| Textual Feature | Appearance |
|---|---|
| alterations to base text (additions or deletions) | added or deleted text |
| passage deleted with a strikethrough mark | |
| passage deleted by overwritten added text | Deleted text Added text |
| position of added text (if not added inline) | [right margin] text added in right margin; [above line] text added above the line |
| proofreading mark | ‸ |
| page number, repeated letterhead, etc. | page number or repeated letterhead |
| supplied text | [supplied text] |
| archivist note | archivist note |
July 28, 1922.
The Cleveland Call Publishing Company,
5204 Harlem Avenue, N.E.,
City.
Gentlemen:
Please discontinue sending the Cleveland Call to me at 9719 Lamont Avenue, until further notice. Your letter of July 14th advised me that my subscription had expired, and since your letter did not say what date it expired, I am assuming it was about that date, and I am enclosing you postage stamps in the amount of twenty cents, which will probably pay for the numbers received since that date, if not, kindly advise and oblige.
Yours very truly, CWC/FLCorrespondent: The Cleveland Call was a Black Cleveland weekly newspaper founded in 1920 by Cleveland inventor and businessman, Garrett A. Morgan (1877[?]–1963). In 1927, it merged with another paper to become the Cleveland Call and Post. The Cleveland Call was not widely distributed, and the Cleveland Gazette remained the dominant Black weekly. Chesnutt subscribed from November 1921 until July of 1922.