The Gazette
Saturday, August 3, 1912
Cleveland, Ohio
Page text (machine-generated)
Turkish Toweling as Used for Pretty Walking Suit
I
The prevalent material craze for this summer is Turkish toweling made up into walking suits. This rough material is all the vogue now at both seashore and mountain resorts.
IN DOLOR
HAS SUSPENDED
THIRTIETH YEAR
Turkish Toweling for Pre
Photograph by Underwood & Underwood.
The prevalent material craze for up into walking suits. This rough mah-shore and mountain resorts.
CLING TO BLACKS AND WHITES
Combination Always Popular Seems to Show Little Falling Off in Favor.
In spite of the rage for color which threatened our peace of eye so seriously in the early days of summer, we remain very faithful to the time-honored composition of black and white. Amongst the most successful of white lace dresses destined to adorn Ascot is one made in tunic style with broad hems of black nylon, a short, rounded, black nylon coat hanging in sack style over this ruched with black ribbon with a white pigtot edge, and the whole is to be crowned with a black hat lined beneath with white chip with a forest of black and white ostrich feathers waving their fronds over the crown; a parasol of white lace hemmed with black chiffon will complete the effect. —London Madame.
FOR THE EVENING.
A chic evening gown with lace fuchsia and graceful draperies. The high-waisted skirt is attached to the bodice and finished off with a wide black sash.
A chic evening gown with lace fichus and graceful draperies. The high-waisted skirt is attached to the bodice and finished off with a wide black sash.
Zebra Rip Could Only Attract the Gaze Because of the Extreme Ugliness.
Very odd, indeed, are some of the new tail-mades, writes a Paris correspondent. In fact, a few of them irresistibly suggest that the wearer, despairing of finding any new ways of being beautiful, is as a last resource falling back on ways of being ugly.
How otherwise could one account for a coat like an Early Victorian dressing jacket, than which nothing more shapeless has yet been discovered in the history of costume, made of stone-colored cloth, and suddenly bursting into an orgy of black and stone-colored zebra stripings, just on a level with the cuffs, which are of the same arrangement?
The skirt, up to the bottom edge of the coat, has also the horizontal stripings, so that the general effect is of a blege jacket standing up in a black and blege basket.
New Stocking Device.
Women who are afflicted with perpetual Jacob's ladders in the tops of their stockings should adopt an amateur device that is successful in preventing such mishaps. Instead of using the steel hooks at the ends of the side and front clastics substitute quarter-inch satin ribbons. Fold a piece in the middle, sew it there to the elastic itself, leaving the two short ends free. On each stocking put two or three loops of silk braid to match in color and through these tie the ribbons. Fold a piece in the middle, sew it there to the elastic itself, leaving the two short ends free. On each stocking put two or three loops of silk braid to match in color and through these tie the ribbons. There will be no madeira work, as some one terms these tiny holes in the stockings made by the hooks, and the effect of the pink or blue satin ribbon bow is attractive.
Picturesque Tunic Frocks
Despite the success of taffetas which had such a run during the spring, it was inevitable that the soft clinging materials should sway for summer, and consequently modes are becoming somewhat simpler. What constitutes a pannier in the clisper silks becomes merely a folded drapery in silk linen and chiffon.
The favorite fashion of the moment is the tunic frock, for the tunic is such a versatile garment that it may be said to merge into the pannier in some of its simpler forms. Mousseline soie and lace take alternative parts in the latest Paris frocks to the tunics.
Malline in Vogue.
Hats.
Gulmpes.
And also tunics.
The most summery of chapeaux.
They're made on fine wire and are very thin.
Flowers trim them in profusion or else single blossoms are used.
ESTABLISHED AUGUST 25, 1883 AND ISSUED EVERY WEEK ON TIME SINCE.
A RETROSPECT
JUDGE ROBERT H. TERRELL OF
WASHINGTON, D.C., ADDRESSES
GRADUATING CLASS AT TUSK-
KEGEE INSTITUTE.
Tuskegee, Ala.—The commencement
address to the graduating class of this
school was delivered by Judge Robert
H. Terrell of the Municipal court of
the District of Columbia, Washington,
D. C. Judge Terrell is one of the most
prominent colored men I met the United
States—graduate of Harvard college
being commencement orator of the
class of 1883, also of the law department,
Howard university, Washington,
D. C. He was appointed by President
Roosevelt to the position of justice of
the peace of the District of Columbia.
He was reappointed by Mr. Roosevelt
and promoted by President Taft to
the position of municipal judge of
the District of Columbia. Judge Terrell's address was a discussion of "Negro Schools—A Retrospect."
"The negro has advanced an immeasurable distance since his ancestors first set foot on American soil. From 1619 to 1868 he yielded his liberty and gave his toll unrequited to a master; his body and his intellect he gave over to an institution that would have ground to powder a less hardy people. He has done more than simply survive these hard conditions. He has proved himself in many particulars equal to the severe and exacting demands of American civilization in all of its better forms. And what he has accomplished has been mally and chiefly attained in the southern states, and I believe that what he will do in the future worthy of record will be done here where there is scarcely any industrial prelude against him. In the south he has the best chance to win a place of economic importance, if he only takes advantage of the great opportunities at his very doors. It is for the negro to say whether or not the foreign labor which is pouring into our country through the gates of all of its seas ports shall successfully invade his province in the southern industrial system.
"The economic and industrial problem lies in the very heart of the social welfare of any race. Some one has said that the possibility of honest bread and butter is the noblest possibility of civilization. And for the negro that possibility is right here in the south—a section of the country to which he is already suited and to which it is not necessary for him to readjust himself.
"The vast resources of the south have for a very long period of time lain dormant and inactive. But this inertness has given way before an industrial ferment that is transforming and developing this part of our land into a new country, destined to equal, if not surpass all other sections in scientific advancement in agriculture and in a vast expansion in manufactures. In this revolution, as far as it has gone, the negro has played no inconsiderable part. And let us indulge the hope that he is not going to abandon the opportunity to profit by the great evolution in industrial methods which is going on at his very doors; and that he is not going to throw away his chances to attain here the substance by seeking the shadow in other far away places.
"The south is the field for the negro along all lines of activity, it matters not whether he be engaged in any one of the learned professions, or whether he be the skilled mechanic or unskilled laborer. Nowhere can we make make love us, but we can so conduct ourselves, and so do our work that we will command the good will of our neighbors and become indispensable to our employers.
"One cannot but be optimistic with regard to the future of the negro in this country when he notes the progress he has already made in the first half century of his freedom. And his accomplishments appear all the more marvelous when we contemplate the fact that the conditions which have confronted him have not always been just and fair and in some localities he is completely shut off from a participation in the best industrial activities which are freely offered to all of the other elements in our great cosmopolitan population.
"The spirit of negro progress is crea- ed and fostered in the negro schools now scattered all over the south. These institutions kindle in the minds of our young men and women aspirations for better things; they are pouring forth their influence to strengthen and to invigorate the moral status of the negro. Wherever we turn we see evidences of their benign and salutary effect in constant development of the young, not only in intellect but even in physical appearance. In these workshops men and women are being trained and drilled for citizenship in that empire where numbers are not the main thing, and where physical power does not control, but where intelligence and capability hold sway, and where this great machine which God has given us, called the brain, is constantly accentuating and emphasizing our contention that all men are created equal.
"The young men and young women who will leave Tuskegee today as graduates are going into the world under the most auspicious circumstances. They will take with them diplomas from a school of international reputation—an institution renowned for its development of students of power and efficiency. They will go prepared to enter the great struggle
of life without further apprenticeship, and with a confidence born of a training that insists upon the practical application of the theories taught in the school room.
"The late Dr. Mayo paid a high tribute to the kind of education which they have received here, when he said: 'Don't believe any man who tells you that this great movement of industrial education is only a clever device of your enemies to crowd down the colored man to the condition of European peasantry, only another name for the old-time chattel slavery. So far from this it is the science of sciences, the supreme art of fine art, the science of putting the trained mind and the consecrated manhood into the body, so that all labor may be exalted to a mental and moral discipline and the mighty saying of the great Apostle be verified, 'Know ye not that you are the temple of God, and the spirit of God dwelleth in you?' "And these graduates are fortunate, too, in having had for so long a time the exceptional privilege of listening to the words of wisdom which have fallen from the lips of Tuskegee's great principal.
"It was Mark Hopkins, the renowned president of Williams college, who made such a wonderful impress on his times as an educator that it was said, if Mark Hopkins were on one end of a log, and a student on the other, that log would be a university. And so it may be said of the great teacher and leader of men, Booker T. Washington, that wherever he is present and speaks, at place is the best of schools.
"I hope that the young men and women who are going out from this institution into the world as teachers and artisans will appreciate the fact that they are to be the leaders of their people in the communities in which they locate. And as such leaders they will render their followers the great service if they will recognize and tell them of their defects as well as sing their praises when they merit them. Men cannot be helped by more adulation. Nations and races can only be great in proportion as they play the part well in the movements of the age.
"For near! 50 years the negro, as a free agent, has been in touch with one of the world's most intense and highly developed civilizations. And in spite of the keen and almost brutal competition in the industrial field, he has been able to lay a substantial foundation on which to build the structure by which he is to be judged in the future as a real and positive force in American life. On account of his racial identity, the struggle for him is just a little harder than it is for the other man. But our faith looks up when we call to mind the fact that the laws which determine the destinies of races are impartial and eternal. If the negro is true to himself, faithful to his obligations, and appreciative of the grandeur of his opportunities, he will some day take a worthy and permanent place in the higher region of American life.
"Young men and young women, knowledge is power and so is wealth. And no race, whatever its color may be, whatever its condition in the past has been, that possesses these two powerful elements of civilization, can long be kept from God's final day of light. Let the words of that great philosopher, Frederick Douglass, sing deep into your hearts: 'Take courage from the example of all the religious denominations,' said he, 'that have sprung up since the days of Martin Luther. Each in its turn has been oppressed and persecuted. 'Yet all in turn have conquered the prejudice and hate of their surroundings. Greatness does not come to any people on flowery beds of ease. We must fight to win the prize. No people to whom libery is given can hold it so firmly or wear it so grandly as those who wrench their liberty from the iron hand of the tyrant. The hardships and dangers involved in the struggle give strength and toughness to the character, and enables it to stand firm in storm as well as in sunshine."
"My young friends, your day has dawned, your sun has risen, and there is nothing more certain than when the morning sun has once appeared above the horizon it keeps its course on to the fulness of noonday."
TO GET RID OF ANTS.
That household pest which is such an annoyance in the home—the small ant which is here, there and everywhere—can be gotten rid of, and Wilson Newell, state entomologist of Texas at the Agricultural and Mechanical college of Texas, tells how.
"Have the drugsist prepare a mixture," said Mr. Newell, as follows: "White arsenic (poison), half a gram; cane sugar, 20 grams, water, 100 c. c. "This mixture will make about three ounces of 'ant poison.' It would be well to have the drugsist add to it a little red confectioner's sugar, so that the color will give warning to the household of its poisonous nature. A small dish of this liquid should be placed under tables, refrigerators, etc., where the ants are in the habit of traveling. They will eat of it greedily for a white, and then will desert the neighborhood entirely. The solution should be kept in a safe place away from children and pets, and the usual precautions should be taken as in the handling and use of other poisons."
GLASSES TO BE NUMBERED.
The glasses used in Hungarian cafes will be numbered in the near future as a means of preventing the spread of disease by the promiscuous interchange of drinking glasses.
BRUGE GIVES STATISTICS
BAYS THERE ARE 142 PUBLIC HIGH SCHOOLS FOR NEGRO YOUTH IN AMERICA-LARGE INCREASE IN 30 YEARS-FACILITIES FOR EDUCATION VERY GOOD.
Washington, D. C.—In presenting diplomas to the graduates of the Armstrong Manual Training school at Howard theater, Roscoe Conkling Bruce, assistant superintendent of public schools, said in part:
"I appreciate' the honor which has been extended to me by the principal and faculty of the Armstrong school. The privilege of presenting the diplomas to this rare group of young men and women is one which would appeal to the least imaginative of men. I think of the ambitions of mothers and fathers that are realized today. I think of the struggles and sacrifices these faithful men and women have made to give their boys and girls the opportunities of an education prolonged through twelve or thirteen years. I think of the moral and intellectual victories which these young men and women have won over distractions of a thousand names and over the arduous tasks of school life. I think of their enduring effort and patience and determination. I think of the happy, serviceable lives they will lead in this and other communities. I think of the inestimable power for refinement and for social uplift which they will exert wherever their lots may be cast in the difficult years that are to come—I rejoice and am exceedingly glad.
"But I should do injustice to the significance of this occasion did I not mention the larger problem in which the endeavors of the Armstrong school are involved. In those cities and states where separate schools for our youth are maintained what progress has been made in extending high school opportunities? How do the facilities which exist here at the capital of the nation compare with those in other localities? Is there anything in the local situation which blurs us take heed that substantial improvement may result? At these questions on this day of reloicing we shall do well to glance.
"My first question relates to the enlargement of facilities for secondary education in those communities where separate colored high schools are maintained. In 1880 there were 36 public high schools for colored youth in the southern states, with 5,237 students; in 1890, 63, with 11,480 students, and in 1901, 100, with 12,202 students.
"In 1910 there were 142 public high schools for negro youth in America. These schools were scattered in 21 states and the District of Columbia; they enrolled 8,973 students, of whom 32 per cent were boys.
From 1880 to 1910—a period of only 30 years—the number of high schools grew from 36 to 142—an increase of 294 per cent, and the number of students from 5,237 to 8,973, an increase of 71 per cent. Truly these facts reflect great credit not only upon the states and cities which made it possible, but also upon this great democratic nation.
"These young men and women before us are especially to be congratulated upon the fact that they have some reasonable conception of the life careers upon which they are to enter; they have enjoyed some preliminary training for those careers. The most eminent of American educators has recently remarked: 'In secondary education the high schools of commerce and mechanic arts have a decided advantage as regards motive power within the pupils over ordinary high schools. A pupil in a commercial high school or a mechanic arts high school has made a primary decision with regard to his life career; he has determined the first direction of his preparatory work, although later he may come to branchings of the way where a new decision will be needed.' You are to be congratulated upon that primary decision.
"Some of you will immediately enter upon the business of earning a livelihood. Prove worthy of your education and training, prove true sons and daughters of the Armstrong school. Armstrong will remember you, will encourage you, will be proud of you."
WALNUTS FROM FRANCE.
The best walnuts in the world—at least they have that reputation—are those growing around Grenoble, France, and a singular fact about them is that at least three-quarters of the entire production are transported across the ocean to be eaten in New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago and other large American cities. The calcareous soil of southeastern France appears to be particularly favorable to the walnut. On the rising land at the base of the French Alps the nut trees often form veritable cultivated forests. The finest variety, the "mayette," has a light-colored shell and a broad, flat base, on which it readily stands upright.
THE SOIL AND MAN
The Kansas Farmer says: "Aside from the vicissitudes of the weather, practically all of the misfortunes that come to the farmer or his-farm can be traced to the haste to secure the present dollar without providing for the future good of his soil. Take care of the soil and it will take care of you, and any other method is a downhill pull."
AFRO-AMERICAN CULLINGS
One of the most informing papers read the Tuskegee International conference on the Negro, as published in The Southern Workman for June, was that on "Education and Racial Traits," by Mr. William I. Thomas, professor of sociology in the University of Chicago. Prof. Thomas takes no stock in race superiority or inherent intelligence as an inheritance. The children of every race have to be taught all that their fathers knew, and any break in the education from sire to son starts the child back from the highest to the lowest point of cultural education and refinement. That is to say, education and culture are not transmissible, as an inheritance, from the father to the son. These are locked up in the son, and require the same long cultural process to unlock them as was required in the case of the father. The same theory holds in the case of environment and social status; these must be continued unbroken from father to son or relapse is reasonably certain. Talking about handicaps to individual success or unsuccess, Prof. Thomas says: It may naturally occur to some of you that race prejudice is the most serious and oppressive form of isolation and cause of mental backwardness in the case of the Negro, and I am certainly not inclined to make light of prejudice. At the same time I do not regard it as a profoundly serious matter. It is something you can get by—it may even be a stimulation. Compared with slavery or serfdom, it is trivial. I am now making some studies among the Slavic peasants of Europe, for the peasant was and is mentally as backward as the Negro is or as he was in slavery. I have found even more backward cases. But my main reason for speaking lightly of prejudice is that it does not successfully isolate. One of the gentlemen from Jamaica who excited your interest here by his mental pose and the nimbleness of his wits confessed that he had studied in some of the most important centers of learning in the world. The point worth emphasizing is that race prejudice is "the most serious and oppressive form of isolation," need not be a drawback but may be made a "stimulation" to mental, physical and material development and growth. The initiator of anything is not the originator of the thing, and that which may be good for the originator of it may be destructive for the originator of it. Mr. F. G. Peck, in the same number of the Workman, talking about "Conservation for the Indians," says that the difference between the Negro and Indian is that the Indian has retained his mental attitudes, his social isolation and his manhood independence, refusing to relinquish his own for those of the white man, and is the stronger for doing so; while "the unviable present social position of the Negro masses is undeniably partly due to the way in which they have faithfully allowed their native originally to become annihilated. . . Surely the experiment in mild sublimation has not proved an advantage to the Negro, so far as his social rank is concerned; . . while in the same issue, talking about "Education Among the Bantu of Southeast Africa," Mr. Maurice S. Evans of the African Society of London, takes the same view of the matter as Mr. Peck does. He says: It seems to me that in breaking down this life we, the Europeans of South Africa, are placed in a position of responsibility to our misheaded accept. To leave the native subject to the corrupting influences of our civilization in his present unprepared state, is to leave the door open to disaster for him and for us. And if for no other reason than to act as a counterpoise for this destructive process now going on, it is imperative that some influence for good should be brought to bear upon him. To go back to the old life is impossible, the new is full of danger to a race so unprepared for change; the Europeans of South Africa are responsible for this and it is our palpable duty to take steps to minimize or remove the danger and give the native guidance and opportunity for a higher and better life. And I must confess, the only method I can see is education in its broadest sense, which includes moral and religious instruction. It is problematic, however, if the broadest English education will ever make out of the Bantu as good and strong a people that have cultural education of him along Bantu lines. He was a simple pastoral people, and education along his lines of thought and habits made him a strong African Bantu and not a weak English Bantu, thinking in English and talking in language and religion. Far from allowing race prejudice and segregation to affect them disastrously, American Negroes should make them serve as opportunity for more natural culture of the native genius and virtues, with the advantage of adopting so much of the white man's genius and virtues as are lacking in their own. We have foreign colonies in every section of the country that are doing this, and the Negro communities have made a good beginning in doing so, and should be encouraged to do so—New York Age
If thought photography ever becomes practical the world will learn some astonishing secrets.
Indicative of the south's industrial awakening we must consider the improvement in southern stock raising; for the stock raising spirit is spreading over the south. In Mississippi alone we find four cattle breeders' associations. Almost every breed of sheep is tried in the south today. Within the last decade hog raising in the south has been revolutionized. A few years ago one could hardly see anything but unmitigated "Razorback." The best that could be looked for was a little group of grades. But now this is all changing, the south is supplanting the "razorbacks" with thoroughbred hogs, such as the Essex and the Berkshire.
Not only is the south awakened in the matter of stock raising, but she is becoming just as active in fruit growing. Within my own memory the south has become the fruit market for the whole country, instead of as formerly, importing fruit from the north.
Neither is the south asleep in regard to her opportunities and possibilities in vegetables. Truck gardening has been given great attention in the south within the last few years. All along the coast from Norfolk to Galveston, trains and streams are well laden for months each year with early vegetables.
Having briefly considered the awakening仁 gin regard to the stock, fruit and vegetable raising in particular; and agriculture in general, I pass to another phase, and note the south's awakening with reference to her mineral resources, of which coal and iron are among those of first importance. Extensive coal and iron mining operations are of comparative recent origin, yet it is in the south that the most rapid progress in opening of new mines is being made today. She has doubled her coal output in the last few years. Alabama mines nearly as much coal today as the entire south dived in 1885. History now records such stapendous increase as we see going on in the southern mining today.
Another phase of this awakening is that of manufacturing. For years the south regarded cotton seeds a nuisance, and dumped them into the river in order to get rid of them, but she has long since awakened to the full knowledge of the importance of cotton seed. Today there is a great demand for all cotton seed that can be produced. Having learned the economic value of these seeds, the south is now extracting millions of gallons of oil, and using the residue as food for stock and as fertilizers to enrich the soil.
Her 85 ice factories, 125 foundries and machine shops, I Besserman steel roll mill, 40 miscellaneous iron works, 30 stove foundries, 5 gas works, 20 agricultural implement factories, 40 cotton mills, 60 furniture factories, 90 tobacco factories, 100 flour mills and 60 lumber mills are incontrovertible evidence of the south's industrial awakening.
Although the south's recent activity is productive industries has attracted world-wide attention, not less has her industrial awakening in the building of railroads, which may be seen and heard in "the fierce meteoric of thunderous and clattering railroad trains" sweeping through the length and breadth of the southland, and exclamating to northern travelers that the south, the industrial "Rip Van Winkle" of this nation, has awakened from a long, long industrial slumber, and today is delving in the depths of the earth, in quest of hidden coal and iron, multiplying furnace blasts in iron and steel factories, developing natural resources, converting forests into fertile fields, reclaiming waste lands, stretching better highways over the surface of the south, and causing a wilderness to blossom as a rose.
The colored natives of some parts of Georgia are considerably agitated over a prophecy recently uttered by a new-born babe. The prophecy foretold the death of the babe, which was to happen and did happen in four days thereafter, and the death of the mother, which was to occur and did occur in four weeks; and the end of the world, which is to occur in November! And it is this latter part that is sorely troubling the colored folks. Whether this old world is really going to come to an end in November remains to be seen, but the thing that worries us is not that it is coming to an end, but in the words of the old preacher, "My God, which end?"—"Old Hickory."
We can't all raise white potatoes, but most of us can and do eat them. It is interesting to know that the American negroes have a "Potato King" of their own, and a real good looking one. His name is J. G. Groves, and he lives at Edwardsville, Kan. He raises 75,000 bushels a year. We have found, too, that it is easier to buy potatoes at so much per than to raise them. It is easier to buy anything, if you have the price, than to raise it.
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J. 8. HALL’S, 3121 Central Ave.
L. SCHWARTZ’S, 2921 Central Ave. Open Sunday.
PURCHASE 9. ©. SCHROEDER'S, Cuyahoga Bldg. Open Sunday.
THE ELMER F. BOYD'S, 2604 Central Ave.
“ 8 F. VALENTINE’S, 2130 Central Ave.
"GAZETTE" AT sam. FERTMAN, 3608 Central Ave.
MILLER'’S, 2249 E. 105th St.
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Mrs, H. Justice of Central Av., is
visiting relatives in Dayton.
Mrs, L. J. Barehart of Lockland, is
visiting Mrs. Frank Perkins.
Rey. Chas. Bundy is attending a
board meeting at Wilberforce.
Mrs, F. T. Berry will leave Saturday
to visit relatives in Mobile, Ala.
Prof, W. H. Lucas of Cadiz, was in
the city, last week attending the S. 8.
Institute.
Mrs. Rosa Smith and daughter, of
Springfield, are Miss Hazel Moun-
tain’s guests.
Misa Mamie Banks of Dayton, a del
egate to the S. S. Institute, is visiting
a sister here.
Arthur Lee, Maurice Cowdery, W.
©. Fowler and B, B. Whiting visited in
Detroit, Sunday.
Mrs, F. Dennis and sister, Mrs. C.
“Norris: of Detroit, are guests of Mrs.
C. Montgomery of E. 83d. St.
1L. G, Adkins took his mother to the
Pittsburg Old Folks’ Home, last week.
It is the finest one of the kind in this
section.
Mrs. Body of E. 7ist, St., is spend-
ing the summer at Erieside, 0., and
Mrv, Jessie Evans Chinn, at Pt, Chau-
taugua, N. Y.
Mr, and Mrs. Wm. H. Whiting en-
tertained at cards, last Wednesday
evening, in honor of Mrs. Florence
Burke of N. Y, City.
Miss Ida Jackson of Canton, a mem-
ber of the class of 1912, Howard Unl-
versity, Washington, D. C., is visiting
Mrs. Jas, Owen of the E. ©,
Principal F. R, Davis of Sherman
Industrial Institute of Huntsville, Ala.,
a resident of this city forty years ago,
is here in the interest of hiis school.
Dr, J.T. Suggs of Florence, Ala.,
will join his wife, Mrs. Fannie Shook
Suggs, here on Aug. 15, to visit her
sister, Miss Willa M. Shook and their
Parents, until the last.of the month.
Mr. and Mrs, Harry Dunnington of
Indianapolis, were guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Singleton of Pine Av.
the past week, having visited one
week in Detroit and Windsor, Canada.
Reys, Chas. Bundy, E. H. Smith, W.
G. Webster and F. G, Sneison, in ad:
dition to the ministers present and
others, endorsed the meeting at Cory
MM. EB. church, Monday evening; so Dr.
Bailey informs us.
Rey. J, B. Davis returned last Fri
day from Pittsburg, where he spent
‘a week, most successfully, in evangel
istic work. Drs. Bundy, Bailey, Burr,
‘Webster, Snelson, Lowery and Thomp-
ton also called on The Gazette, re
cently.
F. L. Rowell, of Cassells & Rowell,
our new restauranteurs, at 2613 Cen
tral Av., (Adkins’ old stand), returned
last Wednesday, from Oberlin and sev:
eral points in’ that vicinity. | Their
chef is one of the fery best in the
city. Try her excellent cooking; also
pastry. ‘The restaurant is open eve-
nings until midnight,
‘The Woman's Suffrage party will
make final campaign plans at an im-
portant-emeting to be held this Sat
Uarday at 2 p. m., at Elks’ hall, 1031
Huron road. Speakers: Misses Eliza
beth Hauser, Eleanor Brannen and
Florence Allen. You are urged to be
present and to bring interested
friends. Myrta L. Jones, first vice
chairman.
‘The Old Folk’s and Working Girls
Home ous have not helped
‘es by participating in that
‘Luna park affair, Thursday. They will
fing it gut to their porzow, before “the
‘end of the chapter”. Endorsing Luna
park colorlines in that manner, is a
mighty poor way to retain the conf
dence and support of the self and race
respecting members of the race in
this city, to say the least.
D. C., is visiting Mrs. Edward Daw
‘Miss Bertha Blue, sister and others
went to Hampton, Va., recently, to at
tend the N. F. of Women's clubs.
Lunch room, soda-water, cigars. and
‘tobacco; the best homecooking at
Geo. H. Randolph's, 3020 Central Av.
Miss Madeline Nooks will return
Monday, from a two weeks’ visit with
Rey: and Mrs. Maxwell of Middletown,
Wesley Jackson of Hudson Av., S
E,, spent Sunday week in Chicago, the
/guest of Geo. Bundy and Sam, Field
ing.
chase copies of The Gazette at Mil:
ler’s Cigar and News Store, 2249 F.
105th St,
Miss Mattie Dexter has. returned
from a pleasant visit with Mrs. Lucy
Whiting Hanshary and Mrs. S. Free-
man of Painesville,
Mr. Andrew MeSpadden and Mr.
‘Fred. Adsit left, Wednesday, for
‘visit in Chatham, Ont., Toronto and
‘other Canadian cities.
The Cleveland (0.) Gazette entered
lication—on time every week—last
Week. Some record that! Editor
Harry C. Smith is the dean of the
Afro-American editorial corps.—Bx.
Mrs, L. S. Jones and niece, Dorothy
Stanley, have returned from Circle
‘ville, where they were called by the
death of the former's father, Mr. Nel
‘son Foster, an old citizen of that city
|__Dr. R. F. Boyd who came to Cleve
and, many years ago, courting Miss
Rachel Walker, now living in London
Eng.. died last week at his home ir
Nashville, Tenn. He was one of our
leading, successful physicians.
There is considerable just criticism
‘of several members of the advisory
board of the Working Girls’ Home or
‘ganization, by several of our minis
‘ters and a number of other persons
IC it Is to be an ultimate success, there
must be several changes and soon.
Mt, Haven Baptist chureh’s pastor
will preach Sunday morning on “God.
‘the Author of the New Life"; in. the
‘evening on “God's Pleasure in Man's
Happiness”. 8. 8. and B. Y. P. U. at
the usual hours.
Mrs. Hattie Brown Williams of Ann
Arbor, Mich., was the guest of Mrs.
Jennie Dyer ‘of 2602 Central Av.. for
fa week, and left, Saturday, for Ober
lin en route home. She has many ol
friends in this city.
Persons in the vicinity of B, 36th
and E, 37th streets and Central av.
can purchase copies of The Gazette ai
Sam. Fertman’s newsstore, 3608 Cen:
tral av. and those further east can
find thom at Brennen’s news-stor,
4401 Central av. Tell your friends
and acquaintances.
“It you are going to buy an overcoat,
suit or just a single pair of trousers,
go to Justice, the tailor, one of the
‘race—4316 Central Ave, Also clean:
ing, repairing and pressing. See ad.
‘Yertlsement elsewhere in this paper
"For a good time—where you wil
‘meet all of your friends—wait for St.
Andrews’ Episcopal chureh’s annual
outing and lake-ride. ‘The day is Mon
day, August 19, and the place, Put-in
bay, The committee reserves the
right to exclude all objectionable per
sons, ‘The boat will leave ON TIME
at 8a. m,, rain or shine. Fare, seven
ty-five cents, adults; twenty-five cents,
children,
‘The Lydia Association of St. John’s
A.M, E, church, held its anniversary
celebration, Sunday evening, and was
honored with the presence of a num:
ber of members from Detroit. Rev. C.
M. Hogans of Bellaire, will preach
Sunday morning and ‘evening. Dr.
Bundy is at Wilberforce, attending a
board meeting. Mrs. Rosa Laporte and
‘Mra. N. Ellis of Detroit, represented
vo Parent Society of that city. Dr.
Bundy's sermon was fine.
“The Union Club of St. Andrew will
“trolley” to Puritas Springs again,
‘Monday afternoon and evening, Aus
‘ust Sth, The July 15th affair was a
‘success notwithstanding the inclem-
ent weather, Stewart's best orches
tra will be in attendance, Aug. 5. Do
not fail to attend the Union Club as
sembly. EACH ONE IS A SUC
CESS, RAIN OR SHINE!
Ernest 0. Orsburn left Millwood
Va., Monday, where he has spent sev:
eral weeks, for Pittsburg and Cleve
land to visit his niece, Mrs. Ida B.
Cash, who returned the first of the
week from Toledo where she attend
ed a convention. Mr. Orsburn is a
member of the faculty of St. Augus
tine School, Raleigh, N. C.. and an old
Cleveland “boy”. He will also visit
his other niece, Mrs. Sadie Ciscc
Bolden, in Chicago, before returning
south, this fall.
Mrs, Edward Pugh of 2165 E. 22d
St, assisted by her daughters, Mrs
Ina Perkins and Miss Lovesta Strange
entertained, last week | Monday, In
honor of Mra. Nellie Smiley, public
‘school teacher of Glasgow, Ky., and
sister of Mr. and Mrs. H. Murrell o
E. 49th.St., whom she is visiting. ‘The
table was centered with pink chrysan
themums, and covers were laid foi
twelve: Messrs. Shirley, Murrell
Crossen and Smith; Mesdames Smile)
and Murrell; Miss Lee and Master
Murrell. An excellent musical_ pro
¢ram_wvee fursished by Messrs. Smith
| AGENTS! READI
} When your Gazettes are not
} delivered” on Friday’ tornings,
| gall at your Central Postofice |
} General Delivery Window for.
/ them In the afternoon of the
| game day. Heiter, |
HE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, 0, SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 1912.
eee eee ae meee:
-auao £0} ‘uoapr9 ‘su eb “AIMpY
omosjaa ase {Ly ‘9x0 st Bout {TN
AjsupuES PU opero “soneq wos}
Spuatiat “OD ANI weAiodonayy om <q
toa “giet “cL venaNy “<uepuoyy seq
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Washington T. Ragland called on
‘The Gazette, Monday afternoon, and
gave It one of the most interesting
‘Secounts of the Grays" recent great
‘rip to the coast, that one would care
to listen to. It was very amusing too,
especially when he told of Chet Mil:
fer’s. Inglorious attempt ‘to. walk to
the bottom of the "grand canyon” of
Arizona, "Wash" says it was a sight
to see a burro return with the chef
tied, stomach down, on its back, led
by an Indian guide, late in. the atter-
noon, that day. Miller left early in
the morning and before noon was “all
in", and not half way down, The
‘guide found him stretched out on his
back on the ground, “Warh.” says.
The chet had boasted of his ability to
“walk, even under an Arizona sun ‘and
‘on lis sunbaked earth, up or down
‘hill, long distances.
Quarterly meeting at Cory M. B.
church, Sunday, Rev. Harper of 8. C.,
preached in the morning, Rey. W. @
Webster in the afternoon and Rev
Jos, “Courtney in the evenint. ‘The
Lord's supper was partaken of by 210,
[AML the services were well attended,
[District conference at Bellaire, next
Week. Mrs. JS. ‘Thomas and Miss
Loueila Dillard are delegates trom the
“pworth league; Miss Beatrice Jones,
“Mr and Mrs. 8. Le Schooler from the
‘8.8 Mrs, Mary Morris and. Mrs.
Caroline Prince trem the Ladies’ Aid:
‘Mrs. SK. Hunter and Miss Anna
‘Pheips from the W. H. M, 8.; Richard
Sissle and W. A. Brown from the
‘Brotherhood. ‘The mass meeting, Mon-
‘day evening, to protest against “jim-
‘erowism’" at Luna park, was attended
by many of our best people from the
churches, and pastors, who are loud
|in their condemnation ‘of Rev, Paxton
[and the Cleveland. Association of Cal
ored Men as a result of their shame-
ful talk and conduct, respectively,
after 10 p.m. and in the church, too.
“Tt was mot only an outrage as far as
‘the meeting was concerned but. also
[Iniserable treatment to. accord the
‘presiding officer, the pastor, Rev. G.
‘A. Sissle, the church, and the Micis:
feortials Gul gone ts
‘meeting. Our Law & Order Reform
Teague-was also well represented. The
“Epworth League captains served re
\freshments after the adjournment.
The “bulldozing” tactics resorted to
[by the Cleveland Association of Col
Jored Aen but emphasized the need of
‘just such a meeting and for the pur-
poses for which it Was called.
|The Ministers’ Alliance mass meet
ing at Cory M. &, church, Monday eve
“ning, was’ unqualifiedly a most sue
cessful protest. against. “emancipadion
|celebratlons" in general and the al
feged “emancipation. celebration” of
Thursday, at Luna park, in particular
The pastor of the church, Rev. G. A
|Sissle. presided, Rov. iH. M. Lowery
opened ‘with prayer, and the speakers
included Dr. H. C. Bailey, Geo. W.
|Johnson, Revs. J. LE, Burr'and BW.
Paxton, P. H. Lewis, Mrs, Blanche
Gilmore and the editor of The Gazette.
“The 8. 8. room ‘was crowded to the
‘doors. ‘The Alliance is due the un
Stinted PRAISE of all manly and wo
[manly members of the race, for the
‘courage and manhood exhibited in
holding the meeting. It was unques-
tionably their DUTY so to do, in order
[to inform their members and all oth-
“ers of the race interested, as to their
duty to the race and themselves, in
“staying away from a park that insults
and degrades our people by. putting
them down lower than. the ‘lowest
“whites inthe community, by their
Unlawful diserimmation inthe park
‘dance hall, skating. rink and. swinn-
[ming pool on nearly every day of the
year that the park Is open except pos-
[bly Aug. 1. Dr. Bailey, Mr. Lewis
ei’ Rev' burr made espesially:etrong
‘pleas. Mr. Johnson exposed the meth
‘ote of the Cleveland Association of
Colored Men, the promoters of the af-
far of Thursday, while Mrs. Gilmere
told of the splendid stand against t,
‘of our City, Federation of Women’s
clubs of which she is president, and
“whose resolutions anent. the matter
“were published in ‘The Gazette last
“Week, “The discordant note, and about
[the weakest “speech” we have ever
“heard anywhere and one that. 95. per
‘cent of the large audience listened to
[with much regret and in a very rest-
‘Tess manner, was sounded by Mr. Pax
‘ton. who aid not seem to understand
“anything Im conneetion with the meet:
Jing, according to his own statements,
‘after sitting all evening and listening
{o the speakers. Earller in the eve
‘ning she had. refused several. invita-
tions’ to. speak. ‘The reason for this
“appeared clear late in. the. evening
‘tabout 10:30 p, m.) when the ten or
‘fitteen members of the Cleveland AS-
sociation of Colored Men filed in from
a meeting in the Clayton block, their
purpose also clear. ‘They " were
thwarted however by motions. by Mr
Herbert Tarlor and ihe ator of The
fazette which “choked” thelr. incl
font elfort to break up. tho meeting in
a "row", AND INA CHURCH, TOO.
“They lett greatly chagrined at their
failure, amidst the laughs of many of
he lage audience nearly all of whom
Were greatly indignant atthe “curb-
“Stone polltien! methods" they sought
to invoke in the portals of a chureh, in
‘a chameful effort to stop a protest
“that should have been voiced by every
“manly and womanly, self and Face re
Shecting member of the taco. in. the
igi. for weeks past. When an Afro-
‘American, and especially a Negro min-
“ister, undertakes to plead in extenta-
“tion of discrimination against the men,
| omen and children of the race, and
inges the patronizing of a park. oF
Jother mangement “that so diserim:
nates, and, to, In a meeting held by
“his brother ministers of the race, to
protest against that very thing, little
Temains to be said. Tt is the “limit”.
What about an alleged association of
What about an alleged association of
‘To Clean Fountains.
‘The best way to clean drinking
fountains which cannot be reached on
the inside, is to use scalding hot wa-
ter and a big handful of shot. Fill
the fountain about a quarter full of
hot water, and then pour fn the shot.
Shake the vessel briskly so tbat the
shot will scrape along the bottom and
aides of the fountain. This will re-
move the scum and leave the fountain
sweet and clean.
< 1 FORD'S
9 ed (MAKES MARSH, RINKY OR CURLY HAIR
\. >, (Goss SOFTER ANO MORE PLIABLE,
NPV | Eres worn ans
=< THE LENGTH WILL PERMIT. UNEXCELED
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(OF SEALE BEWARE OF IMITATIONS, GET THE GENUINE, PUT UP IM
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‘GY PeRv. FORD'S ROVAL WHITE
"av FORD i
sx LONM TOR THE COMPLEXION,
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UPON APPLICATION WILL NOT IRRITATE
he’ Most beLlcare SKIN UNENCELLED
FOR ECZEMA. SALT RNEUM, PIMPLES,
ROUGH SKIN AND EREEKTES oes
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TAnvERIUREURESETIOTANE
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B. & M. HAIR DRESS-
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A delightfully Perfumed Hair-Po
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curly hair soft, pliant and glossy. It
i not only an’ ideal dressing: for the
hair but wonderful hair-grower
It works directly on the scalp and
roots of the hair, relieving dandrutl
and other diseases ‘of the scalp-skin,
thereby causing it to grow Tick, lone
and Iuxnriou,
B.& M. Hair Dressing
and is sold strictly on a guarantee,
BROWN DRUG Ce.
2742 Central Ave.
Selling Agents,
Travis & Strawder
‘Central Transfer Co.”
CAREFUL MOVERS OF FURNI
TURE and PIANOS
Moving Vans
Piano Hoisting a Specialty
Light sist'Wemvy Expressing.
Cederd Weinssiy Aticesea tn
Prides. Ressonahie:
Office and Residence:
2903 Central Ave., Cleveland, Ohlo,
Guy. Gen. 8182R.
TELEPHONES:
Bell, Eddy 11001.
Cay, Central 1745R.
Bell Main 8848, uy. Cont. 7607 L
Globe Printing Co.,
PRINTERS AND STATIONERS,
1897 East Ninth Street
ERA EM ELE
Enjoy a good clean
Meal at Adkins old
stand 2613 Central Av.
Cassells & Rowell.
Proprietors.
THE BEST MEALS AT ALL HOURS
Open Evenings
RRR RH HR EHR AER ES
Theodore B. Green,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
508.510 Superior Building.
Office, Main 3078.
Residence, Eddy 2086-R.
CLEVELAND, 0.
Public Stenographer
MISS LUCAS
2710 Scovill Ave.
Office hours, 2:30 to 6:20 p. m.
Committee, Lodge und all meeting
notices on portals or otherwise, 3
desired,
A SPECIALTY.
MANDEL'Ss
HOME-MADE BAKERY
Cor. E, 37th St. and Central Ave
Where you can get all kinds of
FRESH BREAD, FANCY
CAKES PIES& BUNS.
Birthday and . Wedding
Cakes.
GIVE MANDEL A GALL.
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LADIES! LADIES! LADIESIIT
Call your lady friends’ and
acquaintances’ altention to our
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departments and. thus encour.
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‘The Gazette regularly. onli
the editor |
Rufus S. Justice
4310 Central) Ave, Phone #, 2340-8
Wiahest ‘Grate of ‘Tallering for
baits Costa. ona euiete Wade
order.
CLEANING, DYEING & REPAIRING
(soot called for and delivered 6
ELECTRIC
MASSAGE a
H. A. GAINES
TonsoriaL |. ,
ARTIST :
3131 Central
Ave. :
(HAIR POMADE AND TONIC)
Qiiinade will beautify, Improve and
preserve the hair. Will remove Dan.
draft. “Price, 25 cents. Free sample
SEEBY’S “QUINACOMB,”
a comb made of specially tempered
metal so as to retain the proper de-
gree of heat, Used in conjunetion
with Quinade will remove the curl
from and straighten the hair. Price,
SEEBY DRUG CO.
NEW VORK.
Quinade and Quinacombs are sold_in
Cleveland by Brown Drug Co, 2743
Central Aves cor. 28th St; Tho Peo
ole's Drug (Sore, cor, Central Ave. and
ip, 33rd St.; Spenser's Pharmacy, 2146
2is0 Ceniral” Ave, S. [1 Zeldler's
Drng Store, 2011 E. Sth St, cor. Seo
vill, and druggists in general,
® = .
Ay Ne
OT ONE
GLASSES Jamu Titan
“Hous
P. A, HOERET,
Optical Specialist.
Eyes Examined Free. Satisfaction
Guaranteed.
11 The ‘Tastor Arcade,
Bell, Doan 1388-J, Residence
East 794, Office
Dr, Walter S. Biggs,
Dentist.
(A member of the race.)
4710 Central Ave, Cleveland, 0.
Hours: 8 to 12. a.m, 1 to 5 p.m
‘Sundays and Evenings by
‘Appointment
A Complete Line
DRY GOODS, LADIES’ and GENTS’
FURNISHINGS.
J. LOMSKY
Double Stamps on Tuesdays and
Fridays.
Be
The Best Place
on Central Ave.,
to get a Good Lunch
and Quick Service
J, W. CRAWFORD, PROR.,
8183 CENTRAL AVE.
Open Evenings for the Accommodation
Wa Thenter teaee:
poet eee
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a
MRS. A. M. POPE-TURNBO
PROPRIETOR
“Poro” College
3100 Pine St. St. Louis, Mo.
‘THE “PORO” SYSTEM of Scalp and
Hair treatment is based on the lat-
est scientific and sanitary methods,
effecting a healthy scalp thus promot-
ing a growth of beautiful hair.
‘The “Poro” preparations used in con-
nection with the treatment are made
and sold exclusively by myself, having
the exclusive right to that name; and
1, alone, know the secret of the com-
position that bears that name, Our
claim has always been that when the
hair begins to grow as the result of
the use of “PORO," it will
continue to do so if only thescalp
and hair be kept clean. — This san-
itary method of treatment is also
having the desired effect in helping
to prevent the spread of diseases, for
it is a fact that hair in an unsanitary
condition carries the germs of disease
which often prove fatal to. innocent
persons coming in contact with them,
For treatment, call on or address:
Miss KATIE 8, COLLIER,
4812 Payne Ave,
Cleveland, Ohio.
| eo
QUINADE g@&
| GROWS HAIR REMOVES DANDRUFF @ <fgen
G The best preparation for making Kinky, Coarse a as
Hair soft and pliable and easy to put up in any Sa
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LIBERAL SAMPLE SENT ON APPLICATION ‘=
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QUINACOMB ‘x7
G To staighten the hair quickly, use in conjunc- Gj
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comb made of specially tempered metal 20 as to VE SAS /Y \'\ \ >
retain the proper degree of heat. This comb can also“ "eee
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QUINASOAP «=
Before using Quinade my hair
@ The ideal shampoo soap thoroughly cleanses was thin and coarse and 1 was fast
the scalp and is especially adapted to be wed in brcomin bald. Atscon a wed
connection with Quinade, splay cals ‘oor eke big ad
SEEBY DRUG CO., NEW YORK 7: (Name on file at our ofee.)
Gs ( es) re BALL GLOVE AND Cc
> THE BOYS’ MAGAZINE
, . MOTHS
We wil so elon wou cats cot,
Ego hisuye, (Walter Camp cae Ea
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RRR HHH H HEHE EER
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The Advertised
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Pe
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senaasil eke oie meee
fa this peper because, thelr
Sonam
Pool
BY DR. G, W, BELL, PINE BLUFF
ARK., AN EX-SLAVE AND AN
EX-STATE SENATOR.
Many writers and public speakers claim that there is no real problem concerning the negro any more than that which relates to any other race; that the application of the "golden rule" will destroy it; that if he is given a square deal in the struggle of life and let alone, that he will solve it. Some advance the idea that wealth and education are the most potent factors and essential requisites necessary for its solution. But the one idea which attracts more attention than all the others combined is the industrial education which makes him "a better hewer of wood and a better drawer of water," and chooses for him the south in preference to all the other countries of the earth. For 45 years past, more or less, these various propositions have been before the American people and the other civilized nations of the earth, and it is strange to say, yet 'tis true, that they are far from the solution of this problem as they were when it first began. There are many elements in the formation of this all absorbing proposition which have never been discussed in the public forum heretofore. We therefore admit the existence of this problem, which began as we understand it from the flood and has continued from that period until the present day. When Nimrod sought to be independent of God and conceived within his fertile imagination the building of a tower broad enough and high enough to over come every known obstacle to his ambition, a shadow indicative of his awful sin and disobedience was reflected and indelibly imprinted upon the mind and conscience of the world. Pause a moment and look with me down through the archives of the ages and there we behold the relics of God's awful wrath lying in the valleys, upon the plains and upon the highest mountains. The carcasses of those God had so recently destroyed by the flood can be plainly seen and the stench of their decay is still fresh in the nos trills of Nimrod, the great-grandson of Noah and the grandson of Ham and the son of Cush, the first born of Ham instead of becoming awed and im pressed as he gazed upon these great and mighty deeds of God, his indignation was fired to a burning desire to be revenged on God. He therefore planned to build a tower with a base deeply riveted in the bowels of the earth and its topmost parts reaching the heavens. At this particular period there was no division in the family of Noah. Nimrod then was the ruler of all the inhabitants of the earth. He undertook the most gigantic and heroic scheme that has ever entered the brain of mankind.
God only could comprehend and overthrow his flagrant and contemptible scheme. There never has existed in the history of all the world since that eventful time such unity of mind and purpose as was concocted and cemented into a people as was matchlessly manifested by this wonderful and mighty one before the Lord. Behold his audacity! After God had confused their languages, overthrowing and checking the building of the Tower of Babel, Nimrod remained there and organized the first government upon the face of the earth after the flood. He planned and built the first Great City of Babylon and handed down the plans that enabled Ashur, the son of Shem, to build Nineveh on the River Tigris. How long he reigned and when he died we have no history. Centuries must have elapsed before the all conquest and haughty Hamatic family marched westward over the plains of Shinor and planting their great cities of Sidon, Sodom and Gomorrah upon the west bank of the Mediterranean sea. It was from these centers that Europe, Asia and Africa were colonized. It was here that the world learned its first lessons in ship-building and commercial enterprise. Here the Phallicians, the Canaanites, the Philistines, constituting three branches of the Homitic family, conducted and carried on the most prosperous commercial supremacy that the world had ever seen. They held the keys of commerce with the whole world! Should any one ask what the negroes have done in history answer them by pointing to these achievements. If they are still ignorant of the facts, call their attention to Misraine, the second son of Ham, who was the founder of Egypt, and whose name means Egypt.
He with his sons, Pathrusim, Ludim and Lebahab, migrated from Asia and settled, colonized and founded the garden spot of the earth. He was soon followed by Cush and Phut, the first and third sons of Ham. It was here in this rich and fertile country all the inventions and scientific discoveries were born! It is here we find the greatest wonders of the world! It was here that the world's greatest leader was reared and educated. Here God manifested himself to the Hamitic family in a most practical manner in the Red sea. Here also he sent his son Jesus for protection. This scrap of history is enumerated and cited on account of the direct bearing it has in dealing with the negro problem. This question, if you have followed me carefully, began at the Tower of Babel, repeating itself at Sodom, Gomorrah and in the Red sea. The negro is shown here to have reached the acme of political fame, inventive ingenuity, philosophical sagacity and the highest commercial supremacy! Yet notwithstanding the crush and overthrow at Babel, the thunderous tones of God; in
It is seldom that the amount of plant food in the soil is increased between planting and hunging time, but it is possible to change food that is indigestible or insoluble. If you prefer, into plant food that will be dissolved by water, thus making it in a form such that the plant can use it. All of the food utilized by any plant must pass up through the root and stalk to where it is needed, and it can do this only when in a liquid form.
Tillage truly is manure, in so far as striving to produce what we call and it helps to cause this change. ear of corn.
his hearing at Mt. Sinal. The miraculous lessons God gave them when he overthrew Pharaoh in the Red sea, intoxicated with his wealth and charlots of gold, he refused from time to time to accept God's messengers, who tried to teach them revealed religion. They were stiff-necked and believed only in natural causations and that there was no God.
If the Negro, after reviewing his conduct in ancient days, can catch a ray of hope, in which he is justified in drawing the inference from the memorable statement, "That before the end of time Ethiopia shall stretch forth her hands unto God," to mean that special favors are to be granted unto him, without special efforts upon his part to merit them, there is no possibility for him in attaining them. If we can properly sum up his deeds as we have shown in his most active part played in building the Tower of Babel; his attempt to be revenued upon God, his maker, and his gross and beastly immorality; his utter and total neglect and forgetfulness of God; his highhanded and most wicked statement that there is no God, that all things exist from natural laws that spring up spontaneously without a God to govern and direct them; his rejection of Abraham, when God sent him among them to teach these worldly and most prosperous people the most skilled and the most powerful forces of men, who had demonstrated in every respect all that human ingenuity, backed by its most potent factor, wealth, revealed religion!
He marshaled all his forges both in Africa and Asia Minor and fought daily against the God of Israel; God overthrew the Negro king and drowned him with his host within the Red sea. He made David to kill the brazen and stubborn Negro Philistine, Goliath. God ordered every Negro killed who was found in the Promised Land. And those in Africa he overthrew and drove them from power; from all their beautiful cities, their wonderful pyramids, into the jungle of Africa and gave his inventions, skilled acts into the hands of others who at least acknowledged the existence of a God. The real, certain and comprehensive meaning of Ethiopia stretching forth her hands unto God may be summed up after this manner; I have tried you and you have absolutely rejected me, I shall sell you into strange lands, I shall heap burdens upon you and sting you with the lash of persecution until you can see the error of your wickedness and call upon me. When you do this I will harken unto you and try you once more. The Spanish, the Dutch and Portuguese, in fact every civilized nation upon the earth, were given a large bunch of the Negroes of Africa, and history shows the most cruel treatment given unto them until they submitted and cried unto God. In proportion to their moving into the glorious sunlight of Christianity their yoke was taken from their necks.
Though they had been working the soh, fountains of knowledge were opened and the streams thereof were sent by every Negro's door. The country was stocked with preachers and teachers of the Negro race. An industrial wave has swept over the race and has created the deepest interest. He is truly becoming skilled in all the arts and sciences that his ancient ancestors handed down in their early supremacy through Greece and Rome to the world. In order that the Negro might learn and imbibe the elements of self-sacrifice and the missionary working spirit, God raised up in his midst such characters as Abraham Lincoln, Lovejoy, Harriett Beecher Stowe and Frederick Douglas, who were used as instruments of God to fire the heart and mind of all nations against over-enslavement. We have given marching orders according to the light and reason of Christian obligations to carry the gospel training, together with our knowledge manipulating the soil, over which we had roamed and more than two hundred million are now roaming, stumbling over gold and diamonds and plucking berries and other natural products from the bushes of the forest like so many wild beasts without knowing their value. Are we so blind to reason that we cannot see that history repeats itself? Let us at this moment compare God's dealing with the any people, who have more than any other race been wrapped up in history since the flood. The world owes all of its substantial structures in civic pride and commercial prowess to the Jew and the Negro. It took the Negroes four hundred years to educate the Jews In order to teach them to make brick without straw; to learn and to become skilled in pottery, wood and iron. The knew absolutely nothing of these things, for they were a nomadic people living in tents before they were sent to Egypt. The Negroes had fallen into that same condition before they were taken from Africa. Joseph was sold by his brethren, so was the Negro sold like the Jew into a foreign land. Joseph's brethren had intended to kill him if they had not found captors always put their prisoners captured from other tribes to death. But like Joseph's brethren, Arabs purchased them for the market and they were thus redeemed from a cruel death. The Jews were put to tasks, so were the Negroes. The Jews were learned in all the arts and sciences of the Egyptians, so are the Negroes imbbling these principles from every nation. Frederick Douglas and Abraham Lincoln were our Aaron and Moses. The Jews spent forty years in the wilderness after their most wonderful deliverance. Some would be ingenuely advised the going back into Egypt and to remain there rather than to bear the hardships which were necessary for their discipline in order to fit them to the world.
Thus, when we help the bacteria that are causing this to take place we are increasing the amount of plant food available for the use of the corn plant, so that it may become large and strong, making it possible for it to change a large amount of this crude inorganic matter into the more useful compounds—starch, protein, fat, etc. That is all there is to a corn plant anyhow—a large number of laboratories, each mapped by faithful chemists.
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O. SATURDAY, AUGUST 3. 1912
grapple with the great problems of fighting and building up the country which God had given them. The bones of all those old grabbers after the gold and silver which here represents the golden calf are left in the desert. There are those among us who seem to be selected by our old task masters to persuade us to believe that we can find no other place upon the face of the earth more or better suited for us than our old land of bondage. These so-called leaders walk out or ride around in palace cars and lo! they see our brethren shot down, lynched and burned at the stake. Our women murdered and insulted and unlike Moses they are conspicuously silent. Such would-be leaders advise us to obey and love our old task master, to drop all political rights, do not bother with commercialism, to let law, medicine and all the professions alone, but point with pride to southern fields, where live our "best friends," who on the slightest provocation we friendship in giving "necktie parsies." The southern Negroes in the ex-slaves in other parts of the world have become infected with the geom of selfishness and greed. Having been reared in an atmosphere every atom of which is persecution and all the attributes of citizenship and the same deuterolites and baneful elements are handed down and freely fimbled by their children. Though educated and that under a low pressure standard within such an atmosphere, how can we expect to produce strong men and women possessing the true requisites of manhood and womanhood? Just as it is impossible to rear a strong and healthy child in a laothsome and dirty foul atmosphere, which will impoverish and weaken every cell and tissue in the child's mechanism, so it must be with those who are forced to live under mental and oppressive conditions. Like the Jews, the Negroes are not grateful to God and the friends who added him in gaining his freedom from bondage. What he has gathered in art and science from his neighbors, the Negroes seek to bury it again in the flesh pots of slavery. He is again forgetting God and is running after and building up the golden calf. This is the same spirit he imbbed from his old master.
HOLES IN MACARONI
DEVICE BY WHICH THE HOLLOW STRIPS OF DOUGH ARE PRODUCED.
Haven't you often asked, "How do they get the holes in macaroni?" Yes, you undoubtedly have, and unless you have visited a macaroni factory you are probably still in doubt. Interesting methods are employed in bringing this food into the form in which it is placed before the public.
After the dough has been well mixed and kneaded in a powerful machine it is ready to form into macaroni, which is of a tube shape about one-fourth inch in diameter, or spaghetti, which is a solid shape of about one-eighth inch in diameter. This is done by forcing the dough under hydraulic pressure through a cylinder with a flat circular bronze die or mold at the bottom. The macaroni die is full of holes about one-fourth inch in diameter, and each hole has a small pin in the center of it, which is attached to one side of the hole. This pin forms the hole in the macaroni and divides the dough on one side as it starts through the hole, but before the dough reaches the end of the hole the divided side comes together and remains so, making a perfect tube. The spaghetti die contains only plain holes about one-eighth inch in diameter arranged in groups. When macaroni and spaghetti come from the presses or cylinders they are cut into certain lengths, the length depending upon whether the curing or drying is to be done on trays or by hanging over rods.
In curing or drying macaroni the length of time varies according to the process employed and to atmospheric conditions outside the factory and the standard of quality maintained. Some makers require only three days, while others take as many as six days.—Omaha Bee.
THE DOCTOR'S FEE.
There came a letup in the rush of patients, and the doctor opened two small envelopes lying on his desk. "It's all right," he said. "I wasn't sure. Without offending I couldn't open the envelopes in the presence of the persons who gave them to me. They contain the fees left by two Englishmen who called close on each other's heels. English etiquette is rather embarrassing for a physician who is used to patients who hand over their money with the denomination right on top, American fashion. In England it would be considered an insult to give a physician his fee unwrapped. You can't insult an American physician that way, but newcomers credit him with an excess of sensibility and give him a good many uneasy moments wondering if he hasn't been underpaid." -New York Sum.
AMERICAN SUNSHINE.
Until a man has made the experiment it is impossible to believe how vivid and how severe on British eyes is the glare of the American sun, and also how impossible it is, no matter how strong British prejudice may be in that regard, to play golf in the coat which all the traditions of Scotland prescribe as decent. Very, soon the Briton golfing in America will have cast from him that worse than superfluous garment and will be going with light heart and light ralment—so called "in shirt sleeves"—like the American himself—London Globe.
A NOVEL WEDDING GIFT
A very dalinity present for a bride is one of the new pot pourri baskets made of silver with a delicately-out open-work pattern through which the perfume of the dried petals is allowed to escape. A pierced lid fits into the bottom of the basket to keep the pot pourri in place. If necessary this can be removed and the basket used to hold bons bons, etc.
THE AGRICULTURAL LABORER IN ITALY AND HUNGARY
THE AGRICULTURAL LABORER IN ITALY AND HUNGARY
EXTRACTS FROM DR. BOOKER T. WASHINGTON'S BOOK, "THE MAN FARTHEST DOWN." In the present chapter I shall describe what I saw of the agricultural labor in Italy, and Hungary.
While the situation of the farm hands in Hungary differs from that of the farm hands in Italy in many ways, there are two important respects in which the situation of each is the same. First, a large part of the land of both countries is held in large estates; second, farm laborers, as a rule, particularly in Hungary, do not live, as is the case in America, on the land. On the contrary, they dwell apart in villages, so that they are hardly any more attached to the soil they cultivate than the factory hand is a tached to the factory in which he is employed. In Hungary, for example, it is the custom for a group of laborers to enter into a contract with the land owner during the summer to harvest his crop in the fall. A contractor, who either represents or employs a farm hand, will look over the field and bargain with the owner to do the harvest work for a certain percent of the crop. At the harvest time, the contractor arrives with his laborers, just as he would come with a gang of men to build a house or dig a ditch. While the work is going on the laborers, men and women together, practically camp in the fields sleeping sometimes in the open fields or in such scant shelter as they are able to find.
it happened that I was in Hungary at the harvest time and. In the course of my journey through the country, I had several times seen these gangs of men and women going to their work at daybreak. In this part of the country, the strangest costumes are worn by these peasant people, and the women, especially, with their bright kerrich claws over their heads, their short skirts and high boots, when they are not barefooted, were quite as picturesque as anything I had read had led be to expect. The field hands go to work at early dawn during the harvest season. They work sometimes as much as 16 to 18 hours a day. I have been told, and then throw themselves down to rest for the night on a truss of straw or under a single blanket. After the harvest is over they return again to their villages.
Working in this way, in troops of wandering laborers, there was no room for any permanent relationships between themselves and their employers; such relationships, for example, as exist in spite of the difference of race and color, between every white planter in the south and his negro tenants. On the other hand, the hand, the laborers, working and living together in the way I have described, come to have a strong sense of their common interest, all the more, perhaps, because they are looked down upon by the rest of the population, and particularly by the small land owners, with whom they had been associated up to the time of their emancipation in 1848.
About 1890, a series of bad harvests, coming on the heels of other changes which, for a number of years, had made their lives steadily harder, helped to increase the discontent of the agricultural laborers. Thus it was that when, about this time, the socialists turned their attention to the agricultural population of Hungary, they found the people prepared to listen to their doctrine.
What made socialism the more popular among the lowest farming classes was the fact that it not only promised to teach the farm laborers how they might increase their wages, but declared that the state was going to take up the land out of the hands of the large land owners and divide it among the people who cultivated it.
What made the situation the more difficult was the fact that, as soon as they were thoroughly organized, the agricultural laborers had the landowners, during the harvest time, at a peculiar disadvantage because when work in the fields stopped, the standing grain ripped and spoiled and the landowner was ruined.
In the emergency created by these strikes, the government came to the rescue of the landowner by establishing recruiting stations for farm laborers in different parts of the country. Collecting laborers in those parts of the country where labor was abundant, they shipped them to other parts of the country where, because of the strikes, laborers were scarce and crops were in danger. Thus the government had at one time a reserve force of not less than 10,000 strike breakers with which it was at any moment able to come to the rescue of a landowner who was threatened.
One effect of these disturbances was to greatly increase the amount of emigration to America. In 1904 when the struggle was at its height, no less than 200,000 persons, mostly from the country districts, emigrated from Hungary. Thousands of others left the country and moved into the cities. The exodus of the farm laborer from Hungary threatened, in spite of the rapid increase of the population, to permanently check the rising prosperity of that country. It was soon found that the great landowners could not rely upon repressive measures alone to solve their labor problems. Something must be done to redress the grievance and to improve the condition of the agricultural population. Relief funds were organized in 64 counties and boro-orgs to aid temporarily disabled workmen. Public
ALFALFA ENEMY
Numerous petitions that have been received by members of the United States house and senate asking for an appropriation to exterminate and control the ravages of the alfalfa leaf weevil have led Representative Rucker of Colorado to introduce a bill appropriating the sum of $10,000 for the investigation of the best methods of exterminating the pests destructive of the alfalfa plant, and the further appropriation of $25,000 for the purpose of
prizes and diplomas were offered to laborers who were faithful to their masters.
Something was also done to brighten the monotony of the agricultural laborer's life and strengthen the ties between the laborers and employers. At the suggestion of the minister of agriculture an attempt was made to revive the harvest least which brought the farmer and his laborer together, working men's clubs, libraries, friendly and co-operative societies were encouraged by the government. A popular weekly paper printed in seven different languages was started for the benefit of agricultural laborers and as a means of agricultural education. A bill for life insurance against accidents and old age for the benefit of agricultural laborers provided that if a laborer loses more than a week's time, he shall receive in addition to the expenses of doctor and medicine, a sum amounting to about 25 cents a day for 60 days. In case of death of an agricultural laborer, his family receives a sum amounting to something between $40 and $50.
In Italy the socialistic movement among the agricultural classes has taken a somewhat different course. For one thing, it was not confined merely to the poorest class, namely those laborers who live in the villages and go out at certain seasons to assist in the work on the farms, but extend to the small proprietors also and those who rented land. In many cases, the large estates in Italy are not managed as in Hungary by the proprietor, but by middlemen and overseers, who pay a certain amount of rent to the proprietor and then sublet to tenants. Sometimes, particularly in southern Italy, lands are sublet again a second and third time. In many cases, the terms upon which the land was held and worked by the small farmer were terribly oppressive, even in northern Italy, where conditions are said to be incomparably better than in the south.
Although the peasants in northern Italy were normally given their freedom in 1973, their condition, until a few years ago, has been described by one who was himself a large land proprietor as, "a little better than if they were slaves." In addition to the high rents, the tennant former was compelled to furnish the overseer with a certain number of chickens and eggs, and certain amount of peaches, nuts, figs, hemp, and flax, in proportion to the amount of land he rented.
The overseer claimed, also, just as the overlord did in the days of feudalism, the rights to the labor of the peasant and his ox cart for a certain part of every year. His children were expected to work as servants in his household at a nominal price. The overseer sold the crop of the tenant farmer, and, after deducting all that was coming to him, for rent and other charges, returned the remainder to the tenant farmer as his share of the year's work.
In one case where, as a result of the revolt of his tenants, the middle man was driven out, the tenant farmer, under the direction of the socialist leaders, undertook to rent the land directly from the landowners. It was found that the middle man had been appropriating not less than 45 per cent. of the profits, which, under the new arrangement went directly into the hands of the man who tilled the soil.
In recent years, co-operative organization of all kinds have multiplies among the small farmers of northern Italy. There are societies for purchasing supplies as well as for disposing of the products of the small farmers; the most important of these societies have been, perhaps, the cooperative credit organizations, by means of which the small landowners have been able to escape the burden of the heavy interest charges they were formerly compelled to pay.
There is much in the history of the agricultural laborers of Hungary and Italy that is interesting to any one who has studied the condition of the negro farm laborer in the south. In many respects their history has been the same. There is, however, this difference, when the serfs were freed in Hungary, as in most other parts of Europe, provision was made to give them land, though to a very large extent they were denied the political privileges enjoyed by the upper classes. In Italy also it was intended, in giving the serfs freedom and again when the vast estates of the church were taken over by the states, to create a large class of small owners and to give them land to the people who tilted it.
In both cases, however, it was but a few years before the greater portion of the peasant owners were wiped out and their lands had been absorbed into the large estates. At the present time, the small land owners, under the influence of education and agriculture organization, are gaining ground, and both countries in the interest of agriculture, are seeking to encourage this movement.
The case of the negro was just the opposite. When the masses of the negro people were turned loose from slavery, they carried in their hand, the ballot that they did not know how to use, but they took no property with them. At the present time, I believe, by a conservative estimate, that the negroes in the south own no less than twenty million acres of land, an area greater than that of the four New England states of Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut. On the other hand, the negroes have largely lost, at least temporarily, many of the political privileges which were given them at emancipation.
The experience of the peasants of Europe, just as the experience of the devising means to check the spread of such pests, to be used in co-operating with common carriers, agricultural colleges and other means which may be devised to prevent the destruction of the alfalfa industry.
PURE WATER FOR STOCK.
Just because young calves are feed milk is no excuse for depriving them of water also. They need the water and it should be pure.
negro in America, has served to confirm an opinion I have long held, namely, that it is very hard for a man to keep anything that he has not earned or does not know how to use, and, in most cases, the best way and, in fact, the only-way, to insure any people in the possession either of property or political privileges, is to fit them by education to use these gifts for their own good and for the highest good of the community in which they live.
ONE OF THE EARLY WILDCAT GET-RICH OUICK SWINDLES
The "Mississippi scheme" was one of the famous get-rich-quick bubbles in the world's history. Thousands of people in France were swept to ruin in it, and the infant king's reign in its early years was practically discredited by it.
This pioneer of get-rich-quick schemes was the work of John Law, a notorious promoter of financial bubbles and frenzied financier of the period when Louis XV, ascended the throne of France in 1715, at the age of five years, under the regency of Philip, duke of Orleans. At thirteen the little king was declared of age.
Law was the son of a goldsmith of Edinburgh and early turned his attention to the question of public finances, always leaning toward the spectacular. Presently he came to be known as a skillful gambler and juggler of finances. He was finally forced to quit England for the killing of an antagonist in a duel, going to the continent, where he lived by his wits as a professional gambler until in 1716 when he landed in Paris. He soon ingratiated himself with the regent, the Duke of Orleans, who authorized him to establish a sort of government bank and appointed him to the management of it.
Soon afterward Law created the Mississippi company, a monumental scheme for the payment of the entire national debt and the enrichment of every person in France who chose to subscribe for it. The promoter obtained for his glided enterprise a water tight monopoly of the entire trade of France from the Cape of Good Hope eastward to all the other parts of Africa, to Persia, India, China, Japan, and even to the strait of Magellan. The French people took to Law's frenzied scheme with a rush. They put into it every penny they could beg borrow or steal. But one day the bubble was pricked and every investor in it went to sudden and complete rufn. Thousands of families that had been rated as wealthy found themselves pampers in an hour. Law fled with all France howling maledictions at his luckless heels. He became a wandering vagrant and died a few years later in Venice.
CURIOUS CONTRASTS
AUTHORS WHOSE WRITINGS AND METHODS OF LIFE WERE CONTRADICTORY.
A man of genius when he writes a book and 'all the god comes rushing into his soul' is in an abnormal state and hence lives of men of letters have often been in glaring contrast to their writings. Montagne tells us that he always observed supercelestial opinions to be accompanied with subterranean morals. On the other hand, the most latitudinarian professors of epicureanism have often lived like anchors or traplists. Some of the best sea songs have been written by men who never snuffed a salt water breeze, stirring war songs have been written by timid men and women who would have shrieked at the sight of a mouse, and hymns steeped in the very spirit of devotion have been written by men of doubtful morality, who were never less at home than in a Christian church. Charles Lamb was ready to wager that Milton's morning hymn in Paradise was penned at midnight, and we know positively that Thompson, who sang the praises of early rising in the "Seasons", used to lie abed till noon. Sir Richard Steele could discourse eloquently on temperance when he was not drunk. Woodworth in his "Old Oaken Rucket" sang the praises of cold water under the inspiration of brandy. Dr. Johnson, who wrote so well on politeness, interrupted his opponents with "You lie, sir!" "You are a vile Whig, sirt." Purna was a compound of "dirt and deity." Rousseau, who was always filling people's eyes with tears, betrayed and slandered his benefactors in turn and sent his children to the foundlings' hospital. When Moore proposed to Scott to go and see Melrose abby, as Sir Walter had described it, by moonlight, "Pooh, pooh," said Scott, "you don't suppose I ever saw it by moonlight!" — William Matthews, Salte Beuve's Weekly Chats.
U. S. FARM LIBRARIES.
The United States bureau of education, which is of recent establishment, is introducing a scheme for bringing a circulating library to the home of every farmer in the United States. The plan is to place from 100 to 150 books of suitable character in charge of the local storekeeper or postmaster, and to pay him a small salary for handling them. The books will be renewed every three months. The books will be of a character desired by the readers as far as possible. Collections may be loaned to schools. The plan is patterned after that tried in Van Wert county, Ohio, for many years.
Many farmers will allow or force their cattle and hogs to drink water that their horses won't touch. If the horses refuse the water it should not be given to the other animals, for although their noses are not so sensitive they are subject to diseases from the same causes.
Do not allow horses to drink ice water. The horse's stomach is very small, and liquids readily pass from it into the blood. Many horses are chilled every winter from drinking ice water.
2816.
Here is a pretty model for a shirred dress that can be made of silk, mull, organdy, fine lawn or swiss with skirt of embroidered flouncing as shown in the illustration, or of plain goods. The dress closes at the back and is made with body and sleeves in one. The design is easily carried out.
The pattern (5816) is cut in sizes 4 to 12 years. Medium size requires to make the frock as represented 2% yards of 17 inch flouncing, 1½ yards of 36 inch goods for waist, 1 yard of insertion and 3% yards of edging. If made of one material the frock will require 2% yards of 36 inch fabric.
To procure this pattern, send 10 cents to "Pattern Department" of this paper. Write name and number and be sure to give and number of pattern.
NO 5816. SIZE.....
NAME.....
TOWN.....
S'REET AND NO.....
STATE.....
LADY'S SURPLICE DRESSING SACK
5826
Surplice styles are so fashionable this season that we find them in dressing sacks and the model here shown represents a pretty negligee of this character. Nothing simpler could be thought of, yet the design could not be dainter. The sack may be made with or without the sleeve band. The trimming idea is a pretty one, bands of insertion following the closing line and embellishing belt and bottom of the garment. Lawn, organdy, swiss, crepe or silk may be used.
The pattern (5826) is cut in sizes 22, 36, 40 and 44 inches bust measure. Medium size requires 2½ yards of 36 inch material and 5½ yards of insertion.
To procure this pattern, send 10 cents to "Pattern Department" of this paper. Write a brief description and be sure to give size and number of pattern.
Legal Precedent.
"The court will please observe," remarked this acute counsel, with much deliberation and in a most pumpous manner, "that in the case of Shylock vs. Antonio, although judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, yet circumstances prevented the execution which had issued from being carried into effect, in spite of that fact."
"To what cause," inquired the justice, with a face overspread with complexity, "did the court understand the gentleman to refer?"
"Shylock vs. Antonio, Second Shakespeare, page 235, Johnson's edition," returned the counsel solemnly. "The court will there find the case reported in full." - St. Louis PostDispatch.
When a Woman Faints
Loss of consciousness often causes much alarm, and in fact should not be treated as a light matter, because it may be a preliminary to a grave illness. The first thing to do when a woman falts is to lay the patient on her back. If the face is white and bloodless, have the head lower than the body. Open up the windows and allow plenty of fresh air to reach the patient. Loosen the clothing. Also apply cold water to the face. In most cases this will bring a return to consciousness. Aromatic spirits of ammonia is a good thing to use as a smelling salts and to give internally when consciousness returns.
Sparrows Attack Workmen
Thirty pairs of sparrows put up a good fight against workmen who were tearing down an old signboard in in front of 439 Bloomfield avenue, Montclair, N. J. The sign had been there for thirty years and behind it, against the brick wall, the sparrows had raised their young for many years. Many of the nests were taken out intact and placed elsewhere, but the birds refused to reclaim them.