The Gazette

Saturday, May 21, 1910

Cleveland, Ohio

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Straw and Maline Eagle TWENTY-SEVEN Straw ar THE season has brought in and introduced successfully a number of hats very simply trimmed which are nevertheless quite elaborate enough. The bodies of these hats are made of beautiful braids, of which there are so many different patterns, combined with folded malline, matching them in color. The result is exquisitely soft and light shapes which look better when simply trimmed than otherwise. The Napoleon shape at the bottom of the group is in silk braid, king's blue in color. A close shirring hem of silk gives the breaking its width and giving an airy touch that is lovely. A shaded quill, blue to gray, and a double fan of velvet ribbon, in the same colors, are mounted at the front. 'single flat band of the blue velvet: bon extends over the back trimmer: onto the crown. This is all the trimming and nothing more is Perfectly Good and Up-to-Date Garment May Be Made at Comparatively Small Expense. The all-over lace waist, which is a perfectly good left-over from the wardrobe of two years ago, may be worked into a this year's garment of quite a good and reliable style by making as a part of it a white cotton volle skirt with a paneled back and front, the panels extending up over the shoulders, where they are seamed together. This will leave the side gores of the skirt bolted in. A complete garment you will now have, which is to be slipped on over the lace blouse. How satisfying to be able to use a good garment without making it completely over! If desirable, the collar and cuffs may be removed, leaving the lace bodice collarless and with three-quarter sleeves. Motifs cut from the discarded lace may possibly be so shaped that they can be used as insets upon the upper or waist portion of the long volle panels. Wavy Locks. Even the straightest locks in the world can be made wavy by the simple process of wetting the hair with alcohol and pinning it in little loops tight down to the head. Do not put the alcohol on your hands or brush, but use a little wad of absorbent cotton and dab the alcohol lightly over the hair. Then, taking a strand at a time, pinch it into loops about two inches apart and pin each loop snugly down. This can be done across the back of the head as well as on the top and sides, and the hair will wave and be perfectly dry in about half an hour, especially if a thin piece of velling is tied all around the head as tightly as possible. The Bath as a Tonic. Some women say that they have not the vitality to withstand a daily bath. That is usually the case when the bath is considered a bother and too much strength is expended in the scrubbing and rubbing. The most beneficial bath is the quick one that is over within three minutes. Such a bath is a tonic. It is not necessary to get into the tub. Merely go over the body speedily, bathing away the dust and secretions of the skin, rinsing quickly, and rubbing briskly until the skin fairly tingles. If one is nerve-tired, a hot bath just before going to bed will act as a soothing, resilient comforter. No Cosmetic Like Water. One woman, whose skin is the admiration of all, washes her face with lukewarm water, the best toilet soap and a piece of soft flannel each inght upon retiring and rubs it gently upward with an old linen towel. Then she sips a cupful of hot water. In the morning she dashes cold water over her face and neck and pats it dry with a turkish towel and sips a cupful of hot water again. She has never used a cosmetic, and attributes the beauty of her skin to the generous use of water, both internally and externally. At the left a rose colored turban shows a cleverly wrought brim in which a long strip of braid edged with folds of maline does double service. It covers the brim and ornaments it at the same time. A ribbon plume made of a series of loops is of rose-colored satin ribbon. A silver ornament finishes the trim. This is one of the prettiest models shown in turbans. At the right a smart street hat is made of satin braid and has the edge of the brim finished with shirred maline. The hat is in a light olive, while the ribbon trim is a changeable blue and green taffeta. In this model the crown is a square of the braid draped across the frame. The idea is original and clever. The facing is of shirred maline and a ribbon bow finishes the back. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. Costume of Light-Colored Tweed, However, Was Really Designed for the Golfer. Though illustrated and described for golf this would be a useful style for walking or cycling. It is in a light colored tweed, and is trimmed either with a darker or contrasting colored cloth or leather. The plain skirt has a cross-way THE GOLF COAT band at the foot. On the coat the front and back seams are wrapped; little material straps keep the loose fitting waltband in place. The collar and sleeves are faced to match straps on skirt. Hat of straw turned up at the left, and trimmed with a wing at the right side. Materials required: Six yards cloth 50 inches wide 1/2 yard darker cloth, 4 buttons, 5 yards silk for lining coat. Raised Eyebrows. There is little use to massage for wrinkled forehead when lines are constantly formed from the habit of raising the eyebrows with every word. Often one is unconscious of this trick and should ask to be reminded. This may provoke unpleasantness, so a safer way is to use adhesive plaster. Whenever one is to stay in the house for several hours at a stretch paste lengthwise strips of adhesive plaster at outer corners of eyebrows and just above the nose. Paste with face in repose and each time the brows are elevated the drawing of the plaster, joins the memory. ESTABLISHED AUGUST 25, 1883, AND ISSUED EVERY WEEK ON TIME SINCE. DARROW SCORES DR. WASHINGTON! THE GREAT CHICAGO ATTORNEY OF ORGANIZED LABOR URGES THE AMALGAMATION OF RACESI Speaking to Our People He Says, We Need to Learn How to Live Easier Lives as far as Hard Work Is Concerned—Says We Should Inter-Marry—Williams' $1,100 a Week. New York City—Chicheve S. Darrow, the great Socialist lawyer of Chicago, in an address Saturday night at the second annual conference of the National Negro Committee. In Cooper union, wiped out the color line and urged race amalgamation an the solution of the so-called race problem. He criticised Booker T. Washington and told his hearers that what the Negro needs is some one to race it not to work. He also said: "It may be hard way in the future, but intermarriage between the races finally will settle all difficulties as it has in the case of the Irish and Germans and other people who formerly had to be kept apart in order to preserve the peace. Not a Question of Color? Not a Question of Color? "It is not the color which causes the distinction between Negroes and 'what people'. The real barrier is the fact that Negroes are more slaves and that today they are the ranks of labor. It is a labor question rather than a race problem, and the way for the Negro to obtain recognition is to cast his lot holdly with the poor and fight with them and for them. The cause of the poor is his cause—and his cause is theirs." Booker T. Washington, the speaker described as "that modest, self-abasing optimist who builds industries and lays bricks for the 'white man' and to perform manual labor of the lowest kind." Some Views on Labor. "What you really need," he continued. "is some one to teach you not to work. Your people have worked from the beginning. You have earned your bread by the sweat of your brow so long that now when you ask for an increase in wages it is considered ludicrous and is regarded in the same light as if some one demanded that a horse's wages should be increased." Bert. Williams Gets $1,100 a week. In arguments before Justice McCall a few days ago in the supreme court, it developed that Bert Williams is receiving what is undoubtedly the largest salary ever paid an Afro-American performer on the stage. He is getting $1,100 a week in vaudeville. The court action is a suit by F. Ray Comstock, a producing manager, to restrain Williams from appearing under any except his management. Comstock claims Williams has a $300 a week. He seeks to prevent Williams from appearing in Ziegfeld's "Follies of 1916." SHOT TWICE BY A WOMAN. Dedicatory*Exercises — Obituary — A Wet and, Dry Debate—An, Oratorio—Monthly-Communlon — Personals. GOV. HADLEY'S GOOD TALK And Sensible Veto—Two Very Succe cucceful Veto—Good Appointment St. Louis, Mo.-Gov. Hadley of this state, in an address here last week to the state meeting of the G. A. R., said, among 'other things: "The wounds of the war are healed and a reunited country gives today just what it needs." Just as the north and of the south who fought for the cause they believed to be just. But in this spirit of sectional friendship we must not permit politicians arriving for political success to arouse race prejudices and hatred. The men who gave freedom to 3,000,000 slaves should insist that the president deal with in a spirit of oppression or injustice. Instead of oppressing the Negro and trying to humiliate him by discriminatory laws, we should try to so educate and assist him that he will become a useful and law-abiding citizen. Gov. Hadley very promptly ensured that Missouri legislature some time ago to deprive Negro fraternities of the right to use the symbols and signs of secret orders because such were being used by similar orders of certain "white" fraternities. He said such proscription was unnecessary, that they had to encourage our people and only allowed courage our people in their work of doing good. Geo. A. E. Barnes is foreman of the brick work of one of the largest buildings ever built by our workmen. He is also the Extract building, 200 Baldwin street. G. W. Sanford has put up for one firm the largest apartment house in this city—for seventy-four families. The Raphanga, on the corner of Delmar and Delta streets, the saitres and the police station. Charles Turner has been appointed storekeeper, in charge of the local police department supplies. A PRINCE LAUDS OUR TROOPS Afro-American Guard Given Prince Teai at West Point Is Regarded as the Best the Great China million River Swat --- West Point, N. Y., "When Prince Tsai, military expert of the Chinese empire, visited West Point recently he expressed the greatest admiration for the squad of Afro-American soldiers stationed here. Every one of the soldiers is a man. Half of them are tall, alert, and hard-working. Half of them scared by battles they have been through. They constitute the most perfectly drilled troop in the United States army. They formed Prince Tsai's bodyguard of honor for a portion of his stay, and he could not keep him. "I have never been troops that could be compared to these men," said Prince Tsai, the officers who surrounded him. "We all proud of them," said one of the "for they are proud of themselves" "consider them the best soldiers," said another "were sent here because of their uniform excellence." THE. "UPRISING." POLITICAL The Trouble in Cuba but a Contention for Proper Recognition. Havana, Cuba—So far the net result of the recent "proteale arrests and judgements of Afro-Cubans has been to drive into the Conservative camp many thousands of those very voters who constituted the bulk of the party which elected President Felipe Calderón. The titles have appeared in General Estaoz's Pervision, and the General himself for months past has denounced the government from the sump in unmeasured terms, there appears to he no evidence that he at any time, advocated the forcible overthrow of the government or any rupture of the government. The Afro-Cubans and "white" Cubans that are normal throughout Cuba. What he demanded, as all other colored politicians have done, was the assignment of offices to the Afro-Cubans proportionate to their numbers and to the services rendered by the race in the war of the revolution. There have been many instances of airness, save such as arose among the "whites," who were panic-streaked by the alarming rumors which were circulated all over the country, largely by prejudiced Americans. No Color Line Here! Toronto, Canada—Dr. Prather, a man of family and a good practitioner, is connected with the immigration of face here, representing the F. S. immigration department. As he has held this appointment five years at least he has been a Medley operator. Will Medley, a young man residing here, is chief operator, in the telegraph department of the Canadian Pacific railroad here. An interesting incident followed his appointment. When Medley received his appointment five of the "white" operators employed refused to work under him because he was a Negro. Mr. Kent, the man above, very friendly and engaged new men. Subsequently the dissatisfied ones were only too glad to get back, and Medley is still chief operator and making good. Good for Supt. Ross! Springfield, O.—A few cool high school graduates at New Carlisle are trying to draw a color line. Supt. Ross wamed them who have a "chair picture" of a white student and students refused because it would include one Afro-American girl. Supt. Ross insists that he will refuse to hang any other than a class picture beside the other class pictures in the classroom. The teacher, a southerner or prejudiced southern sympathetic pupil in the graduating class. Given a Carnegie Medal. Williams, an In-Law — Mrs. Martha Generals, an aged Afro-American woman of this city, has been granted a bronze medal and a pension of $20 a month by the Carnegie Hero commission for her bravery in saving the life of Little John Walkes, "white," a broken wire on the street which was heavily charged with electricity, and was being badly burned. Mrs. Generals resumed him. In doing so she was severely shocked herself. Joe Gans, a Sick Man. Baltimore, Md.--Joe Gans, the former premier lightweight champion of the world, will never be able to fight again. Acting under the advice of a well-known Arizona lawmaker for Arizona last week for the benefit of his health, news having been broken to him that he has developed symptoms of tuberculosis. FRESH OHIO NEWS OUR OWN WRITERS' WHAT OUR PEOPLE ARE DOING IN MANY CITIES AND TOWN8 OF THE STATE. INTERESTING PERSONAL NOTES Boccal Functions—Church and Lodge Items—Mariages and Deaths— Literary, Musical and Other Notes of Interest. Weltsky—R. T. J. Wiltky, Mr. and Mr. S. Weltsky, Thursday, Mr. and Mr. J. Weltsky, birthday son has pneumonia. Mr. Winn Paynay visited Stevenson Hall. Friday, Kathleen Hope, Ms. Olsen, Olsen雪 returned from Albany, Mrs. Olsen of Pec cial Thursday evening. A. Alexander of Toronto visited here Sunday—The drama will be given May 26. *Sandusky.* Rey, G. D. Smith was too ill Sunday to speak at the A. M. E. church in the afternoon as announced. Neutralism. The dentist removed two teeth and dressed an injured wound, wearing a hearing aid. Loved her, though, gave an excellent recital at Carnegie hall the 12th. Miss Loisle of Waster assisted him. Miss Fowell of Waster assisted him. Miss Fowell of Waster selected at Decatur School Baptist church Sunday morning. St. Clairsville—Services were well attended at the A. M. E. church Sunday. Rev. and Mrs. Montgomery centered on the celebration of White, daughter and Mother Lewis. Mrs. Taylor Walker entertained Tuesday evening in honor of Mrs. Irwin Jordan and Mrs. S. J. Winston. A number attended the baptizing at M. Pleasant Sunday, Chester Reed has returned from Kentucky. Mrs. Cochran is in Washington. Mr. Mrs. John Wilson and Mrs. Simmons Sunday and Simmons Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Williams have moved to Logansport. Ind. Please pay promptly for The Gazette. Smithfield—Rev. R. R. Cooper and G. Davis preached at the A. M. E. church Sunday. A large crowd attended the Trontoon baptizing Sunday. (Not) Morgan spending a few days in Cadiz, A. J. Giroux were here on Saturday and Sunday. Mr. Wm. Beasley and little daughter visited his sister, Mrs. M. E. Veney, from Saturday until Monday evening.—Miss Sarah Beall visited in Steubenville Saturday. Mr. Dan Bichley visited in Steubenville Saturday. Mr. Carter, F. R. Ferguson, G. Giants and others were in Steubenville last week.—Miss Luka Jackson of Pittsburg is here visiting her man. Sandusky.—The editor of The Gazette will lecture here at an early date.—Communion Sunday. The probationers will be read at the church and the sermon to a large congregation Sunday. He is doing good work and the church is in a better condition than it has been for some time. There was a grand rally, church fund school, Sunday. Total collection $0.5. The church is carelessly carried. Each member of the infant class brought in one yard of pennies. Dr. C. Bandy, P. E. will hold quarterly meeting here Thursday. The Sewing circle me at Mrs. N. Williams last Thursday and the Young people's meeting met at Miss Arla McKenna. The meeting was rendered and the evening passed pleasantly. Washington C. H.—Truman Grimes, Cleo. Hamilton and Veronica Burnell of Wilmington came over Sunday in an automobile. The April 29 ordinance will be May 7. By the W. H. S. steward of Crown Jewelry, parlor and fruit stand will open Saturday evening.—The Gazette wishes a good agent and correspondent in Wilmington, Lancaster and Portsmouth. Whom can you suggest? Edna Mitchell, Nina Brandon, Gladys Harris and Margaret Anderson attended baptism at Sabina Sunday. Thos. Loving, Hamilton, Clarence Jackson was in Wilmington. Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Willow have moved to Dagenham. He is best working there for some time. Mrs. Harry Jones, Mr. and Ms. O. Willett their little son and Debbie Jones have returned from Chelsea.—Fosters Monday. Heart trouble. Age 62. She leaves two daughters. Financial from the residence. Tuesday afternoon. Rev. Fleming officiating. Interment. in Fountain cemetery.—Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Jackson, Master Harry Roberts and Mrs. W. E. Nelson left Findley last week for Bellefontaine where Mr. Jackson was pollinate from the First Baptist S. S. to the Third district convention.—Rev. P. H. Edwards of Bluefield, W. V. was here last week en route to Michigan.—John H. Johnson, who will graduate June 3 from the high school and who has been the star player on the foot ball team for four years, has taken the first prize, a gold medal, the second time in two years at a track meet held here last week Friday.—C. C. Powell of Ft. Wayne was here last week. TERRIBLE BLOW AT OUR RIGHTS WOULD BE A PENDING CONGRE AMENDMENT TO "THE MORRILL ACTS." WRITE YOUR CONGRESSMA Cadiz.-Mr. W. Evans of East Laylervoor was K. M. Veney's guest Sunday.-A number attended the baptism at M. Pleasant Sunday.-Rev. C. M. Hogan was Miss Susie Mason's guest Sunday.-Mrs. Elizabeth Campbell and son, Harry Lucas, and her granddaughter have been Miss W. M. F. Tyrer.-Mr. B. Tyrer, Miss L. White, Mrs. G. Rudolph and Mrs. C. H. Christian spent Saturday and Sunday in M. Pleasant.-Miss Kizzie White of Stoenville spent a week with her mother.-Mrs. J. Barnard with her mother.-Stevenbauer with Mr. Elsworth Ridgid of Columbia, Pa., was Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Strøther's guest last week.-Mrs. R. P. Ballard entertained the Y. M. L. club Friday evening. A delightful lunch.-Mr. A. Strøther spent Monday and Tuesday in Canton.-Mrs. Maud Smith of Menna, Pa., is visiting her parents. Hamilton.-Sedalia lodge's annual sermon was preached by Rev. Singleton. Several visitors attended, Mr. Stanley Davis was in Middletown Sunday.-Mrs. C. S. Dyson is sick.-The Coke Otto Giants defeated the Shakers 9 to 1.-May Z., age 14 of daughter of Mrs. Jessa Young, died Friday morning. Funeral Saturday afternoon. She was baptized by Mr. Hunter and Mr. Mrs. Juno. S. Espy spent Sunday in Columbus.-Attendance at both churches good and collections fair.-A crowd journeyed to Coke Otto to witness the ball game Sunday.-Mr. Stanley Jennings of Indianapolis spent Sunday with his mother.-Mr. John Cossy has opened the city. The Fourth regiment staff of Cincinnati, M. V. P. of G. U., O. F., visited Sedalia lodge Sunday.-Mr. Robinson fell and broke his arm in two places.-Mrs. Singleton is in Cleveland attending M. W. M. S Convention.-The "Jolly booster" dance postponed from Tuesday to Thursday. Many people from Oxford and Glendale attended.-Mrs. Starr and Mrs. Ida Wolffer of Cincinnati visited their daughter and sister, Mrs. Chas. Weeks, Sunday. Youngstown—Ray Green of Cleveland visited Warner and this city last week.—Mrs. Jennie Scott is ill—Mrs. Harry Jackson of Sandy Lake, Pa.—Mrs. James Kelly's son-in-law, is recovering.—Christ Hamilton is convulsive. The Chrysanthemum club entertained at Oak Hill Avenue church Monday evening was a grand success. The late Augustus Marshall's will appear in this letter next week.—Peter Clark of Sharon will be Tuesday at 10 a.m. before Warner to visit relatives in Jansheld—Mrs. Blanche Roberts and Mrs. Estella Brown are ill.—Mrs. and Mrs. Harry Williams entertained Saturday in honor of Mr. Alfred Crawford of Warren.—James Gaskins spent this week in Pittsburgh.—Mr. Harry Devin will be present. Prench has returned from Toledo.—Mr. Harry Price of Boston is employed at the Todd House under Mr. William Brown.—Mr. and Mrs. John Thomas are rejoicing over the arrival of a girl.—Mr. Harry Devin continues to work. Lizzie Cheney and company were in Warron Monday.—Mr. John Simpson's infant daughter and Mrs. Churchville are ill.—Mr. John Horner is improving.—Mrs. George Simpson has returned to Akron.—A. H. Berry's dancing school session Wednesday evening and W. club net at Mrs. M. A. Morris' "wednesday evening: Lunch—Buckeye. Judge held, a business and social session last week. Intermarriage Common. Paris, France—Marriages between "white" women and Negroes have been so common here as to excite no comment. As is well known, many prominent South Americans are Negroes. In Paris they form a most distinguished and most aristocratic society. Prominent among them are Guzman Blanco, Manuel Yriarte, Miguel Campos and Antonio Anchez. Other Negroes with white wives are natives of French colonies. An event that aroused the attention of the race of Prince Dhuleep Singh and Lady Anne Coventry. The bridegroom was a very dark-brown colored man and the bride a very handsome, fair-haired English girl. She is a daughter of the man whose name was Viscount Deerhurst, married Miss Virginia Bonyyne, an American. Soldiers Taught a Lesson. Beaureport, S.C.—Six soldiers of the One Belle Company, four of the company coast artillery, stationed Fort, Fremont, on St. Helena island, were shot by Negroes upon whom they were imposing, just outside of the reservation lines, between four o'clock last week Monday night and 1 o'clock Tuesday afternoon. Two of the men, Privates Quigley and McNally, are dangerously wounded, while Privates McCarthy, Stansberry, Callahan and Sleder are less seriously shot. The men who did the shooting, Will and Isaac Potter, left the neighborhood and only the latter has been arrested up to this time. He was captured last week Friday morning, after a class-action lawsuit and nights in the camps of St. Helena county. Langford's: Latest Victim. New York City--Al Kubik, whose the body young girl from Michigan, lasted a round and a half with Sam Lungford at the Fairmount Athletic club Monday night. After battering him around the ring all through the first round Sam proceeded to finish the job in the second. IN WHICH RESTRAINT OPY FIVE CENTS. TERRIBLE BLOW AT OUR RIGHTS! WOULD BE A PENDING CONGRESS AMENDMENT TO "THE MORRILL ACTS." WRITE YOUR CONGRESSMANI Let Every Loyal Member of the Race, Particularly Those in the North, Send a Strong Protest to Their U. S. Senators and Members of Congress—Do This at Once! 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 inquisitious 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 B. R. 2336 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 act, which may come to the District of Columbia. We suspect that each reader of The Gazette copy and send at once the following petition to the congressman and senator at Washington, D. C. A: PROTEST. To The Honorable ..... Senator (or Member of Congress), Warrin- ington, 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. 24315" of the (Continued on second page.) --- One Year.....$1.50 Six Months.....1.00 Three, Months.....5.00 Subscribers are requested to remit by postoffice money order or registered letter. Entered at the postoffice in Cleveland Ohio, as second-class matter Address all communications to HARRY C. SMITH Editor and proprietor, THE GAZETTE, Blackstone Building, Cleveland, O. Member Ohio Legislature: 1894 to 1896; 1898 to 1899; 1900 to 1902 Cleveland, O., May 2', 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. Prince Tsai, we salute you! Has the Columbus (O.) American Independent, Dr. J. A. Robbins, editor, renounced Democracy? It would seem so. Good! There is far "more truth than poetry" in what Clarence S. Darrow says in our New York letter on page 1, today. Read it carefully—and think. Gov. Hadley of Missouri seems to have the right idea of some things, at least, that concern greatly the future progress of the race. See St. Louis letter elsewhere in this paper, it is encouraging. There are a few of them left, anyhow. Supt. Ross of the New Carlisle, O., high school, is one. May the number increase, is our prayer. They are so greatly needed in this day and time. See Springfield, O., letter in this paper. Sam Langford's success as a puglist, is really remarkable. There seems to be no stopping him these days. The best feature, however, is the fact that Sam is saving his money, having cleared nearly $30,000 on his recent contests. "White" soldiers of Fort Fremont, near Beaufort, S. C., got a much-needed though costly lesson last week, the moral of which is, it does well, always afford "fun" and "pleasure" to "pick on" even the downtrodden. "The worm turns," sometimes, you know. It seems that President Taft is making them "sit up and take notice." —Mobile (Ala.) Weekly Press. He certainly has been one continuous screaming joke—a lazy, mushy and very harmful one, too. The greatest this country, fortunately, has ever bad The Bacheh-Machke "state" won at the Republican primaries, last Tuesday, except in the case of Senator Phare, who won the insolvency judge candidacy over the "slate" candidate, S. J. Kornhauser. It does not require a prophet nor the son of a prophet to foresee what is going to happen to most of the local and state Republican tickets, including several down-the-state congressmen, this fall. There are undoubted indications that many prominent Ohio Republicans, "white," are "pulling" for the state to go Democratic this fall. They are willing to see (gov.) Judson Harmon re-elected providing there is a Democratic majority in the state assembly. They are just that maliciously anxious to secure the defeat of United States Senator Charles Dick. Shame! Rev. W. O. Harper, editor of the Dayton (O.) Outlook, is publishing a portrait of President Taft each week underneath which is the following sentence: "The man who is throwing some good size plums among the colored Change the word "plumbs" for the word "bricks," Friend Harper, and stop misleading our people of Dayton. You are too bright and too good a raceman to permit such a thing, even if it will curry favor with the Republican "political machine" of your city. Taft has been appointed more than a year and is appointed to office just a few Americans—Judge Terrrell and Recorder Johnson. He has kicked out of the service, hundreds of our men. The American correspondents' "Cuban Race War" has degenerated into a farce. The American newspaper men, prejudiced hybrids, on that island, ought to be "fired bodily," because such harmful lies, for sensational purposes principally, are calculated to stir up serious trouble eventually for the Cuban government — just what many American business men and others are trying to home in, and therefore, President Gomer would be perfectly justified in sending from Cuba all such, whether newspaper correspondents or not. They are a positive menace to the continued peace and prosperity of the island republic. Their recent "Cuban Race War" was nothing more nor less than a perfectly legitimate and proper effort upon the part of leading Afro-Cubans to get the recognition in the conduct of the government they are justly entitled to or their numberless, striking loyalty in all their efforts for Cuban liberty. And they will get it, too, before the end of the chapter. In this one respect, at least, they differ greatly from their Afro-American brethren of today. It will pay us to watch carefully this Afro-Cuban effort, led by the fearless and able General Estenoz, editor of the Havana Pervison. May it succeed is our earnest wish and belief. AS TO THE TIME AND PLACE. The following, a portion of an inters THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1910. view with a local Negro, one "Noomy" Brasher, is the most harmful portion of a column article that appeared in last week Monday's Cleveland Daily Leader and which certainly was condemned, and very properly, too, by about all who saw or heard of it: "We, the members of the Cleveland Association of Colored Men, were here in the city, where a colored man has lost his job because he did not take sufficient interest in his work, was negligent or made some mistake in conduct. We want to give our people the opportunity to give for this purpose will provide these lectures. "The footmen are being displaced in front of the big down-town stores because they make 'social centers' of their working places, the barbers are losing out for the same reason and because they do not put brains in work." Walters Are Losing: The waiters are losing because they are not tidy in appearance and thoughtful in the execution of their duties. It was said that the Caterers' association should have written waiters of the importance and necessity of being progressive and clean. The chauchains are in danger of being displaced because too many of their employees use their time of their employers for joy rides' along Central avenue and East 9th street, taking girls, drinking men and others hurrahing through the thoroughtaers. On the entire Leader article, including above excerpt, we commented a follow in our last issue: Most of that publication in last Monday's Cleveland Leader was a very unfortunate thing. Strange that some of our people never learn that parading in the daily newspapers the weakness 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" fjimcrow Negroes may bask in the limelight of a little cheap daily newspaper notoriety. Our local waiters, barbers, footmen and chauffeuses ought to get together and chase that color 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 Monday's Leader reminds us very forbly of that portion of Dr. Booker T. Washington's lecture, a year or so later. Nashville or Memphis, in which he took occasion to publicly or indirectly according to common report, to warn the people who employed Nogro cooks of the latter who were carrying away food, etc. through their employees' back, doors. Shame, O shame! Good Lord, how long, O how long must a long-suffering people be unladen by fjimcrow Negroes? What we wish to emphasize at this time and reiterate is, that such criticism and comment as is contained in the Leader except, reprinted above, may be all right. If corrected, it will be certainly, ALL WOONG IN THE "WHITE" PRESS for reasons obvious and others stated in The Gazette editorial published last week and reprinted above in this article. "There is a time and a place for all things" is an old and very true saying that is peculiarly applicable in this instance—when it comes to making public such criticism and com- Then, too, there is not near so much ground for the invidious Brasher criticism as he would have one believe. When he is older, knows more, and is a resident of Cleveland longer, he will be in a better position to state facts as to the barbers, waiters, footmen and chauffeurs. More: he is hardly the person, from any viewpoint, to rushing into the daily practice of criticism of anybody in this community where there are many of those who are same employees he would choose who have had success in their various avocations. More than can be said of some of their would-be critics. BULLWEST Man is a Suicide Birmingham, Mo. — Webster M. Samuels, known as one of Andrew Carnegie's "brilliant young men," shot and killed himself at the home of brother-in-law because of his wife. His wife, who was Miss Anna McClure of Cleveland, O., was down stairs at the time. Samuels had been confined to his bed for six months. When he was 20 he began to work in the Trenton iron works at Trenton, N. J., one of the Carnegie foundries. In six years he became secretary of the concern. "Vets" Won't Join in Parade. Mount, Verpon, N. Y. —Because they say that the day is being made one of rejoicing, instead of mourning for the dead, the 32 veterans of Flandreu post, G. A. R., of New Rochelle have decided for the first time since the establishment of Memorial day not to join in the public parade of the day. The post, said the members of the Grand Army of the Republic would hold their customary service for the dead and decorate the graves as usual, but ceremony would be private. Fire Claims Entire Family. New York City—An entire family perished in a fire in the tenement at 144 Hamburg avenue, Williamsburg. The victims were Peter Lar- burg, his wife Rose, and their two children, Jennie, S, and Bessie, 12. The police and firemen did heroic work and doubtedly would have saved the Larnico family but for the statement by other tenants that all reached the street in safety. It is believed the family was overcome by smoke. The cause of the fire is unknown. Stone Daughter and Self Syracuse, N. Y.-Mrs. Emma Chapman, wife of one chief of police of Baldwinville, N. Y., shot and killed her 15-year-old daughter Hazel and then herself, white insane. She used her husband's police revolver. She ago aged Chapman was operated on at the Rome, N. Y., hospital for cancer. She refused to take anesthetic. The operation was successful, but the pain was so great that her mind has since been affected. (Continued from First Page.) 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. I 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. "HEWERS OF WOOD AND DRAW ERS OF_WATER", The contention over the reappointment of the keeper of the children's elephant, "Minnie", in the charge of the city, and that now on as a result of the unwarranted and wholesale destruction of the trees in the public parks, have opened the eyes of thousands of residents of this city, besides us, to certain things The Gazette said and reiterated prior to Mayor Baehr-Maschke's nomination and election last fall. Thus early has our statements been made clear, verified as it were, and therefore we are now justified in saying, we told you so. Our people know, whether they will admit it or not, that we have so very many times told them in advance TRUTHS about persons and things that some of them would not accept before, only to apologize upon when it was time to find out that once again the Gazette had warned us of time but in vain, to their sincere regret. In January the Mayor announced the appointment of Dan, Fairfax, Jr., to the appointment in the water-works' department, the only Afro-American up to date to be "appointed" by the city administration to a clerkship. Did he and Maschke let Dan. have the job? NO INDEEDI Did they appoint any other Afro-American to it or any clerkship? NO INDEEDI Are all such positions filled? The Mayor says so. What positions have been given to our voters? A few janitorials, two meter readers, a few inspectors of gates and closets, etc., and many other clerks, a higher appointed personnel and Maschke would make the Negro, "a hewer of wood and a drawer of water." Is this what our parents are sending their boys and girls to High School and Colleges for? Is that what Mr. and Mrs. John Fairfax sent Dan. through Western University to do—work in the city yard on the Lake front, doing work beneath, a clerkship grade that does not require a. Collegiate education? Dan. has held clerical positions in the local and St. Louis Post Office. we do not believe many of Baehr's clerks conspire with us. Do you like being undermined to the plane of care of wood and drawers of water", and your educated children; too and by such men. Think it over and YOU will not have to recall the "Minnie" incident or the park trees' destruction to reach a conclusion. LADIES! LADIES! LADIES!!! Call your lady friends' and acquaintances' attention to our up-to-date fashion and pattern departments and ask them to take The Gazette regularly. Oblige the Editor. 11 Magazines Spread Death. Logansport, Ind.-John Elery, a watchman, is believed to have been blown to atoms and about 20 people were injured when a magazine of the Casparis Stone Co. at Trimmer exploded. The magazine contained 300 pounds of powder. The Casparis Stone Co. is controlled by Columbus, O. capitalists. The injured people were cut by falling glass. Two brakemen employed at the Dupont Powder mills, near Tacoma, Wa., were blown to atoms by the carbon dioxide a car containing ten tons of dynamite. Says Chamber Whitewashed Men. Pittsburgh, Pa.-The municipal affairs committee of the Chamber of Commerce reported "No grounds for the resolution." introduced recently by Samuel W. Black, a real estate operator, which said investigation should be made of the way in which "Attorneys with national and international reputation are being tried." T. Watson and George B. Galeen) leased certain pieces of property owned jointly by them. Black accused the committee of having whitewashed the investigation. Royalty Hold Up Street Gas Seattle, Wash.—Between $1,500 and $2,000 in money and jewelry was the boots carried off early in the morning by three bandits who held up a South Park street car. They line up the conductor, the motorman and the 20 passengers. While two of the men kept their victims in line by leveling revolvers, the third robber relieved each one in line of his valuables and ordered him to march down the alley. It is thought they boarded a southbound train which left shortly after. Shoots Wife. Then Kills Self. Pittsburgh, Pa.-Jealousy over the alleged attacks, to other men to his wife caused the attempted killing of Mrs. W. A. Weller by her husband, proprietor of the Island Avenue hotel, McKees Rocks, a suburb, and the killing of himself. At first it was thought Mrs. Weller was dead, but the doctors say there is a chance for her recovery, although they have not located the bullet in her head. She was shot in the right side of the head and the police view with suspicion the wound which caused Weller's death. How It Struck Bobble. Bobble waited in the barber's shop while his father was getting shaved. On reaching home he exclaimed: "Oh, mamma, the man spread a lot of charlotte roosh on papa's face and scraped it all off again with a knife. EPITOME OF A WEEK'S NEWS Most Important Happenings Told in Brief. PERSONAL. Rev. William A. Wasson has, resigned as rector of Grace Episcopal church, Riverhead, L. L., to devote himself to fighting what he calls the "temperance curse." Max Lamburch of Washington suggests that all boys born on the day Theodore Roosevelt returns to New York be named after Mr. Roosevelt. James Hedley, a noted English locomotive engineer, who hauled King Edward on his honeymoon, and father of Frank Hedley, a former Chicagoan, is dead in New York city of old age. Representative Lincoln Dixon was renominated for congress by the Democrats of the Fourth congressional district of Indiana. James Wallace Van Clever, former president of the National Association of Manufacturers, relentless foe of the labor boycott, died at home in St. Louis from a heart affection. James S. Shakespeare and a character actor, who once supported Booth and Barrett, is seriously ill in Roosevelt hospital, New York. Paymaster George Porelval Auld of the United States marine corps, who came to public notice for having knocked down Dr. E. S. Cowley at a navy dance last December, is to marry Miss' Madeline Swift, daughter of Rear-Admiral William Swift, U. S. N. retired, next month, at Washington, D. C. In the marriage at Stanford, Conn., of Miss Emily Brown, a school teacher, to Norman Provanse, ends a courtship which began before the Civil war, the two being eachorths when Provost enlisted in the army. They published in Paris and else where that Princess Jillah, "Holland's land baby," was seriously ill, are disputed by the fact that the mother, Queen Wilhelmine, took the little one for a drive last Tuesday. GENERAL NEWS. Thirty-six negro convicts lost their lives when the stockade of the Red Feather Coal company at Lacoche mines,bbb county,Alabama,about 15 miles north of Centerville,was destroyed by a fire set by one of the prisoners in an effort to gain his freedom. Former Attorney General of Ohio James M. Sheets and Attorney H. J. Booth, both of Columbus,were appointed receivers of the Hookah Valley Railway company by Judge E. H. Kinkead of the court of common pleas of the Johnson,Ohio. After an exceedingly stormy discussion, in which Jack Johnson and Sam Berger were the principals, Tex Richard was mutually agreed upon as referee of the Johnson-Jeffries boxing match next Fourth of July. Representative Michael S. Link of Mitchell was purged of his contempt of court when he went before the Sangamon county grand jury at Springfield and answered the questions put to him by State's Attorney Ebahmumu to be sent to the legislative scandal. He did this after being ordered to do so by Judge Robert H. Shibley. the trial of Lee O'Neill Brown, Democratic leader in the lower house of the Illinois legislature, on a charge of bribery in connection with the election of United States Senator Lorimer at Chicago was postponed in the criminal court until May 24. A Lake Shore switch engine braked into a circus wagon at South Bend, Ind., and as a result circus employees, Louis D. Johnson, Cincinnati, Louis P. Dickinson, Danville, Va., and Charles Schaeufle, Canton, O., are in a hospital seriously injured. Not one midshipman in the class which was graduated from the United State Naval academy in 1908 passed the recent "tophil" examination for promotion to the grade of ensign, according to a statement published in New York. U. G. Walker, former president of the defunct South Cleveland banking company, was sentenced to five years in the Ohio prisonalty. Walker was found guilty of perjury in making false statements to the state exam- Dr. II. C. Hyde was found guilty of murder in the first degree and his punishment was fixed at life imprisonment. That he poisoned his wife's uncle, Col. Thomas H. Swipe, the Kansas City millionaire, was the verdict reached by tl: jury after three nights and two days of detention. In Philadelphia by a policeman struck a trolley pole, glanced off and killed John Gallon, forty-six years old. The seventh annual session of the National Conference on Education of Backward, Truant, Delinquent and Dependent Children began in St. Louis. After six years of American effort on the Isthmus of Panama it is shown by figures that 165,358,672 square yards of earth and land have been removed. Corn and corn crops in Georgia were dragged by a hall-and-wind storm. At Culverton several houses were blown from their supports. Taking from the shoulders of Secretary Hallinger all the blame for the "clear listing" of the Cunningham Alaska coal chalps, H. H. Schwarzer, chief counsel, and H. H. Schwarzer, land office, took the entire responsibility of the transaction before the congressional inquiry committee. F. Augustus Heinze was acquitted in New York of charges of misapplying the funds of the Mercantile National bank while he was president of the board of the charge of over-certifying the checks of his brother's firm, Oto Helzein & Co. The National Probation Officers' association opened their convention in St. Louis in connection with the National conference of charities and correction. Many prominent men, including American and foreign diplomats and leading political economists, attended the opening of the Lake Mohokn conference on international arbitration at Mohokn Lake, N. Y. The annual meeting of the Nurses' Association Alumnus of the United States began in New York. Several important topics relating to the management of municipalities were taken up for discussion by the members of the Illinois Mayors' association at their yearly meeting in Cairo, Mayer Puden of Evanson presided. Before the Sangamon county (IL) grand jury Henry A. Sharp, representative from the city, made a sweeping denial of the charges in Representative Charles A. White's alleged confession regarding the election of United States senator in the best general assembly. With a rear that was heard three miles away, a battery of seven balloons at the Canton O. plant of the American Sheet & Tin Plate company exploded, killing from seventeen to thirty men and injuring a score or more. Among the injured are a half dozen, who it is said, will probably die. A light vote was cast in Ohio Gov. gregarious primaries, but that vote was nearly twice as heavy as the vote of endorsement for four former cast for Governor Hirick, thick, who was unopposed. Voters wrote in the names of former Senator Foraker, former Governor Hirick, former Interior Secretary Garfield and others. Demands that the interstate commerce commission investigate the freight rate increase, proposed by the railroads, were made by the shippers in conference at Chicago. Fair play was the keynote of the convention. New York city has saved $25,000 in the first three months of Mayor Sayers' administration, compared with the corresponding period a year Mrs. Grace Hartmann, wife of Prokidk Hartmann, superintendent of the Long Island railroad, committed suicide in her apartments at New York by taking poison. Twenty-seven negro convicts pursued in a fire in the stockade at Laurel, Ala. Three prisoners are believed to have been shot. Six presided China is in a state of unrest. The nuns are eating off their opuses, which constitutes an antidystrophy demonstration. John D. Rockefeller, always popular among the group of Tarrytown, N. Y., where he lives, is adding to that popularity this spring by his fondness for taking his friends and neighbors out driving. Not a pleasant day goes by without the off king inviting some of them, men, women and children, to ride with him in automobile or carriage, and it is safe to say that the invitations are seldom declined, for his vehicles are the best to be had, and the drives around Tarrytown are beautiful. Mr. Rockefeller, before starting on a ride, always does a paper vest, claring it a great protection against colds, and he insists that his friends do the same. After the ride, the refuses to take hard to get the presents, and consoles the very home in Tarrytown may be found a paper vest preserved as a souvenir of a delightful ride with the multi-tournaire. President Taft's letter ordering the dismissal of L. A. Glavis from the land office service and exonerating Secretary Ballinger from the charges preferred by Glavis was based upon and in part directly quoted from a draft of a letter written by Oscar Lawler, assistant attorney general of the interior department. President Taft, in a letter to Senator Nelson, assumes full responsibility for the letter prepared by Lawler exonerating Ballinger. Frederick M. Kerby, who gave out a statement concerning the memorandum of Assistant Attorney General Lawler of the interior department regarding the Glavis charges, was dismissed by Attorney Ballinger from the public service. Assistant Attorney General Oscar Lawler, author of the famous Lawler memorandum, testifying before the Ballinger-Pinchot investigation, accused both Frederick M. Kerby and Attorney Brands of uttering a deliberate untruth. William Powers was released from the Missouri penitentiary at Jefferson City, where he has been serving a two-year sentence, on his promise to marry Miss Nannle, Snapp of Gault, whom he rejected several years ago. Six prominent men of affairs of Pittsburgh, including bankers, physicians and former leading politicians, were seized by Judge Robert S. Pratt to terms of six and eight jail and fined on charges of bethery and conspiracy in connection with counselman frauds recently exposed. Two hundred monkeys, a part of the cargo of the liner Graf Waldersee, which has reached New York from Hamburg, are consigned to the Rockefeller institute, where they are to be used for experimentation. Rocking the boat to frighten the girls caused the drowning of six girls and two boys out of a party of 12 on an old mill dam at Huntington Hills, a country town from Wilkesboro, Pa. The four who escaped the boys and they got to the shore exhausted after a vain effort to the girls. Mary, Mrs. Sned, Mrs. Caroline B. Martin and Miss Virginia, aged sisters, were placed on trial in Newark, N. J., charged with the murder of Ocey W. Sned, the daughter of the first named, who was found dead in a bath tub last November. Many men prominent in the arts and in civic life attended the yearly meeting of the American Federation of Arts in Washington. The National Fire Protection association, in convention" at Chicago, planned for closer cooperation among the various associations. Large attendance marked the opening of the National Conference of Jewish Charities in St. Louis. Cherise S. Darrow of Chicago said at the conference of the national negro committee in New York that race amalgamation would solve the negro problem. Hood's Sarsaparilla Cures all blood humors, all eruptions, clears the complexion, creates an appetite, aids digestion, relieves that tired feeling, gives vigor and vim. Get it today. In usual liquid form or tablets called Kargatab. The Dose $1. A REDUCTION. The Critic—That picture looks like $20 cents. Poor Artist-I'll take a quarter cash for it. No Need to Lender Suffer from Kidney Trouble. Mrs. Catherine Suillan, 1712. Mof fat, Jopin, No. says: "Like most elderly people, I suffered from kidney trouble for years. My back ached in tensely and there was a feeling of nubness in my spine. My hands cramped and the urinary passages were profuse. Doctors prescribed for me but I was not benefited. ACL last His Future. Ella—What did your angel sutor say when he proposed to you? Stella—Will you be my widow? If You Are a Trifle Sensitive People Above average shoes by using Alten's Foot-Ease, the Autistic Powder to shake into the shoes, the Autistic Powder to shake into the feet, and gives rest and comfort. Just the thing for breaking in new shoes. Sold everywhere, 200 Sample and FREE. Address, ALEN, S. Olmsted. Arithmetic. Teacher--If I give you one apple--Young American--Don't do it, teacher, and you won't start any of that trouble that Adam and Eve got into. "Beautiful Hands." - One of the most popular of James Whitcomb Riley's poems is "Beautiful Hands." You may be sure the hands he referred to were not reddened and swollen and cracked by the caustic in cheap yellow laundry soap. Easy Task soap—costs a nickel a cake—lasts twice as long and does twice as much work as the yellow soap. Your grown-up friend will get it for it as an honest soap that does the hard work for you and gives you chance to enjoy life. Hard to Choose. "Edward," said the teacher, "you have spelled the word rabbit with two t's. You must leave one of them out." "Yes, ama'm," replied Edward; "which one?" "Hullo, Dusty," said Weary Wagges, as the two tramps met in the street. "How's Ivin?" "Somewhat awful," replied Dusty Rhodes. "The cost of everything's gone up on a feller can't hardly get his three metrs per hour." Calculated Weary, "I never knew you to pay for nothin." never you to pay for it. "No," returned Dusty, "but it's the solenm fact that along my route, where I used to have to ask only once for a breakfast, they make me ask twice these days."—Harper's Weekly. The Jewelled Set. An actress said of Eleanor Robson: "She is a dear. She has married August Belmont. Now she is in the set that I once heard her so witty riddle. "She said that in conversation with a leading matron of this gilded, this jeweled set, she once said: "And where do you think you'll spend the summer, Mrs. Van Gelt? "Er—the North Cape, I believe, Mrs. Van Gelt answered, 'One can get sking there all through August, you know. "And where will you spend the winter, then? "Oh Florida, by all means. There's such ripping January bathing at Palm Beach." A clear brain and Clear headedness and a Strong, healthy body Depend largely on the Right elements in Regular food and drink. Coffee contains caffeine A poisonous drug. Postum is rich in the Gluten and phosphates that Furnish the vital energy That puts "ginger" and "hustle" Into body and brain. "There's a Reason" Cyrus Say, Mandy, Hiram tells me them New Yorkershez dinner at six o'clock. I peckon accordin' ter that they must have supper when th' cock cries. BABY WASTED TO SKELETON "My little son, when about a year and a half old, began to have sores come out on his face. I had a physician treat him, but the sores grew worse. Then they began to come out on his arms, then on other parts of his body, and then one came on his chest, worse than the others. Then I called another physician. Still he grew worse. At the end of about a year and a half of suffering he grew so bad that I had to tie his hands in clothes at night to keep him from scratching the sores and tearing the flesh. He got to be a more skeleton, and was hardly able to walk. "My nunt advised me to try Cuteura Soap and Cuteura Ointment. I sent to a drug store and got a cake of Cuteura Soap and a box of the Ointment and followed directions. At the end of two months the sores were all well. He has never had any sores of any kind since. I can since say that only for Cuteura my child would have died. I used only one cake of Cuteura Soap and about three boxes of Ointment. "I am a nurse and my profession brings me into many different families and it is always a pleasure for me to tell my story and recommend Cuteura Remedies. Mrs. Egbert Sheldon, Jitchfield, Conn., Oct. 23, 1969." There is no service like his that serves because he loves—Sir. Philip Sydney. ANOTHER WOMAN CURED By Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound could not do any of my housework. My sickness was called Retrothesis and I sat down I felt as if I could not get up. I took Lydia E. Pinkman a pound and did just as you told me and now I am perfectly curious and have a box of Box 10, Black Mrs. ANNA ANDH Consider This Advice. No woman should submit to a surgical operation, which may mean death, until she has given Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made exclusively from roots and herbs, a fortune for women for thirty years proved to be the most valuable tonic and invigorator of the female organism. Women residing in almost every city and town in the United States have a wonderful virtue of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It cures female ills, and creates radiant, buoyant female health. If you are ill, for your own sake as well as those you love, give it aerial. Mrs. Pinkham, a Mass, Marian, woman to write her for advice. Her advice is free, and always helpful. Relieves the PAIN of a BURN Instantly THE STANDARD FOR 20 YEARS. Millions of men wear W. L. Douglas shoes boho style, quality prices, quality comp ions. Music典范, honor of the best leather, by the makers in all the latest fashion --- Local News J. S., HALL'L. No. 3121 Central Avenue. F. V. VALENTINE'S. No. 3220 Central Avenue. ELMER F. BOYD'S. No. 2691 Central Avenue. PUSHAW'L. Guayahua Building. Open Sunday. L. SCHWARTZ'L. No. 2921 Central Ave. Open Sunday. C. C. JOHNSON'S. 3315 Central Avenue. Open Sunday. C. C. JOHNSON Cleveland, O. NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS:—Sub- larly should notify us at once. We We advise our patrons to carefully e- before making purchases. Business should have the patronage of Af- vertise is assurance that they we Local reading notices (advertisement) NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS:—Subscribers not receiving The Gazette regularly should notify us at once. We desire every copy delivered promptly. We advise our patrons to carefully examine The Gazette's advertisements before making purchases. Business men who advertise in this paper should have the patronage of Afro-Americans. The fact that they advertise is assurance that they want it. Local reading notices (advertisements) ten cents a line (six words in a line.) 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. Be sure to read Johnson-Jeffries advertisement. Ray Green visited in Warren and Youngstown last week. ago and the night previous to that week it was at St. John's church, the elements, too, seemed against it, as it rained very hard that evening. What promises to be the greatest concert of the season will be given at Lane Memorial church Tuesday evening under the auspices of the L'Overture club. Rev. W. G. Webster, president, and John C. Carr, captain. October ush quince Shiloh bhajan May festival Shiloh bhajan weekbook $450 Wis., has Afro-American girl ushers. Do not forget the, Johnson recital at Antioch church Tuesday evening. Admission free. W. Mamie Mamie Toney of Newark is warranted. J. L. Seelig, of 2434 E. St. street The Philadelphia Weekly Tribune says there are 100,000 Afro-Americans in the Quaker city. The Richmond, Va., Y. M. C. A. bars Jews as lodgers, though it accepts them as members. Bert Williams is in his sixth week at Hammerstein's New York theater at $1,100 a week in vaudeville. Chief Kohler is making it hot for Starlight's saloon, etc., and is rendering the race good service as a result. Jeffries has some more "holls." Wonder how many he'll have after Jack Johnson gets done with him on July 4? Arthur Fisher of 2317 E. 71st street will spend a few days at his home in Lorain. Miss Ruth Fisher was in the city Wednesday. The fourteen members of "The Black Battallion" that the Brownsville Court of Inquiry gave permission to re-entlist are entitled to $1,000 back pay. Do not forget the Orolele Theater benefit for the 'Old' Folks' Home. Messrs. Page and Harris do not half do things. Lot the people do their part. John H. Cisco returned the first of the week from Chicago. His daughter, Mrs. Sadle Bolden, and her husband, Mr. Henry Bolden, also formerly a resident of Cleveland, are in exile and doing fine. Abbie Mitchell, Will Marion Cook's wife, who has been singing in vaudeville from ocean to ocean since last fall, leaves soon to fill a three months' engagement in Europe. She has an exceptionally good soprano voice. The editor of The Gazette acknowledges the receipt of Principal Leslie P. Hill's invitation to attend the commencement exercises of the Manasses (Va). Industrial School, to be held from May 22 to May 30, inclusive. The Boston tallors, Jones & Ricko, are doing some excellent work these days, not only cleaning and repairing, but have also been making a clothing and separate pairs, vests and coats that equal the best tailor made garments. Patronize them! C. J. Sayles of 4812 Payne avenue received recently an invitation to attend the commencement exercises of the Starksville, Miss. schools from his cousins, the Misses Katie Bell and Lulaby Collier. Two beautiful presents were sent to them, as it was impossible for him to attend. When the chairman of the San Francisco police board took office he said the law was to the statement that city officials believed the statement, but as he is now under arrest for larceny, there may have been something in it. — Philadelphia Public Ledger. Our local Ministerial Alliance denounced bitterly the fool article in last week Monday's Leader, coming from certain members of the Cleveland Association of Afro-Americans, and appointed a committee to write an article for H. C. Moore, Form and G. V. Clark, to write an article for the daily papers' refuting the damaging statements in the fool article referred to. Wise action. The entertainment committee of the Caterers' association, Messrs. J. C. Cossey, C. Martin, E. Jones, M. Johnston and D. E. Moore, chairman, of their friends and associates that the association's last indoor entertainment of the season will be a surprise, given at the association's club rooms: 2629 Central avenue, on Monday evening at 8 p.m. The Jordan "lecture and stereopticon show" at Mt. Zion Church last week Wednesday evening was a failure. About two weeks before the "lecturer and show" failed to put in an appearance. There was a "blow-up" of the "lecture and show" at Cory Chapel several weeks FINEST OF FINEST TRAINS TO THE JEFFRIES-JOHNSON Centest at Frisco will be the CLYSMIC-McGLADE "OF $150 Including round trip, meals, berth, admission to contest, etc. Make Reservations NOW! Clysmic-McGlade Century Bldg Enclosed please reserve one ALL O Jeffries-Johnson o balance of $140 o Name ... Address ..... PURCHASE THE "GAZETTE" AT ago and the night previous to that week it was at St. John's church, the elements, too, seemed against it, as it rained very hard that evening. What promises to be the greatest concert of the season will be given at Lane Memorial church Tuesday evening under the auspices of the L'Oveau president, and John C. Carr, captain, Mrs. Kittie S. Mitchell, J. W. Wills and other local talent will participate. Refreshments will be served and a catering service will be provided. The public is coordinated in order to will attend be royally entertained. The editor of The Gazette is greatly indebted to B. F. Tutt, one of our leading and most progressive business men of Seattle, Wash., for a copy of the Seattle Republican's large and splendidly Illustrated "Northwest Magazine" in connection with the Alaska-Yukon Pacific exposition of 1909, which he kindly sent by John H. Cisco, president of the local Caterers' association, who recently toured the northwest, having as his fellow traveler Lewis G. Adkins, also of this city, Many portraits of persons, homes, buildings and delightful scenes are to be found in that number of the Republican. "Jack" Johnson, despite his rugged training, is still wearing his famous "golden" smile and is optimistic as to the result of his coming engagement with James J. Jeffries. In a recent conversation with John J. Johnson, he told him of his friend, who claimed that his friends are a region especially among his own race. "I will see a good representation of my followers at the ringside," says Jack. "Ninety per cent' of them will be from Ohio," he said in conclusion as he donned the mitts for a workout. The Clysmic-MeGlade official special, which is making a rate of $150 to pay all expenses and admission to the catered has calls from all over the states of Ohio and Pennsylvania. In an after talk Sunday evening by H. C. Bailey of Antioch church denounced in scathing terms the malicious attack upon our waiters, barbers, footmen and chauffeurs, made in that fool article published last week Monday's Cleveland Leader by a detainee 'test indictment members of the local police department who were evidently seeking a little cheap newspaper notoriously in the daily papers.' Many Afro-Americans are in danger of losing their simations as a result of that miserable publication, Running into the "white" press with such rot is never helpful, but is invariably very harmful to those least able to stand it, and is always not only a source of anger and a source of a foolish lack of judgment and good common sense. What in the world is the matter with the local jimrow Negroes? Do they wish to ruin Cleveland for our people? Washington, D. C., April 30th, 1910. Editor Gazette, Mear Friend Smith: — I heartily thank you for the article protesting the passage of, the Boutell Bill. Please help keep up the agitation. The Gazette is doing splendid work for the manhood and political rights of the race. I commend you for your efforts to defend people and trust that both you and The Gazette may live long to fight the cause of liberty and justice. You are doing a MAGNIFICENT work for humanity. Keep it up. For equal rights and opportunities for the Afro-American, I am yours. J. MILTON WALDRON. Oberlin's Midget Jumper a Wonder. Oberlin, O. — Williams, the little Afro-American who tied with Scott and placed in the high jump in the Reserve-Oberlin college athletic meet, is a wonderful high jumper. He stands up 5 feet 5 inches. He gauges the height by looking at the bar. His work Monday shows that he will be a sure point winner in the Big Six (Ohio college yearly athletic meet). What Interested Him. Fair Girl="My father made his fortune when he was a young man. Would you like to know how he did it?" Gallant Youth="Not particularly; but I would like to know if he still has it."—Cathold News. Kaufman, Langford's Next Victim. Philadelphia, Pa.—Matchmaker McCarney of the Metropolitan Athletic club, San Francisco, has signed. Al Kaufman and Sam Langford to meet in a twenty-round bout. The flight will take place on June 11. Clysmic-McClure Co. Name Bldg., Cleveland, Ohio. Enclosed please find $10, for which reserve one ALL Expense ticket to Jeffries-Johnson contest. I will pay balance of $140 on or before June 15. THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1910. 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 Hirstius and Others Fully Justified—Some Interesting Letters. As is well-known The Gazette was bitterly opposed to the election of Sheriff Gus Hirstius, because when a member of the council (from the pennit a street to be cut through from Central avenue to Cedar avenue, between Perry street and Greenwood street, because a few prejudiced Cedar avenue residents asked him not to do so "because colored people would come through" the street from Perry avenue and "peer into their windows" which would incendance which he introduced in the council (authorizing the proper city authorities to cut the street through) at the request of the above mentioned preju diced Cedar avenue residents. When he was reelected to the council, Hisius, a second time, promised to have the street cut through, but steadily refused to keep his promise. The following is pertinent and self-explaining. Read the letters carefully and thoughtfully: Cleveland, Nov. 19, 1959 Mr. Peter Witt, City Clerk Bear Sir. Just (before election, Councilman Hirstin made a statement in a political meeting to the effect that he had passed an ordinance, resolution or something in the city council, providing for cutting a street through from the city to the town of Brownsville between East Twenty-second and East Twenty-eighth street, opposite Skeid street, or in that vicinity, which he claimed, though passed by the council in July last the work of cutting the street through) has been held up ever since by Director Springhorn, or some one else connected with the city government. 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 greet through in the same vicinity. Will you tell me whether or not the resolution, ordinance or whatever it was, referred to, was passed by the council, passed by the gov't, passed out through at that time? By complying with the above requests at your earliest opportunity you will greatly oblige me. Yours truly. Hon. H. C. Smith, Editor, Gazette. —Dear Sir; On July 9, 1966, resolution No. 5268 by Mr. Hirstus provided for the opening of East Twenty-fifth place to Cedar avenue. It passed the same month on the 24th day. The improvement was not made for the real reason that his答复 did not His reasons for not wanting it, I have been informed, were and possibly are that the people in the immediate vicinity of the proposed opening did not want people of your race to come through. A day 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 was not enough 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 councilmen for ward improvements, and I am not sure how much improvement at East Twenty-fifth place was not made was because of race prejudice which Mr. Hirstius listened to. Would suggest that you call up Mr. Springhain and get from him a confirmation of what I have given to you as a rumor. Very truly yours. Nov. 25. 1908. Hon. H. C. Smith, Editor Gazette—Dear Sir, Answering your reference to the 42th host, with reference to the enclosed letter from Mr. Witt, will say that the facts are as Mr. Witt states, and had Mr. Hirstius desired to have East Twenty-fifth place opened through to Cedar avenue, it would have been done long ago. At the 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 protested against its opening, and the result was that the property owners did not 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 dismissed. We have always made it a rule to act in accordance with the wishes of the councilman representing the property owners. This kind are to be made. It therefore seems that MR. HIRSTIUS ALONE IS TO BLAKE FOR NOT HAVING THE STREET OPENED. Yours truly. W. J. SPRINGBORN, Electric Power and Public Service. Chinese Moon Worship. In China, moon worship still exists and the Chinese say that the man in the moon arranges marriages and ties together with an invisible silken cord the youths and maidens whom he intends to unite; he is evidently the creator of the honeymoon. Hair 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 NELSON'S HAIR DRESSING is the finest hair pomade on the face of the earth for colored people. It makes your hair grow fast it makes stubborn, kinky and tangled hair as soft and people as silly. It makes it healthy. It keeps it from splitting or breaking off. It makes it rich and gives it that charm to lenged for by all true ladies. Nelson's Hair Dressing and you'll never have dandruff. You will keep clean. The roots of your hair will have the necessary alp disease. You will be delighted with its delicate perfume. Dressing is like in handmade four-square square the boxes, like the lady yields in her hand. Drugstore and box. If you can't get it, send us 30 cents and we will mail it now, or at right down and write us. Address: CTURING CO., Richmond, Va. Ed. Write Quick for Terms. amount of oil. You will never have scalp disease. You will be delighted with its delicate perfume. Ne'son Hair Dressing is put up in handmade four-square square tin boxes, like the hairy holds in her hand. Drugstore and agents everywhere still sit at 25 centre box. If you can't get it, send it up 30 cents and we will mail you a full size box postpaid. Go and buy it now, or sit right down and write us. Address NELSON MANUFACTURING CO., Richmond, Va. Live Agents Wanted. Write Quick for Terms. 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, Zanesville, Newark, Lancaster, Findlay, Lima, Oberlin, Chillicothe, Toledo, Urbana, Troy, Akron, Springfield, Piqua, Columbia, Cambridge, Martins Ferry, Wellsville, Delphentine, Wilmington, Portsmouth, Sabina, Gallipolis, Delaware, Bayton and Middletown, O₂ and other places where we have none. Write to the editor of The Gazette Blackstone building, Cleveland, O₂ and terms 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 likely to subscribe or take it regularly, if they had a copy to look over and read carefully. Oblige the Editor. Tell Us About It. This paper can give all the local news only as our friends lend us their cooperation. If anyone visits you, if you contemplate leading town, if you see or hear or do anything out of the ordinary day's routine, tell us about 4, that we may tell the public. ```markdown ``` When your Gazettes are not delivered on Friday mornings, call at your Central District 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. USE MAKES STUBBORN, HARSH HAIR SOFTER, MORE PLIABLE, HASSLE, GLOSSY, EASY TO COME 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 WAVY. BEST POWDER MADE ON THE MARKET FOR DANDRUFF, ITCHING OF THE SCALP 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 WILL SEND IT TO YOU DIRECT AT THE FLOWING 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 it. Push it strong. Then sit in your store and harvest the pecuniary fruit of your wisdom. :: :: :: (Copyright 1900 by W. N. U.) CUT RATE DRUG STORE PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY CON POUNDED. THE KNOPF PHARMACY THE ORIOLE THEATRE THE ORIOLE THEATRE THE ONLY ONE IN THE CITY OWNED AND CONDUCTED BY OUR PEOPLE First Class in every Respect Vaudeville and Illustrated Songs PICTURES CHANGED DAILY 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 Merchant Tailors Merchant Tailors Ladies' and Gentlemen's Suits Made to Order CLEANING, DYEING and PRESSING FURS REMODELED Satisfaction Guaranteed in All Branches of Tailoring 3122 Central Ave. S. E., Cleveland MCCALL PATTERNS 10 AND 15 HOME HIGHER MCCALL MAGAZINE 50 A YEAR INCLUDING A FREE PATTERN MCCALL PATTERNS Celebrate for style, perfect for simplicity and reliability at the home in the United States and Canada, or by mail or mail. More than any other mail service. Mail for free catalog. MCCALL MAGAZINE More subscribers than any other fashion merchere-million amount. In addition, Lattice paint swapping, fancy peekweed hardscaping equippe, good stories, etc. Only to rent a your worth double, including a free pattern. Subscribe today, send for a sample copy. AMERICAN RESTAURANT Lucian Armstrong's Choice Wines, Liquors and Cigars 2800 Central Avenue Cleveland, Ohio The pen will not turn or ink unless it is used with the finger of the same finger as the pen. The Minneapolis Drier Co. is derived from the law of the state after the law hereinafter. The Minneapolis Drier Co. is a company of the company of the Minneapolis Drier Co. and can be carried in a handling. Fill with alcohol and heat hereinafter. Magic Shampoo Drier 110. Magic Alcohol Heater 50. Literal terms to acents. Write for literature only. Magic Shampoo Drier Co., Minneapolis, Minnesota. MRS. A. M. POPE. 4 years ago my hair was only a flugel-length, and my temples were bald half way up my head. MRS. L. L. ROBERTS. 4 years ago my hair just covered my shoulders. first began our wonderful work of growing and lengths, and all conditions of hair, even to the places of the head, many persons scorned the la- possible; but we have grown the hair for hund- the proof of the varnish of our hair, be particularly precious whose own hair we no further tell that they have very frequently tell their goods (saying that 'theirs is the sa- re referred to "PORO'). We advise you to use o- the oldest and best of its kind). See that the n- box, not genuine with it. Prepared only by ware of Imitation Call, or Address Mail to M. POPE-TURNBO 3100 PINE S ST. LOUIS. When we first begin our wonderful work of growing all kinds, all qualities, all lengths, and all conditions of hair, even to the growing of hair on bald plexus of the head, many persons scorned the idea that such a thing was possible; but we have grown the hair for hundreds, rapidly achieving success. The proof of the value of our work is that we are being imitated and lauded by persons whose own hair we have adequately grown and the further fact that they have very frequently mentioned us when to tell their goods (saying that "theirs is the same" or "just as good" or referred to "PORO"). We advise you to use only "PORO" Hair Grower, (the oldest and best of its kind). See that the name "PORO" is on every box, not "gadget without it". Prepared only by MRS. A. M. POPE. Which we first began qualities, all lengths, and hair on bald plaster of the a thing was possible; he achieving success. The imitation and largely grown and the further when trying to pull them as good" or referred to Hair Grawer, the oldest is on every box, not a POPE. Beware Call MRS. A. M. POPE Beware of Imitations BELL PHONE BOMONT 3109 S GARLIN SPLITS RLING LONDON A A palatable drink for the winter season, furnishing strength and nourishment Deliv THE CLEW CLEVELAND & SANDUS BREWING COMPANY CNE IND FARE $250 DAILY BETWEEN CLEVELAND AND BUFFALO "City of Erie" On the Palatka/Twin "City of Buffalo" Flyers of the Lakes Lrs. Cerrith $100 P.H. Atr. Buffalo $130 A.H. CENTRAL STANDARD TIME Lrs. Buffalo $100 P.H. Atr. Buffalo $130 A.H. Connections made at Buffalo with trains for all Eastern and Canadian points; at Cleveland for Toledo, Detroit, all points West and Southwest. Tickets reading over L.S. & M.S. Pp. on N.Y. C.B. L.A. R.R. will be accepted on this Company's Steamer without extra charge. Ask Ticket Agent for tickets via C. & B. Line. Sand to for handmade illustrated booklet THIS CLEVELAND & BUFFALO TRANSIT CO., W.F. Herman, G.P. A., Cleveland, O. TAYLOR'S SPECIAL ALCOHOL HEATER If the handset and mouse are not compatible with the camcorder, an upgrade up that you can purchase in your handset 2. Price $36. If the handset is not compatible with the Camcorder, but promotes a growth factor of the hair, Price $26. SEND FOR MY FREE CATALOGUE illustrating the larger and more complex Lite Hair Combs, such as Wide, Wide, Wide, Soft, Sattled, Pom-poms, Hair Combs, Caps, Brushes, etc. We Grew Our Hair Now Let Us Grow Yours With 'PORO' TRADE MARK Registered growing all kinds, all even to the growing of formed the idea that such for humanoids rapidly is that we are be- we have actually sequently mentioned na is the same" or "just to use only "PORO" that the name "PORO" ed only by MRS. A. M. ations TO PINE STREET F. LOUIS, MO. 4 years ago my hair just covered my shoulders. TWO DOZEN IN A CASE. Delivered to Any Part of the City. “ed Sr Bp WHS 1 CODY <S ac y SS : a ay SS ae DKA Sy V AD (f ID ‘A Pleasing Sense of Health and _ Strength Renewed and of Ease and Comfort follows the use of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, as it-acts. gently on the kidneys, liver and bowels, cleans- ing the system effectually, when con- stipated, or bilious, and dispels colds and headaches. To get its beneficial effects, always buy the genuine, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. WESTER itor oe oe ies cre a sc ants iy ie ch ae eae oy th eae ‘ nA ae ee a ae eon cease — bye! oe See peat ee oie Basse, eS fs ae ass z rs ae pa 8 fee oe pe Se e ( ise on. . Sra ae = m ee aes echorn er . addres ‘ae : ws (r3) or 9, ‘Don’t Persecute your Bowels -_Siptaasond getine Ther anid ‘CARTER’S LITTLE, . ad IVER PILLS: asx Palen Aa a 55 ae RS py £e = \Se dent BE each sa tnbeete, os milion new, ‘Small Pill, Small Dose, Small Price GENUINE must bear signature . A CHAIN SUSPENDED PORCH SWING Tair ete oe RN | renga to Seat Bumpers ese occncotonsht Seat corbin Anon ut 6Pabpes of Caiman eae Mina Saneet Sea fastasoter Syetertont a = eedonanaumeec Depend eT eae —is within reach of nearly every man and woman who eamestly Aesires it, Start right with beechams Pills ‘Sold Everywhere, Is Boxes 10c. and 250, rocently recelved from a prominent business man of Cleveland Cleveland, O., Feb. 10, 1910 To whom it may concern: , “This is to certify that. Henry A, Abel, was afflicted with Tuog trouble, and. upos being advised by a friend, tried "Nature's Cararion,” and cheerfatly recommend the medicine to all thus aflicted, as it bar Benefted me very mach. Yours sincerely HENRY A. ABEL, 1254 Addison Road Write for Teetimontats of Prominent , Cleveland People, and Booklet ~ _£.D.MORGAN: eid Recama ban. Glevsiant, Cals You Can’t Cut, Out 7A, Beanttitcer os PaSupCauPiN, bac A PES 4 ‘win clean Sher off permanentiy, and RL sehen rei, ee Be A BoaiRE Ie Games clea or Ligaseni ebniged Shaan Alloys pave South feerareeniet cap supply anagivereren Se EE DR. J. D. KELLOGG'S Remedy for the prompt rellot of Asthma and Hay Fever. Ask your Gruggist tor ite Wte for Face SAMPLE WORTHAOP & LYMAN CO. Lid, BUFFALO, MY Sante ee eee Paes illibra ie MEE wc OPIUM 22 UF ieee ee aa ora te Hi aE ore PARALYSIS 243 eet SORAYA IS APRS mo cune, wo pay DELAWARE FARMS, fc25otiszz| Wick EEE Aros, BEE THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, ©.. SATURDAY, MAY 21, (910. TELEPOST SYSTEM OF TELEGRAPHY . HAS RIVALS ON JUMP ‘The activity of the Telepost auto matic telegraph system, which 1s en gaged in interlacing the country with rapid service wires, Is causing the off clals of the Western Union and Postal no‘end of anxlety. In the elghtcen months the Telepost has been In com: mercial operation it hag cut seriously Anto the business ‘of theso companies ‘tn the states.in ‘which It fs operating, One of the first fruits of Telepost competition—hailed everywhere asa signal victory for the automatic ays tein—was the reednt concession by the older companies of.a “night letter” tn part Imitation of the Telepost’s tele Graphed letter feature, 1atroduced to ‘this country by tho Telepost when ft first began business elghteen months ago. ‘The Telepost, however, maintains .a uniform rate throughout the 24 hours and applies it to all distances from the longest to the <shortest_ on the same principle as the U. S. malls. ‘The Telepdst makes a specialty of two forms of letter telegrams, unique in American telegraphy, known as the “telepost" and the “telecard,” Tho firat is a 60 word letter sent over. the wiro for 25 cents with’ the same, expe dition as an ordinary telegram and dé Uvered by mall, instead of by mes: senger.. The second is a ten word message, exclusive of the name and address, sent over the wire in the reg ulr way for ten cents, transcribed on a nostal card’ and delivered by mail. * The Telepost as a system represents the miost brilliant achievement to date fn the evolution of, telegraphy, and transmits from 1,000 to 5,000 words a minute over elther a telephone oF tele: graph wire. It bas met with unquall- fled success in every part of the coun: try to which ft has been introduced, Its speed, accuracy and low rates es: tablishing a new standard of tele. graph effisiency that has commanded ‘recognition .cvery where. Its ability to handle -with one wire ‘the volume of business that requires 65 wires for transm{sston’ by the hand method of telegraphy employed by, the old companies gives ft a big advan- tage. : ‘The Telepost system has been com- mercially operating "in the states of Massachuset‘s, New Hampshire, Maine, Ilinols, Missour! and Indiana for the-Inat year and a half. Extensions are being developed tn all directions, north, east, west and south, assuring this service to the whole country within a comparatively stort time. New Work for. Women. says. She decided that grand opera would. be a good thing for St. Pauband ier tho ‘fashion of men engaged {n «Examine carefully every bottle of In Use For Over 30 Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought ing your wife?” “Treatin’ her? Gosh, if you seen bia bills you wouldn’t think there was ord-Herald. ay For Red, Mohing Eyelids, Cyats, Styen Fe ade Tee etn ee, Sales Ane: Ege he ib Wright—He's going to call bis new paper tho Sausage Links. sare REE BANE ERATE ng Bod losert bites, Reothes and silage the swful Certainly. it 18 heaven upon earth | for a man’s mind to move: in charity and to turn upon the poles of truth.— Secon, an aD rm DODDS Y) E , Aa Ta p NG, * oh nea PILLS Ei TTS asus 11 aes aaa Data ta anit SHAE S25 Bhi Ski ASD A$ ime for a Dime Why dollar wi 100 bur SC ABEA ESB ar tay eg Caer the as directed—get the natural, easy result. Saves many dollars wssted'on medicines that do not cure, Millions regularly use CASCARBTS. Buy a box now—Il00 week's treatment—proof in the morn- ing. co cancers is a oe fe 2 eats frestoents ah draeaie, Bigecet scler KNOWN since 1836 ASRELIABLE Reece TL cK ra Mote “Lele CAPSULES date lao ame ee PCa. Oran S re aL ele ld W. N. Uy CLEVELAND, NO. 2t-1910. His Land or His Lass “I do wonder,” Mrs, Pago ocgan plaintively. Her sister, Sue Andrew, interrupted snappishly: “What? You wonder #0 much, I'd wonder if you didn't for 8 whole’ hour.” “Well! I can't help thinking about Sonny. You don't understand, Susan you never had’a doy, nor minded ‘what you had on, But I'm 'frald college 1s going to go mighty:hard-with him. Roys that, hnve to wear homemade shirts and carn their, qwn spending money It seems to fio hnd better keep at home.” “Shut up, Agnes! You make mé sick!” Sue said, stamping her foot. “Tt 4s fust your way—you'll bo writing the boy word to quit. Patience knows, he's got load enough without that. Every Page from great-grandfathers down has been through collego, Do yon reckon he’ the very Inst of ‘em, wants to grow tp and lonf—and stay poor forever?" “He always loved the land so—duinb creatures and sheep were a heap moro to him, that books,” Mis. Pago pro- tented. “At least, tintil he fell in with Molly Glen, and’ you put nt-him to tirn lawyer and marty Into her fa- ther's firm. As if she'd waft all that long time! Why, ehe’s got beaux by dozens.” : “She'll wait—never you fear,” Miss Sue said confidently. “Can you keep. a secret? Well! sho herself told me to toll Billy she would. Her pap ain't tn a hurry to, part with her—besides, he thinks the world and all of Son—of William, I mean, We've got (o get out of using that baby name, Molly said ho did—sald daddy would tend Wit- Mam all the money ho needed, 1 tell you she took my breath away. spenk- ing out so. But wo couldn't have that, you know—Son—William,; must get bis ao 5) \ OB ag! ood | re oO z ' LS education without being beholden ex cept to his own. Wo can mortgage tho place If tho pinch comes too hard —but ft won't bo for Glen money.” “Ya—'d—rather soll st," Mra, Page halt whispered. “I will—if Sonny can't get through without. But Jeomes my husband, charged me, last thing of all, never to make no mortage to no dody—and I'll mind him." “I hope there'll be no need—the crop's looking fine,” Miss Suo sald comfortingly. “Don't you worry, Ag nes. You'll live to rido in your car riage yet—once Willlam gets a start I know his way—he won't stop short of the top.” ‘The crop fullted its. promise—and rather more. It brought a fine ‘price, Ukewise, and Sonny, away at college, was let know ho might, {f ho chose come home at Christmas, But he ro. sisted the ‘temptation, “I'll walt for Baster"recess,” he wrote, “I want to seo the woods in bloom, and smell the plowing.” He did come at Raster, high-hearted, full of Joy and hope. In'a day he was far otherwise. ‘Things wero going iil on the place. His aunt and his mother aid their very best, but they bad to depend on hired men or croppers to keep up the fences, to plow, and sow, and plant. Tho.stock looked unthrifty —all but the fowl- and the milk cows <to them Miss Sue herself gave caro. Billy gave over all holiday plans and set bimself sedulously to work. He had en days free and in course of them he went just once to: sco Molly, . Sho was a9 charming as over and re- proached him sweetly for not coming earller, and especially for slighting her Bqster plenle and her party tater, judge Glén was more than cordial— mightily interested in William's plans and progress. : “Remember, we, all the country _{n- deed, expect you to ive .up to the name,” he said. “Your grandfather . . “ Wily Stroke of Diplomat foe pec Mrs, Hobbs Had Nothing to Say After | tho top o' the shoemaking trade, the * $0 Strong a Testimonial to fan’t one of you that’s bad the chanc Her Worth: I have,’ I said; and thero wasn't o} 285 , a, of ‘em could deny It. ‘The fact that Bben Hobbs had falrty | ypc Ane Seen cae ended eben, With won the reputation of being tho laziest | Urscine canes at his wife, “I caid man in Willowby was no cause of re-| noc one Fines wnsmt another man rot to him Ho: eat Incorrigisie and | cis ANd thers. wenaall anONS, Bee Imperturbabiy. good natured tinder the | (orn ae oe eo ch 1 dia. fire of bis wifo's complatats. “I should | an that's always had chances,’ Isa think you'd ‘fe sunk into the ground | fgn't likely to let the best one of when all those men could make a ree ee hey : good showing of what they'd dono’ in silpé And t Site tel Fs hee ee {i020 years since Nate Pearson went | STUCK dumb with my words ove tease abd son DeOwt a "thing, at | Inet one of "em!" outs Compan broken down buildings toxour credit,” . said Mrs. Hobbs, on one occiyton, ic “Lawzee, do you think 1 eae what | gin ten ainere do yours opinion o” mo a congressman has?” |e ee cas woes Now, ther inquired Eben, carelessly. “When they | ytrs, Greev. She's ways’ tells got through with their boasting—the | oean things about her nelehbo whole postofficeful of ‘em—I just Lace ah amas Y een bo: whole postoMcetul of "em—I just) Ang” sfre, Husiter talks perfect ‘What with my unele William's being| dreadful about her friends: That a master carpenter, uncle James a| soodness, I never say anything nbo {ust-class plumber and uncle Ed’ard at! anybouy."—Stray Stories. © ‘was in the senate—T hopo to sce you headed for It, at. least, before 1 quit seins anything.” Sonny’ went home, hie head whl He kiew he stood In sight of the part: ing of,tho ways, He could keep on at college; he could even hope to mako a record there. He had a Keod elear brain, and a strong clean body to back 1 Thirthor, ho had tho grit (0. cow btrain his Inelination Tamloce, anhunger, wan $a Blood, but he vould Also And interest [fo'the In, "He would never tare tn ho loved the world outdoors, tnt: It | et allen nor repellent to. hin, Moreaer, It led to Molly. Ie cot nt doubt thai—she hail as god told him s0. She would never. be allowed to marry William. Page, farmer, but Wiinm Page, hr father's juntor ware ner, would be'a mnateh multe acceptable to the paternal mind, Over tgalust all toe there was Ma mother, a figure of pathos, of piety and resignation, She would tue fer: cif out of house and homa for Sona Advantage, ind dor iC nat. inerete tn meek uncomplaint,. but with a sort of painful joy. Aunt Susan, Hkewtse, al- though she was of tougher fber, and morn. filed with ambition, yet the home's parsing wold hit hee hard. How onld they “mantage through the long years before he got on In his profession? If, lacking him, the pines tens nirendy falling away from itselt iis ineame would have dwindled to 18 faniahing, potnt. bythe. tinie he wa Fendy to earn a ving, ‘That nieant i woul have to. be sald antright by tho Uimo he wns hale way throng. Mo wanted to be a great than with part of himself, . tit there was another, a Atronger part, that. pleaded. for tho homo and those it sheltered Ie. could only listen faintly then. 1 was going back on the morceNe. Tt ewan not so fang to term en. Aer ward? “Ite. thought no. further, In stead, very sensibly. ne went to sleep. And when the charm of collene tif had again lald hold on hint be geme- how shunted the evinMigt to the very Baek ‘ot his. find. Ho gat through commencomnnt seth uch’ mild honors. ay are possible t0 freshmen, Molly was thera to x02 hit, but ie, did not dance with her. Tn spite of Aunt Sue's pleadings, he nd no festal garments.” 80 the dances knew him not, Indeed, Ht was tno things he. felt sm honor bound to forego that brought 10 Ife ngain tho Taster strug. It wan lively even before he reached ona find Tound again the Inck of tho: mam. ter's hand and eye. Ho Aung himaeit ardently Into. righting things—s0 ar- dently that Ntiew So shook her head, Molly also eomptained—Wiliam never hd time for her. Willan-—even Ia mother no loriger cated him Senny— fniped a iittlo ne ho Tistened, buf enid nothing. . Ho wan ati Aghting bis Inttle—a hard one for a lad of twenty, Al sum: rer it raged within. him, ‘ow “ono forco, now the other, geting the heat ori . College would fave won" ho tind not loved Molly 60 well, In thr light of that love he Knew nome part of what ho meant to bis moth. Ho Would not leave her to oncliness, to poverty, nt last to homelnssncss, Sho Tight not live to see Mim. petrieve overything. . So one stil, start August night Ne said to Molly, very tow, the wor Mke obs almost: “Tim not going hacks it would be wrong beeausd of mother”. Then, nore aulekly, but vers, very” humbly: ““I—1 hopa.you don't mind—much. 1 know you never—could—mnrry 6—a farmer." : "L belleve 1 might—It only he woud ask me,” Molly sald, reaching out her hand. / “Hilly, you're a goose, a big goose,” sho said, “But wo mean to Save. yon—aunt So and I. You ahan’t havo to give. up clther your Yand-or your Inss.” Too Blue, Perhaps. 7" *” “There aro too many now-fangled colors,” said John Sloan, the well: known etcher, at a luncheon at Sher. ry's. “Shopping in a department store the other day, I heard a lady say to her companion: “No, it’s the new spring shade of blue I want, It’s lighter than navy blue and darker than cton. blue— hardly a sky blue nor an cléctric blue —rather’a robin's egg blue, you know, but richer, verging more on indigo blue, of course, not, so déep as indigo blue, a trifle nearer turquolso luo than that, but with-samething of aqua- marino blu In ft, too, yet not at all like a royal blue, but nearer a baby blue, ff anything.” “Her companion, with a gruff Inugh, sald: . : “'T see the blue you want—It's milk trust milk blue.’ "—New York Times. the top o' the shoemaking trade, there isn't one of you that’s bad the chances T have, I eaid: and ther. wasn't one of ‘em could deny it. “and then, béfore they Kot. thelr breaths-drawed,” added .Even, with a sidelong glance at bis wife, “I said to ‘em, ‘And thero wasn't another man tu town had the sconce to step up and carry off Anne Rawles, which I did. A man that’s always had chances,’ I sald. 4fen't likely to let the best one of all slip. And I can tell ye, they were struck dumb with my words—every last one of ‘em!"—Youth's Companion. Gontidepace.. “J don't like these: women who" gos: sip about others, do you?” “y should say not, Now, there's Mrs, Green, © She's always” telling mean things about her —nelghbors, And Mrs, Hunter talks perfectly dreadful about her friends: Thank goodness, I never say anythlug rbout anybody."—Stray Stories. ” IPractical Fashions fom . Uap Ay Ae} 4 fp 4 i if of . Kot UAL Parts Tater New s2e2, AM Seams Allowed. “Tier of the moet fashien Alte features n° the swat ave promt fend In Ihle effoetivn eeatniie, ene ba fnug hh ose rfaoatce tI phos vise ent a One withthe hes portions, and tho cher by the kitted skirt with tinle at. tichmen’. Ong preferred style of Enimpe or else fitime sunderblonse foey Ne wort with this dav, ad tho Sem Gs te that ean be emplayed te beanie fer the me orb eet, the -teansearent material being ised for toe “aver bese aunt tne, “Vive fatter prvi fe dl antinaed each Hele nt thecderthii: bese yt? shel Hine shes thes hist att tiie tacks The aver Mosse ie bitek etesing, and 1. will bo tient te aitshtly mattered at tho waistline. "The pattern In fn 3 sine, EL to 12 inches tise measure, Poe 2 last the Wrese teaaites o% sands of natertil i fneduee wide, AVOtT of lowe wo value is tant Fy sais. Ta pening tite pattern rent 19 ent te "ratean tepartionte at tna names Mtritenasne agar witivens pitas aed bo aurea poi tach tone ro tere NO. 3262, BIZ. ccessertense STREET ABD NO.ssscsssonensoone CHILO'S UNDERWEAR SET. Om fee al fs. , YA aE . Hehe , (er aaa Tarls Pattern No. 2622, All Seams Alloweil—Thix staple itil set, con: sisting of an underwatst, drawers and perticast, fs developed in elther cain: Urle or flannelette, ‘The underwaist fastens at the centerdaek, and ts mado with straps over the shoulders. A Was Wind of the materlal fs stitched around the waistline, holding the gat hes in place at the front and back. ‘To ‘this aro set the bnttons, which hold in place tke drawers and petticoat, ‘the pattern ts nA sizes—1 to 7 years, For child 5 yeats the underwaist re- quires 7% xard of material 27: Inches Wide, of £4 yard 36 Inches wide; 44 yard of edging; the drawers need t yard 37 inches wld, or 7% yard 36 inches wide, exeh with af yards of ciing 21; inches wide, ar ¥4 yard of material 37 or 26 Inches wide for rat- flex, the petticoat needs 1% yards 27 inches wide, or 7 yard 86 Inches wide, cach with 3% yards of edging 314 inches wide, or 4% yard of material 27 or 25 Inches whie for rules. To proctice tht pattern send 10 conte feta ttinrn Pepartinetts” of this. paper Seite name and avidress planks and bo Sore to give aize aad number oftnatterm NO, 2632. BIBL aeceeaManrsenen STREET AND NOsesssssseesseeeeegeee Wiraattine for Bént.. In several centons Of Switzerand the eustom prevails of hobling wrest Ting matehes and other exhibitions ot phiesteal streng:fy at their choral, gyi aetstie and rithy festivals, The eham- ions carting yart in thes: athletic Sorts telens tthe rest diverse fanke in the sofiad seale. Thus, at a reeent festival at Greneben, a Ute town in the cantan ef, Sebare, a Dealthy property.awier atid bis (ete Bit, Rorerpenier. seenped inta the Brena te wierd seoordine to the Pulses the wit Phere were ta bel fade reindes es fle y het stake for ench, (fo wry ene quarter's eht, After the carpertet bad: thrown bis landlord fore Unes the victer’s prize Nae awcgiied to Litt, amd he accord: tnely round tiniself entithel to dive dn Dis house rent ite fer a whole year, ~ Glorious Colorado No one can say he has seen the world until he has.seen “Colorado.” Write for the books that picture and describe it Electric block’ signals—dining car meals _ and service “Best in the World” via the : . Union Pacifi “The Safe Road” [Ask about oue peesonaly conducted tours to Yellowstone Notional Park For full information, tickets, ete. address E. L. LOMAX, G. P. A, Union Pacific R. R. Co. Omaha, Nebraska DEFIANCE COLLEGE "éHio® Separating, ae aerate pear oe DEPARTMENTS ° EXPENSES isis Acatome Trorhers, Slane Staind, Moet ee Wet ae heals elton 20 Me You may’ be served with ae Bi ica ae | “4 MeL ¢ ie] FOS Bie 5 | ip “ Oasties | WZ . free ema lll TEA . patente “ Toasties \ LACAN EA See ere i iz : os ey Y Then you will know eure = [Z| what a dainey, tempt: ABSA Ba | 2) ing food you have been Teen lg missing. ence Sopra |Z). Pestuim Cereal Co Limieed [77 Every serving wins Sa a friend— | papas Secs, ‘“TheMemory Lingers” Sold by Grocers. {| . Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich. um Ce tile Creek, Miche His Way. Kntets ¢ -Is Jones charitable? Hocker «Well, he doesn’t Jet his right foot know whom hls left foot Kicks, Catarrh Cannot Be Cured FONE ant sect ce ae ey ext eee evade fae ater Tet ae to Mies “tue tsat Cire & natn gia teed Eee Te te peracid by we othe Roel totam Fete ott e ycare ant Ie aleeesene pesceptcy Be ftccupwent ot the hese pater knowns eoraid sult le ber hiued oanera arti ieee the fan thceedicaes iy atte Batted an moder Site a’ eitice estates Roa or tecinonia fe reek ee gk ldL SIN GS. obese Tear iets Pema a tr eonatpanion. Mr. Adee in Europe. Second Assistant Seerotary Adve of the state department is on his annual vacation In Europe. In company with Mr. Thackera, United SGutes consul general at Berlin, and Mrs. ‘Thackera, Ne will devote ahout six weeks (0 a Ueyele tour of southern Franee. Ie expects to return to Washington about the-middle of June, The Handy Remedy for Eruption Caused by Poison Ivy or Wood Poison Is Resinol Ointment. I have used Resinol Salve for sev- eral years: Iwas badly broken ont with eruptions caused by Poison Ivy. ‘The itehing was unbearable. My doc- tor recommended Resinol, It did its work fine. Reing subject to wood pol- gon, I now keep_a jar of Resinol on hand. L have tokl others of it who had Ike results. Jno, H. Kobi, Benton, Kan. The Simple Shepherd. A cockney, while spending his holt: days in the Highlands, met an old shepherd, driving flock of sheep. Wishing to show off a bit, he sald: “Now, If 1 were a.shepherd T would teach the sheep to follow me.” “Oh, aye, sald the shepherd, “and 1 hiv nae doot ye wid manage, for fe they saw anither sheep In frent they wid by sure to follow."—Tit-Bits, Nolsy Nulsances. MLftling doors and windows rep- resent a happy hunting ground for the disturbing winds. In fact, so annoying does the constant ratile of these open- Ings become that many determined tne dividuals, who resolve to udmit the fresh alt, choose thé. lesser of two evils and close the openings In preter- ence {o sleepless nights. This can be remedied if x small wedge of wood bo driven at the side of “an open window; a door can be prevented from rattling if a pad or strip of thick felt he natled on the edge of the door. ‘The annoyance of creaking drawers can bo eliminated by nibbing common soap upon the top, sides and bottom of each. Creaking Mnges on anything should be well ciled, while tho grating, Int tating noise of a sowing niachine can Be overcome ina sitnflar manner, The Ite noises wear away the pax tienco that {s required for other things, It were fooligh to dissipato energy through the channels of tre tated nerves when a Uttle timo will obviate the nuisances. information. - Census Taker—What Js your color? Sweet Young Thing—Georgo says tt Sg peaches and cream. hak ar che tinea. Reeanse of the general scrapping march between the various elties as to who shall have the honor of the Natlunal or International Congress of Aviators, Washington and Baltimore have hoth withdrawn from the whole business, “The "House Cleaning Joke. Thousands of jokes are written each yeat on housecleaning by men who do not realize what a small tragedy house- cleaning is to women. It has to be done, and tt has {9 be done thoroughly. Monsecleaning is fun, though, if Easy ‘Cask soap Js used, Made of pure cocoa- nut off, borax, naphtha’and clean, sweet tallow, it can be‘used on woodwork, floors, curtains, rugs, Inces, china, cut glass, and’ everything else—rids them of dirt and dust.in half the time of cheap yellow soaps. R Divided Family. ‘The bright six-year-old daughter of a physician Happened into hls recep: tion room the other day and a walt: Ing woman patient engaged her In con versation, “L suppose you to Ro church and Sunday school?" she asked. “Oh, yes, ma‘am," she replted, “And what denoiination do’ your parents belong 10?" "Why." sald the te one, “imam ma’s a Presbyterian and papa's. a stomach specialist.” Ra tatkeowasian. | Among. the primary ptipils enrolled ‘ina Baltimore school this term Ja the son of a proininent business man o that city. One afternoon, at close cf.school, the yomigster sought out I father tn bls attice, to whom. he said: “Dad, Ym geting tired of school, 1 think TH auite -iWhs?" asked the astonished par ent; “what's the matter, Tommy? { thought yon Were fond’ of going to school?” ‘ “So L am, dad,” responded the young: ster, suppressing a yawn, “but tt breaks up the day s0."—Harper’s Mag: azine. Importation of Leeches. Leeches are enumerated by tho bis reat of statisties under {ts general head of santinals “Imported, the total value of the Imports of this species In 1808 having heen $5,361; Jn. 1907, $6,022; in 1906,'$4,194; In 1905, $3,862; Jn 104, $2.589; in 1863, $2,249, and In 1502, $2,112—the commerce in Iweches heing tins of a growing .character. The total number of leeches. im- ported In the United States in the Uweade eid with 1508, 8 about $40, nn, Lecehrs are fe.ported trea of duis. ‘Stialls Were at one me enve tuerated as an article ot importation, the recorls from 1884 to 3898 showing nails imported to, the extent of nbout $5,000, Dit the xnall trade so dwin- dled, showing only $24 of imports in 20S, thar the Wrenn discontinued {13 ctatcpoenis.of ahia-astlois.