The Gazette
Saturday, September 27, 1919
Cleveland, Ohio
Page text (machine-generated)
RESPECT FOR OUR MANHOOD AND WOMANHOOD ONLY BASIS FOR AMICABLE RACE ADJUSTMENT
RESPECT FOR
ONLY B
See us First for all Goods in our
JOHN S. HALL
Prices Reasonable. Satisfaction Guaranteed.
JEWELER AND OPTOMETRIST
3121 Central Ave. Cleveland, O.
Centr
CENTRAL SHIRT SHOP
A RACE ENTERPRISE
G. J. TATE, Proprietor.
GENTS' FURNISHINGS. NECKWEAR.
Hoslery, Underwear and Arrow Collars and Shirts, Hats
2922 CENTRAL AVE.
Phone Prospect 441-J.
DRESS WELL—Cash or
Save money by shopping in your neighborhood.
COME TO OUR STORE and compare our prices
prices in any of the stores "down town."
We are ready to show our BEAUTIFUL FALL
SUITS, COATS, DRESSES and SKIRTS.
Your charge account is singercly solicited.
is easy to pay.
DRESSWELL CREDIT C
4712 Central Avenue
Cleveland
THE CO-OPERATIVE HARDWARE
See us First for all Goods in our Line
JOHN S. HALL
Prices Reasonable. Satisfaction Guaranteed.
JEWELER AND OPTOMETRIST
3121 Central Ave. Cleveland, O. Cent. 8816 W.
Rooery, Underwear and Arrow Collars and Shirts, Hats, Caps, etc
2822 CENTRAL AVE.
Save money by shopping in your neighborhood. COME TO OUR STORE and compare our prices with the prices in any of the stores "down town."
THE CO-OPERATIVE HARDWARE CO.
THE CO-OPERATIVE HARDWARE CO.
Corner, Cedar Ave. and E. 105th St.
A community store, carrying a very complete staple hardware, house-furnishings, heating a stoves, paints, oils, etc., and soliciting the patrons of The Gazette.
We repair and renew your leaky roof and install new and repair old furnaces, and do gas and electrical work.
We try to please you, and make your doll little further than most stores do.
a very complete line of
gds, heating and cook-
tating the patronage of
naky roof and gutters,
es, and do gas-fitting
take your dollars go a
is
ENUE
one
01.
eek
A community store, carrying a very complete line of staple hardware, house-furnishings, heating and cook stoves, paints, oils, etc., and soliciting the patronage of the readers of The Gazette.
We repair and renew your leaky roof and gutters, install new and repair old furnaces, and do gas-fitting and electrical work.
We try to please you, and make your dollars go a little further than most stores do.
Our number is
10405 CEDAR AVENUE
and our Telephone
GARFIELD 3701.
---
$65Week
Every
Customer
Delighted!
the
no
ment
We
loth
out-
nse,
the
ting
else
thes.
it in
ling
am-
ade
FREE SUIT. Every man willing to hurtle gets sample suit free, made according to our special offer to agents, made to your exact measures from any fabric you choose prepaid. We want our men to be the best dressed men in town to make them that prove our fit and style and quality, and we'll make suit that we can possibly turn out, the best possible workmanship, the best thing the best that money can buy. Send your name and address in the time to start.
LINCOLN WOOLEN MILLS
Dept. 28
CHICAGO
PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTIS
our
from any fabric you select, deliver
ressed men in town, we want them
ly, and we'll make you the swellest
workmanship, the finest trimmings,
name and address at once. Now
MILLS CO.
CHICAGO, ILL.
special offer to agents, made to your exact measures from any fabric you select, delivery changes provided. We want our men to be the best dressed men in town, we want them to wear clothes that prove our fit and style and quality, and we'll make you the swellest suit that we can possibly turn out, the best possible workmanship, the finest trimming, everything the best that money can buy. Send your name and address at once. Now is the time to start.
IN UNION WE STRENGTH
THIRTY-SEVENTH YEAR
I made $300 profit this month. Hurrah for Paragon Tailoring Fred Kauley, Illinois.
S. P. Harris of Columbus, Ga. writes: That soul made for me was sure a beauty and it gets the business. I made $65.00 last week, and I got a bunch of orders to send in this week.
Years truly, S. P. Harris.
That's the kind of letters we get every day. Our men are making big money, getting orders easy, making big profits every day. The wonderful Paragon offers are irresistible. Your own suit and our beautiful fabrics, classy styles and big values get the orders easy.
No Money Nooded. No experience, no risk, no investment of any kind. We furnish everything free, a big assortment of big cloth samples, fashion plates, full instructions and complete outfit. We teach you the business, start you at our expense, help you, back and boost you in every way.
Orders Waiting. Start now. Reap the profits that are waiting for you. Nothing else can easy to sell as tailoring. Every man must wear clothes. Customers are waiting for you in every house. Start in your spare time. Begin now.
THE GAZETTE
ESTABLISHED AUGUST 25,1883 And Issued Every Week on Time Since
What Our People Are Doing Each Week Church, Personal, Social, Lodge, Literary and Musical Marriages, Deaths, Etc.
CDIZ—Miss Sarah Tyler of Flushing visited Miss Eloise Ballard, during the fair—Mrs. Ruth Orme of E. Liverpool was the guest of Mrs. Frances Christian, the past week. Mr. Theodore Mason spent Sunday with his brother, Mr. Thomas Mason,—R.A. C. H. Young spoke Sunday morning on the "Hidden Talent." His evening theme was "The Shifting of Responsibility."—Miss Eloise Ballard left, Monday, for the Kent State Normal College.—Miss Mildred Greep is visiting Rey, and Mrs. Carpenter.—Mrs. Solan West has a sprained ankle.—Mrs. Joanna Freeman is visiting in Steubenville.—A birthday surprise given Mr. Thelma West. Thursday evening. Quite a number of boys and girls were present.
number were added to the roll. Boy Scout meeting was held there Tuesday evening, and the direction of Scotchmaster S. Johnson and his assistant, Fryhman. More officers were elected as the Boy Scout movement seems to be taking among our people. A new troop will be organized soon, and a lecture given by the Boy Scouts' counselman, D. D. Dancy—Mrs. Howard Thompson and Mrs. John Wilson spent Sunday in Cleveland with her sister. Tell your friends to read "The Old Relish" Gazette and get fables about the face they can get in no other face paper.
HILLSHORO.—Mrs. Tranche-Hill of St. Louis has returned home after a visit to St. Mary's. Boy hunt. Mrs. James Yanee and company. Mrs. Jessie Williams.
CORRESPONDENTS must mail all letters for publication at their main postoffice sufficiently early on Monday (or Sunday) of each week to have them reach. The Gazette office on Tuesday morning, and always write also, their names and that of their city or town on the outside of the wrapper about returned copies. Unless this latter is done, proper credit cannot be given. 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.
YOUNGSTOWN—Rally day was observed very successfully, Sunday, at Oak Hill Ave. S. S. Included in the very interesting progrant were addresses by Miss Ruth Mosley, recreation worker, and Dr. Brown, son of the B. T. W. settlement house. The mulitiorium was filled and a large
PRAYER OF THE RACE
(WHOM GOD MADE BLACK)
By Lucian B. Watkins.
We would be peaceful, Father,—but, when we must,
Help us to thunder hard the blow that's just!
We would be prayerful! Load, when we have prayed.
Let us raise courageous—unafraid!
We would be many—proving well our worth.
Then would not cringe to any god on earth!
We would be loving and forgiving, thus
To love our neighbor as They lovest us!
We would be faithful, loyal to the Right.—
Never doubting that the Day will follow Night!
We would be all that Thou hast meant for man!
Up through the ages, since the world began!—
God! save us in Thy Heaven, where all is well!—
We come slow-struggling up the Hills of Hell!
Amen! Amen!
University of Illinois, Ubana, Ill.
The Richmond (Va.) Planet.
Left By a Member of the Race—Southerners After It.
Okmulgee, Okla.—Unusual interest is being manifested among our people of this city and county in the matter of the guardianhip of Zergusia. Sadie and Charles Loman, Jr. aged 9, 4 and 2, respectively, heirs to the estate of Charles Loman, valued at more than two million dollars. Mr. Loman died near Beggs, in Okmulgee County, about a year ago, leaving an estate then valued at $25,000, embracing about 300 acres of land. A few months later the mother of the children, and their natural guardian, was appointed guardian by Judge Cleveland, county judge of Okmulgee County. Since that time the estate has developed valuable oil property and has consequently attracted the attention of the white graffiti in this county. Recently, the county judge cited Mrs. Loman to appear in court "within 24 hours" to show cause why she should not be removed as guardian of her children. She appeared with her lawyers, and protested against her removal, but the court
number were added to the roll. A Boy Scout meeting was held there Tuesday evening, under the direction of Stoutmaster S. Johnson and his assistant, Mr. Frohman. More officers were elected, as the Boy Scout movement goes to be taking among our people. A new troop will be organized soon, and a lecture given to the Boy Scouts' councilman, B. D. Danney.—Mrs. Howard Thompson and Mrs. John Wilson spent Sunday in Cleveland with her sister.—Tell your friends to read "The Old Reliable" Gazette and get fables about the face they can get in no other place.
HILLBORO—Mrs. Tanner Hill of St. Louis has returned home after a visit with her guard, Mrs. James Young, and groom, Mrs. Jessie Williams,—Mr. and Mrs. Fred Williams of Cleveland, visited her, Mr. and Mrs. Moe Waters, and family members of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Yierson Sunday—Mrs. George Thompson and daughter, Heben, of Cleveland, arrived last Friday to visit Mrs. Amanda Thompson who had been so seriously ill—Mrs. Chrissie Holson visited in Cincinnati, last Thursday—Mrs. Ellen Dixon died, last Friday, after a break illness. She was killed by all and a faithful member of Wesleyan church. She leaves a husband, niece and many friends—Mr. and Mrs. John Sims, Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Dent and daughter, Miss Helen Bowles of Greenfield, Mr. Benj. Reedland P. H. Gataway at Springfield Spent, Sunday with Mrs. Trumbles, Trumbles—mugged from Greenfield, instituted in Cincinnati and New York, instituted in Cincinnati last Friday night, Mr. Helen Hudson of Chiquique—Miss Katie Chisity of Cincinnati spent several days been with Mrs. Thompson, J. J. Rollins of New Vienna has returned from a visit in Cleveland—Mrs. Jessie Williams and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Willis and family at Chillicothe, this week. Mrs. Helen Hudson has returned to Cincinnati. Mrs. Hudson has grounded the name and returned to Sidney, Monday
amputated L. W. White, in honor of
the comedian of Birmingham, an
exclusive white down, 12 yards
of, Okmilnye, where our people are
not allowed to live.
THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS
President Wilson did not understand Europe. He did not understand America. Out of that he understanding is the.
Yes, a man can have 6 votes for Great Britain to 1 for the United States (in the League of Nations) and still be an American about six per cent!
The Marine Undergirders Association press for the ratification of the proposed League of Nations! It is about ready for burial.
President Wilson is learning that the American bird is an eagle—not a parrot! It does not live in a cage and mechanically reproduce sounds.
Looks as if Mrs. Wilson will not only fruit put up this winter—Columbus Tribune. But Woodrow Wilson will be canned just the same.
League of Nation papers sprout to a life because Great Britain and Canada have promptly ratified the League. Well, why shouldn't they? Look at what they get put out of it.
"Johnson, Borah and McGormack are on Wilson's trail, and it would probably cause the lie to call it the trail of the lonely whine—Columbus Citizen.
"When the treaty is accepted," says President Wilson, "the inen in khaki will never have to cross the ocean again". And it was the same attractive vocalist who so pathetically told us in 1916 that he would keep us out of war.
We should like to see the kind of man who will stand up on a public platform in this community and declare that he believes Great Britain should have in the league of nations six votes to America's one. We should like to see what kind of a candidate for public office would make that declaration.
Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Jackson of Chicago, the latter former Miss Herriah Smith of that city, visited his mother and grandmother, Mrs. Mabel Powell Jackson and Mrs. Eliza Holmes, respectively, of Hudson Ave., last week.
DOINGS
OF
THE
RACE
The Urban League, N.Y. City, named a national conference on "Theostrimal Problems on the Atrox-Ammon," to be held in Detroit, O. T. 18-19.
The soon work of the Thirty-third congress of the Arkansas, Va. Normal and Industrial, will be Dr. Robert H. Minton, p. p. p. p. September 15, with congratulations to two local students committing this an in
Dr. Emanuel L. Scott
In a recent speech by Hobson, Montana President Wilson, "I hope you won't think it inappropriate if I stop love and express my shame as an Appalachian citizen at the race riots that have occurred at some places in the country, where men have forbidden humanity and justice, and certainly ousty and have run attacks. That constitutes a man not only the enemy of society, but his own enemy and the enemy of justice." A prominent citizen, he board him, said, "My only gift is that the President waited so long, and waited until he so far away from Washington, D.C. and then slept. It he were making an anomaly.
D. and Mrs. E. Emmet J. Scott represented the rite on the reviewing stand at Washington, D.C. Last week, during the pardon of the First Division, A. L. H. in honor of Gen. Perkins, in New York City, the week previous, Charles W. Anderson one of the company's committees that, according the general to the city hall, where he was officially received, and thence to the Waldorf-Astoria, in stopping peace while in N. Y. City, Mr. Anderson was also on the official reviving stand in that city when the big parade in Pershing's honor was held and attended the banquet in the evening as a member of the mayor's committee and receptions to distinguished guests. Scott and Anderson are splendid representatives of the race.
Abuses His Immunity
In one of his speeches, the President declared that the cause of the league or nations is "greater than the government." There are a lot of communities where, if any man got up on a stump and declared that anything whatever is greater than the government, he would be ridden out of town on a rail. Presidents are protected by the dignity of their office.
Messias Howard Thompson and Mrs. John Wilson of Youngstown visited in this city: Sunday.
SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS
We must confess that the Church and its ministry is related to the welfare of the Negro has been too little inspired by the fundamental principles and ideals of Jesus Christ. Communities that have expressed horror over attrocities abroad, have seen, almost unmoved and silent, men beaten, hanged and also burned by the mob.
The Negro has ever shown profound faith in God and has always looked to the Church for leadership for counsel and for guidance. The Church which for fifty years has a record of almost unmatched service in the education and betterment of the race will now be recurrent to her trust and lose her birth-right of service if she does not meet this confidence with a full sense of responsibility and a full measure of service for justice, peace and goodwill. To this end we therefore urge upon the Church, her ministry and membership this constructive program:
A Constructive Program For Just Inter-Racial Relations
1. The Government, local, state and national, should impartially guarantee to all classes security of life and of property. Mob violence is becoming a crowd habit. When life and property are ruthlessly taken, when men and women are lynched with no protection from officers or courts, law and order are trampled under foot. We call upon the pulpit, the press and all good people to create
S
HOOD
STMENT
Council of Churches
FOR JUSTICE TO OUR
PEOPLE!
em 'No Longer Sectional
and Racial Under-
Necessary—
mendations.
We all upon witness and women
are to protect the integrity
of our community. We regard
with great respect the growing
unity in a prosecution
of crimes. Our community will
work together to ensure that
the law is applied fairly and
justly. We are committed to
ensuring that justice is served
for all who are affected by
the law.
Broadcasting and advertising and
administration in a democracy. The
cost of the matter. The failure to
corporate the Negro as a man. The
dilemma on both sides. The
treatment and fear bath comings. The
failure for Negro manhood and woman-
hood on the economy. The imminent
treatment for a permanent social policy.
If we propose a democratic
program for the protection and self-
determination of the weak and one-
noused people of Europe as a means
at permanent peace and goodwill
abroad, let us apply the same
program at home.
Frank Mason North.
President, federal council of the
Churches of Christ in America.
Albert G. Lawson.
Chairman, administrative committee.
Wilbar P. Thirkield.
Chairman, committee on Negro
churches.
Charles S. MacFarland/
General secretary.
Anyone knowing the whereabouts of Mrs. Dottie Cushenbury, please notify Mrs. Anna Dorsay. 2119 Pine St. St. Louis. Mo.-Adv.
At Last, At Last, At Last. At Last!
Camp Sherman, O.—The disbanding, Monday, of the 418th service company composed exclusively of emergency men, will mark the exodus of all of our soldiers' from Camp Sherman. The organization, once battalion, took care of camp labor. Civilians probably will replace military labor pending the formation of the new brigade.
Mother of 62 Childr
London, England, Sept. 19. The honor of being the mother of England's biggest family, held by Mrs. Mary Jones of Chester, who had 33 children, is eclipsed by Signora Gionetta of Noctera, Naples, who in 19 years of married life gave birth to 62 children. Fifty-nine of the children were boys and three girls. In nine years she had 11 sets of triplets, three times she had four at a birth, and on one occasion she gave birth to five boys and one girl.
One Year ..... 1.50
Six Months ..... 1.90
Three months ..... 3.00
Subscribers are requested to remit by
postoffice money order or reg-
istered letter
Entered at the postoffice in Cler-
land, Ohio, as second-class
maj' matter.
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-
FEST AND BEST in the country.
10,000,000 Afro-Americans.
300,000 in Ohio.
25,000 in Cleveland.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1919
The statement, with recommendations, of the Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America, published on the first page of this paper, should be carefully read by all of our readers. It's a departure very encouraging, and will undoubtedly prove helpful. It is fine!
The editor of The Gazette is indebted to U. S. Senators Lodge, Reed Knox, Johnson, Borah, McCormick, and others, for copies of their speeches on "The League of Notions" or "Plague of Nations," also referred to as the covenant of the League of Nations. Thanks, gentlemen.
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Ex-President and Mrs. W. H. Taft's Hotel Sinton of Cincinnati is still insulting our people. Ohio has a law—Civil Rights law—which forbids just that very thing. 'Why don't our peoof that city use it? Our good friend, Editor Dabney of the Cincinnati Union ought to be able to answer this question.
"Ralph W. Tyler, former auditor for the navy, under the Roosevelt and Taft administration" is the way he signed an interesting communication to the Cleveland News of last week Thursday. Wonder why he did not mention that he was (according to persistent current rumor, for some weeks) an employee of the Ambrosia Toilet Co.? Has Ralph quit the job or wasn't he proud of it—if he still held it?
Hon. Charles W. Anderson, as our only member of New York City's mayor "committee on receptions to distinguished guests," occupied a conspicuous seat at "table A" at the dinner tendered his eminence, Cardinal Mercier, archbishop of Malines, primate of Belgium, at the great Waldorf-Astoria hotel, last week Wednesday evening. Hundreds of the wealthiest and most distinguished citizens of that city and the East attended the grand banquet, for such it really was. Send us some of the good things, Charlie, as mementos—if not to eat. Among the dignitaries yet to visit New York City are: the Prince of Wales, King Albert of Belgium, Marshall Foch, and the Shah of Persia.
BOYS IN KHAKI TO FIGHT
"The Turks do not consider themselves beaten," said Mr. Venizelos, prime minister of Greece. "In Asia Minor, as well as in Armenia, they take every opportunity to demonstrate it. They continually are harassing the Greek posts. Conditions in the territory occupied by the Greek troops are satisfactory, but I cannot say the same for the parts of Asia Minor where there are no Allied troops." Hence Mr. Venizelos is strong for the United States of America (a) entering the league of nations; (b) in order that it may take the mandatory for Armenia; (c) in order that "American soldiers in khaki may be sent across the sea"; (d) in order that they may fight "the Turks who do not consider themselves beaten"; (e) in order that Greece may the casier hold on to the territory she is grabbing in Asia Minor. Oh, no, the league of nations will not send our boys in khaki across the sea. Of course not.
The Mississippi Welfare League (white) has inaugurated some very elaborate plans to try to induce our people to return South, particularly to that state. Last month it sent its executive secretary to Chicago and he arranged for a mixed (colored and white) committee to visit that state with a view to securing a report that would toll many southern Afro-Americans in Chicago and the North back to Mississippi. The committee made the trip alright and we presume returned to Chicago with the kind of
a report the Mississippi Welfare League desired made. Since, we have failed to learn of any exodus from the "Windy City," or any where else in this section, to that state. On the contrary, we have notized the statement that our southern brothers in Chicago intend to remain there, or elsewhere in the North. There are so very many well-known reasons for their decision that it is not necessary to recount them at this time. It is, however, but perfectly natural that they reached the conclusion they did. It was to be expected. The League is not thm trying, the. It intends to establish offices in the "Windy City" for the avowed purpose of distributing alluring literature and conducting a sustained propaganda that will undoubtedly end just as did its mixed committee effort—in a complete failure. A few may return, when the winter season sets in, just as they did each of the last three fall seasons, only to return in the spring and bring others with them. Mississippi and the entire South has beaten, robbed, "jim-crowed," segregated, disfranchised, lynched, burnt at-the-stake, by the whole-sale, and otherwise mistreated the southern Afro-American for so very many years that it is simply impossible to fool even the most ignorant of them now.
VOTE OUT THE DAVIS ADMINISTRATION
A sequel to the race for the title of "master bondsman" that marked the beginning of the crime investigation, last winter, was written in federal court, last week Thursday, when Henry Street, "drum major" and a conspicuous figure in the professional bonding expose, pleaded guilty to a charge of porjury before Judge Westenhaver. Sentence was deferred to Sept. 27. Street admitted he made affidavit before a U. S. commissioner in April, 1918, swearing that he owned property at 2159 E. 43d St., and by thus perjuring himself secured the release of Frederick Brown, charged with robbing freight cars. Brown's bond was $2,000.
The Gazette is not of those who have been severe in their condemnation of Henry Street because it understands the fearfully low "moral" conditions wrought in ward 11, and the entire city, by the loose "conduct" of city affairs by the Davis administration. Street is only one of many victims of those conditions. They have not all been males either, for many women and young girls, some from Cleveland's best families, colored and white, have "fallen" as a direct result of the fearfully low immoral environment permitted to exist, if indeed not encouraged by the Davis administration.
Several years ago, when the City Council conducted its investigation of local vice conditions, the writer was one of those who testified and, according to the local daily newspapers, startled the community with a statement of the fearfully vile conditions, then existing in ward 11 and the entire city, which the newspapers affected not to believe, at least one paper going so far as to attempt to discredit our testimony. However, it was not many months thereafter that crimes became so numerous and vice conditions so alarmingly bad that they forced the official investigation of last winter. Thus was our testimony unheld and vindicated.
But it is not this fact that we would particularly direct attention to, but to another and that is that the vile immoral conditions still exist and that there is no more of an effort on the part of the Davis administration to abate them than there has been since Mayor Davis first took office. We wonder when, in God's name, the decent, law-abiding and law-respecting people of this community will awaken to the fact that only by voting out the Davis administration they are to get relief from the vile conditions complained of all ought to be familiar with now? They are harming, if indeed not ruining hundreds of our young and old, almost monthly, and it is high time to call a halt. Henry Street is but a single victim of those conditions. There are many, many others, both male and female, young and old.
The only four regiments of the American Expeditionary Forces to be cited for bravery and to receive the French Croix de Guerre were the 369th, the 370th, 371st and 372nd, Afro-American. Besides these, a battalion of the 376th—the original "Buffaloes" trained at Yaphank, Long Island, also received French citation. In the great Victory Parade in Paris, France, July 14, this year, and in the great parades in New York City, week before last, and Washington, D. C., last week, held in honor of Gen. Pershing, these soldiers, and all of our brave boys, who fought so well in France were ignored and given no representation at all. We $ ^{1} $ are told that England, France, Belgium, the United States, Serbia, Greece, Italy, China, Japan, Portugal and one or two other nations had their representatives in line in the parade parade. England had Canadians, Australians, Scotch, Londoners, Indians and Africans in line. France had Frenchmen, Soudanese, Senegalese, Madagascans, Morocans, and every other race that fought un-
THE GAZETTE. CLEVELAND. OHIO, SEPTEMBER 27, 1919.
der her flag, in line. Every nation had all the races that fought in the war, except the United States! Although there were over a thousand Afro-American troops outside of Paris, the United States was represented only by white soldiers. The French people were very much amazed and put out for they had not forgotten that four regiments and a battalion of our soldier boys had been decorated for bravery by the French government. The French papers spoke of it. Not a line of protest in any of the great American daily papers have we seen, to date. And how most of them praised our troops as they returned to this country from France but a few weeks and months ago! The prejudiced southern control of the army, responsible for this contemptible outrage upon as brave and faithful a portion of the great A. E. F., and those it directly represented, as fought in the World War, ought to be made by the press of the country to hang their heads in shame. It is a species of smallness that we did not expect even from their ilk. May God forgive them!
Southern "Crackers" in Detroit Detroit, Mich. - Prejudiced southern influence caused our local veterans of the World War to refuse to participate in the Victory Parade here, Sept. 13, which Gen. Leonard Wood reviewed. Our boys were asked to "bring up the ear," marching after civilians who followed the former soldiers (white) in the parade. This was about the greatest insult the "crackers" and their doughtified northern allies dared inflict. A committee of local members of the race notified the general of the gratuitous insult. We would like much to see his reply.
FACTS
* * *
People who Advertise
Can sell Goods.
* * *
People who sell Goods
Can make Money.
* * *
People who make Money
can advertise goods.
* * *
The Best Advertising
Medium is "The Old
Reliable" GAZETTE.
REMARKS ABOUT ADVERTISING
While it is true that occasional advertising will bring extra business, it is equally true that constant, persistent 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 circumstance or condition may imagine he is wise, but his competitors have no desire to disturb his imagination. It's a good time to "give awake."
OUR OHIO CIVIL RIGHTS LAW
Upon the request of many readers of The Gazette we print below the text of Hon. Harry C. Smith's Ohio Civil Rights law which the editor had enacted while a member of the 71st General Assembly, in 1894:
The General Code of Ohio:
Sec. 12940. Whoever, being the proprietor or his employee, keeper or manager of an inn, restaurant, eating house, barber-shop, public conveyance by land or water, theater or public accommodation and amusement to a citizen except for reasons applicable to all citizens and regardless of race or color, the full enjoyment of the accommodations, advantages, facilities or privileges thereof, shall be fined not less than fifty dollars nor more than five hundred dollars, or imprisoned not less than thirty days nor more than ninety 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 person aggrieved thereby to be recovered in any court of competent jurisdiction in the county where such offense was committed.
This law has repeatedly been held constitutional and good law by the Ohio Supreme court. The trouble is our people will not use it as often as they should, and then what they should and must do for themselves, under it, in the courts.
CORRESPONDENTS WANTED
The old reliable Gazette desires an active agent and correspondent in every city and town in Ohio and neighboring states having a number of Afro-American residents. Only a little time on Fridays or Saturdays is required.
We are especially destroys of hearing from persons in the following named cities: Springfield, Davton, Piqua, Lima, O., and other places, particularly in Ohio, where we have none.
Write to the editor of The Gazette, Blackstone building, Cleveland, O., and terms will be sent promptly. Our readers will oblige us greatly by sending at once the addresses of persons in the cities named and others in the state, to whom we can write relative to the matter.
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."—Abraham Lincoln.
PREJUDICE
"Any prejudice whatever will be insurmountable if 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.
A man in a suit and hat is handing a piece of fabric to another man in a suit and hat. The fabric is draped over a stack of books.
Office, Rose, 1412. Res., Gar, 6557
Prine, 791
Office Hours--4:30 to 7:30 P. M.
Dr. O. A. Taylor
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
2288 E. 49th St., Cleveland, O.
MRS.L.S.BRADLEY
8241 Preble Ave.
Cleveland, O.
Has Houses For Sale
or To Rent
J. E. WALDEN
PHENOMENAL BANJOIST
Teacher of Mandolin, Banjo
and Guitar
LESSONS:
75c each Two a week, $1.40
Concert work solicited
Will be located in Cleveland
soon. For further information
address J. E. Walden, Box 215,
Mesopotamia, Ohio.
A Good Meal at
THE ARGONNE
RESTAURANT AND
SODA GRILL
3341 Central Ave. 3341
Popular Prices
Jesse B. Green, Prop.
BOTH PHONES
Opens April 1, Closes Nov. 15, 1919.
HOTEL DALE
CAPE MAY, N. J.
Comfort and Elegance Without Extravagance
This Magnificent Hotel, Located in the Heart of the Most Beautiful
Seashore Resort in the World. Is replete with every modern improvement, superlative in construction, appointments, service and refined patronage, Orchestra daily, garage, bath houses, tennis, etc., on premises. Special attention given to ladies and children. Send for booklet. With sanitation added. At AWK University of Penn. In attendance. W. E. DALE, Owner.
AGENTS--$6.00 A DAY
Olive Oil Pomade is an olive oil, sage and culinary preparation, better than all others in producing beautiful hair care cloths the scalp of dark hair is treated with olive oil, keen to keep hair soft, glows, strong, healthy; keeps it silky, instruc, whisk some excellent for treatment eggs and olive oil, moisturizes for shampooing; Olive Oil Shampoo, contains eggs and olive oil, moisturizes for shampooing; Olive Venue is heat for straightening and waving hair, helps each, by mail to any address, 35 cents; 3 hours, four months' treatment; order or registered letter, send in your day. We want an agent in your town, best preparations,
The Summercamp Method of Hair Culture is the Most Complete, Comprehensive Course of Instruction on Diseases of the Hair and Scalp and their Proper Treatment at home in six to eight weeks; we want graduates everywhere to introduce this wonderful method. Complete course by mast $150 cash or easy payments. A Diploma from the University of California is required. Successful Business Career. Enroll Now. Seal stamp for circular mention this newsletter.
THE SUMMERSETT COMPANY
Montclair, N. J. U. S. A.
THE SUMMER
Monica
---
Firepropping Concrete Columns.
We have been wont to look upon concrete as capable of resisting a great deal of heat, and it may seem strange to think of coating it with a fireproof material. However, there are conditions under which this is necessary.
The bureau of standards has been investigating the condition of concrete which has passed through conflagrations, and has found that if the concrete is made with gravel, particularly stitched gravel, there is a tendency for the stones to burst in extreme heat, which disintegrates the concrete. Accordingly it is recommended that gravel be avoided wherever possible, but if impossible the gravel concrete may be protected from extreme heat by coating it with an inh of cement held in place by a wire mesh. Plastics may also be used in which asbestos is the / principal constituent.—Scientific American.
OLD LANDMARK BURNED
An interesting bit of old Edinburgh, dating back about 1600, has been burned. The destroyed building, which consisted of a single story and attic, was one of the landmarks of the Holywood area. It was the old Ye Tree tavern, and stood inside the bounds of the Holywood sanctuary for debtors, within which, in days of yore, the rigitive was free from the attention of his creditors.
W. H. Martin, of Dayton, O. rises to lay claim to the champion raiser of hirsture adornment of the land. He defies M. E. Skinner, of Pomona, Cat, who says his upper lip has been adorned for half a century. The Dayton man declares his mustache has been growing ever since the Civil War. Until a few years ago he
PROTEST AGAINST WRONG.
To submit in silence when we should protest makes cowards out of men. The human race has climbed on Protest. Had no voice been raised against injustice, ignorance and lust, the inquisition yet would serve the law, and guillotines decide our least disputes. The few who dare, must speak and speak again to right the wrongs of many. —Ella Wheeler Wilcox.
Opportunity
If you would like to earn a good income in your spare time, or if you would consider a full time selling proposition which will net you large returns, write to us. We have a gilt edge proposition for colored people. Selling experience desirable but not essential. Send so money. Write for full information.
National Educational Bureau (Incorporated)
Dept. B-76, Munsey Bldg.
Washington, D. C.
ROBERT FISHER
el Central 1400-W
"I honor the man who in the conscientious discharge of his duty dares to stand alone, the world, with ignorant, intolerant judgement, may condemn, the countenances of relatives may be averted, and the hearts of friends grow cold, but the sense of duty done shall be sweeter than the applause of the world, the countenances of relatives the hearts of friends."—Charles Spurgeon.
OUR LESSON
We must learn to govern ourselves and work together for our own advancement. If we do not learn to govern ourselves 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.
Clothes Prices Will Double for Next Season Don't Delay-Order Your Clothes Now
Woolen prices and skilled labor are advancing every day. To assure you Good Service and Reasonable Prices we would advise you to order now. Complete stock of Fine Woolens. Fit and Workmanship Guaranteed.
worn and tatter. Olive Oil Shampoo, contains witchcraft essentials, antiseptic best for shampooing it to straighten and wave in straightening and waving in straightening. $1.20. four month treatment. 82. mats. Send in your order to Send in your order to your town in your town best preparations fastest sales best preparations
Be A Scalp Specialist
3225 Central Ave., Cleveland, O.
Headquarters: N. SLAVIN, 2542-44 E. 55th St.
Branch Store: 820 Prospect Ave.
REMEMBER!
The RUXIN DRUG CO.
RELIABLE PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS
4210 Central Ave., Cor. E. 43rd St.
Our drugs and merchandise are of the highest quality.
Service and prices always right.
PRESCRIPTIONS MOST ACCURATELY
COMPOUNDED.
Drop in and look over our beautiful establishment
and you will surely come again.
PROFIT SHARING COUPONS WITH
EVERY PURCHASE
The RUXIN DRUG CO.
PATRONIZE OHIO'S FINEST
EQUAL RIGHTS BARBER SHOP
2768 Central Ave.
FIVE CHAIRS AND MANICURIST
In Attendance
THE COMPLETE BARBER SHOP
Agency for the leading race papers
E. R. BROWN, Proprietor
MATTIE HUNTER
4217 Cedar Ave.
HAIR CULTURIST
Kashmir and Walker Systems Hair and Skin Treatment
APPOINTMENTS PREFERRED
Receipts 5215.1
3033 Central Avenue CAFE and POOL ROOM—CABARET FRANK DOCTOR, Proprietor James Mabel, Chef
Rosedale 1800 Quality Service Central 7235 R
SLAUGHTER BROS.
Funeral Directors and
Embalmers
Office and Funeral Parlors
3923 CENTRAL AVE.
Autos for All Occasions. Calls Answered Day and Night
PAINLESS EXTRACTION
Solid Gold Teeth, Gold Crowns,
White Crowns, Bridge Work
Hours 8:00 A. M. to 8:00
DR. GREENFIELD'S, Dent
OPPOSED TO PAIN
227 Euclid Avenue—Right Across the Street
Cent Store.
Gold Teeth, Gold Crowns,
Crowns, Bridge Work
Hours 8:00 A. M. to 8:00
GREENFIELD'S, Dent
OPPOSED TO PAIN
Uclid Avenue—Right Across the Street
Cent Store.
Solid Gold Teeth, Gold Crowns,
White Crowns, Bridge Work .....
Hours 8:00 A. M. to 8:00 P. M.
DR. GREENFIELD'S, Dental Specialists
OPPOSED TO PAIN
Try Our Box Back Tailor Made Suits
Men's Suits pressed, 50c. Cleaned, $1.25. We do all kinds of alterations.
Cox Dry Cleaning & Tailoring Co.
Tailors and Dry Cleaners.
2738 Central Ave.
'Phone, Central 4069L.
.
$5.00 AND UP
M. to 8:00 P. M.
S, Dental Specialists
TO PAIN
the Street from Kresge's 5 and 10
store.
A.
---
Free Examination.
Expert Bridge Work.
22-K Gold Used.
COLLEGIATE AND PROFESSIONAL SCHOOLS
JUNIOR COLLEGE leading to
Schools of Liberal Arts, Education,
Journalism, or Commerce and
Finance four year course, giving
degree, A. B. or S. B., A. B. or S. B.
in Education; S. B. in Journalism;
S. B. in Commerce,
SCHOOL OF APPLIED SCIENCE,
four year course, giving degree, S.
B. in C. E., S. B. in E. E., S. B.
in M. E., S. B. in Arch., S. B. in
Agril., or S. B. in H. E.
SCHOOL OF MUSIC, four year
course, giving degree of Mus. B.
SCHOOL OF RELIGION, three year
course, giving degree in B. D. (Also
diploma and correspondence
courses.)
SCHOOL OF LAW, three year evening
course, giving degree of LL. B.
SCHOOL OF MEDICINE, including Medical, Dental and Pharmaceutical Colleges. Four year course for Medical and Dental students; three years for Pharmaceutical. Following degrees given: M. D., D. D. S., Phar. C.
For Further Information Write J. STANLEY DURKEE, A. M., PH. D., President
EMMETT J. SCOTT, A. M. LL. D., Secretary-Treasurer
HENRY L. THOMAS
Attorney and Counselor at Law
512 Superior Building Cleveland, O
Central 2251-R
Bell 'Phone Rosedale 420
Hours:
9-11 A. M.—1-3 P. M.—6-8 P. M.
Sunday's 3-5 P. M.
E. J. GREGG, M. D.
Physician and Surgeon
Special Service
Diseases of Women and Children
Office:
2322 E. 55th St., Temple Theater Bldg.
Rooms 2-3. Cleveland, O.
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
Orangtown, 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 $1.000.
Board $12.00 per Month in Advance.
Books, Laundry and
Personal Exposures Extra.
Every Modern Facility.
Standard Equipment. Military
Discipline. Faculty of 67
Officers and Instructors.
For Information and Catalog,
Write.
R. S. WILKINSON, Pres.
Orangeburg, S. C.
KINKY HAIR
Your snarly, ugly, coarse, nappy hair is made to grow
Long, Straight, Glossy
By using
HEROLIN
Pomade Hair Dressing
If your soap is dry, Betty, scaly, her falling coat and half of the drust, get rid of it by using Herolin. Feed the roots and hair will grow. Try Herolin. Price the stamps or coin. AGENTS WANTED. Write for terms.
HEROLIN MEDICINE CO.
Atlanta, Ga.
St. Paul, Ark., March 11, 1918, L.
M. Gross;
I, as thousands of others, are glad I met you or heard of your medicine. I have practiced medicine for thirty-nine years. I have had rheumatism for fifty years and constipation for thirty-five years. I am two bettles of C, and I am now well and recommending and using it my practice. I believe it is the best Rheumatism, Blood, Liver and Kidney Medicine in the world.
ARGE KIDWELL is recommended and useful in cases of Pellagra, Rheumatism or blood, liver or kidney disease.
G.S. useful in cases of
Pellagra, Rheuma-
tism or blood, liver
or kidney disease.
Try G. S. once.
Sold by druggists, price $1 per
bottle, or 6 for $5. Sent prepaid.
Dealers order G. S. from your jobber.
Write for Testimonials
L. M. GROSS,
Box 17 Little Rock, Ark.
Where to Purchase The Gazette
Where to Purchase The Gazette
E. R. B. B.
3768
*OPEN*
NOTICE TO
Subscribers not receiving T
us at once. We desire every co
Send or bring locals and all
office, 214-215 Blackstone Bldg.
there, please.
We advise our readers to ca
vertise themselves in this paper should have
fact that they advertise is ass
All matters for publication
must be in the office by 4 p. m.,
latest.
NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS
Subscribers not receiving The Gazette regularly should notify us at once. We desire every copy delivered promptly.
Send or bring locals and all business matters to The Gazette's office, 214-215 Blackstone Bldg. If you wish to see the editor call there, please.
We advise our readers to carefully examine The Gazette's advertisements before making purchases. Business men who advertise in this paper should have the patronage of our people. The fact that they advertise is assurance that they want it.
All matters for publication in current issues of The Gazette must be in the office by 4 p. m., WEDNESDAY of that week, at the latest.
The Ohio State Telephone
Classified Advertising
... Department ...
FOR SALE—$600 cash, and balance on easy terms, will buy one family home near Forest City Park, on car line. Lot is 36x126. Garage. Must be sold quickly. Inquire of Stupka & Racec Reality Co., 4963 Broadway. Tel. Union, 764-L.
FOR RENT.-Small cottage in E. 27th St., available, Oct. 1, '19. Apply at The Gazette office, 215 Blackstone Bldg., City.
CLEVELAND
Social and Personal
Fifty-two of the recent Knoxville, Tenn., mob are in jail there.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. Hodges have as their guest, a cousin from the South.
W. T. Boyd lodge, 85 members, was organized in this city, Sunday, by local masons.
Mrs. J. S. Hull is able to resume work in their jewelry store, after a month's illness.
Edw. Turner, motorman, returned Monday, from a vacation spent in Detroit and Chicago.
Mrs. Eugenia Balla Smith, of Oil City, Pa., visited relatives in this city, last week.
Mrs. W. T. Grant, of Central Ave., returned on the 18th from a month's visit at Atlantic City, N. J.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Williams and Mrs. George Thompson and daughter Helen, visited in Hillsboro, recently.
A member of the race stabbed a Woodland Ave. conductor, Monday morning, as a result of a quarrel over his fare.
Dr. N. K. Christopher is expecting Mrs. Christopher home from Chicago, this week, where she has been visiting relatives for about ten days.
Mr. and Mrs. George Brooks entertained, recently, in honor of their guests, Mrs. J. H. Hill and daughter, Miss Caddie, of Washington, D. C.
Mrs. Phillip Dennie, E. 90th st., entertained royally, recently, in honor of Mrs. Kiner and daughter, Mrs. Victoria Walker of Bedon Iowa. When the "June 1999 Booster" which was advertised to be given away at the C. A. of C. M. picnic at Puritus Springs park, Aug. 18, '19?
The Co-Operative Hardware Co. is an old, well established, thorny reliable and splendid business. Patronize it and receive the benefits of so doing.-Adv.
Members of Autioch Baptist church are "sore" because the pastor and other officers of the church compelled the removal of some of Candidate Alex. H. Martin's placards posted in the church, recently, included Alamo-American nightwatchmen at the academy of the American Steel and Wire Co., were beaten, Thursday morning, as they were leaving, by strikers or strike-sympathizing hoodlums. "Hoofie" Lawson told a representative of The Gazette that he had selected a young lady of the race to clerk in the Benjamin Drug Store, cor. E. 30th St. and Central Ave., when they "turned him down." Attention Voters! The people's council can not. A candidate for council in 11th ward, is an old resident of Cleveland and of the 11th ward. Advocate of progressive politics—Ady.
Dr. E. A. Bailey performed a very successful operation on P. W. Lemon, sunt. of St. John's A. M. E. Sunday School, last Saturday, at the latter's residence in E. 85th St. He is convalescing rapidly.
The William Tailering Co. makes the best clothes and far cheaper than you can get them elsewhere, these H. C. days. Remember that and patronize that firm. See their advertisement elsewhere in this paper.—Adv.
The incipient strike of foreigners, a few weeks ago, at the Grabler Mfg. Co. Broadway and E. 65th St., resulted in about a dozen of our men getting much better positions in the plant, according to S. W. Anderson, an older employee.
On the back of some of the tickets to the Republican picnic at color-line Luna Park, Aug. 16, 19, was printed complements of Coordilier Thomas W. W. Anderson, General. If our people can stand this wilful and gratuitous insult then vote for him in November.
It is rumored that the Phyllis Wheatley Association is trying to sell their present quarters to promoters of a local "jim crow" hospital and purchase a new building. Cleveland has segregation enough now without adding to it with either a "jim crow" hospital, Y. M. C. A. or schools. The Royal Inn is a business venture we are all proud of and should continue to support liberally. There is no good reason why all of our legitimate business enterprises should not be made exceptionally successfully, these prosperous days. Show your race interest and race pride in a practical way. The abbreviation, "Hon." (for "Honorable"), members and ex-members of Legislatures and the Congress are entitled to, but not merely public speakers and persons who have
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J. S. HALL'S
3121 Central Ave.
J. E. BRANHAM'S
4219 Central Ave.
JACKSON'S
4401 Central Ave.
*PHILLIP LURIE.
3051 Central Ave.
held small positions under the government, barbers, waiters, mechanics, business men generally, and others. Roscoe Conkling Bruce and Simmons are not entitled to the prefix.
Rev. J. J. Price of Avery A. M. E. mission returned, recently, from an extensive trip thru the South where he visited relatives. He reports that section in a very flourishing condition from a business viewpoint, made so principally as a result of the vast sums of money spent in that section during the recent World War by the government.
The two women vocalists and orchestra furnishing the cabaret and instrumental music at the Royal Im are attractions that cause crowds to frequently collect outside as well inside of the popular resort. It is certainly a treat to hear them—is the general verdict. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Harris and their able assistants certainly know how to please their scores of natrons.
Hope of Cleveland ever getting improved mail service through the proposed $150 wage advance seemed small, Friday. Need of 500 new postal clerks and carriers here moved postal authorities to offer a $150 a year increase over the present minimum of $1,000 a year. The examinations open October 4 in Federal building. Up to Friday there were just twenty applicants. Our young men capable should take advantage of these openings. Take the examinations!
The Lemuel T. Boydston Post, No. 89, American Legion, took in 77 new members during the week of the national membership drive. Most all of the units in which we were identified are represented in this post. Sunday, Sept. 28, is known as memorial day for this post as it was on this day, one year ago, that Set. Boydston was killed in the battle of the Champagne. Also, on or about this time that the great allied drive commenced and many answered the last call. It is requested that all ex-soldiers meet at the Community Center, at 9:30 A.M., to form in parade to go to Cory M. E. church where the services will be held. All those desiring to wear uniform will march in the uniform section. The post meets, Friday evening, Sept. 29.
BEST FOR THE BLOOD — Puro Herbs. Sold only on Brown Drug Co. coor. E. 28th St. and Central Ave.— Ady.
The "Conference of Workers Among Afro-American People" will be held in St. Andrews' Episcopal church, E. 49th St, near Cedar Ave, Sept. 30 to Oct. 3, inclusive. The special opening service will be held in Trinity Cathedral, Tuesday evening, Wednesday morning, Bishop Leonard will consecrate St. Andrews' church and bless the new memorial altar, choir pews, etc. After this service a luncheon will be served in the basement of the church. Bishop Leonard, Bishops Demby and Delaney of the South, will be present at the meetings, together with the city clergy and delegates to the conference. Extended reference, to the two Afro-American bishops (Demby and Delaney) of the Episcopal Church, was made in these columns, Sept. 13. Read "The Old Reliable" Gazette and keep posted.
Mt. Zion Cong, church celebrates its fifty-fifth anniversary the week of Nov. 2. Rev. H. H. Proctor, of Atlanta, will preach that Sunday morning. In the afternoon there will be a mass meeting. The theme for discussion: "After War Duties, Obligations and Responsibilities of the Afro-American." Tuesday night, Nov. 4, the women of the church will give a dinner. Wednesday night, Nov. 5, a community service, when the work of the Congregational Church among our people will be discussed. Thursday night, Nov. 6, the Fisk Jobiele Quartette will sing, and Friday night, Nov. 7, praise service. Young People may will be held, Sunday Nov. 9, a meeting minister as special preacher. The minister will be something every night. Dr. Russell H. Conwell, of Philadelphia, will lecture, Monday evening, Nov. 10, in East Technical high school on the subject, "Acres of Diamonds."
Capt. Lewis E. Johnson of the 350th Iff, the old 8th Ill. Req., National Guard, was honorably discharged from the army, but two weeks ago, at Camp Grant, Ill. A Chicago race paper says he "was the chief attorney in the defense of the fourteen Afro-American soldiers charged with assault on a white woman." Our impression is that Maor A. E. Patterson, judge advocate of the 92d Div, held that position in that particular trial. How about it, major? Capt. Johnson served over two years in the army and was in the St. Michel, Argonne and Soloslons sectors, being wounded in the battle of Mt. Des Sings. Lewis" left this city, years ago, of Boston, Iowa and Washing-ton, where he served as a Y. M. C. A. secretary finally locating in Chicago for the practice of the practice. He is a brother of Mrs. Waiter B. Wright, Sr. of W. 85th St. When here, he was captain of one of the best basket-ball teams the Central Y. M. C. A. has ever had.
You should take PURO HERBS,
the great blood purifier and system
cleanser. On sale only at the Brown
Chestnut, Central Ave., cor. 8
E2d. 58-Adv.
James W. Faulkner, the veteran and
well-known Columbus correspondent
THE GAZETTE, CLEYELAND, OHIO, SEPTEMBER 27, 1919
WHEN YOU SUFFER FROM RHEUMATISM
of the Cincinnati (O.) Enquirer, wrote that the paper, Sept. 7, '19, that "the Negro political leaders" of this city (meeting the editor of The Gazette) "have under discussion the overtures of the Socialist party for a union of forces." Nothing of the kind, Friend Faulkner. The fact is "Negro leaders" of this and all other sections, in common with the great majority of the voters of the country, are impatiently waiting for the opportunity to vote a straight Republican ticket at the next national election. They want no union with other parties and will have none.
for a un-
the kind.
is "Ne-
ther sece-
reat ma-
country.
Almost any man will tell you
that Sloan's Liniment
means relief
For practically every man has used it who has suffered from rheumatic aches, soreness of muscles, stiffness of joints, the results of weather exposure, Women, too, by the hundreds of thousands, use it for relieving neurals, lame backs, neuralgia, sick headache, Clean, refreshing, soothing, economical, quickly effective. Say, "Sloan's Liniment," to your druggist. Get it
C. A. of C. M. THANKS
Cleveland, O. Sept. 12th, '19.
Hon, Harry C. Smith.
Sloan's Liniment Keep it handy
My dear Mr. Smith—I want to express the thanks of the C. A. of C. M. for the splendid service rendered the people of this city and state by yourself on the day of our picnic at Puritus Springs Park.
I have the very great pleasure to extend to you the welcome hand of the C. A. of C. M. in the form of an honorary membership in the Association, and to say to you that we will be very glad to see you and hear you on any and all subjects of importance to the people of this and other cities. Our meetings are held on the first and third Thursdays of each month in Elks' hall on the famous Avenue, sometimes called Central.
Dr. N. K. Christopher
Office Hours:
10 a. m. to 1 p. m.
3 p. m. to 8 p. m.
Sundays by Appointment
2284 E. 55th St. Cleveland, O.
Wishing you much success in your many undertakings, I am your friend.
Office Phones:
Main 2912; Central 1424-R
Residence, 614 E. 197th St.
Education, Eddy, 2313-J
Sec'y, C. A. of C. M.
Free Home This Winter
For the right colored girl. A business man will share part of a suite to a young lady with good charm. He will live five feet, four inches, weight 125 pounds.
JOHN P. GREEN
Attorney-at-Law
Room 510, Blackstone Building
1426 West 3rd Street
Apply to A. M. Roberts in person at 2480 E. 40th St., after 5 P. M. Bring reference—Adv.
Notary Public
Polish Interpreter Cleveland O
THE ROYAL INN
Sunday Dinner, $1.00, Sept. 28.
Soup
Consomme Princess
Relishes
Celery
Radishes
Broiled White Fish, Maitre
De Hotel
Prime Ribs of Beef, au jus
Roast Lamb, Mint Sauce
Yearling Roasters
with Dressing
French Peas
Mashed Potatoes
Canteloupe A la Mode
Demi Tasse
Coffee
Thone, Rossdale 5409
Polish Interpret
The T
E. 55th t
Friday, Se
"Cheating H
Mystery," No.
Saturday,
mand in "Th
of Thunder"
Sunday, Se
"The Girl Do
Mighty," No.
Monday, Se
in "Leave
Polo."
Tuesday, Se
in "The Hop
on's Shadow."
Wednesday
art in "Mary"
The Temple Theatre
dishes
citre
jus
ace
atoes
coffee
9
Stock
real
organi-
Friday, Sept. 26. Peggy Hyland in "Cheating Herself." Also "Silent Mystery." No. 13.
Saturday, Sept. 27. Mabel Normand in "The Past." Also "Perils of Thunder Mountain." No. 11.
Sunday, Sept. 28. Charles Ray in "The Girl Dodger." Also "Elmo, the Mighty." No. 4.
Monday, Sept. 29. Madge Kennedy in "Leave it to Susan." Also Eddy Polo.
Tuesday, Sept. 30. Dorothy Gish in "The Hone Chest." Also "Demon's Shadow." No. 10.
Wednesday, Oct. 1. Anita Stewart in "Mary Regan."
Thursday, Oct. 2. Tom Mix in "Days of Daring." Also, "Great Gamble." No. 5.
THE NEW BANK
Where To Subscribe For Stock
The step that looks like real business, taken in the organizing of the proposed Colored bank, was the opening of the stock books for subscriptions on Tuesday at 10 A. M., at 4308 Central Ave., the office of Mai. A. E. Patterson, Rosedgeal 3273, and will remain open until 6 P. M. Oct. 7. Colored men and women who have race pride and race interest, and who want to see this big enterprise go through, will now have an opportunity to subscribe for stock, stock that is bound, even conservatives say, to pay good dividends. Every day from 9 A. M. to 5 P. M., up to and including Oct. 7., Colored men and women can call at the above office and subscribe for the amount of stock they decide to take. Members of the carousel have a chance if they desire, leave their subscriptions for stock with their pastor. Major A. E. Patterson, or some other one of the promoters of the new bank, will be on hand to give out any information desired. This bank once started means the employment in many industries of young Colored men and women as clerks, bookkeepers, stenographers and salesmen and bankers.
MAIN THEATRE
O. E. Belles, Manager.
Scovill Ave. and E. 25th St.
Friday, Sept. 26.
FANNY WARD in "Our Better
Selves"
Saturday, Sept. 27.
WM. FARNUM in "The Lone
Star Ranger." One of Mr.
Farnum's greatest photo-
plays.
Sunday, Sept. 28.
GLADYS BROCKWELL in
"The Sneak." Also ELMO
LINCOLN in "Elmo, the
Mighty," No. 14.
Monday, Sept. 29.
MARY McLAREN in "The Unpainted Woman." Also FAY
PINCHER in "Slades of
Shakespeare." It's a scream.
Tuesday, Sept. 29.
usday, Sept. 30.
OSCAR, "Lady
With the Windmere's Fan"
Also "Great Gamble" No. 9.
Wednesday, Oct. 1.
WALLACE REID in "The Firefly of France." Also J, J. CORBETT in "The Midnight Man." No. 2.
See any of the following incorporators for subscriptions:
C. G. Fishback, F. O'Connell, R. W. Tyler, Harry E. Davis, Garrett A. Morgan, A. E. Patterson...Adv.
HARRY MOREY in "The Gamber," also last episode of "Percils of Thunder Mountain" and the first episode of WM DUNCAN in "Smashing Barriers." Some Show!
P
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no chances; get the best. This hair grower has no equal. The scalp of daandruff, stops itching, feeds the roots, stops the hair from growing out, stops the hair from breaking off. If the hair grows out naturally, long straight and keeps the original hair has been giving perfect satisfaction for fifteen years. Box sold at a money back guarantee. No woman can afford the hair and face. Look good and make big by selling and using the Reginai Laboratory's line of Send $1.15 and get the following treatment:
Box of Cocoalm Balm .25c One box of Shampoo Jelly .25c
Box Skin Whitener .50c One box face Powder .Total.....$2.00
Box Pressing Whitener .50c
Agents wanted everywhere. Large cash commission MIS TO AGENTS. Address
LABORATORY, 161 Bell St., Atlanta, Ga.
Over The Top
head every day with
HAIR-SUCCESS DRESSING
The enemy (Dandruff). A finely made for coarse, stubborn hair.
Large package at all drug stores,
bon receipt of price.
Guineine made only by
Can Drug Company
Ave. - - Brooklyn, N. Y.
One box Pressing Oil... $c.
All five sent Post Paid for $1.75. Agents wanted everywhere paid. Write for confidential TERMS TO AGENTS. Address, THE REGINALL LABORATORY, 161 Bell Street.
Go Over The
of your head every day w
PALMER'S "HAIR-SUCCESS"
and knock out the enemy (Dandru
perfumed Pomade for coarse, st
Only 25 cents for large package at a
or sent by mail upon receipt of price
The Genuine made only
The Morgan Drug Co
1512 Atlantic Ave. - - Brook
All fivewested Post Pail for $75. Agents wanted everywhere. Large cash commission paid. Write for RIGSINN LABORATORY, 161 Bell St., Atlanta, Ga.
and knock out the enemy (Dandruff). A finely perfumed Pomade for coarse, stubborn hair. Only 25 cents for large package at all drug stores, or sent by mail upon receipt of price.
The Morgan Drug Company
1512 Atlantic Ave. - Brooklyn, N. Y.
PALMERS
SKIN-SUCCESS
Ointment
Makers of these Two
Famous Skin Preparations.
PALMERS
SKIN-SUCCESS
-Soap
Makers of these Two Famous Skin Preparations.
SKIN SUCCESS
Soap
---
Artistic and ornamental decorating, floor varnishing, woodwork finishing, painting and paper-hanging.
Wm. H. Gillespie. F. C. Seelig.
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The Royal Inn
NEWLY OPENED RESTAURANT AND CABARET
The first and only high-class restaurant in the city——Service
at all hours——Private Banquet Rooms——Special and private
parties a speciality——We earnestly solicit your patronage.
J.A. Timen's Cut Rate Drug Store
2300 E. 55th St., cor. Central Ave.
ALSO AT ALL DRUG STORES
$1.00 the Bottle.
PATIEN
JOE HEDGES
AND BAY
3048 Cent
One of the Best in the
co
DISCO
An Ideal Bleac
ALEXIS (Peroxide a
Remove
Produce
PRICE S
TRY IT AND
STEINER'S
Corner Scovill and E. 46th St
Guaranteed
DENT
At Prices All Ca
We Use "NOVO O
This new and wonderfu
pain in grinding, drill
Prompt Work —
$3 Gold or Por
Alvocolar Teeth
Examination
Gas Administered My "
Open
8 a. m.
to
8 p. m.
DR. S. I
"On the
96 PUBLIC SQUARE
Natur
PATRONIZE
JOE HEDGES' POOL ROOM
AND BARBER SHOP
3048 Central Ave.
of the Best in the city. Everybody
come!
DISCOVERY
In Ideal Bleach for Dark Scales
EXIS (Peroxide and Vanishing O
Removes Freckles and Tau
Produces Soft Complexion
PRICE 50 CENTS
TRY IT AND BE CONVINCED
EINER'S PHARMA
Scovill and E. 46th Street Cleveland
Guaranteed — Painless
DENTISTRY
Prices All Can Afford to
Use “NOVO CAIN” Exclusi
This new and wonderful discovery eliminates all
pain in grinding, drilling and extracting teeth
empt Work — Personal Atten
Gold or Porcelain Crowns
Alvocolar Teeth—Bridge Work
Examination and Advice Free
administered
My “Fit-Rite” Plates Fit P
Open
8 a. m.
to
8 p. m.
DR. S. C. SILVER
“On the Square”
Open
Sunday
10 to 2
p. m.
96 PUBLIC SQUARE—Southwest Corner
nature's CR
AND BARBER SHOP
3048 Central Ave.
One of the Best in the city. Everybody Welcome!
An Ideal Bleach for Dark Skin (Peroxide and Vanishing Cream) Removes Freckles and Tan Produces Soft Complexion PRICE 50 CENTS
Corner Scovill and E. 46th Street Cleveland, Ohio
Guaranteed - Painless DENTISTRY
At Prices All Can Afford to Pay We Use "NOVO CAIN" Exclusively This new and wonderful discovery eliminates all pain in grinding, drilling and extracting teeth. Prompt Work - Personal Attention
A.
Agents Wanted.
ADDRESS AL
H. P. BEN
Successor to P
INDIANA
ADDRESS ALL ORDERSTO
P. BENNETT
Successor to Prof. J. H. Swayne
INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
ADDRESS ALL ORDERS TO
H. P. BENNETT -634
INDIANA AVE.
Successor to Prof. J. H. Swayne
INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
PATRONIZE OUR
ADVERTISERS
.
NO
PAIN
$3
NO
PAIN
Open
8 a. m.
to
8 p. m.
AURANT AND CABARET
is restaurant in the city——Service
Lit Rooms——Special and private
restly solicit your patronage.
fetfully.
S. W. ANDERSON, Supt. Service
and COUGHS
EMULSION
(COD LIVER OIL.)
Agent
Rate Drug Store
cor. Central Ave.
DRUG STORES
RONIZE
THE POOL ROOM
BEBER SHOP
Central Ave.
city. Everybody Welcome!
VERED!
Fish for Dark Skin
and Vanishing Cream)
Frees Freckles and Tan
Soft Complexion
10 CENTS
BE CONVINCED
PHARMACY
Street Cleveland, Ohio
— Painless
MISTRY
An Afford to Pay
CAIN" Exclusively
discovery eliminates all
ing and extracting teeth.
Personal Attention
Celain Crowns $3
—Bridge Work
and Advice Free
Fit-Rite" Plates Fit Perfectly
G. SILVER
Square"
Open Sunday
10 to 2
p.m.
—Southwest Corner
e's Greatest
REMEDY
LONE STAR TEA
Hundreds of men and women who had given up all hopes in life, owe their good health to this wonderful Remedy.
If you need vim, vigor, vitality or if you feel that life is a burden, try this Guaranteed Remedy for Rheumatism, Kidney Liver, Catarrh, Stomach trouble and Lost Manhood.
—OUR GUARANTEE—
After using one-third of the medicine—if not satisfied return the balance and I will refund your dollar.
PRICE $1.00
ALL ORDERS TO
NETT 634
INDIANA AVE.
Col. J. H. Swayne
POLIS, IND.
---
CLEVELAND, 0.
$3
NO
PAIN
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
THE MILITIA IN RACERIOTS
Dr. Wm. A. Byrd Castigates "Sycophant Black Men"
Soldiers, Sailors and Police Too Often Join Mobocrats To Shoot Down Defenseless Negro Men, Women and Children.
In all of the riots that have occured, the municipalities have called out the militia to quell them. Only white soldiers have been called on. In every instance the sympathy of the militia was with the rioting whites. Colored people have had to fight both the lawless white mob and the militia. Then too the soldiers have invariably gone to the section of the cities where colored people live. They have searched every colored man to take away from him his gun or means of defense but white cowards have been left untouched. If municipalities desire justice done they should ask for soldiers of both races. The bitter spirit now extant in this country, since the war, is due very largely to the hostility between white and colored soldiers. In the south, white soldiers are worse than white civilians. They can not be trusted to maintain order by compelling both white and black riots to live up to their demands. As such, led people to protect themselves, must give battle to soldiers. Too often these boys in uniform rejoice at the opportunity to kill colored men. The opportunity to kill colored men. The oath taken by the white soldier is of no more force than the oath taken by the white southern officer who is the leader of the mob. It is plain that the most casual objection that colored people are not rioting but are defending themselves against the hords of white desperadoes. There is no propaganda afoot to dissuade white demons from perpetuating their riots by sycophant black men, some in high places, are calling upon colored men to desist from rioting. These dastardly cowards are better dead than alive! Colored men are simply fending their lives and defending them. We need to keep continue defending them until the last fall and then let the riots run the fight! The Knoville riot is simply one of many that are coming in the south. Southern "crackers" were at the foundation of the riots in Washington and Chicago. They failed to overrate the colored men in those cities and now the attempt is to take it into the south where they hope to be more successful. In this they are sadly mistaken. Colored men in no portion of this country will run, unless it is some of the oranges in high places who are living off the life-blood of the colored men who are giving standing and backbone to the race. These Negro bishops and other sycophants that called upon colored men to be quiet while white villains were destroying their homes, brutu-
DR. ROBERT R. MOTON
On the Mob and Lynching—Splendid Statement—What is Hard For the Average Negro to
Understand.
Tuskegee, Ala.—Dr. Robert R. Monton's position on the recent riots was stated in the communication which he sent to the New York World, August 2nd. In it he said:
"The time has come when thoughtful white and colored people alike will not tolerate wholesale mobbing of innocent Negroes because of the alleged crime of one. The Negro has never instigated a riot by wholesale attacks on white people. The very fact that in riots the innocent have so frequently been obliged to suffer with the guilty has created in the Negro an aggressive and vindictive spirit which manifested itself in the riots. One of the most unfortunate things about such occurrences is that it frequently hurts the morale of the conservative, law-abiding Negroes and the white defensives. Those who make and execute the laws owe it to themselves and to their country as well as to the Negro to see that the Negro has protection along with other citizens. It is hard for the average Negro to understand how we can spend millions of dollars and thousands of lives to help protect the lives of weaker people in foreign countries, yet fail to protect our own loyal, patriotic colored citizens in this country."
AS TO CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS
Former Legislator Jackson Says That
We Kept the "Home Fires Burning"
for America.
Atlantic City, N. J.—"Dollars or
other material gains count for little
A. B.
Dr. Wm. A. Byrd.
lizing their women, robbing them of manhood and reducing the entire race to serfdom; we repeat, those bishops should be driven out of the country. They are unworthy of respect. Ireland in its fight for liberty has its clergy in the front leading: American Negroes in their fight for life and liberty, have their clergy skulking and cringing, making appeals to them to continue as slaves. Such a clergy does not deserve the respect of savages. We believe in order and law. We desire all men live up to this standard. But we demand of the colored race to protect themselves at all hazards! Gentlemen, you are not rioting; but are doing your duty. It is the duty of the municipalities where rioting is, to force white men to respect the law. What a contrast! White ministers are not rushing in to print advising their people to be kidnapping and orderly. Judges and affection of the law are not appealing to white men to desist from mobbing colored people as is sent for when they see colored men up in the white trench. But Negroes of every shade are giving advice to colored men "to stop." Don't heed the infamous cowards! Protect your homes. Don't start anything but when something is started make it hot for them and finish it!
(Rev.) Wm. A. Byrd.
compared to the realization of our sacred constitutional rights in the mighty struggle in which we, a suffering people, now are entitled," Hon. Robert R. Jackson, of Chicago, declared recently, in the K. P. supreme lodge meeting here.
"This is no common task," the former member of the Illinois Legislature, continued. "It is a gigantic struggle and should be accepted by the 12,000 people of our race kept the fives of americanism burning. Let us keep the burning until we burn up every jim-crow car in this country, the end that instead of reading un-American signs. For Negroes Only, we will read real American signs. For American Citizens."
"We have fought for every flag and nation under the sun, why not now fight some for ourselves? I do not mean to fight with guns, bayonets, cannons, revolvers, but with race unity, race solidarity and race leadership that will knock at the doors of the Congress of our nation and secure our rights as American citizens; or, in the event of failure to demand that those who represent us shall only represent us in the same proportion as we are allowed to exercise our rights in the ballot box.
"The world fought for democracy. We fought for it, too. Organizations such as our must continue the battle of a just peace and a real democracy —democracy in all states." Organization will solve the problem without a tragedy. It will require fearless leaders who have patience and tenor. Hate will not solve it, either will prejudice. It is a big problem and a good job for big-hearted, big-brained men and women, who will make good use of that uncommon thing, COMMON SENSE."
THE LAZIEST BIRD
The lures of lizards is the frog-mouth. He sleeps all day, and at night, instead of flying about in search of food, he sits on a bimb and literally waits for the insects to come and reel him. He is such a sound sleeper that you can push him off his pouch with a stick and not make him. He can inhabit Australia and the islands of the Indian ocean. In store the dragonmaw assembles the whipowls and gets his name from his wrist snapping, such serves as his muscular tiger, too lazy to fly for his pool, like of eel or fords, he crawls along the limb of a tree, opening his wrist mouth, and snapping it shut, catching water and gnats come within his range. At night he perches with his made on the roofs of houses, on fences, or stumps. Only after the spider gnats down does he show any inch from to move about.
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, OHIO, SEPTEMBER 27. 1919.
THE LAND OF
QUAINT COSTUMES
EVERY ISLAND HAD ONCE ITS OWN DISTINCTIVE DRESS
THE "BUTTER DAMES" IN MOST REMARKABLE HEAD-DRESS TO MARK RELIIGIOUS BELIEF
Zeeland is a paradise of quaint costumes. Every island, almost every town, once had its own distinctive dress, and many still retain it. The butter market at Middelburg has a pretty setting. The wagons and chaises roll up to the two gateways in endless procession, and the fair Walcheren dames descend with much shaking of voluminous skirts and aprons, much patting of eggs and adjusting of coral necklaces, to set their baskets of golden butter and pearly eggs in even rows upon the long benches within, before trotting off to the inevitable shopping.
The product of dairy and chicken coop belongs exclusively to the farmers' wives in Zealand. It is they who do the selling, they who spend the earnings. You may find the men at the grain market; on the corners where pigs, calves, or sheep are for sale; in the caves about the market square with their fellows, and upon the days of great cattle markets very busy, indeed, driving shire bargains.
The butter market is ready for business about 1 o'clock. If you saunter in, then, through the roo gateway, now standing hospitably wide to invite buyers, you will find the froth on the table all three sides of the arcade with closest rows of heavy baskets, and the back row by the wall with a hundred or mort rosy farmers' wives and daughters, dainty as the proverbial new pin, in glistening white ear, gold spirals, coral necklaces, many fingerlings, and best black aprons over the second-best gown. The very best belongs to festivals and 'fruits'.
The gray front tiptpiece and the bare arms give an air of gayety to the somber costume, and the upturned gold spirals at each temple are fine hangers for many braid pearl-tipped pendants, which quite belie the detriment primaries of the close white cap.
They are not so demure, after all these dainty little dames, who trip so swiftly and lightly from house to house, from shop to shop, from booth to booth, in the market place. They are mischievous and rugged, despite the somewhat putitant air lent by their garb, and quick at repartie and banter.
A tiny maid of four, a wee ladder unable to speak easily, wear precisely the same costume as mother, rather still long, black skirts, white shirt, tiny gold spiral, coral beads, and aprons for one; black cloth or velvet trousers and jacket, much adorned with silver buttons, silver-buckled shoes, and queer black hat for the other.
Ar Tter Goes the butter market is also ruled by the ladies. It, too, is held in an incisive and its gait opens upon the market place. Without it, the men are grouped in numbers, but within the dames reign supreme. There is no great hinder to cast picturesque shadows not filter the sunshine with touches a gold pendant, coral head now and then as with living fire. There is not the same cool, green shadow to make yellower the golden bter of whiter the peeryly eggs, but the matrous ind heads who buy at the there are for more sturding to strang, than the Wetherillian beauties.
Oor their dices gay keros, is folded in prescribed and curious, and the caps which cover their shapely heads are of lace plated into wide-spreading wings. There is a small close cap which as the heads smouldy, disclosing the laim only at the forehead, where it rolls back in a tiny smooth puff.
From beneath this cap jint jumy gold plates, like window mirrors, secured family an place by huge gold pins. Above this is worn the lace cap, coming down smooth and straight to end squarely across the shoulders for a (Roman) Catholic woman, gathered or plaited to flare widely and coquettishly for the woman whose faith is Calvinistic.
Their fathers or husbands also mark belief by headaddress. The Protestant wears his heaver but with birmi rolled up the entire round, the (Roman) Catholic turns his down in front to form a visor.
WANDERING NEWSPAPER
The navy department boasts "the only traveling newspaper in the world." It is called the Navy Recruiter, and is written and published by a party of Great Lakes gobls who are touring the middle western states on a recruiting trip. Material for the paper is written by the gobls "between jumps," and printing is done in the town the gobls are published boost. All of the articles published boast a permanent career. Lee Fischer, George Richmond, and Clark Kinnaird, all formerly of the Great Lakes Ballet staff, are the editors of this wandering journalistic novelty.
FOX AS GIRL'S NECKPIECE
A pretty, lively fox for a neckpiece.
Thus arrayed, Miss Florence Watres, of San Francisco, Cal., created no little stir as she strolled down Powell street.
"Foxy" circled his furry body about the neck of his new mistress riding gracefully and apparently with delight.
The little animal was captured by Dr. George D. Scott. Miss Waters says that the combination pet and necktie is far better than any other neckpiece she ever owned.
"Foxyy" keeps quite still when about my neck, she said. "He seems to know this is what he should do. He answers to his name already."
11 Taylor Arcade Cleveland
Complete formulas and instructions for making at home, rye whisky, real beers, and choice wines, including making and operating home still. Prepared by men formerly in brewing and distilling business. Real goods; no substitutes; postoffice rules formulas may be lawfully sent through mail. Sent on receipt or one dollar—check, money order, cash, or stamps. Act quick. Bill in Congress to prohibit sale of liquor receipts.
BALTIMORE FORMULA CO.
1513 Mt. Royal
Dept. 71 Baltimore, Md.
W. W. MAY
Carpenter—Builder
BALTIMORE FORMULA CO.
1513 Mt. Royal
Dept. 71 Baltimore, Md.
W. W. MAY
Carpenter—Builder
Screening & General Repairing
a Specialty
Residence, 2347 E. 86th St.
'Phone, Gar. 6049-J.
c, 2347 E. 86th St.
one, Gar. 6049-J.
KINKY HAIR
LOOK!
MEN and WOMEN
Your snarly, coarse, nappy hair is made to grow
LONG STRAIGHT GLOSSY
By Using Nature's Remedy
BERMARINE
QUININE POMADE
Gauranteed as Represented
If your scalp is dry, itchy, scaly, hair falling and follicles are red of it by using this Nature Pomade. A hair on the head is worth a dozen in the brains. A healthy scalp does not have a bad color. Feed the rootand hair will grow. Just try BERMARINE. Price 25s stamps or coin. AGENT WANTED.
BERMARINE MEDICINE CO. ATLANTA, CA.
FORD'S HAIR POMADE
I am 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 Ford's Hair Pomade with perfect safety. It is made with nothing in addition to the hair or scalp. Ford's Hair Pomade makes baskets, kinky hair softers, more pliable easier to use. Price $25c & $50 a bur.
contain mineral oils or polished oils
in fact, it is the only pads on the
market tools that we know of that do
not contain mineral oils as a
vassel or petroleum. You can use
Ford's Hair Straightener with perfect sale
qualities that it contains
nothing injurious to the hair or scalp.
Ford's Hair Straightener makes hair rolls
fairer, more pliable, easier to comb
and put up in any style the length
will permit. Price 25c & 50c a bout.
Ford's Hair Straightener No. 022
Straightens the hair by rolling it between four brass rolls.
Beak and quickest way we know of to straighten hair.
Rolls hair by applying a woven that is cotton
straightener put up in a neat box with full directions
how to use it. Price 52.00
Patent Two Piece Hair Straightening and Shampoo Comb No. 023
This comb is made in two pieces, you heat the rod, not the comb, thus causing the scaling of the comb. Comb No. 15 for long hair all cotton. Comb No. 15 for hair wide. Made of solid brass with steel rod and spiral handle. Weight complete, 9 oz. Price $2.40
Teeth and spacers in this comb are made of separate pieces of brass mounted on a solid steel rod and held by a patent ferrite. Should the teeth become loose, turn the ferrite by twisting the handle and this will press the teeth against the teeth. This comb is 4 inches in over all. Comb 4 in long and 4 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 M
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 y
The Ozonized Ox M
WE DID NOT H
We stuck to our regular prices in the face of
that war times is not the time to profiteer, s
at the same price as before the war.
WE STOOD BY YOU
We have faith in the honesty of humanity
ones that stood by you. Our goods are guaranteed
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
PORO COLLEGE
PENDLETON AVE.
ST. FERDINAND AVE.
LOGAN OWENS, Treasurer.
2828 Central Ave.
Cleveland, O.
WE DID NOT RAISE OUR PRICES DURING THE WAR
Texarkana, Tex. March 6, 1917.
The Ozonized Ox Marrow Co.,
Chicago, Illinois.
Sirs:
When I began the use of your Pomade my hair was 1½ ins. long. After using it one year, my hair was 3 ins. long. It grows so thick and fast I have to cut it very often. This is my photo. Mrs. Josie A. Nelson. This is what Mrs. Nelson says about Ford's Hair Pomade. Her picture shows the rest.
FORD'S HAIR POMADE
The Original Oil Products
For harsh, curly, short and unruly hair. It 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.
FOR SALE BY
ALL DEALERS
Write Today for Further Information
"PORO"COLLEGE
EXELENTO
FOR KINKY HAIR
"Every woman can have nice, long hair. Saying that hair has grown 18 inches long by using your wonderful EXELENTO QUININE COMADE
Don't be fooled by fake Kink Removers. You can't tighten your hair until it soft and smooth. You can't smooth your dullness, feeds the roots of the hair and makes it grow and silky.
We make EXELENTO Skin Touches, an oatment for dark, shallow skin. Used in treatment of skin troubles.
PRICE OF EACH 25c IN STAMPS OR COIN
AGENTE WANTED EVERYWHERE
Write for Partners
EXELENTO MEDICINE Co., Atlanta, Ga.
Try it if you want a clean, healthy com-
plexion. Imparts a whiteness to the skin that
shimmers in the warmth of the powder. Relieve bumps and
pumples of the skin. Excellent for man
after shaving. Exquisitely perfumed.
Pleasant to use. Price 25c a bottle.
Ford's Large Brass Hair Straight-
ening 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, wooden handle, and in 8 inches long over all, comb 394 inches long, and about 1 inch wide. Weight 3 oz. Price 75s
Ford's Hair Straightening and
Shampoo Comb No. 027
This comb is 8 in. in depth all, comb 2 in. long. 8
in. wide, solid brass, weighs 2 oz. A fine temple or
mountain comb. Price 35.0
PLIER
POYALE
WRITE
THE
WORLD
SANTAL
CAPSULY
MIDY
CATARRH
of the
BLADDER
referred to
24 HOURS
Each Order
must be
issued by
MIDY
name 49
Beneath of commercial
J. LOMSKY
3820 Central Avenue
We carry full line of
Dry Goods
Ladies and Gents Furnishings