The Gazette
Saturday, August 30, 1919
Cleveland, Ohio
Page text (machine-generated)
AMENDMENTS MUST BE ENFORCED!
IN UNION IS STRENGTH
THIRTY-SEVENTH
AMEN
Spring
FOR YOUR NEW SPRING
LARGE STOCK
THE SCOTLAND
512 Eureu
Phone, C
The Ro
2288 EAST 55th STREET
NEWLY OPENED REST
The first and only high-class
at all hours—Private Banqu
parties a specially—We carry
Respo
JOSEPH HARRIS, Prop.
DISCO
An Ideal Bleac
(Alexis
(Peroxide &
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Produce
PRICE
TRY IT AND
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Corner Scovill and E. 46th St
PAINLESS E
PRTY-SEVENTH YEAR No. 4
MENDM
Spring Tailoring
FOR YOUR NEW SPRING CLOTHES SEE US
MERGE STOCK
THE SCOTLAND TAILOR
512 Euclid Avenue
Phone, Central 2572-W
The Royal In
EAST 55th STREET
CLEVEN
NEWLY OPENED RESTAURANT AND CABA
first and only high-class restaurant in the city
all hours—Private Banquet Rooms—Special a
ties a specially—We earnestly solicit your pati
Respectfully,
EPHIL HARRIS, Prop.
S. W. ANDERSON, S.
DISCOVERY
An Ideal Bleach for Dark S
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(Peroxide and Vanishing O
Removes Freckles and T
Produces Soft Complexio
PRICE 50 CENTS
TRY IT AND
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Cleveland
AINLESS EXTRACT
THIRTY-SEVENTH YEAR No.4.
Spring Tailoring
FOR YOUR NEW SPRING CLOTHES SEE U.S.
LARGE STOCK PERFECT FIT
THE SCOTLAND TAILORS
512 Euclid Avenue
Phone, Central 2572-W
The Royal Inn
PAINLESS EXTRACTION
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Hours 8:00
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227' Euclid Avenue—Right Across
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REME
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4210 Central Ave
Our drugs and merchandise
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PRESCRIPTIONS N
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OPPOSED TO PAIN
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REMEMBER
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The RUXIN DRUG C
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4210 Central Ave., Cor. E. 43rd St.
drugs and merchandise are of the highest
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227 Euclid Avenue-Right Across the Street from Kresge's 5 and 10
Cent Store.
REMEMBER!
RELIABLE PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS
4210 Central Ave., Cor. E. 43rd St.
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Service and prices always right.
PRESCRIPTIONS MOST ACCURATELY
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4210 Central Ave.
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THE GAZETTE
ESTABLISHED AUGUST 25,1883 And Issued Every Week on Time Since
FRESH OHIO NEWS
What Our People Are Doing Each Week—Church, Personal, Social, Lodge, Literary and Musical—Marriages, Deaths, Etc.
AKRON—Mrs. L. M. Upperman is a two week's vacation with relatives in W. Virginia.—The Second Baptist pulpit was "filled." Sunday, by a very eloquent Cleveland minister—J. D. Lewis has been notified, by Y. M. C. A. See. Thompson of his appointment as chairman of the building committee of the Perkins St. branch—Mrs. Mary Broady has been appointed president of the local branch of a newly established gossip club. She has accepted. It is composed of women only and has its head matters in Montgomery, Ala., with branches in Pittsburgh and Cloveland.
CORESPONDENTS must mail all letters for publication at their main postoffice sufficiently early on Monday (or Sunday) of each week to have them reach The Gazette office on Tuesday morning, and always write also, their names and that of their city or town on the outside of the 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 advertisements 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.
CADIZ—Mrs. Alice Howard attended the funeral of Mrs. Agnes Smith at Steubenville—Miss Jessie Lewis is visiting in Mingo—Miss Aurora Queen of Steubenville is visiting Miss Thela Meadows—Rev. and Mrs. C. H. Young and son, Cornelius, spent the week-end in Seio, where he conducted camp-meeting services—Mrs. Lillian Harris, Mrs. Katy, Smith and children and Mrs. Cleo Smallwood were guests of Mrs. Susie, Murrell, the past week—Mr. Polly and daughter of Sewickley are visiting Mrs. Jessie Redmond—Miss Dainline Ballard has returned from a visit in Oil City—Mrs. Elvira Wallace entertained in honor of Rev. and Mrs. Branch—Messrs. Clarence West, Charley Mason and families motored to Seio, Sunday.
YOUNGISTOWN.—The Poles raise a malicious how over being obliged to agree how they shall treat the Jews. They shriek. Are we Turks? Must we sign away our proud birthright in an agreement to treat the Jews the same as ourselves? The "capitulations" stipulate that Poland must assure the Jews full and complete protection, the free exercise of their religion, and their share of public funds for education, religion, or charitable purposes. They also have to the right to use their own language. The Poles, like the Russians, have treated the Jews as the southern people treat our people. Whenever the common people had any bitterness over anything the Poles and the Russians have attributed it all to the Jews. The local agent has been ill, but will soon be able to resume his regular weekly letters to "The Old Reidable" Gazette.
---
KENTON—After an illness of more than three years, Mrs. Bessie T. Whitaker, died at her grandmother's funeral from the residence conducted by Rev. J. D. Jackson. She is survived by father, husband, grandmother and other relatives. Interpret in Grove Cemetery.—The Chanceton and County fair were largely attended. Both had many interesting features.—The 100th annual picnic of the Flintwood S. S. was held at the grove Aug. 14. The day was ideal and many persons attended from the surrounding towns. The speakers were: W. M. Berry of Whiteforest Underflower of Columbus. District Attorney A. T. Cokman and Rev. J. D. Jackson. Next year we hope to have the editor of The Gazette as one of the speakers—Mrs. Mary Ramsey, and others from Lima spent he week here, visiting Mrs. Edith and Mrs. Florence Sims. Mrs. Sims attended at a supper. Friday, in honor of her guests Rev. and Mrs. D. Jackson. M. W. Manley and others—Mrs. Catherine Williams of Sycamore, and Mrs. A. Vaughn of Kansas City worshiped at the A. M. B. Church. Sunday—Mrs. Lizzie Williams entertained at Sunday dinner Mrs. C. Williams. Mrs Mary Harris and Rev. and Mrs. J. D. Jackson. Filmore Mc. Henry is installing in his residence on W. North St. the latest modern improvements. Mr. Geo. Chick is doing the work—Leonard O. Brown has a fever—Mrs. J. D. Jackson. Williams of Hagerstown. M. is visiting her counties. Mr. and Mrs. John
Williams of - Alger- - Women's day at Payne A. M. E. church. Sunday. An elaborate program has been arranged. - Mrs. S. E. Jackson and Matilda Taborn will give a supper. Saturday. - T. J. Hassel promises to put the finishing touches on the parsonage this week.
HILL-SIORO.—Mr. Arthur F. Donadison, a former resident of Hillsboro, now a guard at the O. P. warehouse, last week. Last Wednesday night, members and friends listened to his interesting talk at the Baptist church. He also addressed the K.P. at their hall, Thursday night. We are always glad to have him with us. He returned to Columbus, Friday evening.—Mrs. Greene of Bainbridge and Mrs. Teanna Denson of Indianapolis are visiting their sisters, Mrs. Claa Evans and Mrs. Alley Day.—Mrs. White of Cincinnati visited her parents, Sunday.—Mr. and Mrs. Harley Hill and family of Greenfield motored here Saturday and visited Mr. and Mrs. Edward Jones.—The Misses Edna and Ruth Hill.—Mr. and Mrs. John Dillon, bounty, Mrs. Jones.—Mrs. Jessie Johnson and Mrs. J. Burr were entertained at dinner, last Wednesday, at and Mrs. John T. Williams, Jr. in honor of the Wesleyan church and S. had a picnic at Pence's Grove, last Friday.—Mrs. Alline Burton and daughter, Gina Peyton of Springfield, son, Honor of Chicago and Cincinnati, Mrs. Grace Rollins of Columbus, Mrs. Ida Trumble of Battle Creek, Mich., Mr. Donster, recently from France, and wife, a number of others, of New Venna were entertained by Mr. Ley Carry at his mother, Mrs. Idabelle, Carey's, New Vienna, last Thursday evening. They danced with Hawaiian music and an excellent lunch was served on the screen-porch.—Mrs. Anna Greene is visiting her husband, Mrs. Joan Ford, and Mrs. O. Young visited at Hearst recently.—A number from here attended the reunion at the Gist settlement, last Monday, and report a fine time.—Rev W. L. Tolliver, our delegate to the Association at Cambridge, returned Friday night and reports a splendid session.—Miss Ethelle Carlisle has returned from Zanesville.—Rev. and Mrs. James Young entertained at dinner, Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. John Williams and family and Rev. and Mrs. Tolliver and family, honor of Mrs. Hill of St. Louis.—Mrs. Martha Greene entertained at a party, Monday evening, a number of young people in honor of her daughter, Miss Vicia, of Leesburg.
1. Under operation of orders the 807th Pioneer Infantry Band passes to its parent organization, April 13, 1919.
2. The 807th P. I. Band was assigned to these Headquarters in November, 1918, and had the distinction to take part as 1st Army Band in the ceremonies which announced the Armistice on Nov. 11, at Headquarters, 1st Army, American E. F.
3. The Army Commander, Lieut. All Hunter Higgitt, is pleased to take the opportunity to express his appreciation for the services of the band while a part of those Headquarters. The activities of the personnel of the band have at all times been characterized by cheerful performance of duties, exemplary conduct and all other indication of solderly qualities. Its professional attentions are most excellent.
4. The Army Commander extends to Lieut. William H. B. Voyney, commander of the 807th Pioneer Infantry Band, and to each member of the organization his congratulation on the compensable record made, and his best wishes for the future.
V. L. Willis.
Lieut. Colonel G. S. Deputy Chief of Staff.
How it is the Editor of the Defunct Cleveland Journal Can be There:
Tobias O. August 25, 2018
Editor, Gazette, Pearl Street—On records show that Nanam D. Branche, cause No. 10575, was given a court sentence on September 27th, 1915, and on same date was paroled to the Ohio State Board of Administration and as far as he knew he had withdrawn from Boston to any place he may occupy that must make a monthly report.
Yours truly,
W. L. Renz, Clerk of Courts,
By Frank Ault, deputy.
M.
Secretary of the N. A. A. C. P. Victim of Southern Intolerance and Brutality.
Austin, Tex., Aug 22. John R. Shilladay of New York, secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored people, headquarters in that city, was severely beaten in front of his hotel here today by several white citizens, and ordered to catch the first train out of town. Shilladay, who is white, agreed to leave town at once. The incident followed a meeting held with Negroes by Shilladay. About two works ago, local officers ordered the disbanding of a local branch of the association, on the grounds that the association has no permit to do business in Texas. At this time feeling ran high, both whites and blacks amusing themselves. Shilladay came to Austin yesterday and had a conference with the attorney general regarding the charter of the association. Local officials hauled him before a court of inquiry, yesterday afternoon, and interrogated him as to the object of his visit. They claim that his association has for its purpose the bringing about of "social quality" and that he advanced arguments along this line. His meeting with Negroes today following these conferences was not interfered with, but as he returned to his hotel his assistants met him and administered a severe hearing with their fists. A constable then escorted him to the depot, where he bought a ticket for St. Louis. The constable warned him not to stop in Texas. There is now no indication that local Negroes present the occurrence.—San Antonio, Tex.) Daily Light,
Austin, Tex., Aug. 22 — County Judge Dave K. Pickle, of Travis county, declared John R. Shillady had been "inciting Negroes, against whites," and had previously been warned to leave Austin. Judge Pickle said the attack on Shillady was made by himself. Constable Charles Harvey and Bon Pierce, none of whom he declared would shirk legal or other responsibility.
John R. Shillady lived in Detroit until 1902. His mother, brothers and sisters, two of the latter being teachers in the Detroit public schools, live at 115 Kendallorth avenue, Detroit—Detroit (Mich.) Free Press; Aug. 23, 1919.
THANK YOU, BROTHER HUNT
Hen, Harry C. Smith,
Editor Gazette, City.
Dear Sir--Enclosed please find
money-order for $150 for one year's
subscription to The Gazette. I always
truly try to get a copy, each week but
some times I am unable to secure it
to which I must subscribe. Then I
will be sure to get a copy.
I can certainly enjoy your string-ed-
fords as I know you have the in-
port of the race at heart. You are
free from it. I believe you will never
be prescriptive and you have passed
the great bounds.
Who would like to see you
legal support are the ones who try to
do you an injury.
But always remember: God will
take care of you as you are a race
man indeed, no one can deny.
Always wish you success. I re-
main.
$100 Sunday Dinner. August 1, 19
Fruit Cocktail
SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS
When It Is The Form of Government Under Which We Live—Our Backs Are To The Wall—We Must Fight
Enforcing the Amendments
We have watched in the vigors and epithets of the players in the attempt to enforce the thirteenth amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
We believe that every amendment when made a part of the constitution, should be rigorously enforced. The fourteenth and fifteenth amendments have not been enforced. When there were enacted primarily to prevent the franchise and limitation of black americans, White southern Americans have been permitted to participate in the national college elections for President based upon the old franchise of black men. The new congressmen have been permitted to participate in the national college elections for President based upon the old franchise of black men. The new congressmen have been permitted to participate in the national college elections for President based upon the old franchise of black men.
IN UNION
WE SPREAD
RCED!
d On Race Riots
Meet Violence With ence
of Government Under Our Backs Are To We Must Fight uck.
minded that the long nullified amendments shall now be restored to their place and power in the government. This nation should hide its face when it forces the coloured men in America to fight to maintain their franchise. These amendments can be enforced if a man like Ulysses S. Grant is elected the next President of the country. Just as Grant served notice on the south that it must respect the constitution, he must repose Americans their votes, and the south heard him, so will it hear any other real man who has the courage to enforce the constitution, and keep his worm vow as President of this country. Colored men can facilitate this right by pledging their votes in every state of the union to stand by the man that will pledge himself to enforce these amendments. We look to the Republican party to bring this man to the attention of the voters of this nation. To refuse to enforce this portion of the constitution is a cap at thirteen millions of the citizens of America. To the republican government, human rights and the American nation, cannot fail now. The Republican party owes it to itself to restore a democratic government in the south as well as in the entire nation. For the last six years, democratic government has disappeared from the nation. The policy of ignoring and disregarding the interest of the American nation for years, is the old policy of the south toward the Negro-transferred to the nation. Under southern demographics, the southern white men have done defiantly what they pleased to both Harriets and northern whites. We will upon colored voters in states, outside of the south where an honest vote is cast and counted, to use their votes to enforce the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments. Let us not waste our time, by dickering with the Democratic party for it has shown us that whenever it is victorious, the nation is run by southerners who hate the Union and Negro. We must have Mr. Will Hays and the party that we expect them to do this little job and that soon. Let us have aspirants for the presidency understand now that the enforcement of these amendments constitute our unanimous opinion and that to that we hope to use effectively our votes.
(Rev.) Wm. A. Byrd
Cape May, N. J.; Aug. 24, '19. From Athens, Ga.-Roderick B. Harris.
From Atlantic City, N.J.-D. S.
Wade, Walter Comer.
From Brooklyn, N. Y.-Mrs. J. W.
Evans, Viola Wodlyn.
From Baltimore, Nd—Mr. and Mrs. Jas. W. Hurbes, Mr. Edward Flake, Miss Sara Everette.
From Chicago, Ill—Mr. Jesse Bin-
From Flushing, N. M. Miss B.
From Flushing, N. Y.—Miss H. R.
Goiner, Mrs E. J. Butler.
From Dayton, O.—Dr. and Mrs. B.
A. Rose.
From Harrisburg, Pa.—Mrs. Mollie
Stewart. Miss. Jeanne Brown.
From Jacksonville, Fla. --Mr. and
N. Gill, Miss Ella H. McG
eil, Miss Ella H. McG
From Montreal, Canada—Mr. and
R. J. Jones.
From Nashville, Tenn—Mississ
Gauna and Naylor Stone.
From New York, N. Y—Mr. and
Sam Bright.
From Pittsburgh, Pa—Rev. and
Mrs. Shelton, Hale Bobon.
From Portsmouth O. J. J. A. M.
Mr. Wm. Gooden.
From New Haven, Conn.—Mr. and
M. F. Allen.
From Granville Va - Dr and Mrs
J. C. Downing, Dr. and Mrs. K. R.
Budley, Dr. E. D. Downing.
From Philadelphia, Pa - Miss Etta
Williamson, Chas. A. Budd, L. Johnson,
Lt. R. N. Jardine, M. Khan
Cook, Miss Edith Harrison, Mrs.
Louis H. Harrell, Mrs. Lola York, Dr.
and Mrs. G. G. Strookland, Miss Sara
Hickard, Mrs. W. Worcester, Mrs.
Harrison, Colleen, Mrs. M. E. Woll
Mrs. Joseph W. Worcester, Mrs.
Young, Mrs. Martha Willis,
Daisy White,
Vorkoff, Va. Mrs. you, Mrs.
Tanner, Mrs. Ora and Mrs.
Lester J. Jones, Mrs. P. H. Young
Mrs. Buster Burke, Lawyer, J. L.
Diggs.
From Smythefield, Va - Miss Jabra
Gray, Mr. Julian Gray.
From Washington, D. C. J. H.
Mannier, Miss Deatone Burke, Miss
Pierce, A. W. Worcester,
W. Worcester, N. M. and
W. M. Green.
From Washington, D. C. and
Miss Worcester.
PUMUREED EVERY SATURDAY
TT SERISGITION RATES
9 im Advance) ‘
Gebseribers aro requested fo remit 0
peltellice money order or rere :
Suey a okstered letter
catiged sti Rostoftices [n Cleve-
Ontos, am second-elans
matter.
! , ommn te
wha cara
Editor, and proprtetor,
do sSHB GAZETTE, —
(Gay. Central 613-K)
@lackstone Ballding, Cleveland,
Member Ohio. Lexisiaturet 1894
to 1896: 1896 to 1898; 1900 to 1902
I tee cer
THE GAZETTE Is the oldest, and
tas. the Iargest bona fide eircalation,
double that of any newspaper in. the
interest of Afro-Americans, publish
4 In the state of Ohio, and compar-
faon, with any will. tmmedfately e-
talilish its rank as one of the NEWS-
{28ST AND BEST in the country, .
10,000,000 Afro-Americans.
300,000 in Ohio.
95,900 im Cleveland.
—
SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1919.
‘Mr. Chas. E. Hunt of this city is
‘an exception to the general rule, as
his letter published in this paper will
prove. There are others, of course,
but mot too many. He believes in
giving flowers while one is still able
‘to ‘smell: them, rather than waiting
Until after death to make the, gift,
Thanik you; Brother Hunt. It is very
cnieouraging, indeed.
tte iillh ——
"Those. persons who asked The Ga-
2ette how “Noomdy” Brascher could
be in Chicago, if out of the Ohio Pen-
itentiary on parole, will find their
ios answered jn the letter, from
je clerk. of courts in Toledo, pub-
Ushed elsewhere in this paper. The
defunct Journal was the fifteenth
“race”, publication to die in Cleve-
Yami since the advent of “The Old
Reliable” Gazette. NEXT!
iit!
WHEN WAS IT?
Recently Republican editors have
been challenging their Democratic
contemporaries to point to an in-
stance in international affairs when
President, Wilson stood for “America
first”, Apparently in answer to. this,
‘attention has been called to a speoch
thé President made during the Pres:
idéntial campaign of 1916, when he
insisted that al] must stand for
Ainerica first. But that was not a
matter of international affairs, ‘That
was domestic politics. We should
like to, know when President Wilson
stodd. for» Amehica first - since his
election and in international affairs.
oe ate
‘TRACED TO WHITE HOUSE
U. S. Senator Miles Poindexter, of
Washington, accused the. President of
lending aid and comfort to the Bol-
sheVists, The New York Times, a
thick-and-thin supporter of the, Pres-
ident, detied the accuéation, and as-
serted that Poindexter had misquoted
the President, On August, 11, Poin-
dexter placed before the Senate in
‘open session the record evidence in
support. of his charge, and the Times
haf to acknowledge that it had mis-
represenited the Washington Senator.
‘The evidence is amazing in its charac-
ter. No. one should fail to get
copy af. the.speech and read it. Un-
doubtedly Senator Poindexter will
send. a copy on request.
4 eee.
ANOTHER “CRACKER” ATTACK
However much The ~Gazette may
have pated to John. R. Shillady’s
seven or eight thousand dollar salary,
as sécretary of the N. A.A. C. P., we
have never failed to reeognize the
fact. that he is a “live wire” secretary,
and to say so in these columns. While
we have. criticised the Association's
marked failure to take the lead in the
big race efforts of the past. and pre-
sent, and its. failure to, show. any in-
tentian of doing: so in the future, Mr.
Shillady cannot be wholly blamed for
this and we hold him responsible for
it-only, in part, Regardless of, the
‘foregoing, and all else, we are with
Secretary Shillady and against. those
iow-down white brutes and ruffians of
Austin, Texas, who showed their
“eréckex” breeding and. environment
in that cowardly attaek upon him, last
Friday. It is useless, we. presume,
to even think of securing. their pun-
ishment in any of the local -courts.
They know it and indirectly bast. of
it in the dispatch ta the Detroit Free
Press, republished. elsewhere,:in. this
Paper. Since city, county and. state
and federal officials are all: southern
democrats, there seems. to be abso-
Iuitely-no probability of the “cracker”
offesders’ punishment, we _ regret
greatly to have to say.
Im the second case: against “Dr.”
H. H. Domas of Chicago (tried last
week Wednesday) who was given a
pentence of $25, costs and 20 days in
oo asimilar charge 06 study mon’
7 “nd {aise pretense, ° the sen
ence was gasramee' paiting
‘th “Doctor's” completion ‘of his sen-
tedee in the first case.
THRILLINGLY INTERESTING
Account of the Washington Riot By
@ White Journalisg,‘an, Eye-
Witness—H« le!
Washington, D. C.—From my win-
dow above the howling, snarling,
swearing rioters, when fully 3,000
were jammed ' into two short
‘blocks of which the Patent Of-
fice formed one long side. I studied
this surging crowd for over two hours
and a half. It was a brightly lighted,
‘on-residence street, and a one-way
street, the “way” being right under
my window. Again I say that much
ofthe mob was. white; 1 doubt. if
were: 50 Negroes among them.
The: mob was comprised of | young
white meniwho had not an idea to 2
humdred. ‘They were an irresponsible,
ignorant, -impudent,: swashbpekling
‘lot. Barly-in the evening there was
fnot. a ‘policeman in the. ares. men-
tioned—aunlens he might have been in
pain lathes:
It wae an. armed. moby: these irre-
sponsible, yelling, blaspheming. young
white men. I know they were armed
with pistols and six-shooters, because
every little while some one would fire
one of these into the air, which tend-
ed to make my windows rather dan-
gerous, but no harm was done there.
The language used by these young
white ment is unprintable. The ribald
jests they flung about, the threats
they made, the advice they yelled to
one another was all provocative ‘of
bloodshed.
At either end of these two blocks
were Ninth and Seventh streets.
Rioting there was continuous, gun
firing frequent. Two men were killed
and many injured. As the killings
were announced, the mob I have de-
seribed would surge first to one cross
‘street. and then the other with a roar
and thudding of fast-running of
thousands of feet. Then in a few
minutes they would surge back to the
other cross street. Sometimes, when
wild rumor flew thru the air that
mounted troops were coming, thou-
sands would seck refuge on the Pat-
ent Office steps, where, behind its
grim. granite pillars, they found safe
refuge. *
‘Officers Did Not Interfere
Not am officer; Government or po-
lice, interfered. | ‘The watchman of
| the’ Patent Office viewed the turbu-
{lent crowds from the brilliantly illu-
minated upper windows of the big
building.
These white’ men were “egging”
the colored men on to desperate
deeds—deeds without a name. We
are held highly responsible for per-
mitting German propaganda to cireu-
late among us. Why should the
Washington police or any city police
permit: things of this kind to go on?
‘These white men were inciting ignor-
ance, searcely less dense than their
own, to do awful things. A machine
gun’ fired down those two blocks
couldn't have missed a traitor, for not
one of the mob but was howling trea-
son unspeakable.
| There might have been some excep-
tions; too, for in that mob were doz-
eng of little boys from 10 to 12 years
old. They ran back and forth and
velied and screamed with the rest.
Why didn’t the police turn these kids
neross their knees, spank them till
they'd eat for a week standing, and
send them home? They remained to
the end, *
| then there were, eallow. youths in
white sand young’ girls in
white, aR close to the buildings,
all of them chewing gum, the girls
screaming and giggling, the youths
swenring: Rie round, vaudeville oaths.
Yes; ai there’ were handsome
limousines. with women in full even-
ing dress—indeed, almost every kind
of a motor vehicle, and all crowded
with well-dressed ‘women. — Really
| vou know, it is difficult. to picture our
Amerieun’ society woman as thus filled
jywith animal curiosity. IT heard one
Vshrill-veiced child cry out, “I don’t
HS a getting killed, mamma;
Jlet’s vo where the niggers are getting
killed!”
{The newspapers of the day and the
evening had been filled with requests
from the Commissioners and sugges-
| tions from editors that decent people
stay at home, leaving the streets
clear, and then the desperados could
bejeaaily taken care of.
| Did Washington stay at home?
It did not,
‘That was notice enough. that some-
thing would be doing, and “the de
cent’ people”. of Washington wanted
‘oii reat the kiling,
Did, the. police, send such. “decent
neople” out of \e congested down-
town districts?
‘They -did not.—National Republi-
can, Washington, D.C.
“JIM CROW” Y. M, C. A's
As’ Viewed ‘by a Sterling White
Friend of the Race.
Madison, N. J., March 14, '19.
Miss Mary E. Pierce,
61 Mt. Vernon St.,
Chicago, Ill.
Dear Madame-—T take it, from the
‘anor of » marked article in “Unity”
sent-me-from the above address, that
you ate “a school teacher” and will
not’be offerded at the sedate title af-
fixed to this epistle: 1 am writing
first because you are a stranger to
me and t would like to know whence
you idea that T was opposed
1oRosenwald’s “int Crow” system of
philanthropy? And second, _ why
were you. so late im sending this in-
formation ?
Briefly tald, in my mail yesterday
was & Periodical or magazine, “Unt-
ty" of date, Octaber’17, 1918, ‘and on
Pages 66-69, under caption “Bright-
ening up the Rural South,” was this
marked item extolling the praise and
advertising the benefits of Rosen-
wald’s financial generosity in up-
building Negro schools in Alabama
and other sections of the rural south.
I may have criticized Rosenwald’s
gratem of philanthropy. ax, exempli-
fied in building Negro ¥. M. C. A.’s,
thas accentuating the color line and
race divisions in religion which is con-
trary to Christ's spirit (Col. 3: 11)
ahd’ inimical to christian progress—
Gal. 3: 26-9. ‘True he has done and
is doing much good but the underly-
ing: evil principle of. exelusiveness
will grow: and: dominate’ both’ the
white ‘and’ colored’ co-religionists and
instead of reaping harmony and one-
ness of identity in Chfist, aversion,
distrust and indifference will” sprin
bn and hamper (most effectively) all
future effortsto kindle a feeling. of
rotherly love between them. Tell
me, why must we have separate
churehes ‘and schools amd Y. M. C.
A's, ete., for white and colored folk,
but’ there ix only one common jail?
Sin draws no color-line, why should
initeoumens? Sicknéns, disease
‘death make no distinction in
GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, OHIO, AUGUST 20, 1919.
color, why should religion? Ignor-
fance and weakness are not amenable
‘0 color prejudice, why should prayer
eat joni Pr cary eo eoet ee
Negro race, but if God be just and
we reap (nationally “and spiritually)
the fruit of the seed we sow, what
shall'be the harvest of the so-called
“white” christian churches of Amer-
‘ica, when Christ comes to reward his
‘servants, to punish his enemies and
‘to judge the world? Math. 7: 12,
21.38.
There is only one heaven and only
one hell. In either case we shall not
get rid of the presence of the Negro,
as our equal in joy or woe, and we
might just as well accustom ourselves
‘to sharing equally with him God's
blessing here, before being forced to
do so hereafter.
Respeetfully, yours:
(Rey.) Geo. Wilsow Brent.
OUR OHIO CIVIL RIGHTS LAW
Upon the request of many readers
of The Gazette we print below the
text of Hon, Harty. C. Smith's Ohio
Civil Rights law which'the editor had
‘enacted while x member of the 71st
General Assembly, in 1994:
| Ee Cangenl Cade of Ohics
See, 12940. Whoever, being the
proprietor or his employee, keeper or
manager of an inn, restaurant, eat-
ing house, barber-shop, public con-
veyance by land or water, theater or
other place of public accommodstion
and amusement, denies to a citizen,
exeept for reasons applicable alike
to all citizens and regardless of race
or color, the full enjoyment of the ac-
commodations, advantages, facilities
or privileges thereof, shall be fined:not
less than fifty dollars. nov more than
five hundred dollars, or imprisoned
not less than thirty’ days nor more
than ainety days, or both.
Sec. 12941. Whoever. violates -the
next preceding section shall also pay
not less than fifty dollars nor more
than five hundred dollars to the per-
son aggrieved thereby to be recov-
ered in any court of competent jur-
isdietion in the county where such of-
fense was committed.
‘This law has repeatedly been: held
constitutional and good law by the
Ohio Supreme court. The trouble is
‘our people will not se it as often as
they should, but expect it to do for
them what they should and must do
for themselves, under it, in the courts
REMARKS ABOUT ADVERTISING
While it is true that occasional ad-
ortising will bring extra business, it
is equally true that constant, persist-
ent advertising will ‘keep , "business
growing during “dull days.”
‘The merchant who considers riches
a burden should never advertise. His
store may be like a summer resort in
January. Do YOU advertise?
The merchant who never advertises
under any cireumstance or condition
may imagine he is wise, but, his com-
petitors have no desire to disturb his
imagination. It's a good time to “get
awake.”
CORRESPONDENTS WANTED
The old reliable Gazette desires an
active agent and correspondent in
every city and town in Ohio and
nelghboring states having a number
of Afro-American residents. Only a
litfle time on Fridays or Saturdays
is required.
We are espectally destrous of hear-
ing from pereons in the following
named cities: Springfield, Dayton,
Piqua, Lima, 0., and other places,
particularly in Ohio, where we have
none.
Write to the eiitor of The Gazette,
Blackstone building, Cleveland, 0.,
and terms will be sent promptly. Our
readers will oblige us greatly by
sending at once the addcesses of per-
sons in the cities named and others
in the state, to whom we ‘ean write
relative to the matter
sitessereceevesserererones
z OUR LESSON 5
We must learn to govern our-
selves and work toxether for
our own advancement. If we
do not learn to govern ourselyes
and work together for our own
advancement, we may be very
sure that we will be governed
by others in their own interest
as well as worked by others for
their own advancement and not
ours.
—George W. Blount,
peeeeeeeescsssersoseoess
reeecseeeessrocseoererrs
PROTEST AGAINST WRONG,
‘To submit in silence when
we should protest makes co-
wards out of men, The ham-
an race has climbed on Pro-
test. Had no voice been rals-
ed against Injustice, {gnor-
ance ‘and. lust, the Inquisition
yet would serre the Jaw, and
‘guillotines decide our least
disputes, ‘The few who dare,
must speak and speak again
to right the wrongs of many.
—Fila Wheeler Wilcox.
osceseccesccccoesesesee
teeeccsscessesesesecese.
TUE MAN WHO DARES.
“ET honor the man who In 4
the conscientious discharge of
3) his duty dares to stand alone;
the world, with ignorant, In« ?
tolerant judgment, may con. }
demn, the countenances of 3
% relatives may be averted, and
2 dhe hearts of friends ‘grow
cold, but the sense of duty 3
done shall be sweeter than 3
the applause of the world,
the countenances of relatives 3
or the hearts of frlends.”— J
Charles Sumner, °
Saetsescssrosrecessseseess
The Temple Theatre
E. 55th St. and. Central Ave.
Friday, Aug. 29. Al Ray in “Be
a Little’ Sport.” “Silent Mystery,”
No. 9
Saturday, Aug. 90. Charles Chap-
lin in “Police.”" “Perils of Thunder
Mountain,” No. 7.
Sunday, Aug. 31. Alice Brady in
“Red Head.” Also “Red Glove,” No.
18.
Monday, Sept. 1. “Other Man’s
Wife.” Also Eddy Polo.
Tuesday, Sept. 2. “Choosing a
Wife.” “Demon's Shadow,” No. 6.
Wednesday, Sept, 3. Charles Chap-
lin in “Sunnyside.” Mary MeLaren
in “Her Bargain.”
Thursday, Sept. 4. “The Great
Gamble,” first episode. Also a good
feature,
POLITICS OR GOOD LOOKS OF
CANDIDATE SHOULD NOT
BE CONSIDERED.
SCHOOL FQR FUTURE WOMEN
VOTERS AT NEW HAMEP
SHIRE COLLEGE.
Municipal problems, as they effect
iuture women mayors and: other city
officials, were discussed at the scheol
jor ture women voters at New
Hampshire college, and—well, listen
Mrs. Nancy Schoonmaker of Con-
necticut, spoke’ with great eravity
when #he said: “Ladies, when we
aet to voting for a fauyor, shalt vc
ote for tim, as our brothers, ike
boys have always voted fre ™biny’
‘Thar is, shall we elect our mayor. be-
cause he is awfully good looking?
Shall we elect him for one of the
worst reasons of al, because he is 4
Republican or a Democrat? Op shall
we elect lim becanse he is awiully
nice and speaks to us whenever we
sec him on the sircets?”
Mrs. Schoonmaker's tones were of
decpest religion. “Girls,” she warn-
ed, “these are the reasons that
prompt men to vote. Let ws heware
of them.” Mrs. Schoonmaker then
jaid down a law: “Ladies, we don't
get the best mayor when his election
is mixed with politics. When we
vote, let_us Teale polities out af the
question.”
The women voiers were then given
1 few kindergarten first principles
uy Mrs. Schoonmaker. “For instance,
when we women vole for a street
cleaner, why not, for a chance, yore
for a man who’ knows a little” bit
about street cleaning? Though, for
that matter, woman is the natural
street cleaner by experience and he-
redity.
"Yes," allowed Mrs-+ Trueworthy
White,’ of Roston, “and when we get
‘elected: to street cleaning bureans sc
wlll invent a nice new vacuum strect
cleaner. It will scoop up the dirt
easily and it will he a pleasure to
run it over the street.”
Here are some gems from the
| meeting about sundry political tricks
“the boys” may be up to:
“The only reason for two. political
parties is that when one gets so had
you can’t stand it any longer, why,
them, you can put it out and put in
‘the-other.
“The man voter,* Mrs. Schoon-
maker said, “knows everything. It is
-awiully nice to be born knowing it
all, so that you don’t lose. How-
evor, the tables are turned. We don't
know so much now as we will know
}vlien school closes here,
“But one thing we do know, We
acs not going to ask owe husbands
chow we shall yote. To form: our
opinions, however, we can as poor,
ignorant’ women, sisk questions. {tic
our privilege. ft is our privilege,
as voting women, to change our
minds. ‘The oftencr we change then
perhaps, the more of a stir we shall
make in littl vicious Republican
nests where gerrymandering is the
cofacth teat
BEST UTILITY
If 1 were asked to name what, ia
my opinion, is the most desired utile
ity of modern life, T would not name
the raitroad, nor the telephone, nor
the electric light, nor the automobile,
essential as they are, but { would
hame rtunine water in the house,
Chis conduces more to cleanliness
and health and comfort than any
vher improvement that modera civile
ization fas brought ue Lt ean be
had, too, with little cost. There is
nota farmer of moderate means who
cannet, with economy, have running
water ‘and sewers in his home, and
this would contribate more 19 the
health and comfort of his family
than any other improvement. The
house fly and the mosquito are dead:
ly enemies of our people. They can
be guarded against. with slight ex-
pense, With” running water and
screens, any home, however humble,
can be clean and comfortable and
healthy, and the people who live in
it will be cleaner, more _com-
fortable and healthy.—St. . Louis
Board of Health.
WOMEN VOTE
Equal Suffrage Rules In New Repub-
He ‘O8-@nechosfvabla:
The new republic of Czechoslo-
vakia may lave many trials, but its
“White House” will never be picked
by “votes for women" campers, or
‘its streets’ blocked. hy coltrane pa
rades:
For, “when this newest of the
world's democracies was horn, wo-
imen caine into the same political
[vrivifeges and powers as the men,
The municipal elections will sce
women not only at the polling places,
but in numerous cases standing as
[candidates for office.
At all the toca! town council mect-
‘ings, there have always been a large
peoportion of women representatives.
TO COOL BRONZE BEARINGS
Never forget that cooling with
water a bronze hearing that has heen
running hot is the last thing todo.
The best thing to do is ta wait ior
the beering 10 cool in the ordinary
‘conrse of events, lut if yon are fit
too: much of a bitty for this, coat
th off instead of water
Among the meny American women
wii ave found employment ag tray-
cling salesmen the past few years,
Miss Helen Couriney ts probably the
only one handling her oven particular
line of goods, iss Conrney sells
sire engines and other fire-fighting
apparatus for a mantiscturing: firm in
Columbus, O., and is said to be one
of the most ‘siccessful salesaten in
the business.
POINTED PARAGRAPHS
eae sas ec Mepcinrael
Manya poor man fas wothing bt
money.
Kindness quickly spoits unless
kept in citculation.
Silent men never bave occasion to
‘Gar ther waees
CAN BS RIDDLED, YET DOES
NOT LEAK OR ‘EXPLODE
1AS ODD FEATURES
FINAL TESTS WERE MADE AT
4 DAYTON AVIATION EX.
PERIMENTAL STATION
AND PRONOUNCED
SUCCESSFUL
JN pagoline iank, invented ter eet
Weinberg 9? Detroit, Sas passed
government tests that show it to be
both leak proot ard explosion prao!
In may he. riddled wishowr Tossing 2
drop, and jacradiary niles may he
fired into it without setting ik on are,
‘As described in the Acridl Ngo
Weekly. Mr. Weinbera’s invenion is
feimarily on ordinary. metal tok of
any sie o> shape, liawing two cone
nections and ite filler cap. The ence
tion connection is to provide a par-
thal vactiim about the Tiguid suitici
ent ity prevent its escape saint tho
Pressiire o; atmosphere on the es
Erion. ‘This can be accomplished in
A umber of ways
The fel reaches he earlioretor
through the second coinection hy
overcoming the vacuum create?
throught the former. This may he
accomplished by maiataining gresier
suction or by positive teat pumps on
the interior of the tank.
To incure proper tunsioniag at al!
times, the tants is enveloped in some
clastic material, preferably rebher
whieh covers any ragged holes ia toe
taeial that a fjullet might mnie upon
entering. This covering, due 10 its
clasticity. retuens practically ts its
former siate site being pierced and
eaves a hole so small ghat it ca
Sardly bie detected. Thé tanks may
he Hiterally made a sieve by buile:
Noles and sil fanetion propesly.
The principle of operation i= witit>
gailonaus toa very sitiple example.
Aimast. veryhody. is familiar with
the fac water will not pour out of
the neck of a bottle if the latter ts
tuened iipside down quickly. ‘This is
duc to the partial vacuum above the
fluid, which wilt old the liquid in
the bottle unul the vacuum is ce-
stroyed by the cutrauee uf air. Te
Simplest way do to this is to pots
‘the Tiguid out with the hottle ina
horizontal position or provile
‘secon opening such as we are c-
eustomed to make before we. pour
fmailk ‘out of a can, ‘The air enterins
ne tole altos the fluid to {ow cue
of the other
Te follows that if ve desire to keep
‘te Muid in the can all we ave te
do is to maintain sufficient partial
vaguum above tite liquid regardless
of Row many holes the ean may
Mave. This is wher Weinbere Wid
‘and he produced a vacuum in? ver:
imple way hy (he “peod of tie aie
‘plane itsel’.
©The application of she principle 2:
joaly aiakies a tani lealsprosi.. int
makes: it explosion-praat as well: te
eatise an explosion there must he 4
combustinle imivtire cf sir ard teh
But in the Weinherg tank no aes
Fconilition ricists on aceon’. wf th
rarefied air. ‘he flames starting on
the outside of the tank from a0 in
cendiary batter immediately
drawn into the tani teousl the hi
Het opening and are extine: nelow the
fuel, Any duller striking aliave the
fuel eannat cise ignition iy vouson
Of the vacuum exisuna theres fn lot
the inventor in testing lis tank erie
inally had wo incendiary’ hullers. ot
Ris disposnt, co scier shooting tiles
into the tank he directed a torch
against the bullet holes,
Th has been discovered that a tt
Tet rarely goes complecty tecoush a
fank. In most eases it will poncerate
one side and will lose its energy <0
completely while passing throws the
fiquid that ic sell drop into the wants
Temas he paradoxivally hue traly as:
serted: that he [rel tank which for
merly possessed the greater danger
to thie pilot has now became iis ies!
Bille: proot protection,
‘The fal tests were made at the
ayintion experimental station at Me-
Cook Geld, Dayton, in the following
manner: ‘Two identical tanks, oie
made according to the Weinhers ir-
vention, the other coverei) vith eine! =
Fraateriale prepared by. the science
and rescurch division of the war de-
partment, ware shor at side by side
“with armor piercing and Incendices
bullets. The latter tank caught. fire
after the, third shot, while the Wein
berg tank was peastrated by Cleees
uumor piercing bullets, and. neither
Pit Wor: cabinnioa Gccrce,
AN ARBRIDGED ADDITION
In a Pacific coast town they tel!
of a poliical leader who once four:
ished theres and who, ‘knowing the
financial necessities of one of his
most valitable workers, sent him 9
small portictio, bound ‘like a book,
“among, the leaves of which were le:
posited bank notes to the amount of
‘several thousand dollars.
Some time later the to met, and
the donor ssid:
And how did you Mike the new
work J sent you??
“A. fine sort!" exclaimed the
onier “fread i: with great interest,
so great, indeed, that [ await the
second volume with impatience.”
The politician smiled, and when
the worker's birthday came round le
presented him with another portfolio,
similar in every respect to the Grst
Dur whh thee wor!s engraved upon
i
This work is complete ia two vale
umes. Cartoons Magazine.
| The Naltonal Council of Wonten
in Canada has declared in favor ot
the substitution of the slectrie chair
for the gallows asa method of eve.
| St George’, one of Monteea!'s
most aristocratic Anglican churches,
ibone of the fest in Canada to admit
women cs “vestrymen.”
| What you get out of life depends
spon what you put in it.
‘The tacky man can afford. to pose
ax a disheliover in-lack,
Get busy and attend to business—
but be sure it is your own business,
> See us First for all Goods in our Line j
:
; s
JOHN S. HALL
q Prices Reasonable. Satisfaction Guaranteed, ,
: JEWELER AND OPTOMETRIST
2 3121 Central Ave, Cleveland, 0. Cent. 9846 Wf
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s CENTRAL SHIRT SHOP :
: A RACE ENTERPRISE 1
; G. J. TATE, Proprietor. ‘
: GENTS’ FURNISHINGS, NDCKWEAR, 1
§ Hosiery, Underwear and Arrow Collars and Shirts, Hats, Caps, ete
1 2922 CENTRAL AVE. 1
$ Phone Prospect 441-J. :
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: EQUAL RIGHTS BARBER SHOP:
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; FIVE CHAIRS “AND "A MANICURIST :
; In Attendance
. THE COMPLETE BARBER SHOP :
: Agency for the leading race pap
; E.R. BROWN, Proprietor
: PATRONIZE
7 2a
JOE HEDGES’ POOL ROOM
AND DARBER SHOP
3048 Central Ave.
; One of the Best in the city. Everybody Wel-
: come!
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RS RGN rakes ue beirgrc’ sutiral, long straight and giousy Reginall
oe Eocon Haima has becn elving perfertsalistaction for fifteen sears
a Every bor sold on amoney back cuarantee: ‘No woman eae ak?
4 ford to-nesiect her bait and face, Took coed and make ble
ironey by slturard using the Regisnik Laboratory's hive of
rood, Cond ti Scunduet the following trestmest
i, One box ef Cocos Balm. 2 One box of Shampoo Jelly 25
Seskes st OWmnener | Geeks feet nenaa eee
She box Pressing Oils tac Toul sae
Ailfivesent Poxt Paid for 15, Agents wanted everywhere Large cash commistion
palds Writefor configentia TERMS 1) AGENTS Addren
To OTHE REGINALL LAGORATORY, ia Boil St Atlente, Ce.
Cuyahoga, Central 2017 K ete
9 Wiens
Edward Doctor’s Dining Room
3033 Central Avenue
CAFE and POOL, ROOM—CABARET
FRANK DOCTOR, Proprietor
James Mabel, Chef
Rosedale 1800 Quality Service Central 7235 Ro
SLAUGHTER BROS.
Funeral Directors and
Embalmers
Office and Funeral Parlors
3923 CENTRAL AVE.
Autos for All Occasions. Calls Answered Day ahd Night
Try Our Box Back Tailor- Lie
Made Suits La ;
THEY FIT / #4
Men’s Suits pressed, 50c. |, fe ae 3
Cleaned, $1.25. We doall | * ggeyee * 7g)
kinds of alterations. : ee ee an
Cox Dry Cleaning & ¥- as F sg ™ A
Tailoring Co. oe
Tailors and Dry Cleaners. ih Aes He
2728 Central Ave. es es
*Phone, Central 4069L. aie, wy
Ce:
ee
PATRONIZE OUR
_ ADVERTISERS
aeRO sae bia
: aS
| MAIN THEATRE :
; 0. E. Belles, Manager.
f Seovill Ave. and E. 25th St. |
:
Friday, August 29.
p AN ALL STAR CAST in .
3 “CHOOSING A WIFE.” 4
. Saturday, August 30. :
> THEDA BARA in “A Woman |
E There Was.” A wonde ,
r Fox Photoplay
; Sunday, August 31. .
+ GEO. WALSH in “Putting One -
Over.” Also ELMO LIN- |
COLN in *Elmo The Mighty.” |
No. W, ce
Monday, September 1. :
Labor Day. :
CREIGHTON HALE and
JUNE CAPRICE. in “Oh |
Boy!" A picture you will be |
sorry if you miss
Matinee at 1:96 noon, ‘
Tuesday, September 2. .
CONSTANCE | TALMAGE in |
“The Shuttle.” Also “Great ;
Gamble,” No. 5.
Wednesday, September 3. |
DOROTHY DALTON jy “Green |
Eyes.” Also two real western |
Photoplav, “The Tane of
Bullets.”
‘Thursday, September 4.
GLADYS LESLIE in “The
Girl Woman.” Also “Perils of
Thunder Mountain,” No. 11
Te a a ee
Bell "Phone Rosedale 420
Hour
9. A. M—1-3 P.M—6-8 P. M.
Sunday's 5 BM
E. J. GREGG, M. D.
Diseases of Women and Children
2222 F, Sith St. Temple Theater Bldg
Rooms 2 Cleveland, 0.
Opens April 1, Closes Noy, 15, 1919.
HOTEL DALE
CAPE MAY, N. J.
Gn. Serer han ad
cP a eae SS
ft SS eel s
Si a li ee chars
ee :
= ed r
CSRNES” O88 ree: ene
Extravagance
This Magnificent, Hotel, Located in
the Heart of the Most Beautifel
Seashore Resort in the World.
is replete with every modern improve-
ment, superlative in construction, ap-
pointments, sorviee and refined” pa-
tronage. Orchestra daily, garage, bath
houses, tennis, ete,, om premises, Spe-
vial attention given to ladies and ebil-
Gren. Sent_for booklet, With sani-
tanium added and Dr. C, A. Lewis of
the University of Penn. in attendance,
E. W. DALE, Owner.
"Right on the Job and the Job Done Right!"
Dances, Parties and Receptions a Specialty RAYMOND A. DAVIS Director. ROY SMITH. Manager. 6319 Central Ave., Cleveland, O. 'Phone, Rosedale 787-1 Local 550, A. F. M.
The Douglass Club
For
Political & Social
Advancement
LOGAN OWENS, Treasurer.
2828 Central Ave.
Cleveland, O.
The MECCA
For the
PUREST AND BEST
MEDICINES, SODAS,
CIGARS, ETC.,
and for
Prescriptions filled by a
Registered Pharmacist is
L. A. Lesser's
DRUG STORE
2202 Scoville Ave.
The Pride of Carolina
The State Agricultural and
Mechanical College of
South Carolina
Organizations
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.
Every Modern Facility.
Standard Equipment, Military
Discipline. A Faculty of 67
Officers and Instructors.
For information and Catalog,
Write.
R. S. WILKINSON, Pres.
Orangeburg, S. C.
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HEROLIN MEDICINE CO., Atlanta, Ga.
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CLEVELAND
Mrs. Alida McFarland visited in Detroit, last week.
Mr. Charles Me Afee, musician and old resident, E. 20th St., is critically ill.
Mrs. Rena Brack, E. 46th St., left Sunday for a two weeks' visit in Atlantic and N. Y. cities.
Louia V. Jones' violin solos at St. John's S. S., Sunday week, were fine and greatly appreciated.
Dr. Geo. C. Haynes of the Government Labor Dep't., Washington, D. C., called on The Gazette, last week Friday morning.
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Grove of St. Louis, en route to Providence, R. I., were recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Bolden.
Mrs. Clifford Toney and son, Christian of Granville, were guests of Mrs. Jos. Secig, Penrose Ave., E. C. last week. The latter has been quite ill.
Attorney and Mrs. John Ballard are being visited by his sister, Miss Pauline Ballard of Cadiz, and Mrs. Chas. Wells of Oberlin.
Dan Young of Akron, former resident of Cleveland, was in the city, this week. He is general manager of the Lincoln Cafeteria Grill Rooms of that city.
Mrs. Annie Morton of Washington, D. C., is spending a week's vacation here, visiting her son, W. R. Morton, 2425 E. 43d St., headwaiter at the Royal Inn.
Big Labor Day dancing party, Monday evening, September 1, given by The Men's Club. Dancing commences at 8 P. M. Music by Raymond Smith's orchestra. Admission on eighty-five cents. Adv. Dr. W. W. Whitfield, dentist, wishes to announce that he will resume practise, Sept. 2, 1919, at his former 7743 Central Ave., over the Owl Drug Co. Adv.
Mrs. Nellie J. Macklin, of N. Y. City, visited her sister Mrs. Nettie Jones Brown of Birmingham Ala., last week. The latter is the guest of her sister-in-law, Mrs. Alex. Martin, E. 400th St.
Dr. Geo. C. Sutton arrived in the city, last week, from Washington, D.C., via Pittsburgh. He leaves for his new position as resident physician of Mercy Hospital for Training Nurses, at Philadelphia, Pa., Oct. 1.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. R. Conners left, the first of the week, for Niagara Falls and other eastern cities (on their vacation). Mr. Conners is secretary of our local Welfare Association and Community Center.
L. R. Carey, E. 30th St., and Mrs. Susie Brown, E. 36th St., returned Monday, from a vacation visit with his mother at his home near New Vienna, O. Mrs. Ida B. Carey gave an enjoyable reception in their honor, April 29.
Big Labor Day dancing party, Monday evening, September 1, given by The Men's Club. Dancing commences at 8 P. M. Music by Raymond Smith's orchestra. Admission, eighty-five cents.—Ady.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bolden, the latter former Miss Sadie Cisco of this city, guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Bolden and Mrs. Ida B. Cash, left, last week Thursday, for Chicago, their home. Mrs. Cash is Mrs. Sadie Bolden's cousin.
Afro-American voters of Cleveland stand together! Continue to be men! Insist that the Republican organization of this city hold its formal campaign opening next month, anywhere but at Luna Park.
Rev. and Mrs. E. H. Hunter, the former a leading pastor of Portsmouth, Va., were recent guests o
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Major and Mrs. W. T. Anderson, E. 89th St. It is said the major may become a candidate for bishop at the next A. M. E. General Conference.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. S. Smith left, the latter part of last week, for N. Y. and Atlantic Cities and Philadelphia. Mr. Smith had just returned from a several days' visit in Chicago. He gives a thrilling account of the recent race riots there.
Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Forrester, of Newport, R. I. are stopping with Sgrt. and Mrs. Jesse Thrower, E. 43rd St. He came to study dentistry. Mrs. Forrester has just graduated from the N. Y. school of Philanthrophe. They called on The Gazette, last week Thursday.
Big Labor Day dancing party, Monday evening, September 1, given by The Men's Club. Dancing commencements at 8 P. M. Music by Raymond Smith's orchestra. Admission, eighty-five cents—Ady.
Louia V. Jones of this city has cause to feel very proud of the fact that he was a member of the 807th Pioneer Infantry Band. You, too, will feel proud of the fact and also of the band when you read Lieut. Col. V. L. Willis' letter, written for Lieut. Gen. Hunter Liggett, and sent to the band prior to its leaving France for this country. It is published in full elsewhere in this paper.
Dr. Ellis A. Dale wishes to announce the removal of his office from 2332 E. 40th St., to 2284 E. 55th St.—Adv.
The Starlight Investment Co., was incorporated at Columbus, last week. Capital stock, $10,000. A. D. Boyd ("Star") and Joseph Jodhges are the leading members of the company which, as a starter, has purchased a good business and residence building in Central Ave., worth about $8,000. This is a move in the right direction and The Gazette congratulates the company and wishes it much success.
The rumor that there was a fight "anong crap-shooters over in the woods," the evening of the C. A. of C. M. emanation celebration at Puritus Springs Park, recently, is absolutely false, so W. S. Hansbary, caterer on the grounds, informs us. Mr. Hansbary cooked and should the praise for the chicken served that day that caused so very much favorable comment. It was certainly fine—away out of the ordinary—for such occasions.
Dates for examinations for clerical and stenographic positions at the city hall were announced by the city civil service commission, last week Thursday. Positions pay from $60 a year to $1,620 per year. The dates for the examinations are: junior clerk and bookkeeper, September 17; typists and stenographers, September 20; clerks and typists, September 24; typists and stenographers, October 11; deputy clerk, municipal court, October 18.
Among the several affairs given for Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Smith of Oil City, Pa., was a five course dinner by Mesdames Imogene Smith and Chas. Whartuzes of Scovill Ave. Among the guests were Miss Cousins and Attorney and Mrs. Jno. Ballard, Mrs. Jno. Thomas entertained Mr. and Mrs. Johns, at the Royal Inn, and Mrs. Hannah Davenport gave a dinner party, Monday evening, in their honor. Others present were Mrs. Jenkins, Mr. Manning, Mr. and Mrs. Jno. Ballard.
BEST FOR THE BLOOD — Puro Herbs. Sold only at Brown Drug Co. cor. E. 28th St. and Central Ave. Adv.
Neadom Roberts' intensely interesting story of the wonderful experience of himself and Sergt. Johnson in France, when they killed about 25 German soldiers and drove off many others, and his references to the others, and his references to the World War, were thoroly enjoyed by a good-sized audience at Cory M. E. church, last week Wednesday evening. The lecture, under the auspices of our local Community Center's Woman's Auxiliary, was opened and closed with bugle calls by a member of the 10th U. S. Cavalry, one of our four regiments in the army, who was in the city on a furlough. He is the soldier who saved the life of the captain (white) of his company at Carrizal, Mexico. Still another interesting figure present was a member of Mr. Roberts' company who also has been decorated for his distinguished service in France.
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.
Our voters are demanding of the Republican organization that it holds the " corn roast and outing" in September, elsewhere than at Luna Park and are right in so doing. Many are already saying that, if the Davis administration persists in its determination to have the affair at colorline Luna Park, they will NOT vote for Davis and Tom Fleming, candidates for mayor and councillman respectively, and both well-known, heretofore, as Luna Park "boosters." A committee should call upon the Davis administrator campaign committee at once as suggested by Mr. Wm. Conner, secretary of our Welfare league and Community Center, and notify it of our stand in this matter.
THE GAZETTE, CLEYELAND, OHIO, AUGUST 30, 1919.
TOMMY
is assured of attention, and the business man who has worked out a thought of his own gets a hearing. —Forbes' Magazine.
LINCOLN'S CHAIR IN DISPUTE
George R. Lloyd owns Abraham Lincoln's old chair, made and presented to the latter by an ardent friend and limiter, a jury in the circuit court declares. They settled a dispute between Lloyd and his wife when the latter claimed the chair, fashioned out of elk horns, following a separation. Lincoln gave the prized article to his son, who gave it to his friend, and agreed to dismise in the matter his happiness a w rangle over its possession developed. The foregoing court action followed.
MANY TREES GO TO WASTE
Federal Official Points Out What Might Be Gained by Proper Utilization of Paper.
The amount of waste paper collected in all of Great Britain was about 1,000 tons a week in 1914. By 1918 this had been Increased to 6,000 tons per week, or an increase of approximately 500 per cent, said H. L. Boulderspeger, chief of the waste reclamation service, United States department of commerce, in a speech to the Federation of Women's Clubs.
"Waste material is the protector of our natural resources. Waste paper, utilized in the manufacture of other paper material serves as a substitute for wood pulp. It requires eight trees of mature growth to produce a ton of paper pulp. Every ton of waste paper which can be substituted will save eight trees for other uses. In our urban centers we send annually to the dump approximately 13 tons of usable waste material for every 1,000 inhabitants, and 20 per cent of this tonage is made up of waste paper.
"Based upon the approximation of the present population of our country, we are sending annually to the dump at least 150,000 tons of waste paper, or twice as much paper as was collected in all of Great Britain in 1018. This amount represents the substituted power for at least 1,200,000 trees of mature growth."
FREAKS ENTITLED TO FAME
European Families That Had More Than Ordinary Claims to World's Attention.
There is living at Bilbao, Spain, a family of seven who between them possess no fewer than 104 fingers. One of them has 23 fingers, another 21, while of the remaining five each can boast a couple of hands with 12 fingers spice.
At Koshlivo, Russia, a very similar phenomenon exists in the fifty or more descendants of a peasant with extra fingers on his hands, who married at the beginning of the last century, all of whom are dowered with from one to five fingers in access of the normal number.
The last surviving member of what was perhaps the record family with regard to weight was, in the person of Charles Akins, a few years back interred at Harrow, England. He weighed 476 pounds, his brothers, who predeceased him, being no less than 504 and 500 pounds.
The family record for longevity has not been beaten since Robert Parr, the great-grandson of the celebrated Thomas Parr, died in 1557 at the age of one hundred and twenty-four. His father lived to celebrate his one hundred and ninth birthday, his grandfather reached one hundred and thirteen, while his great-grandfather was 152 at the time of his death.
There is mentioned in the Harleian Miscellany a Scotch weaver and his wife who were the proud parents of 62 children, 50 of whom reached their majority.
Large as this family was, its fame pales before that of a Russian, one Ivan Wassilii, who was the proud father of 87. By his first wife he had 89 children in the following order: Four times quadruplets at a birth, seven times triplets and 10 times twins. By his second spouse he had twice triplets and six times twins. Undoubtedly the record for misfortune belongs to a Belgian family named Adnet. The father, Jean Adnet, was drowned; his wife committed suicide, while of his two sisters one was killed by the kick of a horse and the other by a blow received from a falling scaffold.
Jean Adnet had six children, four sons and two daughters. Of these the latter perished through the overturning of a pleasure boat. One of the sons was stabbed in a drunken brawl, another was crushed to death by a heavy wagon, while the remaining two, who emigrated to America, were stained in 1891, while fighting for Balmaceda against congressists — Stray Stories
15,000-MILE DRIVE
MOUNTAINS AND DESERTS ARE CONQUERED BY DARING YOUTHS.
Not unlike their venturesome ancestors, who roved the seas, coastur-ago, Thure, Emil and David Stry-land of Viking, Minna, have completed a 14,000-mile land voyage covering more than half the United States. The tour was made in a touring car, which during most of the journey pulled a trailer, as he as the car itself, loaded with a camping outfit and tools.
Being carpenters, the youthful tri-ger out from their home several months ago with the intention of paying their expenses along the way by working at their trade. They journeyed west over the Rockies and Cascade mountains, through the national park district to Seattle. West At Seattle they followed their trade for a time. Later they worked in Vancouver.
Snow in the Shasta mountains forced them to ship their car from Vancouver to San Francisco, the next lap of their journey, whence they traveled leisurely down the western coast, traversing many byways in the Yosemite valley and Big Redwood district and stopping at Los Angeles and San Diego. Leaving the coast they started east through the Imperial valley and California desert, with Eastland, Tex., as their objective, crossing the Sierra Nevada and the Rockies a second time. In the Rockies they came upon a stranded car, which they roped behind the trailer and they hauled both over rough roads of the "Great Divide". From the Rockies they plunged into the Great American desert, which they negotiated without mishap save the loss of their worn-out chains. From Kirkland they traveled to Bronxville on the Ri Grande passing through the Texas sand wastes. The deep sands of the Texas desert proved a crucial test, they declare.
From Brownsville the Styrdhills made their way to Corpus Christi and from there began their trip homeward by way of Baton Rouge La., and thence north through the Mississippi valley to St. Louis From St. Louis they proceeded to Duluth, not many miles from their home town.
ORIGIN OF PHRASE
It would be interesting, if they could be traced out, to ascertain the origin of half the quaint old sayings and maxims that have come down to the present time from unknown generations. Who, for example, was "Dick" who had the old looking "that-hard" and who so long has been the synonym or representation of oldly-acting people? Who knows anything authentic of the leanness of "Job's turkey" which has so many poverty-striken initiators in the ranks of humanity? Scores of other sayings there are concerning which similar questions might be asked. How many persons in fact know how the familiar expression "Mind your P's and Q's" originated, in spite of the pains taken, a few years ago by a modern antiquition to expound it? According to this authority, the origin was as follows:
In all houses, in the olden time, when chalk 'scores' were marked upon the wall or held the door on the tep-room, it was customary to put the inmals 'F' and 'Q' at the head of every man's account, to show the number of 'punts' and 'quarts' for which he was in arrests; and we may readily presume many a friendly rapped his neighbor on the shoulder when the latter was indulging overfreely and pointing to the chalk score, said 'Mind your P's and Q's' mind your P's and Q's'.
WHEN YOU WRITE
TO THE PRESIDENT
Through long years of experience the clerks in the executive offices at Washington can sit out the propaganda correspondence with unfailing eyes. Propaganda has always been the favorite work of a large number of agitators, although it took the war to show what force lies in the agency. But there is something about a nation wide propaganda that overcaches itself. At the White House there is no difficulty in detecting the impaired letters, for they always bring out the same main idea along the way suggested by this propagandist.
When this mail is segregated the remainder goes more careful consideration. The acknowledgments that go out for every letter received at the White House are along stereotyped lines but the humble writer
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Don't Throw Away Your Copy of THE GAZETTE After Reading it, but Give It to a Friend or an Acquaintance who Might Subscribe after Reading a Copy of It
M.
Hon. Joseph C. Manning Says
Southern "Crackers" Talked During the Rioting
"The Attitude of the Afro-American"—Dr. Wm. A. Byrd on "An Insidious Propaganda".
(Mr. Manning was a leader of the Republican-Populist fusion party in Alabama and the South, having been a member of the Alabama Legislature. He is a native Southerner and has made a study of conditions in the South for years.)
Nothing so well serves to distract consideration from the methods and practices of leaders of the Democratic party in the South as agitation against the Negro. To one who has lived in the South, who has taken part in political campaigns, the playing up of stories of alleged assaults and the like, charges of criminality as against colored people, is no new thing. It always occurs in districts or States where any serious effort is made to attack the misrule of the Southern Democracy. Anti-Negro propaganda is the smoke screen behind which the Southern politicalocracy hides its lynchings of the rights of all the people. So, it was not difficult for me, an onlooker in Washington, to hear the recent event the facts have told us. The recent event riot the national capital. I was there from July 12 until August 1, and had full opportunity to listen in on conversations and to gather up sentiment. Old-time Southern Democratic sentiment and Southern democratic methods played the part that brought on the violence. Two men seated themselves at a table n a restaurant opposite where I was sitting. It was Sunday evening, about 11:45 July 27. One remarked to the other "As I came down the avenue, awhile ago, I saw a gang of fellows seize a little nigger and give him a terrible beating up." Then came the inquiry "What was he doing?" The reply was: "Nothing, except going along. Whereupon the man with the inquiry said, Well that's the way we do it down home. We have simply got to do something to terrorize these Washington niggers to keep them in their place." The conversation of these men soon developed the information that the one was from Georgia who indorsed indiscriminate attack upon all colored people. It was not difficult to understand anywhere in Washington that anti-Negro sentiment, violent in expression, was common on the part of Southerners holding positions in the departments. They deeply resem the idea that colored people should have been the main positions. It was been the main situation in this racial riot in Washington. The assault stories, alleged as bringing about the anti-Negro demonstration, were, overworked Southern political propaganda of the "damn a nigger anyhow" variety. Washington police have wanted a raise in pay; they have wanted more men on the police force; they have agitated for this for months; and, when the propaganda of the Southerners started against the Negro they were not asleep to the possibility that a little trouble would help their cause along. Colored people in Washington feared, and they had good reason to fear, a repetition of the methods employed in the Atlanta riot, when colored people were attacked on every hand, everywhere, even in their homes. My opinion is that precisely this thing would have happened in Washington had not the colored people shown the spirit of resistance that they had. The police who had made up Washington Negroes had made up their minds that they would not die like rats. It got the verdict from the Southern mohocratic jury, the real lesson that the anti-Negro Southern mob in Washington had learned from their experience, when a "black belt" Democrat said to me: "This thing in Washington surprises me. I am astonished at the resistance put up by these Washington niggers. I am no nigger-hater. A nigger is a useful animal in his place.
These folk in Washington will have to find some other way to teach these Washington niggers their place. We are going to have trouble in Birmingham with the niggers down there. "Oc." The conversation was closed by my remarking that he would find that colored people, South and North, will no longer tamely submit to old-time methods of "terrorizing," and that he had as well count upon it that the colored people in Birmingham would not now die like rats any more than did the Washington Negroes. Who can blame any man for fighting back when he has at the least, come to the conclusion that he has got to die anyhow and prefers to make some sort of defense than he heaten to death or shot to death without turning a hand against the mob? This is simply the feeling of the Negro. He has been bounded until he reasons that he has to take his last stand. This riot once hate is too bad. It is shameful, and in most part, it all arises from political buncomble put forward by Northern Democrats that they may autocracy—while they shout from the house tops about "world democracy." The only way to stop this propaganda against the Negro is to tell the nation the truth about the Southern political oligarchy, for it is all kept up to obscure the facts about political repression of whites and blacks alike—Brooklyn (N. Y.) Daily Standard Union, Aug. 14, '19.
ATTITUDE OF THE AFRO-AMERICAN
The American Negro has been accused of practically everything under the sun. He has been persecuted and spit upon through public sentiment; he has been ignored by those who reckon themselves contributors to civilization; he has been placed in the category of the kingdom of the lower animals by separate car transportation; he has been deprived of the privilege to speak for himself in a land whose founders spit their taxation without representation;" he has mercifully led as a sheep to his slaughter by the ignorant mob of the South, thus suffering at the hand of which he has been benefactor for decades; they have said he is not a fit soldier despite his record to the contrary; they say he is not a builder and creator in face of the all-important part he played in the economic development of American democracy (?). One white man in the South said that there was no objection to the exodus of the Negroes North, despite the efforts of his fellow to escape Negro in the South. They say they do not want him and yet when he goes we hear the lamentations of, the Negro's home, his beloved South, saying, "All of our good colored citizens are leaving." Why is this? Is it that the white man of the South really has within his heart a tender regard for his dark brother? Can the two hundred and fifty years accumulated relations and feelings and possibly love be crumbled in so short a time, as half a century? It is not to be believed. Yes, the Negro has been accused of practically everything, but there are two things not against him. No man has ever accused him of being a coward (Isaac Fisher) and we add ungrateful. When some of the unthinkable white folks of South begin to be seen themselves in to exalted murderous old Ku-Kluks-Klan of reconstruction dues and similar organizations, let it be remembered that it is a far cry from reconstruction to the present and that the Negro can be desipl. legislated against, "ijm-crowed," disfranchised and at times even upon, but he can not be scared. He has been too long living in the "Home of the Brave." Yet, withal,
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, OHIO, AUGUST 30, 1919
in his manly courage, he is meek and conciliating and loves the South. He is grateful for the history of his people and their relation to "Old Mistie" and "Old Marster" and still sings the songs of his fathers like no initiator has been able to copy, but with his wagon hitched to the star of civilization he is looking toward Service and not servitude; he wants, and is tiring recognition for his ability, ability, like trouble is neither black nor white, but comes to every mother's son of us. Whenever the white man of the South, or any other section for that matter, walks up to a full realization of democracy and vittily tures up a man's progress according to his ability and not color, then it is that America may lay claim to being a democracy. The absence of a king in the White House is not blatant, but not exactly a democratic government. The war has one a lot for the white man and it as done a lot for the Negro. It got he white man in a state of preparedness. It got the Negro into the habit of weighing things—putting two and two together—not exactly "watchful sitting," for the Negro has always seen visionary and can see into the future. This is not superstition but gift of God. There is a story told if a black regiment in the last war whose watch word was a slang phrase, Let's go." Whatever the command, whether to peel potatoes or to peel he basket, he has always called "Let's go." This slang phrase represents about as forcefully as anything could under the sun the Negro's present attitude. Whatever may come it's going to be with the American Negro. Let's Go!"—Richmond, (Va.) Planet.
AN INSIDIOUS PROPAGANDA
Many of the southern news-papers, as well as the papers of the District of Columbia, were industriously publishing "attacks by colored men against the white women," in truth in it. No average white reporter on a southern paper is the biggest liar abroad. By these lies the attempt was made to justify the frequent lynchings occurring in the south. It is very well for the world to know that southern white men are the most damnable liars in the world when they wish to mitigate their harbidity as shown in their dealings with colored people. The entire south has lived a lie for thirty years. It was told the world what the south was doing was necessary, if civilization was to be maintained. America has hypocrite enough to pretend that it believed it. Now America covers its face in shame because of the savage men who doing the same to white southern men who spares neither their white nor colored "women. He is a beast of the lowest prey and will use every means to destroy virtue wherever he meets it. Because of his base morality he it is as a savage brute that believes every other being is like him. The infamous crimes committed by the white southern brute against colored women, constitute one of the reasons why colored men are an incited, for they feel colored men are the victims of the white southern brute that white men did to the colored face. There are instances where illicit relations may occur between white women and colored men in the south. In the majority of the instances, their is mutual consent. As a rule decent colored men forget that white women exist. Never again will the world believe the south. The innocent propaganda now being carried on in America is the continuation of the one begun by white officers and privates of the south in France, France, and France, that those white brutes are liars and drove them out while colored soldiers are welcomed. There must be no quarter given to the monumental bids of creation. Colored men, since they know their schemes, should be careful and whenever in their innocence a southern white brutes attacks him or attempts to ar-
THE
MARK
W.
rest him on a trumped up crime, kill him on the spot. Then kill till some one kills him. The southern white man is a coward. He is still the gregarious savage. He is mighty with a mob, if there is only one man they are attacking. Alone he is a sneaking cur that will slink away. This same cur has brought reproach upon white women by constantly connecting their names with colored men in a base way. Investigations have revealed the intentions of human beings together neither the two is the saint in the mix up. The time is past for colored men to keep their mouths quiet and hear the calumny heaped upon them by white southerners and not strike back. Whenever a report detergatory t. a colored man and white woman is started by a southern white man, one is justified in pronouncing it a lie begun for ulterior purposes. (Rev.) Wm. A. Byrd
$20 to $30 Per Week
being made selling our new book "Progress
and Achievements of the Colored People."
by Prof. Kelly Muller, showing the wonderful
dining and new numbers of our race.
being made selling our 25th edition,
ask for terms, write quick.
P.A. HOERET
EYE SPECIALISTS
11 Taylor Arcade
Cleveland
W. W. MAY
Carpenter—Builder
HOERET
SPECIALISTS
Taylor Arcade
Cleveland
W. MAY
inter—Builder
Screening & General Repairing
a Specialty
Residence, 2347 E. 86th St.
'Phone Gar. 3149-W.
KINKY HAIR
LOOK!
MEN and WOMEN
Your snarly,
ugly, coarse,
nappy hair is
made to grow
LONG
STRAIGHT
GLOSSY
d By Using
Nature's Remedy
BERMARINE
QUININE POMADE.
Guaranteed as Represented
SKY HAIR
LOOK!
and WOMEN
Your snarly,
ugly, coarse,
nappy hair is
made to grow
LONG
STRAIGHT
GLOSSY
By Using
Nature's Remedy
MARINE
NINE POMADE.
noted as Represented
School
Poro College
fore for
str
Shampoo
Bell 'Phone
HENRY
Attorney and
512 Superior Buil
If your scab is dry, liebly, scalp, hair falling out and fall of hairlash, get rid of it. If your scab is wet, scab on the hair on the head is worth a dozen in the brush. A healthy scalp does not have a scab. A healthy scalp does not have a scar. Just try BEMAIRING your hair 25 stamps or coin. AGENTS WANTED.
DARE TO DO YOUR DUTY
"Let us have faith that right makes might, and in that faith let us to the end dare to do our duty as we understand it." - J.D. Franklin.
FORD'S HAIR POMADE
It is not a common article. It does not contain mineral oils or poisonous drugs; in fact, it is the only pomade on the market that does not contain mineral oils, such as vaseline or petroleum. You can use Fords' hair Pomade with perfect safety, but it can also cause nothing injurious to the hair or scalp. Fords' hair Pomade makes harsh kinks but softer, more pliable easier to handle. It is also more durable will permit. Price 25c & 50 a bot.
contain mineral oils or poisonous drugs in fact, it is the only pomade on the market today that is known to do that does not contain mineral oils, such as vatine or petroleum. You can use Ford's Hair Pomade with perfect safety. We encourage that it contains nothing injurious to the hair or scalp. Ford Hair Pomade makes harsh hair, cooler, more pliable easier to comb and put up in any style the length will permit. Price 25c & 50c a bot.
Ford's Hair Straightener No. 022
Straightens the hair by rolling it between two brass brushes. Best and quickest way we know of to straighten hair. Brass rolls, heavy polished woven that it can straighten put up in a neat box with full directions how to use it. Price $2.00
Patent Two Piece B
ing and Shampoo
This comb is made in two piece
ting comb, thus saving the soil
9% in long over all, comb 0.4 in
Made of solid brass with steel
Weight complete, 9 oz. Price
Patent Two Piece Hair Straightening and Shampoo Comb No. 023
This comb is made in two pieces; you heat the rost, not the comb, thus saving the selling of the comb. Comb 9% in long over all, comb 4% in long by 2% inches wide. Made of solid brass with steel rod and spiral handle. Weight complete, 9 oz. Price $2.00
Patent Sectional Tooth Comb No. 023½
Teeth and spacers in this comb are made of separate pieces of brass mounted on a solid steel rod and hold a patient for the teeth. Comb 4% in long and 12% inches deep. Weight about 6 ounces. Price $1.75
Ford's Spiral Handle Hair Straightening and Shampoo Comb No. 024
Solid brass, large and very strong, cannot burn the handle off. Special locking device holds the handle without soiling. Price $1.50
WE DID NOT
We stuck to our regular prices in the face that war times is not the time to profiteer, at the same price as before the war.
WE STOOD BY YOU
We have faith in the honesty of human ones that stood by you. Our goods are guaranteed changed in price to the consumer by us. Tell us
The Ozonized Ox M
WE DID NOT
We stuck to our regular prices in the face of
that war times is not the time to profiteer, or
at the same price as before the war.
WE STOOD BY YOU
We have faith in the honesty of humanit
ones that stood by you. Our goods are guar-
changed in price to the consumer by us. Tell y
The Ozonized Ox M
We stuck to our regular prices in the face of the facts that materials entering into our products were raised on us, but we believe that war times is not the time to profiteer, so we cut down our expenses all we could, and by so doing were able to sell our goods at the same price as before the war.
WE STOOD BY YOU THEN, WILL YOU STAND BY US NOW?
We have faith in the honesty of humanity and the merits of our goods; so now it is up to you, to show your true spirit and stick by the ones that stood by you. Our goods are guaranteed to be just as we represent them, and for over sixty years Ford's Hair Pomade has not been changed in price to the consumer by us. Tell your friends what we have done and encourage a just cause, if you think it is right.
The Ozonized Ox Marrow Co., 46 West Kinzie St., CHICAGO, ILL.
OUR NEW HOME
PENDLETON AVE.
ST. FERDINAND AVE.
Poro College extends you hearty greetings. You are coming for the good of each other and therefore for the good of all. You are coming to solve some of the problems of these "Re-construction days. We MUST have a share in making your visit profitable and pleasant. Command us and it will be our pleasure to serve you.
Office, Rose, 1412. Res., Gar. 6557
Princ. 791
Office Hours—4:30 to 7:30 P. M.
2288 E. 49th St., Cleveland, O.
Call on us for Shampooing, Hairdressing, Massaging, Manicuring, Chiropody, Electric and Vapor Baths.
A
When I began the use of your Pomade my hair was 1½ ins. long. After using it, my hair was 1½ ins. long. It grows so thick and fast I have to cut it very often. This is my photo.
FORD'S HAIR POMADE
For harsh, curly, short and unusually hair. It's use makes the hair softer, more pliable and easier to comb and put up in any style the length will permit. Guaranteed to contain no vaseline, petroleum, mineral oils or poisonous drugs. Used for Over Sixty Years. What better could be asked of an article than sixty years of universal success? Do not accept a substitute when you ask for Ford's Hair Pomade. The genuine is called "Ford's Hair Pomade" and manufactured only by The Ozonized Ox Marrrw Co., of Chicago, Ill. Price 25c and 50c a bottle.
ROBERT FISHER
Attorney and Counselor at Law
819 American Trust Building
Cleveland, Ohio
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
1426 West 3rd Street
Ford's Large Brass Hair Straightening and Shampoo Comb No.025
Wooden handle, large and very strong, making a good and serviceable comb for kinky or thick curly hair.
Price $1.00
Ford's Hair Straightening and
Shampoo Comb No. 026
This comb is made of solid brass, highly polished, wood-
en handle, and is 8 inches long over all, comb 3 3/4 inches
long, and about 1 inch wide. Weight 3 oz. Price 75c
Ford's Hair Straightening and
Shampoo Comb No. 027
This comb is 6 3/4 ins. long over all, comb 2 ins. long, 3/4
ins. wide, solid brass, wedding 2 oz. A fine temple or
montachio comb. Price 58c
Ford's Hair Presser No. 028
Solid brass knobs, steel handles, nickel plated; longth
about 8 ins. over all. Weight 6 3/4 oz. Price 50c
Ford's Hair Puller No. 029
Is very heavy and substantially made of solid brass highly polished, wooden handles. This article is designed to work faster than a No. 98l and has a larger bearing surface. Length about 9% ins. over all, weighs about 8 oz. Easy and convenient to handle. Price $1.00
ING THE WAR
Our products were raised on us, but we believe and by so doing were able to sell our goods
Tel Central 1400-W
Notary Public Polish Interpreter
GOOD
ROYAL
MUSEE
SAN FRANCISCO
Kinloch 'Phone: Delmar 4300
SANTAL CAPSULES MIDY
CATARRH of the BLADDER relieved in 24 HOURS by a soldier on duty. Sole bears the MIDY name A43. Be aware of counterfeits.
J. LOMSKY
3820 Central Avenue
We carry full line of
Dry Goods
Ford's Royal White Skin Lotion
Try it if you want a clear, healthy complexion; imparts a whiteness to the skin that cannot be detected or rubbed off like powder. Relieves bumps and pimples of the skin. Excellent for men and women. Pleasant to use. Price 25 a bottle.