The Gazette
Saturday, October 1, 1910
Cleveland, Ohio
Page text (machine-generated)
THE GAZETTE
Hats for Mourning
M. W.
---
THREE hats of excellent design are shown for those who are wearing mourning. It will be noticed that the shapes are small or moderate in size, that the designs are simple but the workmanship intricate and beautiful. These characteristics are what the wearer should look for when purchasing mourning millinery. The first hat, a small round turban with rolling brim, is made of tiny folds of crape laid in parallel rows on circles about them or four inches in diameter. These are applied to the crown and brim which, have previously been covered with crape laid on plain. The wire frame is covered and lined with silk and the hat is finished with a wired bow of taffeta. A rolled border of crape sometimes blinds the edges of such bows and makes a very handsome finish for the ornament.
Fig. 2 shows a moderately large flat brimmed hat in which the underbrim is faced with chiffon and the upper
This new model is of tussah silk or drap de sole. It is trimmed in an original way with appliqué bands of the material and with straps of passementerle.
COMBINING LACE AND BEADING
Slight Carelessness or Lack of Preparation Sufficient to Mar the Result.
When lace and beading are to be sewed to thin materials, such as muslin dresses or underwear of any kind, it must be carefully and thoroughly done to produce good results. Lace edging nearly always has a stout thread in the selvedge which serves admirably as a gathering thread. Pull this thread and stroke the gathers to make them even. Roll the edge of the material and, holding the lace and edge together with the thumb and forefinger of the left hand, with the lace nearest you, overcast the two together with firm even stitches. When sewed to a straight edge insertion can be sewed in exactly the same manner, but to let insertion in, to form a design, first baste the material on the right hide to form the desired design, and hem it down on both edges. Cut the material from underneath the insertion, leaving a narrow strip on each side of the insertion. Crease this strip back from the insertion toward the material and turn as for a hem. Overhand this, taking stitches close to the line of the hemming.
brim and crown are of crape fitted to the shape wings made of folds of chiffon are used for trimming. They are even more effective when made of folds of crape in hats for first mourning. The veil of point de esprit, is bordered with crape and dull jet ornaments hold it to place. Cabochons of the same are sewed to the wings.
No. 3 is a turban made of uncut velvet which is one of the richest materials used in mourning millinery. A soft crown and puffed rim are arranged by shirrings in the material. The role trimming is a full bunch of black fancy feathers in sigrette effect, at the right side. A net veil of line Brussels is finished with a simple embroidery design in silk. Such veils bordered with a two-inch band of crape, or with three narrow crape folds, are very elegant. Black lynx furs are worn and black suede gloves.
JULIA BOTTOMLEY.
FASHION EASY TO FOLLOW
Additions In Dress Accessories That Are Well Within the Reach of All.
There is a late fancy among some Parisian costumers for making the belts of the more elaborate gowns of a color in contrast to the whole color scheme of the garment.
This girdle, though differing in its tone, is of like material, and is merely a new touch—a little oddity—and more evident because of the attention bestowed on the waist line at present.
A dinner gown of sapphire blue, trimmed with crystal embroidery, is given an old rose girdle, and the combination could win its way anywhere, so knowing and artistic was the choice of shades.
Not in years has there been a season when small accessories could add so much to the general style of a costume as do the neck and wrist frills worn with the tailor-made suits of every color, design and material. Such frills may be developed of wide lace, plain or fancy net, chiffon, tulle and even sheer lawn. And the best feature of the fashion is that every woman may, if she wishes, be her own frill maker.
Chiffon, tulle and lawn are undeniably perishable, but then frills of these materials are inexpensive, if homemade, and quite as becoming as those of lace or net.
The art of fine needlework is more in favor now than it has been for many years past, and where children's frocks are concerned remnants of lawn, muslin, lace and embroidery that have been secured at reduced prices during the summer sales can be made up into fascinating little garments at a nominal cost.
To Hold Her Vell Tight
One girl has conceived the idea of running narrow beading around the bottom and threading it with baby ribbon, which she pins at back. Both beading and ribbon are, of course, of the color of the veil, and fasten under the chin, so as to be inconspicuous. She finds this a solution of the veil problem with a low-necked blouse, as her veil never looks either untidy or bulky.
New Combinations.
The latest in color combinations is a dark red and a rather bright blue, so combined as to give the effect of the molish purple. This is very smart indeed, but be careful not to trim with either of these colors; black is the best, or some neutral shade.
ESTABLISHED AUGUST 25, 1883 AND ISSUED EVERY WEEK ON TIME SINCE.
SUMMARY OF A WEEK'S EVENTS
Latest News of Interest Boiled Down for the Busy Man.
PERSONAL.
Jessie Morrison, who has been serving a twenty-five year prison sentence for killing Mrs. Olin Castle at El dorado, Kan., on June 11, 1900, was paroled by Governor Stubbs. The murder of Mrs. Castle was one of the most sensational crimes in the history of Kansas.
Donald P. Stubbs, son of John C. Stubbs, vice-president and traffic manager of the Harriman lines, who was found in the offices of the Union Pacific railroad at Cleveland, O., with a revolver bullet over his heart, is dead.
Theodore Roosevelt was elected temporary chairman of the New York Republican state convention at Saratoga by 567 votes against 445 for Vice-President Sherman. Amid cheers and hisses the names of Sherman and Roosevelt were placed in nomination.
George Chavez, the Peruvian aviator who made the flight across the Alps and came to grief when a part of his machine broke, precipitating him to the earth from a height of several thousand feet, is dead from his injuries.
Mrs. Ida von Clausen, who was in Saratoga, N. Y., sent a challenge to Col. Roosevelt for a fight with weapons one or fists. Mrs. von Clausen blames Roosevelt for preventing her from being presented at foreign courts.
R. B. Wixson, assistant cashier of the First National bank of Marengo, Ill., before the Sangamon county grand jury testified that 40 $100 bills had been deposited in that bank in 1907 to the credit of the F. C. Janke Lumber company, which company, he testified, was owned by Speaker Shurt-lef. He said the money was deposited after the passage of house bill 777.
*Elizabeth Anderson, 16 years old, one of the most beautiful girls in Goderich, Ont., was found murdered in the collar of a deserted house on the outskirts of that town. Her father, Wesley Anderson, led the searching party that found the body.
GENERAL NEWS.
Nearly 10,000' persons have died 'of Asiatic cholera in the Naples district since the scourge appeared there a month ago. One hundred thousand persons of the better classes have fled from Naples and its vicinity since August. It is reported.
United States Senator William Lorimer, whose right to his seat in the upper house of congress is to be determined by a senate committee, won a victory when Senator Burrows, chairman of the committee, ruled that no hearsay evidence relating to bribery in the election of the senator could be given by the witnesses at the inquiry in progress at Chicago.
The senatorial subcommittee on privileges and elections, which convened at Chicago to investigate the alleged fraud and corruption in the election of Senator William Lorimer, decided to proceed at this time with the taking of testimony, and not to postpone action until after the November elections, as urged by the senator's attorney, Elbridge Hancey, at the first open session of the committee.
Twelve passengers on a street car on the Appalachian exposition line at Knoxville, Tenn., were injured in a stamped that followed the burning out of a fuse. Mrs. A. S. J. Davis may die. She jumped and was trampled on.
Sixteen persons lost their lives and thirteen others suffered injuries in the wreck two miles east of Clayton, Knn., of west-bound Rock Island passenger train No. 27. Most of the dead and injured were in the smoker and one of the day coaches. The wreck was the result of a cloudburst which carried out a mass of ice at a long fill, washing out nearly a thousand feet of track.
Kernit Roosevelt returned to New York from Europe, and denied that he went abroad to woo Miss Rutherford, a stepdaughter of W. K. Vanderbilt.
The coroner's jury returned a verdict of willful murder against Dr. Hawley H. Crippen, the American dentist, in connection with the finding in the Crippen Hilddrop-Crescent residence last July of a mutilated body supposed to be that of Crippen's wife, who was known on the stage as Belle Elmore.
Gen. Charles R. Brayton, the blind Republican leader of Rhode Island and a powerful factor in Republican national politics, died at Providence as the result of injuries received in a fall a few days ago. He fractured his thigh, and his advanced age made recovery impossible.
In 1909 there were 2,854 homicide in that part of the United States covered by death registry laws and in the same area $4,924 deaths from suicide. The figures are given in the census bureau's annual report on mortality and cover about 55 per cent. of the population.
The Brotherhood of St Andrew met in annual session at Nashville, Tenn., to celebrate the silver anniversary of its founding by James L. Houghteling.
Catholic newspapers, in Madrid, Spain, predlet that the demonstrations planned for next Sunday will be followed by the resignation of Premier Canalefas.
Joseph H. Miles of Falls City, Neb. has been declared by the courts to be the rightful heir to an estate valued at $1,000,000. His brother contested their father's will for many years.
A lockout of 1,000 bricklayers, ordered by the New York Builders association, is in full swing. The employers assert the union violated an agreement and threaten to bring nonunion men from all parts of the country.
Residences worth more than $1,000,000 are to be sold by the village treasurer of South Orange, N. J., because of the refusal of their owners to pay assessment: for curbing.
Figures compiled by the census bureau show a decrease in the percentage of deaths from tuberculosis in 1909, compared with previous years. The rate in 1909 was 167.5 per 100,000, compared with 173.9 in 1908. There was an increase of 342 in the number of deaths however.
George Robertson, one time Vanderbilt cup race winner, and one of the best-known automobile drivers of America, was thrown on the Massachusetts curve on the Long Island motor parkway and painfully injured. Robertson was going seventy miles an hour in a practic spin for the Vanderbilt cup next wook.
Stephen Stuper, aged nineteen, employed at the Homestead (Pa.) Steel works, was instantly killed while fooling with an arc lamp. His hand came in contact with a live wire and 4,800 volts of electricity passed through him.
Indianapolis entertained the foreign delegates to the International Prison congress.
William J. Bryan addressed the National Irrigation congress at its opening session in Pueblo, Col., and delegates prepared for a contest over the question of state versus federal control of natural resources, especially rivers.
Disobedience to orders by the crew of a freight car is said to have been the cause of the second interurban traction wreck within three days in Indiana, and the disaster cost the lives of six more and severe hurts to a score. A south-bound freight car crashed head-on into a north-bound passenger car on the Indianaapolis and Peru division of the Indiana Union Traction company shortly after noon, two miles north of Tipton, Ind.
Representatives of 350,000 members of railroad brotherhoods at a general conference at New York decided to participate in state and national polities and to urge the interstate commerce commission to increase freight rates.
Within a week an action will be started, in New York by District Attorney Wise looking to the dissolution of the sugar trust. Orders to this effect have been sent out by Attorney General-Wickersham.
"It is our opinion that Porter Charlton is of unsound mind and liable to attacks of impulsive violence, and that his moral sense is pathologically defective. He should be taken to a hospital for the insane and there kept indoinitely." This is the conclusion reached by the alienists who examined the slayer of Mrs. Scott Castle, the actress, who was Charlton's wife, at Lake Cono, Italy, last June.
The first casualty of the Adirondack hunting season has been reported at Glens Falls, N. Y. Mistaken by his son for a deer, William Aubre was fatally shot in the mountains near there.
Announcement was made at El Paso, Tex., by Morris & Co., the packing firm, of the purchase in Mexico of 1,250,000 acres for one of the largest ranches in the world. A $1,000,000 packing plant is to be built.
Capt. John J. O'Connell of the Twenty-eighth infantry, stationed at Fort Snolling, near St. Paul, has been missing for two weeks, and his superior officers fear he has been murdered or has committed suicide.
Mathew Walters, it Detroit, Mich., whose supposed body was buried by relatives after it had been taken from the river, has been found alive in a hospital and attended the inquest which was originally set for his case.
A colored chambermald stabbed and killed her employer, James Mayden, a New York hotelkeeper, when he discharged her. When the police arrived the woman was found dying from a stab wound and accused her victim's wife.
A plague among the cattle of Russia threatens serious consequences and the United States may institute a quarantine against cattle imports, is the information given out in Washington.
Four students of Purdue university at Lafayette, Ind., were hurt in the annual "tank scrap" between freshmen and sophomores. The freshmen class was victorious. The United States census bureau in its 1999 investigations shows that infantile paralysis and pedigree are found in childhood form in many parts of the country.
The Queen of Spain and the wife of President Fallieres of the French Republic in the president's carriage at the occasion of the king and queen's visit at Rambouillet, near Paris.
TRUTH IN DAILIES
Snake Crawled Into Hose
Novelist Says Sticking to Facts Is Best Policy.
Daily Newspapers, Richard Whiteing States, Apathy, Aids Literature and Helps the Poor.
London - Richard Whiteing, veteran of Fleet street and author of "No. 5 John Street," who celebrated recently his seventh birthday anniversary, has given to an interviewer some of his latest ideas about journalism. Mr. Whiteing spurring into fame at sixty, His well-known novel did it. Prior to "No. 5 John Street," he was a hard-working leader writer on a London morning paper. With his big body and big head, his white hair and his brilliant, penetrating brown eyes, he is one of the most pictureque and most magnetic men of letters in the metropolis.
"I often think," he said, "when I see the order that reigns in our streets what it means to keep these people quiet. A good many of them suffer much. But the fact that the press is there, watching over them as a sort of poor man's friend in the big sense, helps them enormously. The fact that there is always some one who will represent you and your cause aright, as Hamlet puts it, is a great calming and tranquilizing influence.
"The so-called 'lower class' is beginning to feel much the equal of the classes above, chiefly because there is no longer any monopoly of how the world wags. Travel, history, politics, art, literature—the daily half-penman manual is a sort of daily manual of all of them. Some foolish people have said that daily journalism is killing literature in its highest forms. I say,
New York City Directory, Recently Issued, Records Many Other Freak Names.
New York.—One of the, six best sellers, the city directory, is out again. The entertaining little volume contains two Laffs and one Tear. The original Mr. Smith has 3,318 relatives this year. Brown runs second with 1,600, and poor Jones has only 830.
Temperance people may be glad there are only 2 Drinkers, 1 Booz, 2 Boozers and 1 Drinkwine, Mr. Pickle may be included, but Mr. Drinkwater balances the account. Looking closer we find 20 Beers, 10 Schnapps and 16 Saltzers. There are 9 Battles.
Passing on to the next cage one sees 2 Beans in front of 8 Bears, 24 Beavers and 4 Mules. Near them are 150 Cranes, 4 Ravens, 15 Robins, 9 Rats and 80 Fishes. They are surrounded by numerous Hoggs, Goats, Piggs and Wolfs, one Rabbit and a Cow. The latter is a policeman, which is appropriate, as policemen in slang are "bulls."
There is just one Catt. There are five times as many Wilds as Wooleys. Out of 11 names there are 4 Losers, 6 Winners and 1 Even.
During Tumult at Fire in Cincinnati Reptile. Took Refuge in Fire paratus.
Cincinnati.—Capt. "Billy" Thompson and fire crew 39 were seated in the engine house at Clarion avenue and Montgomery road, Evanston, when a succession of yells came from the cellar, where Pipeman William Gehringer was fixing up a hose nozzle.
The firemen rushed downstairs and found Gehringer pointing to an immense black snake that had collied in one corner and, as it had no means of escape, evidently meant to fight. Captain Thompson and Lieutenant Perry Doyle put an end to the snake's life with clubs.
When measured It was found that the suspect was a few inches over five feet in length. Captain Thompson says that the company went out to a small fire in a township on Northville avenue a few days ago and, after the blaze was extinguished, the base was unwound and into for some minutes in the high grass and woods, admitting the building before it was placed in
SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS.
Squirrels Rout Many Birds
to the contrary, that the daily paper provides a sort of first course in literature, and I am an immense admirer of the color, inclusive style adopted by the half-puny press.
"It stimulates curiosity, and when once you have done that in any human being you have started him on the right road, The one deadly thing is apathy. The cow in the field has no note of interrogation. The savage might see an airplane and not wonder. You can lead a man from the curbstone to the stars when you have once made him curious. A newspaper forces a man to be curious.
"The dear old truth! That's all we want. The truth is so beautiful, so amazingly interesting, so much more wonderful than fiction. Therefore I say that, quite apart from morality, it is policy for a paper to tell the truth. It is policy in much the same way for a paper to keep itself pure, because the mass of the people are essentially serious. Life hits most of them very hard, and hard hitting does not make a frivolous generation."
Prince Won't Marry Sister.
San Francisco.—The crown prince of San is adding gray hairs to the head of his royal father, King Chulalongkorn, and has set the country by the ears in refusing to marry his sister.
According to Rev. Will C. Dodd, a Presbyterian missionary, all Slam is agog over the prince's announcement. From time immemorial, the missionary says, it has been the Siamese custom for the crown prince to wed his sister, or if he has none, then a half sister, the daughter of one of his father's numerous wives.
The crown prince, though, has asserted his independence by publicly declaring he intends to have but one wife, and that one of his own choosing.
Seven of Them Hold Trees Against Thousands of Pugnacious English Sparrows.
Glen Ridge, N. J.—A three-day battle between English sparrows and red squirrels ended the other day when a flock of the birds, estimated at several thousand, with a great twittering forsook the lofty double row of trees in Midland avenue, and took up a new home in the woodland between Glen Ridge and Montclair.
The sparrows had become a public nuisance in Midland avenue, where the trees arch overhead and give a tropical look to the street. The birds came there in such numbers sleep grew to be almost an unattainable luxury on the part of the human residents of the vicinity. For the last four weeks nightly pyrotechnic bombs were fired off in the foliage. A number of birds were killed, but the flock soon got so they would not fly away while the bombs were going off.
Edward Bartelow of Green Pond, who was a visitor at one of the Midland avenue houses, trapped seven red squirrels near his home and brought them to Glen Ridge. He distributed
He' is of the opinion that the snake, frightened by the tumult attending the fire, crawled into the hose and was carried to the engine house, where it crawled out when the hose was hung in the chute to dry.
Ten Different Margarcts
Chicago.—"This must be Margaret's day visiting," said Clerk Ernest Reul of the Congress hotel the other night, as he assigned the tenth woman of the name of Margaret to a room, "and they are from many sections of the country."
These arrivals were: Miss Margaret Stickley, Grand Rapids, Mich.; Miss Margaret Moseer, Chichauatl, O.; Miss Margaret Shields, Lonsvile, Ky.; Miss Margaret Whittet, Shrewpey, La.; Miss Margaret Baldwin, Grand Rapids, Mich.; Miss Margaret Prest, St. Paul, Minn.; Miss Margaret Cayo, Mobile, Al.; Miss Margaret Casey, Montgomery, Mich.; Miss Margaret Sable, St. Louis, Mo.; Miss Margaret Missy, Little Rock, Ark.
WESTERN RESERVE
CY 9
CLEVELAND, O.
UNION OF THE
WESTERN RESERVE
DISEASE AT SCHOOL
DISEASE AT SCHOOL
Chicago Health Department Tells of Germs in Sweets.
City Bureau Issues Timely Advice to Children to Swap Pencils or Marbles, But Not to Trade Apples or Delicacies.
Chicago—After a series of "health grams" directed to the adults of Chicago, the health department has turned its attention to instructing the school children in ways of avoiding disease.
The weekly bulletin of the department was called "schoolgrams" and contained much pertinent though plithy advice for the youngsters of the city.
"Don't swap candy, chewing gum or apples;" "skiddoo from the boy or girl with the sore throat," "keep that pencil out of your mouth"—these are some of the bits of advice offered in language that every schoolboy or girl can understand.
Some of the "schoolgrams" are as follows:
"Let the first lesson be—how to keep well.
"You'll be brighter, learn more and keep in better health if your teacher will keep the windows of the schoolroom open. Bad air makes a sluggish brain.
"Do unto others as you would have others do unto you—meaning: 'Don't carry disease germs to school and cause sickness and perhaps death among your playmates. If you have a contagious disease at home keep entirely away from all other children. Stay at home if you have a sore throat. 'A little sore throat' in one little child may cause a big lot of trouble for many other children. Many little bore throats' are in reality diphtheria. 'Wash the drinking cup thoroughly before putting it to your mouth. The child which used it just before you may have left the germs of disease on it. Wash the germs off. 'Keep that pencil out of your mouth: It may have scarlet fever, diphtheria or typhoid fever germs on it. 'Swapping gum, swapping apples and swapping candy are about the driest things—and the most dangerous things—that a child can do. Don't be that dirty. 'Keep your hands clean. Soap is your good friend—dirt is your worst enemy. 'Eat very little candy—treat your stomach well and you'll live longer. 'Never buy candy or fruit at an open stand on the street. Files have left all kinds of dirt on it and dirt from the streets has been blown upon it. 'When you play, play out of doors—but never play in dusty places.
"Don't run to school—especially just after eating. Start in time so that you will not have to run.
"Be well and you'll be happy—even in school."
them over the trees, and the combat at once began. The red squirrel robs nests and eats both old and young birds, and the attacks of these little tree climbers on the sparrows could be plainly heard by the householders. When the squirrels were placed on the trees the birds had to fight for their lives or get away. The eyes were picked out of several squirrels before the birds gave up and moved.
FROG INTERRUPTS A LESSON
Jumps Inside Woman Pupil's Bathing Suit and Causes Commotion—Finally Removed
New York.—It is written in the philosophy of Capt. James Fitzgerald, instructor at Plasca Pool, that there is always a way—that is, nearly always. But there was no way that he could suggest when a bullfrog jumped inside of a woman's bathing suit.
Captain Fitzgerald was giving a swimming lesson when a bullfrog sat in a crevice at the edge of the pool and watched the proceedings with interest. "One, two, three," chanted Captain Fitzgerald, and just as he said "three," a boy running by on the brink of the pool, startled the frog and he leaped wildly into the pool.
The woman pupil wore a low-cut bathing suit, a trifle loose at the neck. The frog landed inside and both tried to get out. While Fitzgerald hesitated and stammered, another woman swam to the one in need of help, reached inside of her bathing suit and caught the frog and withdrew it and thereby earned the gratitude of the woman—and the frog.
FORM SOCIETY TO AID HORSE
Wealthy New Yorkers to Secure Better Treatment for Sick Animals —Educate Drivers.
New York—The Horse Aid society, which hopes to obtain better treatment for sick and disabled horses and to educate drivers and horse owners in the more humane treatment of their animals, has been incorporated here. Its organizers, all wealthy New Yorkers, will build throughout Greater New York model stables, drinking trombs, veterinary hospitals and other means of taking care of, and promoting the comfort of the horses and will also establish "rest farms" and veterinary service for sick,老, and injured dogs.
THE GAZETTE
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Entered at the postoffice in Cleveland,
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Member Ohio Legislature: 1894
to 1896; 1896 to 1898; 1900 to 1902
THE GAZETTE is the oldest, and
has the largest bona fide circulation,
double that of any newspaper in the
Interest of Afro-American, published
in the state of Ohio, and comparison
with any will immediately establish
its rank as one of the NEWSIEST
AND BEST in the country.
Ex-President Roosevelt can certainly
do things if he takes a notion.
- Indianapolis Freeman.
Wan't it this same Roosevelt who, in a magazine article at the close of the Spanish-American war, accused the black soldiers of cowardice who saved his life and those of his "Rough Riders" in Cuba? We think so; indeed, we know it. Then, too, his inexhaustible blunder in "discharging "without honor" those one hundred and sixty-seven innocent men, "The Black Battallion," at Brownsville, Texas; and his and Tatt's persecution of them ever since, ought never to be forgotten by any loyal member of the race. O. yes, Theodore, "can certainly do things if he takes a notion," but it takes a bigger man than Roosevelt has as yet proven himself to be to right so great a wrong or even to acknowledge his greatest and most outrageous mistake, to the great American public. He advises our people to stop agitating in an effort to secure a betterment of their treatment how he shows the same attitude he hows like a coyote, from Omaha, Kan., to Oyster Bay, N. Y., in a spectacular effort to help the American people throw off the yoke of the trust and other corporate combinations, get rid of the grafter and all the other menaces to the public welfare. How inconsistent! If his agitation will help the American public, then our will help the race. In these cases, "what is good for the goose is also good for the gander."
Our contemporaries ought to stop being imposed upon by party managers, regularly every four years. Now they are being fooled with a so-called "Washington, D. C., letter," which says there are 14,000 Afro-American federal employees whose salaries aggregate more than eight million of dollars. A bigger political lie, it would be hard to tell. There may have been that many before President Taft began to turn them out of office a year ago last March. He has given appointments to but, two, and dismissed or caused to be let out, directly, and indirectly, thousands of Afro-American federal job-holders in the last year and a half he has held the office of President. Do not be so gullible, confreres. Then, too, his administration or Roosevelt's or McKinley's, are not entitled to any credit for the thousands of positions gained by members of the race as a result of civil service examinations. The latter won their jobs independent of any political party or national administration. The effort to bolster up the Taft administration, the worst in the history of this country's "Republicanism," as far as our people are concerned, and by Afro-Americans, too, is positively slackening, disloyal and an outrage.
VOLUNTARILY GOING BACKWARD
Some of Dayton's Afro-American residents have secured the opening of a "jimrow" schoolroom, is known as Garfield "public" school with Miss Helen Hyde, a member of the race, as teacher (of several grades). This is unfortunate, particularly because of the precedent it establishes. Years ago one of the principals of a Dayton public school was an Afro-American lady and she was one of the best in that city. It does seem to us that an American teacher could have been secured in Dayton without making the dangerous justice for jede there. The laws Ohio not permit such discrimination to stand unless our people quietly submit to it. In this case, "used" whites "whites," have "used" short-sighted Negroes, if not ignorant ones, to accomplish their desired end. This same thing was done at the state schools—for girls at Delaware, and in the case of our girls at the Soldiers' and Sailors' Orphan at the Xenia. The first, under Gov. Harris (Repub), two or three years ago, and the second, under the present governor, the Hon. under the present Dem., last year. For several years, we have noticed with sorrow, the disposition upon the part of certain leading Afro-Americans of Dayton, to cater to the prejudices against the race there in a few might be gained, and this latest deplorable school-exhibition of a baneful color-line is doubtless the direct result of the influence and effort of the same class of men (still catering to prejudiced "whites") who easily drew to their support others of the race less intelligent by using the stereotyped argument that a teacher could thus be most easily secured. They utterly ignore and cover up the tremendous sacrifice all of our people in that community are making in many, many ways, that so greatly outweighs the gaining of a teacher of a "jimrow" schoolroom, as to simply be incompatible. What hurts, too, in this latest Dayton colorline manifestation, is the fact that an organization of Negroes, offered by intelligent men and women, promoted it.
doubtless at the behest of the same prejudiced "whites" of that city who have secured the voluntary acceptance of other color-lines in public places of Dayton.
At Columbus, the Board of Education, encouraged by the same class of "jimrow" Negroes, has forced an entire "jimrow" building upon our people of that city by creating a school district of peculiar boundary lines that includes many of our people living in that section of the city. Our best people of Columbus have taken the matter into the courts, but to date have not shown the aggressiveness in the matter, one has a right to expect from them, especially when it is remembered that they have the law in their favor.
These are backward steps, most harmful indeed, that are not only insults but really amount to an outrage not only upon our people of the two cities named, but also upon all of us of the state. Wither are we drifting?
Mr. John E. Milholland, a wealthy New York City friend of the race, who was in Paris, France, the first part of September, sent the London, England, Standard, on September 6, a rejoinder to Dr. Booker T. Washington's interview of a previous date in the same paper, in which he (Mr. Milholland) simply "skins" Mr. Washington for saying some really absurdly untrue things about the treatment of our people in the southern part of this country, in a disgraceful effort to please the prejudiced-south (at our expense, of course). We applore Mr. Milholland's letter:
Rejoinder to Dr. Booker Washington.
The Ritter of "The Standard."
Bob Lovato, Stanford Prep.
Sira Ishii just read me a copy of your paper, an interview with my friend, Dr. Booker T. Washington. Knowing the doctor as I do, it seems quite certain that he had no thought of indulging in sensational statements, and yet I am sure that no American would have indulged in the United States will read he says with other than a feeling of amazement. He says that "a few Negroes" are now permitted to ride on sleeping cars in the South, as though this were a triumph worth recording. He says that "the African afforded facilities for sleep that are not denied, even in railroad transportation, to horses, hogs, and cattle.
Absurd though it is, I should very much like to know who are the "few Negroes," asid from Dr. Washington himself, that have this "privilege" accents in their speech. Dr. Du Bols of the Atlanta University; because at the last race conference in New York he had to come the way of his race; that is to say, this scholar and thinker, this brilliant graduate of Harvard University, this student of the national Law Association, this recognized authority on Sociology, this gifted speaker whose speech in New York last spring was pronounced by Jacob H. Schiff, the banker, the "ubest economic address, over deliverance of the national law oiis—is compelled to travel on a "Jim Crow" car from Atlanta to Washington, although his personal appearance and habits are such as to make him a welcome guest at the tables of all unprejudged people, Europe or America. Dr. Du Bols giving me the list of the "few Negroes" who are favored with the accommodations denied to Dr. Du Bols and the other real leaders of colored thought and opinion, I will undertake to furnish them with a single out for this remarkable distinction. Does Dr. Washington desire them to be stated?
Yet more bewildering still is Dr. Washington's other contention that the whites and blacks are dwelling together "more harmoniously" than heretofore. This would be really a farcical declaration were the macronym "harmony" is a bold characterization to employ within sixty days after that little affair down in Texas, which resulted in the murder of no fewer than sixty colored men. Some were lynched, some were shot down in the dragged from their homes at night and kicked, clubbed, shot, or stabbed to death, and the cause of it all was an ordinary street brawl between a white man and a colored man, in which the white man received the worst of it!
For objection to Dr. Washington or any other professed authority on the subject coming here to tell the people of the old countries about the progress of the Negroes, for it is worthy of all possible commendation; there is nothing like it in human history from illiterate slavery to a condition where illiteracy has been reduced once half in forty-five years!
What I insist on is that the other side of the picture shall also be shown, and that must be shown even if for no other purpose than to obtain the full significance of the black man's progress in America, that has changed his character, cruelty,rage, and injustice unspeakable, and the fact that though the victim of anarchy, it has not made him an anarchist, nor has mob violence robbed him of respect for the law, and that he is still loyal to the Government, that he is willing to defend him, its valiant defender, surely speaks volumes in favor of the doctrine that to no portion of the human race is denied the power of attainment. Mob law has been under way for more than twenty years. The United States is, in some sense, the average a lynching of one of its citizens every other day in the year, and it has just witnessed: almost without emotion, a massacre in Texas that, had it happened in India, or Egypt, would have convulsed the Empire and led to such drastic action on the part of serial authorities as would make the repetition of such things impossible.
I frankly admit that Dr. Washington's course is the more immediately popular, but there is so one knows better than be the tormenting truths of the situation, however industriously he may seek to avoid them. I am, sir, your obedient servant. JNO. E. MILHOLLAND. Paris. Comment unnecessary. We wish to urge our readers to insist that all their friends and acquaintances read Mr. Milholland's letter carefully, in order that they, too, may know the real Booker T. Washington, and not be longer misled by any person or persons, "white" or black. Advertise in THE GAZETTE.
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1910
DOINGS OF THE RAGE
Carl R. Diton, the violinist, sails for Germany October 1, to study.
FRESH OHIO NEWS OUR OWN WRITERS'
WHAT OUR PEOPLE ARE DOING IN MANY CITIES AND TOWNS OF THE STATE.
INTERESTING PERSONAL NOTES
Social Functions—Church and Lodge Items—Mariages and Deaths—Literary, Musical and Other
conference, and speech at the fair ground were inspirations and of great benefit to all who were so fortunate as to hear them. Men of like convictions and the courage to express them are much needed. Several transfers from the Ohio Conference were made, among them being Rev. Joshua L. Jones to be the驻育-orship of the Eastern District. The conference indorsed him for bishop in 1912. Dr. Jones is certainly an able and worthy man for the exalted position. The retiring presiding elder of the Eastern District, Rev. Chas. Bundy, was recumbently given up by the ministers of his district, and was kindly bereaved with a goodly purse of money. Dr. Bundy is one of the strongest preachers in the A. M. E. Church, and St. John's, Cleveland, is to be congratulated upon getting him as pastor. The North Ohio Conference has with in its membership a lively enthusiasm.
Charles W. Peters of Pittsburg has built a biblane and is our first aviator. Delaware Democrats, in state convention, declared for "jim crow" cars. Richmond, Va., is to have a park for our people only.
Rev. E. C. Morris of Helena, Ark., has been re-elected president of the National Baptist convention. He with S. H. Dudley in Smart Set Co. She does a speciality in boy's attire.
Madam E. Azad Hainley's retiring song recital will be given October 19 in Philadelphia.
New Orleans is at last to have Afro-American teachers in one of its "pub schools" for our people in the Hon. Edward L. South Carolina.
Hon. Edward Green of Chicago, father of Illinois Anti-Lynching law, has been renominated as a candidate for the legislature. He served his first term some years ago.
The Negro as race does desire an equal race "just like all other races or classes in this country. It is silly to think or say otherwise.
Wm. Francis of St. Paul is chief operator of the Northern Pacific railway, and Garrett S. Richardson of Cleveland is an operator for the L. S. & S. Wayne. Pro E. P. Professor of biology at Howard University, Washington, D. C. has made the starling discovery that there are tapeworms bacilli or parasites in the butterfish used in that section of the country. The "old reliable" Gazette is in its twelfth issue. She and the tell your friends and acquaintances to do likewise, and keep up to date in a knowledge of what the race is doing that is creditable and encouraging. North Carolina Afro-American real estate holdings amount to $50,000,000. Virginia Afro-American hold over $100,000,000. those in Georgia, over $100,000,000. pretty good, isn't it?
Mississippi Afro-Americans have organized the Union Guaranty and Insurance Company with an authorized insurance company, and do a general guarantee business, particularly giving bond for members of the race able to qualify. It is estimated by a writer in the Banker and the investor Magazine that the bond will not less than $30,000,000 on deposit in the United States. In one bank in Washington, D.C., alone they have more than $500,000. Rev. Dr. A. E. P. Albert former college president of the Christian Advocate, who was deposed years ago because he advocated so strongly the election of an Afro-American bishop by the M. E. church, died recently at New Orleans, La. In 2014 Missouri inserted in their platform adopted at their recent state convention a plank claiming their friendship for the Negro, and declaring that they will never discriminate against him either by race or by marriage.
The long winter season is near. During its evenings and on Sundays, particularly, you will need The Gazette. Why not subscribe now? Put a dollar on your subscription and send it with your address to The Gazette, Blackstone Building, Cleveland, O. Howard D. Crew of Springfield, Mass. at the great, annual New England fair in Worcester, recently won first prize in the 100-yard dash against the collegiate champion of the University of Pennsylvania; and won first place in the 220-yard dash against his same competitor. The time for the first event was 9:25 seconds. Edward H. Morris of Chicago is grand secretary; Lincoln Johnson of Atlanta, deputy grand master; James F. Needham, grand secretary; and Julius C. Johnson of Baltimore, grand treasurer, of the G. U. O. of F. Henry P. Slaughter of the government printing office, Washington D. Miller and manager of the Odd Fellows' Club.
Anderson Redding; a farmer of Juliette, Ga., has been offered $5,000 for a stalk 'puller that he invented and had patented some time ago. He is the man who invented the crop for which he received a large sum, and hundreds of which have been sold to farmers all over the south. Redding recently invented a threadless heel pin, and will get a large sum from the sale of this. Our women of Boston protested to the National Business League, held recently in New York city. Certain remarks that he was said to have made are referred to as "unjust and slanderous" and "exceedingly injurious and harming" to women, not "not upon the colored women alone, but white women as 'well.'"
It is high time that the Negro refuse to buy papers whose settled policy is their debasement. There are enough good plans to supply every reasonable demand. In all cases the Negro should buy only that which does not intentionally malign and degrade him. It is possible that all news of what is happening in the country by a careful reading of some conservative colored journal. Without this it is impossible to keep in touch with the sentiment that is making for the peace and advancement of the colored peoples. -Durburn (N. C. J. Reformer).
Speaking of the recent B. M. C. meeting, the Baltimore Afro-American said editorially, last week: "There has scarcely assorted cases of criminality, more disorderly and audacious mob than that which filled the hall on Market Space last week. We sincerely trust that Baltimore may never see, like the like of it again. There was the remote murder of a man who entertained the least idea whatever of being fair and brotherly in their treatment of the supposed minority. If the evident need of Odd Fellowship is one who can pilot the ship to the rocks, certainly they found in Grand Master Houston. He was mistaken, the days of the 'Grand United Order of Odd Fellows' are numbered."
FRESH OHIO NEWS OUR OWN WRITERS
WHAT OUR PEOPLE ARE DOING IN MANY CITIES AND TOWNS OF THE STATE.
INTERESTING PERSONAL NOTES
Social Functions—Church and Lodge Items—Marriages and Deaths—Literary, Musical and Other Notes of Interest.
Sandusky, Mr. H. Bartlett is very ill. Mr. W. Butler has located in Toledo. The Second Baptist church socials, Friday and Saturday evenings, were successes. The B. Y. P. U. reorganized Sunday. Miss L. Giberson, Musical teacher, was Walter Royst, secretary and assistant.
Smithfield, Mr. and Mrs. G. Harris have a fine, large daughter. Mr. and Mrs. L. Cassel's little daughter is recovering from a fall. Miss B. Beeks of M. Pleasant is visiting her brother. We are sorry to lose our former much success. Davenport, Mr. Archie Hargreave has returned to school near Philadelphia. Miss Oha Carter and W. Munts were in Hopeless recently. Mrs. F. Ramsey, children and M. Cooper were in McIntyre last week. Miss Emma Carter of love and Mrs. Harris, sir, visited in Pittsburgh last week. Mr. T. Veney of Cadiz is visiting his father, Mr. G. Veney.
Correspondents must mail all letters for publication at their main postoffice sufficiently early on Monday (or Sunday) of each week to have them reach The Gazette office on Tuesday morning, and always write, also, their names and that of their city or town on the outside of the postoffice. If they cannot less this latter is done, proper credit cannot be given you. Lists of names, wedding presents, etc., obituary notices, speeches, resolutions, poetry, inquiries for relatives and advertisements of all kinds, including items announcing entertainments to be held in advance or in advance at the rate of ten cents a line, six words to a line. Our rates for display advertisements will be sent on application. Send postal note and not stamps during warm weather.
Xenia.—Negroes of Missouri ought now to do what those in every section of the country must do sooner or later to have more civic and political. Up to this time, we have been a complete failure in politics because we have followed selfish "leaders" who have made our case what it is. If we had acted wiser, the Afro-American in the south would never have been able to govern with a lack of forsight and courage to adapt ourselves to the laws governing the game of politics.—Rev. J. Gardner Ross has returned from Cleveland, where he went the first of the week to place Master Warren Harris in the office of the president, request of his father, Dr. Ross is greatly pleased over Warren's outlook, along educational lines.—Dr. Gazaway is the new pastor of the A. M. E. church here, and a grand, good friend of Warren. We see how nicely he and Dr. Ross will pull together in the "religious harness." Both are splendid clergymen of experience, education and ability.
Youngstown—Mrs. Mary Taylor is visiting relatives in Oberlin and Cleveland—Mrs. Mary Halldow, of Cleveland, has visited the University, last week. Mrs. Hiram Simmons and Mrs. Christ Hamilton entertained ladies in honor of the former's mother of [barnesville] at Mrs. Simmons—King & Consuls have opened a restaurant on Chestnut street—The social and dance at Elks' rest, given by Buckeye lodge, was a grand success. Mrs. Simmons and Lyles and Mrs. Iva Matthews of Franklin, Pa., were guests of the Mesa F. and H. Simpson last Thursday. They were on route to Cleveland in an automobile—Clarence Allen of Franklin was the guest of Mr. Richards last Thursday. Mrs. Harry Hawkins of Charleston was the guest of Dorssey is convoying—Mr. Williams of Lisbon was the guest of A. H. Berry recently—Miss L. Clark and Albert Kennedy were last week, Miss Beatrice Holmes is visiting* in Pittsburgh—Miss Lena Ford has returned to Pittsburgh to attend a visit to the University of Cincinnati visited Youngstown Saturday.
Cádiz—A number of ladies were delightfully entertained on the 21st by Mrs. W. Epps and Miss Laura Haiter at the latter, in honor of their guest Mrs. D. Snowdon of Charlestown, W. Walt, who returned home Saturday. Sissy Haiter, who enjoyed surprise for her daughter Birtha on the 23d—Born to Mr. and Mrs. H. Redmond on the 23d, a daughter—Miss Iida Brown who visited her sister has returned—Miss Alma White spent the 22d in Wheeling, S. W. Washington, D. C.—Mrs. Christian entertained at dinner Sunday Messrs. G. A. Rudolph, Pearl Green and her (Mrs. C.'s) two daughters—Mrs. Kitzle white has returned to Southville, Mrs. Cora Rudolph of Mt. Mrs. C.'s) two daughters—Mrs. Kitzle white has returned to Southville, Mrs. Cora Rudolph of Mt. Mrs. Ralph Olmstead entertained Mr. George Rudolph at dinner Sunday. Mrs. Alice Tyler and grandson spent Sunday in Keuward—Mrs. James Brown of East Liverpool is Mrs. Iola Brown's guest. Misses Alma Norman Mrs. R. J. Lucas, Jr.'s guests—The X. M. l. club met at Mrs. Melvin Christian's Friday evening. Thirteen visitors were entertained. As it was fancy night, the hostess prepared some millinery work for the gentlemen. Six participated in the prize, the best trumpet prize, the best trumpet hat. Avery elaborate dinner was then served. Mrs. A. J. Bell of Cannonsburg, visited her daughter, Mrs. Geo. West.
NORTH OHIO ANNUAL CONFERENCE.
Rt. Rev. W. B. Derrick, Bishop of the Third Episcopal District of the A. M. E. Church, Presides and Announces 'Appointments.
Urbana, O.—The twenty-ninth session of the North Ohio Conference of the A. M. E. Church, Presides and Announces the 21st to the 25th, with Bishop Derrick presiding. It is putting it very modestly to say that this distinguished prolate is one of the greatest men in public life in America. His talks and lectures to the
conference, and speech at the fair ground were inspirations and of great benefit to all who were so fortunate to ask them. Men of like convictions and the courage to express them are much needed. Several transfers from the Ohio Conference were among them being Rev. Joshua W. Hunt, the pastor of the Eastern District. The conference indorsed him for bishop in 1912. Dr. Jones is certainly an able and worthy man for the exalted position. The retiring presiding elder of the Eastern District, Rev. Chas, Bundy, was reluctantly up by the ministers of his district, and was kindly remembrance of his good purpose of money. Dr. Bundy is goodly pursued by church preachers in the A. M. E. Church, and St. John's, Cleveland, is to be accompanied upon getting him as pastor. The North Ohio Conference has within its membership a large number of strong, competent men whom we are not able to mention at this time. Dr. Bundy is well known by the secretary of the Pittsburgh conference, was in attendance at this conference and rendered valuable service. He is one of the ablest ministers in the church, Mrs. Chavis, Urbana's leading soloist, pleased everybody. Her singing was exceptionally good. The very good and short successes. The increase of members and dollar money surpassed all previous records. Rev. J. M. Gilmore, the worthy presiding elder of the Western District, is continued presiding elder of the district. Dr. Gilmore is the most prominent teacher in the church and home of the District. The increase of city deserve great praise for the solitude way in which they entertained the appointments, as appended, were read. This closed one of the most pleasant sessions in the history of the Western District. Rev. J. M. Gilmore, Western District. Rev. J. M. Gilmore.
Western District, Rev. J. M. Gilmere,
D. D. Presiding Elder.
D. D. Presiding Elder.
Eaker Street Church, Dayton, Rev. Primus Dayton, Rev. J. A. Collins; Hamilton, Rev. J. D. Singleton; Findlay, Rev. R. B. P. Wright; Franklin and Glendale, Rev. G. Derrickson; Second Church, Dayton, Rev. C. M. Collins; Hamilton, Rev. J. D. Smith; Yellow Springs, Rev. J. C. Durren; Bellefontaine and Pickle-town, Rev. J. G. Robinson; Lebanon, Rev. W. H. Coleman; Eaton and Long, Rev. J. U. Hsapsh; Troy, Rev. R. H. Hsapsh; Corner, Rev. R. B. Lowe; London, Rev. J. H. Mason; Kenton, Rev. S. D. Huff; Van Wert (circuit), Rev. G. L. Hicks; Wren (circuit), Rev. Geo. Smith; Wren (circuit), Rev. Corner, Springfield, Rev. S. A. Atkins; Lockhard, Rev. W. E. Watson; Urban, Rev. W. T. Maxwell; Midtown, Rev. J. S. Jackson; Runley, Rev. E. Glover.
Eastern District, Rev, J. H. Jones, D.
D. Presiding Elder.
D. Presiding Elder.
Rev. C. Gas, Bundy, St. John's church, Cleveland, Ohio; Rev. B. W. Lee, Second church, Cleveland; Rev. R. W. Lee, Toldeo; Rev. H. H. Ip-grove, East Liverpool; Rev. D. W. Butler, Stoumbonville; Rev. J. D. White, Newark; Rev. J. W. Sherret, Canton; Rev. C. A. James, Fremont and Norwalk; Rev. M. Tate, M. Vernon; Rev. W. P. Myers, Doahar; Rev. W. N. Culbier, Mechanicsburg; Rev. W. C. Cotton, Jesse Hass, Smith and Alliance; Rev. D. D. Lewis, McMurry; Rev. H. F. Fox, Cadiz; Rev. S. W. White, Snifffield; Rev. J. Montgomery, St. Clairsville; Rev. F. G. Snelson, Bollard; Rev. J. H. Smith, Youngstown; Rev. B. M. Carson, Sandusky; Rev. J. Oleog, Marville and N. Lewisburg; Rev. W. W. Grimes, Randall Martin, Ferry; Rev. W. Chilbers, Akron, and Rev. John Coleman, Wellsville.
(Rev.) E. Forte, conference reporter.
A GRAND SUCCESS.
The Emancipation 'Celebration'—The Editor of "The Gazette," the Speaker of the Day—Attendance Large.
Harry C. Smith, editor of the Cleveland Gazette, Cleveland, Ohio, father of the Ohio civil rights law, and who introduced the anti-lynching white rights law, the same chance for indemnity, is speaker of the day. The committee could not have secured a better man to discuss the topics of the day than Mr. Smith. The committee furnished the music for the grand ball in the evening. Many of the ladies' costumes were beautiful. It was indeed a grand sight, and everybody had a good time. There was no disorder of any kind throughout the day and evening. There was a holiday among our people. Very few work and less are expected to do so. That is the proper spirit, we think.
Over 2,000 Afro-American voters in Maine, disgusted with Taff's administration, voted in opposition and help to run a political plurality into a Democratic plurality of New.
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Refuses $1,000 for Newark Lynching.
Newark, O.—County commissioners of Licking county on Monday offered $1,000 in settlement of the claim of the estate of Carl Etheringham. Who was lynched here in the riot of July 5. Under Hon. Harry C. Smith's Ohio anti-lynching law the county is liable for $,000, which it will now have to pay, as George C. Smith was lynched in Etheringham, refused the offer of $1,000. Arrangements have been made to begin the trials of those indicted in connection with the Lynching next Monday. Two common pleas judges will sit simultaneously in the cases. Assistant Attorney General W. H. Miller will assist in the prosecutions.
ATTENTION, READERSI
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
Call your lady friends' and acquaintances' attention to our up-to-date fashion and pattern departments and thus ensure our customers are satisfied with The Gazette regularly. Oblige the Editor.
AGENTS! READI
When your Gazettes are not delivered on Friday mornings, call at your Central Postoffice General Delivery Window for them in the afternoon of the same day. —Editor.
H. J. KROESEN
Teacher of Piano
Graduate of Berlin Conservatory.
No. 1919 W. 44th St.
Bell 'Phone, West 407-J.
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LOCAL NEWS
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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 Rent. Five-room suite. Apply to Wm. M. Guy, 10518 . Frank ave. Doan 553 L.
A fine baby girl at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Jones.
Mr. James Huston enjoyed a visit from his father recently.
Mr. and Mrs. H. Thompson, of E-ryla, visited Mrs. B. F. Dyer, of E. 30th
J. W. Rhodes, of New York City was here recently, en route home, from Mexico City. The Misses Liona Hall and Hazel Robinson, of Tiffin, were guests of Miss. Grace McQueen.
Mrs. Minnie Cooley, of Columbus, visited Mrs. Fowler, of E. 86th St. recently. Miss Alta Moss, Harry Murray and Cortez Hatcher were in Tiffin, on the 18th
Mrs. Samuel, Russel, of Detroit, spent last week with Mrs. Wm. Moore, of E. 97th St. Miss Eiffle Copies and Miss Edythe Williams, of Oberlin, were in the city recently. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Fields will soon move into their plansant new home in the south end. Miss J. Ednah Hunter underwent a successful operation at St. Alexis Hospital recently. Irving, of E. 36th St., is visiting in Baltimore, Washington and Richmond.
Mrs. Sailie Soloman has returned to Chicago. She visited her slater, Mrs. Carrie Shores, of 1820 Central Ave. Mrs. W. E. Wilson, of 2257 E. 43rd St. returned recently from Saranac Lake, N. Y.
Miss Mattle Dexter, who visited her parents at Mineral Ridge, and in Springfield, Mass., has returned. Dr. W. G. Wren's wife and son of Columbus were guests of Mrs. Chas. Jackson of Lluwoad avenue last week.
Mrs. Elmer Daugherty, of Solon, entertained Mrs. W. O. Thornhill and her guest, Miss Wilhelmina Tate, of St. Louis, recently.
If you owe The Gazette call at the office and pay, please, promptly, and don't wait for the collector. It is crowder, all around.
presentation
Miss Edna Mathews, of 2281 Scovill
Alison is visiting in Racine, Wis. She
will visit in Illinois and Indiana before
returning home.
Miss Cora B. Jackson and mother,
Mrs. Jennie Jackson, have returned
to New York City and Baltimore, respectively.
spectator
Miss Hattie E. Henderson entered
at dinner last Thursday evening
in honor of Miss Wilhelmina Tate.
Covers were laid for sixteen.
Covers
Miss Emma O. G.arnes, who visited
the Misses Blanche and Ethel Wilson,
of Married Ave., for three weeks, have
returned to, Washington, C. H.
Who was at the head and back of
the "Starlight" Policy Company, of
some months ago? Will those who
know answer?
Mrs. Mary Stewart, of Flushing,
spent a week with her son, Lucius,
Miss Ethel will remain here to attend
enter Mr. Ricks left last week Monday to enter the theological department at Howard University, Dr. C. and Dr. D. of the 43d St. Sunday week, for Wilberforce.
D. B. Johnson, one of our best engineers, has purchased and is occupying a fine home at 6712 Hagen west side. Mrs. Johnson's health has improved.
gives
The editor of The Gazette acknowledges the receipt of aift from Douglas Hospital, Philadelphia, attends its annual com-
gression exercises October 5.
The "king" of caterers, Mr. Luther Johnson, served Mrs. Agnes C. Harris recent dinner, given in honor of Miss Garnes of Washington C. H., O.
"Nice," he. Cisco returns a Saturday from a ten days' visit in Mt. Clemens. The Gazette is indebted to Mr. Gorman for a beautifully illustrated pamphlet for his firm.
on that Kathryn S. Mitchell of E. 87th street, gave a very pleasant reception from 8 to 11 p. m. Tuesday in house of Mrs. Johnson in Wilkesville, Ky. Johnson, p. m.
mother Gee. A. Myers of E. 71st street gave a pleasant reception last fuss day from 3 to 6 p. Mrs. Horton, Mrs. Horton, Wilson of Chi
d of Cleveland.
cargo, a. Vinci Lucas, of Richmond, Va. visited Mrs. J. S. Thomas and S. E. Hunter, of E. 300 Jr. and Mrs. Thomas, of Wichita recently from West Virginia cities.
Ohio. a. Chas. Henderson and daughter,
Miss Lulu. of Fluishing; are guee
Mrs. A. E. Sellers. of Miss
Lulu will spend the winter here study
W. C. A.
ing at the W. Y. C. The annual ingathering of the Old Folks' Home will be held on Thursday. Oct. 27. All donations will be gratefully received. A chicken dinner will be served from 12 until 8 p. m.
Mrs. Edith Woods has opened
goods, ladies' and general
store at 217 East Avenue, and Rufus
Stover a clothing store on the
same street, near old Arlington St.
Rev. Ira A. Collins and dug
went to conference last week. Mrs.
Collins will remain two weeks. The
elder will return for the final fare
well.
Miss Sophie Alston, who left this city several weeks ago for Los Angeles, Cal., to locate, writes that she is greatly pleased with her new home, and that her wages there are about what they were here.
double
The Caterers'. Association clam
bake. Monday evening at Luna Park,
was a complete success. They could
not accommodate all the people who
attended. The dance was thoroughly
enjoyed by all. It certainly pays to
advertise your entertainments in The
Gazette.
The two local K. P. companies headed by one of our hands, attended Shiloh church Sunday afternoon, and listened to a special sermon preached by the pastor. A union of the two would make one good company. For Sale—Nine-room house, modern, E. 101st street; a six-room modern house, E. 11th street, and a five-room house, Capital ave., on terms. Apply to Wm. M. Guy, 10518 Frank ave. Phone Doan 553 L. Mrs. Gee. W. Johnson and mother, Mrs. James Means; recently returned from a visit in Chicago, and Mr. Johnson from a trip through southern Ohio. Mr. Means visited in Dayton, his old home, last week. Mr. Carl Salem, who has been spending three months with relocation, Minneapolis, St. Paul and Chicago, was in Cleveland last week on route home, where he is employed as superintendent of the foundry department of the Ruckeye shops.
Mrs. W. H. Lilley, president of the Ladies' Aid Society, wishes to thank the public for their assistance in the entertainments a few-weeks ago at Mt. Zion church, particularly the Messrs. Huggins who added so much to the financial success.
Mrs. Florence Warren whose ad-vertissement will be found elsewhere in The Gazette, highly entertained the Village Beach Lake Shore last Wednesday evening. Mrs. Warren is a dramatic reader of exceptional ability and thoroughly pleased her splendid audience.
Mt. Zlon's Organ Fund Club's social at Mrs. Daniel Fairfax, E. 35th street, last Wednesday evening, was a complete success. Miss Mamie Clark, Mrs. Mary Martin, Mrs. E. Seelig and Mrs. Mildred Sellers gave excellent program numbers. Over $26 was realized.
While trying to get out of a moving elevator at the Zlon club Monday afternoon, William Mullen, a bellboy, nineteen, 2187 East 30th street, was crucified to death. His body was taken in Black & Wright's morgue. He leaves a wife, mother, three brothers and a sister. Funeral the first of the week from Shiloh church, Rev. E. H. Smith officiating.
Mr. Conley Burdine, after a lingering illness of weeks, died at his home in E. $3d St. Wednesday. He was one of our oldest residents and had many friends. Mr. Burdine was one of the most successful superintendents of Mr. Zlon Sunday School (years ago) it ever had. He leaves a widow who has the sympathy of the community.
The editor of The Gazette acknowledges the receipt of an invitation last week from Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Carter to attend the marriage of their friend, Sadie J. Smith, to our good friend, Dr. Harry M. Hargrave, of Homestead, Pa., Wednesday evening, in New York City. Congratulations and best wishes, Dr. and Mrs. Hargrave.
Again we call our pastors' and people's attention to the fact that the National Clothing Company, whose advertisement will be found elsewhere in this paper, has employed an Afro-American salesman, and we must show appreciation of the fact in trade if we are to encourage such employ-ment among young men in such capacities. A word to the wise ought to be sufficient.
Warren Harris, a graduate of the Xenia High School, was accompanied to the city last week by Rev. J. Gardner Ross, at the request of his father, and entered in Case School of Applied Science. The young man is quite an electrician and violinist. He is stopping at Rev. H. C. Bailey's, whom Dr. Ross visited while here. The latter paid The Gazette an enjoyable visit last Friday. Miss Cora J. Hawkins, of Washington, D. C., one of the most expert stenographers in the musical Department, and a warm friend of Miss Esther Irving, one of this city's leading young ladies, who is in the Forest Department there, was the guest of Miss William M. Shook, of E. 74th St., several weeks last week. The editor of the Gazette regrets great that absence from the city prevented his meeting Miss Hawkins.
Funeral services for Mrs. Kathryn Ramey were held Monday afternoon at St. James' church, Rev. G. V. Clark officiating. Members of Mr. Zion choir assisted in the service, the floral tributes were numerous and the large number of societies in attendance strong evidence of the activity of the deceased. She was assistant superintendent of the W. C. T. U. of the state and a valuable member of several other societies husband. B. F. Ramey gave the Gazette to express his gratitude to the many baskets for their kind sympathy and bereavement.
10. St. John's choir testimonial recital, mentioned in our last issue, netted Miss Olive A. Wells, 52. She and Mr. and Mrs. Wells, her parents, The Gazette to thank the choir, and all friends for their kindness. Miss Olive is studying Howard University and that she is greatly cared with her surroundings, etc. St. John's church members, presented her a beautiful silver tea service and tray; the junior, stewardesses, a fine suit of clothes; Miss Cleo Collins, a
From the
ELIZA WARREN SCHOOL.
NOW FORMING CLASSES
For the Year's Work.
Address, 355 Collamer St.,
Collinwood, Ohio.
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1910 beautiful bracelet, from the Baracea class; a silver mesh bag with chain; a silver offering from the choir, and other gifts. population of the west from time to time organize the cruelest riots in the Aslatic quarters." THE ORIOLE THEATRE
the Gazette was honored with a visit on Wednesday from Rev. J. M. Gilmore, presiding elder of the western district of the N. O. Conference of the A. M. E. Church, who is at home from the conference meet at Urkina, for a brief visit with his family. Dr. Gilmore tells us that his district's showing is also at "high water mark" in every respect, and that the future is very bright indeed. Others to call were Rev. Forte, the popular pastor of St. James' church whom we are pleased to say has been returned to the city for another year. Rev. E. H. Smith of Shiloh's church, who recently returned from a most satisfactory trip out of the city, and Rev. Bundy, Revs. Forte and Smith are also doing splendid work their respective fields.
The church workers' national convention, announced in our last issue, opened most suspiciously in Trinity Cathedral Tuesday, with very imposing ceremonies, and continued its sessions in St. Andrews church, too, proved exceptionally interesting, particularly, the splendid exhibitions of skillability upon the part of every all of the clergy and others in attendance. Among the most prominent in attendance are Rev. Scott Wood, of Alleghany; Rev. H. L. Phillips, of Philadelphia; Rev. G. F. Bragg, of Richmond, Va., and Rev. E. E. Milley, of Petersburg, Va. Bishop H. M. Leonard was present, the opening services. The attendance both afternoons and evenings was very large. The convention closes this Friday evening. Everybody web
The untimely death of Lieut. A.IVison Williams, the brilliant editor of the California Cactus, removes from the scenes of human activities a young man of sterling worth. As a member of the Ninth Ohio Colored battalion, under Major Young, service in the Cuban army during the Spanish-American war; being promoted to lieutenant for meritorious service. After retiring from the army he returned to his native state and took a prominent part in politics as a supporter of the Hon. Tom L. Johnson of Cleveland. In recognition of his services, Mayor Johnson him to an important ship which he filled with credit to himself and the admiral until forced by ill health to resign. It was the hope that the balmy climate of Southern California would stop the ravages of burticulosis that brought him here. In his unequal battle with the grim repourage, he displayed the same heroism and the battle fields and his fellow fever camps in his career was short of honors. His years few but full of honors. Peace to his ashes. Angeles (Cal.) Liberator.
LOOKING at the appointment of Rev. Chas. Bunny, presiding elder of this district, as pastor of St. John's church, to succeed Rev. Ira A. Collins who goes to St. Paul's beautiful new church at Columbus, is a popular and excellent one, and Bishop Derrick is to be complimented upon the excellent judgment shown in the selection. Bundy is just the man for a place, and too, at a time when a person with a thorough knowledge of persons and conditions at St. John's, and one with ability, intelligence of a high order and executive range is needed to carry in the great work his predecessors inaugurated and carried on so exceptionally well to date, resulting in the finest church in the conference. His eight years' experience as a presiding elder after five years as pastor of St. John's, has made him all the more valuable to the local church congregation of which is to be congratulated and, felicitated, "well as Dr. Bundy. His popularity with the ministers of his church was attested at conference last week when they, through the spokesman, the scholarly Rev. D. W. Butler, now of Steuben and former pastor at Wells presented him with a good "fat" praise. This was largely resplendent from the fact that the district, under Dr. Bundy as P. E., reached its high "water mark" in every respect
```markdown
```
He is a native of Ohio and has spent 35 years in the ministry. For the last 35 years in the ministry, Dr. Bundy is a member of the financial board of the great A. M. E. church, being chairman of its committee on appropriations; has had much to do with shaping the policy of the church; was a member of the committee that mended the establishment of the church extension department, and chairman of the committee that recommended present laws of the church missioning superannuated minors and giving aid to the widows and orphans of deceased ministers. Indeed this last, was offered by him. Dr. Bundy was highly honored by the Bishop's of the church with the appointment to deliver the culelog on the life and works of the great Bishop Daniel A. Payne for the General Conference at Wilmington, C. He also a trustee of the force University and of the state department of that institution. He has not only pastored Allen Temple, Cincinnati, but is also presiding elder of that district, also. Cleveland has been Dr. Bundy's home for years. He has been a good and successful tax-paying citizen as well as pastor and minister here, and elsewhere. Therefore The Gazette and the community at large welcome him again to the city as a pastor and wish him God speed.
The Black, the Yellow and the Red. Russia's leading newspaper, the Novaya Vremya, published at St. Petersburg, had the following to say anent America's lynchings, and mob violence:
"The North American democracy (the U. S.) considers one of its fundamental principles to be the equality of all, irrespective of race, religion, or language. But that equality, proclaimed by word and written down on paper, is in practice taken with many qualifications. All are equal except the blacks, the yellows, and the reds (and the Jews). Almost all the native Indians have been exterminated, and those who survive have been precisely deprived of their land and all political rights. The Mongolians are absolutely debarred from citizenship in the Republic which is endeavoring to rid itself of them entirely. In 1882 the Chinese were prohibited from entering the country, and as soon as Japanese immigration began to grow, restrictive measures were passed against the Japanese also. To show their true idea of equality the white
population of the west from time to time organize the cruelest riots in the Asiatic quarters."
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When we first began our wonderful work of growing all kinds, qualities, all lengths, and all conditions of hair, even to the growing of hair on bald places of the head, many persons scorned the idea that such a thing was possible. But we have grown the hair for hundreds, rapidly achieving success. The proof of the value of our work is that we are being infilated and largely by persons whose own hair we have actually grown and the further fact that they have very frequently mentioned us when trying to sell their goods (saying that "theils are the same" or "just as good") or referred to "PORO." We advise you to use only "PORO" hair Grower, (the oldest and best of its kind.) See that the name "PORO" is on every box, not genuine without it. Prepared only by MRS. A. M. POPE.
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W, N. U, CLEVELAND, NO, 40-1910.
RULER A PATRIARCH
Gata
One. of the World’s Most Inter-
esting Monarchs,
Nicholas of Montenegro Affectlonately
Known as “the Father of His
People” Literally Worshiped
by His ‘Subjects.
Vienna.—One of the most interest:
ing monarchs In’ Europe, perhaps any:
where, {9 Prince, now King, Nicholas
of. Montenegro, who has recently cele-
brated the fifticth. anniversary of his
reign. Duiring thia half century he
has been to the people a father and a
friend, and it Is asserted that he knows
every one of ils subjects by. name,
which probably ts an exaggeration. He
spends his summers tn Cetinje and his
winters in Antivari, down on the
Adriatic const, but bas residences tn
the principal towns of the kingdom
and occupies ench for a few weeks
every year in order to keep In touch
with local affairs. Ho {s very demo-
cfatic in his manners, and although he
‘dresses in the national costume of his
country, which looks. fantastic for 9
man of ‘his age, his tastes aro slinple,
and his babits and manners aro those
of a country gentleman.
Nicholas. was born at the little vil-
lage of. Njegos, a nest in the moun-
tains, in 1841. “His uncle, Danilo, the
Inte Viadtka of Montenegro, designated
him for his successor. He was edu-
cated in Vienna, Trieste and Paris,
and was not quite twenty. years old
when he was eleyated to the throne.
In 1860, a fow months after bo was
crowned, Nicholds married a Monte-
negrin girl, Milena Vukotich, daughter
of Poter Vukotich, president of tho
counell of state, who was also a farm-
cr and one of the largest land owners
in the‘country, and she has, been a
congenial companion and valuable
help meet. :
‘The Princess Bellona 18 as popular
as her busband, and presides over tho
palaco’ with simple but. graceful dig-
nity. She wears the native costume
whoa ane io ti Mententers, tut had a
eee
He he
Re ay ‘
Ps ce
ed LSE #0
Ce Re
ee + ANE
Parls outfit when she visits’ forelgn
countries, She insists upon her daugh-
tersindaw wearing the sume dress.as
her subjects when they are at home,
and encourages tho people to continue
the anclent customs and practise tho
old-fashfoned ‘arts and accomplish:
ments of past generations,
Nicholas usually rides around’ tn a
Mttle pony chaise, drawn by a diminu-
‘tive animal Ike that Queen Victoria
“used to tise in her. garden at Osborne
and in the park at Balmoral. ‘Tho
‘pony fs led by a page and the prince
‘sits, back in the cushions and talks to
“everybody he meets on the street in a
most condescending and fatherly man-
ner. Tho women come out from thelr
houses and Kiss the hem of bis cloak
and the Iittle cbfldren worship him as
if he were a dem!-god. In the eyes of
these simple people he fs the author
of all tho good that thoy. enjoy; the
protector of their lives and homes;
thelr guardian and benefactor in every
sense. :
From 1460 to 1861 tho executive ait
thority in Montenegro was exereisod
by Viadikas, or prince bishops as they
were called, the ‘sarhe man boing the
head of the church and the head of
the stato. He performed the ecclestas-
tical functions of a patriarch of the
Orthodox Groék church as woll.as the
elvil duties of a king. At first the
Viadikas were elected by ballot; but
about 1696 a powerful and progressive.
leader named Babylas founded the
Present dynasty, and, aa the Viadika
was not permitted to marty, ‘the crown
has descenied from uncle to nephew
in.the same fitmlly over since. King
Nicholas, (he present ruler of Monte-
negro, {a the second who has not beon
ordained as a priest. He simply re-
fused to assume ecclesiastical author!-
ty and the people, who !dolized him
as a young man, unantmously sus-
tained him tn his violation of ,prece-
dent. Ecclestastical authority ts there-
fore exercised by a regular bishop,
slected by the clergy.
‘The daughters af King “Nicholas
are uncommonly beautiful and accom-
plished and thoso of them who have
married havo done well. Princess
Helena married the king of Italy;
‘Anna decame the wifé of Prince Fran-
cis Joseph of Battenberg: Militza mar-
rled Grand Duke Peter. brother of the
cear, and Stena wed Grand~ Duke
Nicholas Nicolarevitch, cousin of the
czar. Of the fons, ‘Crown Prinoe
Danilo marricd Militza, daughter of
the grand duke of Mecklenberg, and
Mirko took for wife Natalle Constan-
tinoviteh, daughter of a Russian grand
duke; There aro two daughters loft,
and a son, Prince Peter.
Mother Breathes Life to Baby.”
-Allenown, Pa.—Mrs. Milton Ruch of
Sc"rnts's Schoolhouse found her year
eld baby apparently dead in tte cra:
dio: choked by mosquito netting In
which’ he had become entangled while
she was preparing supper.
With admirable presence of mind
she employed artificial respiration
and the child recovered conscfousness
Just as the’doctor arrived. The phy:
aicion said but for the mother's work
the Mule one would have died.
.THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, 0O.. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1910.
THE STATUE OF WASHINGTON me 1 knew
EOF Practical Fashions) OBSTINATE SPREAD. |
Now Stands In Versailles; a Gift From a AOS | | .
Hoe the State of Virginia fo the =u ING ECZEMA QUICK-
French Republic. ~ LADIES’ SHIRTWAIST. ' 1
— 41 ‘
Mmter-| wessniagoxi—st gumerant! Feoneh = | LY CURED 7
enibassador, went from Washington to - IES | =
help the French government accept, RES ASS . : Sore
tho state of Virginin and In the Na- AZ sion caivancar ca tank Ce
4 sallles, In the presence of the French A my Ittlo ton year old boy's leg, aftor | r
minister of war, General Brun: tho oes ice er re ME
peck eee nd he ee: Gf 9 a; » failed. Tho trofible had existed for | A ;
wrest: | and the American’ ambassador, Robert re et if yi six months, and nothing seomed to o
: ee ap A eet 4
bea Sel “a
piey faci (jet
yg / at > Be Ig
g gral > ar oN
BR or
eae. i
eo eA ae
Pan ecm oe ka
cs ae + 3
BUA kos al og <1 ae
bay we po) toa
as RN ;
Howsshis Bistiie of Washington:
Bacon, and Mrs. Bacon, the bronze
Toplica of Houdon’s celobrated statue
of Washington In the statchouse at
Richmond, Va., presented by the state
‘of Virginia to -the French republte
war dedicated with appropriate cere
montes. Tho dedleation coremontes
took place boforo a distingufshed as:
somblngo of Frenchmen and Ameri
cans, Including Marquis de Lafayette,
momibers of the French mission thnt
presented to Amoriea the statue of
Rochambeau, now at Waehington, and
Nathan B. Scott, once United States
senator from West Viritnia..
‘Thoy had great doin's there, largely
military, with a beap of French nota
bles and a good many Americans. Tho
band played the “Star-Spangled Ban-
ner” ax Count Chambrun, brother-in-
law of Congressman Longworth of
Oblo, great-grandson. ot Lafayette, un-
yelled the bronze, which was veiled,
not with the Stara and Stripos, but
with the "Sle Semper Tyrannis”. flag
of Virginia, When M. Jisserand made
his speoch he ‘sald, among other
things: “America Is the only country
with which Franco has nevor fought.
Franco !a the only country with which
American was ever an ally." Arid he
added: "No gift could bo more valu:
able, as no part of America is dearer
than hintortenl Virginia, the birthplace
of the United States.”
In the pedortal on’ which the statue
will stand will bo a Ist, of 46,000
namos of French ‘soldiers and satloré
who fought In the United States dur-
(ne the poretation:
THE GEN. MOULTON HOUSE
Historie Old Building In Hampton,
Masa, Which Was Owned by -
Noted Revolutionary Hero.
Doston.—Of moro than passing {n-
terest in historle old Hampton is
the Gen, Johathan Moulton house tn
the heart of the town whlch was built
in 1769.
‘The home of this sterling local pub-
Ne tunetlonary of those carly days
was burned to tho ground on March
15.1769, ends long account of tho
event, for that period of nows-gather-
ing;‘appeared In the Boston Chronicle
‘of March 20, A
General Moulton immediately bullt,
hear the site’ of the destroyed bulld-
ing. the house whlch now stands. at
the familiar corner near Rand's ill
and which since bis death In 1787
has been occupied by various first
familtes of the hamlet by the sea,
There have doen many traditions,
ghostly and otherwise, ‘connected with
igs o 5
ey
Ces 2 iF
PG fae. A
Nae Cy NY ia
Se ae rie
a
Moulton House Built In 1769.
the old Moulton house; and a landlord
with a reputation for genlality and
smagination combined, has often
paraded. the old Moulton boot with
which General Moulton “aught the
gold from the’ devil's ‘coffers’” in tho
olden time when superstition ran rife
in tho neighborhood.
General Moulton was a mighty man
‘in the years that called for men.. He
‘served with tho rapk of colonel
throughout ‘tho Revolutionary war. In
return for the present of a fatted ox
to Gov. Benning Wentworth, in ‘tho
colonial, era, Colonel Moulton, as he
was then known, was glven a largo
territory’ of wild ‘lands In Coos coun-
ty. and countles south of Coos, until
“this resident of Hampton was the
largest ‘landowner In the state. He
doubtless never knew the extent of his
possessions. But ho died a bankrupt
and. his property was sold far and
wide to different purchasers.
This Hampton patriarch left 12
‘children, out of a family total of 15,
to mourn bis departure from earthly
scenes.
Historical. "+
“Mrs. Green and Mrs. Smith came
in before sunitse:today and settled
thelr bilis,"ssaid the clerk in the cor-
ner grocery.
“Ab, Indeed," Iaughed the fat gro-
cor. * “Well, I always was-Interested
to the cafly settlers,” :
[Practical Fashions
Ae
I \ ‘
Hd beha\..$
ih’: A] Nes
[fA Lo
AW ALE
gi NN
515) . ”
AML Seams Allowed. —The walst 1
lustrated $s one whieh will make up
well In flannel because of the Mttle
fullness and the long tucks. The
tucks each side of the center front ex:
tend from shoulder to welst Une, and
the closing, whieh tx In the nature of
a tuck, gives a graceful Tine to the
Agure, While a Mile extra fullness ts
obtatied by the short tuck at the
shoulders, A tuck at cach side of the
centor-back gives a Los.plalt effet
‘The sleeves are he ‘regulation. shirt
style, finished with cuffs, whieh are
fastened with Inks. Preneh and
Scoteh flannels, pereale, misidras, nen
or taffeta silk wi develo a taut sty:
Hah watse The pattern (161) ts cut
in elzes 82 to 44 bust. ‘To make the
rarsnent'In'the medium sla will re.
quiro’2 yards of material 27 inches
wide, 24 yards 36 Inches. whie, oF 1%.
yards 44 Inches wide,
To procuro thin pattern wend IM cents
to “Valine Departinents” of tbs gage
Write nang and addres tings, att ow
sure to give exo uit miimber uf pustern,
No. 5161. SIZE Sse
STREET AND-NOcsssssss sessseeseeeee
LADIES’ YOKE WAIST.
Sy
y
1 Sean :
ATR
Hy | fh) Ken SS
RA =e
YAN i A
HN
Ef Th | ee
Hy. | (Q
Wy 1 i
HN
\ \
WW 5137 ‘
All, Seams Allowed.—This simple
‘waist may be-made quite effective tt
Garo 1s ured in selecting the materials.
‘The round yoko has tho Lody gather.
ed to ft, and’ at cach side of the yoke
‘at the shoulder a Gibson tuck is made.
‘Tho fullness’ thus obtained Is brought
dows Into a peplunm which takes away
all the fullness over the. hips. The
walst may bo on a lining if destred, a
pattern being provided. The sleeves
aro puffs, gathered into a band just
below the elbow; below this an under
sleeve of contrasting xoods may be
worn. Silk, atin, lawn ‘or batiste
may be used for the waist, with all
over lace or tucking for ‘the lower
sleeve and tho yoke and slceve bands
may be hand embroldered or trinmed
with soutache brald. - The pattern
(5137) fs cut In sizes'32 to 42 inches
bust. ;To make the walst In medium
rize.will require 4 yards of ‘material 27
Inchés wide, 2% yards 36 inches ‘wide,
or 2% yards 41 Inches wide, with %
yard of tucking 18 Inches wide,
To! procure this pattern wend 19 cents
fo “Watery, Departnent” ef tile paper,
Write name and address phatniy, and bo
sure to give size and nunboe uf pattern,
NO, 5137. BIZ sessoseessonsses
STREET AND NOvsscsessssesssessssees
Tantalizine®
| In searching for’ the location of the
‘gas rango Mr. Stubb had stumbled
‘over the Kitehen tabfe.
“On, John," eplled Mrs. «Stub,
sweetly, “I know what's the trouble.
You need what they have on battle
ships."
“What's that?" demanded Mr. Stubb,
rubbing his bruised toc.
“Why, a range finder.”
And what Mr. Stubb sald nbout
femnine wit used “at wrong umes
would be a caution. .
+ Base Canard,
Spring chickens wero scarco and
dey bad killed the ancient game :ock
for Sunday: dinner.
“Ab.” sald tho old farmer, reverent:
ty, “thls certainly was 8 gamo chick:
an. infact, he Was the bravest In two
stator.”
Tho star boarder glared at tho car
cass of the deceased fowl,
“It T only had au ax.” he mumbled,
“And what would you do with’ an
ax?" demanded the farmer, curiously.
“Td assassinate the man’ that start
ed that expression: “The bravest ar
the tenderest.’”
"a thce Bes ae
“Stidder ‘busin’ do devt! so much,”
sald Brother Dickey, “ft would “be mo’
healthy fer ‘yon ter take a recess ep
praise ¢o Luwd some.
OBSTINATE SPREAD-
ING ECZEMA QUICK-
LY CURED
|__Mrs. Wm. C. Wood, Newark, N. J,
writes:
“Resinol Ointment cured an obstt
nato case of spreading Eczema on
my Iittlo ton yoar old boy's leg, after
vartous other salvos had signally
failed. Tho trotible had existed for
Six months, and nothing neomed to
4o any good until we procured a jar
of Resinol, which quickly cured him.
Tt han now become a household remo.
dy with us, Wo also hava Resinol
‘thefr skin, health and complexion are
perfect."
Rosinol Ointment: can be posltively
relled on to givo instant rellot -and
quickly cure the torturing skin dis-
eases of Infancy and childhood, For
ecurma, nettle rash, chaling, diate.
uring, plimylos and Stehing eeupssons of
all Kinds, it 18 a prompt and suro
remedy.
Every family should bo eafe-gunrdad
with Resinol _proparationn—Rtesinol
Ointment to cure the skin troublos
that now and Uien occur; Resinol
Soap to use regularly’ for tho tollet
and bath, to keep tho akin’ pura and
healthy and preserve the complexion.
Reeinol Medleated Shaving Stick ts
aso the Deut and gatent to uRo, bo
cause It keope the taca fren from erup-
Uous and prevents tnfectton
These. preparations ara gold at all
arug atoren
We fond free on application valu:
ble Ittlo booklet on Cara of the Sida
and Complexion, Send for ft. Resinol
Cherateal Co,, Haltimore, Ma.
icelaen lcs Saniepk ee
“Mistah Jenkins,” asked on old ne-
gro of Atlanta’ of his employer,
“would yo" be 80 good, ‘wah, ax to ex-
plain (© me ‘bout this’ wiretess cole
graph Business 1 heara ‘ein mtatking
"out
Why, ceftainly, Henry.” responded
tho employer, “though T ean do a0 only
in a general way, as I myself know
Mittla of the wubject. Tho Ching con:
alate fn sending messages through tho
alr tnatead of over wires.”
“Yassah,” sald Henry, "t knows
‘bout dat; but, sab, what beats mo Is
how dey fauten tho alr to the poles!”
NO HEALTHY SKIN LEFT
“My Mttlo con, @ boy of fivo, broke
out with an itehing rash. Three doc
tors prescribed for him, but he kopt
getting worso until we could aot dross
him any inore. ‘They Onally advised
mo to try, @ cortain medical college,
but te trontment did no good. At
the timo I was induced to try Cutt
cura he was so bad that 1 bad to cut
bis batr of and put tho Cutleura Olnt-
menton bim on bandages, as it was
Impossiblo to touch bim with. the bare
hand. ‘Thoro was not-ono square inch
of skin on bis wholo body that was
not: affected. Ho was ono mass of
sores. Tho bandages used to stick to
hy skin and in removing them tt used
to take tho skin off with them, and
tho screams from tho ‘poor child were
heartbreaking. I began to think that
hd would never get well, but after the
second appltcation of Cutlcura Olnt-
ment I began to see signa of improve.
ment, and with the third -and fourth
appllegtions tho sores commenced to
dry up. His skin pected off twenty
mes, but ft Gnally yielded to the
treatment. Now I can sny that bo ts
entirely curod, and a stronger and
healthier boy you never saw than be
fs to-day, twelve youre or more since
tho cure Was effectod. Robert Wattam,
1148 Forty-eighth St, Chfeago, UL,
Oct. 9, 1909." -
a ae 7
“It was Anfa’s first visit at the sea
side, She was only a Mttlo gir, an¢
vory enthusiastic over the lons-looked
for opportunity to go into the water.
They camo too Into tho proviou:
day for a dtp In the surf, so Anna was
up early, and ag she put on her bath
{ng eult whilo the rest were nt brealt
fast some one questioned her-as te
her haste.
"Well, you see." replied tho thought
ful child, “I want to hurry and go ts
‘before s6 many people get In and
‘get tho water cold.”
The Sliver Question.
When you seo silverware scratched
and tarnished with black stains and
streaks in the interstices of the orna
mental patterns, that 1s dirt, left therc
by common, cheap rosin soaps. It ls
Letter to uso a soap that Js antlsept
fg well as a perfect) cleansing agent
“Kasy Task Soap,” {tho hard, white
Jaundry soap, will dean your silver:
waro surely find quickly. It will get
out the dirt tho other soaps havo lett
Your grocer will’ sell you two cakes for
ten cents, and if It doesn't satisty you
the makers will glyo back your dime.
Submarines’ Toll of Lives.
In ‘tho last flv years about “Atty
ves have been Jost Jn France In sub
marino boat disensters.
gs oa amie
Examine carefully every bottle of
Bears the
se Dacha
‘The Kind You Mayo Always Bought
land vccur in public tnstituuions.
| PINK EYE and the like among. horse
| camo stable fromhaving the disoass, Also
See entree
to tafe 50 cents and BLO battle, Agents
eso cat oa Se
| Spee. Cobtagious Diseases, Goshen, Ind.
| battlefield of contending forces.—Dr.
Sash seins
Uf Your Eyes: Bother You
lie, west nicccaifal eve realy ate,
LOW FARES
TO
Low One-Way Colonist Fares in effect daily
October -1 to October 15, 1910
via
Union Pacific
Southern Pacific
Standard Route of the West °
Electric Block Signals
Excellent Dining Cars
Fér tickets and informnativn, adi on or address
GERRIT FORT, EF. T. M.
= U.P. R. R. Co. Omaha, Nebraska
| KNEW HIS DESTINATION.
fe e
sao si
| OY be |
GS 22’
| DAZ ea
FE OO) 4
Wye ke s
! 0. Gr
i, Tk 4
fo} es), 28%)
HBS) >
: oe
“Where ERT
So dayton
SWveih gear betior Issey At yea
wanter aves Indenre teabeht, De Jal
In dat bute rages it hie woe
USED HYPODERMICS.
Only Relief From Terrible Suffering.
‘Thomas #2. Vest, 1503 5, 12th St.
Torre Haute, Lh says “h head no
teonteod waver’ the izle tan tte palm
ee eee ee ee
weremiaet J grew
worse sand lay da ed
for. weiks, the only
Teltef betng fron hy:
wpoderntes, 1 was
trented by three hy
stelans whthet help
atl thee last one sald
an ojeration wag
Sie diemet Ee ° pie:
ite kerenmel J grew
BER Wire et ay
FB) fer caeea, the ont
RB islet i on hy
Mee. oileriites. twas
+ treated by three phy
Motane setthost help
A: Aree sit ties last one sald
BRS oon ojeraction was
AGF Newasarye at
Une J began using = Poan's . Kidney
Pilin and. pawand gravel sold as
large an a pea, The next day I
paused two moran! (eon thu on
Amnproved Fapidly unt) enred.~
Remenien Gar pauierstine
For wale by nil dealer, cots @
bow
Foster sttiburis Co, uffala, N.Y.
The Ettecte.
“t hava cate ta yon, iy felon, fo
patton, MF ilat art baw ureausd fa
sory badly Iwas teste ty expiatn
Fomethtng. to her but she gavy me
fuel ahagp loska they rut nie 10 the
Heart alia levered ane tt
tearm, crushed tuo’ with her cold
hers and. stabbed ei sith her keen
tdged tongue.”
ssa. hers,’ man, you oughen’t” to
come to me for contort: What you
heed ta (a fo 10 a hospital for treet:
meats
a
“My niece,” sald a well known man
the other day, “fa often called tho prat
Ucat girl in Cincinnati. I believe half
the compliments 4ho, gots are due t
her shirtwalste, Thy aro always 9
clean nnd: dainty looking’ as A sa0w
flake, “She's mighty particular abou
them. Sho won't use the cheap, ord!-
Dery ‘rosld. soupe. for washings, ut
| buys this “Easy Task Soap" you hear
feo mulch about It seema that. “Rasy
Task Soap” just naturally goes after
tio rt and doten't eat into and. to
the fabrics lke the common yellow
resin soaps. It costs. tho eane—a
dickel a cake.”
| A Generous Git.”
ee
young. ministers, be 1 have. noshing
but pratse for our sonng pastor,” the
pompous ste. Drown remarked, 68 Be
Passed out. of tho ehtweh.. "Xotning
Bar pease:
“so T observed,” divly retorted the
deacon Sho" anand Toe plage Has
Deafness Cannot Be Cured ,
a oie oy ommend
Seats tia te a cee hee eg
muro Halng of the Fastachian ‘Tube. When (his
SSE cee zor tar cet e, E
Bert cect ce Suan cnet arts
era mies rete sck Beets
phan accra ante te agen eet
The wise know better than to try to
vo on the splee of Ife alone.
otra, Winniow'a Rooting Srrep.
Ea nhat thats See,
| Woman's sphere now seoms to be the
hole earth,
l For Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes ~Y
GRANULATED EYELIDS
‘Murine Doesn'tSmart—Soothes Eye Pain
Drogas Sel Meri Eye Remedy Ligsd, 2c, 50, $1.00
Murine Eye Salve, in Aseptic Tubes, 28, $1.00
EYE UOOKS AND ADVICE FREE DY MAIL
MurineEyeRemedyCo.,Chicago
Mens
Pid Sail hal eel NS ade
Peer ea ee
Losi
Fate! tate er aa
Ficesan gate wipe) z
‘thousdis QE”
endn Retire tana
Fae (aa os Ee St one
seer “Arsh. oo:
AUDruggists, 25°
Blemishes
On the Face
Don't go about. with a face full of
blotches or other skin eruptions.
Clear off these disfigurements in a
short time at little expense. These
unsightly blemishes come from im-
pure’ llood and a disordered sys-
tem but will all disappear after a
few doses of
Beecham Wi
Pillé
which do. the work quickly. and
thinroughly. Salves, ointuents and
washes never cure'a piniply face,
You must get the (poison ont of the
system. This is what Beecham's
Bitis do, ‘They move the bowels,
start the bile,carryaff the impurities,
cleanse and vitalize the bicod and
:
Beautify the
.
Complexion
fais, eau aaa
what Liver or Bowel’ medicine you
are using, stop it-now. Geta 100
box—week's treatment —of CAS
Chants aa tae ee
and leara bow easily, naturally and
delightfully your fiver can bo mado
to work, and your bowels move every.
day, There's new life in every box.
CASCARETS are neture’s belper.
‘You will see the difference! 3
poerent sah an
fecreent ot Srugpinn, Berea ecltet
Indispensable to every man
KNOWN THE ities over
c KNOWN since is36 ASRELIAGLE.
ay ae TW cds
Ao CAPSULES
da Aula awa aa
Rartocea ra NTL
Exteel tivasatet ort
STOCKERS & FEEDERS
SH eS ets teacie os
an Coine and eae Tor joureell
National Live Stock Com. Co,
tana iy Mo SiC eae 6. Omaha te
‘DR. J. D. KELLOGG’S
Romeédy for the prompt retlet of
Asthma and Hay Fever, Ask your
Graggist tor Ite Wits Tor Fnee saMete,
NORTHROP & LYMAN CO. Ltd., BUFFALO, N.Y.
ee PARKER'S
Pe rs 3S HAIR BALSAM
Re HALE BALSAM.
ae
Paes deat et erga
FOR SALEvrerews tren tients
Sues eee, a eae Tote
ESESTEGRE NS Mean aati eg oe
WE PAY TWO EIVE AGENTS {20irs3
ee ULRRS ERG, Ss Tans
PATENTS Stax cupe es
TRUSSES «.£27ERT FITTING,
Exicoaleies Thompson's Eye Water