The Gazette
Saturday, February 26, 1910
Cleveland, Ohio
Page text (machine-generated)
Two Useful Coats
5
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THE COAT is an Inverness, and could be made in cloth, serge or tweed, lined or not, as preferred. It is very plainly made, having only stitching as a finish at the edges. The fronts are double-breasted; buttons covered in the material form the fastenings. Toque of black pan, trimmed with a rosette of gold tissue, and two peaants' feathers. Materials required: Four and one-half yards 48 inches wide, six buttons, four yards of silk for lining the wolf.
One with Plain Back, Without Ornamentation, Best to be Fitted with French Louis Cover.
For one of the daintest hat brushes you can imagine, select a plain back of, irreproachable shape and no ornamentation whatever, and with good white bristles.
Before covering the wooden back it may be very lightly rubbed with a fine sandpaper, to roughen the surface so that the glue will hold.
Now for the French Louis cover. This is made of corded silk of a deep cream, embroidered slightly with ribbon work in an oblong medallion design. The silk is so cut as to entirely cover the wooden back except on the bristle side, and when the paste is applied to the silk care should be taken that it does not touch that part beneath the ribbon medallion, nor the top of the brush, but only along the edge of the silk. Do not turn in the edge, but after the glue is dry, paste over it a narrow gold lacage galloon.
To be as French as possible in effect, the creamy tone of the silk should be soft and old, the rococo embroidery of flowers should be soft in tone and the galloon of a more bronze coloring.
TO MATCH CLOTH DRESS
This simple bodice is made with two tucks on each shoulder, and lightly braided at the edges. The prettly shaped yoke is of coarse filet net to match color of material; it is braided at the edges. Cuffs are made of the net set to material bands at the elbow, to which the sleeve is gathered. Buttons and braid loops form further trimming.
Materials required: $1\frac{1}{2}$ yard cloth 46 inches wide, one dozen buttons, one dozen yards braid.
Vell Novelty.
Have you seen some of the new vests that are being worn with the smart cavalier hats? They may easily be called freakish, as the meshes of flet not have huge flowers and butterflies in self colors. Those of black are best style, though there is a new tan veil with big conventional figures that is liked by the unconservative.
E
On the right we show a very useful motor coat, made in heavy blanket serge, with a panel down both back and front, set on with a wide wrapped seam; the fastening is at the left side of front. The collar is made so that it can turn up or down, and the sleeves are set to wide turn-back cuffs, so popular just now.
Motor bonnet of gauged silk to match color of coat.
Materials required: Six yards 48
inches wide, one dozen buttons, three
yards Vilyella for lining to waist.
DESIGNED FOR TOILET TABLE
Pincushion of the Latest Designer Formed of Mattress-Shaped Cushions Prettily Decorated.
A pincushion that is dainty yet serviceable is one of the mattress-shaped cushions four an a half inches wide by six inches long. This is stuffed with wool or bran and covered with satin, or satine, if cost is an item. The outer cover is made from two pieces of heavy linen with a narrow hem stitched hem running entirely around it. The pieces finished fit easily on the top and bottom of the cushion. The inner parts of the linen are then decorated with tiny squares of flat or Cluny lace, with a design of leaves and scrolls in satin stitch and cyclot embroidery spreading around each bit of lace. The section intended for the top has a more elaborate design than the bottom piece. The upper and lower section are joined by lace insertion just the width of the sides of the pincushion. Thin is overcast to the edges all around. One end is left open to silp in the cushion and is lightly overcast when it is in place, or can be joined by tiny buttonholed loops on one edge and lace button on the lower side of the cover across one end. Such a cushion is more distinctive than the covers that lace on, yet washes almost as easily. The insertion at the sides should match the lace inset at top and bottom.
Fringe on Frocks.
Tiny cotton fringes in cream or white are to be used upon some of the novelty cottonts and filenurs for summer frocks. They are those identical ones that come for bedroom upholstery.
The finest qualities among them are quite delicate enough to use on linens scrims and hopsackings!
Some of the fringe measuring but a scant inch in depth is woven of white and blue cotton in a pattern which runs along the gimp which holds it in place. In others, the fringe remains uncut, each thread being a loop.
The French have used these fringes for several seasons; just as they have used the tiny silk quality on chiffon and white radium silk.
A New Bracelet.
A new bracelet which is attracting considerable attention among women is a band of gold from a half-inch to an inch in width. It is either heavily engraved or bears a pattern in black or colored enamel. As a matter of fact, the bracelet is not new, being similar to a style worn many years ago by our grandparents. In keeping ribbons, do not place odds and ends in an indiscriminate mass in a box. Have either different boxes or envelopes for the different colors, and they will be compact and easily managed.
Plalted Ruffles.
The lingerie ruffle on the last French petticoats and on the pantalon combinations are no longer invariably gathered to the beading which joins them to the garment.
Plains frequently are substituted for the old gathers. They are laid regularly or in bunch plaits and, again, in pairs; and since the plaits are very shallow the flounce requires only the usual amount of material or a very little more. The material is never measured three times round the space.
ESTABLISHED AUGUST 25, 1883, AND ISSUED EVERY WEEK ON TIME, SINCE. CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1910.
MIXED SCHOOLS DECIDELDY BEST
FOR OUR AND ALL OTHER PEOP
PLE: THROUGHOUT THIS
GREAT NORTHLAND!
"DAMNING OWN CHILDRENI"
Says Our Detroit Contemporary—Dayton, O., Springfield, Ill., and Washington, D. C., School Matters Discussed in an Interesting and Intelligent Manner.
In some sections of the north there is now on a senseless agitation by colored people in favor of separate schools in two sections at least, Springfield, Ill., and Dayton, Q., the local colored newspapers are supporting the movement, "The Forum" in the former city and "The Citizen" in the latter. It is quite evident that the colored advocates of "separate schools" have failed to study the effect of such institutions south upon the welfare of the colored student.
For a long time there was an agitation south to limit the financial support of the colored school taxes paid by colored people. This idea was carried to such an extent that it has been discovered in many communities that the school services accorded their children by the white men who spend the school money but that the Negro taxpayers were actually contributing toward the education of the white children. The effect of this policy tends to give the colored child the minimum amount of education while the white children receive the maximum. The colored child's school year is three months, the white child's school year is nine months. The colored teacher is employed three months in the year, at poor salary, and must have corn and pick cotton the balance of the year for support. While the white teachers are employed nine months in year, get good salaries, and spend locations at northern summer resorts.
Even in Washington, D. C., where the school money is expended by a Republican congress, the members of which, are largely from the north, there is gross discrimination against the colored schools. One-birded or two-birded schools, that city are colored, yet an average of less than one-fifth or 20 per cent of the school money is expended on the colored schools. This tends to crowd the colored schools, overwork the colored teachers, limit the number of both teachers and students colored on the other hand over 80 per cent of the school money is expended on the white pupils which constitute only 65 per cent of the school population. We would very much like to see reports of Cincinnati, Indianapolis and St. Louis school boards and not all institutions are not found in these cities.
Far better will it be to institute for the employment of your educated men or women in the regular union schools as has successfully been done in Detroit. Here we have a half dozen educated colored women employed in the public schools. Some of them over 30 years. All of them teach white children and have made good. All of them get the same salary and are employed the same number of months as all other teachers. In at least two other cities in Michigan colored teachers are employed or have been employed in the public schools. Adrienne C. Cox is the course to pursue as it gives the child the equal opportunity to acquire the highest education that the municipality provides and what is still better the association of the children of both races in the school quickens and broadens the civilization of the resulting educated man or woman. "Citizen" and "Forum" are daunting their own children by the course they are pursuing. Stop it!—Detroit Informer.
'TWAS EVER THUS!
A Little Heart-Rending Reminiscence of a Thorough Man—Man
of the Thoughts
God does things, so nobly to those who suffer for His cause—to illustrate. When we were taken (several years ago) from our home (having lost three lovely children in one year, and another one being deathly sick) and put in jail and therein kept for 20 days, we were put upstairs, where three lovely children were working with those boys. At first they cursed, fought and chewed tobacco, but at the end of thirty days they had stopped it all. We bathed and prayed daily with those boys therein. We were happy then as we were, on the 24th day of January, 1910, because well did we know that we were innocent in high cases. To keep under cover we had to jailed last month, but that 30 day period (referred to above) beat anything in criminal history. We had taken a Negro out of jail four times and the last time stood for a $25 fine. On one Sunday morning, we took him out of jail and said, Joe, go to church. When that Negro afterwards took sick, we helped to feed him. One day after hunting for hours, we got him out of the gut of ours. When we got home of our boys said, "Papa, let me have those birds for Joe Green." They were cleaned, cooked and taken to him, and added to this, we helped clothe two of his children; and when he got well, this Negro swore that he saw us shoot and kill a man with a rifle when we never had owned a rifle, nor fired a shot that night, and to climax the story, as we weighed 60 taken to the jail for 10 days, 1915, he asked that we be lynched and offered his services to the noose around our neck. In all of our afflictions the dying
words of two great and noble women have consoled us; they were Madam Roland and Maria Antonieville. The first said, "O! Liberty, the crimes that are committed in thy name!" and the second said, "O! Justice, the crimes that life is a highly cultivated mind"—Martinsburg (W. Va.) Pioneer Press.
"EMPIRE STATE" NEWS.
Musical, Social and Personal Notes of the Week—Obituary and Other Items of Interest.
Buffalo, N. Y.—The C. C. congress program Sunday was in charge of Mr. R. Mason, sr., and was good—Bon. S. Mers', who toured England with a concert company, and A. G. Smith were in Boston last week.—A P. Cook of Washington, D. C., who is spending the winter here visited Philadelphia, Mr. Mason, and Mrs. Shirley Jackson of Detroit are the latest arrivals at the Talbert cottage.—The Serenata club, assisted by J. E. Knight, a leading head collist, will give a program Sunday. The remains of the late Geo. Smith were taken to Alken, S. C.; for interment by his wife and brother, W. H. Talbert and daughter returned recently from Brooklyn, going to Talbert, a luncheon in honor of Mrs. Grace Bailer of Caroline, Mr. and Mrs. S. Jackson and S. J. Valentine of Mr. Clair, N. J. Mrs. Baller, mother of A. G. Smith, and Mrs. Talbert's guest, left Sunday for New York and Boston. Mrs. Lake Green entertained the N. B. Social club Monday evening, and Mrs. and Mrs. Talbert's guest, left Sunday for new home 242 Hudson street. Mrs. W. Williams of Jersey City, N. J. formerly Miss Annes Webb of this city is visiting Mrs. Lee. The Games at afternoon Whist club has adorned until after the Lenten season.
DOINGS OF THE RACE
Hen. Talman, the famous Negro abuser, is dying, and the race is living and making astounding progress. Amen to both. Martinsburg (W. Va.) Pioneer Press.
Sam McVey continues to please the gay Parisians with his showy fights and he recently knocked out a good one from Australia.
Ad Wolgast beat Bat. Nelson in 40 rounds out west Tuesday. Just what Joe Gans did in their first fight and ought to have done in the second.
A 60-year-old Afro-American civil war veteran shot and killed himself at Los Angeles. Cal. recently. Of course, he had lost his mind before doing so.
Ben Tillman, who is so fond of notorious publicity, stopped abusing the Negroes long enough to tell the world that his own son is a confirmed drunkard, an employee of the government, and that it is afraid to put him out. Does Ben know that, science claims like begets like, or in other words, "as the father, so the son?" Pioneer Press. If the pioneer Press' subscribers would like Prof. W. H. Richards lone of the latest Negro lawyers in the world, and connected with Howard university's law school—it is honored to have him as its teacher! he would have a building and outfit equal to the Washington Star, and a paper, the world would appreciate, at least the better part of it, and I believe that class is in the majority. He reminds me of Freed-erk Doughas, Senator B. K. Bruce and first said: "Clifford, I get thirty-eight newspapers, but I always read the Pioneer Press first." Senator B. K. Bruce said: "Clifford, you have pluck and manhood, essentials to the race; I admire you and like your paper, and I am going to appoint you." John M. Langston said: "As long as I live the Pioneer Press will be my weekly compartment," and it was. The three men always over paid the indebtedness yearly and waited to be asked for money, and so does the beacon lights along the roughs and bumps over which editors have to get—may their tribe increase—Pioneer Press.
Bradford, Pa., Notes.
Mr. Thornell left for Eric, Tuskegee and other southern points.—Mrs. Alexander lost her hand-bag containing two pairs of glasses, a bunch of keys and some small change.—Mr. and Mrs. Kelly of Buffalo visited relatives here Sunday.—Mr. and Mrs. Price were in Boliver last week.—Miss Sheckles was in Olean recently.—A. J. Wright of DuBois was a host.—Mr. Thornell was initiated into the Household of birth and banqueted the members.—Mr. and Mrs. Mary served luncheon and Mr. Thornell was the guest of the evening.
West Bridgewater, Pa., Obituary
Mrs. Clara J. Ash, age 75, died Tuesday. For years she was a member of Bethel church. She is survived by a daughter. Funeral from the church Thursday afternoon and interment in Beaver cemetery.
ATTENTION, READERS!
Don't throw away your copy of The Gazette when you have done with it, but give it to some appreciative person whom you feel would be likely to subscribe or take it regularly, if they had a copy to look over and read carefully. Oblige the Editor.
FRESH OHIO NEWS OUR OWN WRITERS
WHAT OUR PEOPLE ARE DOING IN MANY CITIES AND TOWNS OF THE STATE.
INTERESTING PERSONAL NOTES
Social Functions—Church and Lodge
Items—Mariages and Deaths
Literary, Musical and Other
Notes of Interest.
Fostoria. — The First Baptist church revival closed Sunday evening. Rev. R. J. P. Fleming left Monday for Middleport for a few days' rest. Miss Addie Moore of Moore is visiting her mother, Mrs. J. Shores. Mr. Robert are ill. Mr. Jas. Carter has left the contract for a five room cottage.
Dayton. — Rex. J. D. Robinson was in Cleveland and Oberlin last week. Confirmation services at St. Margaret's mission Sunday. Quarterly meeting at Eaker Street church in the afternoon. Rev. J. M. Glimere, P. E. presiding. Mr. Louis Johnson's home was partially destroyed by fire last week. Mr. and Mrs. C. Robinson obtained the family annuity per Sunday. Mr. Leroy Cox will soon open a drug store.
East Liverpool. — Mr. Robt. Lacey and John Veney visited in Rochester, Pa. last week. Ruth Bald and Annelion Allen are conglessent. Mrs. John Looe of Wellsburg, W. Va. visited here Sunday. Mrs. Margaret McIntree and Harvey are ill. Mrs. John Veney visited in Leetonia Sunday. George Smith obtained in Leetonia. Gaule, music and lunch. Mr. Gray has gone to New Castle to work.
Xenia. — Ohio Afro-Americans have it in their power, this fall to accomplish some material results if they will only take some coned action. Either they should do this or eschew politics. Jolly or "thank you" is not enough for any other class of "Buckeye" voters except ours. — Timekeeper W. S. Rogers informs us that the tobacco factory will open in a few days, and the company will be involved in Beliefontaine — Miss Mona Montalbari of Marion is visiting Mrs. F. T. Lindsay. Tell your friends to take The Gazette and keep abreast of the times in race matters.
Sandusky. — Mrs. Sacredi Rogers and son, Alton, are visiting her mother, Mrs. H. Johnson, The A. M. E. church and S. S. are doing fine. The Sowing circle met at Mrs. S. Gardner's Thursday and the Aid society at Mrs. L. Smith's Tuesday. — Help the agent to increase his number of patrons, please — Mrs. S. Gardner and Mrs. Kate Gibson are all. The former is improving slowly. Mrs. B. Chuckelford, corner of Mrs. S. Rogers' office, Sunday. — Miss Elsie Thomas of Norwalk is Miss Lacille Gibson's guest. — The Gazette is our best race mate.
Wellsville—Born, on 14th, to Mr. and Mrs. James Manley, a son. Mr. Andrew Benford, who has been ill for several weeks, is still quite sick. Miss Alice Payne, who has been sick this week, is better. Mr. J. So Henderson was in Washington—a number of weeks before after pre-practice to reorganize the Allen League society. The meeting proved very interesting. An active part was taken by the young converts. The European band concert has been postponed—the stewards hold a birthday social Tuesday evening at Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Spiris. Quite a number attended and a very enjoyable time is reported.
Washington H — H. Pauline Cassius has received Mrs. Maraezedra the local representative of The Gazette. Give her your order for it and your local news. The dispatches from the west say Jojee. Jeffries 'dog did not know him when he returned home recently "because he had lost so much flesh." Well, that same dog won't know him again in July when he returns home after Jack Johnson has done with him. The daily newspaper does publish a lot of not about Jeffries and Johnson, too, but are always "knocking" the latter. That won't help Jeffries any.
Smithfield.—A large crowd attended the Ford-Carter trial at Steubenville last week.—S. S., in the morning is working like a charm. Rev. W. Munts returned from Georgetown and preached to a large and attentive congregation.—Mrs. E. H. Harris went to Steubenville.—H. H. Harris went to Steubenville.—The S. L. club's valentine entertainment, conducted by Mrs. Powell, netted $9.00. Mr. Froh. Ramssey and family of Hopewell have located here.—Mrs. Leekins, son and daughter, Susie and Harry, Mr. and J. Smith and children were here Sunday.—Mesdames M. Peterson and G. Fouch are guests of Miss S. Harris. Sandsky.—Second Baptist church and S. S. were well attended. No. 4 is in the church on Tuesday evening. Rev. G. D. Smith married Miss Iona Scott and Mr. Nelson Bolling at the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Boo, Scott's last Tuesday evening. The made members of the Parlor club gave the ladies of the organization and their friends, a delightful entertainment at Mr. Jas. French's valentine evening. The men got up the supper and served them.—Mrs. Alice Rogers and son of S. S. and other relatives.—Mrs. Victor Jones is at home convalescing after an operation at the hospital ten days ago.
Correspondents must mail all letters for publication at their mail postoffice sufficiently early on Monday (or Sunday) of each week to have them reach The Gazette office on Tuesday morning, and always write also, their names and that of their city or outstate where the letter is about return. Unless this latter is done, proper credit cannot be given you. Lists of names, welding presents, etc., obituary noires, speeches, resolutions, poetry, in
purifies for relatives and advertisements of all kinds, including items announcing entertainments to be held in the near future, must be paid for in advance at the rate of ten cents a line, six words to a line. Our rates for display advertisements, will be sent on application. Send post note and not stamps during warm weather. Cadiz.-Theo. Veney, Ed. Brown, Helen Duling and Mrs. M. Christian won the prizes at the masquerade on the 15th. Miss Susie White visited her husband in Cannonsburg, Pa., last week and returned to Martins Ferry, Mrs. N. Blancheard entertained 20 small girls on the 12th, in honor of her daughter's 10th birthday. Many very pretty presents were received—Mr. and Mrs. Jno. Lucas of Springfield were called here by his mother's illness. Also Miss Vioa Lucas of Richmond, Va., Miss Zola Tyler entertained Miss L. Harris at dinner Sunday; Mrs. L. White, son and daughter, have returned to Subletteville; Mrs. Cia Brown, Miss W. and M. Cooper, son and daughter; Mrs. B. Brown, M. Cooper, Sunday in Hoppead; Carl Brown visited in Newark last week. Rev. E. L. Gilliam's lecture last Thursday was well attended, considering the weather.
Youngstown—Mrs. W. Harris of Pittsburgh was the guest of Mrs. J. H. Stewart last week—Mr. and Mrs. Harry Williams have moved to 425 W. Federal street—Mrs. Oscar Smith of Salt Springs is very ill—Mrs. Anna Shaw of Pittsburgh spent Sunday with Mrs. Chas. Jackson of Jacksonville the '67 Rest by the E. R. K. R. and Oak Hill Avenue choir were successes—Mrs. Wm. Collins is better and Mrs. Alice Coleman ill—Miss Bessie Harris of New Castle was here Tuesday—The Uganda minstrels and unique club's entertainment in Sharon was a success—Good Hope M. S. supper at Mrs. F. Hunt's Wednesday evening netted a goodly sum—Mrs. Hunt's evening netted you enjoyable as usual—Mrs. W. Allen entertained in honor of her sister, Mrs. Ruth Bobson's eighteenth birthday Friday evening, Games, music and lunch—Oak Hill Avenue Sewing Circle met at Mrs. W. Smith's Thursday afternoon. Next meeting at Mrs. Q. Robinson's March 2—Mrs. Masterson of Jam stown, N. Y., and Mrs. H. Robinson of Castle were guests at Mrs. H. Bessie Williams at Wormell, Mrs. J. Baker, A. Kennedy, Mrs. N. Smith, Frank Conway, Mrs. L. M. Cormicke, Mrs. H. Smith and Mrs. C. Terry have been quite ill.
Steubenville—Mr. Hartz of Detroit has located here—Mrs. Lloyd Martin has la gripe—The valentine social at Quinn Chapel was well attended—Messrs. West and Carter visited Mrs. S. Banks last week, Mrs. E. L. Hodge, T. R. deputy for this division, and Sparkling Star lodges, were here last week, Mr. E. J. McCallough has la gripe—Mr. J. McCallough, the 10th, Mrs. J. McCallough's youngest daughter is having an operation performed on a growth on her neck—The W. R. C. held its annual banquet at Mrs. J. W. Mathews' Thursday evening. Mr. Spencer Banks was in Uniontown, Pa, last week—Mr. John Swan of Pittsburgh is here visiting his brothers. The Madison family have moved here from Mungo. Mr. Robert Stephan died Wednesday and has buried Saturday. Mrs. Stephan died the second death in three days. He was 43 years old—J. P. Guy, for many years junior of the court house, died Sunday, aged 50 years. There is a movement on foot to secure a house for a children's home—Mr. George Snowden is in a very feeble condition.
—The Washington ica at Quinn church Tuesday evening was a simec with a threeday Gosset is traveling with a threeday group to South Dakota last week and this week in Texas.—No Afro-American high school graduates this June.—The C. U. B. will renew its fortnightly meetings by holding a session at Simpson church Sunday.—Eric Brown was ill —Miss Patterson, niece, Mr. Cox of the Simpson church. —Miss Banks, who has completed a three-year course in nursing, in Philadelphia, arrived Thursday —Another tinnichicken supper at the Baptist church on the 15th.—In the Quinn S. S. contest the girls have gone 1,300 miles and the boys 1,554 miles. —The Allan School —Mrs. I. N. McCallough entertained Mrs. Gertrude Jennings of Pittsburg at dinner Sunday.
Rochester, Pa., Obituary.
Andrew J. Burroughs died! Friday morning Tuberculosis. The deceased leaves a daughter, several brothers and sisters to mourn his demise. Agree. 44.
WESTFIELD REBEAR
CLYDE AVE.
200 SOCIETY
THE UNION
IN ASSUMPTION
TS.
REN.
EDITOR "FRANK" H. WARREN.
We give above on an excellent portrait of the editor of the Journal (Maria Informed) an exceptionally timely editorial from which is reproduced in another column of this paper, and on this page today. The article speaks not only for itself, but also and in clarion tones, too, for Editor Warren, Mr. Warren is also an attorney with a good practice, Mrs. Warren, a talented woman, being in immediate charge the Informer. Both are loyal and excellent people, personal friends of the Carotee. In this article, we want the reappilation of the daring editorial to contribute our endorsement of the same. Let every one read it carefully and thoughtfully.
During the graduating exercises in the Baron de Hissch school in New York, where fifty immigrant children had learned the English language sufficiently well to enter the public schools; when the American flag was borne past the children, one little girl pulled up the folds, and repeatedly kissed that flag, and then topped it with safety for the refugees, an end to oppression and the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
In the United States are 10,000,000 Afro-Americans who are alleged to be citizens. All were born in this country. Thousands now living have fought to defend the flag; thousands who are dead gave up their lives in defense of the flag. The race gave 240 years of尊敬 of those who gave up their lives in defense of the wealth of the country and since the civil war have added other billions to the national wealth. The majority of these people are loyal, peaceable, law-binding men and women. Yet they are wronged and oppressed in the land of their birth. In twelve states of the Union, in which the government is a travesty on democracy after failing laws their civil and political rights are disgraced and their lives are never safe from the fury of the mob.
The little Jewish girl taught to be grateful that she has left Russia, where her race is oppressed, to live in America, where foreign-ers have their rights protected. The Jew, despised and maltreated in Russia, can come to America and send his children to the general public schools, while the African American in many cities of children ejpern crow schools or grow up in insurance. The most impertinent and designed forigner who comes to this country has a decided advantage over African-American citizens. The defender.
THE EIGHTH PEOPLE'S CONCERT.
Will be given next Sunday at 3 p.m. at the Gryf of arm by the Cleveland Symphony orchestra, assisted by Mr. Emil Ring, conductor; Mary Gleeson Vaughan, soprano; Miss Bairie McCue, contrife, of Alton. Program.
L. March, "Banner of the World," Barnes.
Overview: "Freeschutz." Weber
Grand Scene Aria, Verdi.
Alf. fors e lui from La Traviata
Virginia S. Serrano
Ah! fors e lui from la Traviata
Mary Gleesner Vaughan.
4. Symphony No. 2 (E Flat)
Gounod.
Allegro and Largo.
5. Marionet Dances No. 1 and 2.
Keller.
6. (a) Coventry, "Aye, Gorgette de Baal," Mopperion, "Miss Beatrice McCue.
(b) Duxet, The Gypseus, Brinkley, Misses Vaughan and Mr. C.
(Fantasy, "Coca-Cola Bounty," Mascarine.
The next concert will be given on Marig 6 at the same hour, Johann H. Beck conductor; and Mr. Marinus Salomons, pianist.
Beaver Falls, Pa., Brevities.
The valentine part of Mrs. Marie Cobb's Monday evening presents enjoyable The Election at Mrs. Cobb's home, and R. Robbins brought from Pittsburgh Monday.
Stewart returned from Chicago Tuesday, Mrs. Cobb was in Salem, Wisconsin.
Robbins was in Pittsburgh Sunday, Mr. C. Adkins of the city visited by Susie Harris. The Zoots met at Mrs. L. Cobb's home, singing St. Evelyn, to impress the Battles and Battling Trees, Mr. Harold Ford, the N. B. Mrs. M. M. Cobb and Mrs. Sage of R., were guests of Mrs. M. Parker of Loop Ferry.
New Brighton, Pa., Notes.
W. M. Smith, St. Albans, England.
E Liverpool, Sussex.
Gardner of Dartmouth, Sussex.
Mahan Hall.
New daughter, Mrs. W. M. Cobb was in Salem, W. M. Cobb Gardner in Salem, W. M. Cobb Newman was in Pittsburgh Tuesday, Mr. Mitchell is ill.
Booker T. Refused Dick's Institution
Bohome, Iowa. Born P. Bohome, sent here by the police, is a student in mittee to be a law enforcement officer, was denced lodging at the Y. W. Y. A rooms, and at the Bohome institution. Mayor C. L. Wentz took him his home as his guest over night.
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LIBERTY IN AMERICA!
Program.
Alluzro and Lambda
Beaver Falls Pa Brevities
New Brighton, Pa. Notes
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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-American, 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 Montgomery Colored Alabamian celebrated its third anniversary, last week, with an illustrated and enlarged paper that was very creditable indeed. Special articles, a higher grade of paper, and other extra features characterized the edition.
Senator T. E. Burton is right: this country has been given up to commercialism and sensationalism to such an extent that the two things threaten its stability and its future. Better and more important, even vital things, are being lost sight of entirely in the "mad rush."
We congratulate the great majority on our people of this community on the good sense and sound judgment they showed last week, in voting against the bond issues and the Taylor plan. The former were beaten and the latter ought to have been. Those who made the mistake of voting for it, will realize this, within the year, if indeed they have not already done so.
Those four Afro-American special deputies at Cairo, Ili, who, in assisting the Sheriff last week to protect the fall and its prisoners from a mob of "white" brutes, were compelled to fire into it, killing one and injuring four others, certainly did a good job, even if they are being persecuted and may have to suffer further as a result of their very commendable action. That dose will do more to put a stop to the Cairo "pastime," in recent months, than almost anything else that could have been done. It's a pity that more of the mob were not given the death they were so anxious to deal out to prisoners in the custody of the sheriff.
CAN PICK A WINNER.
The man who can beat Governor Harmon for a second term is now practicing law in Cincinnati. He is the most brilliant and brainy man the state of Ohio has ever produced and the country at large has few who will compare with him. His name is J. B. Foraker—Ottawa County Republican. The TRUTH—absolutely no question about it. Our esteemed conference have gone a step further and told more of the same kind of truth. The fact is, the only Republican who can beat Gov. Harmon for re-election this fall, is the peerless orator, statesman and jurist, Senator Joseph Benson Foraker. The question is, can he be prevailed upon to make the run We think not, and feel that President Taft knows—ever since that interview with the senator, of several weeks, ago. Present indications are that it is going to be a waste of time and political energy and as well as money to nominate any other Republican.
If there is any thing more pittiful than the Negro who is still following in the wake of the Taft political table-hoping to get a "crumb," we fail to see it. Even self and race respecting, Negroes with manhood who hold federal office, wisely say nothing or speak conservatively and in harmony with the dominant political feelings of the race. O. yes, we are Republicans; but O. how President Taft has outraged, us and thrown all Republican precedents to the winds in so doing. Not only in the matter of appointments to federal office, but what is more, an hundred fold more vital to us, he has taught the American people to believe that we are to be treated in a political as well as a social way on a lower "American" plane. That is another vitally dangerous thrust from which it will take its years to recover even under the most favorable conditions. Bryan, as President, could have done us no more harm, especially when we remember the President's "rebel" appointments—Dickinson as Secretary of War, to "carve" for "The Black Battalion" of infamous Brownville, Texas, notoriously; and Judge Lurton, another Democratic Tennessee, as an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court. Again, thank the Lord, we did not vote for Taft or Bryan.
ANOTHER SOUTHERN OUTRAGE
The imprisonment of Editor and Attorney J. R. Clifford of the Martinus burg (W. Va.) Pioneer Press by U. S. Commissioner T. Lemen in that state recently was unquestionably a most high-handed and outrageous preintition of judicial authority. He was sent to jail simply because he requested that certain witnesses be summoned to appear for a client who had been arrested on a trumped-up charge, concocted by this complainer or a gang of hirelings. Every man is entitled to his day in court, to be heard in his own defense and to have compulsory process for such witnesses as he may desire to testify in his behalf. It was this constitutional right for which Attorney Clifford was contending, and which he persisted in contending for until placed behind the bars of the jail, to be released as soon as the aforementioned U. S. officer and his gang had
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1910.
married out their infamous act. As we took occasion to say several weeks ago, and frequently in years gone by, Editor Clifford is a clean man of education, ability and experience, a conservative Christian gentleman, who has the courage of his convictions and plenty of manhood, self and race respect. He can be depended upon, with the aid of his paper, to give that man Lemen, his associates, and the mistreatment he was subjected to, all the publicity they are entitled to, as well as insisting upon an investigation by the government's department of justice. The result will be salutary and what he has a right to expect in an intelligent, law-respecting and law-abiding community, congress district, and state. Wonder if we are right in our estimate of West Virginia, especially that part of it in which is located Martinburg? Hope so, anyhow. We shall see. The race needs more MEN like Editor Clifford. More power to him!
THE SHADOW AND THE SUBSTANCE.
Some person in this city has imposed upon a New York exchange by sending it a letter naming a number of Afro-Americans as having been appointed to clerkships and lesser positions by Mayor Baehr, the total number being less than one-half the number of positions given our people by the previous (Democratic) administration, Mayor Tom L. Johnson's. The fact is, the present (Baehr-Maschke) city administration has not given a single clerkship to a member of the race, and a number of those men tioned as having received appointments have never been given the positions promised. The only Afro-American appointed to a clerkship, and that a third-class position of the kind and in the water-works' department at the city hall, has never been allowed to take the place because of his color. This is no secret, but is generally known throughout the city. To get rid of him as a clerk, a place was found for him down on the lake front in the city yard, "learning the stock" (handling pipe, etc.), and he university! There are a number of others, named in the New York paper as having been appointed to positions, who have not fared as well as he has. As they have not been allowed to fill them. Why lie about such things? Why not tell the truth and shame, if possible, the Baehr-Maschke administration into treating it as a contingent at least half way decently and fairly? A few box-heaving, broom-holding, spittoon and barn-cleaning, and garbage hunting jobs are, as Bishop Derrick well said when here a few Sundays ago, but "petty jobs at-best and not worth making so much noise about." Some Negroes are so inernally "cheap," and hungry for any kind of a political job, that it seems they are willing "to lie like the very old mischief" to cover up the refusal of their "white" political masters to give them decent appointments, anything like they ought to give to the intelligent of our people. The fact is, the Baehr-Maschke city administration has given the Afro-Americans of this community the SHADOW. for the SUBSTANCE. In the matter of positions, and precious little of the SHADOW, up to date.
.TAFTS "NEW SOUTHERN POLICY"
While the editor of The Gazette he loves as strongly today as ever in the principles of the Republican party that made it great and powerful, we have absolutely no patience with and therefore cannot condone any such curiously unfair, unAmerican and despicable policy as President Taft's "new southern policy." It was this and this alone, working overtime in the northwest, that robbed John F. Cook, Jr. of his place as Postmaster of Bonnors Ferry, Wash., recently while he was at the bedside of his dear old father (a life-long Republican and for years one of the race's most prominent and conservative leaders) those life and obbing away. It was Taft's despicable "new southern law" at work in the north, that accused Judge Sater to depose George W. Hays after thirty-eight years of faithful service as courtier of the United States Courts at Cincinnati, Mr. Cook, Jr., had served faithfully twelve years, and W. Hays, leading the businessman against whom as, the Hays case, absolutely nothing could be or was said, except that they were members of the race. These two cases have been duplicated here in the north many times, and hundreds of times in the south, since President Taft took office on the 4th of March just ONE Negro (Judge Robert Terrell of Negro, D. C.) has been appointed to an office of any kind by Mr. Emmett J. Scott of Tuskegee, Mla., Booker T. Washington's secretary, was appointed a member of the librarian Commission, we know, but this was provided for by President Hoover before he left office. Taft but ratified it. That is all. The extent of the injury the race has sustained, directly and indirectly, in other avenues of life as well as the political, as a result of the President's despicable "new southern policy," cannot be estimated nor expressed in words. However there is not a decent, salf and race respecting Afro-American, with the proper manhood, in or of Ohio, who does not feel it, yes and know it too, even if he cannot explain it in so many words. How, in the face of this and much more, it is not necessary to repeat here at this time. President Taft, Wade H. Hills or any other sane person can ask the Ohio Afro-American "to warm up" to their candidate for Governor this fall, is a little more than we care to attempt to figure out.
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When your Gazettes are not delivered, on Friday mornings, call at your Central Postoffice General Delivery Window for them in the afternoon of the same day. —Editor.
Christmas Morning.
Christmas morning.
Large spotted cow to small Noah's ark—"Gee! If they put me in that barn I'll have to give condensed milk."
EPITOME OF A WEEK'S NEWS
Most Important Happenings Told in Brief
PERSONAL.
LeRoy Percy of Greenville, one of the most brilliant lawyers in Mississippi, was nominated as United States senator from the state of Mississippi to fill out the unexpired term of A. L. McLaurin, who died December 23, last.
Dr. Robert Schneider of Berlin, who is the discoverer of a new cure for tuberculosis, arrived in New York on the steamship Umbrina. Dr. Schneider employs a combination of sulphuric acid, charcoal and eucalyptus, which is burned in a lamp placed in the sleeping room of the patient.
Miss Marie Louise Logan, grand daughter of Gen. A. Logan, and Henry D. Slechay of Belgium were married in New York.
"Tyrphoid Mary," so called because she was considered a living receptacle and distributor of typhoid fever germs, has been released after three years in New York hospitals. Postmaster General Frank H. Mitchell declares that he is tired of politics and will quit the cabinet if he is expected to conduct another national campaign.
Just before Judge Peter S. Grosscup of Chicago started from New York on board the steamship Cronia for a three months' vacation up the Nile, he declared that the United States would soon become sane on the question of "trisus" and would put forward efforts to regulate rather than exterminate them.
A daughter was born to the Earl and Countess Granard. The mother, before her marriage, was Miss Beatrice Mills of New York, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oren Mills.
Neil Burgess, the actor who died at his home in New York city after a year's illness, made his greatest success on the stage in a simple play, 'The County Fair, which was produced in 1888.
Benjamin Ryan 'Tillman, senator from South Carolina, is critically ill. His condition is extremely grave. Dr. E. F. Pickford, the attending physician, said he had a slight chance of recovery.
Simeon W. Stevens, appointed postmaster at Gardner, Mass., by President Franklin Pierce in 1854, and who had received successive appointments since then, is dead. He was 91 years old.
Col. Roosevelt and his party arrived at Gondokoro, Sudan, safe. The caravan marched in, headed by Chief Karba and his native bugle band. All the members of the party are well. Col. Roosevelt and his companions have now passed through the most trying stage of their perilous journey.
Henry S. Haskins, board member of the firm of Lathrop, Haskins & Co., which failed recently, is declared ineligible for restatement on the New York stock exchange by the governors.
GENERAL NEWS.
The Western Philosophical association
and Allied organizations met in
palm Beach, FL, on June 15, 2014.
The street car strike situation be came so threatening that the officers of the Philadelphia militia companies were ordered to have their men ready to answer riot calls at any moment. This action followed a series of street riots in various parts of the city. Cars were blown in two and wood work scattered by heavy charges of dynamite. Other cars were partially burned before the fire engines could reach the scene. The windows in hundreds of cars were broken with sticks and clubs in the hands of angry sympathizers.
No individual deputy sheriff was named in the verdict of the coroner's jury at Calip, Ill., which investigated the death of Alexander M. Halliday, who was killed in the mob which last Thursday night sought the life of John Pratt, the negro purse-snatcher. The jury found that Halliday came to his death by a gunshot wound caused by a weapon in the hands of one of Sheriff Fred D. Nellis' deputies, fired from the north window of the circuit clerk's office in the courthouse.
"If I was permitted to do so, I would undertake to run the government of the United States for $300,000,000 a year less than it now costs." This was the declaration of Senator Nelson W. Aldrich in a speech in the senate in which he indicted the government on the charge of extravagance.
According to a dispatch from Chicago received at Kansas City strychin, in far greater quantities than is usually administered. In medicinal doses has been found in the stomach and liver of Christman Swope and in the stomach contents ejected by Miss Margaret Swope.
The record for industry on the part of hens is claimed by G. H. Slede of Snipsie Lake, Conn. During the last three months 160 hens owned by him have produced 7,775 eggs.
Pittsburgh, Kan., adopted the commission form of government by a majority of 21 votes.
A golden chalice studded with jewels, contributed by parishioners, is soon to grace the altar of St. Paul's Catholic cathedral in Pittsburg, Pa.
Illinois farriers by hundreds gathered in Edwardsville for their annual institute, President J. P. Mason presiding.
Traffic in Europe's paranail-coated eggs, which began to arrive in New York last week, has been checked suddenly by orders from the department of agriculture.
The sixth annual convention of the National Association of Cement Users opened in Chicago.
The mob, the bomb and the torch held command of the street car strike situation at Philadelphia. Martial law was declared in some parts of the city, but the riders made a fare of it. They stripped the uniforms from the backs of the State Fencibles, the one military organization that was called out, and threw coats, hats and rifles into the sewers. All over town there was rioting and stoning of cars and there were several burnings and one bad case of dynamitting.
Emperor Franz Josef ordered the Austrian minister at Athens to urge King George not to abdicate, believing that the downfall of the present Greek regime would precipitate a reign of anarchy.
Frankie Conley of Kenosha, Wis., and Monte Attell of San Francisco battled in sensational style for the better part of three hours before the Pacific Athletic club at Los Angeles, Cal. Conley won with a clean knockout in the forty-second round.
President Taft was cheered by 600 police Heutenants of New York, whose guest he was at their annual banquet at the Waldorf-Astoria. The president had previously delivered an address before the Society of the Chicago of the state of New Jersey, an aristocratic affair held at the Hotel Plaza.
Adolph Wolgast is lightweight champion of the world. After a grueling battle at Point Richmond, 12,000 fight fans saw Battling Nelson's colors lowered. After 40 rounds of the gamest fight ever witnessed, bleeding, staggering and half blind, he was unable to tell his corner, while Referee Eddie Smith stopped the fight and declared Wolgast the winner.
The host of Senator Conger's evidence in support of his charge that Senator Jotham P. Aldis demanded and received $1,000 nine years ago for "protecting" the bridge company against hostile legislation, was laid before the senate. Conger's attorneys announced that they rested their case.
In accordance with a provision in the will of Mrs. Haifahn Williams, a Brooklyn woman who died a few days ago, her son will burn the piano which for 40 years has been in the Willkins home.
Released from prison at Atlanta, Ga., three months ago after serving time for the cracking of the post-office at Raleigh, N. C., in 1905, John Leonard was shot and killed at the door of his home in Brooklyn, N. Y. by Thomas Barnes, whom he had thrashed for calling him an exconvict.
In a report submitted by a legislative committee of the New York assembly appointed to investigate the workings of direct primary laws in other state, opposition is raised to the direct primary system as proposed by Gov. Hughes.
Little Johnny Waravskii, six years old, chopped a dynamite cartridge, not a cherry tree, with his little hatchet, at Elizabeth, N. J. Besides mangling the lad house in the neighborhood was shaken by the explosion.
In opening the third parliament since big reign began King Edward delivered an unusually brief speech from the throne, the reading of which occupied just four minutes.
The British Isles and the whole west coast of the continent from Denmark to southern Portugal are being lashed by terrific gales, and great havoc has been wrought in shipping.
Murdered with six ax while about her household duties, and her body mutilated with blows, Mrs. Hazel Roberts, aged 28 years, wife of Guy Roberts, a farmer living three miles from Marathon, ta, lies dead at their home and three small children are motherless. Henry Johnson, the hired man, is in jail charged with the crime. It is believed Johnson is insane.
In a spectacular fire which partly destroyed the Family theater in the Schmidt building at Pittsburgh, 200 guests of Newell's hotel and the Antlers were routed from their beds. Mrs. Anna Martin and Miss Flora McEwen, both of Pasadena, Cal., were killed and Charles A. Erickson was fatally injured at Azusa, Cal., when a Santa Fe train struck the automobile in which they were riding. Following his arrest at San Jose, Cal., on a charge of swindling pastors, Albert Nier of San Francisco confessed that he joined 20 churches within a week and that "preachers are the easiest game in the world." Eleven bodies of miners were recovered from the St. Paul coal mines at Cherry, Ill. To the amazement of veteran mine inspectors, the bodies entombed since November 13, 1900, when brought to the surface, were found to be almost perfectly mummified.
The South Carolina senate completed the legislative ratification of the constitutional amendment permitting congress to levy an income tax without apportionment among the several states. The resolution had already passed the house.
George Stephens, son of a prominent nine operator of Birmingham, Ala., shot and killed three of his little children, their colored nurse, and then turned the pistol on himself and ended his own life. The tragedy took place in the man's home.
Miss Agnes Leslie Elkins, niece of Senator Stephen B. Elkins of West Virginia, who shot herself at the Willard hotel in Kansas City, is dead. The young woman apparently was on the road to recovery when suddenly she relapsed into unconsciousness.
Louisianans have subscribed $50,000 to the Consumers' Household Supply Company, which has been given a charter at New Orleans for the purpose of buying a farm and supplying stockholders with vegetable, dairy and other products. In the hope of solving the problem of the high cost of living.
Senator Conger's counsel, James W. Osborn, strenuously resisted the efforts of counsel for Senator Alldis and other senators in the investigation of the bribery scandal at Albany, N. Y., to get from Conger what he knew about the distribution of the $4,000 alleged to have been paid to Assemblyman Burnett to defeat highway legislation which the bridge trust opposed. Spain's new premier, Canalias, is opposed by friends of former President Moret, who are demanding the return of Capt. Gwen Wyther, former minister of war, to form a new cabinet.
KNEW HER STYLE.
law of
from the
was and
own cars
and
the
ange
week
of
is.
so
suitor--but you haven't asked me
yet whether or not I can make a living
for your daughter.
Father. Never mind, Henry; if you
marry her she'll see to that.
KEEP BABY'S SKIN CLEAR
Few parents realize how many comfortable lives have been omitted and social and business success prevented by serious skin affections which so often result from the neglect of minor eruptions in infancy and childhood. With but a little care and the use of the proper emollients, baby's skin and hair may be preserved, purified and beautified, minor eruptions prevented from becoming chrome and torturing, disignifying rashes, itchings, irritations and chafings displeased.
To this end, molding is so pure, so sweet, so properly effective as the constant face of Cuticle Soap, assisted when necessary, by Cuticle Ointment. Send to Potter Frug & Chem Corp. sale propofol, Boston, for their free 32 pear Cuticle Book to flog all about the care and treatment of the skin.
Helen the Minister.
A Dutch prankster had in his conversation an old woman who was dead. In order to hear the servant each Sunday, the old lady would rent herself at the test of the pallet stairs. One day the woman was about death, and the prankster became very thirsty.
And when the prankster throw Joshua overboard and, in a hurry, his foot leaped him up. Was it a shark that got retin? No, Joshua leapt; it was kept in a shark. Was it a swordfish that not retin? No.
"It was a whale," whispered the old lady. "Hah, hah," and the prankster, in a hurry, would talk the word of that out of yet no one members' mouth. "Sorry, Miss America."
Fatal Course
A patient who was yetting her for
her home city, and was under full
hipbaby with the seemingly endless
string of questions stand in need of a
case.
"And your sister's daughter Violet?"
she asked.
"Violet is married," the friend replied.
"Abashed. My.' How time does飞
Happy married. I trust?"
"Oh, dear, no!" My sister always
lamented her. You knew was the
response, "and the poor child was per-
mitted to marry the man she was in
love with." Sunday Magazine of
the Cleveland Leader.
Some Luxuries- Needed.
These stern economists who are pointing out that the people of small means ought to abandon "luxuries" forget that even such people have a moral right to something beyond the bare necessities of life. The rapid increase in prices does not mean, to them cutting out more extravagances, but forgetting the modest recreations which have brightened for them the bulk of their lives. In a hard world where one could obtain just enough to keep body and soul together, and no more—Patience learned.
Two Votes
The first time I ran for the general assembly one of the prominent citizens of my community told me that he was going to vote against me because when I was a shaver I throw a rotten apple at his horse. Another prominent citizen told me that he was going to vote for me because when I was a shaver I put a rotten egg in a buggy cushion belonging to the woman he worked for and he had never liked the woman. Think of it! And yet such stuff has thrown the scales where thrones have been at stake. From a speech at Norwich by former Gov. George P. McLean of Connecticut.
SHE QUIT
It is hard to believe that coffee will put a person in such a condition as it did an Ohio woman. She tells her own story:
"I did not believe coffee caused my trouble, and frequently said I liked it so well I would not, and could not drink it, but I was a miserable sufferer from heart trouble and nervous prostration for four years.
"I was scarcely able to be around, had no energy and did not care for anything. Was emaciated and had a constant pain around my heart until I thought I could not endure it. For more, I never went to bed excepting to get up in the morning. I felt as though I was liable to die any time.
"Frequently I had nervous chills and the least excitement would drive sleep away, and any little noise would upset me terribly. I was gradually getting worse until finally one time I came over me and I asked myself what's the one of being sick all the time and buying medicine so that I could indefinitely in coffee?
"So I thought I would see if I could quit drinking coffee, and got some Postum to help me quit. I made it strictly according to directions and I want to tell you, that change was the greatest step in my life. It was easy to quit coffee because I had the Postum which I now like better than the old coffee.
"One by one the old troubles left, until now I am in splendid health, moves steady, heart all right and the pain all gone. Never have any more nervous chills, don't take any medicine, can do all my home work, and have done a great deal beside. Leaf: "The Read to Willeville" in pikes. "There's a Reason."
Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are true, and tall of human interest.
---
Does He Love Anybody?
Von Muster had some few human failings. He loved his wife devotionally but conquered his alma mater. Denmark even after she had elevated him for the military service out of her poor, string pocket. But Kinneler is a machine man only. He loves neither man nor woman. His spear has never known a brother, as its sharp point has hewn asunder the bodies and souls of the sons of women—Boston Post.
Two Bad Cases In England Cured by Resin Ointment
I have been using Resinol Ointment during the last few weeks for a variceous ulcer on leg and can bear tinnitus to its cooling and curative qualities. Have never found anything to equal it. I was recommended by my sister, Mrs. Curtus Ladykirk, Norham on Tweed, to try it. She had been treated 14 months previously without effect, but was entirely cured by Resinol Ointment.
Robert Davidson, Gateshead on Tyne
Belgium Has No Navy
Belgium Has No Navy.
Belgium is, perhaps the most prosperous state in Europe, as well as the most thickly settled. The late king's reins was at least marked by an enormous advance in wealth and social reform. One of the country's special advantages is that its international neutralization permits it to dispense with a navy, while the Belgian army is maintained on a very small and inexpensive basis.
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured
These Knowing Children
"Come here, Mamie Deer. Look at this beautiful Mamie Deer. Don't be lovely." I don't think Mamie ever drew a more charming paper. That is not much, paper, that this is the model that we need to sit on Mr. Mamie's knee." Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Make $500 in Gold.
Read the maximum offer by the John A. Salzer Seed Co. in another part of this paper. Get your wits to work and capture the $500, and at the same time secure a supply of the most reliable seeds on earth. The company is one of the largest in the country, and thoroughly responsible.
The Graveled Crometer.
Ephidia was beating off his abilities.
"That," eruded his wife, "when you find
why our mom bills are just as big as
when they charged an dollar a thousand
cubic feet."
With a mean he sped into the night.
Important to Mothers.
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
hears the
Bears the
Signature of
Chad H特勒
In Use For Over 30 Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought.
She Had Noticed It.
Mrs. Knipfer.—They say the purchasing power of a dollar has diminished.
Mrs. Bocker.—Yes,' it used to buy a bargain worth $1.98, and now it only gets something worth $1.19.
Free to Our Readers
Write Murine Eye Repedy Co., Chicago, for 5999 Illustrated Eye Book Proofs. Write Murine Eye Repedy Co., Chicago, for they will advise us on the Proper Application of the Murine Eye Repairs in self-tell that Murine Ribes Sore Eyes, Strengthens Weak Eyes, Doesn't Smart, Doesn't Blind, Doesn't Cause Eye Pain. In Your Eyes and in Eyebrows Eyes for Sore Eyebills and Granulation.
Outward appearances are often misleading. One can't always tell what is in a man and a mince pie by their looks.
As we get older the blood b
cles and joints stiffen and a
cavier. Sloan's Liniment qu
up the muscles and joints an
with astonishing promptness
Proof that it is Best
Mrs. DANIEL H. DEHIL, of Mann's C
"Please send me a bottle of Sloan's Lin
It is the best remedy I ever knew for I ca
For Rheumatic Pains
As we get older the blood becomes sluggish, the muscles and joints stiffen and aches and pains take hold easier. Sloan's Liniment quickens the blood, limbers up the muscles and joints and stops any pain or ache with astonishing promptness.
Proof that it is Best for Rheumatism.
MRS. DANIEL H. DIFFIE of Mann's Choices, R.F.D. No. 1, Pa. writes "I will be very grateful to you for being a stiff and stiff team. It is the best remedy I ever knew for I can do without it."
Also for Stiff Joints.
Mr. MILTON WHEELER, 2100 Morris
"I am glad to say that Sloan's Linien
joints than anything I have ever tried."
Sloan
Linim
is the quickest and best remed
tism, Sciatica, Toothache, S
and Insect Stings.
Price 25c., 50c., and 1.00 at
Send for Sloan's Free Book on H
DR. EARL S. SLOAN, BOX
"Mr. MILTON WHEELER, 2100 Morris Ave., Birmingham, Ala., writes
"I have done me more good for stiff
jointes than anything I have ever ever."
Sloan's Liniment
is the qickest and best remedy for Rheumatism, Sciatica, Toothache, Sprains, Bruises and Insect Stings.
Price 25c., 50c., and 81.00 at All Dealers.
Send for Shaun's Free Book on Horse. Address
DR. EARL S. SLOAN, BOSTON, MASS.
Make $500 in Gold.
Coffrith Wins Race. London to Frisco.
James W. Coffrith, light promoter,
won his bid of $2,000 made with a
member of the National Sporting club
of London that he could reach San
Francisco in ten days from London.
Coffrith had a margin of two hours
and forty minutes.
Coffrith, according to agreement,
sout a telegram to Eugene Corri, with
whom he had the wager. When he
arrived at the Oakland pier he was
welcome by a large debauction that
charged him as he stepped from his car.
The time made by Coffrith is the
fastest ever made from London to San
Francisco over the Atlantic and across
the continent. He made the trip in
nine days, five hours and five minutes.
The journey from Omana to San
Francisco was made on the famous San
Francisco "Ocean Lined" of the
Union Pacific Southern Pacific, and is
simply another victory for Safety,
Service, Speed via the old Overland
Route.
"So you are studying telepathy?
Yes." answered Senator Sorgham;
my object in life has been to find
what people are thinking and then
say it first. Any reliable system
would simplify my labors immensely."
- Exchange
Distemper
In all its forms, among all ages of horses
and dogs, curd and others in the same
stade prevented from laying the disease
with Spohn's Distemper Curse. Every lo-
cal doctor, nurse, doctor, doctor, or
send to manufacturers. Agents wanted.
Write for free book. Spohn Med. Co.
Spec. Contagious Diseases, Goshen, Ind.
A Benefactor.
"Are you doing anything for other-
sides?" asked the philanthropist.
"Sure." answered Mr. Crossbolds. I
made a garden every year for the ben-
efit of my neighbors' children.
DRUNKENNESS is unworthy when you can have it removed without anybody's knowledge. Acme simple home-treatment will do the work. Write E. Fortin, Dickey Bldg., Chicago, Ill., for free trial.
Correct.
Teacher: What is an ocean?
Johnny: A body of water necessitating kartinghips. New York Sun.
Bhocumatism Cured In a Day.
Dr. Jackson's Relief for Rheumatism
mightily comes in 1 to 3 days. Its action is
probably the most important in the answer and the
first one given by the suppliers. First one
gives births. Theurgists.
Commonplace though it may appear,
this doing of one's duty embodies the
highest ideal of life—Smiles.
TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY
Title LAKATINE BROOM Quineate. Table
of remedies for the cure of a cold. E.W.
official baggage signature is on each box.
No man can be provident of his
those who is not prudent in the choice
of his company—ferecy Taylor.
ALLEN'S LUNG BALSAM
Is the old relation cough remedy. Found in every
baggage. For sale by a druggist. Sold and 100 cents.
The family tree of a banko man
must be a slippery elm.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing syrup.
For both bathing, self-care, gum treatment
and pain relief. Sold and 100 cents.
It is easy to offend people who have
no use for you.
DODD'S
KIDNEY
PILLS
FOR ALL KIDNEY DISEASES
FOR RHEUMATISM
BRIGHTS' DISEASE
DIABETES, BACKWARDS
ER 375 "Guaranteed
For Rheumatic Pains
becomes sluggish, the mus-aches and pains take hold quickens the blood, limbers and stops any pain or ache.
It for Rheumatism.
Choice. R.F.D., No. 1, Pa., writes: — ment for rheumatism and stiff joints. can't do without it."
is Ave., Birmingham, Ala., writes
ent has done me more good for stuff
n's
ent
ready for Rheuma-
sprains, Bruises
All Dealers.
Forces. Address
SLOAN'S
LINIMENT
MILLS AIL
A. Thought Reader
Distemper
A. Benefactor
Correct.
SLOAN'S
LINIMENT
MILLS AIR
N.Y.C.
Local News
PURCHASE
THE
"GAZETTE" AT
J. S. HALL'S, No. 3121 Central Avenue.
F. VALENTINE'S, No. 2130 Central Avenue.
ELMER F. BOYD'S, No. 2601 Central Avenue.
PUSHAW'S, Cuyahoga Building. Open Sunday.
L. SCHWARTZ'S, No. 2921 Central Ave. Open Sunday.
C. C. JOHNSON'S, 3316 Central Avenue. Open Sunday.
Cleveland, O., February 26, 1910.
Notice to Subscribers.—Subscribers not receiving The Gazette regularly should notify us at once. We desire every copy delivered promptly. We advise our patrons to carefully examine The Gazette's advertisements before making purchases. Business men who advertise in this paper should have the patronage of Afro-American. The fact that they advertise is assurance that they want it.
Local reading notices (advertisements) ten cents a line (six words in a line.)
The Metropolitan club gave a dance at Haltmorland's hall Tuesday evening. John Fulton's wife and children are located on East. Thirty-seventh street. C. W. Chesnutt, esq. did not speak at the Attucks club dinner last week, as advertised.
It is a safe prediction that the movement to make Paris a dry city will prognose Louisville Horral. "Starlight" says he had beat "the Fleming gang," in order to land Clarence Brown in that garbage inspectorship.
The Lyceum exercises at Antioch church, Sunday afternoon, were well attended. Rev. Dr. Jenkins is a fine lecturer.
The best dinner on Central avenue is to be secured at Mrs. Anna Lee's restaurant, corner. East Thirty-seventh street.
Cook appears to be one, of the very, very few lost explorers for whom no searching party has been sent out. - Denver Times.
Zlon and their many friends, as well as all others of this community, even since they came to the city. Rev Clark preached Sunday evening under the auspices of the A. M. A. a Newton Falls.
Last Sunday's "pop" concert was another gem. Joe Marovec's march "Colossus" was great—exactly what its name indicates—a big, musical composition with the "swing." Congratulations friend Nivette! It was just the thing to open the program with, and Prof. Johann Beck showed excellent judgment in so placing it. Miss Voss and Mr. Eichelberger of Akron, particularly the former who possesses a strong dramatic soprano voice, acquitted themselves very "creditably indeed the inter's" "Sound the Alarm," by Handel, being decidedly his best of them, enclosed as was his last Adeline Vosse being enclosed. Mr. Becks direction of the "Three Twins," the program's most
After looping 500 buttons on his wife's dress, a man feels like a qualified delegate to a bookworm conference.—Atlanta Constitution.
The fact that over a thousand post-offices were robbed last year may in some measure explin: the postal debrief. Charleston News and Courrier. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Frost, with the latter, who was W. T. Coleman while in the city last and this week, returned to Buffalo on Wednesday.
On a very pretty souvenir post card received Monday, J. D. Hackley, writes the editor of The Gazette, under date, February 18: "I am in San Antonio (Texas) having a delightful time; on my way to Mexico."
Rev. J. D. Robinson of Dayton was in the city route to an event From Oberon to New York, where he came up, the guest of Mrs. W. T. Coleman of Hudson avenue. All three called on The Gazette, Saturday and Monday.
A meeting for men was held Sunday evening in St. John's church at which Rev. Dr. Caspar Wistar Hyatt was the principal speaker. A male chorus of 40 voices sang and the balcony was reserved for ladies. Franklin, aged 2½ years, while playfair, the housemate with hispa, fell down His father, thinking to tease him, said, "You dropped something." But Franklin was equal to the occasion, for he replied, "At was me."—The Dellineator for March. The Minerva Reading club met at Mrs. J. L. Seelig's Saturday afternoon and celebrated its twelfth anniversary. The afternoon was spent very pleasantly in George Washington games. Mrs. John Early and Mrs. George Morton were guests of the club.
Another exceptionally pretty souvenir post card received by the editor of The Gazette, Monday, February 14, in Albuquerque, New Mexico, date, February 16, contained the following: "At the Grand Canyon having a fine time, all around. Wish you were here. Mrs. Jones is and having the time of her life." Good.
Alex. Martin's rost of a "colored" Y. M. C. A. at the Attucks club's dinner, last week, was the hit of the evening. There are enough color lines now, without our attacker Martin. "Nooody" to the contrary notwithstanding, Attorney Chas. S. Sutton in a neat speech presented Matt. Henson with the autographs of those present.
A "Constant Reader of the Gazette" writes the editor: "You can be in the office with reference to Sam Woods, was all right. What Bishop Derrick said appeared almost word for word—verbatim. The Gazette made one mistake, however, and that was in saying that Sam held a minor position in St. John's church. He does not hold a minor position, it seems to me, only makes his reprehensible act only all the worse."
Owing to a misunderstanding as to the meeting place, the latter having been changed to St. John's church without the help of the notice of the same sent to him, his address to the local Ministers' association, on "The Mission of the Press" was not delivered Tuesday morning at Shiloh church, but will be at St. John's church on the second Tuesday in March, the Sth,
Because he was severely beaten with a pair of brass knuckles when he remonstrated with Robert Maddox, 1243 West Second street, when he found that Maddox was continually talking to his bride of a month, Charles Jasper, colored, 123S East Fourteenth street, appeared in the former's home Tuesday night with an old army rifle, and shot him through the leg. The injured man was taken to Lakeside hospital.
The entertainment Tuesday evening given under the auspices of Mt. Zion's Sunday school was a grand success. The program was made up of piano solos, recitation songs, drama. Each participant did well and felt all resulted. Little Contance Dean and little Vivian Smith won much praise and /admiration from the audience for their gracefulness in the drill. Miss Addie Hackley and Miss Bertha /Sutton, who planned the entertainment deserve great credit. and friends of Mt. Zion church and Sunday school, under the leadership of Mrs. Ellis Dale and Mrs. R. Green, presented the pastor, Rev. G. V. Clark, with a fine overcoat this week, and will provide for telephone service in the church, appreciative of the grateful and is loud in their appreciation of the splendid treatment accorded him, Mrs. Clark and their family by the members of Mt.
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 26,
Zion and their many friends, as well as all others of this community, ever since they came to the city, Rev. Clark preached Sunday evening under the auspices of the A. M. A. at Newton Falls.
Last Sunday's "Pop" concert was another gem. Joe Maroche's march "Colossus" was great—exactly what its name indicates—a big, musical and "taking" composition with the swing. Congratulations, friend Narcisse. It was just the thing to open the program so the audience could Beck showed excellent judgment in so placing it. Miss Voss and Mr. Eichelberger of Akron, particularly the former who possesses a strong dramatic soprano, voice, acquitted themselves very "creditably indeed, the latter's 'Sound the Alarm,' by Handel, being decidedly his best effort." It was encased as was Miss Adelina Norovich's vocal cores. Mr. Becks direction of the "Three Twins," the program's most popular number—the vocal numbers and the Narocve march excepted—was poor, to say the least. The Symphony Orchestra's other numbers were all well rendered, as was also the "Three Twins" which could have an older and more intelligent directing. Among those of our people, we noticed in attendance upon the splendid concert were: Miss Ida M. Brown and Mr. Henry Cash, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Minter and daughter, Little Miss Norma, Mr. Daniel Fairfax, Jr., and friend, There were others whose names we do not know and whose not so great. The next concert, Feb. 27, Sunday, at 3 p.m. Prof. Emil Ring, conductor, assisted by Miss Mary Glesner Vaughn, soprano, and Miss Beatrice McCue, contralto, of Akron.
Gives Wives the Credit.
New York City.—"I am sure if you were to ask the greatest successful men of this country to whom they are indebted for their success, they would point to their wives. Common sense is one of the dominant traits of American women." Thus Mrs. K. Imanishi, wife of the Japanese banker who negotiated the $250,000,000 war loan in this country, sums up her impressions of American women as gained through six years of study. She is about to return to Japan with her husband. She has attained much social success.
Old School Actor Dies.
Philadelphia, Pa.-George Holland, an old school actor, who was a friend of Booth, Jefferson and Irving, died here at the Presbyterian hospital. Mr. Holland was taken ill at New Orleans about two months ago, and came here for treatment. He had been under the care of Dr. E. S. Hawley at the hospital. Mr. Holland was in his sixty-fourth year. He came of historic stock, both his father and mother having been identified with the stage, while the former was one of the older Jefferson's friends.
Equitable Life Shows Gain.
New York City--At the annual meeting of the Equitable Life Assurance society directors here the report of President Paul Morton showing the results from last year's operations was presented. It showed a not gain in the society's insurance in force amounting to $8,869,000, as compared with a loss in the preceding year of $13,647,000. The various accounts showed general increases, total assets having mounted during the 12 months from $472,339,000 to $480,109,000. President Morton was re-elected.
Senator Tillman Improves.
Washington, D. C.-Senator Tillman is much improved. The attending physicians hold out hope of his recovery. His mind is clearing and the power of speech is returning. The senator recognized his physicians and called them by name. His recuperative powers are remarkable and they lie back of the physicians' guarded expression of belief that the senator may again have control of his limbs and only slightly impaired speech. Senator William Alden Smith of Michigan is recovering rapidly.
Believed Leishman WIII Resign.
Rome, Italy.—It seems well understood that Ambassador Leishman is about to resign or has resigned his post. The reason for his action is said to be the offer of a big mercantile position in the United States, but people well posted say that it is due to friction with Roman society. It is certain the ambassador has made no efforts at securing social eminence, and Mrs. Leishman is equally lukewarm. They have not taken a house and are living in room at the Hotel Excelsior.
"Painter of Presidents" Dead.
Washington, D. C.—Henry Ulke, 89, whose portraits of presidents and cabinet officers gained for him the title of "Painter of Presidents," died at the emergency hospital here of concussion of the brain due to a fall at his home here. Ulke was a personal friend of Lincoln's and furnished part of the bedclothing of the martyred president's deathbed. Ulke was boarding at the time of the assassination in the now famous Tenth street house into which Lincoln was carried after he was shot.
CORRESPONDENTS WANTEDI
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: Mt. Vernon, Zanesville, Newark, Landester, Findlay, Lima, Oberlin, Chillicothe, Toltec, Urbana, Troy, Akron, Springfield, Piqua, Columbus, Cambridge, Martins Ferry, Wellsville, Belefonine, Wilmington, Portsmouth, Sabina, Gallipolis, Delaware, Dayton and Middletown, O., and other places where we have none.
Write to the editor of The Gazette, Blackstone building, Cleveland, O., and terms will be son promptly. Our readers are specially 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.
Notice.
The State of Ohio, Cuyahoga County, ss.
Notice is hereby given that the St. James African Methodist Episcopal Church has filed in the Common Pleas Court of Cuyahoga County, State of Ohio, raise No. 116412, praying for authority to mortgage its real estate property in the City of Cleveland, accuse in the City of Cleveland, said County, said State, being a vacant lot which was conveyed to it by the trustees of the Seventh Day Adventist Church Society, by deed on the 5th day of April, 1958, recorded in the 1154, page 329, by boca County Records, to secure a loan of $1,800. Said loan to be either straight or constructive, and bearing interest at six or seven per cent, respectively. The sum no borrowed to be evidenced by a mortgage on said real estate. The same will be for hearing on or over the first day of March, A. D. 1910.
CHAS, S. SUTTON.
Attorney for Pottier.
Madam LeRoy's Message.
Your fortune told from cradle to grave, Midam LeLoy reveals everything, rehitches the separated, settles lover's quarrels, removes evil influences immediately, and tells how to be successful in business. What I tell you, you too, Seed date of birth with 25 cents in stamps, and get a dollar reading. Seed stamps to Midam LeLoy, 215 W. 42nd St., New York City, Also the Art of Palmistry and Psyche reading taught by correspondence. (51)
LADIES! LADIES!! LADIES!!
Call your lady friends' and acquaintance' attention to our up-to-date fashion and pattern departments and thus encourage them to subscribe or take The Gazette regularly. Oblige the Editor.
Ford's Hair Pomade
Fifty years of success have proved the morris of this preparation.
What is more attractive than a beautiful head of hair? It has been the ambition of women in all ages. The use of Ford hair for an all-age woman, kinky or curly hair soften, more pliable and glossy, easy to comb and arrange in any style desired consistent with its length, as long as the Revender is hair. This result may be obtained by one application according to directions. Two to four applications a month will keep the hair in satisfactory condition, and two to four bottles, regular sizes are usually sufficient for a year. Directions with every bottle.
Ford's Hair Pomade
Mme. Walker's Hair Grower
Growth Guaranteed from One-half to One Inch per Month
MISS WARREN
Scalp Specialist
4310 Central Avenue
McCALL PATTERNS
10
AND
15
MORE HIGHER
McCALL'S MAGAZINE
50
A
YEAR
INCLUDING A FREE PATTERN
Celebrated for style, perfect fit, simplicity and
tradition, nearly 40 years. Sold in nearly
every city and town in the United States and
Canada, or by mail direct. More soul than
any other make. Send to: McCall for free catalog.
McCALL'S MAGAZINE.
More subscribers than any other fashion magazine - million a month! In eight styles, patterns, decimals, millinery, plain sewing, fancy needlework, hairdressing, etiquette, good stories, etc. Only Genie, baby twins doublely, including a free pattern. Subscribe today, or send for sample copy.
WONDERFUL INDUCENCES
to Agents. Postal brings premium catalogue and new product previews. Address
THE MCCALL CO., 228 to 248 W. 37th St. NEW YORK
WILBERFORCE UNIVERSITY
Located in Greene County, three and one-quarter miles from Xenia, O. Healthful surroundings. Refined community. Faculty of 32 members. Expenses low. Classical and Scientific, Theological, Preparatory, Music, Military, Normal and Business Departments. Ten industries taught. Great opportunities for High School Graduates entering College. Preparatory Courses. OHIO STUDENTS desiring to enter Business or Industrial Departments can obtain certificate from State Senator or Representative entitling them to Free Tuition, Room Rent and Incidentals.
Catalogue and special information furnished. Address
W. S. SCARBOROUGH, President, or OF THE UNIVERSITY HORACE TALBERT, Secretary
The Magic will not burn or injure the hair, because the compacts are heated. The steel heating bar which iron the hair is alone, and into the figure of the handle, is easily detached from the heating bar, after the bar is heated the comb goes back into place and is held by turn of the handle.
The Magic Heater is also suitable for curling irons, has a cover and can be carried in a hander.
Fill with alcohol and light here.
Magic Shampoo Drier $1.00. Magic Alcohol Heater $0.50. Liberal terms to agents. Write for literature today.
Magic Shampoo Drier Co. Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Nelson's Hair Dressing is put up in handmade four-ounce square tin boxes. like the lady holds in her hands. Drugs and agents everywhere sit at 25 cents a box. If you can't get it, get us 30 cents and we will mail you a full-size box postal. Go and buy it now, or all right down and write us. Address
Taylor's New Shampoo Dryer and Hair Straightener!
The Best in the World!
The Comb, properly heated, and the use of Lacrosse Hair Pomade, will bring the most crimp hair straight and elkty at every stroke and cause a rapid growth of the hair.
Don't put it off but buy $1.49 today and get the comb by return mail.
PRICE OF COMB $1.
Large, Heavy, Strong and Durable. Made of copper and brass associated together and cast iron, brass with polished and all nickel plated, steel bolt which goes through the large wood handle and screws into metal end of comb to prepare the handle from get it tightened on combing oil. Hardware is all in one piece. Nothing to get out of order, will last a lifetime.
Price of Hair Straightener and Alcohol Heater complete $1.50.
TAYLOR'S SPECIAL ALCOHOL HEATER is the handset and most convenient method of heating the Comb, and can be closed up so that you can put it in your hand-bag. Price $0c. For best results use LaCreto Hair Pomade. It not only meets every requirements of the Combo Straightener but provides the Largest and Most Complete Line of Hair Goods in this country for colored people, such as Bange, Wigs, Puffs, Switches, Pompadour, Hair Pine, Combe, Brushes, etc.
Agents Wanted.
T. W. TAYLOR, Howell, Mich.
When writing please mention this paper.
JONES & RICKO CUT RATE DRUG STORE
Merchant Tailors
Ladies' and Gentlemen's Suits
Made to Order
CLEANING, DYEING and PRESSING
FURS REMODELED
Satisfaction Guaranteed in All
Branches of Tailoring
3122 Central Ave. S. E., Cleveland
AMERICAN RESTAURANT
Lucian Armstrong's
CAFE
Choice Wines, Liquors and Cigars
2900 Central Avenue
Cleveland, Ohio
A DAINTY LUNCHEON AND
CONFECTIONARIES
TOBACCO, CIGARS AND
ICE CREAM
FRANK WARLES
No. 2905 Central Av., near E. 30th
CLEVELAND, O.
---
Does it comb easily without breaking?
Is it straight?
Does it smooth out nicely?
Can you do it up in any of the charm-
ing styles, so it will stay, and
make you proud of it?
Is it long and full of life?
If you cannot say YES to all of the
above questions, then you need
NELSON'S HAIR DRESSING is the finest hair dressing. It makes your hair grow fast. It makes a stubborn, khinky and tangled hair as soft and supple as italk. It makes it healthy, and gives it charm so long for all true ladies.
Nelson's Hair Dressing and you'll never have dandruff. Will keep clean. The route of your hair will have the necessary help disease. You will be delighted with its delicate perfume.
Dressing is put up in handsew four-square square tins, like the lady holds in her hand. Dressings and box. If you can't get it, send us 30 cents and we will mail it up now, or right down and we will address ACTURING CO., Richmond, Va.
Ed. Write Quick for Terms.
New Shampoo Dryer Straightener!
In the World!
The use of La Trobe Hair Pomade, will bring the most every styling tool to the hair. $1.60 today and eight down and eight up. Address
MB $1. Large, Heavy, Strong and Durable. Made of brass and brass associated together and cast iron. It holds gloss. Highly polished and tully nickle plated, steel bolt which goes through the large wood handle and screws into metal end of bomb to prevent the handle from getting loose. It coiling off. Remember it is all in one place. Nothing to get out of order, will last a lifetime.
Price of Hair Straightener and Alcohol Heater complete $1.50.
HEATER is the handiest and most convenient method used up so that you can put it in your hand bag. Price 50c hair Pomade. It can hold pennies, requirements of a luxurious growth of the hair. Price 25c.
OUBE Illustrating the Largest and Most Complete Lines of people, such as Bange, Wige, Puffa, Switches, Pomete.
W. TAYLOR, Howell, Mich. Please mention this paper.
CUT RATE DRUG STORE
Prescriptions Carefully Compounded.
Soda Water, Cigars, Etc.
"NOORALGIA" HEADACHE POWDERS
50c Ingram Milkwood Cream. 30c
25c Rubitum. 19c
1.25 Fountain Syringe. 75c
Hot Water Bottle. 69c and up
Omega 8.1. 19c
$1.00 Mother's Friend. 83c
And many others.
Nutrition Table.
Free Library Ballot box.
THE KNOPF PHARMA
J. J. MACK, Manager.
3132 CENTRAL AVENUE, S. E.
MADAM PATTERSON
LISTERINE FOR THE HAIR
KEEPS THE HAIR SOFT, GLOSSY
AND STRAIGHT, THICKENS THE
GROWTH. THE WOMAN WHO
WISHES TO RETAIN HER, YOUTH
MUST LOOK AFTER HER HAIR.
The Woman with Scarf, Unattractive
Hair is Never Admired
TWENTY-FIVE CENTS PER BOX
No. 5233 CENTRAL AVENUE
CLEVELAND, O.
Forest St. Roller Rink
is now open under the management of Fred. Berry & Raleigh M. Randolph and will be open
Admission; Gentlemen 15c; Skates 15c. LA IES ADMITTED FREE, Skates 15c. There Will Be No Dancing.
GOOD MUSI
MUSIC Increased Floo
The
Hair
We. Gre
Now L
You
I. POPE. | MRS. L. L. ROBERTS.
GOOD MUSIC Increased Floor Space
MRS. A. M. POPE.
4 years ago my hair was only a finger-length, and my temples were bald half way up my head.
MRS. L. L. ROBERTS.
4 years ago my hair just covered my shoulders.
my head. I first began our wonderful work of growing
lengths, and all conditions of hair, even to the
places of the head, many persons scorned the
possible; but we have grown the hair for hair
access. The proof of the value of our work is to
and largely by persons whose own hair we
the further fact that they have very frequently
to sell their goods (saying that "theirs is the
referred to "PORO." We advise you to use
(the oldest and best of its kind.) See that the
box, not genuine without it. Prepared only
ware of Imitation
Call, or Address Mail to
M. POPE-TURNBO 3100 PINE
ST. LOUIS
When we first luggage
qualities, all lengths, and
a hair on bald places of t
a thing was possible; but
achieving success. The
lingitimated and largely
grown and the further
when trying to sell them
as good') or referred to
Hair Grower, (the oldest
is on every box, not p
POPE.
Beward
Call
MRS. A. M. POPE
When we first began our wonderful work of growing all kinds, all qualities, all lengths, and all conditions of hair, even to the growing of hair on bald places of the head, many persons scorned the idea that such a thing was possible; but we have grown the hair for hundreds, achieving success, the proof of that the hair of others we are born grown and largely by persons whose own hair we have actually grown and the further fact that they have very frequently mentioned us when trying to sell their goods (saying that "theirs is the same" or "just as good") or referred to "PORO." We advise you to use only "PORO" Hair Grower, (the oldest and best of its kind.) See that the name "PORO" is on every box, not genuine without it. Prepared only by MRS. A. M. POPE.
Beware of Imitations
MRS. A. M. POPE-TURNBO 3100 PINE STREET ST. LOUIS, MO.
BELL PHONE BOMONT 3109
SPLITS
SPLITS
CARLING LONDON ALE
A palatable drink for the
winter season, furnishing
strength and nourishment
TWO DOZEN IN A CASE.
Delivered to Any Part.of the City.
THE CLEVELAND & SANDUSKY
BREWING COMPANY
TELEPHONES:
BELL, WEST 113 CUY., CENTRAL 3933
WOULD YOU LIKE YOUR FACE LIGHTER COLORED FOR EVERY IMPORTANT OCCASION? YOUR SKIN CLEAR. SMOOTH. FINE? YOUR HAIR LONG. THICK. DRESSY? YOUR PERSONALITY MORE ATTRACTIVE! SEND 10c FOR SAMPLE OF WONDER HAIR GROW ANOTHER 10c FOR 2 SAMPLES OF COMPLEXION WONDER
These samples and our information book and the private letters we will write to you will show you how to have all these improvements. We cannot overcome nature, but as far as your individual characteristics will permit, we can make you prepossessing, presentable and attractive. The editors of colored newspaper will tell you we are responsible. We are doing more for colored people than any business concern in this country. Our mission is not a lofty one like that of Dr. Booker Washington, but in our way, we are trying to do for their bodies, what he is doing for their minds.
We Represent That Company enables people, white or colored, to improve their appearance. People, who have good appearance and who are prepossessing and presentable, secure better positions commercially and socially and get along better every way.
WE WILL BE GLAD TO CORRESPOND, WITHOUT CHARGE
WITH COLORED MEN AND COLORED WOMEN WHO TAKE
BENEFIT FROM THEIR EXPERIENCES
BEINFORMED OF DISCOVERIES WHICH WILL BENEFIT THEM
AND 20c FOR THE THREE SAMPLES IMMEDIATELY
THIS LITTLE EXPENDITURE WILL BENEFIT YOU MORE THAN YOU KNOW. After
this sample, you will be able to:
WRITE YOUR NAME, AND STREET ADDRESS, EVERY PLANET.
4 years ago my hair just covered my shoulders.
AT EIGHT O'CLOCK
Floor Space
The Original
Hair Growers
We Grew Our Hair
Now Let Us Grow
Yours With
'PORO'
TRADE MARK
Registered
growing, all kinds, all
even to the growing of
denied the idea that such
for hundreds, rapidly
work is that we are bea-
l we have actually
frequently mentioned us
is the same' or 'just
to use only "PORO"
that the name "PORO"
ed only by MRS. A. M
nations
GO
LINE STREET
T. LOUIS, MO.
---
WHEN YOUR BACK ACHES SUSPECT THE KIDNEYS.
Backache is kidney ache, in most cases: The kidneys ache and throb with dull pain because there is inflammation within: You can't be idle of the ache until you cure the cause—the kidneys.
Zarry Peterson
Mike a Story
Doan's Kidney Pills cure sick kidneys. G. S. Warren, 1517 No. 7th St., Boise, Idaho, says: "An injury to my back years ago left me lame. I had to use a cane, and it hurt me terribly to stoop or lift. The kidney secretions passed too frequently. For five years since I was cured by Doan's Kidney Pills, I have had no return of the trouble."
"Remember the name—Doan's. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co. Buffalo N.Y.
Meaning of Cemetery.
It is not correct to say that "cemetery" means the "city of the dead." The word is from the Greek "Kolmerion," meaning sleeping place, not the place of the dead. There is nothing in the thinking that it was originally intended to convey the idea that the departed were really dead any more than there is in the old Hebrew term for cemetery—"Bethaim"—the house of the living.
IMPOSSIBLE TO FIND ANYTHING besides the grave of Perry Davis Dunlister. Get the larger size, it is the cheapest. At all drugstores, 20c, 25c and 28c bottles.
When common sense takes a vacation it is time to stand from under.
FILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS
PAZO 14 days case of Bebing, Blind, Bleeding or Prodrug Piles in 6 to 14 days money refunded. 100.
Landlords and tenants can never see through the same spectacles.
AFTER FOURYEARS OF MISERY
Baltimore, Md. — "For four years
my life was a misery to me. I suffered
from irregularities, tees, sensations, sensation, extreme nervousness, and that all gone feeling in my stomach. I had given up hope of life when I when I began. to take Lyda E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Then I new life, had been
from a terrible dragging sensations, extreme nervousness, and that all gone feeling in my stomach. I had given up hope of ever being well when I began to take Lydin E. Pinkham W. George Compound. Then I felt as though new life had been given me, and I am recommending it to all my friends."—Mrs. W. S. Forp, 2207 W. Franklin St., Baltimore, MD. The most successful remedy in this country for the cure of all forms of female complaints is E. Pinkham W. George Compound. It has stood the test of years and to-day is more widely and successfully used than any other female remedy. It has eased thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, and urinary incontinence, indigestion and nervous prostration, after all other means had failed.
If you are suffering from any of these ailments, don't give up hope until you have given Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial. If you would like a special advice like Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for it. She has guided thousands to health, free of charge.
Costs no more than artificial material and
you will have no ROI that will absolutely
not cost you for centuries for out-
side one cent of expense. Nothing in
lacanence can be worth.
SHELDON'S Sea-Green
and Purple
ROQFING SLATE
for strength, durability and economy.
Our free book, THE ROOF 2, tells WHY.
It's yours for the asking.
F. C. SHELDON SLATE CO.
GRANVILLE, NEW YORK
Never Falls to Restore Gray Hair to its
Natural Color and Beauty. Stop its falling
and keep it looking fresh. Refuse all substitutes. $10.00 and 500
Bottles by Mail or at Drugstores. FREE
Send 100 for large sample bottle
Philo Hay Spec. Co., Newark, N. J.) U. S. A.
14¢ Cents a Rod
For 8n. Bike Fence 15-4-4 for 8n.
for 34in. bike for a 47in.
for 48in. bike for a 54in.
For 56in. Bike Gold on 36 days
from 48 rod spot) Jewel Bike
from 48 rod spot) Jewel Bike
KITTELMAN BROS.
Bee 4g MURDER, INN.
PISO'S CURE
THE BEST MEDICINE FOR CUGHS AND GIRLS
It will instantly relieve that packing cough.
Takes acupressure it will often prevent
Asthma, Bronchitis and serious throat and
lung troubles. Guaranteed safe and very
palatable.
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1910.
Practical Fashions
LADIES' ONE-PIECE WORK APRON.
1
Paris Pattern No. 3205, all seams allowed. A really practical work appron, one that protects the wearer from neck to skirt him, is necessary; in fact, indispensable to every woman who looks after her household affairs, whether it be to do a little dusting or to see to the cooking, also an apron of this kind is quite as much needed by the art students. The pictured model will make a strong appeal for favor, as it is not only practical, but so very easy to make, being all in one piece, with only a single button and buttonhole or hook and eye for the fastening. The garment is pictured made of blue and white seersucker, and can also be made of gingham, towel-fling, percale, brown or red linen, chambray, duck or jean. The pattern is cut in four sizes—32 to 44 inches bust measure. For 36 bust the apron requires 3¼ yards of material 36 inches wide.
To procure this pattern send 10 cents to Pattern Department, of the paper office, and send plainly to give size and number of pattern.
NO. 3205. SIZE......
NAME......
TOWN......
STREET AND NO......
STATE.....
10
Paris Pattern No. 2421, All Seams Allowed—Cambric, lawn, batte, nailsook or jaconet are all used for garments of this character. The underwatist is made with a round neck, and this and the armholes are trimmed with a narrow edging of fine embroidery; strips of seam tape trim the waist, which fastens at the centerback. The drawers are tucked and finished with an edging of deeper embroidery. They are gathered into a wide walstand band which is worked with bottomholes, so that the garment may be fastened to the underwatist. The pattern is in six sizes—two to 12 years. For a child of six years the underwatist requires three-fourths yard of material 27 to 36 inches wide, with 5% yards of bliss seam tape and two yards of edging; the drawers need 1 ¼ yards 27 inches wide, or 1 ¼ yards 36 inches wide, two yards of edging.
To procure this pattern send 10 cents to Pattern-Department, of this paper. For gift to give size and number of pattern.
Fewer Studies for Children
Hours of work have been reduced in many of the schools of Germany. By the new arrangement 45 minutes is the maximum time for a subject, thus allowing the treatment of six subjects in no school days. It is desired that the shortened hours at school be made up in home study and that as little school work as possible he done outside the school proper. "The child derives more benefit," the educators think, "from its play and from the study which it does voluntarily than it does from grinding. Self-imposed mental work is of the greatest benefit to the school child and the attainment of this is possible only when the child has several days daily of absolute leisure."
A Repeater.
Beulah—When he kissed me last night I asked him to tell no one.
Belle—And did he?
Beulah—Why, it wasn't two minutes before he repeated it.
How often do you eat this food?
A short time ago there appeared in the columns of one of the prominent magazines an article on building brain and muscle by the proper selection of the foods you eat.
A good many people were surprised to find oatmeal placed at the top of the list of foods recommended; but if the article had appeared in an English or Scotch paper every reader would have expected to see first place given to good oatmeal.
As a matter of fact Great Britain and Europe come, to us for tremendous quantities of Quaker Oats because it represents to them perfect food, being the richest in flavor and best in cleanliness and purity, of all oatmeals.
Americans should eat more Quaker Oats; the results would soon show themselves in improved conditions of health and strength. 55
Tommy, whose varying points of view are illustrated by the Farm Journal, had not yet learned the Golden Rule. Neither have a good many of his elders.
"I should like, Tommy," said his father, "that you might find some boy to play with you. Now what's the girl with Johnny Jenkins and the little Dobbs boy."
"Pooch! Why, they're a whole year younger than I am," said Tommy, contemptuously.
"I couldn't play with them!"
"Well, there's Jack Spear and Willie Harlow. Won't they do?"
"Yes, but they are a year older than I am," said Tommy, wistfully, "so the mean things won't play with me."
Power of Example
"It ain't a pretty kind world for a poor old Swede woman like me," said Christine. "Just sometimes dies a pretty good world anyways. I was at a place yesterday vere de lady always make me iron all afternoon and den send me home mitout my supper. So yesterday I tol her how kind you vas to me, and how you tell me set down and rest tilt, supper get ready, and gilt me money the street car so I don't have to walk home when he she say to me. Set down and have something to eat pretty soon, Christine; you not be in deay. Dot's because I tell her about you, ma'am. I tink lots of peoples he gooder if dey know about somebody also bein' good."—Newark News.
Not Actually Necessary. The lawyer proceeded to examine the witness.
"Pardon the question, Mrs. Chuckley," he said, "but your answer constitutes a part of the record. How old are you?"
"Why, you ought to . know, Mr. Sharpe," she answered; "my birthday is the same as yours, only I was born ten years later than you were." "Ah, yes, I remember. Well, it isn't important, anyhow. Go ahead, Mrs. Chucksley, and tell the jury what you know about this case."
THE STORY OF THE PEANUT
SHELLS.
As everyone knows, C. W. Post of Battle Creek, Michigan, is not only a maker of breakfast foods, but he is a strong individual who believes that the trades-unions are a menace to the liberty of the country.
Believing this, and being a "natural-born" scrapper for the right, as he sees it, Post, for several years past, has been engaged in a ceaseless warfare against "The Labor Trust," as he likes to call it.
Not being able to secure free and untramured expression of his opinions on this subject through the regular reading pages of the newspapers he has bought advertising space for this purpose, just as he is accustomed to for the telling of his Postum "story," and he has thus spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in denouncing trades-unionism.
As a result of Post's activities the people now know a whole lot about these organizations; how they are honeycombed with graft, how they obstruct the development of legitimate business, curtail labor's output, hold up manufacturers, graft upon their own membership, and rob the public. Naturally Post is hated by the trades-unionists, and intensely. He employs no union labor, so they can not call out his men, and he defies their efforts at boycotting his products. The latest means of "getting" Post is the widespread publication of the story that a car which was recently wrecked in transmission was found to be loaded with empty peanut shells, which were being shipped from the south to Post's establishment at Battle Creek. This canard probably originated with President John Fitzgerald of the Chicago Federation of Labor, who, it is said, stated it publicly, as truth.
Post comes back and gives Fitzgerald the lie direct. He denounces Fitzgerald's statement as a deliberate falshood, an underhanded and cowardly attempt to injure his business, having not the slightest basis in fact. As such an effort it must be regarded. It is significant that this statement about "the peanut shells" is being wide given newspaper publicity. In the "patent inside" of an eastern country paper I find it, and the inference naturally is that labor-unionites are insidiously spreading this lie.
An institution (or a man) which will resort to moral intimidation and to physical force, that will destroy machinery and burn buildings, that will malm and kill if necessary to effect its ends, naturally would not hesitate to spread falsehood for the same purposes.
We admire Post. While we have no enmity toward labor unions, so long as they are conducted in an honest, "live-and-let-live" kind of a way, we have had enough of the tarred end of the stick to sympathize thoroughly with what be is trying to do. He deserves support. A man like Post can not be killed, even with hles. They are a boomerang, every time. Again, we know, for hasn't this weapon, every weapon that could be thought of, been used (and not simply by labor unions) to put us out of business, too?
I am going to drink two cups of Postum every morning from this time on, and put myself on a diet of Grape Nuts. Bully, for Post!—Ethical in the American Journal of Clinical Medicine
SALZER'S SEEDS
ARE SOWN
THE WORLD OVER
Shakespeare says the GOOD NAME IS statement by offering long-kerneled corn,
A prominent Agricultural F new corn, exclaimed:
"Salzer, you have startle World in discovering this most corn! Indeed, it is the most remain by mortal eye.
But not a bushel of it is for not one-tenth enough in existen dous orders that will pour in goes on the market.
Next year we may have en now the best anybody can do package—enough to grow 1½ b You are mighty welcome to a 8c in stamps to pay mailing c
The thing that puzzles us GOING TO NAME OUR NAME
Mr. Salzer will not be conte a slashing, smashing good nam in gold to the seed-buyer who suitable name.
We want you, reader, to help corn, won't you? It does not the corn-naming coupon below it to-night and be a candidate prize.
A prominent Agricultural Expert, on seeing this corn, exclaimed:
"Salzer, you have startled the Agricultural world in discovering this most remarkable breed of corn. Indeed, it is the most remarkable corn ever seen mortal eye.
But not a bushel of it is for sale. For there is one-tenth enough in existence to fill the tremens orders that will pour in when this new corn is on the market.
Next year we may have enough to sell. Right v the best anybody can do is to obtain a sample kage—enough to grow 1 bushel of seed for 1911. u are mighty welcome to a sample. Please send in stamps to pay mailing charges.
The thing that puzzles us is WHAT ARE WE WING TO NAME OUR NAMELESS CORN?
Mr. Salzer will not be content with anything but dashing, smashing good name. So he offers $500 gold to the seed-buyer who hits upon the most table name.
We want you, reader, to help us out. Name this n, won't you? It does not cost a penny to use corn-naming coupon below. Fill it out, send tonight and be a candidate for the $500 cash size.
Shakespeare says there is nothing in a name, but John A. Salzer says A GOOD NAME IS WORTH A FORTUNE. He backs up his statement by offering you. $500.00 in gold to name his wonderful, long-kerneled corn, pictured in life size at the left on this page. A prominent Agricultural Expert, on seeing this new corn, exclaimed: BILLION $ GRASS
"Salzer, you have started the Agricultural World in discovering this most remarkable breed of corn!"
Indeed, it is the most remarkable corn ever seen by mortal eye.
But not a bushel of it is for sale. For there is not one-tenth enough in existence to fill the tremendous orders that will pour in when this new corn goes on the market.
If you yet yearn to have enough to sell. Right now the best anybody can do is to obtain a sample package—enough to grow 1 bushel of seed for 1911. You are mighty welcome to a sample. Please send 8c in stamps to pay mailing charges.
The thing that puzzles us is, WHAT ARE WE GOING TO NAME OUR NAMLESS CORN?
Mr. Salzer will not be content with anything but a slashing, smashing good name. So he offers $500 in gold to the seed-buyer who hits upon the most suitable name.
We want you, reader, to help us out. Name this corn, won't you? It does not cost a penny to use the corn-naming coupon below. Fill it out, send it tonight and be a candidate for the $500 cash prize.
THE JUDGES
We are fortunate in securing capable and prominent men in Judges in our big corn-naming Prof. R. A. Moore. Wisconsin College, Inns, Jesse County, shn. Hon. Robt. Calvert, U. S. These eminent men will name you suggest, and, if it will get the $500 prize. No more where you live, you will be opportunity to land the money. Fill out the free corn-naming or pen as you please, but be sure plete home address.
We are fortunate in securing three of the most table and prominent men in Wisconsin to sit as ages in our big corn-naming contest. They are: F. R. A. Moore, Wisconsin State Agricultural Department, J. L. Moore, Wisconsin from Wisconsin, H. Robt. Calvert, I. S. Customs, La Crosse. These eminent men will weigh carefully the one you suggest, and, if it is most suitable, you get the $500 prize. No matter who you are or you live, you will be given a fair, square opportunity to land the money. Fill out the free corn-naming coupon with penel pen as you please, but be sure to give your com- home address.
We are fortunate in securing three of the most capable and prominent men in Wisconsin to sit as Judges in our big corn-naming contest. They are Prof. R. A. Moore, Wisconsin State Agricultural College, Hon. Robt. Calvert, S. C. Customs, La Crossa. These enlist men will weigh carefully the name you suggest, and, if it is most suitable, you will get the $500 prize. No matter who you are or where you live, you will be given a fair, square opportunity to land your money. You will be given a corn-naming coupon with penel or pen as you please, but be sure to give your complete home address.
Salzer's Catalogue
It's the most original seed
is gladly mailed to intending
remit 10c and get lots of re
gamples, including Billion $ G
etc., worth a little farm to got
18c and we add a package of
JOHN A.
182 S. 8TH
It's the most original seed book published, and
gladly mailed to intending purchasers free; or
lit 10c and get lots of remarkable farm seed
apples, including Billion $ Grass, Alfalfa, Speltz,
worth a little farm to get a start with, or send
and we add a package of Nameless Corn.
HN A. SALZE
S. 8TH STREET
It's the most original seed book published, and is gladly mailed to intending purchasers free; or remit 10c and get lots of remarkable farm seed samples, including Billion $ Grass, Alfalfa, Speltz, etc, with a little farm to get a start with, or send 18c and we add a package of Namelies Corn.
JOHN A.SALZER SEED CO. 182 S. 8TH STREET LACROSSE,WIS.
16 SEED BARGAIN
Eettuce, Turnip, Rutabaga.
Union, Celery, Carrot.
Radishes, alone worth 16 cents!
Parsley, Melon, Tomato.
Flower Seeds, 50 Sorts.
Nelms, including big catalog, all postpaid,
of 10,000 kernels of richest finest, most de-
brilliantly beautiful flowers, will
grow BUSHELS and BUSHELS of vegetables
set of exquisitely beautiful flowers, ALL
and if you send 220 POSTAGE, OLD
Pailings for which were seeking a name,
appraised at the quantity of vegetables you
need collection.
SEED CO., 182 Ss. 8th St., La Crosse Wiz.
execute
els.
They are brun
CARTERS
LITTLE
IVER
MILLS.
$125,000 net from
$15,000 from 22
$3,200 from 20 a
San Joaquin V
A cow and an acre of alfalfa will earl
Grapes will yield from $100 to $300
while oranges will produce from $250 to
an acre. There are ten million arable an
unimproved land for $50 an acre.
Ten acres are enough to comfortably y
a fine living, with money in the bank. For
1500 Each, Lettuce, Turnip, Rutabaga
1000 Each, Onion, Celery, Carrot.
1000 Rarest Radishes, alone worth 16
100 Each, Parsley, Melon, Tomato.
1200 Brilliant Flower Seeds, 50 Sort
In all 10,000 kernels, including big catalog, all
only 10 in stamps.
More information on 10,000 kernels of highest, finest,
lemon vegetable and brilliantly beautiful flower so
furnish all summer long, BUSINESSES and BUSINESSES of ve
getable, organically beautiful flowers
FOR ICE POSTPAID and, if you send 25 POSTAGE, we
a package of our corn Prolog, for which we are seeking
You will be greatly surprised at the quantity of vegeta
can get from our Prolog.
JOHN A. SALZER SEED CO., 182 Sa. 8th St., La Crosse
1500 Each, Lettuce, Turnip, Rutabaga.
1000 Each, Onion, Celery, Carrot.
1000 Rarest Radishes, alone worth 16 cents!
100 Each, Parsley, Melon, Tomato.
1200 Brilliant Flower Seeds, 50 Sorts.
In all 10,000 kernels, including big catalog, all postpaid,
only 10 in stamps.
In each bagion of 10,000 kernels of richest, finest, most
vegetable and brilliantly beautiful flower seed, will
furish all summer long. In each bagion of 10,000 kernels of
exquisitely beautiful flowers, ALL
FOR THE POSTPAD and, if you send 22c POSTAGE, we will add
a package of our corn Prologue and a name.
For the quantity of vegetable you can grow from this 10 cent seed collection.
$125,000 net from 1200 acres grapes. $15,000 from 22 acres peaches. $3,200 from 20 acres raisins, in the San Joaquin Valley, California
Don't Persecute your Bowels
Don't Persecute your Bowels
*Cot cut cathartic and sagittative. They are brazen*
*CARTER'S LITTLE*
CARTER'S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS
Purify vegetable. Act
gently on the liver,
eliminate bile, and
sooth the digestive
smoothness of the bowel.
Cera Con-
scious. Rilease.
Bileas-
A cow and an acre of alfalfa will earn $120 a year in the San Joaquin Valley. Grapes will yield from $100 to $300 per acre; peaches and apricots, $150 to $500; while oranges will produce from $250 to $500, and in many instances more than $1000 an acre. There are ten million arable and irrigable acres here. You still may buy untreated or treated fruit. Ten acres are enough to comfortably support a small family. Twenty acres afford a fine living, with money in the bank. Forty acres should make you rich.
Small Pill, Small Dose, Small Price
GENUINE must bear signature:
You pay from one-fourth to one-
half of the crop, usually can be paid
out of the crop.
for out of the crop.
The crops can be raised in the San Joaquin country—oranges and pears. The crops can be raised in and hardy potatoes. Products of the temperate and semi-tropical zones flourish.
KNOWN SINCE 1836 AS RELIABLE
PLANTEN'S TRADE MARK
C & C OR BLACK
CAPSULES
SUPERIOR REMEDY. URINARY DISCARGES
DRUGISTS BY MAIL OR BAIL INFO: NO.
H PLANTEN & SON. 1819 HEWY ST. BROOKLYN, N.Y.
Plenty of water for irrigation drawn from the river is easy for one to make a start. Land between the rows can be used, with little effort, for crops. The point is to make every crop. The point is to make every crop. What some farmers have done: Frank Thomas, of Fresno, Cal., started his career ago. He had but $300 to start on. To make it happen, he has an income of over $200 a year.
DR. J. D. KELLOGG'S
William Shrayer. R. F. D. 7. Fresno.
Cal, bought his first ten acres six
years ago. Now owns sixty acres all
painted for, and refuses $1200 for his
farm.
Romody for the prompt relief of
Asthma and. Hay Fever. Ask your
drugslist for it. Write for FREE SAMPLE.
NORTHROP & YLMAN Co. Ltd.; BUFFALO, N.
M. F. Tarpey, of Fresno, owns vineyard of 1,200 acres from which he harvested 1,000 acres on the Harold estate, twenty-two acres of peaches yielded a $15,000 crop.
S in every county in
the United States and
Pennsylvania.
Land in the Texas
Arizona and South
Arizona. We have
exclusive dates
compilation, etc.
Ohio, General Agent.
PATENTS Watson E. Coleman W. A.
ington, D.C. Bookfree. Highest
references. Best results
never sticks to the iron.
DEFIANCE STARCH
CHEW AND
MAILP T
Once Try, Alwe
5¢
BLACK BROS
LAST MORNING MAXIMUM
TOBACCO
CREATING A NEW
COUPON IN
EACH PACKAGE
5¢ BLOCK BROTH MISSISSIPPI MAILPOUCH TOBACCO CHEW AND SMOKE MAILPOUCH TOBACCO COUPON IN EACH PACKAGE Once Try, Always Buy
Here is a joy collection,
beating the world, composed of 10,000 kernels
of the richest, juiciest,
tenderest seeds;
We Will Pay You $500 in Gold
BILLION $ GRASS
SALZER'S
BILLION DOLLAR GRASS
ALFALFA
Pronounced Absolutely Pure, No Weeds.
Largest growers of Clover, Timothy and Gra-
Oats, Barley and Potatoes in America.
EX-GOV. HOARD, OF WISCONSIN, from
acres sown to Salzer's 20th Century Alfalfa,
vested within 24 weeks after seeding $2500
v of magnificent hay, or at the rate of $83.33 per
magnificent Alfalfa Clover will produce a crop
any farm in America where timothy will grow.
famed for its stubborn hardiness and prodigal v
Price, 20th Century (Pure Seed)—sow 20
per A—20 lbs., $4.90; 100 lbs., $22.00.
Largest growers of Clover, Timothy and Grass, Barley and Potatoes in America.
GX-GOV. HOARD. OF WISCONSIN, from sown to Salzer's 20th Century Alfalfa, at $8.33 per significant hay, for the $8.33 per Alfalfa Alfalfa Clover will produce a crop in America where timothy will grow. for its stubborn hardiness and prodigal price, 20th Century (Pure Seed)—sow 20 A., 20 lbs., $4.90; 10 lbs., $22.00.
Largest growers of Clover, Timothy and Grasses, Oats, Barley and Potatoes in America.
EX-GOV. HOARD, OF WISCONSIN, from 30 acres sown to Salzer's 200th Century Alfalfa, harvested within 24 weeks after seeding $2500 worth of magnificent hay, or at the rate of $83.3 per acre.
Salzer's Alfalfa Clover will produce a crop on any farm in America where timothy will grow. It is famed for its stubborn hardiness and prodigial vigor. Price. 20th Century (Pure Seed)—sow 20 lbs.
Price, 20th Century (Pure Seed)—sow 20 lbs.
per A.-20 lbs., $4.90; 100 lbs., $22.00.
POTATOES
100.000 Bus. Pedigree Seed Potatoes.
Largest Growers Seed Potatoes in America, yielding from 150 to 600 bushels per acre for each and every acre you plant. Price range from $2.00 to $4.00 per barrel.
Largest Growers Seed from 150 to 600 bus. every acre you plant. I per Harrel.
No other Seed House with State Agricultural Pier Seed Co. This grower pedigree, varieties forth by State College, sota, the Dakotas and a in the Middle West.
FREE
JOHN A. SALZE
Gentlemen:—Pleas
For your new corn 1 a
My Name
P.O.
R. P. D.
from 1200 acres
2 acres pea
acres raised
in Valley,
sir $120 a year in the S. 500 per acre; praches an to $500, and in many insti te and irrigable acres he bably support a small family. Forty acres should make.
Largest Growers Seed Potatoes in America, you from 150 to 600 bushcels per acre for each acre you plant. Price range from $2.00 to $4.00. No other Seed House has kept in such close to State Agricultural Colleges as the John A. Seed Co. This great Seed House specializes in pedigree varieties of seed, that are bred by State Colleges of Wisconsin, Iowa, MN, the Dakotas and all other Agricultural Colleges in the Middle West.
FREE Corn-Nam
JOHN A. SALZER SEED CO.
182 South 8th St.
La Crosse,
Gentlemen—Please send me your Free 1910 Offer
Whose Seed Have You?
For your new corn I suggest this name.
My Name
P.O. _____
R.P.D. State _____
In 1200 acres grapes.
acres peaches.
acres raisins, in the
Valley, California
$120 a year in the San Joaquin Valley.
per acre, peaches and apricots, $150 to $500;
$500, and in many instances more than $1000
and irrigable acres here. You still may buy
support a small family. Twenty acres afford
any acres should make you rich.
No other Seed House has kept in such close touch with State Agricultural Colleges as the John A. Sailzer Seed Co. This great Seed House specializes in pedigree cultivation and has been fortunate to fortune State Colleges of Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota, the Dakotas and all other Agricultural Colleges in the Middle West.
FREE Corn-Naming Coupon
Carson Reed, Reedley, Cal. from a farm in the southeast of Sultana rainsetted 43,200. I know this valley from end to end. I went to work in it and in every one of its counties. I have interviewed farmers, ranchers and merchants and collated the testimony of crop experts. All this valuable information is contained in the San Joaquin Valley land survey. I write for it, giving full name and address. I will also send you our immigrant Journal, The Earth, six months free. The Santa Fe employs me to help with the land survey. The company has no land to sell, but I will gladly refer your inquiry to reliable sources. Low fares are offered by the Santa Fe daily. Comfortable tourist sleeper accommodations can be made at other times for a reasonable cost. Santa Fe tourist service to San Francisco is quickest. C. L. SEAGRAVES, General Colonization Agent
TWO
FOP.
1150 Railway Exchange
PATENTS
Patents advertised free.
W. N. U., CLEVEN
SMOK
DOU
A. T. & S. F. R. Ry. System
1150 Railway Exchange
Chicago, Ill.
PATENTS Capitalize your brains. Advice and book S free. Spee-
tive and UFO. Personal services.
Patents advertised free. R. R. O'FLY. Washington, D.C.
W. N. U., CLEVELAND, NO. 9-1910.
SMOKE
OUCH
Positively the greatest
grass of the century.
Sown when the ground is
thoroughly warm, it will
produce from two to four
crops of hay the first season,
yielding all the way from
10 to 15 tons per
acre. It is prodigiously
plugged.
It requires 20 lbs. seed
per acre.
Price: Salzer's Superior,
20 lbs. $1.75; 50 lbs.
$3.00; 100 lbs. $5.50.
Salzer's 20th Century,
20 lbs. $2.25; 50 lbs.
$5.00; 100 lbs. $5.50.
We commend our 20th
Century strain as the pur-
ple, we believe on earth.
over, Timothy and Grasses
mats in America.
WISCONSIN: from 30
20th Century Almaia, har-
tered by the University.
the rate of $83.33 per acre.
will produce a crop on
timothy will grow. It is
ardiness and prodigial vigor.
(Pure Seed)—sow 20 lbs.
$22.00.
Potatoes in America, yield- dies per acre for each and range from $2.00 to $4.00 was kept in such close touch colleges as the John A. Sullivan House specializes in of seed that are brought of Wisconsin, Iowa, Minne- other Agricultural Colleges
EED C
CROSSE, W
Corn-Namim
SEED CO.
182 South 8th St.
La Crosse, Wis.
send me your Free 1910 Seed
Whose Seeds
Have You Used?
test this name
Wor
es grapes.
hes.
as, in the
California
Joaquin Valley,
pricots, $150 to $500;
es more than $1000
You still may buy
Twenty acres afford
en rich.
WE
Senate
The street
160 ACH
FARM
WEST
CA
Pleasan Do Go
Do Go
uine ta
curo or
Bathroom
ABORGE
Fitting
poot
Allays pat
for free bo
W. P. TOYOTA
Do you wish a sample packet of the corn
which we offer you $5 to name? _____ (If you
do he sure to enclose $6 to pay mailing charges,
you need not have sample to name the
corn.
WESTERN CANADA
Senator Doliver, of Iowa, says:
"The stream of emigrants from the United States to Canada will continue."
Senator Doliver, recently paid a visit to Western Canada, and says: "There is a reason for English speaking people to come to Western Canada." The rumor of so many our people are pleased with its Government and the protection of law, and their treatment of Thunderland, and low contributions large-
Headache
"My father has been a sufferer from sick headache for the last twenty-five years and never found any relief until he began taking your Cascarets. Since he has begun taking Cascarets he has never had the headache. They have entirely cured him. Cascarets do what you recommend. Cascarets will give you the privilege of using his medicine in 1220 Reiner St., W. Indianapolis, Ind.
Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Texts Good.
Do Good. Never Sicken (Weaken or Grip).
10c. 25c. 50c. Never sold in bulk. The generality of treatment G.C. Guarantees to cure or your money back.
Removes Burial Enlargements,
Thickened, Swollen Tissue,
Cured from any Bruise or Strain, Cured
from any Infection, or from a Burial
Does not Hitter, remove the hair
or lay the horse up. $ 00 a
Bridal Veil. $ 00 a
ABSORBINE, dk. (maschin k and b bottle)
post. Varscan Vein, Varscan Cord,
Varscan Vein, Varscan Cord,
reference. Will you move your writ
for free book and testimonials. Mildly on
W. P. YOUNG, P. B. 310 Temple St., Syringa,
Maryland.
PATENT Book and Advice FREE. Meet
W. P. YOUNG, P. B. 310 Temple St., Syringa,
Maryland. D.C. Etsy. Get it now.
can farmers who make Canada's home during 1800 years grow potatoes during 1800 years during you added to the wealth of the country. 8170,000,000.00 Grain growing, mixed farming 8170,000,000.00 Oil profitable. Free Home gardens in the very best districts. In the very best districts. Grow the richest, water and water within certain areas and churches in every settlement.
H. M. WILLIAMS
Law Building
Toledo, Ohio
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ABSORBINE