The Gazette
Saturday, May 14, 1910
Cleveland, Ohio
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Simple Street Hat
IF YOU are looking for comfort and service in a street hat and want to be sure that it embodies style and becoming as well, study the models shown here.
Fig. 1 shows a French hat woven in one piece and faced with a demi-facing of black velvet. It is so altogether charming that it will tempt the price of a much more elaborate effort from almost any discriminating buyer. Nothing could be simpler than its decoration of two phasant feathers mounted with a big, jeweled straw, cabochon. This mounting of two long quilts gives them an importance which matches the "chanteric" class at once. And one must put compil at the high price of a "chanteric" pattern. This is really one of the most beautifully balanced shapes which is to be found. Call it the "hen-phen-ant" model and cheerfully part with 200 francs for it in Paris. It will finally "dawn, upon those who observe that there are other things to a hat besides trimmings.
Fig. 2. of which two views are shown, is an American model in royal blue and white braid. The brim is soft and beautifully draped, and
CONFIRMATION DRESS.
The dress we show here is pretty in its simplicity. It may be made up in white material. A plastron is taken down the center center, the bodice and skirt joining it with a wrapped scam; a straps of silk edges the foot of skirt, above the over-sleeves, and another is taken over the shoulders, while the lace yoke is edged by a small plastron of silk. The under-sleeves are of lace to match the yoke.
Materials required: Six yards 44 inches wide, one dozen buttons, two yards face, two yards silk.
Pretty Veil Effect.
The nets dotted with metallic beads are used to a large, extent for yokes, sleeves, sahes, etc. The general manipulation of yokes, cuffs, etc. is to use the net for the outer portion. Hanging with chiffon or mousseline do the work. The effect is better if the bead is seated for a foundation and the veiled with finest mull, tulle or any delicate transparent fabric. Puff skirts arranged with this kind of veiling give the prettiest effect imaginable, softening the glare of the metallic beads.
the whole make up of the hat, shows the handiwork of an artist in millinery. Folded velvet is thrust through the brim at the loft and extends across the back and disappears under the brim at the right side. Two flowers spring out of the crown. A flower hung above the brim, place, but is no part of the design. This is a very commendable design, and this is true of its modest price.
Nothing could be more unpretentious or more finished than a simple bat now much worn. This is of a durable braid in burnt straw color, faced with black satin ribbon. The ribbon, bordered with braid, is laid in a scant flat rosette and finished with four "years." The crown is very large, but a model similarly trimmed, having a smaller crown, has been made and is even more successful than the original.
The American models are handmade of rows of braid sewed together. The braids are light in weight, very soft and of high luster. There is nothing rigid or heavy about the shapes, and they are altogether satisfactory.
JULIA BOTTOMLEY.
CONCEAL JOINING OF...LACE
Easy to Arrange, Though Much Depends Upon the Quality of Material That Is Used.
It is possible to join lace so the joining is almost entirely concealed. This is managed in several ways, much depending upon the kind of lace and how it is used.
For a yoke or other solid surface that is to lie flat it is better to upholpe the lace together. Cut out the design irregularly, and join it to the under piece so that it continues the pattern. The edges are buttonhole, sewed or overcast together according to which stitch shows least. Do this with fine thread and cut away all ragged edges.
For firmness it will usually be found necessary to join the under side also. In this case make the stitches on right side small.
Where lace is to be joined for a ruffle the best way to do it is to button-hole the edges together in the thinnest possible seam. Use a fine thread and do the stitching neatly. This same method is often used on yokes and for thin laces is better, perhaps, than appliquing. Press the edges open on right side between thumb and first finger so it does not pucker.
Some persons lap the edges of the lace so that the wrong side of the left side lies for about a quarter of an inch upon the right side of the under piece. Both ends are then heumed in tiny stitches. This prevents a seam, but is almost impossible to do without showing.
Never join lace by sewing in a French seam, as it is entirely too bulky, and, no matter how carefully done, will not look neat. Above all, do not content yourself with sewing in a single seam. The edges curl badly at first washing and the lace is apt to pull apart.
For the Dressing Table
A convenient set of three small consecutive bags, which will prove wonderfully convenient if hung beside the dressing table, is made from a yard length of pompadour, dresden or plain saffron ribbon divided into three equal parts, folded into bag shape, the sides overcast missing beads by matching their color, if the selvage and the tops equipped with sets of rather long ribbon hangers, which join under a big rosette or a silk-covered cabochon. The same design may be used for a desk accessory for preserving special scraps of paper, by making the triplet bags of chamols, bordered with ribbon and decorated with the embroidered initials of the owner, each bag compartment bearing a different letter.
ESTABLISHED AUGUST 25, 1883, AND ISSUED EVERY WEEK ON TIME SINCE.
MR. BENSON M'ILRATH.
Descended from "Underground Rail road". Stock of the Days Before the War of the Rebellion—A Friend of the Race We All Should Be Glad to Vote For.
The editor of The Gazette takes real pleasure in announcing the candidacy of Mr. Benson Mellrath, a true friend of the race, for a Republican nomination (three to be nominated) for county commissioner. Primaries, Tuesday, May 17, Mr. Mellrath was named the first Cincinnati, Ohio, grandfather, grandfather and great-grandfather, all of whom were abortionists of the most active kind, the grandfather being a leader in the "Underground Railroad" work in this section. Many a poor shave was secreted in his house, and he took the hike and sent across it to Canada and freedom. LIBERTY! Now comes Mr. Benson Mellrath, standing upon his own record as a true friend of the race; asking our support at the primaries. The Gazette proposes to hold a public meeting and all other candidates for the position because it knows our people can depend upon his doing more for them as county commissioner than any of the many other candidates. The first petition ever filed in our county commissioners' office to construct a road, the Mellrath family is a trainee of the Mellrath family association, the largest in this county. The entire family has always, been stunned Republicans and friends of the race. This is Mr. Mellrath's first attempt to secure an office. He will be the first city and county for years. Remember to vote for him on May 17.
DOINGS OF THE RACE.
A Richmond, Va., trust company has $10,000 left to George Washington Lyons, born in 1855, who left that city some years ago. His father was a lawyer. Senior Moran Oakridge, president of the Cuban society recently appointed minister of commerce and agriculture by President Gomez, is dead, Bright's disease. Mrs. Aida Oyerton Walker has received a beautiful diamond brooch from the museum, and is on the second place in District P. in the New York Journal's recent $50,000 popularity contest for actresses. Four of our people at Niles, Mich., have sued the manager of the Colonial theatre there for $1,400 for ecting them from reserved seats when they were objected to them, and will win $1,000 each.
We want to keep this idea before our readers, that it is better to own a home than to live highly and own nothing. The time has come in the business of the theatre down to the substance. Onlin (Neb.) Enterprise.
The supreme court of Louisiana has decided that mulattos and octoons are not Nerrous and that the laws that prohibit the "association" of a white person with a Negro do not skip the laws of suchized Caucasian and African blood. Sam Langford, since the first of the year, has added $2,000 to his bank roll. Sam is saving his money, and owns several houses in Boston, Langford's next battle will be with Al Kubailan, a heavy肝. May 17, in New York City.
Possibly the worst trost given any member of the race in any of our papers for years was that given Bishop Wesley J. Gaines of the A. M. E. church by "Thomas Fortune in the book by Washington's New York last week.
Recently the New York Foundling and Orphan asylum shipped a carload of babies to New Orleans, LA., where they were eagerly adopted by women there. The managers of the New York asylum have, however, done the babies an irreparable wrong in sending them to the south in the spring and taught the heilish race prejudices which prevail in jincowdom—St. Paul Appeal.
The supreme court of Georgia has killed our secret orders in that state, and we are restrained from using either symbol or sign or uniform of any order. Our federal soldiers are only allowed to wear their uniforms forty-eight hours while in Georgia off.
There were over 300 applicants who appeared before the board of engineers, Philadelphia, April 20, for license to operate steam stationary engines in that city, Walter E. Johnson, age 21, a member of the race had the highest percentage and led the large group of Britol, a pretty eighteen-year-old "white" girl was arrested in Rochester, N. Y., April 28 with forty-year-old Daniel-Linsey, with whom she had cloped from her homes in Brattleboro, VT. The couple had been traced here from Buffalo. The Brattleboro girl's father is one of the leading merchants of Brattleboro. She has been well educated and manned a farm. She was also with the African American. Bessie said she and Lince are married.
George A. Feldshman, a presupous
"white" farmer near Fulton, N. Y.
look out a hecuma April 29 to marry his housekeeper, Mrs. Minnie Coleman, a comedy-Afro-American widow. Mr. Fleishman, who is 39 years old, and Mrs. Coleman, 25, were married by Rev. E. S. Halley, pastor of Zion Ace Church, Syracuse. Coleman, Coleman, dressed in a dark blue suit and a flat brimmed straw hat trimmed with flowers and foliage.
BROKE $300 PLATE CLASS.
Picad Guilty to Theft—A Theod. I loves and Maaons—A Spelling Contest—A News—A As. to Local News—Person als and Church Notes.
Stonevilleville, O.,—John Munroe, and
Mr. White, "white," plued guilty to
the theft of 50 lbs. 60 pounds of brass
from the Vernor Coal Co.—Sherman
Cowans gave a musical and boisterous
Mrs. Walker of Untown, Paz and
visiting Mr. and Mrs. S. Banks.—Mr. Venery of Smithfield was here
has work. The Epiphany bengue held an
interview meeting Friday evening at
Ninth Street church. The feature
was the spelling contest held by
Haward. Howard later won and the former treated
to ice cream and cake. Rev. J. H. Accoe delivered the H. of R. and
Odd Follows' annual sermon Sunday
at 5 p.m. The stewardess' tally
was 100. The holder held a
Monday evening meeting. Mrs.
Gave a humorous and interesting talk,
representing the lodge from Bellehra-
"Mothers' day" was observed in all
the churches Sunday.—Dr. Hargraves
of Pittsburgh was here Sunday.—L. A.
Coles, on route to Stormont, stopped
and asked Mrs. Banks to have
Mrs. Lydia Carter.—A quarrel over a
game resulted in the breaking of a
$300 plate glass window which certain
persons will have to pay for.
Paul Bolden has returned from
Columbus. Rev. J. W. Kinchow
of Columbus has returned from
L. Carter is enclosure at—The local
office is enclosure at—The local
all churches and persons who patronize
the Gazette, but does not promise to
publish any one's new "just as it is
handed" to him, because the editor
uses his judgment as to how to contain
words to a line, for O. Objective
matter is not published at any price.
Read carefully the notice to correspondents published among the Ohio
letters on page 1 and you will be
used to understand that Smithfield was
here again a serve on the grand jury especial soision.—The W. M. M. S. gave
an ex client program Sunday evening
at Qu in church—Shapson church's
dedication will take up the entire last
week to hold an interning meeting
at 3 p.m.—Mrs. A. J. Guy's military opens. The w. v. Pibbey and
Saturday.
"BERT." WILLIAMS A 'STAR!
Signed to Lead a Company of "White
Performers on the Stage"
on the Stage"
New York City, Williams, and Walker were for years a team of song and dance artists. They were funny, and, with their company of performers, made thousands laugh. Now what tricks take plays. Williams and Walker were to play with their company for many years more, and been rated similarly as a couple of 'comical' 'colorful' cartoons. But Walker was taken sick, and has been for a long time in a hospital. Williams went into vancouver recently. Without his partner, without his Williams went into vancouver quiet mod turn, he has taken a jump in the theatrical world that is just beginning to make people sit up and take notice. One New York drama matricie several, books, also had the tenacity to allude to Williams as "the funniest man on the stage." No color line was drawn, no Caucasian laughhunter as Low Fields, JoeWolf Hopper, Cecil Lein, Eddie Foy and a few others who have tanked high as funny men. But nobody contradicted the bold article, and his verbiage was indored by a pretty shrewd authority when Manager Hugh was few steps behind him. Ziefer's action made many other teams gasp. Williams is playing a four, works, and engagement at Hammettstein, and he is the biggest cardy vandy club house has had since Harry Lauer sailed away. He is recalled every night until he has to beg off. He isn't funny in real life, but of being magnetic as Lauer, as quintilis as Ezra Kedall was, as drilled as Foy. His half-sung, half-splooted ditties are rendered quiet, almost sad, but they sure do make people laugh themselves slick. And here's another thing to be said for Bert Williams, comedian. His fun is all clean. His jokes are fit for anyone to hear.
LEONARD G. SCHWARTZ
Candidate for Precinct Committeeman in Precinct 10—Wind—Vote for Him. Vote for Him.
Mr. Schwartz, who keeps a confectionary store near the corner of E. 50th street on Central avenue, is so well and favorably known to our people in that vicinity that it is hardly necessary to ask him to dignify the publican committee in his letter E of the Twelfth ward. He was born just over the county line in Lorain county at Avon, of German parents, who, like the son, have always been active friends of the race. He has been a resident of this city for eighteen years, whom he has supported. Republican, Mr. Schwartz is one of the charter members of the Twelfth Ward Republican club and also its secretary. He asks the support of our voters at the primary a next Tuslay and, if elected, promises we continue the course he has followed since he was all fairly without reference to class or color. Vote for him or the 12th. Tuslay.
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.
Xenia—To the colored vote of Green county: Vote for Walter L. Dean, county auditor, candidate for second term; J. P. Harshman, candidate for county commissioner, and Prakash, candidate for prosecuting attorneys of Green county.
Sandusky—The A, M, M, E. Sewing Circle met at Mrs. Kate Gibson's last Thursday. The Young People's Guild spent a very pleasant evening with the Misses Rhodes last Tuesday—Mrs. Dixon of Toledo visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. Walton, last week, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Pate are remodeling and painting their Ging street property.
Wellsville—Ed. Wooldridge is convalescent. Mrs. Paul Rhodes of Cambridge was here Friday.; Mrs. Thos. Richerson is ill—The S. S. will be home tomorrow.; G. W. Payne visited fromlond Thursday. The ladies will give an entertainment the week of the 24th.; Mr. George Payne read an excellent paper on "Temperature" Sabbath for the benefit of the S. S. The Odd Fellows turned out here Sunday. Rev. Grant of Sabina preached two sermons; Among those here Sunday were: Ruth McCray of Greenfield, Jessie Warner, Porta Curtis of Sabina and Hore Valentine of Bloomingburg, and the late Miss Grace of Mrs. Harry Jones last week, on route to Dayton, died there suddenly Saturday. Heart failure. The Daughters of Tabor had public installation at their hall Tuesday night.; Lenora Winslow is in Kokomo, ind.
Fostoria—The M. S. elected the following officers last Thursday: Mrs. L. Nelson, pres; Mrs. S. Wilder, vice; Mrs. H. Johnson, see; Mrs. C. Collins, Columbus visited her daughter, Mrs. E. R. Johnson, last week. Misses E. Hurley, Vern Porter and Mrs. Rose Marshall visited in Cleveland Sunday. Mrs. J. Johnson was called to Fremont Sunday by her mother Mrs. E. B. Gibbs visited in Lorain Sunday. Luther Tyler, Albert Burton, W. Wibbs, W. A. E. R. and T. J. Johnson have returned from Norfolk, Va. Cadiz. The entertainment at the A. M. E. church Thursday evening by rails on Sunday. She visited her sister's success. The thousands of birth thanksgiving services Sunday afternoon. Rev. H. E. F. preached. Miss Mayne Snowden is visiting in Massillon and Miss Keha West has returned from there. She visited her sister's success by her mother's illness. The party at M. A. White's in honor of Miss Toline Barnaby's birthday, was quite a surprise. A fine time. A delightful lunch was served. Class 2 have an entertainment last Thursday. Mrs. S. Wilder visited in Hoppele Saturday and Sunday. Dr. H. Hurraye visited his parents here Sunday. A number from Mehty attended church here Sunday. The remains of Mrs. C. Waters of Ashtabula, Gurney of Mehty, were buried in Silver Leaf club will give a special gift to the fifth
Sandurkey, — Rev. H. C. Riley of Cleveland preached the H. of R. and Old Fellows' annual sermon Sunday afternoon at the Second Baptist Church in Cleveland, where his congregation greeted him. Rev. G. D. Smith preached an excellent sermon on "Mothers' Day" in the morning. Rev. R. M. Carson preached it 10:30 a. m. in Newark, heard Dr. R. J. H. H. preach it in the evening. He has a rally on the Lich. —Mr. J. Shadd's birthday, May 9, was observed by many friends. —The Aid society had an Exceptionally interesting meeting at Mrs. J. Day's church club meet at Sandurkey May 9. A good program and refreshments.
Correspondents must must all letters for publication at their main postoffice sufficiently early on Monday (or Sunday) of each week to have them reach The Gazette office on Tuesday morning, and letters write, also letters that may be or own 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, monologues, monologues to be held in the near future, must be paid for in advance at the rate of ten cents a line, six words to a line. Our rates for display advertisements will be sent on application. Send postnote and not stamps during warm weather. St. Clairsville—The Odd Fellows' sermon was preached at the A. M. E. church, preached three excellent sermons Mrs. J. A. Wilson has gone to Virginia to spend the summer—Harry Wilson is attending the miners' convention in Wheeling—Little Carrie and Sing. Lewis are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Dick Lewis—Mimie Montgomery and Harry Wilson were guests of Mrs. Ann Wilson were guests of Mrs. Wade dined with Rev. and Mrs. Montgomery Sabbath—Made Jackson is. Improving—Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wilson of Wheeling are here visiting relatives—Mr. Q. Johnson of Belfast practiced Sunday with his
wife, Mrs. Stella Brown and children visited her sister, Mrs. J. Lewis, Sunday. Leave your order for The Gazette and please may promptly. Belfast,—Don J. Res., 19. Alston captain, will have the Wingband band give a concert at St. Paul's church Holees and apron Saturday, given by Sadie Alston for the benefit of Club 5. Retreatments. Father Wheele of St. John's church delivered a very fine lecture Thursday evening for the benefice of Club 1, Mr. Stowell, captain. Mrs. Randolph, 6. visiting son of the benefice of Club 1, heard the Old Fellow's annual sermon in Stonehillville Sunday. Addie and Elmer Rundolph of Glencoe were here Sunday. The Sewing Circle at Mrs. Martha Jopling's last week Thursday evening. An enjoyable time. Mrs. Sadie Alston has been ill. Mrs. Lloyd of Grafton is visiting Mrs. Lloyd of Grafton. V. M. A. not in Wingding Monday. Rev. Alston attended
Hamilton.—The "Jolly Dozen" third monthly dance May 11 was a success. Mr. Elmer Chapman' of Lynchburg, Va., was here Sunday.—Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Dale have returned to "Urbana."—Mrs. Catherine Baker's baby died Saturday evening, danced from Sunday to the F. M. Chapman' of Newport, Ky., visited her sister, Mrs. C. S. Dyson, Sunday.—Mr. Homer' Brady is porter for Chas. Sayers. The "Jolly Dozen" met at Mrs. F. Todd' Wednesday evening.—Mrs. A. Lawrence's daughter of Marion,巾巾 was Mrs. M. Gibson is visiting Marmorie Hogans.—Mrs. Wm. Bell had visitors from Cheinmiata Sunday.—T. O. Smith of Middletown was here Sunday.
SENATOR WM. G. PHARE
Candidate for Judge of the Court of Insolvency, Subject to the Republician Primaries Tuesday, May 17th.
Decidely the best of the several candidates for the Republican nomination for Judge of the Insolvency Court is Senator William G. Phary, who has had eighteen years' experience at the bar in this city. A longer period than either of the other candidates for the nomination has been born in Cuyahoga county forty-six years ago and has resided here ever since. Recognizing his worth, local Republicans elected him a member of the State Assembly twice—in 1899 and in 1909 elevating him to the State Senate the last time. A splendid and deserved endorsement. He is a good clean man and man of character, and always stood ready to vote with the editor of The Gazette for anything for our people when they were in the Legislature together in 1900. Mr. Phary is from good old "western reserve" stock. Be sure to vote for him next Tuesday.
A $50,000<sup>5</sup> STRIKE
Los Angeles, Cal., John Thompson, who has Wednesday was penniless, now has $50,000 in his pocket, and is a Pullman passenger for Louisville, Ky. He made a lucky strike at Blodgetts Tanks, in Riverside county, Thompson came to Southern California as a Pullman porter on the Santa Fe. Contrasting the gold fever from the talk of some prospectors he met from the graduate camp six weeks ago and with the luck of a tenderfoot stumbed across a rich gold-bearing ledge at Blodgetts Tanks. He put in four weeks shaking on the dock. Mining experts were at once taken with his rock. They made a number of tests and offered the Afro-American $100 cash for his location. This offer was steadily raised until they had offered him a consider less than $500. The expires communicated with the principals in New York and shipped east 1,000 pounds of the ore. Wednesday afternoon they received a telegram to close the deal at $2,000.
Honest Confession
The census enumerator was confronted at the door by a meek and apologetic little man. "Who's the head of the house?" asked the census man. "From a strictly legal standpoint," replied the little man. "I suppose I am, but when you get right right up to brass tacks I can't."
IN MEMORIAM
THE KNIGHT
PETER H.
Candidate for a Republican Nomination as Common Pleas Judge—Comes from Abolition Stock—Vote for Him.
Charles H. Olds, Esq., was born at Jefferson, O. right in the heart of the old "Western Reserve"), in 1895, 44 years ago. Jefferson was the home of the immortals, Joshua Gildings and Benjamin Wade, leading anti-slavery fighters, in and out of Congress, in the days when slavery was to be such a position. Mr. Olds graduated from Oberlin college in 1890, from the same institution. His father was for six years a missionary among our people in Jamaica, West Indies, and worked for two years among the freedmen of the south during the war of the rebellion. Mr. Olds was a resident of Cleveland for twenty years, coming here soon after graduating, and has practiced law for eightteen years, being located in Mr. Cline's office since January, 1909. He has been actively engaged ever since, working in the "bucket shop" cases, trying nearly all the murder cases and many other smaller ones. On the 17th there will be several candidates for juries to decide on the issue, is every reason in the judgment of the Gazette why Mr. Olds should be one of these. Do not forget him. We cannot have too many friends on or off the bench.
REMARKABLE SERVICES
Honor the Memory of Dr. Consuela
Clark Seward at Her
Funeral.
Youngstown, O.—Dr. Counsel a Clark Stewart, who died April 17, and was buried in Cinema-nari, the home of her child-hood, on April 20, had a remarkable funeral in at least one respect. The group which gathered around her mother, the educator and the divisive of the life she had led. There are thousands of foreigners, workers in the great iron mills of this city. They are frequent sufferers because, of the ills that flow from ignorance, poverty and disease. As an active member of the community, Stewart had frequently ministered to their wants and relieved their sufferings. Representatives of these, Greeks, Slavs, Romanians, Russians and Polish Jews, gathered around beffold and the Catholics, crossing themselves, knelt and muttered prayers. She was the soul that had pitted their sorrows. She had been an early promoter and patron of the local kindergarten and a committee from that organization came forward to lay a wreath of flowers upon the coffin of their co-worker. She was a charter member of the school. She and the religious services due to the occasion were conducted by her pastor, who was assisted by a vested choir of boys. The ward of the local hospital in which she expired had been furnished at her expense. Thus there gathered around that coffin repaired all the races and of all forms of religion to be found in Youngstown.
At Cincinnati, where a second service ice was held, scores of schoolmates and friends came together, bringing in a large number of friends. The eternal repose of their companion and friend. Thus, covered with flowers and watted by prayers, she was laid to rest by the side of her mother. Those incidents, which marked the death of her "cumpled" shoulder, she said, were truthfully said. The world is my country, mankind are my countrymen and my religion is to do good." Mrs. Stewart was a daughter of Professor H. Clark, now of St. Louis, who was a member of the W.R. Stewart (former member of the Ohio legislature) of this city.
DR. B. F. HAMBLIN.
Candidate for a Republican Nomination for County Commissioner. Three to be Nominated at the Primaries.
We consider Dr. Hamblin, an old and active Republican for many years, one of the very best candidates now before the people seeking nominations. For thirty years he has been a resident of the county, and is 55 years old with aethiopian heritage. As a stalent, the doctor is active in business affairs—in the real estate business and as president of the Brooklyn Savings & Loan Company. For twenty years he was a resident of Royton, Cuyahoga county, and for ten years lived on the west side of the city. Dr. Hamblin is a charter member of the Chamber of Industry a member of the Trippetton and Sunset clubs, a Mason and Old Eyebrow and a broad-canned man who has all his life been a starring friend of the race. The Gazette takes pleasure in voters in the strongest possible number and urges them to vote for him when they go to the primaries on Tuesday, May 17.
THE BEAR AND THE MONKEY
The "little black bear" a "monk" would be.
The "little black bear" a cage sought he.
The "little black bear" a "monk" is he.
As the "little black bear" is caged; Tweehe!
JOHNISING *MEIYERS.
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THE GAZETTE
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY
One Year. $1.50
Six Months. 1.00
Three Months. .50
Subscribers are requested to remit by postoffice money order or registered letter.
Entered at the postoffice in Cleveland Ohio, as second-class matter
Blackstone Building, Cleveland, O.
Member Ohio Legislature: 1894
to 1896; 1898 to 1898; 1900 to 1902
Cleveland, O., May 14, 1910.
THE GAZETTE is the oldest, and has the largest bona fide circulation, double that of any newspaper in the interest of Afro-Americans, published in the state of Ohio, and comparison with any will immediately establish its rank as one of the NEWSIEST AND BEST in the country.
The local political fight in the courts the past week on Senator Dick's candidacy for popular nomination at the primaries next week, as provided by law, is little short of contemptible. We are not surprised that it failed. There are some so-called Republicans who will stoop to almost anything, it seems, to gain a point.
Call your friends and acquaintances attention to our article, elsewhere in this paper, on Sheriff Hirstius and tell them that your manhood, self and race respect will not permit you to vote for him, and also ask them to show their friendship for the race by not voting for him. Defeat Hirstius on Tuesday next, if possible, and we will not be obliged to vote against him in November.
None of the candidates advertised in The Gazette last and this week are Baerh-Maschke "slate" or "machine" candidates. All are Republicans, however. Therefore, do not hesitate to vote for any or all of them. All are good men. You will make no mistake, as we have not opened our columns to all the candidates in this primary campaign, but have endeavored to present to our readers only those who are worthy of our votes. BEWARE OF THE OTHERS!
The outlook for Republican victory, locally and in the state at large, this fall, is 'anything but bright. Therefore it behooves every good member of the party to see to it that they vote only for the best candidates at the primaries on Tuesday next, and the "best candidates" are certainly NOT those who are backed by "machines", cliques, factions or those on the "slates" of political bosses. Such nominees will be the easiest to beat at the polls in November. Surely we do not want a Democratic victory, locally or otherwise, in the fall.
Most of that publication in last Tuesday's Cleveland Leader was a very unfortunate thing. Strange that some of our people never learn that parading in the daily newspapers the weaknesses of individual members of the race (as if they were racial weaknesses) that are common to members of all classes of people, always does our people more harm than all others combined. And why do they do it? That, a few nondescript and in the main "yesterday" jimcrow Negroes may bask in the limelight of a little cheap daily newspaper notoriously. Our local waiters, barbers, footmen and chauffeurs ought to get together and chase that rabble of color out of town. They lack not only discretion and a little good common sense, but are absolutely dangerously harmful to the progress of the large and hard working class of our people in this city. Their output, in the main, in last Tuesday's Leader reminds us very fervently of that portion of Dr. Booker T. Washington's lecture, a year or so ago, in Nashville or Memphis, Tenn., in which he took occasion directly or indirectly, according to common report, to warn the people who employed Negro cooks, of those of the latter who were carrying away food, etc., through their employers' back doors. Shame, O, shame! Good Lord, how long, O, how long must a long-suffering people be punished by jimcrow Negroes?
Our esteemed editor of *The Cleveland, (O.)* Gazette is never happier than when in a rumpus for the solid rights of his race. He hates petty jobs in pay for fealty at the polls minus of which, the party would be in a non-active state and branded with odium. Deal with the mayor in the city, with the will never forget the day. —Martinsburg (W. Va.) Pioneer, Press.
We dislike petty jobs when given our people to the exclusion of BETTER ones. They are all right when accompanied by our proportion of the better ones. Mayor Baehr-Maschke in January, soon after taking office, announced the appointment of only one Afro-American to a clerkship and then refused to give him or any other member of the race, the place or a clerkship of as high a grade, and IT was only a THIRD rate one at that. We also dislike petty politicians, and above all, the "jmcrow" Negro political slave who endeavors to make people at home and abroad believe our people of this city have been properly recognized by the Baehr-Maschke "outfair" have been given the "substances instead of the "shadow" they really possess, in order that they, said "jmcrow" Negro political slaves, may curry the favor of their cheap, prejudiced political masters or bosses ("white");
ANOTHER BLOW AT OUR RIGHTS.
There is now in force in this country a law known as "The Morrill Acts" by which the government makes large donations of money each year, to the several states and territories for education in agriculture and the mechanical arts. The amendment of August 30, 1859, to the Morrill acts expressly provides that when but one institution in a state receives the whole appropriation,
The time has come for every Afro-American and for every church, society and newspaper among us to protest against the passage of the Boutell amendment, and to do so at once! This inquisitive measure will not pass congress if the voters of the race in the north, east and west will write their congressmen and senators immediately asking them to vote against the Boutell bill (known as Bill H. R. 24316 of the second session of the Sixty-first congress), or against any other bill which seeks to extend to George Washington university the entire benefits under the Morrill acts which may come to the District of Columbia. We suggest that each reader of The Gazette copy and send at once the following protest to their congressman and senator at Washington, D. C.:
A PROTEST
To The Honorable ..... Senator (or Member of Congress), Washington, D.C.
Dear Sir:
The undersigned, a citizen and voter in your state (or district) protests against the passage by congress of the bill known as "H. R. 24316 of the second session of the Sixty-first congress," or any other bill giving to George Washington university the entire appropriation which goes to the District of Columbia under the Merrill acts, and respectfully ask that you vote against this or any similar measure when it comes up for consideration, because it will discriminate unjustly against my people and also establish a dangerous precedent.
Yours very respectfully.
Let every Afro-American, every lodge, society and church we have send in this protest and do so at once, in order to save the race from unjust discrimination, and wicked, injurious and unlawful class legislation.
We've Been "At It" for 27 Years! Witness: G. G. April 29, 1970
Washington, D. C. April 30th, 1910.
Editor Gazette, My Dear Friend
Smith:—I heartily thank you for the
article protesting the passage of the
Gazette and the negotiation. The Gazette is doing splendid work for the manhood and political rights of the race. I commend you for your fearless defense of our people and trust that both you and the Gazette may live long to fight the cause of liberty and justice. You are doing great work for mankind. Keep it up. For equal rights and opportunities for the Afro-American, I am yours.
J. MILTQN WALDRON.
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.
Don't vote for Gus. Hirstian! Show that you have some manhood, self and grace respect. Read carefully the article relative to him, elsewhere in this paper.
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY, MAY 14, 1910.
JOHN H. COX,
President of the Cuyahoga County
League of Lawyers—A
Friend of the Race
John H. Cox, the progressive and energetic candidate for the Republican nomination for the office of County Clerk, is conducting one of the cleanest campaigns in the history of local politics. In his speeches and organization he has fought his opponents fair but is giving the public facts that must nominate him. Mr. Cox has long been known as a fighter who does things in the open but does them thoroughly. In many campaigns he has been a valuable party worker. His close connection with the vari-
PETER H.
our clubs of the county as president of the Cuyahoga County League of Republican clubs has brought him in constant touch with the most energetic of the party's workers, the large majority of whom are working hard for his success.
John H. Cox is a man noted for his many liberal characteristics. He is devoid of any prejudices, meeting with equal courtesy and affability men of all races, creeds and stations in life. Our race has many men who claim John H. Cox as a close friend and on several instances he has gone far out of his way to favor some of our people. Mr. Cox is a man well fitted by years of training for the office of county clerk and commissioner and office will be move to better and more equitable administration of the office in the interests of all the people.
VOTE FOR JACOB J. ADAMS
For the Republican Nomination for Sheriff—Will Give Us a Deputy Sheriff With Salary as Well as Name.
Jacob J. Adams, who is to be the next sheriff of this county, was born in the old 17th, now the 12th, ward at E. 34th street, formerly Phelps street, worker. He was last employed as a county inspector. If nominated and
M.
elected, as about every Republican expects him to be, Mr. Adams will under no consideration hold prisoners over after sentence more than a few days, and will be sent to a county a good business administration. The Gazette asks the united support of our people for Mr. Adams because of reasons stated above and also because of a article relative to Sheriff Illibustion to be found elsewhere in this paper today.
PROF. ALFRED CLUM.
Candidate for a Republican Nomination for Common Pleas Judge Vote for Him.
Mr. Alfred Clum, who is a Republican Candidate for Common Pleas Judge, subject to the primaries on May 17, has been a resident of Cuyahoga County since 1886. He has been engaged in the general practice of law in Cleveland, for twenty years. He was born in New York State, and educated at Cleveland and C. C. He graduated from the Law Department of the Columbian University in 1883 and received the degree of "L.L. M." as a post graduate from the same institution in 1885. Columbian University is now known as the George Washington University.
Mr. Clum was attorney for the Village Court for nine years, conducting successfully the litigation which secured to the Village the land on which the Shaw High School is located; and maintaining the rights of the people in the Municipal Traction controversy. Mr. Clum for several years last past has been Professor of Medical Jurisprudence in the Cleveland College of Physicians and Surgeons and the Law Laboratory to has been Professor of Equity Jurisprudence and the law of Corporations.
There is absolutely no question as to Mr. Clum's exceptional fitness from every viewpoint for the position he seeks and we do not hesitate to commend his candidacy to our people in the strongest possible manner, having a cross before it when you vote at the Primaries on the 17th.
COSTO MANAGER IN HUMAN RESOURCES
**MAMASSAS**
Why do you teach a month of July in recitation and in profitable study at the Manassas Summer Normal School in the foothills of the Blue Ridge mountains? Belightful climate, good home cooking, excellent corps of instructors. The Normal School aims to prepare for the State examinations which take place at Manassas at the beginning of the semester and board for the entire session, ten dollars. For further information, write Leslie Pinckney Hill, conductor, The Manassas Industrial School, Manassas, Va. 611-911
EPITOME OF A WEEK'S NEWS
Most Important Happenings Told in, Brief.
PERSONAL
Thomas F. Byrne, who as head of the New York detective department became known all over the civilized world as one of the greatest thief catchers the country ever produced, died at the age of sixty from chronic indigestion and gastritis.
Walter Craig Kerr, president of Westinghouse, Church, Kerr & Co., and a well-known contracting engineer, died at Rochester, Minn.
Fred Saugrain, aged 104 years, the oldest native of the Louisiana purchase territory, is dead at Sodalia, Mo. He added Gen. Grant to build the Grant cabin near St. Louis.
Rear Admiral Mecalain, U. S. N., died at Santa Barbara, Cal., of apoplexy.
Rev. Alexander McLaren, the noted Manchester (England) preacher, died at Edinburgh.
Paris reports says the engagement of Jay Gould and Miss Beatrice Godfrey Van Brunner will be announced soon. Lleu't. Sir Ernest H. Shackleton, R.N., holder of the farthest south record, lectured in Chicago and was presented with the Helen Culver gold medal by the Geographic society of Chicago. Princess Nobuko Fungi-no-Miya, 18-year-old daughter of the emperor of Japan, was married to Prince Asaka. Senator McCumbern of North Dakota has rallied from the effects of a second operation and physicians at Washington report his condition to be encouraging. Thomas H. Croft, founder of Pasadena and a California resident since 1875, has been committed to the state insane asylum at Patton, Cal., following a stroke of paralysis.
GENERAL NEWS.
Edward VII, King of Great Britain and Ireland and emperor of India, is dead. His illness, which lasted less than a week, became serious only three days ago. The king returned to England from a vacation on the continent ten days ago in the best of health. He had reigned nine years. He was sixty-nine years old.
George V. took the coffin and was formally proclaimed king of Great Britain and Ireland and emperor of India in the throne room of St. James' palace, in the presence of the privy council, under the presidency of the earl of Crawford. "The proclamation was a somorous document, gathering upon the new sovereign all the attributes of a ruler which his father possessed.
So contempted brite taker No. 3, Representative Michael S. Link, who two days had populated in denial of participation in legislative ascription as previously relicted under auth. by Representative Charles A. White and H. C. J. Hekmeyer—went before the grand jury at Chicago, purged blonded men of perjury by retracting his former saturny, and made the following admission: "that he entered into an agreement to vote for William Lerner for the United States senator in Iowa for a promise of $100. That he did so veto and was paid the stipulated $100 in St. Louis personally by Rep. conservative LON N. Hill, leader of the Democratic party in the house." That later July 15 he was at the Southern hotel in St. Louis and there did receive from Representative Robert E. Wilson of Chicago $100 as his share of the "gift pot" or legislative fund.
Columbia with the celebration of his eighteenth birthday, Professor George Davison, the California scientist and author, has recovered his sight, after he finally lifted together most a year.
Sir Francis Lakin, physician, in ordinary to the Ling, visited Queen Mother Alexander and Princess Victoria. Subsequently it was announced that both the queen mother and her daughter were in good health.
Robert Llevington Cutting, who sailed from New York three weeks ago, just before his mother, Mrs. Judith Mole Cutting, began fight against him in the supreme court to recover $290,000, died in a hospital in London, England.
The administration, railroad bill passed the house by a vote of 290 to 126. Mr. Mann offered an amendment for the reinsertion of section 11, authorizing the purchase by railroads of the stock of noncompeting transportation companies. The amendment was defeated.
The National Association of Retired
Greeks opened their annual meeting
in Springfield, IL, being welcomed by
Governor Demn. n.
The annual touring of the Westm.
National Whistle-books League in Chicago with several past players taking part.
Prof. Alexander Gannon, Jr. be-
came ventor and assistant manager
was in New York oil field in 1914.
C. C. Shaw, in 1915, will May appear in New York world. By types of art are being exhibited in New York. Belts International in New York.
The existence of rulings in the interior department which Mr. Hallinger must have violated in appearing before the general land office in behalf of the Cunningham coal claimants after his retirement as commissioner, was brought out by Attorney Brandels in cross-examining the secretary of the interior in the Hallinger-Pinchot investigation.
Thirty-five thousand persons saw Donna win the thirty-sixth Kentucky derby in Louisville, Ky. He just managed to reach the wire ahead of Joe Morris, second choice for the event. Fighting job was third. Time: 2002. 2.5.
The much discussed meeting of Emperor William and Theodore Russell has taken place. The visit of the former president at the new palace was devoid of any spectacular feature inconsistent with the court meurning for King Edward, but the occasion lacked nothing from the viewpoint of hospitality and the purpose to honor the distinguished American.
In the federal court at Des Moines, Ia., Judge Smith Metherson dismissed the complaint of the Kansas City and Omaha mulling companies, protecting against government seizure of bleached flour shipped into Iowa.
Herbert Booth of London, England, youngest son of Gen. William Booth, founder of the Salvation Army, told the Pastors' union at Detroit, Mich., that he is no longer connected with the Salvationists, giving family difficulties as a reason.
Following a secret investigation of the conduct of custodians officers at the port of New York, Collector Loeb has suspended 12 men, nine of whom are inspectors.
Following his defeat for reelection to the French chamber of deputies from the Bas Alpes district, Count Boni de Castaneh has announced at Paris that he is done with politics.
Karl John, the Metropolitan officer, who gave his wife her freedom to become the wife of the man she loved, smiled for Europe from New York, disguised, and with little left of his season's earnings.
Figures from the middle ages strode through the streets of London and other great cities of England and Ireland, proclaiming in good twentieth century English the accession of George V, to the throne just vacated by the death of Edward VII. Clad in gorgeous costumes and carrying trumpets, the headdress passed through the streets announcing that Edward's son has assumed the seperate of Great Britain and India. Curious crowds watched the scepter soberly, even admirably, but without a smile. In Dublin the Ulster king at arms read the proclamation in the presence of Lord Abercrombie, Lord lieutenant of Ireland, and Lady Abercrombie.
Gilbert Coleman, a multitate, formerly a Pulliman car cook, convicted of wife murder in New York city, was put to death in the electric chair in Sing Sing (N. Y.) prison.
That parents of toting birth make the most successful fathers and mothers, at least among the poorer classes, is shown by statistics of infant mortality catalyzed by the Free Outdoor Ministry clinic in New York.
After causing the arrest of her husband, James Goldberg, on a charge of bigamy, Mrs. Jain Goldberg, formerly a hotel proprietor of St. Louis, committed suicide at a small town near Lake Shield, C.I., by showing herself in the head.
The state of Missouri, through the immigration board, offered a five-acre farm to any person in the United States who makes the greatest number of words out of the letters in the words "Missouri Homes."
William Randolph Heart entered
in the federal court against Henry
Watterson individually, for $10000,
and the Court Journal for the
same, the all against Mr. Watterson
is based on his official which as
according to the petition, appended the
staff made in Mr. Watters by Major
Garner at the Press linger in New
York and "engaging as prison Gay-
ter's charges."
The dead at Carrion, Co. Cork, number 1400. The city was destroyed by an earthquake which lasted four seconds. It was a tremendous movement, which followed a townier checks. The railroad and telegraph lines were broken and the electric light wires fell, leaving the city in darkness. Thereands ran pumplestrick in all directions in an effort to save themselves, leaving behind those under the rules. Every house and building was destroyed, including join churches and the palace of the American peace copt, the gift of Andrew Carrion. Some Americans are reported to have been killed, but identification is impossible. Many of the wounded clot, suffering terribly. Entire families have been wiped out. The Northern Baptist convention, comprising several denominational societies, opened its fourth annual session in Chicago. The steamer Normandy sank 29 miles south of St. John, N. F. All of the crew reached the shore safely in boats.
Most picture men have offered to assist the study of geography and history in the New York schools by providing educational pictures free.
Amy General Stead filed a motion in the court court at Springfield where the prosecution of the information of the legislative伯害 petition by the Sangamon county attorney and later State's Attorney and the special judge jury completed their proceedings on New York that could be heard on the wage question be handled by prosecutors in the Lafayette company and on the Kaufman company and treatment the law being pled on a trial.
THE METAMORPHOSIS
It was all owing to the inheritance. Miss Angelina Dobbins, spinster, would have been resigned to a placed life-existence in Hubbelt-town-coorker cards, sallow complexion, silly singer, and all had not Fortune tipped her brimming heen and glove unto the midnight lady both money and a thrillly little half-fightened wish to be revengeed upon a certain person.
Miss Angelina was 30 years of age when crusted Renhe,贞held, uncle on the maternal side, passed on, leaving to his sole relative an accumulation of long somnolant dollars.
The obsequies over the belles placed a good man on the farm and back to her home to wrestle with high odds of venomage she had long thought hidden away in the grunt of forgotten tibbs that followed, and at a specimen of specimen of Miss Angelina's laceyed by the beauty little old new You, even to the posse, Why, Miss Dobbins, mausseuse, "you girlish. Your comp and while as a year you have better expre control of language that arrived.
Three months before gilda would have an image stamper. Now "I am giving the culture conscientious you. You see I had me" so long that I had war in the grunt of forgotten tibbs
And so it was that the natives of Hubbleton awoke one blustering morning to find the annuer Miss Doblins a memory of yesterday. Nor had the departed left one chie behind to tell of her whereabouts.
Hubbleton sat up and took notice. It was a new days' wonder, a startling epoch in the staid history of the town. For, a brief period there was talk of abduction, elopement—here, tumor again touched upon the one romance in the woman's life—and then—Hubbleton stretched its arms, yawned and forgot.
As for Miss Angelina, she was safe in New York. Also, a wonderful metamorphosis had begun. Miss Angelina, inconsistent chanting, was emerging from the chrysalis of the mellowed convention to girlhood!
The necromancers along Broadway—the half dressers, the massage artists, the musculusists—and the
"My Heart Is, Yours."
dressmakers and the wonderful department stores were accomplishing miracles.
From corkscrew curls and a severer rope of hair capped with a shell coil, Miss Angelina's chestnut tresses were transformed to molish waves, and the saltyness was steamed from the well-shaped forehead and face. The lady's blue eyes took on a vivacious sparkle under the stimulus of the change, and she walked with the elastic step and spring stride of the woman 'of purpose.
Know then, that Miss Angelina had a purpose.
Years ago, when the life was a childe dame, a lady had taken her life, a wonderful life. Angelina had thought in the innocence of her youthful heart, and she had listened to his words of love.
All of which proves the limitations of the sheechee-for-the-moment youth who asked Miss Angelina to marry him, and went confidently home to arrange matters with the pastor.
"You will wait for me, dearest!" asked T. Bentt gently, preliminary to starting for the home-bound train.
"Forerow, it necessary," the girl had answered, and with a clenched kiss on her brow the nible Thomas had laid away—and out of the fire of the madness.
But it bogart was inconsistent, Miss Angelina was not. Letters she months made it appear that she was to remain true for all time to her prose.
After ten years of silent constance it came to Miss Angelina, through some vagrant changes, that the faithless one had again succumbed, upon his return to his father's home, to his first love.
Her old man manner, had been time's gift to her during the years
This Wooing Didn't Wic
In a wild west situation at Coney Island two years ago and on the farthest times of the performance we the late show of a girl on board had a man who had been after the show on board. The man fell in love with the girl although the latter did not reappear his attention to any marked extent. This attitude does not baffle the singer, however, and one does not need to see the gift of the singer to draw her hand with him to the hat, and to the presence of the singer to hold her hand up to the light to enjoy the warmth. The old girl poses. And the man does not attempt to dress the show but instead has left the picture to be held by the woman.
that followed, and at 42 she was a fine specimen of spinster.
Miss Angelina's latent bloom, awakened by the beauty culture clan in little old New York, was a revolution, even to themselves.
"Why, Miss Dobbins," enthused that body's massouse, "you look positively girlish. Your complexion is as pink and white as a year-old baby," and you have better expression, and —r— control of language than when you first arrived."
Three months before this Miss Angelina would have answered with an frame stamper. Now she spoke calmly: "I am giving the subject of beauty culture conscientious study—or a purpose. You see I have been an old maid so long that it has palled on me."
By August the lady from Hobbletown could have passed through the streets of her native village, incognito. Her chicks were as pale and pink-tinted as a young girls. The angular lines had become graceful curves. Miss Angelina was now the queen, Miss Doblins.
Forty years do not sit heartily on the head of the knowing woman. It occurred to the sojourner from Hobbletown as she gaped into her mirror that she must have spidely found the secret of perpetual youth.
"Now," culminated Miss Doblins, as she critically summed up her alluring Blessness, "I believe—I actually believe—that I am equipped for the trauy." And thereafter New York, knew her not.
It was a dainty little woman in weeds whom Mrs. Albert Harding introduced to the best society of the thriving city of Albantown. Susceptible youth and gay widowers fell victim to her charms. In this group the popular newcomer noticed appreciatively one Thomas Rosart, recently bereaved, and rather pedgy and ridiculous.
There were others. Mr. Rosart's fat little characterless face had good reason to farrow deep lines of wordment. The dapper Albert Kalm, some years younger, and financial magnate of Albantown, was a rival.
But, in spite of this, the gods seemed kind. Mrs. Case seemed to favor his suit, and this was well, because it was rumored that the sprightly widow had money.
On an evening during which Rosart had been unusually favored and allowed to escort the widow home from the opera, his ardor suddenly got the better of him.
"Mrs. Case," he began, when they had arrived at the home of the widow's friend, "I have something serious to say to you."
"What is it—Thomas?" A slow flashlighted the pale face of the fascinating widow. Donart's eyes rested Hingergly upon her, and his heart thumped joyously.
"I—Mrs. Case, her Margaret," he burst out desperately. "I—I love you. Can you not see it in my every action? My heart is your's. Will you marry me?"
"Do you really love me—Thomas?" she asked gently.
"I swear it," responded T. Donart, convincingly.
"How am I to know?" insisted the widow, compeltly. "Is not some other one waiting discontented, some place, for you?"
"How can you think it?" she answered bravely.
"I didn't," I acknowledged the yellow notebook, somewhat really. "Rarely. Timmy. I'm sure there isn't. And I will carry you, use, only-only I must be brave and arrange things. Then I will come back. Will you be true?"
"Forever, if necessary," she sobbed the jihadian "I loogart. He attempted to kiss her, but she repulsed him, olding him wait."
And he wailed.
The next day the widow left for her home, nor did the infatuated lover receive word from her. Months went by. He remembered that he did not know where she lived. He asked Mr. Hardling, who she refused the information, blinding him wait. Not did he notice, in his corrupted state, the absence of Albert Kahn. Finally, this latter came to him. "You need wait no longer. Have decided that you won't do. Go back to the girl you left in Hubbleton. Now he she wants you. I don't." "MRS. ALBERT KALM." "What hands jesus women are?" whimped Thomas Beggart, "and I wonder how she heard of Angels—or what's her name."
Quality of a Good Teacher.
No man can govern a school unless he knows how to govern himself.
The One Purocte
Why do we stay on earth not to grow? Browning.
Etonian Reminiscences.
"Bromont Highly by O. K. Browning upon recently is a shoft of the faithful prominent of the Eton of 20 or 40 points. In Browning the author tells us was possessed of a sensible modell on him. When was that proposed to possess a house of Shelley in the poor school which now stands he is said to have re-posed. Not he was a bad man and to have approved his hometown not that the poet had been educated at Harrow.
A colleague who is a Hearty preacher to the William Morris to become to be the school begun to that the school would not have been educated that it was Morris, the
"He will welcome the party with
appreciation. To welcome it, he imply
that it will be a great success. To know
that it will be a great success, he
would like it to be a great success. To know
that it will be a great success, he
would like it to be a great success."
Autos in International Commerce.
Autos are rapidly increasing in
the international commerce.
J. S. HALL'S, No. 3121 Central Avenue.
F. VALENTINE'S, No. 2130 Central Avenue.
ELMER F. BOYD'S, No. 2604 Central Avenue.
PUSHAW'S, Cuyahoga Building. Open Sunday.
L. SCHWARTZ'S, No. 2921 Central Ave. Open Sunday.
C. J. CHOJSON'S, 3315 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 adhere to occurrence, that they want it.
vertise is assurance (that they will
Local reading notices (advertisements) ten cents a line (six words in a line.)
PURCHASE
THE
"GAZÉTTE" AT
For Sale.—Cottage—Five rooms; water and gas, lot 40x117 feet and 11 inches. Between Central and Cedar avenues. No. 2212 East Thirty-seventh street. $2,100 cash.
W. O. Bowles is teaching in the Harmon building night school.
Bern R. White, R. E. preached at
Rev. E. A. White, P. E., preached at
Cox, chaged Sunday, evening.
Cory chapel Sunday evening
Current rumor has it that Mr. "Lonnie" Curtis will wed a Pittsburg belle at an early date.
Milnese F. Hurley, Hurley Porter and
Mr. Roscoe Marshall of Fostoria, were
in the City.
The barra class of St. John's church deposed its president, Henry Taylor, last week Tuesday evening.
New blood is needed badly in the County Commissioners' office. Vote for Mr. Benson McLlrath, our friend!
If Mt. Zion church can raise $1,000 toward purchasing a new $2,000 pipe organ, the other $1,000 will be furnished by Andrew Carnegie.
Vote for J. J. Adams for the republican nomination for sheriff, on the 17th.
He will give us a deputy sheriff, something we have never had.
Quarterly meeting at St. John's
church Sunday. Dr. Chas. Bundy, P.
E. will preside, preaching in the
meeting.
The old Folks' Home board of lady managers met Monday at 2 p. m. at managers. Cornelia Nickens', East Eighty- on street.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Russell and baby, Mrs. Maggie Scott and grandson; and Mrs. Sarah Brown of Wheeling, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Tuck, of East 37th street, Sunday. Better nominal Adams for sheriff, 17; then we won't to help defeat Gus. Hirstion on election day. Vote for Adams. Pass the word on "down the line." Mrs. J. M. Tilly of East Forty-third street entertained Mt. Zion Ladies' Aid society recently. Mr. Carsons of Lincoln, N. C. and Mrs. B. C. Carter of Washington, D. C., were honor
guests.
Mrs. Lucy James has resigned an on- and the Visiting Nurses association and Mrs. Clarence Williams, in charge of the reading room at 3322 Central avenue, under her direction, has given up that work.
The Gazette acknowledges the receipt of an invitation from Prof. H. A. Hunt, principal of the Ft. Valley, Ga. High and Industrial school, to attend its closing exercises for this year, May 13 to 18. The best candidate for a republican nomination for County Commissioner Penson McIlrath. See portrait and sketch of him elsewhere; in this paper, and you will know why. Vote for him on the 17th. Escorted by the Phillipsians, the local Odd Fellows and Parishieca captained by Bep. Douglass marched on philhoh church Sunday afternoon to listen to their annual serenade by the pastor.
Our people are NOT under any obligations to the present County Com-missioners for a few spittoon-cleaning jobs they have given them a race for work done on them in the past. Do not be misled by "Jimcrow"
NEHRAP. Eliza A. Fields, who lived for years on Hackam (now E. 36th street), died Sunday after a lingering illness. She was one of our most highly respected residents. Funeral Friday from Black & undertakers.
Three-year-old Loren was 'pulling baby's toes for amusement. Papa, who was holding baby, said, "He careful son, you might pull his toes which Loren took off, so no, daddy, they came off, they's got nails them."—The Delineator for June.
Walter L. Brown left last week for Vandergrift, Pa., to visit his parents and daughters. But, the college will graduate on the 4th, the grammar school on the 5th, the Grammar school on the 6th, Mrs. Brown will join in a few days. Both will return in Vandergrift several weeks.
John H. Cisco, president of the Caterers' association, sent The Gazette a very pretty souvenir card from Clarinda, Iowa, last week. He was traveling through the west with President Brown of the New York Central lines. Mr. Cisco returned to the city the first of the week.
the first of
Forest City park opened last Saturday
under new management. All the
concessions and park arrangements
are fine this year and the outlook
are the. The Johnson-Jeffries contest
will be shown after July 4. In motion
pictures in the Vaudeville theatre at
the paranoid
comes to be 'the consensus of
opinion that the unfortunate article
in Monday's Leader by local Negroes
was a very harmful one from several
viewpoints. Another case is
bears "in a china box." Some people
have no discretion whatever.
Anything to give a little cheap no-
lobby
In this section of the country, you cannot get the best local and general race news, unless you take The Gazette, the doggerel of others. This is an old established newspaper and not a campground sheet run for cheap "white" politicians by "jimcrow" Ne
groves.
Borreal recital will be given by
Florence B. Johnson, assisted by J.
H. Gantt, basso, at Antloch church
Tuesday, May 24, at 8 p.m. Admission
free. This is an opportunity for
who love music and Gantt are as
Miss Johnson and she Gantt are talented.
A silver singing will be taken for
the church.
benefit of the Cox nomination for County Clerk. Furthermore, he is decided the best
candidate for the place as far as we are concerned. Do not allow any one to mislead you into voting for any one else. We must stand by our friends if we are to retain any, and Cox is a friend. Vote for him on the 17th.
imagine Willie Green, George Myles, Welcome Blue, Tom Fleming, "Nosemyd" Drasher, he of the alabaster brow (nit), and the others named, lecturing our waiters, barbers, footmex and chauffeurs on their failures to do as they think they, ought to. Good Lord! This is the only amusing feature of that harmful Leader article of Tuesday last.
The music includes a cantata, Silhloh church last week Wednesday evening, was a success. All of the participants, Silhloh orchestra and choir, Mesdames Grace and Ethel Brown, M. Hooper, Misses Ethel Moss, Clara Dyson and Ernestine Rollins, Messrs. Henry Cash, Harry E. Thompson, J. W. Wills and Mayer Louie Jones old and Mr. M. Albert Jones old and Miss Elenora Albrow accompanist.
J. 5. Mack, propietor of the Knopf Pharmacy, 3132 Central Av., is demonstrating the efficacy of internal rheumatic treatment. He explains its advantages to all who inquire. Relative to The Gazette, Mr. Mack wrote us under the date, April 15, 19, as follows: "Advertising in The Gazette has given very satisfactory results to me. I fail to see how hospitalized we are, especially can do business without the assistance of The Gazette's advertising columns."
The editor of The Gazette acknowledges the receipt of an invitation from the board of trustees and faculty of the Tuskegee, Ala., Normal and Industrial Institute, to attend its twenty-ninth anniversary symposium. Also, Ala. will invite from Prof. Allen S. Peal, a native of this city, and for years a resident of Columbus, O., to attend the Wagoner, Okla., County Normal for our teachers he will conduct from May 30 to June 25. Prof. Peal will deliver the commencement dress on May 27. The Governor's Seminar at Tailquah, Okla., of which Prof. J. R. Mayme, formerly of Circleville, O., is superintendent.
The Delineator for June makes a broad appeal, for its special articles deal with a great variety of subjects and its fiction interprets many phases of life. The high cost of living receives attention in "A Brief for the Housewife," by William D. Duggett, who has Revolutionized Five Hundred Sunday Schools," by Allan H. Benson; "Childhood's Happy Hour," by Eugene Woold; "The Theater—A School for Discipline," by Louise Closser Hale, and "Women in the Indian Service," by Francis E. Leupp. Ernan J. Ridgway in the new editorial department entitled "Conversazione," discusses marriage. "Simple Simon," a Kholing story, leads the fiction. Other tales of the time, "Anna Eliza," by Algo Brown; "The Ant-Left," by Agach Khunusode; "Le Behind," by Marjorie L. C. Dickhall; Mary Stewart" Cutting's serial. "The Unforeseen," develops delightfully in humor and dramatic interest.
THE NEW MANASSAS!
What Can You Do to Make it Possible?—A Grand Outlook—Help Get It $30,000.
Manassas, Va.—The friends of the Afro-American and of the great cause to which all our trial schools are dedicated, will rejoice that the Manassas Industrial School for our youth, has been assured of sufficient funds to enable it to begin work on a new hospital, a new wing on Howland Hall, in which will be located a modern kitchen and dining room, a national dormitory space, and a $30,000 Trades Building. In last gift is conditioned, who must raise $5,000 of the $30,000. Our people of northern Virginia have responded as generously as they were able and have given out of their mengre funds more than a thousand dollars. It seems difficult to get in this limited field the remaining $4,000, by May 30th, commencement day, to enable the school to proceed at once with the building so that may be ready for use by the opening of the next school year. It will be a back-set work to which Mr. Manassas pledged if the construction of our needed building is delayed because our people have not rallied to the cause. But our people of the nation, when they know the need, and the condition upon which the $20,000 building is made possible, will not fail. The new Trades Building will enable Manassas to take advanced ground in the realm of Trade School education, and a fast, high standards on Manassas battlefield, on grounds built by the first battle of the Civil war. will be a worthy monument to those brave who here gave their lives that the fight for self, liberation and self-fulfillment might be made possible for our youth. A dollar, ten cents, five cents, if given at once, and given by all who love their race, will enable Manassas to go forward at once to new and better things. Won't you read those lines, how to make the new Manassas possible? amount is too small to be valuable in educational pursuits, power, and to be grateful by a Mr. Oswald Gerwin Villard, President of the Board of Directors, New York City, or by Mr. T. C. Williams, Treasurer, Manassas, Va. or by Mr. Leslie Pinckney Hill, Principal, Manassas Va.
HIRSTIUS GUILTY SAY BOTH OF THEM
CITY CLERK WITT AND DIRECTOR
SPRINGBORN GIVE INSIDE
INFORMATION.
WHY STREET WAS NOT OPENED
The Gazette Was Right in Its Contention, as Usual—Our Refusal to Support Hiristus and Others Fully Justified—Some Interesting Letters.
As is well-known The Gazette was bitterly opposed to selection of Sheriff Gus Hiristus, because when a member of the council (from the ward) Hiristus refused to permit a street to be cut through from Central avenue to Cedar avenue, between Perry street and Greenwood street, because a few 'projudiced Cedar avenue residents asked him not to do so "because people would come through" the street from people to "peer into their windows". He withdrew an ordinance which he introduced in the council (authorizing the proper city authorities to cut the street through) at the request of the above mentioned prey
died Cedar avenue residents. When he was re-elected to the council, Hirsutus, a second time, promised to have the street cut through, but steadily refused to keep his promise. The following is pertinent and self-explanatory. Read the letters carefully and thoughtfully:
Cleveland, N.Y.
Mr. Peter Witt, City, New
Sir; Just before being, Connellman
Hirius made a statement in a political
nature to the effect that he had
an ordinance, resolution or
something in the city council, providing
for cutting a street through from
Central avenue to Cedar avenue, between East Twenty-second and East Twenty-second streets, opposite Steel
street, or in that vicinity, and which
claimed, though passed by the council
in July last (the day of cutting the
street which has been held up ever
since) by Director Springborn or some
director connected with the city governmen
How much, if any, truth is there in his claim?
Last year or the year before the same individual introduced an ordinance, resolution or something in the council, providing for cutting a street through in the same vicinity. Will you tell me whether or not the resolution, ordinance or whatever it was, referred to was ever passed by the council, or was ever the street was not cut through at that time? By complying with the above request at your earliest opportunity you will greatly oblige me. Yours truly.
HARRY C. SMITH.
Editor The Gazette.
Nov. 23, 1908.
Hon. J.H.C. Smith, Editor Gazette...Dear Sir; On July 9, 1966, resolution No. 5268 by Mr. Hirstus provided for the opening of First twenty place to Codar It. It was the same event on the 24th day. The imposition was not made for the reason that Mr. Hirstus did not want it. His reasons for not wanting it. I have been informed, were and possibly are that the people in the imposition of the proposed race did not want people of your race to come
In May of the present year there was a resolution introduced, and passed in June, looking for the making of a new street between Central and Cedar avenues, about opposite Sked street. This improvement was never made for the reason that the money in possession of the city through the sale of bonds was for the opening of dead end streets and not the making of new streets.
It is the custom of the administration to defer to the wishes of councillors for ward improvements, and I feel sure that the only reason the improvement at East Twenty-fifth place was not made was because of race prejudice which Mr. Hirstus listened
Would suggest that you call up my Springborn and get from him a confirmation of what I have given to you as a rumor. Very truthful.
Hon. H. C. Smith, Editor Gazette.—Deat Sir, Answering your reference to the 12th inst. with reference to the enclosed letter from Mr. Witt, would say that the facts are as Mr. Witt states, and had Mr. Hirstius desired to have East Twenty-fifth place opened through the door, he would have done long ago. It was proposed to make this opening Mr. Hirstius invited me to meet with him a committee at the close of one of the council meetings. The committee represented the property owners and residents on Cedar avenue, where the improvement was intended to be made. They pretested against its opening. We finally agreed to have it made, AND ASKED ME TO HAVE NO FURTHER STEPS TAKEN IN THE MATTER. It was not until recently that the case which we had started in court to condemn the property was digressed. We have always made it a rule to a court cordance with the wishes of the councilman represented inward in which improvement of this kind are to be made. Therefore seems that Mr. HIRSTIUS ALONE IS TO BLAME FOR NOT HAVING THE STREET OPENED. Yours truly.
In China, moon worship still exists and the Chinese car that the man in the moon arranges marriages and ties together with an invisible silken cord the youths and maldens whom he intends to unite; he is evidently the creator of the honeymoon.
Is Your Hair Beautiful
CORRESPONDENTS WANTED!
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, Zanaville, Newark, Lanaster, Flanday, Lima, Oberlin, Calhoun, Toledo, Urbana, Troy, Akron, Springfield, Piqua, Columbus, Cambridge, Martins Ferry, Wellsville, Bellefontaine, Wilmington, Portsmouth, Sabina, Gallipolis, Delaware, Blyton and Middletown, O. and other where we have none.
Write to the editor of The Gazette
Blackstone building, Cleveland, O,
also terms will be sent promptly. Our
orders will oblige us greatly by sending
the address of any good person
or persons in any of the cities named
above or others, to whom we can
write relative to the matter.
ATTENTION, READERS!
Don't throw away your copy of The Gazette when you have done with it, but give it to some appreciative person whom you feel would be like you. You can or take it to school. If they had a copy to hold over and read carefully, you could the Editor.
Tell Us About It.
This paper can give all the local news only as our friends lend 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.
AGENTS! READ!
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.
FORD'S
HAIR POMADE
THE OLD RELIABLE DRESSING FOR KINNY OR CURLY HAIR. IT USE MAKES STUBBORN, HARSH HAIR SOFTER, MORE PLIABLE AND GLOSSY, EASY TO COMB AND PUT UP IN ANY STYLE THE LENGTH WILL PERMIT. WRITE FOR TESTIMONIES, TELLING HOW THIS REMARKABLE REMEDY MAKES SHORT, KINNY HAIR GROW LONG AND WAYY. BEST POWDER ON THE MARKET FOR DANDRUFF, ICHING OF THE SCAPE AND FALLING OUT OF THE HAIR. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS, GET THE GENUINE, PUT UP IN 25* AND 50* BOTTLES WITH CHARLES FORD'S NAME ON EVERY PACKAGE.
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS.
IF YOUR DRUGGIST CANNOT SUPPLY YOU, WE WILL SEND IT TO YOU DIRECT AT THE FOLLOWING PRICES, SMALL SIZED BOTTLE, 25* LARGE SIZED BOTTLE, 50* THE OZONIZED OX MARROW CO.
216 LAKE ST. DEPT. 62 - CHICAGO, ILL.
AGENTS WANTED.
Show em
Now-to-day
ADVERTISE the best thing you
have in stock at your store in the
next issue of this paper. Feature is.
Push it strong. Then sit in your
store and harvest the pecuniary
fruit of your wisdom. :: :: ::
(Copyright, 1922 by W. N. U.)
CUT RATE DRUG STORE
CUT RATE DRUG STORE
PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY COM-
POUNDED.
SODA WATER, CIGARS, ETC.
"NOORALGIA" HEADACHE POWDERS.
15 Cushion Cushion Tubem 16c
$10 Mother's Friend 83c
$10 Orange Oil 83c
10, 19, 39c
15 Bathroom 39c
20 Durable Tubber Gloves 39c
25 Transparent Shampoo Tar Soap 12c
Excelsior Hair Pressing 12c
Excelsior Hair Pressing Straight Hair 12c
Violet Tubem 15c
Momnet Tubem 15c
All Fountain Syringes and Hot Water
Bottles guaranteed. Everything
family absolutely needs. Prices 47c and
more.
My sampler Double Powder is carefult
in cases. 25, 50c
Kilner Swamp Rod. 73c
And Many others.
Notary Public. Free Library Ballot Box.
J. J. MACK, Manager.
2182 CENTRAL AVENUE, S. E.
THE ORIOLE THEATRE
THE ONLY ONE IN THE CITY
OWNED AND CONDUCTED
BY OUR PEOPLE
BE LOYAL AND PATRONIZE
THE ORIOLE
3223 CENTRAL AVE.
Page & Harris, Proprs.
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
JONES & RICKO
Ladies' and Gentlemen's Suits
Made to Order
CLEANING, DYEING and PRESSING
FURS REMODELED
Satisfaction Guaranteed in All
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3122 Central Ave. S. E., Cleveland
MCCALL PATTERNS
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AND
15
NONE HIGHER
MCCALLS MAGAZINE
50
A
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INCLUDING A FREE PATTERN
McCALL PATTERNS
Celebrated for style, comfort, fit, simplicity and
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McCALLEN, New York - More than any other fashion
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Subscribe today, or send for sample copy.
WORLDWIDE INDUCEMENTS
In Agents, Posts brings premium catalogue
and new styles to addresses.
THE McCALLEN, NEW YORK 117th St. NEW YORK
AMERICAN RESTAURANT
Lucian Armstrong's
Choice Wines, Liquors and Cigars
2800 Central Avenue
Cleveland, Ohio
Fair Beautiful
Soft, Silky and Long?
Does it comb easily without breaking?
Is it straight?
Does it smooth out nicely?
Can you do it up in any of the charm-
ing styles, so it will stay; and
make you proud of it?
Is it long and full of life?
If you cannot say YES to all of the
above questions, then you need
Nelson'S HAIR DRESSING Is the floral hair pomade on the face of the earth for colored people. It makes your hair grow fast! It makes stubborn, kinky and tangled hair as soft and apple as skin. It makes healthy, healthy it from splitting and barking off. It makes it rich and greatt that charm is longed for by all true ladies.
Nelson's Hair Dressing and you'll never have dandruff. We will keep clean. The roots of your hair will have the necessary up disease. You will be delighted with its delicate perfume. Dressing is put up in handsome four-square square tin boxes, like the Lady hats in her hand. Druggists and box. If you can't get it, send us 30 cents and we will mail it now, or set right down and write us. Address: CTURING CO., Richmond, Va. Ed. Write Quick for Terms.
Fill with alcohol and high here.
Magic Shampoo Drier $1.00. Magic Alcohol Heater $0.50. Liberal terms to agents. Write for literature today.
Magic Shampoo Drier Co., Minneapolis, Minnesota.
MRS. A. M. POPE.
4 years ago my hair was only a finger-length, and my temples were bald half way up my head.
MRS. L. L. ROBERTS.
4 years ago my hair just covered my shoulders.
my head.
We first began our wonderful work of growing
lengths, and all conditions of hair, even to
places of the head, many circumstances the
possible; but we have grown the hair for
access. The proof of the value of our work is
and largely by persons whose own hair we
to sell their goods (saying that "theirs is the
referred to "PORO." We advise you to use
r. (the oldest and best of its kind.) See that the
box, not genuine without it. Prepared only
ware of Imitation
Call, or Address Mail to
M. POPE-TURNBO 3100 PINE
ST. LOUIS
When we first began our wonderful work of growing all kinds of qualities, all lengths, and all conditions of hair, even to the growing of hair on bald places of the head, many persons scorned the idea that a thing was possible, but we have grown the hair for hundred, equally achieving success. The proof of the value of our work is that we are being imitated and largely by persons whose own hair we have actually grown and to further fact that they have very frequently mentioned us when trying to sell their goods (saying that "theirs is the same" or "just a good") or referred to "PORO." We advise you you use only "PORO" Hair Grower, (the oldest and best of its kind). See that the name "PORO" is on every box, not genuine without it. Prepared only by MRS. A. M. POPE.
When we first began qualities, all lengths, at hair' on bald places of a thing was possible; b achieving success. The ing imitated and large grown and the further when trying to sell the as good') or referred to Hair Grower, (the olds is on every box, not POPE.
Bewar
Cal
MRS. A. M. POR
Beware of Imitations
Call, or Address Mail to
MRS. A. M. POPE-TURNBO 3100 PINE STREET
ST. LOUIS, MO.
BELL PHONE BOMONT 3109
SPLITS ARLING LONDON
SPLITS CARLING LONDON ALE
A palatable drink for the winter season, furnishing strength and nourishment
THE CLEVELAND & SANDY
BREWING COMPANY
TELEPHONES:
BELL, WEST I13
CUY., CENTRAL
LEVELAND AND BUFFY
City of Erie" On the Palatial Twin "City of
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Hold 6130 A. B.
actions made at Buffalo with trains for all Eastern and Canadian land for Toledo, Detroit and all points West and Southwest reading over L. S. & M. S. Ry. or N. Y. C. & St. L. R. R. will this Company's Steamer without extra charge.
Taylor's New Shampoo
and Hair Straightener
the Best in the W
umb, properly heated, and the use of latex-free Hair Pomade, hair straight and silky at every stroke and all areas of the body by
C.B.
MARKETING
CLEVELAND AND BUFFALO
"City of Erie" On the Patental Twin
Flyers of the Lakes
Lrv. Cleveland 6:00 P. M.
Arr. Buffalo 6:150 A. M.
CENTRAL STANDARD TIME
Lrv. Buffalo 8:00 P. M.
Arr. Cleveland 6:150 A. M.
Connections made at Buffalo with trains for all Eastern and Canadian points; at Cleveland for Toledo, Detroit and all points West and Southwest.
Tickets reading over L. S. & M. S. Ry. or N. Y. C. & St. L. R. R., will be accepted on this Company's Staircase without extra charge.
Ank Ticket Agent for tickets via C. & B. Line. Send 4d for handsome illustrated booklet.
THE CLEVELAND & BUFFALO TRANSIT CO., W. F. Herman, G. P. A., Cleveland, O.
Taylor's New Shampoo Dryer and Hair Straightener!
Price of H and Alcohol
$1.50.
LYLOR'S SPECIAL ALCOHOL HEATER is the hassle-free and pr
effective solution that you can put in your heater
results use LaGreele Hair Pomade. It does not press
and mold hair, but it provides a smooth finish of the hair.
AND AUCTION CATALOGUE Illustrated the Largest
in this country for coiled hair, such as Papers, Wigs,
Hair Pieces, Combs, Brushes.
Wanted.
T. W. TAYLOR, He
When writing please place this paper
TAYLOR'S SPECIAL ALCOHOL HEATER is the hardest and most convenient of heating the room and can be used with any type of you can put in your hand. Free use. Our heat results use LaCreole Hair Pomade. It is the best way to enhance the comb hair texture. It is the best for the hair. Price 256.
SEND FOR MY FRIEND A TALOGUE Illustrating the Largest and Most Comfortable Lift. Your country for comforting people such as Farms, Wines, Desserts, Nutrition. Hair Lift, Combo. Brushes.
'PORO'
ROBERTS.
by hair just
shoulders.
TRADE MARK
Registered
new work of growing all kinds, all
of hair, even to the growing of
persons scorned the idea that soon
own the hair for hundreds, rapidly
value of our work is that we are be-
come those own hair we have actually
have very frequently mentioned us
that "theirs is the same" or "just
advised you to use only "PORO"
its kind." See that the name "PORO"
at it. Prepared only by MRS. A. M.
Imitations
Press Mail to
3100 PINE STREET
ST. LOUIS, MO.
4 years ago my hair just covered my shoulders.
ITS ONDON ALE
TWO DOZEN IN-A'CASE.
Delivered to Any Part of the City.
O & SANDUSKY
COMPANY
PHONES:
CUY., CENTRAL 3963
FARE
$250
DAILY
BETWEEN
AND BUFFALO
"City of Buffalo"
Twin Lakes
STANDARD TIME
Lv. Buffalo 8:00 P. M.
Art. Cleveland 8:30 A. M.
All Eastern and Canadian points; at Cleveland
point West and Southwest.
Y., C. & St. L. R. R. will be accepted on
or without extra charge.
No. Send 46 for handsome illustrated booklet.
CO., W. F. Harman, G. P. A., Cleveland, O.
Shampoo Dryer
rightener!
in the World!
Of late trade Hair Pomade will bring the r
of hair and a new fragrant look to the hair.
Redest in rest by return mail.
Large, Heavy Stirling and Durable. Made of copper and brass wires. Fits in a large tub for the Lattice. Each nickel placed, steel bill which goes through the large wood and steel wires and inserts into the tip loop or confines it. Remember it is in one piece. Northland. All orders will not be lifetime.
Price of Hair Straightening and Alcohol Heater complete $150.
TER is the hardest and most convenient way that you can put it in your hand. Price is made. It not only meets your practical growth of the hair. Price 25c. Illustrating the Largest and Most Complete Lips such as Paws, Wings, Fetts, Snaillets. P.
TAYLOR, Howell, Mich.
T. W. TAYLOR, Howell, Mich
When writing please mention this page.
We Grew Our Hair Now Let Us Grow Yours With
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Has made itself welcome in
the homes of the people the
world over, by its wonderful
cures of all blood diseases and
run-down conditions.
Get it today in usual liquid form or
chocolate tablets called Sarataba.
W. L. DOUGLAS
$5, $4, $3.50, $3 & $2.50
Workmen's SHOES
$2.00 Shoes
$3, $2.60 & $2
W. L. Douglas
shoes are worn
bymoremen than
any other make,
BEOAUSE!
W. L. Douglas $5.00
and $4.00 shoes equal,
in shape, as men wear
other makes, costing
$5.00 to $8.00.
W. L. Douglas $3.50,
$3.00, $2.50 and $2.00
shoes are the lowest
world-credited in the world.
Fast Color Equity.
W. L. Douglas
bymoremen than
any other make,
BEDAUSE!
W. L. Douglas $2.00 and $4.00 shoes equal, in style, fit and wear, for $8.00 to $10.00, $12.00 to $16.00, $18.00 to $24.00, $30.00 and $38.00 shoes are the lowest price, quality considered, cost less than Fast Color Epixlets. The genesis have W. L. Douglas name and price. Ask your designer for W. L. Douglas shoes. If they are not available, give them to your shoes also, giving full directions boxed to the group all directions direct from factory to store by mail. Shoes ordered direct from factory to store by the group all
Make the Liver Do its Duty
Nine times in ten when the liver is right the stomach and bowels are right.
CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS
gently but firmly compel a lazy liver to do its duty.
Corn Cereal
stirigation,
Baking
stick
Stick
Headache, and Distress after Eating.
Small Fills, Small Deeps, Small Price
GENUINE must bear signature:
Auckland
WESTERN CANADA
What Prof. Shaw, the Well-Known Agri-
culturist, Sayes About It:
"I would want to settle in Western
Canada than in the corn belt of
the United States, and I
would like to finish
better for the purpose.
I am more
preferent than your
applies. Wheat can be
grown up to the 60th par-
tition, and the 80th par-
tition of the International board
will be taken at a rate
applicable, we have enough
people in the United
States to take up this land." Early
70,000 Americans
will enter and make their home
in 1909, predecessor another large
grop of wheat, oats and barley;
export an immense Mem-
orandum to the United States,
farm and grain growth in the
Alberta and Alberta, Saskatchewan and Alberta.
Free marmalade will be sold by railway and land company, will be delivered to the nearest railway station. Adaptable both heatful culinary and cold preparations, and good railway, warehouses, and food stores. Our literature "Lest We Wear" how to cook and preserve the best of Italian cuisine, write to Sara's of Immigration, to the Changi Government Agent. H. M. WILLIAMS Law Building Toledo, Ohio (Use address nearest you) FREE Send postal for Free Package of Paxtine. Better and more economical than liquid antiseptics FOR ALL TOILET USES.
Gives one a sweet breath; clean, white, gum-free tooth—anisotically clean mouth and throat—purifies the breath after smoking—dispels all disagreeable perceptions and body odors—much appreciated by children—quick remedy for some eyes and catarrh.
A little Petine powder dissolved in a glass of hot water makes a delightful anisotopic solution, possessing extraordinary cleaning, germicidal and healing power, and absolutely harmless. Try a Sample. 50c. a large box at druggies or by mail.
PYRAMID
FLY
CATCHER
To prevent fly easily you can have
a fly catcher in your home or garden.
It will help to keep the house and
all around the house free of flies.
If you will need a fly catcher
you can call 1-800-722-2222.
The Pyramid Fly Catcher has tested the
behavior of fly and has been
proudly used by private and public
businesses by proven and trusted
scientists.
Lynn Bengham & Co.
78 James St. New York, NY 10019
Is Your Health
Worth 10c?
That's what it costs to get a—week's treatment—of CASCARETS. They do more for you than any medicine on Earth. Sickness generally shows and starts first in the Bowels and Liver; CASCARETS cure these ills. It's so easy to try—why not start to sleep and help is in the morning?
IT.WEARS YOU OUT.
Kidney Troubles Lower the Vitality of the Whole Body.
Don't wait for serious illness; begin using Doan's Kidney Pills when you first feel backache or notice urinary disorders.
John L. Perry, Columbus, Texas, says "I was taken slick about a year ago. My limbs and feet began to swell and my doctor said I had Bright's disease. I then consulted an other doctor who told me I had dropsy and could not live. Doan's Kidney Pills relieved me promptly, and I owe my life
EVERY PICTURE Tells a Story
Columbus, Texas, says "I was taken slick about a year ago. My limbs and feet be began to swell and my doctor said I had Bright's disease. I then consulted an other doctor who told me I had dropsy and could not live. Douan's Kidney Pills' relieved me promptly, and I owe my life to them."
Remember the name—Doan's. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Spring Longings.
Spring Longings.
Splutter—I'm just dying to get out and dig in the ground.
Butter—Golf or fishworms?
KILL the Elles Now and Keep
Personal Knowledge
Personal Knowledge.
Teacher—Give me an example of a transparent object.
"I think I shall let that woman rent my house."
"Why?"
"She's the first one who's called to see me about it who didn't brag about what a good tenant she is."
Tit for Tat.
Stranger (to prominent clergyman)
—I came in here, sir, to criticise your church management and tell you how it ought to be run.
Prominent Clergyman (amazed)—What do you mean, sir? How dare you? Who are you, anyway?
"I am the humble editor of the paper you have been writing to."—Life.
Finding of Fresh-Water Eel.
The straits of MESSina are channels of immense depth, through which a wild form of whirling eddies have the effect of bringing up from the depths below many marine creatures which are rarely seen except in the deep sea trawl. It was here that the fresh-water eel was first discovered, an incident which threw a blaze of light on the life history of a very mysterious fish—London. Dally Telegraph.
When Company Comes
If there's one thing above all others that makes a woman feel desperate it is to have company drop in unexpectedly to spend the day, and to know that her table-cloth is yellow from the last washing and the napkins worn in holes and dingy looking. If she had used Easy Task laundry soap her table linen would have been spotlessly white and she would be proud of it. Easy Task soap is the enemy of dirt and the friend of fabrics of all kinds. Try it next Monday and you'll rename washday to Easy task day.
Didn't Care to Mention His Name.
A colored woman presented herself the other day in an equal suffrage state at the place of registration to qualify for the casting of her vote on the school question at the next election.
"With what political party do you affiliate?" inquired the clerk of the unacustomed applicant, using the prescribed formula.
The dusky "lady" blushed, all coyness and confusion. "Is I bledg to answer that there question?" "Certainly; the law requires it." "Then, recreating in dismay I dore to mention to the court I hate to have to mention the party's name. Jee's one of the nicest gent-mums in town."-Ladies' Home Journal.
Light on Cause of Tuberculosis.
The sixth annual meeting of the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis was held in Washington on May 2 and 3. Among the most interesting papers was one by Dr. William H. Park, the famous pathologist and head of the laboratories of the New York City department of health. Dr. Park contend that pulmonary tuberculosis is very rarely, if ever, caused by infection from bovine sources, such as the drinking of milk or the eating of meat. Tuberculosis of the stomach and internal organs, which compose only about ten per cent, of the sickness from this disease, are often caused by drinking or eating infected matter. Doctor Park substantiated his conclusions by showing the results of years of investigation and examination of pathological specimens. His conclusions are substantially those reached by Dr. Robert Koch, the discoverer of the tubercle bacillus.
Of the brain, and activity out of the body, must be
Put.Back by
Or brain-fag and nervous prostration are sure to follow.
If you want to know the keenest joy on earth—the joy that comes with being well, try Grape-Nuts Food
"There's a Reason"
POSTUM CEREAL CO., Ltd.,
Battle Creek, Mich.
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY, MAY 14, 1910.
Practical Fashions
LADIES' SEVEN-GORED SKIRT.
Paris Pattern No. 2276, All Seams Allowed.—The handkerchief tunic which drops a little at each side in square points is an attractive form of this fashionable style skirt. The picture design has also a panel arrangement in front which will be found extremely becoming, and the flounce section continues to the waistline in the back in two box-plats, the closing being effected at their center. The pictured garment is made of dahlia-colored veil. The pattern is in 6 sizes, 22 to 22 inches waist measure. For 26 waist the skirt requires made of material with nap $5\frac{1}{2}$ yards 36 inches wide, or without nap, $5\frac{1}{2}$ yards 36 inches wide. Width of edge about $3\frac{1}{2}$ yards.
To procure this pattern send 10 cents to the Department of this paper. Write a letter addressed to the department to give size and number of pattern.
GIRLS'·PRINCESS DRESS.
10
Paris Pattern No. 2277, All Seams Allowed.-Mothers who were inclined to think the princess dresses of last year, in which the waist scans continued into the goros of the skirt, made little girls look almost too slender, will be charmed with the present model, the body portions of which are semi-litred and are lengthened by the hoxt-plated skirt, always becoming girlish figures. The closing of the pretty garment is made at the back, and the square yoke appears at the front only. Where the skirt joins the body portions belt straps are attached, through which the sash may be run. The pattern is in 5 sizes, 6 to 14 years. For a girl of 10 years the dress requires 3 yards of material 36 inches wide, with % yard of all-over embroidery 18 inches wide, 1½ yards of insertion.
To procure this pattern send 16 cents to the manufacturer of this pattern. Write name and address plubly, and be sure to give size and number of pattern.
NO. 3277. SIZE......
NAME......
TOWN......
STREET AND NO......
STATE.....
Reindeer in Switzerland
Fifty years ago an unsuccessful attempt was made in the Rosegg valley, Switzerland, to acclimatize a colony of reindeer. These animals have recently been again imported into Switzerland in connection with the races at St. Moritz and it is intended to make another trial to habituate the reindeer to a southern country.
On the success of the experiment depends the possibility of reindeer finding an extended home in the Swiss Alps. The average height of the Englundie is 1,580 meters; and as the snow files here for about half the year, the animals could be made serviceable for; that period. During the summer months the reindeer could be moved to higher levels, such as the Bermuda Hospice (1,230 meters), where snow would still be found.
—From the Field.
Braid Invalid's hair
"When caring for a patient with long, heavy hair, I arrange it in two firm braids," writes an experienced nurse.
"Fastening two long, soft ribbons or strips of cloth at the top of the braid, I wind it closely to the end, again securing the strips carefully.
"In this sheath the hair lids smooth and untangled, only needing to be cared for once in several days, and giving the slick one the least possible annoyance."
London's Coal Consumption.
London consumes about 14,000,000 tons of coal yearly.
PRETTY NEAR IT.
The Maiden—How did you act when you were under fire? Did you shrink? The Soldier—I don't know as I shrunk, but I tried to make myself as small as I could.
AN INTOLERABLE ITCHING
"Just about two years ago, some form of humor appeared on my scalp. The beginning was a slight itching but it grew steadily worse until, when I combed my hair, the scalp became raw and the ends of the comb-teeth would be wet with blood. Most of the time there was an intolerable itching, in a painful, burning way, very much as a bad, raw burn, if deep, will itch and smart when first beginning to heal. Combining my hair was positive torture. My hair was long and tangled terribly because of the blood and scabs. This continued growing worse and over half my hair fell out. I was in despair, really afraid of becoming totally bald.
"Sometimes the pain was so great that, when partially awake, I would scratch the worst places so that my finger-tips would be bloody. I could not sleep well and, after being asleep a short time, that any awful stinging pain—would commence and then I would wake up nearly wild with the torture. A neighbor said it must be salt rheum. Having used Cuticura Soap merely as a toilet soap before, I now decided to order a set of the Cuticura Remedies—Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Pills. I used them according to directions for perhaps six weeks, then left off, as the disease seemed to be eradicated, but toward spring, eighteen months ago, there was a slight return of the scalp humor. I commenced the Cuticura treatment at once, so had very little trouble. On my scalp I used about one half a cake of Cuticura Soap and half a box of Cuticura Ointment in_all. The first time I took six or seven bottles of Cuticura Pills and the last time three bottles—neither an expensive or tedious treatment. Since then I have had no sculp trouble of any kind. Standing up, with my hair unbound, it comes to my knees and had it not been for Cuticura I should doubtless be wholly bald.
"This is a voluntary, unsolicited testimonial and I take pleasure in writing it, hoping my experience may help someone else. Miss Lillian Brown, R. F. D. I, Liberty, Me, Oct. 20, 1999."
Bishop Eats His Own Boots.
Fow bishops have to lead such a strenuous life as bishop Stringer. In company with a missionary companion he made a tour recently to Herschell island, in the Arctic ocean, and back to Dawson City, where the bishop resides.
Their small supply of food becoming exhausted, they were obliged to eat their muckalucks and moccasins. These, made of raw scalskins, were soaked until they became glutinous, and were then toasted in strips over the fire. The bishop says the food was real good, especially the muckalucks.
Now He Expressed It
Every small boy—the right kind, anyhow—thinks his own mother the symbol of all perfection. Few, however, have the ability to express their admiration as pretty as the little hero of the following anecdote: Richard's mother was putting him to bed, and as she sat in good night, said, "Do know you are the whole world to mmunua?" "An I" he answered, quickly, "Well then, you're heaven and the north pole to me!"—Youth's Companion.
STATE OF OHIO CITY OF TOLLEDO. 1 52.
FRANK J. CHENYEN makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of J. CHENYEN and doing business in the City of Tucson, Arizona, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLAR for the services of the USE OF HALLA CATALINA CURT. FRANK J. CHENYEN swore to be me and my submissive in my presence this 6th day of December, A. D. 11. A. W. GLEASON. N-ARY PUBLIC. DEAL. HALLA CATALINA CURT is taken to court and the judge finds the blood and numerous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonies, fire. J. C. CHENYEN & Co., Tucson, O.
Inside and Out.
Speaker Cannon at a dinner in Washington, said, soothing, to a young suffragette: "After all, you know, there is room for both men and women in this world. Men have their work to do and women have theirs. "It is the woman's work to provide for the inner man, and it is the man's to provide for the outer woman." Drain on Country's Resources. In 1908, the foreign-born population of 13.6 per cent, furnished 15.6 per cent, of the criminals, 20.8 per cent, of the paupers, and 29.5 per cent, of the insane. Between 1904 and 1908, the aliens in these institutions increased 34 per cent.
Important to Mothers
Important to know
Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it
In Use For Over 50
The Kind You Have Always Bought.
Circumstances Alter Cases.
"The trouble is that too many people give expensive presents. That's where the mitchief comes in."
"Not! My wife's rather gave her a house and lot."
PERRY DAVIN PAINKILLER
Summer time in the house have no terrors in household where this dependable medicine is kept on hand. Soe. See and bottler.
Of Course Not.
"Did that young man have the face to kiss you?"
"He didn't kiss with his face."
MADE WELL AND STRONG
By Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
Jefferson, Iowa. — "When my baby was just two months old I was completely run down and my internal organs were in terrible shape. began to grow. By Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and mother wrote and told you just how I was. I began to gain at once and now I can eat well." MRS. W. H. BURGER, 700 Cherry St., Jefferson, Iowa.
Another Woman Cured.
Glenwood, Iowa. — "About three years ago I had falling and other female troubles, and I was nothing but skin and bones. I was so sick I could not do my own work. We sit with my sister and well and well Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I will always tell my friends that your remedies cared me, and you can publish my letter." — Mrs. C. W. Dunn, Glenwood, Iowa.
If you belong to that countless army of women who suffer from some form of cancer, E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. For thirty years this famous remedy has been the standard for all forms of female illis, and has cured thousands of women who have been troubled with such alliments as displacements, fibroid tumors, ulceration, inflammation, infection. If you want special advice write for it to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. It is free and always helpful.
TIME FOR HIS DEPARTURE
As Close Friend Knew, That Frame of Mind Was Not Apt to Be a Lasting One.
Ben, T. Rice and Hymen Lovy, both now dead, were two of the real old Virginia characters in a small Piedmont county seat town: Ben was the keeper of the town inn and Hymen, a genuine Jew, ran a store. Ben was noted for profanity, drinking and gambling and telling unheard of yarn. Hymen was a daily visitor at the inn to get his draim, and at times became thoroughly shocked at Ben's outrageous language and manners. Ben one evening, joined the town boys in an exciting game of football on Main Street, became overheated, and, cooling off too quickly, went into pneumonia at night. Several physicians attended him, who soon, pronounced his case hopeless. A dozen or more of Ben's friends, among them Hymen, were standing around the bed just before Ben's spirit took its flight from earth, when he uttered a long groan and said: "Oh, Lord, have mercy enme." At this moment Hymen turned his head slowly and remarked: "The good Lord ought to take Ben right now, for he never will be so good no more."
Knew Her Latin.
"Do-Feen-dum," spelled the younger on the rear goat as the "rubber-neck" wagon was passing the Twenty-second Regiment army, at Broadway and Sixty-eighth street. "What does that mean, antilie?"
"I didn't catch quite what the guide said," replied the old lady. "Oh, Mr. Guide, won't you kindly tell us what it says on that building?"
"Defen-dum!" roared the guide through his megaphone, dividing the word into three sections.
"That's what it is," said the old lady. "A dear and dumb acyram."
Remedies Too Costly.
Get out the old-fashioned household remedy book and scratch out two remedies, one advising raw beefsteak spread on a bruise and the other advising bacon for a felon. We can't waste beefsteak and bacon on brushes and felons these days.—Archisep Globe.
How Careless!
Smith--Why did your pretty cook leave you?
Jones--Not mad.
Smith--At what?
Jones--She caught me kissing my wife--Cleveland Leader.
A girl isn't necessarily a jewel because she is set in, her ways.
Children
Especially
Like
The sweet, "toastie" flavour of
Post Toasties
Crisp, fluffy bits of perfectly ripe white corn cooked, rolled and then toasted to an appetizing brown.
Served with cream and sometimes fruit, this dainty food pleases the whole family.
Give the home-folks a treat.
POSTUM CEREAL COMPANY, Ltd.
Battle Creek, Mich.
SHAWNEE. OKLAHOMA.
Is in the heart of the richest, best profit making farm land in the great Southwest. From a brush pile to a city of 25,000 population in 14 years. Wonder of the age in city building. Now building Meat packing house—1500 employees; Cotton Fabric Mill—600 employees; Baptist and Catholic State Universities—Will enroll 1000 students. Unprecedented profit making investments waiting for men of small and brave means. The last opportunity to get property in Shawnee is a low price. Get it on the ground then. Prices will advance rapidly. Nothing can stop Shawnee now. For descriptive literature and further information write SHAWNEE DEVELOPMENT COMPANY, Shawnee, Oklahoma, which is not a real estate company.
"There is no worse vice than frankness," said Doot Tarketing, at a farewell dinner in New York predecessor to his departure for Europe. "How should I feel, for example, if I asked you for your opinion of my plays, and you answered me frankly, quite frankly?"
"Why, I should feel like the poor indy at the bridge drive who said to her hostess' little daughter:
"Your eyes are such a heavenly blue. And what color are my eyes, darling?"
"Dwab middles, yellow whites and wed wims!"
**Fool Remarks.**
"The innancy of courtesy remarks that some people feel called upon to interject into conversation calls for a permanent commission in lunacy," said the man with the ingrowing grouch.
"Now, the other day I was telling Jones going down on the subway that my four-year-old had swallowed a safety pin, and we were up half the night with him.
"It was an accident, of course," said that idiot Jones."
Woman Caught Red Handed.
A woman was caught red handed last Tuesday. There was nothing sensational about it. All she had done was to do her washing with cheap, common yellow laundry soap, and the result was, as it always is, that her hands were cracked and chapped and clafed until they were sights. Easy Task soap relieves a woman of so much rubbing and dipping the hands in the water that no harm results. As a matter of fact, Easy Task soap is good to wash the hands with. It won't hurt the most delicate skin any more than the finest face.
Proposed Partnership.
Father—You want to marry my daughter?. Why, sir, you can't support her. I can hardly do it myself.
Suior (blandly)—C can't we chip in together?—Pick-Me Up.
SORE EYES, weak, inflamed, red, watery. SKIVE, too. ALL drugsters' or Howard Bros. Buffalo, N. Y.
Sleep with a piece of wedding cake under your pillow for three nights in succession and whatever you dream on the third night will come to pass.
When You Feel
There comes a time when you
Your nerves are unstrung, the
is weak and the blood impo-
creeping over you. Be c
BEECHAM
at once; there is need to re
nerves, wearied brains, sick s
liver, sluggish bowels—all fe
Beecham's Pills. Their use m
tonic action of these pills upo
diate, thorough and lasting.
For Run-down
When You Feel Played Out
There comes a time when your grip on things weakens. Your nerves are unstrung, the vital forces low, the stomach is weak and the blood impoverished. You feel old age creeping over you. Be careful of yourself. Take
BEECHAM'S PILLS
at once; there is need to renew the life forces. Weak nerves, wearied brains, sick stomach, feeble blood, torpid liver, sluggish bowels—all feel the quickening effects of Beecham's Pills. Their use makes all the difference. The tonic action of these pills upon the vital organs is immediate, thorough and lasting. They are Nature's own remedy
Sold Everywhere in Boxes, 10c. and 25c.
THE
TRADE MARK
ALABASTINE
ALABASTINE
A Woman's H
should be her pride. Your h
reflect your own individual
cannot have special wall p
signed by you for each woman
carry out a special Alabastine
tive scheme for those rooms-y
a leader in your community
your home the talk of your friend
Alabastine
The Studiish Wall Text
THE TRADE MARK
ALABASTINE
A Woman's Home
should be her pride. Your home should
reflect your own individuality. You
cannot have special wall paper des-
igned by you for each room—you can
carry out a special Alabastine deco-
rative 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 hummable color effects, plastic stencil designs, 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 Alabastine
is used.
Alabastine is a powder made from Alabaster, ready for
use by mixing with cool water, and is applied with an or-
dinary wall brush. Full directions on each package.
Alabastine Company
New York City, N.Y. Grand Repida, Mich.
THE PACKAGE
for home or family use when soreness of the skin prevails. It first soothes, then heals. A certain cure for itching piles.
RESINOL CHEMICAL COMPANY, BALTIMORE, MD.
Resinol Ointment, Resinol Toilet Soap, Resinol Medicated Shaving Stick are sold at all Drug Stores.
A City Beautiful.
Terrors of Frankness
Fool Remarks.
Proposed Partnership
Visitor I saw your husband in the crowd down town today. In fact, he was so close that I could have touched him.
Hostess—That's strange. At home he is so close that nobody can touch him!—Puck.
Mrs. Winston's Soothing Syrup.
Percussion training, softening the guitars, educating an audience, pain, cure wounds. So a bottle.
How one woman doesn't enjoy hearing another praised.
DODD'S
KIDNEY
PILLS
FOR ALL KIDNEY DISEASES
FOR RHEUMATISIS
FOR BRIGHT'S DISEASE
DIABETES.BACKKORN
1375 "Guaranteed Quality"
ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE
"In a pinch
'Beehive
Food-Late"
MOTHER, RAVIN Sweet
PUPPETS, the best medicine for
Fever, sickly Children. Sold by
Drugstore.com.
FOOD LATE
Trim Package FREE
ADDRESS:
ALEN S. OLSTAD, L. K. N. Y.
Trial Bottle Free By Mail
FITS
If you suffer from Epilepsy, Fits, Falling Sickness,
Spiraea, or have children that do so, my New Discovery will relieve them, and all you are asked to do is send for $Free Trial$ Bottle of Dr. May's
Epileptolide Oure
He is graduated from the University of Iowa and failed. He is now by May Medical Laboratory Under Pure Food and Drugs Act, June 80th, 1908. He is a graduate of the University of Boca Raton and give AGE and complete address DR. W. H. MAY, 648 Pearl Street, New York. Please mention this paper. Druggists fill orders.
THICK, SWOLLEN GLANDS that make us horse Wheeze, Heart, have Thick Wind, or can be removed with can be removed
EN GLANDS
ABSORBINE
or any BAILER or Bwelling
No bilaterion, no baff
a work $80 per bottle.
DELAWARE FARMS Best fruit-growing
good markets, fair climate. Wine,奶
good markets, fair climate. Wine,奶
WILLEY & RAWLING, SEAFOORD, DEL
PATENTS WATSON E. CLEWAN, Watson,
D.C. Bookfair, Hibiscus
reference. Best results.
Amended with: Thompson's Eye Water
forest use.
W. N. U., CLEVELAND, NO. 20-1910.