The Gazette
Saturday, April 12, 1919
Cleveland, Ohio
Page text (machine-generated)
CONTEMPTIBLE TREATMENT
IN UNION WE IS STRONG
ELECTRICITY TURNS DUST INTO MONEY
DEVICES IN CHIMNEYS RECOVER PORTION OF PRODUCTS FORMERLY WASTED.
Value of Various Metals Saved Pay
Handsome Profit.
Over the hills from a Vergent plant quarry there came, with "prospering winds," filmy clouds of redish dust, settling down on plaster hollows and seeping in through unsuspected cracks. Quite a problem it became, and it seemed to be well much adoable, says World's-Worth. In a Pennsylvania town, not from a sulphuric acid plant became an equally much discarded problem. Some folks even used the word "gallurance." Then electricity came, not only to stop the dust as well as the mist, but to extract from each as well as from smoke—a money value which formerly no one received, and stopped the nuisance. Technical men called this remedy "electrical precipitation," causing a valuable product to fall out of the dust and mist, putting a price in other words, on things which formerly "went up in smoke."
It is one of the unique examples of the many and varied uses to which electricity is adapted today on a commercial scale. Electrical precautions works out in this way: above a mingle or factory from which power must, dust or smoke arise and settle over the community, they are contained in chimneys or caught by specially constructed pipes or cylinders. The pipe-like chimneys are then equipped with a thin straight wire that gently inside the hollow pipe or cylinders and charged with from 25,000 to 25,000 volts of electricity. It is known as the "discharge electrode". The pipe or cylinder, in turn, is "prompted" and is known as the "collecting electrode". Thus we have the gas, smoke or mist, led up through the specially prepared pipes or cylinders. Then the electric current is turned on.
The intervening air space becomes highly charged with electricity. All floating particles become electrified and are repelled by the charged wire over against the side of the pipe or cylinder, where they are collected. In the case of a liquid, as in the sulphuric acid mist, the particles which the electricity separates from the mist gather on the side wall and drip down to the bottom where there is a vessel ready to collect them, whence they are piped off for use, becoming the new element saved, as a "brand from the burning." In the case of the particles escaping in dust, as from the slate quarry, the electricity drives them to the side of the pipe and they either settle down to the bottom of the chimney or adhere to the sides and, when the current is turned off, a smoke or less light tapping on the sides will cause them to drop into the bins built at the bottom to receive them. These likewise become another tangible element snatched out of the air.
The diameter and length of the cylinders will, naturally, vary, with the volume of the gas, dust or smog to be treated. Several pipes may be joined in a set by a common header, each pipe having its own discharge electrode suspended axially within it. In this manner, not only smokey, which is nothing more than, uncommon particles of carbon, but also fumes and mists of various character, are now successfully treated, eliminating much damage to property, doing away largely with the "smoke nuisance," and enabling the recovery of much valuable material, which has hitherto been allowed to escape.
In numerous installations of the electrical precipitation system, the value of the various metals and other products, such as silver, copper, iron, lead, zinc, sulphuric acid, assemble and potash, pays a lapisous profit on the cost of the "treater."
Among the problems to which the system is being applied are collecting and recovering fumes and dust from gases given off by many kinds of furnaces; removing acid mist and fumes from gases given off by nitrating operations and sulphuric acid concentrators; cleaning gases artificially from electric furnaces; cleaning producer gas and illuminating gas, recovering the tar and oils; cleaning iron blast furnace gas, recovering the potash and iron values; removing soot and other suspended materials from gases drawn from the smoke stacks in railway locomotive round houses; and numerous other operations.
Thus, electricity comes in to create valuable by-products and to make the proverbal two blades of grass grow where only one grew before.
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THE GAZETTE
FRESH OHIO NEWS
What Our People Are Doing Each Week—Church, Personal, Social, Lodge, Literary and Musical—Marriages, Deaths; Etc.
FANDUCKY. The second public service closed last week. Twenty-three joined class by Baptizing Fiction. It is expected to be a good day for Noe. Mr. Jerry. Finner. General was held from the residence in third St. and that of Mr. and Mrs. Grace Thomas. Baby from the midst of Froyle. Bey. G. D. Smith. Disturbance. General health condition not later here and the weather is good, but work is not plentiful.
FINDLAY—Mr. Fred Miller is late and Mrs. Goo. Harriet is to be around again. General meeting in Fondale. Gov. W. B. Loe. D. L. praached an interesting sermon. Mrs. Moton of F. Wayne. John is visiting his sister the Miller Rhodians. The M. M. served at the Holloway. Monday afternoon was a success. John Seam was a sober from colleagues. He returned home. Mr. Anderson of Fostoria. Visiting Edith, the late I and held to no time in the Gazette. Over the local agen your order for a week.
CADIZ, B.A. C. W. Governor of S. Crespi ville wa. F. J. H. Young-
son, at the at least contem-
porary meeting. Reading Co. Min-
ister Sara B. Good and W. Expand-
are attending the M. Conference of
Lexington, K. Y. W. M. De la
Laporte Ch. L. and W. L. De
Laporte Ch. L. Mr. A. Kindle of
Dupontville, J. Lee. Moody,
Bishop A. H. Jones of W. White force
covers the late Bister C. T. Stu-
lian in charge of this. third M. K.
district, A. Mofford and L. W.
retained from Crawford, M. A.
Grade Bank, was reimbursed on an
enganged $1.00 to the North
Ohio A. M. C. conference to the
St. Louis A. M. F. church. Mrs. H. Hau-
lson Smith is complaining.
CORRESPONDENTS are paimil-
letters for publication at their main
postoffice sufficiently carry 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
wrapper about returned copies. Unless
this latter is done, proper credit
cannot be given you. Lists of names,
wedding presents, etc., obituary notices,
inquiries for relatives and ad-
vertisements of all kinds, including
items announcing entertainments to
be held in the near future, must be
paid for in advance at the rate of
20 cents a line, six words to a line.
Our rates for display advertisements
will be sent on application.
HILLSBORO, Mr. and Mrs. Clip
Bobbie entertained W. W. L. and
Mrs. at dinner, Sunday, Sept. 11th,
with children, Sunday, Sept. 11th,
Grace, June 10th, and June 10th,
Bishop church and at Lincoln school
which was greatly appreciated—Mel-
vin Warmer of Columbus (calling
her parents—Delicious "happiness"
brand, pies and cake) he pre-
chased from Mr. Amanda Thomas-
kins. Learn Opinion skills in
OUR age—Hezekiah Trible and
Carey Zimmerman. She arrived from
France recently, were married out
at Camp Shank, last week. Friends
were all to welcome them phone-
number. Bullard is not so well by Mrs.
Ed Jones is better, second. Bullard
and Mrs. Florence Rose were in
Cincinnati. Friday, Mr. and Mrs.
John E. Williams, Mr. and Mrs.
dinner, Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Fritz
Johnson and Mr. and Mrs. Oliver
Young—Mr. and Mrs. Charles De-
nancy of Ripley visited Mr. and Mrs.
John DeLancey, Sunday. Friends
were sorry to hear of the death of
Prof. George Ellsworth Maestro,
for many years she was on her own.
Drawn college, Atlanta. Ga. The o-
mains were born in Georgia home,
in George town, to the beloved
Mrs. James Moore, wife of the de-
sident state organizer of B. N. P. C.,
in Georgetown recently. Mrs. Mina
Hemison entertained Mrs. Ellison
Smith at dinner, Sunday.
KLINTON.—Fax. A. A. Doolittle, superintendent, Saturday, September 10, 1943, have been homely discharged at Camp Sherman on March 25. A grand welcome will be given all of the returned solider boys at the A. M. E. church at an early date. Rev. J. D. Jackson, pastor, will deliver the principal address. The closing exercise of the church New confession was held, March 30. They went over the top, reporting 105. All are well pleased with their appointments and will begin at once to prepare for next year. The third quarter meeting and conference were held, April 6 and 7, respectively. Services were conducted by Dr. W. R. B. De K., who presented a fine session in night and composed the reception their epiphany access for the provocation, on all lines. The old A. M. E. personage which has stood for 50 years in the rear of the church.
ESTABLISHED AUGUST 25, 1883 And Issued Every Week on Time Since
OF OUR OVERSEAS SOLDIERS!
DOINGS
OF
THE
RACE
And on the other side, the
Catholic Church is
Gentlemen's Church.
Dr. W. L. B. Belford married from France, who took the week. Six and three thousand members of the new embarked in Mother Zion A. M. E. Belford N. Y. city recently, and organized Darbies as society on the cause of Africa in the power conference in Paris, France.
An interesting memoir is in the book and Quarterly of the Paris Journal of the Christian Geography, a noted author of biographies and composer of color works in France in 1799, Saint-George was one of the first French amateurs to write dromountains. A direct in Garrard's name.
STATEMENT OF THE OWNER
SHIP.
(Not)
CARG OF THANKS.
MR. EDWARD C. HERRY.
MR. EDWARD C. HERRY.
OCT. 24TH. ANNIV. 1897. CONFERENCE. WITH PERSONAL UNIVERSITY. WITH LEGAL ORCE. OHIO. WAY. 12TH. 1899.
Friday, Aug. 30. 1899. W. Office of the
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COLOR-LINES IN FRANCE!
Apparently have succeeded at Last, in Drawing them On Our Soldiers Overseas—An Outrage!
We have been so impressed by Dr. Erikson's own prowess that deeply pointed out that the enemy will not take them on our soldiers. If it will take them on our soldiers, we will not protect them. But we are not so helpless. The French and British people have not been so prejudice against the blacks and the Indians and are merely say that others have not been so prejudice against them. In experience well, we just as soon as possible with kissing and I wouldn't take anyabile. That is not a problem for us. In conclusion I have been earth for it. In conclusion I have been earth for it.
BON JAMES L. SCOTT.
Nouvelle in France.
Dear Sir, Mrs. James Miles, LTD,
Dear Sir, Mrs. James Miles, LTD,
would be grateful to you for not setting
up a commotion in the town, by Y. N.
C. V. A. awful. They have always and
will be able to do that, but they want to
encourage the council to come to
the town. *But we would not
stand for it. They were some col-
lectors who have to perform the
task in the village and the North Pham-
nue, and they would not have found
the explanation of some reason was set
for the council. It was the
the above officer. *If it was the
Y. M. C. V. A. many. The main
of this kind had to come before
I was called and I should be in one
way too. And that they threw
them off the road. But after that
they would be allowed to come on
the road. We came to the town and
that he coloured would be all on one
and the other colour. But that
but I continue to work for we are
going to could be it. There are
we three coloured colours in
harm and we must be up to stick
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you from previous experiences so deeply pouted
behind them until I saw it I will take
my painful crises to protect it out. But
happily, the French and British people
show no prejudice against the black
man and I can simply say that com-
ing to success is an experience well
worth keeping and I wouldn't take any
thing on earth for it. In conclusion I
would say that which strikes me
We can't just the way.
To be the loc of service gaining
At all life that's worth obtaining
At all time that's worth obtaining
At all time and play.
While the years are flying,
Fore will be trying
Some way to find
To help bankroll.
In love and faith relying.
Here our brotherhood shall bind us
And the future shall bind us.
With a religious mind behind us
Bible day by day.
Your year with
CORE, VAN LINN, HU DSON,
COIL, SEH) Pion or Inf. A. E. F.
> MISS. ELLEN G. REVELEY
A Bronze Memorial Tablet in Her
Henry Unveiled at Sterling
School, Monday Afternoon.
Southerner Too Slow
New York City the station
of the New York City
railroad is the principal
transportation point for
the city. It is also the
most important railroad
station in the United
States. The station is
located at 100 West 42nd
Street, New York, New
York 10001.
12 UNION
WITH 15 STRENGTH
SINGLE COPY EIVE CENTS
GIRLS OPERATE MINE IN ALASKA
AND CIFLY ASSISTANT IN TASK IS THEIR MOTHER.
At Pearl Harbor, forty miles from Jekyll Island, two young women, just out of their teens, have for the past four years, operated a paying mine. Their sole assistant has been tight-minder. They operate a two-stamp mill and their present ambition is to install a two-stamp equipment.
These girls are the daughters of the late John G. Peterson, a pioneer wife with Miss Peterson, acquired an mine, in some mining properties twenty years ago in the Pearl Harbor district. The girls' names are Jama and Margaret. Both were born in Juneau.
There is nothing in mining that the two young women are not capable of doing from sharpening a steel to shaving a mine. These things are every day affairs with them a part of the day's work. They built the neat tourroom cottage in which they live, getting the timber out of the forest themselves.
An inspection of their library shows works on geology, mineralogy, mining and mining, and mine management by the best authorities. A number of standard magazines come to them. The girls occasionally take trips. One of these excursions took on the proportions of a tour to Europe.
Jekyll, the town of their nativity, is proud of them. So is Alaska.
There are two days in the week upon which and about which I never worry. Two carefree days, kept tiring from fear and apprehension.
—One of these days is Yesterday. Yesterday, with all its cares and frosts, with all its pains and aches, all its faults, its mistakes and blunders, has passed forever beyond the reach of my recall. I cannot undo an act that I wrought. I cannot usay a word that I landed on Yesterday. All that it holds of my life, of wrong, regret and sorrow, is in the hands of the Mighty Love that can bring honey out of the bitterest desert — the Love that can make the wrong things right, that can turn writhing into laughter, that can give beauty dog gashes, the gurgent of praise for the spirit of heaviness, joy of the morning for the woe of the night.
Save for the beautiful memories, sweet and tender, that tinge like the perfume of poses in the heart of the day that is gone. I have nothing to do with Yesterday. It was mine; it is God's.
And the other day I do not worry about is Tegorowr. To morrow, with all its possible adversities, its burdens, its perils, its large promise and poor performance, its failures and mis takes, is as far beyond the reach of my mastery as its dead sister. Yesterday. It is a day of God's. It's sun will rise in re-ate splendor, or behind a mask of wooing clouds. But it will rise. Until then, the same love and patience that hold Yesterday hold Tomorrow. Save for the star of hope that cheers forever on the brow of Tomorrow, shining with tender promise into the heart of To-day. I have no possession in that unborn day of State. All else is in the safekeeping of the Infinite Love that holds for me the treasures of Yesterday. The Love that is higher than the stars, wider than the skies, deeper than the seas. To morrow it is God's day. It will be tainted.
There is left for myself, then, but one day of the week—Today. Any man can fight the battles of Today. Any woman can carry the burdens of first one day. Any man can resist the complaints of Today. O. friends. It is only when, to the birdens and cares of Today, carefully measured out to us by the Infinite Wisdom and "Might that lies in the promise," "As they day, so shall thy strength be," we willfully add the burdens of those two awful enemies — Yesterday and Tomorrow — such burdens as only the mighty God can sustain — that we break down. It isn't the experience of Today that drives men mad. It is the response for something that happened Yesterday, the dread of what Tomorrows may close.
Those are God's days. Leave them with him.
Those are I think, and I day and I feel, I love, I live day at a time. That is the man's day. That is the man's day. That is Our Day — Gods and Mine. And while faithfully and diligently I run my course, and work my appointed task on that day of Ours. God the Almighty and the Alloy's duties care of Yesterday and tomorrow. R. J. Darlette.
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(By, Central S.B.R.)
Blackstone Building, Cleveland, 0.
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-Americans, published in the state of Ohio, and comparison with any will immediately establish its rank as one of the NEWS-TEST AND BEST in the country.
10,000,000 Afro-Americans.
300,000 In Ohio.
25,000 In Cleveland.
SATURDAY, APRIL 12, 1919.
The Republican party is the only national party in the United States.
O. for more such loyal and active members of the race like our long-time friend, Mr. E. C. Berry of Athens, O.
We have seen a good many criticisms of President Wilson. But we have never seen him accused of talking too little.
What an inferior being Abraham Lincoln was? He never presumed to know more than George Washington and all the other makers of the American constitution.
The Afro-American soldier overseas certainly had a hard time of it, with the Germans in front of him and prejudiced southerners on all three of his other sides.
*Will Rogers, the comedian, says "the reason that the soldiers are being kept in France and Germany is because mail addressed to them during the war period can now be delivered to them."
The editor of The Gazette acknowledges the receipt of a copy of Prof. Kelly Miller's booklet, "The Negro and the New Reconstruction." Persons desiring copies of it should address him at Howard University, Washington, D. C.
"The Bolshevik continue to push their offensive against the American and allied troops near Archangel." — News Item.
What is the American policy in Russia? The American people either want their soldiers pulled out or the Bolshevik cleaned out of Russia.
Just as soon as President Wilson's successor is elected—and he will be a Republican—our people must make a combined effort to have everyone of those (more than fifty) victims of the Houston, Texas, riot pardoned—liberated from the federal prison at Ft. Leavenworth, Kan.
President Wilson's platitudes, beatitudes, and pifittudes will in time disrupt the Democratic party but we confess we were hardly prepared for the Bailey bombshell. When a Texas Democrat like Joe Bailey says he is through with the Democratic party it would seem that the exodus had tegun.
When the good book said: "The horse-leech hath two daughters crying, Give, Give," it must have had in mind the Wilson administration and the soliciting South. A few more years of those two daughters of the horse leeches and the taxpayers will not have anything left to give.
If H. B. No. 139, known as the Beaty bill, to amend the Ohio Civil Rights law, the enactment of which the writer secured when a member of the Ohio Legislature in 1894, twenty-five years ago—will strengthen the law, which has repeatedly been upheld by the Ohio Supreme Court, we want to see it pass both branches of the Ohio Assembly just as soon as possible.
That government call for volunteers which adds this very significant and stinging statement, "only white men need apply," is characteristic of the southern-controlled Wilson administration and "queer recognition" of the grand work of our overseas soldiers, to say nothing of the loyalty and assistance of those at home and our people as a whole. O, Lord, how long; O, how long?
The Pan-African Congress met in Paris, France, Feb. 19, 20 and 21, and issued a strong set of resolutions. "Those German African colonies" are not being talked of so much these days by Afro-Americans who should have been worrying about their own people's interests in connection with the World's Peace Congress. The same is true of the Pan-African Congress and its Afro-American "boosters."
Rt. Rev. C. T. Shaffer, bishop of this, the third district of the A. M. E. Church, died at Lansing, Mich., March 27. Bishop Shaffer was born at Troy, this state, and had served his church in that capacity for 19 years. He was ordained a minister of the church in 1870 by Bishop Daniel A. Payne. A widow, son, three brothers and three sisters survive him. Since presiding over the third district, he has lived in Chicago where the remains were laid to rest. Bishop Shaffer was one of the church's ablest men.
America has one vote and but one vote in the Wilson-Cecil League of Nations. Great Britain has its own vote and those of Canada, Australia, India, New Zealand and South Africa, six in all. Wherever England has a self-governing province she has an additional vote. Not one person in a thousand who talks so glibly of the present form of the League of Nations being above amendment has any knowledge of the above facts—not that it would make any difference if he did. Why not base representation upon actual importance in the world and in the League of Nations even if the ratio has to be arrived at by approximation and agreement?
At Niagara Falls, N. Y., recently, after deliberating twenty minutes in the case of Samuel Dett against the Arcade Theater Company, in which the defendant was charged with violating the Civil Rights Act, a verdict was returned in favor of Mr. Dett, who was awarded $392 damages. At Syracuse, N. Y., Mrs. Marshall Gray won her suit against the Seneca Amusement Co. for declining to sell her a ticket for other than the balloon. She was awarded $190. The two theaters that were figured in her suit were the Temple and Crescent. The way for our people in New York state, Ohio and everywhere there is a civil rights law to get their rights is to go into the courts, just as have Mr. Dett and Mrs. Gray, and fight for them. Too few do this to enable the race to make the progress it should be making everywhere in the north.
COUNCILMAN TOM FLEMING.
IT HAPPENED in the Chicago city council, and in a report special mention was made of the capture of "Negro" burglaries by the various officers of the police department. Alderman Jackson took exception to the "language of the report, and after a fiery speech in which he said, "A burglar is a burglar," a murderer is a murderer. You have Polish, Irish, German, Scandinavian, and all other classes of burglaries. Why pick out any one race and designate that race as burglar? I move you that all reference to race be stricken out. It is needless to say that this motion was unanimously carried. This is cited to show how necessary it is for us to have representation on all governing bodies, and we have in Alderman Jackson a "Watch Dog of the Council."—Chicago Defender.
Did ANY ONE ever hear of Councilman Tom Fleming's doing ANYTHING of this kind? What good is he in the city council (or out of it for that matter) to our people of Ward 11 and the city?
That bath house for Ward 11? Yes, it is to cost $45,000 while the one to be built out St. Clair Ave, for whites, the same size, etc., etc., is to cost $125,000! What in the world good in the city council (or elsewhere) is he kind of "representation" Councilman Tom Fleming affords us. Then consider the street car service, the sewers and about everything else in the ward he ought to have had improved.
Suppose Japan were negotiating for a coaling station from Mexico, or the purchase of the Lower California Peninsula, or was colonizing heavily near some strategic military point; or, suppose an ambitious Japan or a reviving Germany were colonizing near the Panama Canal or securing exceedingly valuable "gentlemen's agreements" with Colombia or other
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states near the Paname Canal; or suppose that Germany was adding a million or two to her half-million colonists in Brazil; or supposing Japan were to insist on Japanese immigrants having an unassailable right to come into the United States; or suppose that Great Britain were to insist on the removal of all economic barriers by the United States and the establishing of an equality of trade conditions with us. Now where would we be when these matters came up for decision before the Executive Council of the Légée of Nations, our having one vote out of nine, when nobody agrees now on what the constitution really means.
THE EXODUS BEGINS.
Senator Joseph W. Pailey in his official days the ablest Democrat in the United States senate, has left the Democratic party. Declaring that he would "never again vote for the candidate of any party which constantly reduces our liberty and unnecessarily increases our taxes," he said:
"I have been a Democrat all my life, a 'collar' Democrat, if you please, and I have never scratched a party ticket. But those who now control the Democratic party have renounced or abandoned one Democratic principle after another in such rapidity and be避�ing succession that they have left us nothing except the name."
When a man of Senator Bailey's intense Democracy ceases to be a Democrat because it has lost its democracy it is a fact of more than casual interest. He is not alone. When we hear from the plain Democrat who believes in Jefferson, Madison, Monroe, Jackson and Cleveland, and who was taught real American history in a real American school house it will be found that an exodus from the Democratic party is on the way.
Rev. John Harmon of Atlanta, Ga., candidate for editor and manager of the Southern Christian Recorder, an organ of the A. M. E. Church, called on The Gazette, Tuesday afternoon, in company with James K. Nickens of this city, Dr. Harmon has traveled extensively in the north in recent months furthering his candidacy and interest that is appealing to tell anent the condition of our people who came from the south in recent years. He addressed our spineless Ministers' Alliance, Tuesday morning, and left the city in the evening. In using this expression (spineless, etc.) The Gazette has reference Smith, O. W. Childers excepted) of that organization and not those who have come to the city in the past two years.
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THE GAZETTE. CLEVELAND, OHIO. APRIL 12, 1919
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just on Japanese im-
munassailable right
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NAZIMOVA, The Greatest Screen Artist of the Day, App
Eye For An E
7—Seven Stupendous Parts—7
Seven Acts That Portray Every Human Emotion and
A. The Greatest Screen Artist of the Day. Apr
Eye For An E
7—Seven Stupendous Parts—7
Acts That Portray Every Human Emotion and
NAZIMOVA, The Greatest Screen Artist of the Day, Appears Here in
Eye For An Eye
7——Seven Stupendous Parts——7
Seven Acts That Portray Every Human Emotion and Thrill.
ALSO FIRST EPISODE OF
ALSO FIRST EPISODE OF
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HOUDINI has appeared before kings and queens. He has escaped from every prison and cell in the world. The most astounding and expensive serial ever shown. Start with the first episode, Friday and Saturday.
Positively the biggest double bill feature show and the most expensive double bill ever shown in the city for one admission.
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, APRIL 11 AND 12
Special Matinee Saturday
Admission 15c; Children 10c
Tells all about the war: it is fair to
colored people. A tremendous seller.
Price only $2.50. Agents making $8 to
$15 a day. Send 25c quick for agent's
outfit.
AUSTIN JENKINS CO.,
AUSTIN SENATINS CO.
50 Ninth Street, Washington, D. C.
Office, Rose, Res., Gar, 6557
Office Hours—1:30 to 7:30 P. M.
Dr. O. A. Taylor
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
2288 E. 49th St., Cleveland, O.
Office Phones:
Main 2912; Central 1424 R
Residence, 614 E. 107th St.
Phone, Eddy 2318-J
JOHN P. GREEN
Attorney-at-Law
Room 510, Blackstone Building
1126 West 3rd Street
J. C. Phillips, A. B.
Elecautistion, Dramatist, Poet,
Social Uplift and Welfare
Worker and Lecturer
Open for Engagements
Write for particulars
Serves in Colleges, Churches,
Special Programs, Associations
and Organized Literary Societies
Res., "THE GERALDINE"
2212 E. 40th St., Cleveland, O.
Thone, Rosedale 2040.
ING
Artist of the Day, Appears Here in
An Eye
andous Parts----7
by Human Emotion and Thrill.
EPISODE OF
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Telephone, Central 1572-R
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Edward Doctor's Dining Room
Edward Doctor's Dining Room
3035 Central Avenue
Wm. Brack, Prop. Fr
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---
Smiths' Orchestra
"Right on the Job and the Job Done Right!"
Dances, Parties and Receptions a Specialty
RAYMOND SMITH, Director.
ROY SMITH, Manager
6319 Central Ave., Cleveland, O.
'Phone, Rosedale 787-J
'Local 550, A. F. M.
The Douglass Club
For
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The MECCA
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DRUG STORE
2202 Scoville Ave.
The Pride of Carolina
The State Agricultural and Mechanical College of South Carolina
Orangeburg, S. C.
Next session begins September 30th and ends May 31st, 1919.
No Tuition, no Room Rent, no Charges for Water, Lights or Fuel. Entrance Fee $10.00.
Board $12.00 per Month in Advance. Books, Laundry and Personal Expenses Extra. Modern Facility. Standard Equipment. Military Discipline. A Faculty of 67 Officers and Instructors.
For information and Catalogue, R. S. WILKINSON, Pres.
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EXELENTO MEDICINE CO., Atlanta, Ga.
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The Ohio State
THE GAZETTE, Harry C. Smil
Classified Advertising
... Department ...
WANTED—Paperhanger, first-class workman; seventy cents an hour. Wm. H. Gillespie, Garfield 3991-J. For address see my advertisement elsewhere in this paper.
WANTED — Light compactioned colored barber; $20 per week guarantee, and half over $30. Apply to Sherman B. Henderson, Ashland, O.
RECONSTRUCTION.
In the re-building of the war-torn countries of Europe, we should glean the lesson of re-construction of our own affairs and begin to construct for prosperity and peace for ourselves.
This can best be done by each one of us doing all things that goes to make us independent. You can best do this by getting a home of your own. You can make a start with your Liberty Bond if you hurry.
$5.00 per month makes the payments and gives you possession. You can have your garden, this spring, and let the lot help pay for itself. They are being taken by our people from the Atlantic to beyond the Mississippi—so they'll be gone before spring.
Whether you buy or not, call and see C. C. Cade, 2403 E. 40th St., Suite 1. Maybe he can help you. You cannot afford to miss this opportunity.
CLEVELAND Social and Personal
Mr. L. West and Mrs. C. Stuart of E. 103d St., were married, recently.
Mrs. Gray, formerly of E. 103d St., has moved to E. 106th St. S. E.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Oliver and family, E. 103d St., left Saturday for their former home in Central, Ga.
Mr. and Mrs. Alex. O. Taylor, E. 29th St., will move into their new home in E. 103d St., soon.
Mrs. Edw. Chaffin of E. 69th St., has returned from Detroit, where she was called by her nephew, Raymond Fields' illness.
The Bagnall trial at Detroit was postponed from March 31 to April 9. Watch The Gazette for full particulars.
Mrs. Teresa Dunjill is still quite ill at her cousin, Miss Davis', E. 37th St. Mr. John Trimble's funeral took place from the residence in N. Blvd., last Wednesday.
Miss Caroline Anderson of Anderson Ave., who spent her vacation with her parents in Fostoria, has returned and resumed her studies at Normal School.
BEST FOR THE BLOOD — Puro Herbs. Sold only at Brown Drug Co., cor. E. 28th St. and Central Ave.—Adv.
Charles Alexander, for twenty years a member of the "Old Eighth Illinois" Regiment band, which gave a concert here recently, is a brother of Mrs. E. M. Montgomery of this city.
An enjoyable and successful social was given, last evening, at Mrs. Willa Scott's, E. 71st St., to assist in the "drive" to raise $1,000 for the building fund of Mt. Zion Cong. church.
You should take PURO HERBS, the great blood purifier and system cleanser. On sale only at the Brown Drug Co., 2742 Central Ave., cor. E. 28th St.—Adv.
Mr. James Merideth is publishing a patriotic race song, the music and words of which he has written, that ought to become popular and a money maker.
The Y. M. C. U. lyceum is open to all for public discussion, every Sunday from 4 to 6 p. m. A restaurant in connection. Take your dinner there instead of going away home for it.—Advt.
Sergt. Harry Walker, recently returned from overseas and honorably discharged from the army at Camp Sherman, paid the Gazette sanctum a pleasant call. Wednesday.
Mrs. Dean (Pansy) Talbot, daughter of Mrs. Jos. Hedges, died Tuesday afternoon. Funeral, this Friday afternoon, from Shiloh Baptist church.
Take Your
PRESCRIB
T
J. A. T
DRUG
2300 E. 55th St.,
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, OHIO, APRIL 12, 1919.
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3315 Central Ave.
*MRS. BESSIE SMITH'S
3943 Central Ave.
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Central Ave.
W. T. GRANT,
3512 Central Ave.
*M. GORDON'S,
2928 Central Ave.
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WEDNESDAY of that week, at the
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th: "Cuyahoga", Central 513-K
Mr. and Mrs. Hedges have the earnest sympathy of a host of friends.
Frank J. Perkins and Walter Robbins of Ypsilanti, Mich, spent Saturday and Sunday in Cleveland. Mr. Perkins has employment near Detroit.
Carroll, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Dean, Elberon Ave., E. C., returned to Camp Sherman, yesterday, after about a week's leave of absence, visiting relatives and friends in the city. He expects to get his discharge in July or August. Carroll is looking fine.
Mr. and Mrs. Louia S. Jones, E. 1015 st., are the happy recipients of letters from their son, Louia V. Jones, who is still stationed at Bar-sur-Aubee, with the First Army Arm Post band; Will Volley, director. The band played recently for the Prince of Monaco.
the grandest dancing carnival of the season will be held at Dreamland Dancing academy, Easter Monday evening. April 21, 1919; given by the MEN'S CLUB. Music by Cleveland's best orchestra of eight pieces; Raymond Smith, leader. Admission, 85 cents a person. A flashlight picture will be taken.—Advt.
The funeral of Mrs. Elizabeth Milligan E. 90th St. took place from St. Stephen's Church Wednesday afternoon. Several fine testimonials were read and Shiloh Baptist church members sent a beautiful floral tribute. Mr. Milligan is a member of that church. Mesdames Yuell and Santee sang "Beautiful Isle of Somewhere" in a very impressive manner.
Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Price spent Sunday week in Youngstown, visiting Mr. and Mrs. Donald Berry, Mr. and Mrs. Richardson, formerly of Columbus, and Dr. and Mrs. Lancaster. They had a lovely time.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Cokalow, E. 33th St., gave a delicious six-course dinner. Sunday, in honor of Prof. J. C. Phillips, A. B., the talented elocutionist. Mr. and Mrs. Handsberry were also guests.
Rumor has it that Jake Reed came near punching Syd Thompson in the nose at a "Garrett Morgan" meeting of that welfare committee, in Sec. Conner's office, a few weeks ago. The latter said, Tuesday evening, that Garrett is going to pay the "flag money" to the committee (for the soldiers) but does not name the date.
Private A. Bowie, a hero of the Argone, St. Mihiel and Soissons sectors, a member of the old Eighth Illinois Reg., who had been confined in the general military hospital. Fort Ontario, recovering from gas attacks, etc., was entertained at dinner by Mrs. Grace Willis Thompson, recently, as he passed through the city on route from St. Louis, Mo., to an eastern base.
Luther Hall, a native Cleveland, a member of machine gun company No. 1, old Eighth Illinois Regiment, is glad to be back in the old home town after an absence of several years in the "Windy City." With his bride, formerly Mrs. Dora McEchine, a trained nurse of Newport News, Va. He is located at 17906 Rosene Ave., Nottingham.
The funeral of Rev. John B. Cory, former minister of the M. E. church, was at Epworth Memorial church, Prospect Ave. and E. 55th St. Tuesday. Rev. Frank W. Luce, supt. of Cleveland District, officiated. Rev. Cory died Saturday at the age of 81 at his home, 5615 Curtis Ave. He was the founder of Cory M. E. church and a life-long friend of the race.
Leslie N. Edwards, convicted in 1917 of robbing the mails between Cleveland and Buffalo and now in Atlanta federal prison, was sued for divorce, last week, by Ethel L. Edwards, 10526 Hudson Ave., on the ground of cruelty and neglect. Mrs. Edwards asked the custody of both children, a six-year-old boy and a five-year-old girl. The Edwards were married in 1909.
The following ladies attended the W. M. M. S. district convention presided over by its superintendent, Marie T. Perkins, held in Bethel A. M. E. church, Akron, recently: Mesdames Parker, West, Owen, Ella White, Estelle Merritt, Margaret Anderson, Bessie Carter, Ethel Simm, Hora McCormack, C. Washburn, H. Hill. Delegates were in attendance from Warren, St. Clairsville, East Liverpool, Wellsville, Canton, Cadiz and Steuensville, Rev. Fearl of Canton attended and Rev. Archie Allen is pastor of Bethel. He was ill during the meeting.
IPTIONS
o
Timen's
STORE
Cor. Central Ave.
The 369th Infantry (the old 15th N. Y. Reg.) band, headed by Lieut. James Reese Europe, who wrote much of the music for dances presented a few years ago by Vernon and Irene Castle, will be in Cleveland, Saturday and Sunday, and give four concerts at Grays armory. The band is composed of 65 Afro-American musicians and is the band that made the jazz popular in America, France and England. A Cleveland boy, Lieut. Noble Sissle, will be the tenor solist of the concerts. He was graduated from Cen-
JOHN BURTON
tral High school, received a commission after attending an officers' training school, and early in the World War was the drum major of the band. While our troops were fighting in the Champagne region, Gen. Gourraud of the French army paid them a visit, and was pleased with Sissel's voice. Gen. Pershing detailed the band to camp for American soldiers was established, and their excellent music was praised by all, securing them an engagement in London, Eng., later on. Philander C. Knox in his Canton speech said: "Mackey and Roosevelt would go to Georgetown with us now, with their sound judgment, to tell us whether this evil thing with the holy name should be accepted by the American people."
Jazz reigned supreme at the concert of the "old 8th Ill." band, in Grays armory, Sunday evening. Selections from grand opera were appreciated by the audience, which nearly filled the armory, but when the boys played the poppies, jazz whose the audience became so excited that, and it been Sunday, there might have been dancing. Many encores were demanded. They were always answered with more jazz. Mme. Anita Patti Brown, soprano soloist, assisted the band, which had the distinction of being the only one that went "over the top" with American forces. It was a part of the 370th Inf. Lieut. S. S. Gordon assisted, also, by giving an interesting description of the regiment's going "over the top." The armory was not filled because the management of the concert advertise it. This, possibly, became the previous concert and dance at Dreamland was such a success owing to the dance adjunct.
W. GILL
Expressing & Auto Re-
St. Louis Shaving Park
57 CENTRAL AVE.
g Tailorin
W SPRING CLOTHE S SEE U
SCOTLAND TAILOR
C. W.
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Old Reliable
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(Successor to
Phone, Cent
THE TEMPLE
East 55th St., New
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512 Euclid Avenue
Phone, Central 2572-W
ALL SHIRT SHIRT
A RACE ENTERPRISE
M. J. TATE, Proprietor.
SHINGS, NECKWEAR,
and Arrow C ollars and Shirts, H
1922 CENTRAL AVE.
The
Table Lunch H
Amerly "The Old Dominion")
3652 Central Ave.
Home Cooking, Served Family
tment and Good Service!
GAN GIBSON, Pro
successor to L. Hargrave)
Phone, Central 3173-K.
IMPLE THEAT
St., Near Central A
URICE BOLASNY, Manager.
CENTRAL SHIRT SHOP
A RACE ENTERPRISE
G. J. TATE, Proprietor.
GENTS' FURNISHINGS, NECKWEAR.
Hosiery, Underwear and Arrow Collars and Shirts, Hats, Caps, etc
2922 CENTRAL AVE.
Friday, April 11.
VIRGINIA PEARSON in "The Love Auction."
Saturday, April 12.
MITCHEL LEWIS in "The Code of Yukon." "The Man of Might." No. 2. Billy West Comedy.
CHAS. RAY in "The Claws of the Hun." Fatty Arbuckle Comedy. Mutt and Jeff Weekly News.
---
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The grandest dancing carnival of the season will be held at Dreamland Dancing academy, Easter Monday evening. April 21, 1919, given by the MES music to be played by the orchestra of the prize houses; Raymond Smith, leader, Admission, 85 cents a person. A flashlight picture will be taken—Advt.
MAIN THEATRE
Scovill & E. 25th St.
O. E. Belles, Manager.
Friday, April 11.
MILLEDRED HARRIS in
"When a Girl Loves."
Saturday, April 12.
THEDA BARA in
"The Light."
Sunday, April 13th
George Walsh in
"PLUCK & LUCK"
Also
Francis Ford in
"THE SILENT
MYSTERY"
No. 4 & 5
Monday, April 14.
GRACE CUNARD in
"After the War."
Also BILLY PARSONS in
"Pink Pajamas."
Tuesday, April 15.
CRANE WILBER in
"Breezy Jim."
Also PEARL WHITE in
"The Lightning Raider." No. 15.
Wednesday, April 16.
SESSUE HAYAKAWA in
"The White Man's Law."
Also EDDIE POLO in
"The Lure of the Circus." No. 16.
Thursday, April 17.
WM. DAVIS, N. in
4. OF Mighty H.
Also EDITH ROBERTS in
"A Taste of Life."
Night, Gar. 8035-W
GILL
Ging & Auto Repairing
Us Shaving Parlor
GENERAL AVE.
tailoring
CLOTHE S SEE US!
PERFECT FIT
AND TAILORS
HIRT SHOP
ENTERPRISE
Proprietor.
NECKWEAR,
dollars and Shirts, Hats, Caps, etc
NERAL AVE.
The
Lunch Room
(Old Dominion")
Central Ave.
Baking. Served Family Style. Good
Good Service!
GIBSON, Prop.
(L. Hargrave)
Central 3173-K.
THEATRE
Bar Central Ave.
LASNY, Manager.
Monday, April 14.
"EVERY MOTHER'S SON," Special Feature.
Tuesday, April 15.
LOUISE GLAUM in "The Law Unto Herself." "Houdini," No. 1.
Wednesday, April 16.
GERALDINE FARRAR in "The Hell Cat." Big V Comedy.
Thursday, April 17.
CARLYLE BLACKWELL in "Hit or Miss." "Lightning Raider," No. 11.
Brownell Drug Company
Successors to Sachs-Mitchell Drug Co.
Next to the Corner of Central Ave. and East 14th St.
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"ABusyLife"
Mr Foraker has given us his experience in the Union Army on the Bench, as Governor of Ohio and in the Senate of the United States. Political and public events of great importance and incidentally many national characters are dealt with in the most enlightening manner. The work will prove of special interest to all students of political history whether they are public officials or only public spirited Americans, interested in the preservation of our institutions.
2 VOLS. NET $5.00
All orders sent direct to the
"THE GAZETTE"
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will have the personal direction of its Editor
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"Notes of a Busy Life"
BY J. B. FORAKER
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UT. EUROPE’S COLORED BAND
a ee oe
We SSOert Tne Tr
te yo
‘eo x 1%,
Matt se
es Seale Sk te Sha to i
' Me ee He
ee Hill
peer 11
i Wee ees Goer eee a
+ baad pre Sh sea aed 5 aly
i : bee iray eee kG |
"| Pee £ ; f
ee eee sian i oe ° 1
RS peeeeceanenetnreeepenictie cdi ; : 5
( oh ae Eyrope’s colored band entertaining the convalescent American soldiers on the old
epee track at Auteuil, where the AMERICAN RED CROSS put up a tent hospital (Amer.
Lican Military Hospital No. 5). Those who were able danced in the tent in the background
September, 1918.
Ce EE ER
SLY FOX DESERVES LANAAAANAANANANAANAAANAAAN th
Ee His REPUTATION |G rnnnas
Sa es
i Prey.
In every country the fox is the
synonym for cunning, and he weil
merits the appellation. From cent
Hes of chasing he has developed an
fAcuteness little short of human, and
4€ it were uot for the (rained fox
hounds man might hunt him in vain
util he died of old ase.
‘As It is there is many a sty fox who
hhas baffled the hunters for years
Btorips are numerous among hacters
about the cunning of Mr, Reynard,
und here are three of the be;
In Lancaster County, Pennsylvani
a fox had been started, end thirty
fiye hounds and a half dozen rider
were in lively parsust. Tae trail |
among the fiells and over U
for several miles, and then took the
hounds to the turnpike. There, ia
the middle of the pike, the seent ws
Yost, The dogs maneuvered and beat
about here, there and everywhere, but
the trail could not be found. A Wan
ster on bis way to town with a load
‘of bay had passed the spot whore the
trail was lost in the pike only a
minute before the hounds burst on th
road in full cry. ‘The teamsicr stopped
on seeing the pack and the riders 4
lowing them to wateh ihe result of
the maneuvering.
“Which way did he go?" asked th
hunters.
“Dunno!” shouted the teamster,
“didn't see him.”
‘Then the teamster drove on, and
the hunters gave up the chase, dees
ing that there had never been such’
an inexplicable loss of a fox ts)
‘After going a mile or two tiie teans
ster stopped his horses to talks to an
acquaintance he met on the rod, and
as they were talking the fox jumped
out of the hay at the rear end of 1
wagon and trotted leisurely away 10
cover,
“Well, that beats me!” ~ said the
the teamster, and told is friend abou
the way the hunters lost the tril
‘They both concluded that the only
‘explanation of {t was that the fox hid
jumped into the road just behind tn
Toad of hay as it was passing, anc, be
ing a cunning old cosiomer, had
jumped on the hay and burrowed int
it out of sight before the dogs can
up in full ery.
‘Phere in snux retreat he douht!
enjoyed the discomfiture of hott
hounds and hunters.
‘Anothen day, a patty of hunter
with a forge pack of hounds were lel
f@ long and circuitous chase by 3 fo
and at last the animal took :
‘a farm’ garden. ‘There the seest v
Jost and could not be recovered, and
the chase was final!y abandoned
‘An hour later, 2s the farmer
making his rounds, he was surprised
to see the fox jump ont of 2 bie sar
“bage oven in the garden, the door of
‘which was six fect from the sround.
‘and hurry away to its native hills
During another ehase in Landis
Valley. Pa, thé fox led the Thunters
and dogs a long chase over a hard
country and then struck for the pike
‘After following the pike a long di
tance the fox took to the fields asain
and then the dozs lost the scent
‘The chase lasted until late in the
afternoon, and it was not until sun-
get that the for’s hiding place was
Aiscovered, and thon only by acel
dent.
The sly animal had actually en
tered a-farm yard and teen reves?
in the Kennel of one of the very
hounds that was-in the chase.
High Morale.
. Henry Van Dyke, the former Minis-
ter to the Netherlands, said s' the
Author's Club the other day:
“The morale of all the Allied sot
diers.is always excellent. They jeke
about their wounds.
‘“[ met a-wounded young America
aviator trom the Escadritle Lafayett
at a tea. He sat in a bath chair, wiih
his leg propped straight out, end his
two crutehes at his side.
“ ‘How is the leg coming on? !
said.
swell, anyhow," he laughed, “i
tent coming of! °
Nature’s ia
| Eg f- RCME
i ed FEMEDY
: gz —————,
i Zz IONE STAR TE |
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| Cai rienireds CT inen and women
4 rare) eho boi wiven up all hopes in
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A iy A =~ —OUR GUABRANTAE—
DRO onecthind of
i a NESEY, | ae
i = 5 OG turn and 1 will
B pF ila rein
Agents Wanted. PRICE $1.00—
ADDRESS ALL ORDERS TO
= —-624-—
EP. BENNETT .834-
Successor to Prof. J. 8. Swayne
INDIANAPOLIS, IND. :
i GARhe esa ERE RS a
FACTS 2
afiene 3
People who Advertise 3
Can sell Gos. 3
Cais $
People who sell Goods
Cau make Money.
: cas :
People whe make Mon | 3
ey ean advertise goods. ;
The Best Advertising ;
Mediu is “Phe Old 3
Reliable” GAZETTE. 3
CAA RAAAAAD ANI OPA INISS
REMARKS ABOUT ADVERTISING
While it is true that occasional ad
vertising will bring extta business,
is equally true thal actant, presi
growing during “Wall days
The merchant who considers riche
a burden should never advertise. H
store may be li@ n summer resort in
January. Do YOU advertise?
The merchant who never advertice
under any eireumstance ‘or condition
may imagine he is wis, but hi. con
potitors have no ilesire to disturb fh
imagination, 1's a good time to “get
| awake.”
| CORRESPONDENTS WANTED
| The old reliable Gazette desires an
active agent and correspondent in
every city and town mn Olio and
‘neighboring states having number
of Mfro-Ameriena residents. Oily 2
fittle time on Fridays or Saturdays
is required.
We are especially destrous of hear:
jing from percona in the following
‘named ities: Sprinsficl4, Dayton
Akron, Lima, 0. nd other place
Partletarly in Ohio, where we have
none.
| Write to the editor of The Gazvite
Blackstone building, Cleveland, 0.
|feaders will oblize us rreatiy bj
sending at once the adresses of por:
sous in the cities named ard other:
in the state, to whom we can writ
relative to the matter.
PREJUDICE
“Any prejudice whatever will
he insurmountable {f those who
do not share in it themselves
truckle to it and flatter it and
accept it is a law of nature."—
John Stuart Mill.
‘THE GAZETTR, CLEVELAND, OHTO, APRIL 12, 1919.
Tso or three “brothers” from the
outhtand stole a Jot af clothing, ec,
from the paya shop in the block on
thes. b. comme: of Central Aves and
FE, 28th St, Satuyday night. Early
Sunday moztiing the police iocated the
not the of the thieves as he’ was
nie to eet away, Bafove he died
he impticated two others, his associ
ates in tho job, it is anid. The usual
wockly kiting in Ward Jt, otherwise
known as the Contral Ave. district
And. still the Ministers’ Alliance re-
fuses to act! A week ago, Saturday
night, one “brother from the south”
wan killed in 2 crap game and an-
dikes 26 sevioudy shot that. he, too
died ¢ few Mavs later, it is said. That
made Gvo or three murders for thet
cel, Lant, have meres! on that
aoe Ty
Meh! REE
Mgt ype
ASE oeren ro
Pe orren 70
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Dept. A—10 Pore Corner : St. Louis, Mo.
HENRY L, THOMAS
Attorney and Counselor at Law
512 Superior Building Cleveland, O.
Central 2251-R
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: J. LOMSKY :
$ 3820 Central Avenue }
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ROBERT FISHER
.Atorney and Counselor at Law
819 Ameviean Trust Building
Cleveland, Ohio
Tel. Central 1400-W.
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