The Gazette
Saturday, March 12, 1910
Cleveland, Ohio
Page text (machine-generated)
TWENTY-SEVENTH YEAR. NO. 33.
Costumes in Fashion
THE FASHION OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
On the left is a long coat of gray cloth, trimmed with darker shade of brald- black velvet toque with gray, green and black algrette. The second is a blue serge taller red suit, with collar and buttons of black satin, large black hat, with blue plumes.
TYPE OF SPRING MILLINERY | TIGHT SKIRT NOT GRACEFUL
Eagle
Costumes
On the left is a long coat of gr
of braid—black velvet toque with gr
The second is a blue serge tailo
black satin, large black hat, with b
TYPE OF SPRING MILLINERY
Hat with High Gathered Crown Most Elaborately and Becomingly Trimmed.
Among the early spring models is a comfortable hat, becoming and well fitting, made with a high gathered crown held out with an inner one of book mustlin, and a fluted brim of soft moiré. This does not hang around the face, but is made double and has enough thickness to hold it in position.
About the high crown is tied a wide scarf of soft satin ribbon. When black is used for the hat then one of the new light blues is used for the scarf. Silver and gold gauze are also tied around instead of ribbon and end in a fine, careless bow in front.
The expensive models show this hat with a crown of lace moire shot with blue, pink, and green lined with chiffon or gauze, to match the color of the scarf.
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This is made in black face cloth, and is a simple sacque shape, a style which matrons always find so useful. The loose bishop sleeve is set to a turn-back curl of cloth, braided lightly at the edge, the collar being braided to match. Bonnet of black crinoline trimmed with oatricin tips and black satin ribbon.
Materials required: Three yards cloth 48 inches wide, 1 dozen yards braid.
Keeping Faucets Bright.
In the bathroom the nickel faucets can be kept bright as new indefinitely if frequently washed and given a brisk rub daily when the room is set in order. A clean cheesecloth duster serves this purpose specially well.
THE GAZETTE
Mistake Made In Carrying the Fashion of the Moment to Undue Length.
A grave protest should be made against the skirt that is narrow at its best and tied in just above the ankles at its worst.
It should be condemned and discarded by every woman who considers personal comfort and a graceful appearance. There is an independent quality of American women that refuses to walk with knees pressed together and a hammered Japanese manner of taking thin steps.
After all, there is a great artisitic delight in a flowing skirt that follows in soft, sinuous lines the motions of the figures.
In Paris and London women have accepted the inhibition of easy, graceful motion, but it is to be hoped that our fair ones will in some usual and clever way attain the best of these suggestions and at the same time keep the senseless tyranny at arm's length.
Of Craft Cloth.
The portiere may be more play and altogether possible in the verlest amateur if some simple idea be carried out.
Make it of arts and crafts cloth in a soft, natural tone, and after it is hymned with silk to match it work a row of simple trees one above another down the length of the hanging along one of its solvages.
Not in elaborate embroidery, but in the coarsest of cross-stitching done in worsted yarn, and in a combination of dusky green and blue shades, each so dull as to melt into one another.
Again, if a one-toned curtain be desirable, choose an Indian red, dull brown or blue, and using the coarse worsted yarn, hemsithe a broad hem along a very 'open line' which you have drawn, or overcast the hem in coarse hemming stitches a quarter of an inch in length.
Necessary Gowns.
A modiest claims that three dresses a season are sufficient for the average woman, citing the ever useful tailor-made, a calling gown for afternoon wear and decorate for evening wear. This might do in a case of necessity, but no society, woman can get along with one evening dress for an entire season any more than she can get along with one pair of gloves. A woman moving in a circle of well-dressed women must dress equally well or else step down and out. Her dress must be good, stylish and noticeable. Dress does not make the woman, but it most assuredly does make her place in circles where stylish attire is more important than many other things.
Fine Idea.
One embosses one's own letter paper now, the neat raised monogram being pressed into the paper by means of a celluloid tablet and a little roller. Any combination of three letters may be obtained in the celluloid, and it is the matter of a few moments to emboss a whole quite of writing paper.
ESTABLISHED AUGUST 25, 1883,
AND ISSUED EVERY WEEK ON TIME SINCE.
CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY, MARCH 12, 1910.
HERE IT IS, AND JUST AS IT IS!
HERE IT IS, AND JUST AS IT IS!
OKLAHOMA HOUSE PASSES A
BILL TO DISFRANCHISE 40,000
AFRO-AMERICANS.
DEBATE BITTEREST KNOWN
A Republican "in Spite of the Negro—Will Appeal to the Coffees if Democratic Governor Haskell Signs: the Bill —Neither Party Loves the Negro.
Guthrie, Okla.—The most entitled legislative day ever known in Oklahoma history resulted last Tuesday when the Democratic majority in the house declared their enactment of the Taylor senate initiative and referendum bill was for the purpose of disfranchising 40,000 Negro voters, and that this was desired for the purpose of keeping the Republican party in the minority. Only the coolest heads prevented personal encounters and perjured bloodshed. The bill was passed by a bitter page now goes to Gov. Haskell for approval. The Republicans will immediately appeal to the courts if the governor signs the bill.
"We have the Republican party in the minority, and we mean to keep it there," declared Smith of Custer county, who then launched into a tirade against the race, "I am forever against the man who has anything to do with a placer," declared Smith of Browder, who would sit down at my table.
The principal speech on the Republican side was by Judge Charles A. Cook of Muskogee, a native of North Carolina, who as a cadet drilled results for service in the Confederate army. He said in part:
"The passage of this measure reminds me of the South in reconstruction and that it has only the same result—bitterness among the people. The Negro was freed 40 years ago, and by education, and training he has fitted himself fairly for the elective franchise. The advancement of the Negroes during that 40 years is surpassed only by that made by the Japanese, and by the Southerner, am a Republican, not because of the negro, but in spite of him, and I left the Democratic party in Carolina when to be Republican took as much bravery as to stand before the cannon's mouth during battle hent. Your enactment of this law will be in elation of the federal government with the United States government in securing statehood."
DOINGS OF THE RACE
Clara Miller, 46, leads the Mohawk N. Y., high school--brightest pupil in the school.
Thomas Johnson, another Afro-American pupil, took first honors in January in the high school at Jersey City, N. J.
The Heffin bill, designed to told "Jim crow" street cars upon the people of the District of Columbia, has been killed in committee.
If you want the truth and the race news each week, subscribe for the "old reliable" Gazette. This is a race paper, pure and simple, all the time.
Chicago has an Afro-American deputy sheriff in Col. John R. Marshall. Something the Crescent City, Q., has not seen. The best we have ever had is an assistant turnkey at $60 or $70 a month.
Joseph C. Johnson of Detroit has been promoted three times by the American Exchange National bank of that city, and is now correspondence clerk of the institution. This is encouraging.
Georgia has left but one local African American federal officeholder. Hon. H. A. Rucker, internal revenue collector at Atlanta. Taft has "fired" all the others and given their places to Democrats.
President Taft is soon to remove H. A. Rucker, for years internal revenue collector at Atlanta, Ga., and give the place to a "white" Georgia Democrat. This explains his appointment of H. L. Johnson to succeed John C. Daney. See editorial note on Page 2. Two Americans good miserable treatment as long as they "cledd us" and "it out." Result: Two "white" new dead. A pussie with bloodhounds have been unable to overtake them.
"The supreme court of Louisiana has solemnly declared that in contemplation of the law "a Negro is a person having a perceptible mixture of Negro blood." The court makes the train conductor, the hotel-keeper and most any old "white"斗 the judge of what is a "perceptible mixture." There are many different what constitutes a "perceptible mixture" as there are "white" people in the south.
Our colored people are so impressed with the value of "white" people's opinions that they are ever ready to how to them in reverential adoration. At their meetings and general public functions, the "white" press is generally requested to send a reporter, and the colorful press definitely turns the whole affair into a light, crap game or misstated show. Colored people rarely consider a col-
teach paper. A different importance to connect the attendance of a representative. After the "white" news has pinned the whole business into a past of ridicule the Negro woman must be called prior to a treaty and vaxed. She must be treated and vaxed daily, on people they may not ever wipe his proctile and learn to respect and have confidence in their own institutions. - Chinneh. - O. Union.
It is it so, to remark how the speakers are pulling out of the arrangements ter Wilberforce day at another literary society, Washington, D. C. The news has gone the formula that the president married a white woman and they, fear less their appearance on the program may be construed as an approval of social conditions. The program is an affirmative that men with good sense will stop a net that will be of much material assistance to a needy school simply because the president of the same married a white woman about thirty or more years ago. Or course Negroes themselves do not take kindly to such marriages. They feel that there is in such unions something that they do not want. Still they are willing to allow them to look after their own business. - Durham, N. C. Reformer.
Mr. Taft must have a very peculiar opinion of the northern, eastern and western Negro votes, otherwise, certain it is, he would not appoint a Georgian Negro, who can neither vote nor have his vote coursed if he could, for the state, as recorder or deeds for the District of Columbia. If that Negro is objectionable to the whites who vote and he can't, why should he not be objectionable to the Negroes of the sections referred to? In fact, he and his distranchised bank, pack national conventions and force on them men who don't want to vote, these men could not be elected. He represents just as much as John C. Dancy of Wilmington, N. W., infamy, so far as the rights, the duty and justice are concerned. For one, we accept it as an insult, and hope every other many Negro does Martinsburg (W. Va.) Pioneer Press.
Bishop A. Walters, D. P., of the A. M. E. Zion Church, Connection, churches of England just in time to an "English, mad dog" afflicted with an attack of "Negro phobia," and who in his madness attempted to bit all the colored folks on earth and ost of them that had gotten within "pearly gates." The bishop hands him out a big dose—in the Queen, most vigorous and the most
and' told him to take it in whole doses. He guaranteed a cure forever if future demonstrations of the hysteria. This vile slumberer of the race will not be heard from again soon. Of course, the incident we would have yet been ignorance as to the pronouncement of the good bishop's relation, 'Gi Good kid, if you please. He told the Englishman that he was in deed and in truth related to the priesthood of Jesus. Abraham Lincoln, butly for Wetters', Indianapolis Freeman.
The Negro citizen in each and every state in the Union should have the right to vote, the right to be elected to office in city, state or nation. Those rights were bought by his ancestors' blood, and written in the constitution with the jaws whose handles were stained with blood that strewed the battlefields of the outland, and no city or state has a right to deprive him of those rights, rise up and fight: "THEY THAT WOULD BE FREE MUST THEM SELVES STRIKE THE BLOW." Strike! Taxation without representation is wrong, unRepublican, unDemocratic and unAmerican. God give it to the southern states so pay prosecution debts, what is the use of the Negro voters of Indiana, Ohio, Illinois, West Virginia and Michigan rolling up modester majorities for the Republican ticket? What's the answer? There will not be any "Jim crow" cars for Louisville, Ky., and a "heavy shake" for Editors inward and Peters. The power of the pre-incumbent in this case is significant in this case, and unaccepting. We have entirely many distributing laws now, notwithstanding the palating position of some of our social leaders. Exit "Jim crow." -Indianapolis Freeman.
Tenth People's Concert
Next Sunday by the Cleveland Symphony orchestra, will have Mr. Emil Ring as conductor and Miss Rita Elandi, soprano, as soloist. Following is the program:
1. March, "Return from Elba"—F. O. Boes.
2. Overture, "Waverley"—Bortzio.
3. aria, Dieh theure Hale (from Tambunser) Wagner; Miss Rita Elandi.
4. "Fate," Symphonic Poem—Chas. Rychlik.
5. Selection, "Tosca"—Puecini.
6. Recitative and Aria, "Ermani insolvent" (from Ermani) (Verdi; Miss Rita Elandi.
The Mill (from String Quartet)—Rafal.
Waltz, "Brume on Blonde"—Waldbufel.
The following Sunday, March 20, an extra grand testimonial concert will be given the orchestra. Mr. Emil Ring and Johnn H. Beck, conductors. The Singers club, Roes Davis, director, will assist in the program and an extra treat is sure to re-
Fella De Bequities
Beaver St. Warner was in Pittsburgh Oscar Stewart was in Pittsburgh Thursday, Mrs. O. Grimes Friday evening, Mr. Grimes Sunday and Carrie D. Pinkney Saturday evening—The Ethelzer society met at Mrs. Allen's Tuesday evening and the Zonaave society at Mrs. J. C. Cobb Thursday evening—Miss Susie Harris, Mrs. W. Allen Mrs. H. Johnson and son are ill—Mrs. Einders Sandra a social Saturday evening for the N. B. A. M. E. church, Jerry Bolden was in B. Friday evening
Wins a State Oratorical Contest. Color: Rapids. Iowa—Henry Coleman of Cornell college at M. Vernon, a member of the race, with his oration, "The Philosophy of the Race Problem" won the state oratorical contest here last week.
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.
Sandusky—The A. M. E. S. Sunday school is doing fine. Rev. E. R. Gools has been removed by the presiding elder. Miss Marion Evans has returned to Akron. Her aunt, Mrs. Pate, accompanied her as tar as Lainah. Miss Ida Westison is very ill. The Sewing Circle will meet at Mrs. Scott's Thursday. Mr. Rvelds and Hopkins of Norwalk were here last Thursday.
Washington C. H.—Roy, Grant of Sabina is assisting at the A. M. E. church. Revival services are. Mrs. Empy Bayisman is ill. Mrs. Elizabeth Lawrence fell recently and broke a limb. Mrs. Claire Payne and George Cassell spent Sunday in Bloomingburg. Stewart Quinn is convulsed. The whist club met at Miss Nettie Tayler's Monday afternoon. The Gazette wishes an agent in Sabina and Lancaster.
Xenla—J. W. Loftwin has been appointed a mail carrier between the postoffice and the station. Rev. B. W. Clark has been called to the pastorate of Antioch Baptist church. Columbus—Willierforce students are taking a course in theology. How Clark and Everett attended the Ministerial institute in Dayton this week. The new tobacco factory has opened and Timekeeper W. S. Rogers will take on hands from time to time until he reaches the limit. Dion
**Fostoria**—Rev. R. J. Fleming, returned from Midport堡 first Friday. Rev. Hunter of Baptist church reached at the First Baptist church Sunday evening. —Miss Jennie Burke of Cleveland visited her parents Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. F. Brooks visited in Trey Sunday. He returned in the evening and she went on to Knightstown to arrange for the shipment of the house and furniture. Mr. and Mrs. Sampson and Seymour of Cleveland visited Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Wilson Sunday. —Rev C. L. Mundell is in Woodstock where he has a charge.
Sandusky. — Six were received for baptism at the Second Baptist church Sunday. The revival will continue over Sunday. It has been well attended. Mr. Butler joined church Sunday. S. S. class 4 has the banner. Baptizing the first Sunday in April, Mr. Moses Montgomery is stopping at Mr. Chas, Taylor's. Rev. Debs preached on the A. M. E. Church Sunday evening at P. R. Davis and visited their brother and wife, Mr. and Mrs. W. Garett—Mrs. Victor Jones, Mrs. Janney, Mrs. Rhodes, Mrs. P. Anderson, Mrs. Stephen Wallace and Mr. Luther Jones are conventional.
Dayton.-Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Robinson entertained Mrs. Chester Cassey. Miss M. Banks and Mr. Owen's attends super Sunday evening.-Rev. Dinsmore of Wilberforce university preached at Baker Street church Sunday and quilted ill.-Mr. Cook remains very ill.-Mrs. Eunna Cassey has returned to Wingington. Mich. She spent the winter with her mother, Mrs. Mary Goodler.-The recital at the O. W. C. A. last week was well attended.-The new Y. M. C. A. building on Dunbar avenue nears completion. A meeting of high school college and normal graduate schools on Friday night discusses matters of interest to the race. Smithfield.-Services at the A. M. E. church were well attended. Sabbath, Rev. C. M. Hogans was sick and Revs. W. H. Veney and Wm. Munts preached. The trustees' entertainment Saturday evening was a success. The S. S. Missionary repped a program Sunday afternoon. Miss Mimie Beal is sick. Mr. Cooper and Mrs. Beal are ill. Sunday and dined with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ramsey.-Mrs. Dave West and daughter of Hopedale spent Sunday with her mother.-Mrs. J. Christian of Steubenville visited her daughter, Mrs. R. West.-Mrs. A. Harrison returned to Pittsburgh Sunday.-C. W. Parks was here Saturday.-C. W. Parks and Carter Steubenville last week. Hines and Cassell were at Emerson Sunday.-Mr. Peterson has out the --- at Hopedale.
Correspondents must mail all letters for publication at their main postoffice sufficiently early on Monday (or Sunday) of each week to have them reach The Gazette office on Tuesday morning, the next day, also, the next day, and that of the day or town on the outside of the wrapper about returned copies. Unless this latter is done, proper credit cannot be given you. Lists of names, wedding presents, etc., obituary notices, speeches, resolutions, poetry, inquiries for relatives and advertisements of all kinds. Including items announcing entertainments to be held in the near future will be sent out at the rate of ten cents a line, six words to a line. Our rates for display advertisements will be sent on application. Send postal note and not stamps during warm weather.
East Liverpool—The A. M. E. W. M. m society was entertained at Mrs. John Bailey's Thursday afternoon, Lunchroom. Rev. D. W. Butler visited in Pittsburgh Thursday—Mrs. Daniel Salah has returned from Edwards, Miss, where she spent the winter with her daughter, Mrs. Wm. Scott—Mrs. Jesse Reed died Friday morning at a hospital where she leaves a husband and three children, sisters and three brothers. Funeral Sunday afternoon from Grant Street church, Rev. D. W. Butler officiating—Miss Maria Marks, Mrs. and Mrs. Thomas Mosby of Lismore, Mr. Reed of Columbus and Mr. and Mrs. Lafayette Phillips of Midland, Pa. attended—Mr. Wm. Gray, who has been working in New Castle, visited his wife Sunday—Mr. Robert Allen of New
Brixton visited his sister, Mrs. Alfred
Mentra, Sunday.
Weltville,—Mr. James Fonix has returned to work after several weeks' lay off with a moused foot. Mr. John Collins has returned after spiking the winter with his sister in Philadelphia. Mr. Collins has returned a week's illness. Mrs. Mabie Brown, Frank Jones and Eda Fisher are ill.—The S. E. Easter program at 2:30 p.m. March 20. The public is invited.—Mr. Matthew Smith was home Tuesday looking after a moused toe and the foot. The evening proved very interesting. Subject: "Resolved, that a man can gain more by reading and conversation than by traveling and observation." Negative, J. M. Brown and Rev. Williams; affirmative, P. E. Spires and S. Williams; positive, Spires and family attended Mrs. Jesse Reed's funeral in East Liverpool Sabbath afternoon.
Hamilton.—The "Jolly Doon" first banquet Wednesday evening was a decided success. W. E. Davison is combined with rheumatism. W. H. Norman is critically ill. Mrs. M. Hill is visiting in Camberwell. Mrs. Rachelle daughter, Mrs. A. Lawson. Mrs. Samuel Jones has resigned her position with Mrs. Davison and returned to Indianapolis. Mr. Ernie Owings was called to Carlisle, Ky., by his mother's illness. Mrs. Laura Nixon is ill. Mrs. Noll Baker is able to be out. William Hogans spent Sunday in Oxford. The Gazette wishes an agent there. Mr. and Mrs. Caffot Mrs. Palmer spent Sunday in Midtown. The Gazette wishes an agent there. The Middletown Embroidery club met here at Mrs. Wilson's refreshments. Mrs. Cobman of Willeborre spent Sunday with Mrs. J. D. Singleton. Rev. Burnett preached at the morning service at Wood Street Baptist church Sunday. Mrs. Works is visiting long parents in Camberwell. Services at both churches are on Monday. Mrs. Wilson held their grand opening Monday night. It was weathered by W. We wish the most blessings.
Cadiz—Mrs. Alphonse West took over the Mrs. H. L. court in the notorious last Friday evening. The program was followed by an election of officers. A four court jury, Mrs. Chesa B. Hawkins, Reddish and L. Brown, browning the court for the last birthday. Mrs. W. E. Tyler was in Martine Ferry Sunday. Bax C. W. H. Hearst was Miss Susie Masonis guest last week. A delightful surprise party was given Mr. Tia Wallace Monday night. The Mrs. M. E. W. M. Society holds its monthly meeting Sunday evening. An excellent program. Rev. H. F. Fox preached a very interesting sermon Sunday morning. Mrs. L. Jones and children of the institution Saturday and Sunday Mrs. A. B. Brooka and family have moved back to Cadiz from Wellington. Mr. Jno. Simpson of Fishing visited Mr. Frank West and family entertained Lavade and Helen West and Mrs. O. Rudolph and an entertained Mrs. Lazie Petersen at diner H. F. P Fox and family entertained Miss Plah and Teresa Harris at lunch Sunday. Mrs. A. B. Brooka visited her sister. Mrs. A Kent of Steubenville last week. Mr. A. Mead of Fairmont, W. Va., visited Miss Myrle Ramsey Sunday.
Springfield.—Albert E. Gray of Chicago visited his cousin, Mrs. Anso Viney, recently. He was on route to Indianapolis and Pensacola, Fla. Mrs. Richard Stanhope of Urbana was also her guest Sunday week. Mr. Herber Morton has returned to Baston, Fla. Mr. Richard Stanhope of Urbana was also her guest Sunday week. Mr. Herber Morton has returned to Baston, Fla. Mr. Richard Stanhope of Urbana was also her guest Sunday week. Mrs. Elw. Sherman of Dayton, after attending the S. S. Institute, will visit Mrs. H. Linden. Mrs. Andrew Clary attended the institute in Mechanicsburg.—Gee, C. Jackson has resigned the secretaryship of Central Y. M. C. A., greatly to the sorrow of the boy and young man, and thators are invited.—Miss Alicia Rickett and quinny.—Miss Ruth Briscoe has convalescent.—Miss John Shaw has located in Cleveland. Mrs. Simon Hilton was called there by a brother's death.—Mr. Thomas Langston is hometown Oberlin.—Rev. John M. Henderson, pastor of North Street church, has been transferred to Findley and has been transferred to Findley and local charge.—Wiley W. M. S. gave an offering to the Launcas family recently. Mr. Launcas has tuberculosis. Among others donating were Dr. Gordon, the Phyllis Wheatley Culture club, Victory Court of Calanthe and the Cherry Blossom club.—Rev. R. T. Frye of Lexington, K., resumed charge of Second Baptist church holiday. A reception wife in the church parlsers Monday evening.—Give the local representative of The Gazette your order for the paper every week and it will be promptly delivered to you.
Youngstown.—Miss Rhoda Holmes entertained the Chrysanthemum club Monday afternoon. Lunch.—The rally at Oak Hill Ave, church Sunday was a success. All the captains are entitled to great praise. Mrs. Hauger had $75 and $100 apiece. The captain an ankle Tuesday—Buckeye lodges the banquet Tuesday evening was a grand success. James Simmons, weight 793 pounds, and his brother, William, were initiated into the lodge recently. Will Collins, age 15, was another of the class of 20 taken into the organization. Lunch was served—Mrs. Minnie Gayton of Tittsville, Pa., well known here, died recently.—Rev. S. C. Honesty of W. Bridgewater, P. visited his son and daughter, William, and Frank, recently.—Mr. Robert of Cleveland visited her father, Rev. J. H. Smith. Oak Hill Ave. Sewing Circle met at Mrs. Q. Robinson's Thursday afternoon and will meet at Mrs. A. Reshek on the 15th. Lunch was served. It will hold a lacquer on Easter Monday. The masked social in the evening under the direction of Mrs. E. Lacy, was a big success. Rehearsals. The church building (and was naturally increased by this entertainment) (Corresponding must mail his newsletter earlier in the week—Edl.
Bellaire—Mr. and Mrs. John Stovall
THE EAGLE
THE EAGLE
DR. BOOKER T. WASHINGTON.
GORDON'S: FAREWELL POEM.
The following poem was written by
Senator Gordon of Missouri in his
firewell address to the senate on
recently:
The dear old black manmy so noble
and tender.
So faithful and true to her trust
I love her so well I dared not offend
her.
She is gone, yet I love her dear.
From the walls of my heart arise
tears of regret.
Theo she sleeps beneath the soil. I can never forget.
She was lovely to me in her colored bandanna.
With which she turtured her head;
Her songs were far sweeter than tute
or piano
As she put me to sleep in my bed.
Her soft, crouching voice I can never
forget.
Like an angel in dreams she comes to
me yet.
We make our own sorrows the evils
of fate
When we take in our hearts malice,
ENVY and hate.
There is good in the world, and we
may be sure
That a heart of full of love will keep
the soul pure.
When we cross death's dark river and reach the bright shore
Beloved ones will greet us and welcome us 'oer.
And while it is given to dwell on this earth,
No matter where may be the land of our birth
our birth.
Our duty to God is to do all we can—
Be true to our country, love our fellow
man.
Bradford. Pa., Topics.
Tunic Valley lodge, Elks, initiated Mr. Jones of Dubois, I. M. Fields of Salamanca and Rev. Williams on the 2nd and served lunch.-Mr. J. Stuart of Belvedere and Mr. J. Watson of Ridgeway were guests of Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Brown Sunday.-The stew was cooked for a good sum.-Miss G. Stirpes and little Byrnt Enly are in Duke Center.-Mr. and Mrs. Pullan are out of the city for a few days.-Mr. Ed. Parker is here visiting his aunt, Mrs. McGanzy, and Mrs. Enty dined with Mr. Wraghal Sunday. The larger and Messrs. Collins, Enty and Tyler will debate in Oleum soon.-Mr. and Mrs. Enty dined with Mr. Wraghal Sunday.-Miss Eind Lott and Mrs. G. Roberts have returned from Jolietown.-The Gazette will be an event in Oil City.
New Brighton Pa. Cullings
P. H. Gales of Pittsburgh was here Thursday. Newman was there Wednesday. Mr. Jas Peyer has accepted a position in Chicago. He and his wife will have the last of April. Mr. and Mrs. G. Lee have returned to housekeeping—Mr. Harold Ford's vacation is at an end. He has returned to work—The Gazette wishes an agent in Seville.
z
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HARRY C. SMITH
Editor and preorletor,
THE GAZETTE,
Blackstone Building, Cleveland, 0.
Member Ohio Legislature: 1894
to 1896; 1896 to 1898; 1900 to 1902
Cleveland, 0. March 12, 1910.
THE GAZETTE is the oldect, ant
has the largest bona fide circulation
double that of any newspaper in th:
Interest of Afro-Amerizane, publiche:
im the state of Ohio, and comparisa:
with any will immediately establisi
ite rank ag one of the NEWSIEST
AND BEST in the country.
Southern planters are “firing” the
Atalians they Imported to succeed our
men. It has proved an expensive ¢x-
periment. .
Even Booker T. Washitigton’s New
York Age ig “souring” on the ‘Taft "ad:
ministration. “Mercy! This is the
Timit! It says the recent Nelson
Crews and W. D. Jobson appoint:
ments are not presidential “appoint:
ments and that the Jobs pay but from
'$60 to $10W a imonth. Just what The
Gazette said some weeks azo.
“Yes, 4 thous:nd dollar a year job.
even if it is hustling boxes, etc.. is a
pretty good thing “fer some Negro
“editors.” But it anight have been at
least a clerkship, at that salary. The
reasons ure obvious. This for the
benefit, particularly. of New, York and
Washington, D. C., syiudicate corre:
sponderce-letter writers to a number
of race publications.
———_-
Texas oveupied the most hratat
part of U7 Ivheh-murder .stuxe tas!
week. ‘The South knows Wt has nett:
tng, absolutely hothing, te fear trem
the Taft: administratich, xo uinrder
Negroes at wileand in Ue tiost bar
barous fashions known to that lawless
section of this country, Our southern
sympathizing President does npt ever
SAY auything in his messages or else.
where about lynching, distranchise:
ment, ‘Jimcrow’ ears and pther vital
attacks upon the fundamental laws of
the land as well as upon ciiisron,
At a recent meeting of the Repub-
Hican club in New York City at whieh
the well known Jewish banker, Jacob
Schiff, expressed’ hix fear of a
coming war between Japan, Mussia
and England on the. dne hand and the:
United States and China on the other,
Prof. W. E.R. DuBois of Atlanta.
Ga., University, declared that « con-
filct_ was even more imminent, in the
next ‘few years nt least, between the
Colored and white laborers in the
south, unless political conditions were
radically altered. Will’ the wiiite
electorate understand in time its duty
to alter these conditions? Here is
the opportunity for the, Socialists ind
lavor unions to rise above prejudice.
THAT “NEW SOUTHERN POLICY.”
" That wonderful product of the
Judicial brain" of ‘Theodore Roose:
Nelt's political son, "tw southern pol
fey of the Republican Taft.” whieh In
{ts subserviency~ to feudal | concer
tlons in these modern days’ In. the
presumably most advanced political
state on earth, the American repub-
Vic, reininds one ‘forcibly. of | the
shameful days of 1852-1860 (Pieree
and Buchanan in the presidency.) ts
based upon the sane rotten xronnd
upon which the Union sigad in
slavery days: the suppression of
human rights in‘the Interest of “busi-
nees;” the perversion of eternal laws
of morality by appeals to prejudice,
narrow mindednges and ethical cal:
Tousness: Uy the adoption of ward
politicians’ methods—"pstronaxe and
other forms of Wibers"—and “by
threats of awful calamities, if. con-
sclence be put above commerce. And
the policy will ultimately fall, as did
the other, when once the conscience
of the people. awakens and their
minds are enlightened on’ the matter,
It becomes the Imperative duty of
every clearaminded and clearsouled
citizen of the republic to ald the men
opposing this damnable race’ prejudice,
and discriminating policy. in’ thelr at-
tempt to ler the nation to n better
conception of Itcpublicanism ~ and
Democracy than that prevailing with
the so-called leaders of today. Free:
men, fespond?
——
TO DISFRANCHISE FORTY THOU-
SAND.
There is plenty of food for careful
thought in _ both — Representative
Smith's and Jule Cook's, remark,
See Gutbrie, Oklahoma, letter on page
1. They show that the Democratic
party has absolutely no use for the
Negro, and that the Itepublican party,
North as well as South, cares for him
‘only to use him. We shoul some
day awaken to a full and proper real-
feation of these facts and proceed to
ute the ‘Republican party everywhere
in returnsfor the votes we give It, or
defeat it wherever we can untll It
Gomes to our terms.” This means so
much to our race that it Is strange,
passing strange, that our intelligent
fen Who seck leadership in the varl-
ous parts of the country have not
Jong ago seen {t, and recognizing. the
fact, bad the. manhood, loyalty, cour-
age, self and race respect to stand for
ft, bravely and boldly, out in the open.
Until this fs done, and the masses of
our voters Jn every community, made
to understaod the sltuation as it really
ie there {8 no hope for the future, but
there will be the continuance of the
gradual and constant loss, not only of
the franchise, but also our clvil
rights that bes characterized the last
Bitten oF twenty years to such an €2-
tect.as to make vacomfortably clear
the result fn the not too distant fu-
TIE GAZETTE. CLEVELAND, 0. SATURDAY. MARCIE 12.) i810.
tire, Read tie Guthrie ieitor cave.
ee, Rey
ee ee i
‘(ic pee ee Geen
ea LO
CREE tan RY
aoe
week Atiornéy Henry Lincain John-
son of Atlants, Ga.—recerder of deeds
Of the Distriet ef Columbia, 46 surened
the Hon, Joti, Dancy of Norrh Cay;
Olina, wie hae held the ettteys fay dear:
Iy ten years, Ae sitis rate we aay es:
PECL AbONT 1Wwo OF three more appoint,
ments Fran Ming COAL beicns the eth
of his fivst sand ties vers,
THE SHADOW ANO THE SUB
STANCE.
© Same ‘person in this rity dees im
‘posed upon x New York exchumee by
sending it a letter using a number
of Afro-Americans as having heen ap
pointed to glerkships und lesser posi
ons by Mayor Buehe, he total mut
ber being lees than oneshay the’ nei
ber of sositions given or people by
the previous (Democraticn adminis
tration, Mayor Tom 1. Johnson's. The
fact Js, the present. (Bichr-Masehke)
“city ‘administration has not given a
shigle clerkehip fo a member of the
race, aud a namnier of these” met:
Uoned ite having reveived appoint
ment: have never bees given thi pe
Bilions promised. |The yonly’ Afro
Minerican eprolated: to at elerkshin,
and that a third-ciass position of the
kind aud in the euterovorkss’ depart
megt at the eity hall, has never been
allowed to’ take the place because of
his color, This is no secret: but ix
generally known throughont the city
Yo get rid of himeas a clerk, a place
was found forhim dovin-on. the: lake
front in the city yard, “learning the
stock” (handling pipe, 16), und he
2° graduate of Western’ Reserve Un!-
versity! There are a number ot
others, named in the New York paper
as having been appoiuted to pasitions,
who Inve not fared as well as he tis.
‘As yet they have not been allowed to
fill them. Why He about such things?
Why not tell the truth and shame, if
possible, the Baohr-Masehke adminis:
tration into treating ts black contin:
kent at least Ralf way: decently and
alrly? A few box-heaving, broom-hatde
ling. spittoon and barnctenning, and
garbage hunting Jobs are, as Bishop
Derrick well sald when here a {ew
Sundays ago, but “pert: fobs at best
and not worth making xo much: noise
about.” Some Negroes: are so infer-
nally “cheap,” and hungry for any
Kind of a political job, that it seems
they are willltig "tO lie like the very:
old mischief to cover up the refusal
of thelr “whit:” political masters to
give them decent appointments, any~
thing like they onght to give to the
intelligent. of ony. people. The fact. is,
the Bachr-Maschke city administration
has given the Afro-\merivzns of thie
community. the SHADOW. for the
SUBSTANCE in the matter of posi-
tions. and, previous tittle uf the
SHADOW, up to date.
ADDRESS: KANSAS CITY. MO.
“The City Avornes of Kansas City
Mo., has drown an ordigsnee for tie
Intrdductton of the very “democratic:
vepublfean, just amd humane” south
ern Americanism, Iowa as tie “sin:
crow” cart! He ties ty caver hfs
tracks by ‘chiming that “pablic opin:
ion” claims this measure in defense
“on account of the Wave ef, exine in
fe Negrovs figure so turgely that
ft Is sweepins over Kansas City.”
When a “wave of rime” swept aver
New York City two yyars igo, the
papers axl the police chief comment:
ed on. the fact. that the “erininals
were mginly’ “foreigners.” aid the
Springfidd (Muss,) Republican .olud-
ed to the “absence of any remarkable
percentage of Negrovs’in the reports”
as favorable (0 the Colored part of
the _pogulation, Moreover to person
in New) York was crazy. enowzh to
suggest ("segregation of foreigners in
the cars as protection to passenKers,
mainly women,” as the individual it
Kansas*City does. There is a lesson
to be learned by some people herein.
When the “wave of crime” Swept
over Chicugo. afew years: ago, the
erimes being largely aitacks on wont
en, the Chicago Tribune, whieh keeps
fa “eriwminologteal statixtic™ table, re-
ported seventeen attacks on women
in one week (!) ending with March
18, 1905, Of the ‘seventeen cused
only two referred to Negroes! ‘The
rentest myer of tack on one
day (June §) vas in the same yeur,
being seven, every.one by ‘whites.
‘The Chicagd: Record-Herald tried to
argue with southern demagoxues, why,
make a speckalty of rare prejudice,
by pointing out that there were nines
ty men behind bars from the city of
Ehieago and Cook County, foF crimes
against morality (of sexual ature),
attacks on femile children then’ be-
ing quite frequent. Yet this could not
fustify race or pationallty presudice.
In this case also the preponderance was
unproportionally of whites. The Chit:
cago Chronicle, at the time of the
Atlanta bateery, reminded “uke
“greatest. enemies -of the Republic,
mainly of the south Itself.” the “race
prejudice propagator.” that it never
occurred to the residents af Chicago
to ruld the quarterg of any national-
ity oF race, bccailse ‘some of its mem:
bers had perpetrated an dutrage! If
the pulpit, press and public of Kansas
City and. any other town, where poll-
Heirs of the few mented aml moral
a ve desley bse Ua pet
iis. 3 thelr duty. these pests of te
Ane vienn Repablie Swill not) sieeerd
fie inves ae with Thoin restores ae
a tae cileuue cktecelaet
freelae serves ian fi elle tron
nr ig wot ithe terest of ble
seracilor C6 aeaneate che isola Ia
truly “democratic Republic. Sree
Mert eases for hatred, aneow lo
ree hal roads lgeontent, WI
hee Iteastan exanphe bene 108 Sony
see andthe history of the Ghetto,
hose atuolinhed "i «tery. progressive
Vivoneat comnts, a8 an TnsttWetor,
AAmetieanss should think deeply, bee
fore entering. pon the road hat
trait ta asinvegration. Last the
evevican _yeople poder well over
these uttiemnern, he Ia ee of
which comes from an obl, thoushttal,
ayia patriots who ated the
Mtovati Sramw apa ita Hf tho for
eel" Geeilaan yapees_of ole. CUTE
eeu aieenssing a feat i The
Shatuiss a alee newly ada state
Oe kta. whieh MOH ar
imran ogre, thee Ste LantiePoat
Distaleh, an erga of the prohnee
Whi af Slaganeleaaueraes. de
stored and condemned thie feauire of
Tie icaimten of fie neweanter inte the
Hee. esa iegobstanen, “I Ji
fai eats are justine hy pried
fuser, whigh we. doubt, or ai 4
fiauier af espedioney. this oes
Canin ¢xint tn, Oklahonty a state
omtize te (he ion at this ate
Gate atten tie abla of shavers.
avin eomtsinime. avail tbe
centage of Coluned ¢ibeens” AW al
Sait ignites een more forcibly o
Mleceart he eonteaaneertion ef ald
Teck tal redele at the te af el
Kavtpr's “Repaidie’ and that ik ret
Anata! And, tien, plese nets
4, Missowrd ix one of the states thet
Nid ataltatin slavwty” BEFORE “Lit
itn’: eminedpation —pracktngtinn.
Rhent aqch as neato eo Iayeewab to
ete Teryane ate sand Tillman?
Kees Clay Journals i ple ait
cA
Ab fast it hus reached | Cleveland
fberetofore: knnecvn ate the best citys
The country i its treatment ofont
people, fh receMt years uste ate
teen gan fifty af amost + nidesttatt
soithern “whites” and finer” Ne
Ries with Hie reanlt Grit Chevehand
fa shan (abe punished ss ater north
Sr cities ayes bevy sy ees gots
[SOW tHe detente boner cet
Seville atten, twats sath be wit
tenks whew tare ie a stalin in steht
Bor years prefiadiced "white in, tie
Yo MLC. AL hive, tried to enewaiess
The estatdishment of a Jimeres: YOM.
GAS but never have beet abhs to
make any headway? About a your at
so.ago Sceretary Shurllett wteceasedy
gebo first established a calortine “in
ie Vo MC. A. of this city, possibly
five or sis Yours ago, although hevit
able tothe day of his death, to get ot
Of the orzanization all of its Mfro:
Ametican members, held seeret incet-
ines with « fow Jimerow Negroes who
were, also, ashamed 10 Wet the Afro:
Ainepieans of this capmmniiy: know. oF
The dirty. work Gey were partiedpat ink
in at the request af Shurlel or other
prejudiced “white” members of the
YOM.COAL AC his death the disgrace:
ful secret meetings were abandoned.
The reernt local Y. Me C..A. financial
moxement whieh has netted aver a
halt miltion of dollars is te resilt in
ao new and enlarged home for the
organization, The membership will be
greatly increased, the number of pred
Adiced “whites” will mturally. grow,
and the ban against new Afro-Amer:
Tan members will naturally | zrow
stronger at Teast that is what is dn:
Vicipgied—cilthongh a few of the od
Nngeo members Mill remain in the
dreanization. ‘Thf Joral impecunions
fimerow Nezrdes again’ see ain oppor:
hints 1 serve thelr prejudiced
shive" mister’, amd are “xetting
mnisy"" - pevuchingy their contempible
Sanparation” Gimeyow) doctrine whieh
really meang any old Kind of a eolor
Tine just sala job is made for them
ar a dollar is secured by them. ‘The
Sucrifier of any principle, even one
Vital tote race, is not toe aeeat in
the estimation of Muse gteedy, iam
prennions jimeraw Negeoes, if they
are bem ited finnekttly, Geet
GOO! ie this the racial “proxtess”
Gur sood people of this city, the older
itigens yaigtientirly. have been all
these? years working for? We hat
thongbt this kind of a Nexro—the
jimerow Negro vdead ax. far, as the
North, at feast, 4s concernell, std if
hot dead, shat a phe would “always
he found for him here in this section,
the “western reserves” and that he
rould beSkept In it or rut owt of
town, Te pine Y. MOC. AL Near
in Clecelald is alsd am advorate of
siparate séhonks for our people, not
withstanding the fact that we now
have more teachers in our amixed pai
Wie schools than we would have if
there were jimerow schools. BMC the
jimeraw Negrons"are not the teachers
ax they would be if their prejudiced
white” tasters comd only secure
separate Schools as well #3 a Simerow
YOM. C. Ac which. the fimerow Ne-
grovs also would offlerr if they could
only xceure its establishment, - The
effort to beat dawn the colorline in
the local Y. M,C. A. does not teed
to be a tremendous one, but the Jin
crow Negroes’ “white” masters ~ do
not want it made. That word “Chris:
tian” in the name worries, It seems,
They would much rather make iC.ap-
pear that our people are ‘asking for
the separation when the fact fs, no
such thing is the case or ever will be
regardless of the activity of The few
jimerow, Nexroes and their prejudierd
swhite” Yo MC. A. masters. But the
aifort is on, and now out in the open.
The “yesterday” fimerow Negro ts
selfish, mercenary. and. Sharp enough
to try to make the iknorant Negroes
of this community believe that the
separation referred to: aleve, 8 for
their. best interests. The hitter know
no differently. as a rule, and it is not
to we marveled at that they arcebt
the fimerow Negro’s talk because it
apparently has the earmarks of racial
progress, when, as a matter at fact,
the direct opposite is true in this con
munity and about every other in the
North., Our leading intelligent peo-
ple mist become more active than fn
the last year or Co and must speak.
up and out. generally, that the less
intelligent ones of the race may be
made 10 understand he seffish, shames
fal cand deteriecutime efferis wf the
Nawal fisnernw Negroes, espn dally as
resntde a jimenec ¥. MLC. Nand sim
Etohe pithtie siheaks, The jimerow
Neh is not Jer raedad prozress: but
Ine is ie personal, financial inter
ests, His tien! Bice his hips. as a rule,
is to “thick.” He ig the Kind of a
tee metndier whe would ax SHON be
Janitor, hossheaver, garhase or meter
Inspector. bridgi-iender er bw placnd
in any old menial yosition ai $75. or
S10H a month, az%4o hold & clerkship
or anything better that paid the same
amount. ‘That hes “pets the money”
is allaailicient for him: onever sind
the race." is hie favurite expression,
Tie Jimerow Yeast, C,\. and schoo
Neuro waits a Job, exardless of thie
conseanenees tacthe race, "0, never
aniind thee rare; we want the money."
says i dl thee (gineJudiced) “white?
WHE aways. see that Wee ote He tat
when the dirty work is dane as well
as while ft fs Weing.dane, ‘Phe jim
exow Necro will salle anything on
thy rare, hie «sin, that he may benefit
financially. I is simply a waste of
the tarsi! Mee anatter with hin,
aud “this aurtiels ie jot intended fos
him Wat for the: Large: majority ot amin
ly Aft Americans in this. comuaunity
when are set sand) rage rexpeethie! and
whe really Tsk ti see the rive pros
grees lets all tines in the same Way
that other elses in. Unis comunity
progress, Stzanie the Irish, Gortnaat
aad other American classes, eet tee
Jews, dle mie aster tather scot presi
Mice je teen of other eligi tu at
Vest te dbs oa, for separate YOM
AJs and separate public spac, +e
Such wf their stasis as woukl ston
tee sniete a Kaw Shetvs wot bee tarred
Aue fessthieredd sed pin out a tect
Giste the finery Nero eet bs
Fetters beh thes send Aver Nite tiene:
ff CR vetanel, pnt teri fos ions ath
hate. tom, oe this new backward
uinvenents "Te se fine tee Newtave
fare the stn ates who deft iat na
Dewnte OF Fhe Community bee sotbatet
With the shadow that tie Huh
Manse ike sedminest vataon iin. wt
Demile of this commuuit ster thes dub
Stance fi the mutter ed jos They
haven't a single clerkship oF sob of
that grade, til yet they are wet wuly
easier: 7H Wa dtakistinos that the
Jonte the? otal gitiier thine: they have
not, Tiers otter tite, with that hated
Of a Neo Leven woh the tetinere
Se Ah reg VAL CAL tute sete
Wh Be bicter ud th Say at the Manet
FRESH NEWS:
{Wontinued from Flest Pare.)
entertihied Mrs, Alston and dunghters
At suppres Silay evwntnies Weve ad
Mes. Alon. wee ii Avheclig iast
coeds The We Me My sordeay: was
lertained by Ming, Price. An enjogabhe
ies Wins Hach Ais Staggine ort ef
St Chiraville isin theseity. Mr Will
Tistes of Parnesvitle was Me, Stent
Moria est at Weel Mi
ine Preston was in Wondstield last
seerkis Mine hath Murphs. of :
{Wis hw inesteot Mig Hottie levi fast
Weekwor Mis, Stele Groen entertained
eeentiy. in hon of hee birthing =
Mes doh Carns: bis reared thom
Youngstown. Phe. Carnation eli,
Mrs, Stella Green, explain, hela sie
exgatul entertainment. Tava even
fine at St. Paul's chitreh, A iniater
ff Kadies wet at the A. SL: 1 parson
fier hast Priday afternoon for the pte
host: of arsanizing sacial ela, "The
lite organize of our Wenen's- clubs,
Mis. Elizabeth (Alston, was preset,
Oticere wer elected for the ensuing
Soiree Nin Jolin Harvey lett for
Younseterwn “lest "Thursday. Mee
Sarah Siumons as called ty Ait, Ver
hon by, her daghter’s illness. tise
Hattie: bevtnsentertaiead hast “Tuwsay
evening in honor oF Miss Fle Mus:
hy.
Stevbenville—Mr. Joseph tackson
cof Pittxinars. viaites nis cpurwsits. Sat
Gay! Mis lames Howard ix. mich
Better ‘Sanulaye tlhe inde it the: haves
to fijakt in the Quinn SoS, sents,
Trav ins thiean "10 tens hind Mis,
Clnekts thine ridged S2este which wit
fhe beg Waterton." Fle arsaanian te
ot the Casler Iodee held ah nneting
SFressiay eseninig at Odd Bellas hoe)
Mise Cordele Draxtony witht
cipiwnt uf a "postal showers” Si earls
niige reerdvedoeT hie Ale eld
necting At Stanpsen ehaypehy at AM
Sindy. “Mme A. Phils preset
Mra, hoyd Mardin entertaimest tes Av
Be Ge Thesday evenings Misses Haisy
Ross and Hirzel Minnphfort are aris
fame aeiuhe Mt. SE Brown sil
Jett, MeCulloweh ix slowly. unproving
Tvs tern ish, Wife Ae ss
Zone to. Pitshunge—aehutveh voter
nee wax held Mt Quinn chives Mon:
flay exening. Mr. Tather Ford aed
Mes. Nannie Seoti were the baudbers of
the Epworuh League at Simpson
Cini Simiay. wwening, <= Credit
showld be given to the members. of
the Thaptist ehureh for tele st renmous
efforts in removing the ehnreh debt
ihe recent tnteriar teanadetins. OF the
Simpson chute atfracts the eye.
Mrs Al. Julinstont ie convalescent
Mee Benton slackson ig. still rented
with, rheumatism. Mr. 1. Mode, the
chief tvansferinat of his Kind, recently
purchased itu fine Workman. four
Whevied wazen, Mrs, Cartis of Mar
tins Ferry visited MrsSpeneer Diahkes
Stinday. Lather Siniti. Louis. Thorn:
ton. Oscar Winters of Wheelin, were
kets of the Misxex Guyder Sina
Mies: Shencet Ranks ip convalescent
whe We iM. ALS. hud. progeann
Sunday veining At Quinn chiuteh. The
regular sermon was onnitted, The fel
Towing were Participants: lveitations
Ruth Jackson and. Gladys rowan:
puner, Me. Ard. Gus: sulo: Mes. te Ie
Merecrsduet, Sirs. B. Whit and 1
Se NeCullonehe A supper at Simpson
churet Thursday nicht, dese 1
Grocesone tettenial front Washinisten,
Paes where he practiced. medicine for
afew taonths=Mt. target Willlatis
matertalied at dinner Thursday tet
rae
An Ardent Advocate.
* Maly, Calo., Mar, 1, 1910.
Eelitor Gazette, ear Sir; | Please
pardon the delay Jin sending my ‘re
newal sutseription. Tam wn ardent
advevate cf The Gazette berause 1 be:
Neve the stund you are taking 48 a
patriotic one, ‘The race ought to show
fts appreciatian of the couragcous and
Inteusely loyal fight for. justice you
are making by rolling up such an in-
mensz subscription to The Gazette
as would make tbe entire country sit
up and take notice, and make. our
paper the power in the land 1t ought to
be and I sincerely hope soon will be.
= Your well-Wisher and friend,
JAS. SNEDLEY.
rr
‘ADE ENGRNGUS PROF
K Bort nye
STANDARD “OIL CO. EARNS $1,006
000,000 1N 7 YEARS. SAYS
WICKERSHAN,
UNITED STATES, BY ATTORNEY
GENERAL, FILES BRIEF IN
SUSREME COURT. ~
Warhington, (D.C. The Vnites
States, he Attorney General, Wieker:
stain. hase filed inthe Unig States
Supine: ewart ste brief in the
Statayd OH ease, whol with Ie at
ued anh Mogday With the attenney
cgenieral will appear Messrs, BoM. Ket
Tesgz, C1 Morrison and C, At Severs
ner, whe have worked up thee tithes
Hion “on bybalt af the overament
aanainat the trust, "twa ieiauense vel
umes nidies ap thee brief. ane entitled,
Summary of the tacts aul brief at
The hayes." the ether entitted, MA
istry. of tho: standard Ot Co, from
Isto to cwates” “This history cniorr os,
the various transaetions by whieh the
Prevent parent vous has abe
Sorted on gatawed vctzinalty inde
Jmnitent eunberns,
The iteration of the vations por
eases sand ai qnineauets de swomst ate
to the gevernnent the: mopay ly ae te
straint of tude, eehiely ie tos borsis of
the caverient Will The geeurient
fot cauntins Dearzets fess thats ot at &
Thee site Ne prinesqea outa ntione ot
Ue bei The tatiite af Huitiet ovis.
des: tant rin sotaidict thee peew eeddsnt
Ing tie getettsni tl Phe eer) athe
Trib the sate Laid gusset
Comupentiis on toe eects sats ef
Irnits, tle tisk Ree tat a8
Mis Mle wt tle toe tnaady ob We ae
Fegubants fester tee ehtertsanss
setitins sat thr “eandb ey? ly bee eat
Mtr aoe ethos Phe Sadat
Onl tat fae f the Soatobesd ed Co an
whith se oe at Look deta ge ete
Mies ilies ee or anne et Toot
sientne eet. Mad estes ae
fhe sdatsan Wee dederseeeyia kd
Nar the tutte ef Pe ata Pe at
Tuetitt bat trene tac ee taemg at M
Alocefe ther ter twas aesit + thet te
eee anaes Mie pants ef Deg, We
Raves ewtetaii itty gL asso etoagmnn
tied be this majors an2T years
Shiv mpesscd, Aaa toe go ad een tier
te etopedy: bead Ime te? ety
Laide Bi the fen yeaa wuatia o Sh
TAKES FLING AT THE WEALTHY
Chica, HL We eine get riel
hide presest conditions ‘withent
Fabbings sumebods. f leive totes it,
you are dug Mt, sud fai sill dein
A Whett dase Bets, a millionaice
soap mnauutaetifer of Phikidelhia
and ‘London, England, mate this very.
“Framk anid iisenions statement te aun
Axsetiblage of prominent Chis
duen, many of them millionaires, at
the City chats heres he epeated a yen
sation, Here és what Mr, Fels ssid in
elucidating his string statement:
“1 propose to spend. thee darnabte:
money F have mde to wipe ont the
system by whieh Danade it; and {any
Of you hive got the courage ty lo die
same thing, for God's sake let ms eros
Qaals, Psat some of yon Armours,
and some of yan other people T hap:
pew fo think of Ale, Armour tiecatse
he makes soap- and T want some of
you men te begin to think: that ce
making af mduey is not the best fad
most important Ubinsg: but chat the
nutking of money without evens,
somebudy is ile husk came important
thine for a busiiess sian to thik of.
said The say muenfgemyde or an
other hone in his addres,
ME Reis is th are ait failanee at he
Moorines af te tate Heute tare.
Me is asin sax e tient ated
Mronsh sd he weliewes cht the
Sihele tax weal fe farther ttn ing
One atten akensine ta aine not kat
‘Clfienr, Séehing Ailén With Singte
© Optic and Finding Teree, Sater
Pusste iy Artesteng All
© Massitton, O.—Tase seed of a wate
faut foe the attest at) Prank
Workidee and having ix a means of
inentitication aly tie Kas te dzw at
Workidas- was a Hinextian with one
oye, Conitatie Le HL, Piambetser lle
at ain address given hive ancl found
three onewged Hungarians, None of
the tie wonld-indieate Workide. So
Hamberser task the three 10 jai).
Te was learned that when Workides
found hee was Seated” for havin abe
tained baatd aeder false pretenses,
he went te the Bouse where hig ane:
eyed exgupgsnions resided, + His ree
Tailed when the constable widered the
three to Jail, tor then the (xo friends
Detrayed The man,
Old Friends Bury Piatt.
Owego, N.Y. On a bexutifal nite
sid overicaking the village of his
Virth, the hady of Thomas’ Cottier
Plat former Veited States ss nator
find for anany sees Kepubliean fbr
of New York ‘state, was barieh The
Gereinoning aie Ube Eins Presiotetian
churely aid at he eave Were bret
sad were attended by tates of his far:
inet political followers and obl cane
friends and netehbore. Tieieanthant of
New Vork reptesentutives in eeneress
dnd from Uh state feaistattire att md
eal the funeral serves
oe, welen tacaemsaend
» Detroit, Mich.--tr, George A. Friteh
Was sentened too serye from
seven and anehalt to 16 yokes i the
state penitentiaty at daeksor for
Dhanskingkter, ik eadsins, lest Vasu,
by means of an esiawtal operation,
the det of Mabplle Millman of Ann
Arbor. Judse James Phelan in make
Ing the usnal recommendation Sader
the indeterminate sentence Jaw re
ommended that Fritch serve 15 years,
Fritch was convicted recently after a
sensation! trial: lasting more than
three, weeks.
: . OF THE VIRTUE OF
" . f
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
What is the use of procrastinating in the face of such
evidence az the following letters represen? If you are a
sick womiin Gt know one who is, what scnsible reason have
you for not giving Lydia E. Pinkham’'s Vegetable Com-
pound atrial? For 36 years we have bea publishing such
testimonial letters as Uiesc—thonsards of them —they are
genuine and honest, too, every one of them,
Mrs. S.J. Barber says: Mrs. George May says?
oR SLinind [itis Be PX, one knows
Viniiain’s trees |] gee, |what 1 have sat
flab Cinpnacid | | gQeeatemees Lrered ftom te-
FET hlchcnts | | ASR |inaie Couttes,
foe eine in tive world | | BRE FESS S lncwwalzia pains,
REVS HS ar wenen—and |] BRS SAY hind backache,
se tel eds | | RYO AW [ity doctor said
J hte let vthers a P Hiv could not givo
Kine Ce gonil At = ree -anything to
Shr ng flied tet 12. 4 feure it Through
Ras) vrei | | aR fice adeiew tea”
rage i had so VOT fiend I began
ea] tie the doctor to tre Lyla EB.
TUE Aid wontd Dave Pinkham’s Vexe~
fobetemaved bean onerction or L | tile Componnd, and the pain soon
coull net Es hare bean a yet, | disapeared. Teontinued $65 uso
orivesttinet, Corte Mrs Piste [ard am now in perteet health,
hantsUL yaa, MB ssc toraelvien see | Lydia Pinklatm's Vexetibte Cons
Cr UL botdhey wt Ladin. Be Pinge, | pote Bas been a Godsend tomo
Whats Vecenahbe Cainpoxtd stad te [as Pbeleve should have Jen in
dasie famee be gone asa Data [my erase df 32 Bed not been for Ss,
pete well enn, To bage my bTinkhanes sdviee and fate 1
(Sane dit wit tert benere toate | diukhane's Veo tide Compound
wore Mrs. 8d. Darien, Seolt, | o Mes. Groiei: May, 86 sth Ave,
N.Y. j Paterson, Nod
Dirs, BP, Mayes sarge Mrs. W. Ki. Housh says?
re SP eas nid the Se Vay) i have been
ety doctors. tres “ie ane completely cured
mA frit fea sroid | | CRBC RINE Lor a severe fe
A ee iced | | ee a Cronbte by
mw [ou pa see || CBS | Isutin iF. Pink.
BEY (rvs wlosting, Page |icim's Vezetable
~ aul cont not BF {Compound and
Bes Walls or stand om GF Arcant to recon.
my feet any Bo | racud it toallsuf.
Teaethef tine. 1 Gt Tering women.”
re aerate to Mes. | P g@gihy wMrs. W. Ke
I Ahvee Vinkhan ft L aie JEM, igual Ease
LAeattsain | views tullowed ek (ee as iB slew “Ave. Cin
Lr directions snd | LC jeinnati, Ohio.
took Lgdin bs Piakham's Vegetable | Because your ease is & dintentt
Compound. “Today L ama well | one, doctors hayiug dene you no
Yromin, the tuiner Was espelted sink | ood, do not continue to suffer with-
Jay whole system streaatheped. I | ont giving Lydia E. Dinkham's Veg
Euvise all wouen who are ailicted | etable Componud a trial,” 1Csurely
with Gunors or female, (roubles to | Tas eured tiany eases of female is,
try Lydia B. Piskharn’s Vegetable | such asinfiammation,uleeration.dis-
Goes nade — Mess BoE, Haves, | plaeements, fibroid tamors, ree.
380) Washington St, Boston, Mass. | luvities,periodic pains,backache,ete.
For 30 years ‘Lydia 1. Pinkbam’s Vexetable , G@® ©
Compound has been the standard remedy for * y ‘i
female ills, No sick wonnin docs justice to
herself who will not try this famous medicine, Se
Made exclusively from roots and herbs, and pe
has thousands of cures to its credit. s
freer is, Pinkham invites all siek women wtp
to write her for advice. Sho has \\ 435
guided thousands to health free of charge. QISSADeN
“Address Mrs, Pinkham, Lynn, Mass, cee
Kansas Takes
1,000 Overland Cars
Ce — A “SEER See
a ‘or re.
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Ae, Wesel ge is Se
( Ka VES Ss ae
faxes) Poa = fee 3
WL ARE Botner eeeunnay, WG
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[Fm SRD ALL NOSE
D a AND THROAT DISEASES
ey ane ase Malet ae enna recente, Lael oon
CAG SSS ee gets the oerey ier ant artegtans
PES SPOHH MEDICAL CO, Chemists, GOSHEN, INDIANA.
~ “"“TNVEST YOUR IDLE DOLLARS IN
Oklahoma’s Rich Zinc Mines
Seeaar een tase Se Ce eee a
G999 IDEA.
“ped
Jette SS
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poe PF Ke
Feo Age
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a. gun wil abel ging bards
Fatag Seat Foe te Be whore te
eo sua
Hiodhe ‘ean =
emia Mot an Sa ane
ance tla en ke 0 ae sg
UM Tittis | Chutes ltunnahs! <= Denver
ay ie TR AAT eed
Orr cents in Ramin hive euteg t for
Mis pease Hn Obetirtad wat tive
Neteoea take yon beta tee Tepe
Re PT Rae Hk amet cuagter be
Frotsts ede fimo apebitd LE earning
Ve foes aaattied the with te, Now
Sine Gap nine Mes OMo th eiad. veawt oh
hone cen hee sa
Wa sepa Deidaeeh yee
What weet Hath Gonna DBIEEAS
Overtaaaie for Seeder wenerts uf Oye
Miele ste paves ties dest feet
Year, That's a factor abe Uait ose ot
Yet. tyr Years poy few Red weer het
‘ofan Overland Seis men iate -
Be eatioa 2 heise ae
The Simple Car
The sucess of the Overtand ie matnty
Gute tats acing sanptiat A tegeaee
Git elute wart inasice thie way tin tive tne
Ghee ashy stad forwad tee gee tied,
oa
Ginetta Wie bat ake, lone 8 bmn
Meg Mar with thee hysptoat triste
Uae len irhas an ‘Uvettanel a tauieated
Miles aba Yess
“Phere wis tener eae by easy tonne
See cae Se ase ta ee
Your Liver
is Clogged up
Thet's Why You're Tired~Out of
Fret Ey Noise ge
oe es
SERS egies CS
cal aed CARTER
Vuey co Sey ITTLE
mee ESR. Be f
contre Sn [mm
eee igen, cod Bick Headache.
SMALL PLL SHACL DOSE, SMALL PRICE
GENUINE more rar Sera
(iecaF ard
PATENTS S225
PATENTS 20S
W. N. Us CLEVELAND, NO. 11-1910.
20 Per Cent Reduction
ie nga te anoern de nen is 10
fee
ee ER aa dn aE
ineiat Gah ye Oat Cae Biles oan ok
Sean te Rode ge
tere Ethan Gein tase case
WAN Yb son SLIe Mlamtndie “ind fail
tage th edeag ot cae “—
Ask for the Story
wR ee ea ae aks
toreadue hy un fon seumeorene a tte
tiharect fact! idl ahne RL” Riad i aodia
TE ha BS ted
‘The Willys-Overland Co., Toledo, One,
lincsed etree ben'tuteet
Local News
PURCHASE THE "GAZETTE" AT
J. S. HALL'S, No. 2121 Central Avenue.
F. VALENTINE'S, No. 2120 Central Avenue.
ELMER F. BOYD'S, No. 2261 Central Avenue.
PUSHAW'S, Cuyahoga Building, Open Sunday.
L. SCHWARTZ'S, No. 2211 Central Ave. Open Sunday.
C. C. JOHNSON'S, 2315 Central Avenue. Open Sunday.
Notice to Subscribers.—Subscribers not receiving The Gazette regularly should notify us at once. We desire every copy delivered promptly. We advise our patrons to carefully examine The Gazette's advertisements before making purchases. Business men who advertise in this paper should have the patronage of Afro-Americans. The fact that they advertise is assurance that they want it.
Local reading notices (advertisements) ten cents a line (six words in a line.)
Mrs. Robert Nooks visited her father in Youngstown recently.
Miss Virginia Waugh has returned from a several months' stay in Chicago.
Miss Jennie Burke, Messrs. and Mesdames Sampson and Seymore visited in Fostoria Sunday.
Miss John Shaw of Springfield has located in this city and Mrs. Simon Hilton of the same city was here recently to attend a brother's funeral.
The University of Missouri is going to institute a course in writing poetry that being another of the things evidently that Missourians have to be shown.—Detroit Free Press.
Dr. Wiley says he has saved, the government $12,000,000 in the past ten years. The which is now represented, perhaps, in one or two obsolete warships—Washington Herald. The Mozart quartet's selections and solos by Miss Ruby Yates and Mr. Louis Rich, violinist, made the musicale at St. John's church Sunday afternoon a very good one, indeed.
The Shuberts announce that they will not produce "The Man Higher Up" this season. None of the graft investigators seem able to produce him, either—Denver Republican.
The Cleveland Symphony orchestra concert at Grays' armory Sunday afternoon was as usual the musical of the day. Among those of our people in attendance were Mr. Alfred Fox and lady.
The BIG chorus of "AMENS!" to our editorial on "A. lincroon Y. M. C. A." shows the temper of the great majority and best of our people in this community, and suggests its republication in The Gazette, this week.
A Pennsylvania minister has gone on record that he will not marry a couple unless the man can show an income of $2,000 a year. Evidently he doesn't expect to perform any titled marriages.-Detroit Free Press. The street car company has discharged some of its Afro-American employees already. That is the "pay" they get for working for Burton, Blachar, the Tayler plan and the bond issues. Vice President Sherman says the insurgents in congress are simply men who want to please their constituents. All of which shows that a man may be a vice president and still have lucid intervals.-St. Paul Dispatch. Mrs. Salle Stevenson, age 43, Mrs. Mamie Russell, age 21, Baby Strickland, Louis G. Buchanan, age 43, Mrs. Nellie Binga, Mrs. Peter Barber, Mrs. Bessie Turner, Baby White, Wm. Sappy, age 22, and Benj. Johnson died recently.
Mr. Joseph Ricks, one of our oldest and best known citizens, after several months' illness, died the first of the week, and was buried from Mt. Zion church Tuesday afternoon, the pastor officiating. He leaves a daughter to mourn his demise.
No us trying to "ring in" Wappo Johnson. He says he is not a Negro. The Bachr-Maschke "outfit" simply refuses to appoint an Afro-American to a clerkship and that is all there is to it. Recorder Maschke as well as Mayor Bachr have clung tenaciously to that rule. Our sensible voters will remember this for future use.
"Uncle Joe" declined to decide a point of order in the house the other day, but put it squarely up to the house itself. It took the house two hours to find the answer. All of which may or may not be pertinent to the issue, of course.—Washington Herald
Mt. Zion's W. M. S. and Men's Auxiliary met at Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Edmonds to congratulate them on their 39th wedding anniversary, last Wednesday evening. The auxiliary presented them with a handsome cut glass cream and sugar set. Music, recitations and an elaborate lunch made the evening an exceptionally enjoyable one.
The editor of The Gazette, at the request of the local Ministers' Alliance, addressed them Tuesday morning at their regular weekly meeting at St. John's church on "The Mission of the Press." For an hour and a half, they listened to a careful and instructive discussion of the subject that elicited their individual praise and a unanimous vote of thanks with the suggestion upon the part of several that he come again and address them.
Writing from San Diego and Los Angeles, Cal., under dates Feb. 26 and March 2. Mr. Harry Jonos says: "I wish you could see the things we have. Its great! Fine weather, and all well. Have gone on several trips from Los Angeles where we are making headquarters. With help here, Marcus, Francisco next, Sam, Simpson, weather; straw hats, shirt sleeves and 'peaboock' waists, all the go. This (San Diego) is the weekly plunge."
There should be less talk of "white supremacy" of a right, etc., and less advising the race to knuckle to the laws of oppression and repression. What the Negro should be told is to rise up and fight for his rights, as a man, and never to submit to flunkism. Don't be a lick-splatter or clam. Be a man! You have a right on earth and in heaven. Be a man—every inch a man! No compromise! "EVERY RIGHT WITH ALL THY MIGHT!"—Indianapolis Freeman. Editor H. J. Smith is up in arms against Microsoft, M. C. A. in Cleveland, Ohio. You are right, because God declares he is no respector of persons. As the ones who do this best, are the best, so are you the Negro's best friend and advocate in Ohio. The foolish element that caters to whims of caste, feed on Oh's, and Ah's and on a few innocent its to connect their logic (?) with devilry. Fight like a man; you have a work to
do, the result of which will not only keep you alive on earth, but richer in heaven, by getting your divine reward at compound interest. 'You are a West Virginian by birth, and naturally tower in thought from the lowest valley to the highest peak in nature—it's a living contradiction that Christians should war with one another—Martinsburg (W. Ya.), Pioneer Press.
Officer Press.
There is no bank in this country that is stronger or better than the Society for Savings of this city. Pay no attention to the silly rumors abounded in this community the past week. The person or persons who started them ought to be severely punished.
End of the "Brownsville Probe.
Washington, D.C.—The Brownsville court of inquiry, which has been sitting in this city during the past several months, has concluded taking testimony and probably will begin the preparation of its report within the next two weeks. Of the 167 members of the Twenty-fifth infantry who were summarily discharged by an executive order of President Roosevelt, all except forty-four have appeared in person and have been examined. In its report, the court will pass upon the right of each of the soldiers to reenter the army, but the members of the board declined to indicate what their findings would be.
Suicide Creates Sensation.
Napoli, Italy.—A great sensation has been created here by the; suicide of Sigraca Farino, the wife of a retired admiral. She had been suffering from acute nauseaesthenia and on several occasions had manifested her intentions of committing suicide. Early in the morning she managed to escape the persons who kept her under observation and, going to the fourth floor of the house, threw herself into the street. As soon as her escape was noticed Admiral Farine rushed upstairs, but was too late.
One Man Kills Three
Citronelle, Ala. — Joseph Stokes, Charles Goldman and David Gortman, all three farmers, were shot and killed by Laurence Oden, a cattleman, at the latter's home, four miles from this place. After the shooting, Odom surrendered to a deputy sheriff at Citronelle; Odom says the killing was the result of an old foul. He says all were armed and he had to kill to save his own life. Odom killed a man at Citronelle eight or ten years ago, cutting his victim's throat.
Woman Hermit Dies in Wealth.
Burlington, N. J.—Miss Elizabeth Hays, 86 years old, who in life professed abject poverty, lies dead in a tumble-down farmhouse, in the midst of gold and currency, which for 50 years she had been secreting about the place. Miss Hays' financial status was discovered when the heirs and her executor made a search of the house. Bed and table linen yielded $10 and $20 bank notes by the scores. Bed springs, old coffee pots, several old purses and other receptacles were found to contain hundreds of dollars.
Dr. Fritch Found Guilty.
Detroit, Mich. -- Dr. George A. Fritch was found guilty by a jury here of causing the death of Mabel Millmah. Ann Arbor girl, who went to him for a secret operation, and whose dismembered body was found in Ecorse creek. Fritch was charged with having dismembered her body, after she had died on the operating table in his office, and having taken it in sacks to Ecorse creek, to throw it into the water. The strongest testimony on behalf of Fritch has been offered by 15 women witnesses.
Landslide Kills 92 More.
Vancouver, B. C.—Of the one hundred and six Canadian Pacific trainmen, trackmen, laborers buried by an avalanche in Rogers pass, on the summit of the Selkirk range of the Rocky mountains, 92 are dead, and 14 are in the hospitals badly injured. There was another big slide of snow and rock a mile east of the spot where the men were overwhelmed. It destroyed a portion of a swolwed and buried the track for 40 yards to a depth of 60 feet. There were no victims in the last avalanche.
Louis James. Actor. Dead.
Kansas City, Mo.—Louis James, the well-known actor, is dead at Helena, Mont. He was stricken with heart trouble while in his dressing room at the Helena theatre. Mr. James was born in Tremont, Ill., in 1842. His first engagement was with McAulley's Stock Co. which he joined at Louisville, Ky., in 1864. Later for five years he was Lawrence Barrett's leading man. From 1886 to 1889 he starred. He played with Joseph Jefferson in 1891-2, and in the later '90s he played as joint star with Warde.
Vesuvius in Eruption.
Naples, Italy.-Vesuvius has been in violent eruption for the last 24 hours. Terrific explosions occur frequently in the interior of the volcano and vast quantities of lava are pouring out of its crater.
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY, MARCH 12, 1910.
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.
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, Lancaster, Findlay, Lima, Olerlin, Chillicothe, Toledo, Urbana, Troy, Akron, Springfield, Piqua, Columbus, Cambridge, Martins Ferry, Wellesville, Bellefontaine, Wilmington, Portsmouth, Sabina, Gallipolis, Delaware, Dayton and Midtown, O, and other places where we have none.
Write to the editor of The Gazette, Blackstone building, Cleveland, O, and terms will be sent promptly. Our readers will oblige us greatly by sending the address of day good person or persons in any of the cities named above or others, to whom we can write relative to the matter.
Call your lady friends' and acquaintances' attention to our up-to-date fashion and pattern departments and thus encourage them to subscribe or take The Gazette regularly. Oblige the Editor.
Tell us about it.
This paper can give all the local news only as our friends lend to their cooperation. If anyone visits you, if you contemplate leaving town, if you see or hear or do anything out of the ordinary day's routine, tell us about it, that we may tell the public.
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 subscriber or take it regularly, if they had a copy to look over and read carefully. Oblige the Editor.
Ford's Hair Pomade
Fifty years of success have proved the merits 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's Hair Pomado makes stubborn, harsh, kinky or rough hair. It is easy to comb and arrange in any style desired consistent with its length, as long as the Pomade remains in the hair. This result may be obtained by one thorough application according to directions. Two to four applications a month will keep the hair in satisfactory condition and free to可供乳房, regular size, are usually sufficient for a year. Directions with every bottle.
Ford's Hair Pomade
removes and prevents dandruff. invigorates the scalp and keeps it from getting harsh and dry. stops itching and prevents the hair from breaking off. Helps life and vigor. Absolutely harmless. Used with splendid results even on children and infants. Delicately perfumed. its use is a constant pleasure. A most satisfactory toiletry for ladies, gentlemen and children.
Don't buy anything else allowed to be "jus"
Ford's Hard Hat Pomade. Look for this name
— Charles Ford, Postt. — on every package.
Pick up a pair of pants. Pair with you on the
gaucho, we will send you
We pay postage and express charges to all points in
Order. All orders shipped on or before receipt of petty
charge.
The Ozonized Ox Marrow Co.
116 West Kinzle St.
Chicago, Ill.
FORDS HAIR POMADE is made only in Chicago
by the above chain.
Agents Wanted Everywhere.
For Long Beautiful
Hair Use
Mme. Walker's Hair Grower
Growth Guaranteed from One-half to One Inch per Month
MISS WARREN
Scalp Specialist
4310 Central Avenue
MONEY THAT TALKS BACK
THERE'S a lot of money here and in this vicinity. Possessors of that money read this paper; they swear by it. They want to be shown. If your goods are right, they want to buy. This paper talks to that money at regular intervals. It's money that talks back and talks back strong. Get your share--do your talking through our advertising columns.
WILBERFORCE UNIVERSITY
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 Graduate Education College. Ohio State University training center. Business or Industrial Departments can obtain certificate from State Senator or Representative entitling them to Free Tuition. Room, Rent, and Incidentals.
W. S. SCARBOROUGH, President, or HORACE TALBERT, Secretary OF THE UNIVERSITY
The Magic will not turn or injure the hair, because the hair is never heated. The steel head bag which lions the hair, as alone, put into the frame of the handle, is not permitted to come out from the back of the bag, if of the bag is heated the compartment being the place and is held by a turn of the handle. The Magic Heater is made for curling irons, has a power and can be carried in a handbag.
MAGIC
TOP
Taylor's New Shampoo Dryer and Hair Straightener!
The Best in the World!
This Comb, properly heated, and the use of Lagerhead Hair Pomade, will bring the most
crimpy hair straight and silky at every stroke and cause a rapid growth of the hair.
Don't put it off, but send it today and get that comb by return mail.
PRICE OF COMB $1.
Large Hair Strokes and Durability. Make of copper and brass associated together and cast into one solid piece. Highly polished and fully nickel plated. Steel which goes through the large hand and handles easily. The end of a comb to prevent the handle from getting loose or coming off. Remember it is sil 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 handiest and most convenient method of heating the comb, and can be used up to you to cool your handbag. Price 50c. For best results use a Creme Hair Pomade. It only meets every requirement of the comb Straightener, but promises a hairful growth of the hair. Price 25c.
T. W. TAYLOR, Howell, Mich.
When writing please mention this paper
Ladies' and Gentlemen's Suits Made to Order
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FRANK WARLES
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CLEVELAND, O.
NELSON'S HAIR DRESSING is the finest hair pomade on the face of the earth for colored people. It makes your hair grow fast it makes it smoky, kinky and tangled hair as soft and purple as silk. It makes it healthy. It keeps it from splitting or breaking off. It makes it rich and gives it that charm to be loved by all true ladies.
Nelson's Hair Dressing and you'll never keep clean. The roots of your hair will have the necessary help disease. You will be delighted with its delicate perfume. Dressing is put up in handmade four-square tin boxes, like the lady holds in her hand. Drugsticks and box. If you can't get it, send us 30 cents and we will mail it now, or at right down and write us. Address: ACTURING CO., Richmond, Va.
Write Quick for Terms.
New Shampoo Dryer Straightener!
in the World!
the use of Lactose Hair Pomade will bring the most at every stroke and cause a rapid growth of the hair. $1.50 today and get that comb by return mail.
MB $1.
Large, Heavy Strong and Durable. Male of copper and brass associated together and cast into one solid place. Heavy polished and fully nickel plated. Speed both which goes through the large wood handle and screws into metal end of a comb to prevent the handle from getting flame or coil mortar. Remember it will in one piece. Nothing to get out of order, will last a lifetime.
Price of Hair Straightener and Alcohol Heater complete $1.50.
L. HEATER is the handiest and most convenient method. It can pot, put on our hand bag. Price $8c. Hair Pomade. It only mortar. Appropriate of a hurricane growth of the hair. Price $2c.
DUGG Illustrating the Largest and Most complete Line of people, such as Banges, Wigs, Puffs, Snatches, Pom-
W. TAYLOR, Howell, Mich.
Please mention this paper.
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Address
THE MCCALL CO., 533 W. 32ND ST. NEW YORK
is now open under the management of Fred. Berry & Raleigh M. Randolph and will be open
Admission, Gentlemen 15c; Skates 15c
LADIES ADMITTED FREE, Skates 15c
There Will Be No Dancing.
MUSIC Increased Floor
The Hair
We Grow New L
Ye
M. POPE.
my hair was
through and
were hard
my head.
MRS. L. L. ROBERTS
years ago my hair first
received by shoulders.
ware of Imitation
Call, or Address Mail to
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ST. LOUIS
the best in the art of the wonderful work of growing all kinds of hair, the best in the art and the conditions of hair, even the growing of hair in ideal places of the hair, many colours, points of the idea that hair is what was possible, but we make grown the hair for the hands, by cultivating success. The purpose of the value of our work is that we are being cultivated 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 (saving that "things is the same" or "just as good") or referred to "PORO". We advise you to use only "PORO" Hair Groomer (the oldest and best of the kind). See that the name "PORO" is on every box, not guaranteed without the Prepared only by MRS. A. M. POPE.
BELL PHONE BOMONT 3109
SPLITS
RLING LONDON
A palatable drink for the winter season, furnishing strength and nourishment
TWO DOZEN IN A CASE.
Delivered to Any Part of the City.
E CLEVELAND & SANDUS
BREWING COMPANY
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!
These samples and our information below are for private use only and may not be used for any other purpose. We are not responsible for any characteristics with which we may be responsible. We are not responsible for any information with which we may be responsible. We are not responsible for any business concern in the country. Certain information may be useful to the reader, but in no way is it intended to be used for any other purpose.
We Represent
The Chemical
Wonder
Company of
New York
WE WILL BE GLAD TO CORRESPOND, WITHOUT CHANGE,
WITH OUR GREED MEN AND COURSED WOMEN WHO ARE
INFORMED OF OUR EXPENDITURES. WE SEE TO BE
INFORMED OF OUR DISCOVERIES WHICH WILL BENEFIT THEM.
SEND 20c FOR THE THREE SAMPLES IMEDIATELY
THIS LITTLE EXPENDITURE WILL BENEFIT YOU MORE THAN YOU KNOW. After
the samples are received, watch for the postman. He will bring your letters very soon.
WRITE YOUR NAME AND STREET ADDRESS VERY PLAINLY
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Floor Space
The Original
Hair Growers
We Grow Our Hair
Now Let Us Grow
Yours With
"PORO"
TRADE MARK
Registered
growing all kinds. All
to the growing
of the idea that such
for handbooks. By the
work is that we are to
have we have actually
frequently mentioned as
is the same" or "just
to use only "PORO"
that the name "PORO"
used only by MRS. A. M.
nations
to
PINE STREET
T. LOUIS, MO.
---
DOUBLE REWARD OF VIRTUE
Love Story Written by Small Boy at Least Brought Things to a Happy Conclusion.
Apropos of love stories in general, Jerome S. McWade, the well-known Duluth connoisseur, said at a recent dinner:
"At the approach of Valentine day last year I offered a prize of five dollars to the little boys of my Sunday school class for the best short love story. I have one of the stories here, and I am going to read it to you."
Mr. McWade then read:
"A poor man fell in love with a lady whose mother was a rich toy dealer.
"The poor man could not marry the rich lady, because he had no money.
"A villain then offered him $50 if he would become a drunkard.
"The poor man wanted the money to get married with, so agreed, but when he got to the beer saloon he said:
"No, I will not become a drunkard, even for gredt riches."
"On the way home he found a bag of gold. So the young lady married him. It was a splendid wedding, and the next day they had twins.
"Moral - Virtue is its own reward."
—New York Times
Rheumatism Cured in a Day.
Dr. Dennis Kelley for Rheumatism radically cures in 1.80 days. Its action is remarkable. It removes the cause and the disease quickly disappears. First dose greatly benefits the Druggist.
Some men go to their graves without discovering that they were not as important as they thought they were.
Bear your own burdens first, after that help to carry those of other people.—George Washington.
PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS.
FAID OUTMENT is guaranteed to cure any case that has been mutilated or of Providing Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 600.
Scandal is the tame of fools who judge other people by themselves.
BREAK UP THAT COUGH
with ADVERTISING. It is family remedy. It comes where other remedies fail. All coolers. So, 600 bottles.
It isn't every prodigal son who gets a whack at the obese veal.
DODD'S
KIDNEY
PILLS
FOR ALL KIDNEY DISEASES
HEUUMATISM
BRIGHT'S DISEASE
DIABETES BAKK
1975 *Guarantee*
What Governor Deneen, of Illinois,
Says About It?
Governor Deneen, of Illinois, owns a co-
lege. Hon. of Illinois, O. H. Deneen,
of Canada, he has said in
armies in
WESTERN
CANADA
FREE
EN GLANDS
Nemoody for the prompt relief of
Asthma and Hay Fever. Ask your
drugstreet for it. Write for FREE SAMPLE.
BROTHROP & LYMAN CO., LLLB, BUFFALO, Y.
PISO'S in the word to remember when you need a remedy for COUCHS & COLDs
Practical Fashions
LADIES' DRESS IN SEMI-PRINCESS STYLE.
1
Paris Pattern No. 3210, All Scams Allowed.—Russian blue diagonal chevlet is the material selected for the pictured development of this stylish dress, with black silk for the band trimming and all-over lace for the yoke. Small jet buttons close the waist. The waist of the dress is arranged in groups of tucks at each shoulder, those of the back continuing to the belt, while those of the front terminate at yoke depth. The closing is effected at the front, and the right front is shaped at the closing edge. The sleeves are close-fitting and the neck of the waist is cut in horseshoe outline, displaying the yoke facing, or may be made plain, as shown in the small front view. The skirt is one of the new gored models with an inverted box plait at the back. The pattern is cut-in six sizes—32 to 42 inches' bust measure. The 36 bust requires for the dress seven yards of material 36 inches wide, with, as illustrated in the large view, $1\frac{1}{2}$ yards of silk 20 inches wide and one-half yard of all-over lace 18 inches wide. Width of lower edge is about $3\frac{1}{2}$ yards.
To procure this pattern send 10 cents to
"Pattern Department," of this press,
write name and address plainly, and be sure
to give size and number of pattern.
NO. 3210. SIZE.....
NAME.....
TOWN.....
STREET AND NO.....
STATE....
GIRL'S APRON.
Paris Pattern No. 2300, All Seams Allowed.-Cross-barred dimity has been used for this pretty little apron. The front and backs are gathered into the yoke-band of English embroidery insertion, and the arm-bands are of the same insertion. Three-cornered pockets of the material ornament the front, and sash ends extend from the under-arm seams to the back. The pattern is capable of development in any material, and looks particularly well in plain or figured chambray. The pattern is in four sizes -6 to 12 years. For a girl' of ten years the apron requires 3% yarns 27 inches wide, of 2% yarns 36 inches wide; 2% yarns 24 inches to trim. This yarn pattern gend 10 cents to Pattern Department." of this paper. Write name and address plainly, and be
NO. 2300. SIZE.....
NAME.....
TOWN.....
STREET AND NO.....
STATE.....
NOT UP ON SLANG.
"I'd like to get a room for the night," drawn the old man with the chin whiskers and yellow satchel.
"By Jinks, Buttons!" whispered the clerk to the bellhop, "all of the rooms are filled, but we don't want to discourage the country patronage, so we'll have to give him some kind of a 'stall.'"
But the old man overheard the remark and fired up instantly. "No, yeou don't!" he blurted defiantly. "By crickety, no! I wanted to sleep in a stall I'd stopped at the livery stable on the other corner."
To-Day's Charm.
The horsehoes used to keep at bay Disasters dire.
What is the proper charm to-day-
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY, MARCH 12, 1910.
For Pain in Chest
WANTED TO BE ON SAFE, SIDE
Woman, Twice Deserted. Didn't Mean to Take Any Chances on Her Third Hubby.
The officers of the thumb print bureau were just wishing for something interesting to turn up when a telephone message offered timely diversion. A woman was speaking.
"Do you make prints of anybody's thumbs except 'criminals'?" she asked.
The bureau did.
"Well," said the woman, "if I will come down there right away with a man will you make a print of his thumbs?"
The bureau would. The man and
Do farmers eat the proper sort of food?
The farmer of today buys a much larger proportion of the food that goes on the table than he did ten years ago. It's a good thing that this is so because he has a great variety to select from.
He should, however, use great care in selecting for the best results in health and strength.
The widespread tendency in the city to increase the amount of Quaker Oats eaten is due very largely to the recent demonstrations by scientific men that the Quaker Oats fed man is the man with greatest physical endurance and greatest mental vigor.
For sore throat, sharp pain in lungs, tightness across the chest, hoarseness or cough, lave the parts with Sloan's Liniment. You don't need to rub, just lay it on lightly. It penetrates instantly to the seat of the trouble, relieves congestion and stops the pain.
Here's the Proof.
Mr. A.W. Price, Fredonia, Kans,
says: "We have used Sloan's Limi-
ment for a year, and find it an exe-
cient thing for sore throat, chestpains,
a fever, or overt heat. A few
drops taken on her chest cough-
ing and sneezing instantly."
Sloan's Liniment
is easier to use than porous plasters, acts quicker and does not clog up the pores of the skin.
It is an excellent antiseptic remedy for asthma, bronchitis, and all inflammatory diseases of the throat and chest; will break up the deadly membrane in an attack of croup, and will kindly kind of neuralgia or rheumatic pains.
All drugists keep Sloan's Liniment. Price 25c., 50c., & $1.00.
Dr. Earl S. Sloan,
It is an excellent antiseptic remedy used in the throat and all inflammatory diseases of the throat and chest; will break up the deadly membrane in an attack of croup, and may kind of neuralgia or rheumatic pains.
All drugists keep Slonn's Limiment. Prices 25c, 50c, & $1.00. Dear Slonn, Dear Slonn.
SOUR STOMACH
"I used Caesaretts and feel like a new man. I have been a sufferer from dyspepsia and sour stomach for the last two years. I have been taking medicine and other drugs, but could find no relief only for a short time. I will recommend Caesaretts for indigestion and sour stomach and keep the bowels in good condition. They are very nice to eat."
Harry Stuckley, Munch Chunk, Pn. Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good, Do Good. Never Sicken, Weaken Gripe. 10c, 25c, 50c. Never in bank. The sensitivities Guarantee to cure your money back. 928
What He Was After.
George Washington Henry Clay Lincoln Carter, one of Georgia's younger darkey citizens, was suddenly called upon not long ago to explain his presence at 1 a. m. in the henhouse of a white neighbor.
"Stealing my chickens, are you, you black rascal?" the owner demanded.
George W. H. C. L. C. rolled his eyes until they were all whites.
"Now, now, lookyah, Mars George," he protested, "dat daint not way ter ae—"an" please doñ" pint dat gun at mueh" he hastily said, "he hastily" holding up his battered but as a shield, "Ah 'char Ah wren't gwine no chickens; no, sah' Ah 'write' or diale story" Ah 'ah des' come mossgen romh' hyah ter git local color—yas, sah, dats all Ah was after, Ah 'char te de Law hwt hit!"
If She Had Her Choice
A gentleman who finds great amusement in telling his wife which of their acquaintance he will select as her successor when she dies, and who, one day, had been teasing her with numberless mock-serious allusions to the subject, suddenly called the life of the daughter to him and asked her, shaking with laughter at his own wit: "Madeline, how would you like to
"Madeline, how would you like to have a stepmother?" The child considered for a moment and then, with great earnestness replied: "I think I'd much rather have a stepfather."
Not Appropriate
Senator Beveridge was replying at a dinner in Washington to a defender of the sugar trust:
"You remind me of a man at his brother's funeral. This man bent over the grave and closely watched the lowering of the coffin down into the cleavetcut rectangular chamber prepared for it. He heaved a sigh as the coffin came to a rest, and said to the undertaker heartily: 'The greatest fit I ever saw in my life. Come and have a drink on the head of it.'—Sunday Magazine of the Cleveland Leader.
CHANGE THE. VIBRATION It Makes for Health.
A man tried leaving off meat, potatoes, coffee, and etc., and adopted a breakfast of fruit, Grape-Nuts with cream, some crisp toast and a cup of Postum.
His health began to improve at once for the reason that a meat eater will reach a place once in a while where his system seems to become clogged and the machinery doesn't work smoothly.
A change of this kind puts astile food of low nutritive value and takes up food and drink of the highest value, already partly digested and capable of being quickly changed into good, rich blood and strong tissue.
A most valuable feature of Grape-Nuts is the natural phosphate of potash grown in the grains from which it is made. This is the element which transforms albumen in the body into the soft gray substance which fills brain and nerve centers.
A few days' use of Grape-Nuts will give one a degree of nervous, strength well worth the trial.
Look in pkgs for the little book, "The Road to Wellville." "There's a Reason." Ever read the above letter! A new one appears from time to time. You must, true, and full of human interests.
BLOCK BROS.
WEST VIRGINIA MAIL POUCH
TOBACCO
CHARGING
5 Cts
CHEW AND SMOKE
MAIL POUCH
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"TREAT YOURSELF to the BEST"
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CATALOGUE
OF VALID ARTICLES
SENT FREE
MAIL POUCH
TOBACCO
DEPARTMENT A.
WHEELING.
W.V.A.
SAVE THE
COUPONS
WANTED TO BE ON SAFE, SIDE
Woman, Twice Deserted, Didn't Mean
to Take Her on Her
Third Hubby
The officers of the thumb print bureau were first wishing for something interesting to turn up when a telephone message offered timely diversion. A woman was speaking. "Do you make prints of anybody's thumbs except criminals?" she asked. The bureau did. "Well," said the woman, "if I will come down there right away with a man will you make a print of his thumbs." The bureau would. The man and the woman came. The woman thumb prints for identification," said the woman. "We are going to be married tomorrow. He is my third husband. The other two rain away and I had the hardest kind of a time to find them because there was no sure way of identifying them. They say thumb prints can never change and that a man can be tracked by them to the ends of the earth. I hope I shall never have to use them, but it is just as well to be on the safe side. Will you make them?"
HOW A DOCTOR CURED SCALP
DISEASE
"When I was 'ten or twelve years old I had a scalp disease, something like scald head, though it wasn't that. I suffered for several months, and most of my hair came out. Finally they had a doctor to see me and he recommended the Cuticura Remedies. They cured me in a few weeks. I have used the Cuticura remedies, also, for a breaking out on my hands and was benefited a great deal. I haven't had any more trouble with the scalp disease. Miss Jessie F. Buchanan, R. F. D. 3, Hamilton, Ga. Jan. 7, 1908."
Kept with Barnum's Circus
P. T. Barnum, the famous circus man, once wrote: "I have had the Cutleura Remedies among the contents of my medicine chest with my shows for the last three seasons, and I can cheerfully certify that they were very effective in every case which called for their use."
FRIENDS.
"O, well, beauty passes, you know." "Yes; a pity you didn't stop it on its way, isn't it"
WORTH KNOWING
Simple But Powerful Prescription for Rheumatism and Lame Back. This was previously published here and cured hundreds. "Get one ounce of syrup of Sarsaparilla compound and one ounce Toris Compound. Then get half a pint of good whiskey and put the other two ingredients into it. Use a tablespoonful of this mixture before each meal and at bed time. Shake the bottle each time." Good effects are felt the first day. Any druggist has these ingredients on hand or will quickly get them from his wholesale house.
When Tempos Didn't Eugit
Little Helen, during the three years of her life, had never been separated from her elder sister night or day for more than a few minutes at a time; but at last the time came when the sister went away for a, whole day. The child tried every game and occupation that she knew of, and a new one or two suggested by her mother, but they all pailed.
Finally she gave up and stood and looked sadly out of the window. Then she sighed deeply and said: "It's still the same old day, isn't it, mother?"—Woman's Home Companion.
Entitled to It.
"How are things lookin' over to Dingedel?"
"They've been lookin' purty squeamish for a spell. Th' creek got so blame high it overflowed Peasley's dam, an' there's two foot o' water in Widder brown's cellar."
"Well, well, I s'pose you folks over there will be so stuck up pretty soon that you'll be callin' yourselves th' Parisians of Ameriky."
$100 Reward, $100.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that sicken Cataracts. Halti Cataract Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Cataract Cure is an internalized treatment. Halti Cataract Cure is taken internally, active direct therapy. Halti Cataract Cure is thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient the nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer Cure. Send for list of any case that it fails to cure. Address F. J. CHENKY & CO. Tolteo, D. C. Halti Cataract Fans Plus for constipation.
Insufficiently Clad.
Chapple.—I was sitting by my bed wrapped in my thoughts.—
Dollie.—Goodness! Didn't you take an awful cold?—Cleveland Leader.
Always hold in mind that even failure can be the alphabet of success.—Wilson.
Do farmers eat the proper sort of food?
The farmer of today buys a much larger proportion of the food that goes on the table than he did ten years ago. It is a good thing that this is so because he has a great variety to select from.
He should, however, use great care in selecting for the best results in health and strength.
The widespread tendency in the city to increase the amount of Quaker Oats daten is due very largely to the recent demonstrations by scientific men that the Quaker Oats fed man is the man with greatest physical endurance and greatest mental vision.
Farmers, should give this subject careful thought and should increase the quantity of Quaker Oats eaten by themselves, their children and the farm hands. 57
Traveling Man Got Even.
A traveling man called on the manager of a large New York concern the other day and sent his card in by the boy at the outside gate. The boy sauntered back lazily and told the traveling man that the manager wouldn't see him.
"Well, you go and ask him for the card I sent in," said the caller.
In a few minutes the boy returned from his second trip, "Say," remarked the boy, "the boss told me to tell you that he tore up that card, but he sent a nicked to you to pay for it."
The traveling man was deeply insulted, but he decided to get back as best he could. He opened his card case and drew out another card, handling it to the boy.
"Give this to your boss," he said, "and tell him that I'll keep the money. My cards are two for five. Much obliged."
The manager rushed out of the gate to find the traveling man, but he was too late. The man had left.
Analyzed by Chemists
Apropos of President Taft and his recent decision about whisky, Richard Le Gallienne said at a dinner at the St. Regis:
"While I was living in Liverpool there, arose a hot whisky discussion. Was pot still whisky the only whole-some one, or was patent still whisky the one non-poisonous drink? Chemiol and whisky were applied to every whisky going.
"A Liverpudlian entered a public house near the Albert docks one night and said:
"Is yer whisky pure?"
"Well, I should think so," the public answered. "It's been paralyzed by three marchists."
LIQUOR has destroyed more men than any war or epidemic combined; still some men think they must drink. The Acme Home Treatment is the safest and surest way to rid yourself of the Drink-Habit. Try it and you will see the difference between whiskey health and Acme health. Write E. Forin, Dickey Bldg, Chicago, for a free trial.
Storm Episode:
Two handsome young womens, becoming dressed, slipped and fell together in the slushy pool of the crossing. They arose wet and angry.
"Wring out, wild belles," commented an observer, such an addition of insult to injury being condemned by all who overheard. Philadelphia Ledger.
Where Resinol Ointment is Known it Is Considered a Boon to Humanity.
If the soothing and healing properties of Resinol Ointment were generally known it would be universally used to the exclusion of all others. It is indeed a boon to humanity.
W. J. Callan, Brooklyn, N. Y.
An Appreciated Distraction.
"So you think the automobile has made life much pleasanter?"
"It has for me," answered the comfortable citizen. "I drive a fast horse and my son rides a bicycle. The automobile has taken the minds of the police off both of us."
Important to Mothers.
Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of H. H. H. H. In Use For Over 30 Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought.
Thinking of Garden Time.
Bacon—I think much of the man who can make two blades of grass grow on a garden. Egbert—I've not got my eye on him. I admire the man who can make only one weed grow where a dozen grew before.
“Plink Eye” in Epidemic, Attack on the Spartan, Is Contagious and Calls for Immediate Action, Marine Eye Remedy Affords Relief from Blindness, Freely and Frequently, Doesn't Smart.
A Practical Success. his alright a success?
"Well, it's practical, at any rate. He uses the motor to run a wood saw machine."
PERRY DAVIS PAINKILER has an available reputation of over twenty years of reliable rooftop installation, softball, plumbers alleys, etc. S.S. and A.E. all droughts.
The man who worships a woman will never develop into a free thinker.
TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY
Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine Tablets to fund money if it fails to cure. E.W. GROVES's signature on each book.
It doesn't take one long to become an expert fault finder.
Mrs. WILSON's Soothing Syrup.
Forchment teaching, softens the gums to increase inflammation and main cures wind conditions.
A crab-eating monkey in Siam swims like a fish.
should be her pride. Your home should
reflect your own individuality. You
cannot have special wall papers de-
signed by you for each room—you can
carry out a special Alabastine decorative
scheme for those rooms—you can be
a leader in your community and have
your home the talk of your friends.
Alabastine
The Stylish Wall Tint
is the material that will accomplish this result. We can
show infinite color effects, classic stencil design, and
our Art Department is at your service.
Send for the Alabastine book explaining what we do
for you and how we furnish free stencils where Alabastino
is used.
Alabastine is a powder made from Alabasten, ready for
use in building with water, and it is applied with an or-
dinary wall brush. Full directions on each package.
Alabastine Company
New York City, N.Y.
Grand Rapids, Mich.
THE PACKAGE
Bargains
Automobile
A Chance to Buy Good Used
from the Largest and Most Rel
Concern in the Automobile Ind
We have a number of used cars which we are selling
customers who have purchased our 1910 models. T
have been thoroughly overhauled and will give splene
faction—much better, in fact, than the average new, lo
car. Among our bargains we call special attentic
following:
Model E White Steamer
Side-entrance, painted maroon, wit
completely overhauled
gains in
mobiles
Buy Good Used Cars
best and Most Reliable
the Automobile Industry
used cars which we are selling for our
purchased our 1910 models. These cars
perhauled and will give splendid satis-
fact, than the average new, low-priced
cars we call special attention to the
Steamer
painted maroon, with top,
perhauled
$500
Bargains in Automobiles
A Chance to Buy Good Used Cars from the Largest and Most Reliable Concern in the Automobile Industry
We have a number of used cars which we are selling for our customers who have purchased our 1910 models. These cars have been thoroughly overhauled and will give splendid satisfaction—much better, in fact, than the average new, low-priced car. Among our bargains we call special attention to the following:
Model E White Steamer
Side-entrance, painted maroon, with top,
completely overhauled $500
Model H White Steamer
Newly painted, completely overhauled cylinders in engine, with top, in first condition, a splendid buy at
Model L White Steamer
Newly painted and new top, complete hauled, listed at only
d, completely overhauled, new engine, with top, in first class plendid buy at $1100
e Steamer
l and new top, completely overat only $1250
Newly painted, completely overhauled, new cylinders in engine, with top, in first class condition, a splendid buy at $1100
Newly painted and new top, completely overhauled, listed at only $1250
Model G White Steamer
Seven-passenger, paint in-fair condition, with top, car completely overhauled, is offered at $1450
Model O White Steamer
Completely overhauled and repainted, we almost impossible to tell this car from a new 1010 model, goes to the one who the first check for
erhauled and repainted, with top, able to tell this car from a brand tel, goes to the one who sends for $1500
Completely overhauled and repainted, with top, almost impossible to tell this car from a brand new 1010 model, goes to the one who sends the first check for $1500
Model M White Steamer
An exact duplicate of the car used president Roosevelt and by President completely overhauled, has been used a demonstrator. To get quick action model, we have set the low price of $ Baker Electric $ Also recent models of the Franklin, Reo, Sto Dayton, Stearns Ford and Chalmers-D
dicate of the car used by ex-
sevelt and by President Taft,
erhauled, has been used only as
er. To get quick action on this
set the low price of $2750
$650
the Franklin, Reo, Stoddard-
ford and Chalmers-Detroit
An exact duplicate of the car used by ex-president Roosevelt and by President Taft, completely overhauled, has been used only as a demonstrator. To get quick action on this model, we have set the low price of $2750
Also, recent models of the Franklin, Reo, Stoddard- Dayton, Stearns Ford and Chalmers-Detrott Come to Cleveland by Roil and Drive Home in One of These Cars
THE WHITE COMPANY
805 East 79th Street, Cleveland,
$125,000 net from 1200 acres
$15,000 from 22 acres peaches
$3,200 from 20 acres raisins,
San Joaquin Valley, Cali
A cow and an acre of alfalfa will earn $120 a year in the San Joaquin
Grapes will yield, from $100 to $300 per acre; peaches and apples
while oranges will produce from $250 to $500, and in many instances ma-
an an acre. There are ten million arable and irrigable acres here. You
unimproved land for $50 an acre.
Ten acres are enough to comfortably support a small family. Twen-
a fine living, with money in the bank. Forty acres should make you rich
STATE COMPANY
Street, Cleveland, Ohio
from 1200 acres grapes.
12 acres peaches.
10 acres raisins, in the
San Valley, California
I earn $120 a year in the San Joaquin Valley.
$300 per acre; peaches and apricots. $150 to $500;
to $500, and in many instances more than $1000
able and irrigable acres here. You still may buy
easily support a small family. Twenty acres afford
Forty acres should make you rich.
THE WHITE COMPANY 805 East 79th Street, Cleveland, Ohio
$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
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 produce from $250 to $500, and in many instances more than $1000 an acre. Acre and acre of arable and irrigable acres here. You still may buy unimproved land for $50 an acre.
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.
You pay from one-fourth to one-third of your income, usually can be paid $200 to $500 for out of the crop.
I know this valley from end to end. I have seen crops planted and harvested in the valley and interviewed farmers, ranches and merchants. I have collated the testimony of all. All this valuable information is contained in the San Joaquin Valley land office. I will give full name and address. I will also send you our immigration journal, The Earth, six months. The Santa Fe employs me to help with land lines. The company has no land lines, but readily refer your inquiry to reliable land owners who have. The Santa Fe daily, Comfortable tourist sleepers and chair cars. The Journey also may reasonably cost. Santa Fe tourist service to San Francisco is quickest. C. L. SEAGRAVES, General Colonial Agent A. T. & S. F. Ry. System 1150 Railway Excursion Chicago,
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IN EACH PACK
CATALOG
OF VALUABLE ARTS
SENT FREE
ADDRESS
MAIL POUND
TOBACCO
DEPARTMENT A
WHEELING
SAVE THE
COUPONS
COUPON
IN EACH PACKAGE
CATALOGUE
OF VALUABLE ARTICLES
SENT FREE
ADDRESS
MAILPOUCH
Tobacco Q
DEPARTMENT A.
WHEELING.
W.VA.
SAVE THE
COUPONS
You pay from one-fourth to one-half of the crops. Almost anything can be raised in the grape, wheat, figs and apples, delicate grapes and hard potatoes. Products of the hard and semi-tropical zones flourish by side by side. Plenty of water for irrigation drawn from the nearby Sierra snows. It is used for the grape, wheat, figs and apples, while orchard is young, for many profitable crops. He bought twenty acres of land five years ago. He had lost $100 to start on. Today his place is paid for and he has an orchard. He bought twenty acres of land five years ago. William Shrauer, R. F. D. 7. Fresno, Cal. bought his first ten acres - six acres of land - for $1000 for paid for, and refuses $1200 for his place. T. Tarney, of Fresno, owns vineyard of 1,200 acres, from which he makes an annual profit of $125,000. He acres of peaches yielded a $15,000 crop.
Alabastine
The Diamond Wall coating
ALABASTINE
ALABASTINE
ALABASTINE
Alabastine, Loving
Loving
Loving and Encouraged
Alabastine Company