said that the colored spectators had at first sat toward the front of the balcony, but a policeman approached them and in kindly manner told them to move back. They asked why and were told that the people up there were the office's officers on a platform. The black man does really appear to be out of it. Once the sinew of the Republican party of North Carolina, that party is no* ashamed of him and afraid of political association with him, and the Democratic party doesn't need and doesn't want to be completely shorn of his strength — Charlotte (N. C.) Daily Observer.
Resigned by Request
Washington, D. C.-A statement on authority was made Tuesday that the recent resignations of Second Assistant Postmaster General James T. McCleary, nominated for congress in the Second Minnesota district, and Paul Ewart, assistant district attorney, also a candidate for the congressional nomination in the same district, were required by the president, because of their political activity.
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THE GAZETTE,
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PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY,
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IN ADVANCE.)
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THE GAZETTE is the oldest, and
has the largest bona fide circulation,
double that of any newspaper in the
interest of Afro-Americans, published
in the state of Ohio, and comparison
with any will immediately establish
its rank as one of the NEWSIEST
AND BEST in the country.
‘The rumor that the Assembly of
Georgia has decided to wipe out the
convict lease system of that state Is
almost too good to believe, If there
is a national disgrace to the good
pame of this country that rivals that
of mob violence and Iynch-murder it
is the hellish convict lease system of
the south with Its barbarous treat-
ment of male and female unfortunates,
black and white,
AN ABJECT FAILURE.
Not 150 people heard the Hon.
Charles W. Anderson, internal reve-
nue collector of New York City, speak
in the great, large Forest Street arm
ory in this city last Tuesday evening.
The announcement that he was to
speak for Taft and Roosevelt was the
cause. The “emancipation celebra-
tion” was an abject failure as far as
this part of the program was con:
cerned, It was right and proper that
this was so. A good crowd assembled
long toward midnight to enjoy the
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“Charles W. Anderson,
dancing. Mr. Anderson dkd_not do
himself justice either, as a public
fpeater, possibly because "of the
smallness of his audience, No. Roose
ett or ‘att in ours, Charley. The
Sverege Ohio Atroamerican has.
Glear ‘understanding ofthe situation
from a racial viewpoint, and neither
campaign “boodle” nor a charge of
the Rootevelt, black "brendan bat
ter" Brigade will swerve “them one
Jot from. thelr determination ott
support Taft. We. are FOR "FOR
AKER “FIRST, LAST AND ALL THE
TIME”, and against Roosevelt and
one
THE TAFT CANDIDACY IN DES
PERATE STRAITS.
‘Last Saturday or Sunday Mr. “Dis
franchisement, Jim-Crow Car” Taft
said in the usual Roosevelt bombastic
way that he would not strike a man
when he was “down” even if he
thought it would secure him suflletent
votes to elect him, Tuesday morning
President “Brownsville” Roosevelt ts
‘sued a characteristically dirty and
contemptible attack upon Senator
Foraker, which included a letter from
Mr. Taft that showed the latter to be
as bitter an enemy of our great and
‘good friend as 1s “Czar” Roosevelt
‘That this was a surprise to many {s
putting it mildly because Taft’s oft
Tepeated statement that he owed his
start In public life to the senator
made an opposite impression general
ly. It Is now perfectly clear to every
body, and. especially to every loyal
‘Afro-American voter, that a vote for
‘Taft is one for an enemy of the race
and of Senator Foraker whose elimin-
ation from publtc ife he was secretly
aiding. Roosevelt's publication of his
(Tatt’s) Tetter Tuesday morning “let
the cat out of the bag.” The presi-
dent's two public appeals of the past
week and the one of last week show
Clearly in what desperate straits
the Taft candidacy is. It does not
take a prophet or the son of a prophet
to seo that the big fat ex-secretary of
war is headed toward a stinging re-
buke and defeat in November; primar.
ily because of his indorsemenit of
Roosevelt and Roosevelt's policies;
secondarily, because of the opposigion
of loyal Afro-American, Hebrew and
organized labor Republicans through-
out the country; and because of the
factional fights and disturbances
among Republicans of New York, West
Virginia, Ohio, Indiana, Wiinols and
other northern states. It 1s indeed
gn embarrassing position, in the face
of Taft's statement the first of the
week that Roosevelt's publication of
his (Taft's) lefter on Tuesday places
Candidate Taft in, It is anything but
5 eonsistent ome, to say the least.
‘THE ROOSEVELT-TAFT ATTACK
ON FORAKER.
Roosevelt's formal statement issued
Bondsy at Oyster Bay containing
Dalt's letter of July 20, 1907, opposing
the endorsement of Senator Foraker
for reelection to the United States
senate, is remarkable document par-
ticularly because It shows how low
the man will stoop in an effort to
misrepresent facts in connection with
the Brownsville matter, and to injure
his MASTER, Senator Foraker. When
the latter literally “skinned” Roose-
vyelt at the Gridiron dinner in Wash-
ington, D. C., last year because of the
latter's inexcusable and insulting ref-
erence to the Brownsville contro-
versy, then on in®the United States
senate, as an “academic” discussion,
he not only impressed all present, but
later on the entire country, with the
fact that he was unquestionably, far
and away, the president's superior in
point of ability as well as experience
as an orator and statesman. This
incident, coupled with the senator's
magnificent and successful fight for
“The Black Battalion,” and his oppo-
sition to the administration's pet meas-
ures (the railroad rate and statehood
bills), have apparently so angered
Roosevelt as to make him simply un-
controllable whenever an opportunity.
be it ever so despicable, arises to
strike at the senator. In spite of the
fact that but a day or two previous
he bad issued a second appeal for
Candidate Taft within a week, Roose-
velt issued that Oyster Bay attack of
Monday, so “delighted” was he with
William Randolph Hearst's malicious
and lying attacks upon the senator,
and, too, In the face of the following
‘Sweeping and general denial from Mr.
Foraker:
“Neither the Standard Oil Co, ‘or
any other company or individual has
ever paid me a cent on account of
any public service, nor has that com-
pauy or anybody else ever even sug.
gested to me any compensation or re-
ward of any kind in consideration of
support for any bill or opposition to
any bill, or for any action of any na-
ture whatever.”
That “yellow journals” of the stripe
of Hearst's miserable sheets, most
Democratic papers and certain over-
zealous Taft-Roosevelt publications
should persist in reiterating the con-
temptible charges in the face of the
senator's sweeping denial, is not near-
ly 80 surprising as the fact that the
president of the United States will
stoop to the low level the afore-
mentioned publications occupy, to
vent his spleen and to try to “get
even" with Senator Foraker. His ef-
fort to pose, and to shove Candidate
Taft into the Hmelight, boasting of
the alleged reforms he claims his ad-
ministration has sought to inaugurate,
shows the overweoning conceit that
has characterized the man in a
marked degree ever since his unfortu-
nate elevation to the presidency. It
is positively disgusting and one of
the principle reasons why thousands
‘of Republicans will refuse to yote this
fall for Taft, who has made the fatal
mistake of endorsing all of Roose
yelt’s policies, If ever there was a
menace to the safety and prosperity
of this country Roosevelt, as. presi-
dent, has been and is that menace.
His statement that “the entire agita-
tion over Brownsville was in large
part not a genuine agitation on be-
half of colored men at all” is not only
untrue but only another one of his
many insults to the great mass of our
people. The man has grossly insulted
us almost every time he has issued
a statement anent Brownsville, He
seems to have absolutely no respect
or care for us, whether in or out of
the army, and if we fall to do every-
thing in our power to help bring about
the defeat of Taft in November there
will be no reason why he or any other
man in public life should have any.
Even Taft in his letter of last year
arguing against the senator's endorse-
ment had the “gall” to refer to, Roose-
velt's and his outrageous discharge
withouthonor of “The Black Bat-
talion” as “an important but inch
dental matter, magnified (by Senator
Foraker) to embarrass: the (Roose
yelt) administration, using in this,
without seruple, a blind race preju-
ice to accomplish his main purpose.”
Another rank insult which ts only
exceeded in {ts grossness by Roose-
velt’s latest effort along the same line
Is there no limit?
White Soldiers Not Dismissed.
At Laramie, Wyo, on August 9th,
82 white soldiers criminally assaulted
@ young woman, leaving her uncon-
selous upon the ground and her es-
cort beaten into insensibility with a
gun. Twenty-six men alleged to have
deen tmplicated in the attack are un-
der arrest. The others are still at
large, and the big daily papers have
Kept awfully quiet about the matter.
Every effort was made to keep the
assault a secret, but it leaked out.
Now, why were’ those white soldiers
not iynched and burned? Why were
they not branded as outlaws, and why
‘were not the headlines over the as-
sault in the daily papers in box-car
letters on the front page? Why didn’t
Mr, Roosevelt dismiss the whole artll-
lery battery in disgrace, without a
trial?’ Why were not these things
done? Was it because these were
white soldiers? Will some of our
Afro-American brothers who are yell-
ing themselves hoarse for Taft and
Roosevelt. answer these questions ?—
The Portland (Ore.) Advocate,
cee” WAS eee,
Mr. and Mrs. Cady of Oswego are
visiting Mr. and Mrs, T. Barnes.
‘There is a new girl at the latter's—
Mr. Lester of Washington, D. C., and
Mra. Emma Moore of Ithsca have re
turned.—Mr. Alexander of Bradford
passed through here recently en route
to Atlantic City.—T. £. Snowden has
retired from Arcade, and Mrs. Haith
cock and children from Buffalo and
Canada—Miss Halliday visited _in
‘Wellsville last week.—Messrs, Vir
ginie, Barnes and Ross have returned
from’ Boston.—Miss Sarah Hill enter:
tained in honor of G. H. Burghardt of
Caneadea—Edna Maybee and Oren
Randall are fll—Mr. H. Brooks was
home Sunday from Franklinville,
Bryan Suggested It!
September 1, Prof. Wm. H, Dam:
mond, C. E., was appointed to the im-
portant position of inspecting engi-
heer in the department of city con-
troller by Hon, Frank B. Doremus,
controller. The position is a most
important one and carries a salary of
$1,200 ppr annum. It Is understood
ihat’the appointment ‘was made upon
Fequest of Mayor Thompson and his
fmmediate advisers, who, it is said,
have decided to act upon the recent
suggestion of Candidate Wm. J. Bryan,
and give colored supporters of Demuo-
Cracy the recognition they will be en-
titled to.—Detroit Informer.
AZETTE, CLEVELAND, 0., SABRURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1908.
iqe meow nsville “Aftfray” luvetrated |RY-
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Courteg# of the Montgomery Colored Alabamian.
TAFT DRAGS THE SOLDIERS BY THE NECK TO ROOSEVELT WHO KICKS THEM IN!
“ MLYNCH-MURDER” GANSON! | ter from the southern prejudiced view-| A QUEER CONDITION OF A
eee Ly point. As you will see in the copy of| “REPUBLICAN.”
tcl pltehall Notoriety — Gow: | vou tate weektha ia co Fespeadlis | svlun. Presidential Candids
Harris Honors Him—Tatt, te | 10,Yixe Bromnetilie outrage ond thors | logy Tet meecnaily endo
franchisement, “Jim-Crow" most insulting messages to the United | franchisement, “Jim Crow”
Cars and Brownsville. States senate relative to that matter, | pamcnennen™ tim Crow” &
panier fs President Roosevelt, His spec a ete
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR, | Grand faplds and. ciner points In | WiMout Nonor of “The Bl
Columbus, O., Sept. 4, 1908. | Be north only e dee earn coy 6. Peeve
Editor Gazette—My Dear Harry: I
notice in a recent issue of The Ga
zette that you are criticising the gov-
emmor.on account of the failure to re-
moye C. H, Ganson from the board of
agriculture. You have always been
reasonable, and you and I have been
political friends so often that I take
the liberty of writing you in regard
to this case,
As you no doubt remember, the
state board of agriculture had no off-
cial standing until last winter when,
the legislature providing for the state
taking over the property, etc., of the
board, it was made a state institution.
Heretofore the members of the board
have been selected by the delegates
to the state agricultural meeting held
tn January of each year. The new
Jaw provides that this soctety shall
‘recommend two members each year
‘to the governor for appointment to fill
‘the vacancies occurring annually.
When the law was passed last winter,
there were no protests against any
of the members then serving and the
governor, following the spirit of the
law, appointed the ten then serving.
Having gone thus far, your know!-
edge of state affairs will show you
clearly that the governor has no pow-
‘er to remove Ganson, except for cause,
which must be reported to the senate
at its next session and passed upon by
that body. When you come to remove
a state official, the cause must be off
Cial misconduct, or such conduct, after
his appointment, as plainly renders
him unfit for the position—at any
rate, it must be a cause that would
pass muster before the senate, As a
matter of fact, the governor's power
does not go further than suspension,
pending the action of the senate.
Tam aware that this law says the
governor shall have power to. re-
move members at any time, but
ft Is clear that the legisiature
did not intend to give the
governor any special power in_ this
ease, but merely to confer the same
power he is given with reference to
other appointive positions.
You certainly appreciate the fact,
‘as you seem to indicate in your edi
torial, that Goy, Harris would not
wantonly do anything inimical to the
colored race. In his speech at Youngs-
town to-morrow he will express him-
self clearly on the subject, and his
‘War record ought to protect him to
some extent at least, Then, Harry,
there are some other things that I can
‘not pat in a letter that ought to oper-
‘ate in the governor's favor. I hope I
may see you soon. But, in the mean-
time, for the sake of our old triend-
ship'and for the preservation of your
reputation for fair play, I ask you to
suspend judgment in this case. Very
truly yours, OPHA MOORE.
Cleveland. 0. Sept. 11. 1908.
‘Mr, Opha Moore, Care Executive Of-
‘fice, Capitol Building, Columbus, 0.—
Friend Opha: Copy of the governor's
speech at Youngstown _recelved.
Thank you. In reply to that part of
ft relative to the Negro, please say to
the governor that the Ohio Democratic
platform {s not any more silent on
the: question of the “rights of the
Negro” (cap N) than the Republican
party hasbeen -as a matter of
(action) fact for the last 20 years.
‘That is why the continued repeating
of the “hog-wash” in the Ohlo Repub-
Mean (and national, too) platform {s
30 meaningless to’ intelligent Afro-
Americans everywhere, and especially
here in Ohio where they (the intelll-
gent ones) are in the great majority.
‘With all the power in this state and
nationally, the Republican party does
absolutely nothing to carry out any
of its many platform pledges to the
“Negro” for more than 20 years past.
On the contrary, the Republican party
fn the national convention at Chicago
not only indorsed “Lily-Whiteism”
when it seated 213 delegates from the
south, simply because they were for
Taft, and unseated the same number
of seqularly elected delogates (white
and black) because they were not for
‘Taft, violating a fundamental principle
of the Republican party, but also per-
sisted in the nomination of Tatt in
spite of the protests of practically all
‘of our leading men, representing as
they do, so potent a’ factor of the Re
publican party.
AS you and every one else know,
Mr. Taft in his speech in Greensboro
North Carolina, in 1908, condoned, if
indeed he did not practically indorse,
disfranchisement in the south. In a
speech in Lexington, Kentucky, in
1907, he not only indorsed “'Jim-Crow”
ears in the south for my people, but
took pains to try to. show them how
to make such laws’ stronger and bet-
ter from the southern prejudiced view-
point. As you will see in the copy of
the current issue of my paper sent
to you this week, he is as responsible
for the Brownsville outrage and those
most insulting messages to the United
States senate relative to that matter,
as President Roosevelt. His speech
at Grand Rapids and other points In
the north only made this condition
worse,
From the foregoing and other well-
known facts which time will not per
mit me to write, you will readily see
or be able to understand the position
of the average intelligent member of
my race when it comes to matters po-
Utical this fall
‘The governor's retention of “Cham-
paign County Lynching” Ganson on
the state agricutlural board will cost
him thousands of Afro-American
Votes this fall, Such effort as he can
make to get rid of Ganson ought to
be made at once and will help him
with my class of people. A do-nothing
policy, if 1 understand your letter cor-
Tectly, will only make bad matters
worse, and show that he is not dis-
posed’ even to make an effort to get
rid of Ganson, 1 am sorry that this
seems to be the disposition at the
capitol, because up until the Ganson
exposition, personally I felt toward
the governor ag Indicated in the edi-
torlal In my paper last and this week,
Very truly yours,
HARRY C, SMITH.
THAT BURTON ENDORSEMENT,
AEE SOTERY 6) VET eeRe COMIN,
Republican convention endorsed the
alleged candidacy of Congressman T.
E, Burton for United States senator
contrary to the Wishes of the great
majority of the Republicans of this
communtty. It was the work of pro-
fessional politicians who favor the
candidacy of William H. Taft for the
presidency, and who are opposed to
the reelection to the United States
senate of Senator Joseph Benson For-
aker, because they favor his elimina.
tion from publle life, presumably as
a result of his participation in the
Brownsville controversy—bis great
and successful leadership of that long
drawn out contest. The 14 candidates
for the state assembly, nominated in
that convention, as a result of the en-
dorsement are not only pledged to
yote for Mr. Burton “first, last and
all the time,” but are also pledged to
vote against the re-election of Sena-
tor Foraker. As Mr. Burton cannot
possibly hope to be elected to the
United States senate next winter be-
cause southern Ohio {s entitled to the
honor and will without a doubt com-
mand it, It 1s easy to be seen that his
only object in securing the empty en-
dorsement 1s to command Cuyahoga’s
14 Yotes im the next state assembly
(it the Republican candidates nomt-
nated in last, Saturday's convention
are elected in November) and to keep
them from being cast for Senator
Foraker. This being true, as it cer
tainly is, the duty of every voter in
this county, particularly every Atro-
American voter, who is loyal to Ohio's
senior United States senator 1s clear.
They must do all in their power to
prevent the election of the 14 assem-
bly nominees of last Saturday's Cuya-
hoga county Republican convention
because they are pledged to vote for
Mr. Burton and against Senator For-
aker, Last fall we tried to make it
lear to all people of this community
that Mr, Burton was tnalterably op-
posed to the senator. This fall Mr.
Burton makes it unnecessary for us to
do 80, again, as the result of his polt
Uclan-triends’ action in the last Sat-
urday's convention, referred to repeat-
edly in this leader. There {s no ques-
tiea now; every vote cast this fall for
the legislative nominees on the Repub-
lican ticket of this county will assist
in the elimination from public life of
Senator Joseph Benson Foraker.
Vindication for Senator Foraker,
Senator Foraker continues in the
role of evil genfus of the Republican
fold. He can neither speak nor refrain
from speaking without disturbing his
colleagues’ peace of mind. The worst
feature of the truly lamentable situa:
tion is that the senator is so often
right. The circuit court for the east-
ern district of Pennsylvania holds the
commodity clause of the rate law un.
constitutional in the test case brought
by the government, Mr. Foraker said
this when the measure was pending in
congress and was the only Republican
in the senate to vote against it, The
court decision is a vindication of the
senator as a lawyer, even If it does
hot strengthen his bold on his pres
ent place at Wasbington.—Cleveland
Plain Dealer,
A QUEER CONDITION OF AFFAIRS
“REPUBLICAN.”
| With Presidential Candidate Win:
the rebellion general, Gov. Andrew Le
Harris (candidate for re-election) ap-
ae ae Ganson; with Lyman
governor, president of the Tippecanoe
‘club of Cleveland, a Republican organ-
ization, that bars from its membership
all Afro-Americans dark enough to be
south where they lynch your people;”
pect to sit at a table in a public place
eighth streets, because a few of the
ised faithfully to have the street cut
hoga county, to decide how to vote
{is certainly a queer condition of mat-
ters political (Republican) which the
ea
ae ie a canta
feat all enemies of the race, regard-
Soe
oe ee
good friend, Senator Joseph Benson
ee ee
Please remember this. Therefore,
Piece peepee ap
fee re es coe oe
‘their duty in large part.
‘The Portland, Ore. Advocate has
the following, which, to say the least,
ig decidedly ‘interesting and goes to
show that the indifference toward Taft
fs more general than many would have
us believe: “The Taft and Sherman
political club has about fizzled out.
Its promoters found that the colored
voters’ pelitical enthusiasm at this
time was not centered Taftward, and
they gave It up as a bad job. ' And
how comes the announcement that a
Bryan and Kern political club will be
organized, and, to cap the climax, one
of the erstwhile prominent leaders in
the now defunct Taft and Sherman
elub will issue the call and open the
meeting. And, judging by the many
expressions of approval from the vot-
ers, the initial meeting will be largely
attended.”
Henry T. Eubanks’ nomination in
last Saturday's county convention, dic-
tated by “Bill” Crawford (white) was
‘an awful blow to “Dode" Green and
his friends and to Harry Davis and
his friends, and many others. As Eu-
banks is pledged to vote for Burton,
if elected, and to vote against Sen-
ator Foraker, the duty of every loyal
member of the race, a voter in this
county, is clear. So throw off any dis.
‘appointment you may have felt, and
get busy. The entire list of Cuyahoga
county candidates for the assembly is
pledged to vote against the senator,
if elected, so there is only one thing
to do, and that is to do everything
in our power to defeat them in No-
vember. This is a DUTY, if we prop-
erly appreciate Senator Foraker, Then
there gre Taft, Treadway, Kennedy,
Cline ang Hirsttus who must also ge
down totdefeat! Read our editorial
‘on pace two relative to them,
New Modes for |
Those in Mourning
By Julia Bottomley
ey
powever, modified materials used’ and
heavy fabrics have been supplanted
by those of lighter welght, in rich,
deep biack. All white, or a liberal
mixture of white with black, in sult-
able materials, Is accepted as correct
mourning,
In millinery nothing aurpasses the
beautiful hats of white crape and the
combination of this material, both {a
black and white, with other fabries,
{n making up elegant mourning. Crape
{s the insignia of mourning and by
using it as a trimming, or finish, light-
weight and elegant hats and bonnets
are made. Mourning millinery 1s con-
ceded to be the highest type of milli-
nery art. Recently a medium large
hat was shown in Paris, made of
white silk with a wide border of
white crape about the edge of the
brim, A cluster of bows of white
ribbon at the front, studded with
white orchids, trailing off into a half
wreath about the crown, was chosen
for the trimming. As an example of
elegance in millinery and exquisite
beauty in fiself, this hat created a
sensation, even in the city of wonder-
ful millinery. The white orchids were
almost like shadows of that ethereal
FOR A BIG FAMILY.
Twirling Tray Does Much to Expedite
Table Service.
‘There Is a novelty extremely smart
ag well as sensible, that solves a
problem of many a housekeeper, both
those with plenty of servants and
those with none. This is a twirling
tray to expedite table service.
‘To have the meals of a large family
daintily, even comfortably, served re-
quires a skilled waitress. Even 80
there are apt to be long waits or
shoving.
The English fashion of being more
Informal for breakfast and luncheon
than for dinner, is gaining headway
with us, While the sideable serv-
ce, with each one helping his or her-
self, has by no means become gen-
eral, {t is being more and more
adopted, especially in country homes.
A convenient substitute ts found fn
one of these trays, They are made
to match the table, elther mahogany
or oak, and are about 24 inches in
diameter, though they can be made
to suit any width table.
‘The twirler 1s placed in the center
of the table, in reach of all, and on it
are placed, butter, preserves, bread
and rolls, the molasses pitcher, and
such relishes as radishes, celery, or
cheese. As these are the things that
are in constant demand, and keep the
waitress busy, ft is a great time.
saver to have them reached by simply
a twirl of the tray.
Ugly? Not all all; rather un-
vsual looking at first, but the tray can
be made very dainty with its snowy
embroidered cover, a vase of flowers
in the center, and the other dishes en-
circling it. .
If one cares to g0 to the expense
there are sectional dishes made that
just fit these trays. ‘They are shallow
ana rimmed, and have a circular dish
In the center, with six or eight tri
angular dishes radiating from it to
form an outer circle.
‘When the family is extra large two
trays are used, one at each end of the
table.
‘While these trays are only consid-
ered “the thing” for breakfast and
luncheon, and are generally used on
the bare table; when there is no mald
they can be used as convenience dlc-
ate
Voile for Traveling.
Few women can afford to keep a
gown entirely for traveling. It must
be utilized for walking and for simple
and informal occasions, and it should
bo a gown that can be worn in town
in the fall, With all of these things
pressing upon her mind the woman
‘who goes out to-buy a traveling dress
has much with which to contend,
Volle makes light traveling dress,
and it is durable if one understands
volle. A certain modiste displayed a
Mac voile which she sald had been
‘worn two seasons by one of her cus-
tomers. This year, after a little reno-
vation, ft was being treated to a nar-
tow trimming of braid upon the collar
spd cuffs and to a braided design
down the back. A coat of Iilac-
colored braid, three-quarter length and
fastening loosely down the front, was
to complete the renovation of the Ilac
costume. A black straw hat faced
with Mlac silk and trimmed with lilae
flowers makes the costume one of har.
mony.
Difficult at First.
‘All things are difficult before they
are easy.—Danish Proverb.
viduals may feel
on the subject of
wearing mourning,
the fact remains
that people in the
highest walks of
Mfe continue to
show respect. for
their dead, and
command respect
for their grief, by
putting on mourn-
ing apparel, Good
Judgment has,
: O
e/ Pe Oe
| oo
| : ‘
™
| ya
" ©: ay
effectively with folds of crape is serv
Ieeable and very appropriate. ‘The
veil, when worn In the summer, is
of net bordered with crape or silk
‘grenadine. For winter it. is of
‘silk grenadine bordered with craps,
except when one 1s in dees
‘mourning, when ft 1s entirely of
crape.
A word of caution to those buy-
‘ing crapes and grenadines. These
fabrics are sometimes almost imper
ishable. There are varieties, how-
ever, that are easily ruined by mois
ture, Always test the material by
immersing a plece of it in water. I
the right kind the color will not
run, nor the erimp come out. Thes®
fabries may be successfully reno-
vated and made to look like new
by steaming them, when the mois-
ture-proof kind is bought,
MATERIAL FOR THE COLLAR.
Fine Mull in Thread Tucks 1s Now
‘Much Warns
‘The new separate collar to attach to
@ thin white blouse 1s made of very
fine mull in thread tueks, edged with
@ tiny border of black silk muslin at
top and bottom.
A line of this is also run up the
back and it is fastened with tiny round
silk buttons and cord loops,
‘The Uttle bow attached to the front
is of platted mull edged with the
black, and in the center there, Is a
butterfly of Irish lace,
‘This stock is especially effective
with an all-white suit and carries out
the color scheme ff there are place
pumps and stockings and a white hat
trimmed with black satin,
It is quite the fashion to finish the
center of the stiff litte bows worn in
front of stock with a motif of heavy
lace. These can easily be picked up
by the half dozen at sales,
Another pretty idea in neckwear ts
a large bow of messaline made with
equal loops and ends finished with a
heavy silk cord to mateh at all edges.
‘These sell In some shops for $1.50,
but if a girl has a bit of messaline in
the house she can make one for the
price of the cord.
‘They are worn at the base of the
stock as well as with the thin turn.
over collar which fs taking the place
of the thick linen turnover.
Let a woman who has been working
all the morning over the countless
details of housekeeping put on her
hye and go out for a brisk walk. If it
is only for 1 minutes it will do her
untold good—her head wil! be clearer
and her heart lighter.
‘Time thus taken {s not wasted, but
the best kind of an investment, ag
she will find she can do much more
in the long run.
Making Essence of Lemon,
Do not throw away the rind of
lemons, for it can be utilized nicely,
Fill a bottle with rectified spirits and
when using lemons cut away the yel
low part from the lemon and place ir
the spirits. You will find this quite as
good as the essence of lemon which
you buy. Essence of orange can be
‘made in the same manner.
‘That the trend of the times is to
ward magpie effects is evidenced in
the large number of such semitrans.
parencies as Marquisettes, grenadines
and volles, made up in black and
white and white and black, a differ-
‘ence more marked than distinguished
Many of these materials are bordered
and afford opportunity for the carry-
ing out of tunic draperies and class
ic effects. They are perfectly adapt.
ed for the modest modifications of the
much-discussed “split” skirt, for the
borders may be arranged Into draper
es that fall apart and disclose a plat
ted skirt or chiffon underskirt, This
Idea will be extensively utilized dur
ing the autumn and coming winter {p
the case of costumes combining
smooth-faced cloth and sicilienne, a
material which fs to be one of the
fashionable fabrics of the year.
Jt ts diMleult to understand how the
young man with the turned-up trousers
and the striped hat band can be at
foolish ug he looks.—Chicago Record
Heraid.
Well-Srant Time
Making Essence of Lemon.
Magpie Effects Fashionahie.
Impossible.
Local News
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J. S. Hall's Jewelry Store, No. 3121 E. Central avenue S. E.
C. C. Johnson, 3315 Central avenue S. E.
For Rent—Store room and five living rooms in the rear; bath and gas. A barn in the rear (if wanted). Good location for a saloon, barber shop, restaurant or grocery. Near corner of Scovill avenue and Brownell (E. 14th) street. Apply to M. A. Cohen, The May Co.
WANTED. A single man wants a two or three-room house in a good neighborhood. Address, Box R, The Gazette, Blackstone Bldg, city.
If you owe, pay promptly, please, for your Gazette.
O. S. Fox attended the True Reformers' convention in Richmond, Va., recently.
Revs. Collins and Maxwell attended their conference meeting in Dayton the past week.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Evans of Buffalo have located in the city for the winter at least.
Hon. W. R. Stewart of Youngstown was in the city on business last Friday.
W William T. Coleman, of No. 16067 Frank avenue, who was operated upon at the hospital a few weeks ago, is almost convalescent.
Jack Johnson and Tommy Burns (white), champion heavy weight puglist, will fight in December in Australia.
Mr. John Stevenson, one of our oldest residents, who was recently operated upon successfully by Dr. E. A. Hopkins, the hospital, is convalescing at his home in Wickliffe.
Hair Vim makes the hair grow! Reliable agents wanted. No money required. Liberal commission. Write today to the Columbia Chemical Co., Newport News, Va.
Prof. Hill returned to the city Tuesday from Indianapolis, and with Mr. Horace Gibbs of Little Rock, Ark.
Dr. C. Fisher of Lorain called on the Gazette
Go to Central armory next Tuesday evening and hear Eugene V. Debs, candidate for president of the Socialist party. He is our friend and a fine speaker. He is T. Lane, an old citizen, and well known cook, died last week. His wife has the sympathy of the community as Mr. Lane was a good man and popular.
As we stated in our last week's issue, Tuesday evening's alleged emancipation meeting turned out to be a political meeting. It will not help Tatt or the local locator, however. The privilege to encounter the News is still using the words "nigger," "pickaninny," etc. Indeed, it never loses an opportunity to do so. Do not allow the miserable sheet in your home.
The Bachelor club's "Smoker" at Woodliff hall last week Friday evening was well attended. It proved to be a political affair, but will do Candidate Eubanks no good, because he is against Foraker.
The local Ministerial Alliance decided at its meeting Tuesday not to attend the political "emancipation celebration" held in the Forest Street armory that evening. With the exception of the dance at midnight the affair was an abject failure. T. W. Bahanks, "I am for Burton," (to succeed Senator Foraker). The same is true of the other Cuyahoga Republican candidates for the legislature. How can you vote for any and thus help to defeat the senator, our friend in great need?
Prof. W. P. Hill, president of the industrial school at Manassas, Va., who spent a week or ten days in the office of the senator, interest of his institution, left for Indianapolis to continue the good work done here.
The funeral of Mr. Marshall Mason was conducted by Rev. Dr. B. J. Prince, assisted by Rev. B. K. Smith of Oberlin, and Forest City Fountain, W. O. T. R. The remains were placed in the receiving vault in Woodland memory, James A. Rogers, funeral director
The editor of The Gazette acknowledges the receipt of a formal announcement from Mrs. Adeline F. Henson, Ann Arbor, Mich., of the marriage of her daughter, Miss Leota, to Alexander L. Turner, on the 16th, in that city. The bride and groom will be at home after October I at 517 Catherine street, Ann Arbor. The remains of Mr. Hulot Hilliard of No. 7918 Quincy avenue, who died on the 13th, were brought here on the 18th and taken to the chapel in Woodland cemetery, where a short funeral service was conducted by Rev. Prince. The remains were consigned to the receiving vault. James A. Rogers, funeral director. Mr. Marshall Mason of East Thirtieth street died last week Thursday at Lakeside hospital after a brief illness from a complication of troubles, Marshall was in his prime of life and had a host of friends, who sympathize with his bereaved parents and their family. Funeral Saturday afternoon from Shiloh church, the pastor officiating.
Spanish-American war veterans can secure fine land free in the Rosebud Indian reservation by sending their application by mail, or otherwise, to the United States land superintendent at Dallas, Chamberlain, Gregory or Presho, S. D., or to him at New Valentine, Neb. The applications are brought to. The lands are to be disposed of by lottery on October 19.
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 26. 1908.
The deaconess' board of Shiloh church arranged a fine reception on last week Wednesday evening in honor of the pastor, Rev. Dr. B. J. Prince's 46th birthday, Dr. H. C. Calhoun, Rev. I. A. Collins and Mrs. J. M. Calhoun deliver an appropriate addresses, and referees served. A purse containing $16.50 was presented to the pastor, and an extremely pleasant social time was had by all.
As to Senator Foraker's senatorial candidacy, the Associated Press is authorized to state the senator's position as to the senator's role, leave the selection of his successor to the legislature. In addition to this information, Senator Foraker told his friends that he would make a speech at a proper and convenient opportunity in answer to the Hearst charges and in defense of himself, and to campaign the entire state in behalf of his senatorial candidacy, but under the jurisdiction of no political committee.
John Penelton, 61, run down by an auto owned and driven by Fred S. Avery, Hotel Euclid, September 14, has not been discharged from Charity hospital, Penelton, 3402 Central avenue, popcorn vender, was pushing a cart along Euclid near East Nineteenth at 6:15 p. m. when the auto struck him. He was thrown violently to the pavement. His cart was cracked Black & Wright's ambulance toolbox to the hospital. At the hospital Friday, was said Penelton's injuries consisted of the Report at police headquarters says he was bruised about the body, but not seriously.
The following members of King Solomon's Temple of Shriners visited Maracau Temple in Detroit this week: B. M. Shook, C. H. Adams, George R. Young, Charles M. Johnson, Cass. Sellers, Walter and C. A. Stratton, George E. Turner and George L. Ross. An elaborate five-course dinner, including champagne, was served at Mr. Dave Roy's, after which the couple rode the camel of Marracau Temple to the eft shrine, where they witnessed the initiation of a class. The Clevelanders were guests of Mr. Wallace Bolden while route. The Detroit Shriners are royal entertainers.
Mary Crawford, 22, told Judge Levine in police court Monday she was taken from her home in Cincinnati four months ago and taught shoplifting by William Powell. She was charged with petit larceny. A charge of suspicion against Powell was changed to petit larceny after the girl's testimony. His statement led to the arrest of the girl. The girl testified they visited Columbus, Toledo and Cleveland. Merchants in these cities said they were robbed. Powell told the judge he had been arrested 19 times, the first time when he was 13 years old. In all but three cases he was fined the maximum. Powell said. He was fined $200 and costs and sentenced to 30 days in the workhouse. The girl was fined $25 and costs and 30 days.
A few small-fry local politicians of color and several from outside the city "banqueted" themselves in the Clayton block Monday and Tuesday night after the alleged emancipation celebration in the Forest Street armory. The latter was supposed to be in honor of the Hon. Charles W. Anderson, internal revenue collector at New York City, who was the speaker of the evening and as a boy lived in Cleveland many years ago. We feel sure that he would have spent the time socially with some of our older residents who knew him years ago and who are our leading men of the community, politically and otherwise. Tuesday evening's program included a selection by Bowman's orchestra, the presentation of a medal to Maria Bolden, whom The Gazette finally forced Assistant Superintendent Hicks of the Cleveland public schools to publicly acknowledge "champion speller" as the result of the N. E. A. spelling bee of several months ago, and a prize drill contest, which was participated in by the public and organized by a reception and promounce. The celebration attendance was not near what it was hoped to be.
Mrs. Hallam (white), the Springfield, ill, woman who wanted to have her picture printed on postal cards and sold in order to make some money, after she claimed she had been assaulted in her home on August 14, has completely broken down and did not assault her, in an affidavit which she freely and willingly signed recently, requesting State's Attorney Hatch to release him from the Bloomington jail. It is not out of place to state right here that "the blood of the innocent" Negroes who met their death at the hands of the mob, is splintered and longest day that she lives cannot escape from realizing that her foolish or childish tale was the direct cause of so much bloodshed," and the following is the tale she told, which was printed in large type, with most glaring headlines in setting forth her old tale. She claimed that at or near the end of her life she had some Negro from her bed, out of the house through the back yard to an outhouse, where she was assaulted; after which she 'leaped over a back fence' and notified her mother-in-law." While the so-called assault was on, she claimed that she never lost consciousness, and yet notwithstanding the fact that she never heard one heard any scuffling or noise. With these facts in mind she had the nerve to relate
her tale of assault, and the morning after it was supposed to have been pulled off, she was at the police station looking as bright and fresh as anyone could look.—Chicago Broad-Ax.
THE BLACK "BREAD AND BUT
TER" BRIGADE.
Several Misstatements Corrected Afro-Americans for Foraker and Against Taft and Roosevelt.
Cleveland, O., Sept. 23, 1908.
The following letter, which is self-explanatory was on Wednesday sent to the editors of The Press, The Leader, The Plain Dealer and The News:
Dear Sir:—Please correct a statement in Tuesday's issue of your paper which announced that a meeting had been held in this city earlier in the day at which "colored voters skipped at Foraker." No such thing was in Cleveland or anywhere else in this country. It does not people of this community great injustice to have such a statement made in public print.
One thing more, the statement, in a daily daily paper (The News), of the Hon. Charles W. Anderson, internal revenue collector of New York City, that "ten out of every 14 colored voters of this country are wearing in some way their feeling in some way their feeling and absolutely impossible that it is a matter of surprise that even a member of the Roosevelt black "bread and butter" brigade (federal office-holders) would make it. The great mass of Afro-American voters will either vote for Taft or not. This tells A goodly number have announced their intention to vote for Bryan. One thing sure, the number of votes from this class of people that Taft will get will not make him round shouldered to carry them.
Mr. Anderson does not owe his position and success in life to President Roosevelt, as stated in several of our local papers Tuesday, but does owe his support in the chairpard, deceased, former publisher of the New York Mall and Express.
As a matter of fairness and justice to all interested I ask the publication of this communication.
Yours respectfully,
HARRY C. SMITH,
Editor of The Gazette, Organ of the Colored People of Ohio for More Than 25 Years.
Bradford, Pa., News.
Rev. Bowser is convalescent,
He preached Sunday. — J. W.
lescent. He preached Sunday. — J. W.
Logan was called to Beaver Falls by
his brother, Anthony Logan's, death.
— Mrs. L. Johnson returned to Oll
y Miss Edna Collins is visiting
in Titusville. — J. Davis of his
wife and children in Buffalo Monday
night. — Mr. Stives of Duke Center and
Myers of Ridgeway were here
Sunday. — Mrs. M. Price is visiting in
Buffalo.
Swisher Resigns.
Charleston, W. Va.-At a meeting of the regular Republican state committee here Monday night, the resignation of Secretary of State Charles W. Swisher as the party's candidate for governor was received and accepted.
AN EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY.
The old reliable Gazette desires an active agent and correspondent in every city and town in Ohio and neighboring states having a number of Afro-American residents.
We are especially desirous of hearing from persons in the following cities: Dayton, Zanesville, East Liverpool, Akron, Lima, Lorain, Springfield, Newark, Urbana, Owerlin, Cambridge, Sandusky, Hamilton, Wellsville, Toledo, O, and other places where we have none.
Write to the Editor of The Gazette, Blackstone building, Cleveland, O., and terms will be sent promptly. Our readers will oblige us by sending the address of any good person or persons in any of the cities named above or others, to whom we can write relative to the matter.
Straighten Your Hair
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If your drugstore will not apply you with the genuine send us. express or postal money order, card, or cash. Please send your bottle and give us your druggist's name and address. S.A. by return mail or on receipt of price. Address: The Ozonized Ox Marrow Co., 133 East Kenzie St. Chicago, Ill. FORD'S HAIR POMADE is made only in Chicago by the manufacturer. Acquired Warehouse.
notify us at once if your Gazette fails to arrive as regularly and satisfactorily as it should.
We do our best to give perfect service but unless The Gazette's subscribers co-operate by keeping us informed of any difficulty they may have, we cannot give the perfect service that we try to.
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THE CLEVELAND & BUFFALO TRANSIT CO., W. F. HERMAN, Gen. Pass. Agent, CLEVELAND, O.
Howard University School of Medicine
1867 Rev. W. P. Thirkield, LL. D., President 1908
Robert Reyburn, M. D., Dean W. C. McNell, M. D., Secretary
The Forty-first Annual Session will begin October 1, 1908, and continue eight months.
The New Freedman's Hospital, which adjoins the Medical College, just completed at a cost of $500,000, offers unexcelled clinical
The Third Session of the Post-Graduate School and Polyclinic will begin May 9, 1909, and continue six weeks for Medical Course and four weeks for Dental Course.
W. C. McNEILL, Dental Estetologist, write W. C. McNEILL, M. D. Secretary, 535 Florida Avenue, Washington, D. C.
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CUYAHOGA, CENTRAL 1737-L.
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WILBERFORCE
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W. S. SCARBOROUGH, President, HORACE TALBERT, Secretary
BERFORCE UNIVERSITY
WILBERFORCE, OHIO
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Other Fellow's Ad
You are reading this one. That should convince you that advertising in these columns is a profitable proposition; that it will bring business to your store. The fact that the other fellow advertises is probably the reason he is getting more business than is falling to you. Would it not be well to give the other fellow a chance
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GET MARRIED ANY TIME, but send us your orders for wedding invitations. We have the latest styles, lowest prices, and do best work. Samples at this office.
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EGOISM.
Mistress—Bridget, it always seems to me that the crankiest mistresses get the best cooks.
Cook—Ah, go on wid yer blarney!
Wanted to Go the Same Way.
We were taking a little trip into the country. The only vacant seats in the train were turned so as to face each other. I told my little girl, four years old, to take the seat in front of me, as riding backward would not make her sick. She hesitated, and said:
"I know it won't make me sick, but
if I ride backward will I go to the
same place you are going to?"
Much Safer Size.
Mistress—Are you not rather small for a nurse?
I don't, indeed, madam! The children don't fall so far when I drop them!—Stray Stories.
A
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Men who cannot stop for a rainy day.- will find the greatest comfort and freedom of bodily movement in
TOWER'S FISH BRAND
WATERPROOF OILED CLOTHING SLICKERS' $300 SUITS' $300
Every garment bearing the sign of the fish guaranteed waterproof Catalog free
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1908.
GIRL'S AND CHILD'S FRENCH DRESS.
Paris Pattern No. 2517, All Seams Allowed—Flowered or plain dimity, organde or lawn makes up pretty in this design, that is particularly becoming and much worn by the growing girl. The long full waist is gathered into the round voke of lace insertion and blouse slightly at the front. The very short, full skirt is attached to this waist under a narrow belt of the material, and the short puff sleeves are gathered into bands of the insertion and finished with a narrow edging of lace. If desired the model may be made with long bishop sleeves. The pattern is in four sizes, two to eight years. For a child of six years the dress requires $3\frac{1}{2}$ yards of material 27 inches wide, $2\frac{1}{2}$ yards 36 inches wide, or $2\frac{1}{2}$ yards 42 inches wide, with three yards of insertion and $1\frac{1}{2}$ yard of edging to trim.
To procure this pattern send 10 cents to "Pattern Department," of this paper, sure to give size and number of pattern.
NO. 2517. SIZE......
NAME......
TOWN......
STREET AND NO......
STATE.....
DRESS
Paris Pattern No. 2550, All Seams Allowed. If made up in heavy tan tinen, this little apron is very serviceable for school wear, and it is so simply constructed that the woman with only a slight knowledge of sewing will have no trouble in putting it together. The sleeves are cut in one with the front and back; the only seams being under the shoulders and at the under arms. The wide sash ends, which extend from the underarm seams are of the material. The square neck and lower edge of the sleeves are scalloped and hand-embroidered with red embroidery cotton. The model may be developed to advantage in Persian lawn or nainook. The pattern is in five sizes—one to nine years. For a child of five years the apron requires 2½ yards of material 27 inches wide, or 1½ yard 36 inches wide.
To procure this pattern send 10 cents to Pattern Department of the paper. Write plainly, please plainly, to give sure address and number of pattern.
Anticipation Worse Than Realization.
Men are so unanimously eager in the pursuit of things which, far from having any inherent real good, are varinshed over with a specious and deceitful gloss, and contain nothing answerable to their appearances. Hence, it proceeds, on the other hand, that in those things which are called evils there is nothing so hard and terrible as the general cry of the world threatens.—Lord Bollingbroke.
Girls Learn Trade Lessons.
Civic clubwomen in Philadelphia have opened a school where girls may learn dressmaking, millinery and other things during the summer that will fit them to take in the fall positions in which they have mastered the early stages of the work. The classes are very popular, young girls taking advantage of the opportunities offered.
The Rank of Merit.
No man will be in truth superior to another without superior merit; and that rank can no more be taken from us than the merit which establishes it—Lord Bolingbroke.
ONE KIDNEY GONE
But Cured After Doctors-Said There Was No Hope.
Sylvanus O. Verrill, Milford, Me,
says: "Five years ago a bad injury
paralyzed me and affected my kidneys. My back hurt me terribly, and the urine was bad I discolored. Doctors said my right kidney was prickly cally dead. They said I could never walk again. I read
alffected me and affected my kidneys. My back hurt me terribly, and the urine was badly discolored. Doctors said my right kidney was practically dead. They said I could never walk again. I read of Doan's Kidney Pills and began using them. One box made me stronger and freer from pain. I kept on using them and in three months was able to get out on crutches, and the kidneys were acting better. I improved rapidly, discarded the crutches and to the wonder of my friends was soon completely cured."
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
TOO TRUE TO BE GOOD.
Pinxit—I have just finished the late Mrs. Peck's portrait. It's a speaking likeness. The Widower Peck—Would it be too much trouble to—er—change it a bit in taint respect?
DEEP CRACKS FROM ECZEMA
Could Lay Slate-Pencil in One—Hands in Dreadful State—Permanent Cure in Cuticura.
"I had eczema on my hands for about seven years and during that time I had used several so-called remedies, together with physicians' and drugstores' prescriptions. The disease was so bad on my hands that I could lay a slate-pencil in one of the cracks and a rule placed across the hand would not touch the pencil. I kept using remedy after remedy, and while some gave partial relief, none relieved as much as did the first box of Cuticura Ointment. I made a purchase of Cuticura Soap and Ointment and my hands were perfectly cured after two boxes of Cuticura Ointment and one cake of Cuticura Soap were used. W. H. Dean, Newark, Del. Mar, 28, 1907."
Women Fishermen
On the coast of Holland, Belgium and Northern France the fishermen are a familiar sight, with their great hand nets and quiet costumes. Many of the towns have distinctive costumes by which their women can be recognized anywhere. Those of Mana-Kirkke, near Ostend, wear trousers and loose blouses, while their heads and shoulders are covered by shawls. They carry their nets into the sea and scoop up vast quantities of shrimps and prawns, with an occasional crab or lobster and many small fish. They often wade out till the water is up to their necks, and they remain for hours at a time in water above their knees, rarely returning until their baskets are full.
A Doctor's Disadvantage
"In one way," said a collector, "it is easier to get money from a doctor than anybody else who is slow pay. It is more difficult for him to swear that he hasn't been able to make any collections himself since the first of the year. A doctor's reception room is open to all possible patients. A collector with a grain of ingenuity can find a way to worm out of the men on the waiting list information as to the terms of payment. After an interview with three or four persons who have paid spot cash for treatment and who have told the collector they paid, it takes a mighty nerve on the part of the doctor to insist that he hasn't a dollar to his name."
Microscopic Writing
A remarkable machine made by a lately deceased member of the Royal Microscopical society for writing with a diamond seems to have been broken up by its inventor. A specimen of its works is the Lord's prayer of 227 letters, written in the 1,237,000 of a square inch, which is at the rate of 53,880,000 letters or 15 complete Bibles, to a single square inch. To decipher the writing it is necessary to use a 1-12-inch objective, which is the high power lens physicians employ for studying the most minute bacteria.
AFRAID TO EAT.
"Several years ago I was actually starving," writes a Me, girl, "yet dared not eat for fear of the consequences.
"Many kinds of food were tried, all with the same discouraging effects. I steadily lost health and strength until I was but a wreck of my former self.
"Having heard of Grape-Nuts and its great merits, I purchased a package, but with little hope that it would help me—I was so discouraged.
"I found it not only appetizing but that I could eat it as I liked and that it satisfied the craving for food without causing distress, and if I may use the expression, 'it filled the bill.'
"For months Grape-Nuts was my principal article of diet. I felt from the very first that I had found the right way to health and happiness, and my anticipations were fully realized.
"With its continued use I regained my usual health and strength. To-day I am well and can eat anything I like, yet Grape-Nuts food forms a part of my bill of fare." "There's a Reason."
Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs.
Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human interest.
General Demand
of the Well-Informed of the World has always been for a simple, pleasant and efficient liquid laxative remedy of known value; a laxative which physicians could sanction for family use because its component parts are known to them to be wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, acceptable to the system and gentle, yet prompt, in action.
In supplying that demand with its excellent combination of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, the California Fig Syrup Co. proceeds along ethical lines and relies on the merits of the laxative for its remarkable success.
That is one of many reasons why Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is given the preference by the Well-Informed. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine—manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading druggists. Price fifty cents per bottle.
SHE GOT HER MAN—HAPPY.
Indian Woman Not Likely to Be Left Far Behind in Life's Battle.
Writing of the famous Dean Kaye of Topeka, in Suburban Life, Paul A. Lovewell, says:
"Dean Kaye has had interesting experiences during his soujourn in the wilderness. Once an Indian woman came to his cabin.
"You marry?" she asked.
"Yes," said the dean, "I can marry folks. Have you got a man?"
"Again the woman grunted, and departed. About sundown she returned, dragging with her an apparently abashed and reluctant brave.
"Got him,' she remarked, is conically, producing her marriage license. The man knew no English, but the woman prompted him when it became necessary for him to give his assent to the dean's questions. When it was over the squaw paid the minister his fee and led her husband away in trilumph."
TERRIBLE ACCIDENT!
"What's the matter over there?"
"The sword swallower is being choked by a fishbone."
"I'd rather waltz than cat," confided the summer girl.
"Then we'll just have another dance instead of going to that fashionable restaurant," responded the thrifty swain. "And," he added mentally, "that $'s saved." -Kansas City Journal.
SPOHN'S DISTEMPER CURE will cure any possible case of DISTEMPER, PINK EYE, and the like among horses of all ages, and prevents all others in the same stable from having the disease. Also cures chicken cholera, and dog distemper, a good drugstruck can supply you, or send manufacturer, 50 cents and $1.00 a bottle. Agents wanted. Free book. Spohn Medical Co., Spec. Contagious Diseases, Goshen, Ind.
Cause of the Break.
"What caused that awkward break in the conversation?" "Some one dropped the subject." -San Francisco Argonaut.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup. For children, softens, softens the grus, reduces the damnation, all pain, cures wind colic.
He has no force with men who has no faith in them.
It Cures While You Walk
Allen's Foot+Hose for corns and bumps, hot, sweaty callous aching feet. See all Jangkicks.
It's easy to get tangled up in truth's castoff clothes.
OLD VIL
CHER
OLD VIRGINIA CHEROOTS
3
OLD
VIRGINIA CHEROOTS
TRADE MARK
REGISTERED MAY 25TH 1886
FEDERAL CIGAR COMPANY
SUCCESSOR TO
P. WHITLOCK
PUTNAM FAD
Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any other dye. One 10c package
gray garment without ripping apart. Write for free booklet—How to Dry, Bleach a
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any other dye. One 10c package colors all fibers. They dye in cold water better than any other dye. You can dry day garment without ripping apart. Write for free booklet—How to Dye, Bleach and Mix Colors. MONROE DRUG CO., Quincy, Illinois.
Cause of the Break.
LEST HE FORGET.
No. Roseate Postcard Without Its Thorn of Suggestion.
Harold's mother—well'll call him Harold—went abroad a month ago, leaving Harold under the somewhat unsubstantial control of his elder sisters. In spite of the itemized directions with which even unto the moment of final leave-taking she had not ceased to bombard him, Harold's mother was far from sure that her efforts would have any lasting effect. Her voyage was more or less disturbed by these doubts, but before she landed on the other side she had determined on a course of action. Like all small boys, Harold is most covetous of picture postcards and had looked forward to a harvest from his mother's trip. He got it. Every day she sent at least one card. And whatever else it bore in the way of inscription, there was not one which failed of this introduction:
"Just as soon as you get this go and brush your teeth."
Artist (who has been bothered by rustics breathing on him all the morning)—My good fellow, I assure you that you can see the sketch with more advantage from a little distance!
$100 Reward, $100.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that so severe has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is cancer. Cancer is a serious disease that is now known to the medical fraternity. Catarin being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutionally internal, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby despairing the patient. Cancer strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have one Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to address F. J. CHENEY O. Toledo. O. Sold by all Chamber of Commerce for continuation.
More Important
"Ab! Mrs. Newcomb," said the uppish Mrs. Subbubs, "my many social duties have prevented me from calling upon you as I should. However, I will surely return your visit some day—" "Oh! that doesn't matter much," replied Mrs. Newcomb promptly, "but I do wish you'd return the groceries you've borrowed from time to time."—Catholic Standard and Times.
DODD'S
KIDNEY
PILLS
FOR ALL KIDNEY DISEASES
FOR RHEUMATISM
BRIGHT'S DISEASE
DIABETES BACKLIKE
1875 "Guarantee"
SICK HEADACHE
They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
CARTERS
LITTLE
LIVER
PILLS.
Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Simile Signature
Grant Wood
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
VIRGINIA
ROOTS
Are 5c cigars without the heads Therefore 3 for 5 cents
Not only extra good they are clean. Made of absolutely pure, clean tobacco by modern systematic methods in the biggest, airiest, best-equipped and cleanest cigar factory in the world. No wonder they're so good. 5 cents buys 3.
FADELE
y other dye. One 10c package colors all fibers. They dye
booklet—How to Dye, Bleach and Mix Colors. MONR
these Little Tails
They also relieve Distress digestion and Too Heavy Eating. A perfect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Bad Sleep, Tongue Tugging, Tongue, Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER.
ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT
Vegetable Preparation for Assimilating the Food and Regulating the Stomach and Bowels of
INFANTS • CHILDREN
Promote's Digestion, Cheerfulness and Rest Contains neither Opium, Morphine nor Mineral NOT NARCOTIC
Recipe of OIA Dr. SANUEL PITCHER
Pamphin Seed -
Alkuma -
Nichelle Salts -
Anise Seed -
Dipropionidine -
Hiclopandine Salts -
Warm Seed -
Claridyl Sugar -
Winkween Flavor
A perfect Remedy for Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Worms, Convulsions, Feverishness and LOSS OF SLEEP
Fac Simile Signature of
Cha. H. Flitcher
THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK.
46 months old
35 DOSES - 35 CENTS
Guaranteed under the Food and Exact Copy of Wrappet.
Signature of
Cha. H. Flitcher
In Use For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA
THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY.
ROSEBUD GOVERNMENT LANDS
BEST REACHED FROM DALLAS
Dallas and Gregory, S. D., are reached only by the Chicago & North Western Railway.
They are the only towns on the reservation border.
Dallas and Gregory are the main registering points.
President Roosevelt has designated Dallas for the final drawing October 19, 1908.
The Chicago & North Western Rg. is the only all-rail route to the reservation.
A million acres of fertile agricultural and grazing land in the great Missouri Valley Corn Belt is to be
ROSEBUD GOVERNMENT LANDS
Dallas and Gregory, S. D., are reached only
by the Chicago & North Western Railway.
They are the only towns on the reservation border.
Dallas and Gregory are the main registering points.
President Roosevelt has designated Dallas for the
final drawing October 19, 1908.
DULUTH DAKOTA
DALLAS
GREGORY
BROSEBUD
PRESIDENT
ONE MILLION
ACRES
GOVERNMENT
LAND
MINN.
ST. PINNEL
MINNESOTA POLIS
Mankato
SOUX CITY
SOUX CITY
CORNELIUS BUILDS
DAS MOINES
Cedar Rapids
CHICAGO
NEBRAKA
Hastings County
Lincoln County
IOWA
CHICAGO
ORGANIZED
The Chicago & North Western Ry. is the only
all-rail route to the reservation.
A million acres of fertile agricultural and grazing land in the great Missouri Valley Corn Belt is to be opened to Homesteaders October 5 to 17.1908
THE
NORTH-WESTERN
LINE
NW751
For information about how to get a homestead with details regarding rates, train schedules, address
W. B. KNISKERN
Pass'r Traffio Mgr., C. & N. W. Ry.
Chicago, Ill.
Shortest Line to Rosebud Reservation
The opening of the Rosebud Reservation, October 5 to 17, next, will give over 5000 people each a choice farm in Tripp County, South Dakota, for a small sum per acre. 838,000 acres will be opened. People drawing one of these farms must pay $6.00 an acre: one-fifth down, balance in 5 years. Chamberlain and Presho, South Dakota, are places of registration. Both are located on the shortest line to the reservation from Chicago—the
CHICAGO
MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL
RAILWAY
The best of these lands are located in the northern part of Tripp County, easily reached from both Chamberlain and Presho. All persons, except certain soldiers, must be present in one of these towns for registration. Presence at the drawing is not required. Those who draw one of these farms will be notified by mail. Rosebud folder, containing map, and giving full particulars free on request.
The opening of the Rosebud Reservation, October 5 to 17, next, will give over 5000 people each a choice farm in Trip County, South Dakota, for a small sum per acre. 838,000 acres will be opened. People drawing one of these farms must pay $6.00 an acre: one-fifth down, balance it three. Charitable and Presso, located on the shortest line to the reservation from Chicago—the
The best of these lands are located in the northern part of Tripp County, easily reached from both Chamberlain and Presho. All persons, except certain soldiers, must be present in one of these towns for registration. Presence at the drawing is not required. Those who draw one of these farms will be notified by mail. Rosebud folder, containing map, and giving full particulars free on request.
F. A. MILLER,
General Passenger Agent,
Chicago.
Send For Free Catalogue
"How to Make Money Selling Goldfish." Makes business lively around your store when everything else fails. BIG profits and QUICK returns. Full line of aquarium supplies. Write to-day.
AUBURNDALE GOLDFISH COMPANY
51 North Peoria Street,
CHICAGO, ILL.
Send For Free Catalogue
鱼
"How to Make Money Selling Goldfish." Makes business lively around your store when everything else fails. BIG profits and QUICK returns. Full line of aquarium supplies. Write to-day.
AUBURNDALE GOLDFISH COMPANY
51 North Pooria Street. CHICAGO, ILL.
THE DUTCH
BOY PAINTER
STANDS FOR
PAINT QUALITY
IT IS FOUND ONLY ON
PURE WHITE LEAD
MADE BY
THE
OLD DUTCH
PROCESS.
W. L. DOUGLAS
$300 SHOES $350
W. L. Douglas makes and sells more
mature shoes than any
other manufacturer in the world,
because they hold their shape, fit better,
and wear longer than any other make.
Please call the store at (212) 255-2555.
Family, Men, Boys, Women, Misses & Children.
W. L. Douglas $4.00 and $8.00 Gift Age Shoes must
be equipped with W. L. Douglas $4.00 and
$8.00 shoes are the best in the world.
W. L. Douglas
Take No Substitute. W. L. Douglas
name pristine shoes stamped on bottom. Sold
everywhere shoes are made in factory to any
part of the world. Catalogue free.
W. L. DOUGLAS, 137 Spark St., Buckton, Mam.
We, Wholesalers of California Lands
wish agents in all portions of the U. S. Can you
help us find a dealer in your area from
United States Government Batch. We can give
you a subdivision permit. We can give you
a mortgage. Montgomery County Fannie Mae.
DEFIANCE STARCH easiest to work with and
starches clothes nicely
A. N. K.—C 1908—39 2249.
SS DYES
in cold water better than any other dye. You can do
E DRUG OO., Quinoy, Illinois.
Douglas, Ariz., Offers You an Opportunity
to make money. Bichest copper, gold and silver mining district known. Million acres fertile farming land free. Delightful climate. All the time. Pure water pleasant. Merchants, jobbers, manufacturers, farmers, investors needed. Address Dept. G, Chamber of Commerce, Douglas, Ariz.