The Gazette

Saturday, June 5, 1920

Cleveland, Ohio

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DR. BYRD ON ANGLO-SAXON DECADENCE! THIRTY-SEVENTH YEAR No. 44. EL HASA TEMPLE, SHRINERS, CLEVELAND, OHIO THIS CELEBRATED SUPERB ORCHESTRA of Twelve Selected Performers, Detroit's Pride, have been engaged for the pleasure of Cleveland's Terpsicorean Connoisseurs. ATTEND THE SEASON'S SOCIAL EVENT AT ZIMMERMAN'S AUDITORIUM, Euclid Ave., near E. 105th St. SPECIAL INSTALLED VENTILATION. MONDAY EVENING, JUNE 7TH, 1920 Cards $1.50 a Person (informal) including War Tax, Checking and Refreshments—Dancing till 1 A. M. COMMITTEE: Walter Stratton, Chairman; B. F. Douglass, Oscar White, Robt, Todd, B. M. Shook, Sr., I. W. Butler, Edw. Ringgold, C. G. Crosswhite, Secy.; Geo. L. Ross, Potentate. OFFICERS: Dr. P. O'Connell, President Dr. A. J. Whithead, Treasurer R. K. Hodges, Vice-President Selmo C. Glenn, Attorney H. S. Chauncey, Sec. and Manager. Rosedale 6778 Central 1715 W. The Empire Savings & Loan Co. 2316 E. 55th Street. INVEST IN OUR STOCK AT $10 A SHARE! Deposit Your Savings with us. We pay five per cent. OFFICERS: H. E. Murrell, President H. S. Chauncey, Secretary. R. K. Hodges, Vice-President A. H. Martin, Counsellor. Dr. A. J. Whitehead, Treasurer. Rosedale 6778 Central 1715 W. First-Class Restaurant, Reading Room, Bath and Other Conveniences. Hall for lodge and other meetings. Gymnasium; &c., to be installed soon. LADIES' AUXILIARY MEETS EVERY TUESDAY EVENING. MEN'S LYCEUM FROM 4 to 6 P. M. EVERY SUNDAY. ALL WELCOME. NOAH ESCUE, Pres. C. MORGAN DABNEY, Fin Sec. LEWIS PRESTON, Treas. W. F. WEST, Mgr. H. M. LOWRY, Soliciting Secretary. IN UNION IS STRONG ANNOUNCEMENT Shook's Detroit Under the EL HASA TEMPLE, SHI THIS CELEBRATED SUPER Performers, Detroit's Pride, hau Cleveland's Terpsicorean Connec SOCIAL EVENT AT ZIMMER near E. 105th St. SPECIAL L MONDAY EVENT Cards $1.50 a Person (Informa Refreshments.— COMMITTEE: Walter S. Oscar White, Robt. Todd, B. Ringgold, C. G. Crosswhite, S. The People's 2316 I If you have proper We Buy, O Dr. P. O'Connell, President R. K. Hodges, Vice-President H. S. Chaun Rosedale 6778. The Empire S 2316 I INVITE STOCK A Deposit with us. O H. E. Murrell, President R. K. Hodges, Vice-President Dr. A. J. W Rosedale 6778. "It's easy to pay an Dresswell Cr 4701 Central Ave., We Invite Charge Accounts CASH LODGING 2364-2366 East First-Class Restaurant, Readin ences. Hall for lodge to be installed soon. LADIES' AUXILIARY MEN MEN'S LYCEUM FROM 4 ALL W NOAH ESCUE, Pres. C. LEWIS PRESTON, Tr. H. M. LOWRY, THE C. A. C. DRY CLEANING COMPANY LADIES AND GENTS TAILORING Cleaning, Pressing, Dyeing and Repairing We Specialize on Fancy Silks, Furs, Feathers, Etc. WORK CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED 2033 Scovill Avenue Cleveland, O. C. A. Cowley. Prop. Phone: Central, 4423 W. THE GAZETTE The world's two most famous circuses now merged into one and headed this way will exhibit here, Monday and Tuesday. The very name of the great new circus—Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Combined—assures all who attend the greatest program ever presented in America. This is likewise true of the manmuth street parade, Monday morning. Hundreds upon hundreds of performers will appear in the gigantic main-tent. There will be spores upon scouts, of the cleverest dumb actors. A gorgeously costumed pagan of stupendous size will open the program. Great companies of characters, representing the best-loved stories of fable and nursery lore will appear. There will be splendid and many groups of beautiful horses in jeweled trappings. The army of clowns exceed all past records for fun and numbers. The editor of The Gazette leaves today for Chicago where he will spend about a week, returning home for next Wednesday and Thursday only. Tell those who wish to see him to call at the office on those two days only, next week. ESTABLISHED AUGUST 25,1883 And Issued Every Week on Time Since Their Greed for Gold—Immorality Rampant Unjust to Weaker Races—Women's Dress. Etc. What Our People Are Doing Each Week—Church, Personal, Social, Lodge, Literary and Musical—Marriages, Deaths, Etc. CORRESPONDENTS must mail all "The Old Reliable" Gazette. Subscribe letters for publication at their main | for IT! All about, evidences that the Anglo-Saxon race is decaying are visible. The rule of hate is the one passion of the hour. White men have lost faith in each other and it is only when they have each other tied fast that they make any pretence of trusting each other. In government, this race has stranded the world, Kingdoms, republics and empires under them have crumbled. Orderly government has given away to moblaw and tyranny. Politics which has to do with the proper running of municipalities and larger divisions, has been turned into dishonor and rapine. Taxes, which are paid for the betterment of the people as a whole are used principally to fatten political grafters. The good of his own purse, and not the people, is the one aim of the politician. Today, Europe is a wreck, the result of Anglo-Saxon decendence! The cause of Anglo-Saxon decendence! have been told and those who brought it on have never been brought to the bar of justice. No one nationality in Europe is responsible for the last war. Huge sums of money, the war in America, have been ruthlessly squandered and the orgy of squandering continues. Virtue, which was on the decline prior to the war, fled during the war, and since the war immorality has eaten up the world. Jacobism, the taking advantage of the necessities of his brother, is the one principle governing trade now. Every man is a HOG when it comes to determining the profit he shall make. Thirty religious denominations have joined in trying to recreate the world and in the mist of this laudable attempt, the biggory, and selfishness of Anglo-Saxonism are about to defeat its ends. Unwillingness to record others what they enjoy and the mobbing together to keep them out is the ethics of white people of the present day. Injustice toward weaker races numerically is the chief characteristics of Anglo-Saxon "chivalry". During the war, Anglo-Saxons assumed an arm of brotherliness and attrition. They FRESH OH Written by 'The Old Reliable Throughout What Our People Are Doing Personal, Social, Lodg cal - Marriage 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—Mr. Edward Freeman and Mrs. Ida Bowles of Massillon, are visiting Mrs. Anna Freeman—Mesdames Rufus Smith, Frank West and Gertinade Toney, of McIntyre, are guests of Mrs. Lizzie West, Mrs. M. F Walker died, Wednesday evening, after a lingering illness. The remains were taken to Oberlin for burial. The deceased graduated from Oberlin College, some years ago—There will be a baby contest at St. James A. M. E. church, June 8, that is attracting much attention. A number of men met at Simpson M. E. church to organize a band—Mrs. Susan E. Lee, of Wheeling, is visiting her son, Benj. S. Lee—W. L. Johnson is visiting his daughters at Warren. The Invincible Blind Concert Co. drew an audience that filled the auditorium of the A. M. E. church, Thursday evening. The door receipts were over $80. All members of the company are "artists" and gave general satisfaction. Mr. Frank Christian, of Hopedale, frequently comes to visit friends here. Miss Rachel Smith of Canton and Jesse E. Smith of Pittsburgh, are visiting Mrs. Henrieta Smith. Mrs. Eva Strother, of Canton, and A. L. Strother of Rankin, Pa., are guests of Mrs. Bertha Strother Redman. The best race news, the kind that helps us on in life's struggles, is to be found each week, in --- preached "our country's good," Since the war, and their hides having been saved, they are flauntingly speaking of the "white man's country." Cowardice seems to be his chief stock in trade, especially when he is afraid of being whipped. The laboring man of their own race do not trust their rulers and as a consequence strikes, and disorders abound everywhere and almost in everything. Criminals and recriminations are heard everywhere among them. Laws are not regarded, everywhere the seeds of insurrection are growing and each man is seeking to safeguard himself, without any regard for his neighbor. The dress of women is the evidence that the substitution of all greediness has gone for the sinuity, of the human body, especially those portions which nature ordained to be covered. It has been brazenly thrown away. In all these things our white brother leads! We quicke for him, for it seems that he has reached his goal in greatness and is now falling. Confusion fojens in every thing. What is the trouble my brother? Ha it your sin, found you out and is the God of vengeance now, turning you over to yourself for your own destruction! Your full means destruction to our civilization. Your firm hand on other races, so as to keep them back and shut them out, from the rule and government of empire and kingdoms, has caused the other races to be unprepared to continue civilization as it is now. Your fixed purpose to deluge this world into another cataclysm of arms, worse than that of the last war, seems gave to accomplish its aim. Weaker races lenging for ideal morality stand agastat, at your shameful desecration of things once revered and loved. Virtue, the angel of happiness, has been wounded by you so that now she is prostrate and the heathen races look on in wonder while she is dying. Darker races prepare to save the world for your white brother has failed! REV. Wm. A. Byrd. OHIO NEWS e' Gazette's Correspondents at the State ing Each Week—Church, age, Literary and Musi- es, Deaths, Etc. "The Old Reliable" Gazette. Subscribe for IT! HILLSBORO.—Mr. Pearl Zimmerman of Columbus, visited his mother, here, this week.—Mrs. George Trimble and daughter, Miss Helen of Cleveland, were here, several days.—Mr. and Mrs. Lewis of Springfield, visited the latter's mother, Mrs. Aline Burton, this week.—Rev. and Mrs. W. L. Tolliver attended, last Tuesday evening, in honor of their daughter, Miss Gladys' birthday. The home was beautifully decorated. Mrs. Henry Woods is visiting relatives in Indianapolis.—Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Donaldson attended commencement here, last week, and returned to Columbus, Sunday.—Mrs. Ida Day was called to Cincinnati Saturday, by the serious illness of Mr. Enoch Frye.—The eighth grade Lincoln School commencement was Thursday and Friday. Rev. Spivey, of Washington C. H., made the class Ethel B. Carlisle. Burnice Hudson, Burnett Smith, Roy D. Gallagher Ada Williams.—Mr. Walter Stribling of Springfield was here, Decoration day.—Mrs. Theo. Campbell returned to Cleveland, Sunday, after an extended visit here.—Children's day exercises at the Baptist church, June 13.—The Odd Fellows' sermon, the afternoon of June 6, at the A. M. E. church.—Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Gregston entertained from Saturday to Monday, the former's sister, Mrs. Robert Robinson of Cincinnati.—Kenneth Tolliver entertained at a lawn party, Sunday evening: Josephine Harris, Virgil Paxton, Gertude Christy, Helen and Bernadine Johnson, Dorsey and Charles Minor, Roy Spey, Sterling Hancock, Roy Trimble, Howard Kilgore and Charles Williams.—The B. Y. P. U. rendered an excellent program, Sunday evening, presided over by the president, Mrs. Mary Holland. Each Sunday evening the captains have interesting programs.—Mrs. Jessie Ross has returned to Cleveland after a visit with relatives here. --- SOUTHERN DELEGATE CONTEST Hon. Joseph C. Manning Tells How Best to Relieve the Party From Them Every four years there comes up from the southern states a large number of contested delegations to Republican National conventions. Southern Republicans are criticised, sometimes, denounced and always branded as a uncontinent element. It is not altogether the fault of the Republicans of the South that this situation confronts the party. Southern Republican leaders have come to look upon the matter of getting into a national convention as the only method of obtaining recognition and certainly as the foremost step toward federal patronage. For years it has been the custom of Republican national administrations to put, a foremost of concern in the South, the matter of manipulating delegations there with a view to controlling party nominations for President. This reached its height in 1968 when the administration employed federal office-holders in that section to the fullest extent in the work of nominating Taft. One reason for this disorganized condition of the party, in the South is that there are no voting Republicans there, to speak of, as a result of the aggressions of southern Democracy upon constitutional democracy. This is a government by political parties and we find that southern Democracy has set to work partisan political machinery there, with the direct purpose of eliminating the possibility of an opposing political party. The disfranchisement laws in the South were set up, primarily, to disobey the opposition then becoming strong and known as the fusion party. The object of the laws is shown by the results arising from their operation. Only about one-fourth of the whites and practically none of the colored males of voting are there have voice in government, so far as is revealed by the election returning. That southern Democracy dominates that section through political suppression and repression is a well known that it is unable to rectify the fact. The amazing aspect of the situation is that there is no further any interest in this southern condition on the part of the Republican party than this every four-year excursion of delegate-hunters from northern and western states, while the supporters of the party generally in the North and West are quick to asail southern Republicans for alleged "selling out" to various candidates for the nomination for President. The thing that could to be done is to asail Republican member of Congress who set capably in their seats and hear "world democracy" proclaimed by southern Democrats who have set up a system which amounts to nothing less than political slavery in the South. The "solid-South" will not be law and tyranny. Politics, which caused to take the heel of political despotism off the necks of disfranchised southern Republicans and until the U. N. Constitution and its suffrage guarantees stand for as much in the south as in the other states of the Union. The best way to relieve the country of these southern contests is to relieve the southern masses of political slavery and let them vote, so there can be two political parties in the South. Then there will be a Republican party in that section and these contests will disappear. PARIS, France.—The French government has decided to withdraw at the beginning of next month the main body of colored troops from the occupied regions of Germany. This decision, it is emphatically stated, is not an admission of any charges brought against them but is alone solely to avoid any ground for a repetition of the silly, lying "American" charges. Some 1,500 blacks are to remain, forming a part of eleven regiments of French colonial troops from Algeria, Morocco, and Madagascar. These other troops are recruited from among the Arabs and Nonnegroid races of Africa, who have been under French influence for generations and are entirely Christianized men, and are as well disciplined and have as good records as any other French or other regiments. The allegations which prejudiced German-Americans have been bringing against them are denied by both civil and military authorities. The same formal denial is made to the allegations made by German-Americans against the Senegalese and other black African troops whose behavior has been carefully inquired into by the civilian authorities and found to be also the very best. They will be replaced by young French soldiers and will be used to replace French contingents in the near east. Obituary. OBERLIN, O.-Mrs. M. Fleet Walker, wife of the lessee of the Cadiz Opera House, who died there, last week, after some weeks' illness, was buried here. Mrs. Walker was a graduate of Oberlin college, a splendid wife and helpmate. Mr. Walker has the earnest sympathy of a host of friends throut the state. HAMPTON, Va. + Bishop Theodore D. Bratton, Jackson, Miss., president of the Southern Sociological Congress, in bringing to a close the race relations' section of the recent Washington meeting, said: "All tests of social ideas are affoat. We are in the midt of a propaganda of in one to work a good idea. An individual must be wise to discrimi- Dr. Robert R. Moton. mate in this age of turmoil following the Great War. Express your desires, your hopes, and your principles unreservedly, strongly, but patiently and courteously." Prof. Robert T. Kerlin of the Virginia Military Institute, Lexington, Va., in his address on "The Negro's Reaction to the World War," said: "A new type of colored man has come upon the stage: the Afro-American who is struggling for manhood rights, for political, economic, and social freedom, for all that democracy means to the most favored. This man has not yet found in the white race an interpreter. He is too recent, too alarming. We are baffled by his attitude and his ambitions. We have made no provision in our social system for this new man in the old color. Tradition is mighty. Prejudice is subtle and prevailing. The romancers have so engaged our fancies with the delectable old-timer that the new-comer finds all our mental chambers occupied. The sympathy requisite for an interpretation being thus wanting in the white race, the Afro-American has become his own interpreter and his newspaper is preeminently his organ! What brought forth this new man? Doubtless the World War brought him upon the stage of our national life, but the World War did not produce him. The fifty years since emancipation, fifty years of struggle and upward striving through semi-servitude, have done that." Dr. Robert R. Moton, principal of Tuskegee, Ala. Institute, declared that Afro-Americans have not lost faith in all white people. "We want white people everywhere," he said, "to put us down as American citizens. We do not need to be adjusted to American ideas and sentiments. Afro-Americans have always been loyal to their nation, their state, and their community. We ask to be treated as Americans. We ask no more, and we should ask no less." Dr. Moton pointed out clearly that when the Afro-American fight segregation, he knows that not once in ten times is the promise of equal accommodation fully carried out. "The South has enormous natural resources," said Dr. Moton. Our Afro-American population offers the finest and most reliable source of labor in the South. The South indeed cannot get along without this labor. The Afro-American is asking today for an equal chance along every line of human endeavor. They ought to be guaranteed life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness, and an equal chance along all lines of honest endeavor. Among the things to encourage us are the following: The Atlanta plan includes an organization of inter-racial committees that work quietly and persistently to improve inter-racial conditions; many of the best people of the South have set themselves like flint against lynching; the spirit of Jesus Christ is working in the hearts of men to solve this human problem—this race problem." Dr. Emmett J. Scott, secretary-treasurer of Howard University, Washington, D. C., referred to the contribution which had been made by our Afro-American citizens to the field of serious scientific research and achievement. Dr. Scott's program of readjustment between the new Afro-American and the new nation covers the following points: "(1) Lynchings in all parts of the country IN UNION IS STRENGTH DENCE! ns Improving prominent Speakers ay. In That Section too Year—What Our -Re-adjustment— Ownership. should be stamped out; (2) labor conditions must be improved, with a just wage and humane working conditions for all; (3) the sacredness of the ballot must be recognized and equality of citizenship enforced for all who measure up to the law's requirements; (4) adequate educational facilities must be provided for the Afro American and fair opportunities for the exercise of God-given talent; must be afforded in the trade markets of the Nation; (5) Afro Americans must stand unfalteringly for thrift, industry, and an abiding sense of responsibility, reliability, honesty, discipline of self, and participation in the helpful activities of their communities." Monroe N. Work, of Tuskegee Institute, editor of the "Negro Year Book," in his address on "The Afro-American in Property Owning," declared that they have not generally required property for speculative purposes but in order to establish home, and added: "Afro-Americans now own over 600,000 homes; that is, one home out of every four which they have is owned. The progress which they have made has required self control and self denial. They today own $1,140,000,000 worth of taxable property. In the rural sections there is no匀凄ness of the race problem because of their owning property. Their future development will be largely determined by the ex- PETER H. tent to which they acquire property and establish good homes." THE N. A. A. C. P. Annual Conference Opened Four-Day Session in Atlanta, Sunday, ATLANTA, Ga.—The annual conference of the N. A. A. C. P. opened a four-day session here, Sunday, the first meeting of the organization in the southern states, Gov. Dorssey, Mayor Key, the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce, the committee of church co-operation, and the church council acted with the local branch of the association in inviting the annual meeting to Atlanta. The governor, the mayor and other local officials delivered addresses of welcome and the meetings of the conference were addressed by men from other states. Considerable attention was attracted to the conference because of the criticisms by the organization, of lynching, "jim-crow" laws, disfranchisement of white and colored citizens, and its stand on other phases of the race question at issue in the southern states. The association which claims a membership of 100,000 including 10,000 whites, has 328 branches in forty three-cities and had about 200 delegates and visitors to the Atlanta conference. Dean Durham of Emory university; Charles E. Russell, the Socialist leader; Florence Kelly of the Consumers League; Bishop Hurst, President—Black of the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce, and Dr. W. E. Dubois were among the speakers at various sessions. On Tuesday afternoon Dr. James H. Dillard of Charlottesville, Va., president of the Jeanes educational fund presented on the campus of Atlanta university, the Springgarn medal, which goes annually to the Afro-American who is accounted as having accomplished most in any hold of human endeavor during the last year. It was given Du Bois, Labor and migration, lynching and segregation and the ballot and education were among the subjects discussed. The association announced a growth of more than 100 per cent. in membership during the last year. Moorefield Store of Boston—Senator Capper of Kansas, Jane Addams of Chicago, and Joseph P. Dowd of Boston are among the members of it. ```markdown ``` The A Nia ha GAZETTE PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY SUBSCRIPTION RATES (In Advance) One Yerkes. Seve cesee soo FEM Six Months -...cceeescceesese MOP ‘Three Months ...........06600+ 0 Subscribers are requested to remit by pestoffice money order or reg- i istered Netter a? Entered at the postoffice in Cleve- land, Obie, as second-class ' mail matter. Address all communications to HARRY C. SMITH Editor and proprietor + THE GAZETTE, - Gay., Central 513-K) Blackstone Building, Cleveland, 0. Member Ohio Legislature: 1894 to 1896; 1886 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, publish- ed in the state of Ohio, and compar- ison with any will immediately ea tablish its rank as one of the NEWS- IEST AND BEST in the country. 10,000,009 Afro-Americans, 200,000 in Ohio. 25,000 in Cleveland. SATURDAY, JUNE 5, 1920, THE PROPLE, NOT PALMER, WON. It ie a well known fact that , the veeent cut in retail clothing prices had rio velation whatever to any action of Attorney General Palmer in his efforts to reduce the high cost of living, Mr: Palmer and his army of special: agents, with their large appropriations, endeavored —_ for midntls to reduce the cost of living butidaring the time of their activity prices continued to advance. Not a single eut can be eredited to the attivities of the Department of Jus- tice. When people ceased to buy and indiested their determination to wear old clothes until prices were cut the reduetion began. Mr, Palmer spent his hundreds of thousands of dollars of’ Government funds to no useful purpose. sari FARMERS FAVOR ANTI-STRIKE LAW, In the hearing before a subcom- | mittee of the Interstate Commerce Committee of the Senate relative to the Poindexter Bill to prohibit in- terference with interstate commeree by ‘conspiracies of either employers cor'vemgloyes, the farmers were un- qualified in their support of the measure. ‘The Poindexter Bill, like thesGumutins Bill, does not prohibit | any-empleye from quitting his oe plogment)atvany time for any reason so'long ashe does not enter nto @ conspisaey with others to «interfere with interstate commeree, In practi- cabreffact: the! bill would , prohibit strikes yon railroads, engaged in in- tefotatecbusiness, Quite naturally the faimers are in favor of such x mea-| suites wiso) are shippers of com- médities ofall kinds, and consumers generally. The tavmer ean not cease produetion, <neither ean the general publie-dease) eonswnption. But there cam be no continuous production or consumption uniess there, shall be reasonably. continuous, interstate tat- fic. The farmer of the West ean not ship his wheat to the consumer in ‘the cities unless the great railroad systems of the country are in oper- fation. Singe the welfare of both of the producers and the consumer re- quire continuous. interstate commerce both those. classes will be strong ad- vooutes:.of the” enactment of a law which ‘will prohibit railroad strikes. At the same’ time, there will also be general support of a provision in the Federal, statutes which will as: _sute to employes who have grievanees that a-fair trihunal will hear their grievances and render judgment ue- cording to the merits of the contro- versy.; When. this: has been, ansared, there ean be no reasonable opposi- tion to an anti-strike law applicable’ to railronds engaged in interstate commerce. A WARNING. An early morning duel, by the rays of @ flashlight, between railroad de- tectives and an alleged car robber ended, last week Thursday, in. the Killing of Hagh Goodman, "2615", 88d. St. James Givens and Frank Stu- linski, detectives employed by the Nickel Plate railroad, reported to po- lice they. came upon Goodman ran- sacking freight cars in the Nickel Plate yards, a short distance west of E..65th St, Seals on five cars had been broken. Quantities of merchan- dive, including several hundred dol- Jans’ worth of ciothing, shoes. _and soap, were piled slong the track. With a pocket flashlight Stulinski explored the.interiors.of the cars, coming upon Goodman in the fourth of the row. He backed-out of the car and called on the man to surrender. Instead, the detectives said, Goodman dashed at them with a knife in his hand. (This “sounds,” a little.) ‘The trio battled near the door. ‘fhe flashlight was dropped. and broken. Fearing Good- man might injure his companion, Givens drew his revolver. As Good- man, unable to escape, lunged at ‘Stulinski with the knife, Givens fired. (This also “sounds.”) The bullet pen- erated Goodman's heart. Police were summoned and the body taken to the morgue—Cleveland Daily Plain Dealer. All of the foregoing may and may not be true. We do not believe it ALL and that is one reason why we are calling our local organizations’ atten- tion to this particular case and urging a careful investigation of the matter. Another reason is that in the last few years, since the influx from the South, there has been a growing ten- dency upon the part of the police, both private and public, to kill members ofthe race sought for committing crimes and misdemeanors. Less re- spect for the lives of our people is being shown and that is something that interests all of us in this com- munity. Better be up and doing NOW, if for no other reason than to warn officers of all kinds that they cannot kill members of the race in this community with the same impun- ity that it is done in the South, ey ea THE TRAGEDY OF THE HALF LOAF. ee rte ee. eee ‘The strongest races of men, and the most indomitable charaeters of his~ tory have always either uncompro- misingly demanded every scintilla of their just rights, or, being denied the full measure of attainment of their ideals, have spurned even life itself. Patrick Henry in crying out for “either liberty or death,” voiced the sentiment of the Pilgrim Fathers, who preferred the unknown horrors of the great uncharted Western ocean and the savage-ridden land beyond to religious oppression in @ comfortable home. But the American colored man is ssoernty satisfied with the HALF LOAR.. For 250 years he) was’ told that she was entitled to NOTHING —that he even enjoyed life itself by suffyance. His mind’was so deliber- ately diversified and stunted that he could not even’ think to the» con- trary, Sp well was this psychology in- grained into him that, even today, race leaders of the old school, finding it inkpossible to break from this log cabin philosophy, “handed it down to free-men.” He’ was so thoroughly robbed’ of his mentality, that he complacently help- ed manufacture the shot and’ shell whieh cnabled his masters to keep him ‘in slavery. When’ Liberty and Citi- venship-were granted him, his childish mind coujd not grasp. their signifi cance. He took what was given him with a thankful heart, thanks to the teachings of the old sehool. He has not yet demanded unequivo- -eally all that is due him! He fears to refuse acceptance of the Half Loaf axa demand the WHOLE, trembling lest he be denied any at all. With apologetic mein and smirking smile, he rengers gratitude for “jim-crow” settlement houses, ‘‘fim-erow” — sol- diers und sailors’ clits, “jim-erow” Y. M.C. A's, “jim-crow” _ officers’ training camps, “jim-crow:” churches, fraternities and polities. He thus plays the beggar’s role in spite of the fact that he has proven himself to be an indissoiuble and in- ‘divisible entity of the whole warp ‘and woof of Ameriea, economic, po- litical, military and social. He js the economic backbone of the South, He i the bajance of political power as he is beginning to learn. He hus always been the fangs of the Ameri- can army. His blood, suspected and unsuspected flows in-more veins than any other one strain in America, He is still a slave, if he accepts anything short of the full unstinted measure of recognition and respect. ‘The new colored American will never tgain be satisfied with EQUAL RIGHTS when they are not the SAME RIGHTS. ‘The NEW Colored ‘American, repudiating the. teachings fof the oft! school, who led him into the quagmire of peonage and: serf- dom MUST and WILL spum the Half Loaf and lay hold onto the WHOLE ‘LOAP, “so help him God.” PROTEST AGAINST WRONG, To submit In silence when we should provest makes co wards out of me, ‘The hum: an race has climbed on f'ro- test, Had no voice been rals- ed agulnst fujustice, —guor- ance and tust, the Inquisition yet would Serve the lav, and guillotines decile our ‘Teast disputes. The few who dare, must speak and speak again to. Hs tlle, wrongs of many, —Ella Wheeler Wileox. “THINK AS A MAN” Class is asfatal in intelligence as anywhere else. Wateh your- self, that you do not slump into looking at all questions. from the point of view of your class. ‘Think as a:human being, not as a Republican, or Democrat, or Laborer, or Capitalist, or Prot- estant, or Catholic, or Jew, or an Bastemer, or a Westerner, or a Negro, or an American. Think ag,.aman.—Dr,. Frank Crane. i THE GAZETTE. CLEVELAND. OHIO, JUNE 5, 1920. White and Black Liars! ee | The Race’s Greatest and Most | Harmful Enemies RSS ae How Our Burden is Made Heavier—‘Religious” Ignoramuses and ‘Their Noise and Leaders. % Special to The Gazette. ynot coe liar nor black traitor. Then. No other race in the world has so stupendous a burden resting upon it as has the black race. Designediy ‘the white race, especially in America, ‘has and is now trying to convinee the world that the black race is unfit for the family of races as an associate on equal terms. ‘The monumental sin of the times, is the attempt by whites to show that blacks are inferior and to do this, the blacks are denied the safeguards and protection of govern- ment as well as the civilizing influ- ences of education in many portions of the country. Wicked hostility meets the black man on every road he travels excepting that of a servant and a fool. America is now seeking to poison the world of nations against the black man of America. In this at- tempt a lieing propaganda has been inaugurated and a publicity program entered into that permeates every- ‘thing. ‘The white liar of America is ‘the black man’s “Iago.” Very shrewdly is this “Tago "gathering round him black sycophants, dollar liars and eraven tools, to aid the As- sinine forces of America in holding’ down, practically in slavery, the ma- jor portion of the colored race in this country. ‘The educational funds of America’for the black man have been syndicated. The, syndicate pours out [where it will produce weaklings and truckling tools to continue the regime! [of wickedness now dominant in the South. Churches are opened in the North, East and West to these infa- mous black traitors to preach their doctrine of submission and “showing the white race that we are worthy.” ‘The truckling tories of color, are ued in the South to cower the colored youth that desires manhood and they are despatched to the North to per- suade the North to follow the atti- tude of the South, ‘These same trucklers are saying to the world, “we [es the spokesmen of the Negro race; we live in the south where we teach jour people not to invitate the white | folks but to go ahead, get money and learn to work, and things will come [ao “Tort te in every community in the North and {they take up that doctrine and spread it privately in all of their associa- | tions. ‘The attempt is now being: made te give the black man, the world over, jthe treatment that the South accords him. Wickedly strange, some black | southern traitors are at the head of this movement. Of course this will fail, if every able-bodied black man of the country, outside of the South, must die in fighting to the limit this Saldicne eat Va Relting it. sve snare WHY NOT JOHNSON AND VARDAMAN? Special to The Gazette! NEW YORK—The N. Y. Evening Journal, May 20, prints some very in- teresting Johnson presidential propa- vanda, which has all the ear marks of press bureau stuff and appears in a newspaper that has been boosting Senator Johnson for nomination on the Republican ticket for _ months. Upon reading this article, 1 wonder why not make the ticket Johnson and Vardaman, or Vardaman and John- son? For a Republican U. S. Sena- tor, who secks the nomination “ for President on the Republican ticket, to yemain silent to the! aggressions of the southern Democracy upon consti- tutional democracy in the South is bad enough, but for him to be openly endorsed for his acquiescence in the lynching of voice in government per- petrated by southern Democracy and by Vardaman, at that, is certainly going the limit, Vardaman is the southern Democrat who said of Booker Washington: “I have more respect for the cocoa- nut headed coon who blacks my boots than I have for Booker Washington.” ‘This remark evidenced his senti- ment toward Negro progress in par- ticular and toward Negro people in general. 1 deny that either Varda- man or southern Democracy speaks for the southern people or represents them, for the southern Democracy is an oligarchy which sits in power over the southern people on a vote of no more than one-third of the whites. ‘The Democracy of the South exercises power through suppression and re- pression and oppression. ‘There is no more of real cleyicracy in the South than there, is of old-time religion in hell or of southern Democrats in heaven, As to the Negro in the South, he was good enough to buy Liberty Bonds and do war work, to go abrodd and fight for world demo- cracy, and to return to the South of political slavery and, be told to “get out of that uniform nigger” and then and there to become submissive to, all the wrongs which southern Demo- cracy may heap upon him. Thisy too, without any Republican of the Sena- tor Johnson type to champion the cause of human justice as the Varda- man Democracy of the South proceeds unrestrained in its persecution of the Negro of that section. There is now a Negro minister working on the chaingang in Mississippi for being an agent of a New York Colored maga- zine whieh is supported by many lead- ing white as well as Colored people the country over. It is unspeakable and infamous that the Republican party of Abraham Lincoln should so condescend in recreancy that, a man would darg to use the endorsement Bf a man tike Vardaman as am asset in seeking the party nomination for President. Read the New York Eve- ning Journal article, Colored America, and those’ of you in the North who can have voice in the North bear in mind that now is your time te be not white liar nor black traitor. Then, too, our burden stows heavier by the coming into fairminded communities of the North colored people from the jungles of the South who have been denied the civilizing influences of the South, and to all purposes they are more ignorant thanychildren, With this ignorance goes prejudice and hate. They bying a religion of noise, emotions, spasms and ignorance. They axe establishing little churches, rather “store dens,” everywhere, and are having as their preacher some of the most dangerous crooks of the black race. Into a land where com- pulsory education is required, comes this new immigrant with his religi- ous teachers (7) decrying education and forcing, upon neighbors a kind of bedlum that is repulsive and damning, ‘Their appearance on the streets, their sanitary surroundings and their de- corum in public places; drive from them people of refinement and cul- ture, But these are black people. ‘They belong to us and it is our bur- den to uplift them! We must not be cowards! We must fight their ignor- ance and, in spite of them, place them in the hands of competent lead- ers, Especially must we take care of the young, ‘These young. boys and girls of black people must he given a fair chanee. Take up then the black man’s burden and help him! (Rey.) WMA. BYRD, heard, Let. Senator Johnson either repudiate this article or you tepudi- ate him, making your ‘repudiation heard aS you CAN if you WILL to make it heard. JOSEPH C. MANNING. Ben, Shook, Jr., and his superb De- troit Society orchestra is coming! Everybody knows what this means— an El Hasa Temple treat of the finest kind. At Zimmerman’s auditorium, Monday evening, June 7.—Adv. Mr. Katzenmeyer, who has | for fourteen years been manager of Mar- shall’s drug store, comer Woodland Ave, and F, 55th’ St., has opened a first-class new drug store at 5546 Woodland Ave., next to the postoffice, where he will be glad to welcome his many friends among our people.— Adv. yrvcrevrsesessssnsseeeeees ; : PREJUDICE : + “Any prejudice whatever will tbe insurmountable if those who 3 do wot share in, it themselves $ truckle to it and Matter it and $ $ accept it as a law of nature."— 3 $ John Stuart Mit, : FACTS People who. Advertise Can sell Goods. Peaple who sell @oods Can make Money. People who make Mon- ey can advertise goods. The Best Advertising Medium is “The Old Reliable” GAZETTE. REMARKS ABOUT ADVERTISING While it is true that occasional ad- vertising will bring extra business, it is equally true that constant, persist- ent advertising will keep _ business growing dhuing “dull days.” ‘The merchant who considers riches a burden should never advertise. His stofe may be like a summer resort in January. Do YOU advertise? ‘The merchant who never advertises under any circumstanee or condition may imagine he is wise, but his eom- petitors have no desire to disturb his imagination. It's a good time to “get awake.” ASPIRIN Name “bayer” on Genuine (Cs? % > z Su “Rayer Tablets of Aspirin” is genuine Aspirin provid sufe by millions and pre- scribed by physicians for over twenty years, Accept only an unbroken “layer package” Which contains proper diree- tions to relieve “Headache, ‘Toothache, Farache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Colds: and Pain. Handy tin boxes of 12 tab- Tets cont few cents, Druggiats also sell larger “Bayer packages.” Aspirin is trade mark Bayer Manufacture Mono aveticucidester of Salieylicaeid. RORERT FISHER Attorney and Counselor at Low 819 American Trust Building Cleveland, Ohio a Tel Central 1400-W ; J. LOMSKY ; $ 3820 Central Avenue } $We carry full line of 3 ; Dry Goods ; 3 Ladies and Gents Fur- 3 3 nishings | 3 MRS.L.S. BRADLEY 8241 Preble Ave. | Cleveland, O. Has Houses For Sale or To Rent | ‘J"Exetento Will Make Your Hoir Long, Too’” ey tira SA ee “s=” ENT gems EXELENTO “MEDICINE Cf, Arta, Ca. | oto AMI a KINKY HAIR | our easy ‘BERMARINE |, OE ee: LB ce tee» Deere ase ' z je}, Mirs. lackson’s iy op ge a Epileptic Fits”. Conquered zis \ Her own story of her remarkable ‘Se deliverance, a New Jersey {_ oe s~j) Chemist offers i see generous supply of the wonder- ful remedy free. No wonder Mrs. Jackson is anxious to have the whole world know what Ds. Kline's Epileptic Remedy did for her. Doctors tied and failed to help her. Fifteen convulsions inthtee hours is'a terific experience. - But Mrs, Jackson is well now, Read how it all happened “ Be st Petes, Pas Pe Boat nite Sty Red Bank, N. J. ent ax yrs ago Ivan en with com: en ee Ses sue ea ec Hezscea alana tal er aca cere ie eee eriead Seve ferent Seer Tia at yeesaek sti Rigel assne cee Saeaateeees Ebina rnnene menial PORE, ol tee fee ta ears "Signet Ses W.0. Jackson, FRE E22 slices from Epit lepay, St. Vitus. Dance, 0 meee similar nervous disorders, 0 _ generous tial bottle [fll §1.25 sie) with (ahiable book on the treatment of these diseases, on application toDr. R. HH. KfineCo., 301 White St., Red Bank, N. J. THE NEW DRUG STORE : THE KATZENMEYER DRUG CO. 5516 Woudland Ave, Next Door to Post Office Drugs, Tohaceos, Soda Water. Kedaks and Films, Toilet Articles, Rabber Goode "A tall tine of Marae: Walkers and Ble mud Wie Your Trade Cofdially Appreciated THE NYAL STORE (Oi ET ee eee See ee eRe ee eata ia rene nae | CENTRAL SHIRT SHOP | ‘ A RACE ENTERPRISE 1 : G. J. TATE, Proprietor, f : GENTS' FURNISHINGS, NOCKWEAR, 1 $ Hosiery, Underwear and Arrow Collars and Shirts, Hats, Caps, ete : 2$22 CENTRAL AVE, 1 ¥ Phone Prospect 441-J. : L dobebobdetalldeb bl tebdeidebdestelodellebsbelelbeledbelele Hosedate si, Quality ServieeCentral 7235 RB SLAUGHTER BROS. Funeral Directors and Embalmers Office and Funeral Parlors eh CENTRAL ANI iicion fez Auton satenn, coaumcauamated oeeheea tient ; | JACOB SCHNEIDER - | BAKERY | Fresh Rolls, Pies, Cakes Daily | Central 1745 W 3028 Central Ave. (ARORA PEteneuieeesetensrereeeeneeenenttesetnteeesstetet DISCOVERED! An Ideal Bleach for Dark Skin (Peroxide and Vanishing Cream) f 5 Removes Freckles and Tan Produces Soft Complexion . PRICE 50 CENTS : PE Th AND EE CONVINCED STEINER’S PHARMACY Corner Scovill and EB. 46th Street Cleveland, Ohio -PAINLESS EXTRACTION } FR ES STD eke | Wie ayn iiaenGre.,...59-00 AND UP ¢ -DR.GREENFIELD'S, Dental Specialists | suena aneasanwantoassiiasnesansaaahaent ty Cos; Adu yor eee ke Nickens & Fitzgerald Undertakers and Funeral Directors Bell, Prospect 4264 poe ee Cuy., Central 1115-W $350 CENTRAL AVE, COR. E, 34th ST. FUNERALS, $100 , For COLDS and COUGHS SEALEAF EMULSION (THAT CHOCOLATE COD LIVER OIL) Sole Agent J.A.Timen’s Cut Rate Drug Store 2300 B. 55th St., cor, Central Ave. 4 ALSO AT ALL DRUG STORES $1.00 the Bottle. The Smith Studio 2346 E. 43rd St. Rosedale 3556-W Individual Portraiture “At Home” Portraiture By Day and Evening By Appointment, Copying Enlarging = Framing aoe oo ARTHURS. SMITH 6 years this location. Photographer (Oth CENTURY oy Sitiéo WATCH ° 35° Vt She Nog SD Tes Faas SS Ih 1.0. D, aad = Sree ag ee eas ena Se eile neta CURED HER FITS Mrs, Paul Gram, residing at 916 Fourth Street, Milwauke: Wis., recently gave out the following stater act" had suffered with Fits (Epilepay) for over fourteen years. Doctors and medicine id me no good. Itseemed that I was beyond all hope of relief, when at last I secured a prepara: tion that cured me sound and well. Over ten years have passed and the attacks have not re- turned. I wish everyone who suffers from thie terrible disease wold write to L. Lepad, 19¢ Island Avenue, Milwaukee, Wis., and ask for a bottle of the same kind of medieine which he gave me. He thas generously promised to send it prepaid, free, 20 anvese who writes him.” —Adv. F SANTA Keer 24 HOURS |. NGF 22 Go { Rte cil Dr. N. K. Christopher. DENTIST Office Hours: 10 a. m. to 1 p.m 3p. m. to 8 p.m. Sundays by Appointment 2234 E. 55th St. Cleveland, 0. "Phone, Rosedale 6165 ee Olce’ Phones: Maio 2912; Central 1424-8 Residence, 614 E. 107th st Phone, Eddy 2214-5 JOHN P. GREEN | tnistoned-st-1a6 Room 510, Blackstone Building 1426 West Brd Street | Wetacy Palate Fetaiitegtrecig!'. nclareunig 0; Bell ‘Phone Rosedale 5598 Regidence, Garfield 2680 Hours: 9-11 A. M-—1-3 P.M—6-8 P. M. Sunday's 3-6 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, 6, Se eee Cae The MECCA For the PUREST AND BEST MEDICINES, SODAS, CIGARS, ETO,, and for Prescriptions filled by a Registered Pharmacist is ; L. A. Lesser’s DRUG STORE 2202 Scoville Ave. The Pride of Carolina ‘The State Agricnitural and ae College of uth Carolina + Orangeburg, 8. Next session begins Septem- ber 30th and ends May 3lst, 1919, iio, Taltion, ao Rosia ee no Charges for Water, Lights or Fuel, Entrance Fee $10.00, Board $12.00 per Month in Ad- Re ieee autiy and Pprscdal fixpshses'tstra, ey ican oni Standard Equipment. Military: Discipline. A Faculty of 67 Officers and Instructors. fer intoraation, eed Oke: ee ae B.S. WILKINSON, Pres. Come n ce Rese yy A Good Meal ; at THE ARGONNE ; | RESTAURANT ; HOME-COOKING! ; 3341 Central Ave, 3341 ; Popular Prices ; Jesse B: Green, Prop. 3 BOTH "PHONES ; Sreserererereeeoersoereres eat ie) a BO Office, Rose, 1412. Res., Gar. 6557 + Princeton 171 Office Hours—4:30 to 7:30 P. M. Dr. O. A. Taylor PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON 2288 E. 48th St., Cleveland, O. The Douglass Club 4 For Political & Social Advancement LOGAN OWENS, Treasurer. 3033 Central Ave. Cleveland, O. P.A.HOERET EYE SPECIALISTS 11 Taylor Arcade Cleveland Where to Purchase The Gazette J. SoBALLS: ‘$121 Cemtral Ave 4. E. BRANHAM'S *ERNESY P. JACKSON'S ais Central bre, 3009 Central Aves ; JACKSON'S, W. T. GRANT, 4401 Central Ave. 8512 Central Ave, “PHILLIP. LURIE, A. ZINAMON’S, (3051 Central Ave. 2921 Central Ave, E. BR. BROWN’S, 3708 Central Ave, s SUPEN SUNDAYS, Ee id NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS Subscribers not recelvine ‘he Gazette reyularly shoyla wutity us at once. We desire every copy delivered ’promptly. Send dr bring locale and all susiness piatiers The Gexettes office, 214-215 Blackstoue Bldg. If you wish to see the editor call thare, please. We advise our readers to carefully examine The Gazette's ad- vertisements before making’ Sarcharen Benne eed ae tise in this paper should have the putrouage of our people. The fet that they advertise in aepareea That ioe ee Ail matters for puslieation In current igsgen ct ihe Gatette sauat be in the ofice by 4, ls WEDNESDAS er thee eeu inet eee OOS ‘The Ublo State ‘Telephone THE GAZETTE, Harry C. Smith: “Cuyahoga”, Central 513-K a CAMETTE, Marry C Smith: *Cuyahoge”, Central 519-K * of themselves. Dr. Leroy N. # CLEVELAND ‘esheets. Dr 16 Cnet ~ a: himself save his liberty if no Social and Personal _ him! save his liberty’ it no Armen’ G Evans returned from Washington, D C., Monday. | Mrs. George ‘Trimble and daugh- ‘ter visited in Hillsboro, last week. |, Miss Bessie Cook, pianist, has’ re- bm from a successful season at ie. Mis. Jessie Ross and Mrs. ‘Theo. Campbell have returned from extend- ved visits in Hillsboro, __ Lieut. Daniel Johnson of Atlanta, |Ga., is the guest of his uncle, George W. Carroll. | Mr. and Mis. Theo ‘Taylor had As “quests their cousins, Mr. amd. Mes, Clarence Minor of Pittsburgh, |_ Mrs. H. B. Mason, E. 10ist St,, re- ‘cently entertained at dinner, My. and Mrs, Chester Amderson of Hillsboro. Mrs. Ida Gray, E. 85th St. en- tertained recently’ in honor of her | guests. Mies Gray is yery popular. |, Agein we ask who ‘sent ‘The Gazette, §2 on Mar. 27 and $1 on Mey 29, thru the mails, and forgot to enclose their name and address? | Mas. ‘Thos H, Reynolds (nee Mabel |Blue) ‘is visiting her parents, Mr, ‘and Mrs. Richard Blue. She will re- turn to Kansas City early this fall. Chester K. Gillespie a senior of Baldwin University law department (Cleveland Law School) was in Col- “lumbus last week, before the state “board. Rev. Branch and a Mr. Keene of ‘Savannah, Ga., and a Mr, Gray of Birmingham, Ala., were dinner guests ‘recently of ev.” and Mrs, Saul A. Lucas. | Mrs. Arthur ‘T. Abbott, E, 96th St, ‘district grand supervisor of juvenile "work of the House-hold of Rath, left last week for an inspection tour ‘through Ohio. Rev. E, L. Gilliam of Columbus, was the speaker at the N. A.A. C. P. mass meeting at Antioch’ Baptist church. He raised $360 at Cory M. E. chureh, Sunday week. Dupree Griffin, brother of » Miss Wills Griffin and’son of Mr. and Mrs. Randolph Griffin, B, 1Wist St., was ‘buried from E.' Mt. Zion Baptist church, Rev. B. K. Smith officiating. EB. Mt. Zion Baptist. chureh has purchased two lots near the corner of Cedar Ave. and E. 105th St., where their large churchbuilding is’ to be ‘erected. Rev. B. K. Smith, pastor The Present Day club was delight- fully, entertained recently, at_ Mrs. Daw's, E. 86th St, by Mrs, Charles Warren. Mrs. Luther Bailey, E, 102d St., was hostess at the meeting, Tues- day. Boydston Post was most enthusias- tically greeted, Decoration Day, in spite of the fact that some dirty “slacker” seoundrels (white) along the line of march had uncomplimen- tary remarks to make. Mr. Wim. Wheeler, barber, one of our old residents, died Sunday eve- ning, after some weeks’ illness. A daughter, whose health is not the best, survives him and has the earnest sym- pathy of the community. Mr. Joseph Harris, proprietor of the Royal Inn, opened one of the fin- est barber shops in the city, the first of the week, next to his E. 55th St. place of business. It fills a long felt want in that section of the city. Mrs. Luey Manson Dickerson, E. 126th St., Mt. Pleasant, was hostess to the Helping Hand society of St. John's church. A three-course lunch- ‘eon was Yerved. ‘The meeting, May 28, was ab Mrs, Carrie Scotts, E. 82d St. : Basil Ramey was called to Chicago, recently, by the death of his mother, Mrs. Mary Winfrey, widow of the late B. F. Ramey, well known in St. James church circles, who died sever- al years ago, The daughter, Mrs. Fannie Ramey Calloway of Chicago, contemplates making her home in Cleveland. again, ‘Wm. R. Conners, sec. of our Wel- fare organization,” represented, the N. W, League at the chureh and com- munity convention in Hotel Cleve- land, the first of the week. He also addressed a lyceum at Shiloh Baptiss church, Sunday afternoon, and, the conference and institute ‘at ‘Tried- stone Baptist church, Sunday evening. Rhea P. Moore and J. Walker Duff were quietly married, recently in Youngstown. They spent a few days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey E, Moore, and went on an extended honeymoon trip whieh will include his native home, Blooming- ton, Ill.; Indianapolis, Chicago and Quebec, Canada, returning — home about June 15. Ex-Senator John P. Green address- ed the men’s forum of the Community Center on a recent Sunday afternoon. He and Charles H. Leatherman rep-| resented St. Andrews parish at the recent diocesan convention held in Trinity Cathedral. ‘They also attend- ed the dinner giver in honor of Bish- op H. M. Leonard at the Hotel Stat- ler. "Five regret to note the fact that some of the members of the local branch of the N. A. A.C. P. are “Knocking” the Duncan-Bundy lee- ture, They are few it is true but| ‘THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, OHIO, JUNE 5, 1920. gee ak ae weey ee Be tend the lecture. BE LOYAL! Dr. E. W. D. Isaae of Nashville, Rev. Brown of Peoria, Ull,, Dr. Und: erwood and Rev. Hamilton of New Orleans and Rev. C. G. Fishback were entertained at breakfast, Mon- day morning, by Dr. and Mrs. J. K. Nickens of E. 88rd St. Revs. Isaac, Brown, Underwood and Hamilton ‘closed ‘the week's sessions of | the Bible Conference at Triedstone Bap- ist chureh collecting $990.10, $340 of which went to the ehureh. Judge W. I. Jamison, former resi- dent of Topeka, Kan,, has located his temporary offices at the comer of E. 8th St. and Central Ave,, over the Owl Drug store. The judge comes to ‘Cleveland with the very best | regom- ‘mendations, from men like both U. S. ‘senators from that state, and the most ‘prominent lawyers and judges in To- peka and Kansas. Best wishes, Judge; “The Old Reliable” Gazette Will help you, too, to get started in your new field of labor, In court, ‘Tuesday, “Prof.” Stra- con Williams, President of the Ne- gro Chamber of Commerce, President of the Booker Washington Realty Company, Editor of the Daily Col- ored American,” ete., ete., was sen- ‘tenced to the Ohio Penitentiary for from oe to ten yeurs ona charge of embezzlement, preferred by members of the B. W. 'R. Co. jnearly $1,000 of whose hard-earned money “the Prof. juggled out of sight.” Attorney Roundtree, who so successfully prose- cuted him, has rendered this commun- ity signal service in this ease and deserves credit for it, Now let_him get after the other fellow for selling “stock”, and offering an automobile in a voting contest and then “duck- ing.” ‘An innovation was the reeent Sun- day afternoon musicale, at Dr. and Mr. J.T. Suggs’ for the purpose of raising funds to defray Rey, Irving ‘T. Merchant's expenses to a Con- gregational meeting in Boston. ‘The participants were: Edgar Blair, ten- or; Mr. and Mrs, Harry E. Thomp- son, Dr. Whitfield, Mrs. Robert Cor- am/and Mrs. Hazel Blake, who sang “Ina Tiny Garden”; Miss Mabel Clarke, accompanist,’ who rendered “Deep River”: the Present Day Club quartet, Mrs. Blake, Mrs, Bailey, Mrs. Fairfax and Mrs. Basey, starred in the rendition of “Ashes and Roses”; and the Cory male quartet. To Mrs. Coram, Mrs. Robert K. Hodges and Mrs., Suggs is due much praise for the success of the musicale. A free- will offering netted $22.50. Win, N. Williams of Chicago, a na- tive of Cleveland, whose father was a shoemaker here, many years ago, returned to Chieago, Saturday week, after a delightful two weeks’ visit with his cousin, Phil S, Dennie, E. 90th St. Among those who contrib- tuted to the success of his visit here were: Jesse Firse, Ed Johnson, Wm. Swoope, Mr, and Mrs, Dennie, all of whom gave dinners or stags, some, both. At Mr. Dennie’s stag, John 'T. Wilson won the first prize in whist. L, Johnson won the booby, with 16 points. Mr. Williams entertained a party of ladies with a theater party. Mrs. Dennie toured the city with their guest, in their Overland, help- ing very materially to make Mr. Williams visit one long to be remem bered. “Billie” says, out of two weeks here he had only one night’s good rest. He is one of the oldest members of tie Appomattox club, Chicago. Ac- companied by Mr. Dennie, he paid ‘The Gazette sanetorum a very pleas- ant visit renewing a boyhood ae- quaintance with its editor, Cleveland has entertained many cireuses but never anything to com- pare with the gigantic double shows billed as “Ringling "Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Combined which will exhibit here, afternoon and ight, Monday ani) Tuesday. The merging of these mammoth institu- tions in one circus of colossal size, constitutes the amusement surprise of the century. A quarter of a mil- lion pounds of elephants take part in a single act—six times as many as have ever been seen. in one main- tent exhibition. The artistic stars em- brace all the world's foremost cireus performers. There are three hours of novelties and big sensational acts. The menagerie is far and away the most colossal ever traveled, For in-| stance—a' herd of eight giraifes re exhibited in place of the two or chee shown in. the past. ‘The great tournament which opens the main- tent program, is the most magnif cent thing in pagentry yet produced | fn America.” Hundreds “upon -hund- | reds of gorgeously costumed char- | acters and beautiful horses take part in it, The morning street parade is the longest and most brilliant ever giver anywhere, ‘The sixteenth race paper to die in Cleveland since the advent of “The Old Reliable” Gazette, Aug. 25, 1883, is the “Daily” Colored American which “passed out,” last week. NEXT! Its “editor,” “Prof. Stracona_ Wil- liams,” alias “Rothwell Hector Dean,” alias ete., etc., who, it is said, “stuag” this city, @ year or two ago, and for whom $3,000 bail had not been se- cured when we last inquired, was ‘still languishing in the county jail on ‘that charge of embezzlement. “These jure hard days indeed for the “profes- sor, editor, and president of the Ne- gro Chamber of Commerce and Book- er Washington Realty Co.” ‘The report of the Ohio Leonard Wood Colored Republican club, head- quarters, Columbus, filed with the Secretary of State ‘at Columbus last week, showed “among others the fol- lowing expenditures: —R. W. ‘Tyler, $150; Rev. Geo. I. Davis and Rev. J. W. Carter, $100 each; Jas, Wrouts, $50; all of Columbus; Ormond Forte, “$100; Kemper C. Young, W. J. Martin und D, L. Fenton, $10 each; Thomas Green, $6; all of Cleveland. R. W. Tyiers Vill “for sign-painting, rent of quarters, stationery, stamps, clerks” ‘and other things, called for $749. ‘Other help in different parts of the ‘state, including Columbus and Cleve- and, $723.92; total $1572.92, A note ‘on the back of this statement reads: ("$25.08 vemaining in the treasury.” GRAND TOTAL, $1598. ‘The Leon- |ard Wood campaign in Ohio certainly ‘cost real money and a plenty of it. ‘There were a number of Wood “workers” of color (ministers and |others) here in this city who were employed by the local Leonard Wood ‘headquarters. They would not, of course, be included in the report given “in the foregoing but in a separate one. |It is said they received $5 a day for a stated period, possibly two or three weeks. It will be remembered that |Tyler started out as a supporter of |Senator Harding, received that check for $100 and then “ducked” to Wood. |More anon! | Annual emancipation celebration picnic, August 2, "20, under the aus- ‘pices of the Cleveland Association of Colored Men—Ady. Donot wait for the collector to call on you, but do as many have done the past week—either call, send or mail [your overdue subscription money. It is so ravel’ pleasanter. | You should take Puro Herbs, the (great blood purifier and Gin clean- ‘ser. On sale only ut the Brown Drug |Co., 2742 Central Ave,, cor, E, 28th | Stadv. | Our advertisers want your trade. ‘Those who do not ask for it in ‘The Gazet*e certainly care little, if at all, ‘for it. ‘Therefore, we urge our read” |ers and all of our friends to patronize those who ask for your trade in this poner. fest for the blood—Puro: herbs? Sold only at the Brown Drug Co., cor, 'E. 28th St. and Central Ave—Adv. AS. 1S-CUT IN TWO AND THEN RESPLICED Wounded Soldier Uses Member Now With a Portion Shattered by Pr ie David Ballantine, a former Lance corporal in the East Surreys and who is now working in the British mint, has been the subject of one of the inost remarkable operations ever pet formed, His arm was cut thru com- pletely in two places and a portion wes taken out, The severed arm was replaced and the limb 1s now in work- ing order. Ballatine was severely wounded in the fighting at Loos in September, 1915, and lay out on the grounds with- out water or food for four days and four nights. A shell fragment had smashed a part of his upper arm be tween the shoulder and the elbow and cut into his body, driving out a por: tion of his ribs, German machine guns rattled over him xs he lay. Sometimes he was unconscious. Subsequently he was taken up by the Germans and made prisoner, aud sent into Germany, ‘There he was in & hospital for a time and eventually was sent home with a batch of wound- ed prisoners and brought to Millbank Hospital. : He was discharged from the army as physically unit for further mill: lary service, His case was brought to the notice of @ distinguished surgeon at the Middle-sex Hospital, who took ft up, and about four months ago per formed the operation, He cut the arm thet in two places, above the elbow, and removed a por tion .f the ari, bone, sinew and all, ‘Then he joined up the arm again, and the operation was so successful that, aitho the arm is shorter than the other, he ean use it to some extent, He can take up a cup of tea, for in- stance, with that arm and raise it to hia lips. Ballantine has the pleee of bone that belonged to the portion of arm that was removed and is keeping it as a acavenic. MEN'S GARTERS NOW HAVE CASH POCKETS Idea 1s Patented and Is Latest Issue in “Liste” Banks. Recently patented garters for men include pockets for carrying money. ‘Tuus another institution hitherto sacred to women has been taken over by mere man—the lisle bank. Soon there may be private rooms in banks for men customers and high- way robbers may change their formal order "Hold up your hands,” to"Stand oa your head, and Me quick about it:” ‘Also the new style garters, if they become’ popular, will give added meaning to the old saying about “pull- ing a man's lee.” ‘There are advantages about the new style, however. Just picture the hen-pecked husband going to bed with his garter snapped around his neck and mystified wifey searching his Wardrobe in yain for her pin money. ‘And hubby likely can get away with it, while 1€ he tied his trousers around his neck, to conceal his money he would arouse her suspicions, ‘The mica windows of coal stoves can easily be cleaned with a sot cloth dipped in vinegar and water. ‘This should be done when putting the stove up. Warm friends are more plentiful in summer than winter, See ae 2322 E. 55th St. Friday, June 4. THEDA BARA in “Salome.” Saturday, June 6. Mitchell Lewis in “Last of His People.” Sunday, June 6. Robert Warwick in “Man of the Hour.” Monday and ‘Tuesday, June 7 and 8. PRISCILLA DEAN in “Virgin of Stamboul.” Wednesday, June 9%, Tom Mix én “Desert Love.” ‘Thursday, June 10. WILLIAM FARNUM in “Les Miserables.” HENRY L, THOMAS Attorney and Counselor at Law 612 Superior Building Cleveland, O Central 2251-R Dr. E. A. BAILEY PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON 2265 B, 40th St. Cor. Central Ave. + Cleveland, 0. Office Hours: 4 to 7:30 P. M. Phone—Rosedale 2306 Central 1666 1. “SYRUP OF FIGS” CHILD'S LAXATIVE Look at tongue! Removespoi- sons from little stomach, liver and bowels fun A ~~ SH j f (N F. Accept bbs Syrup of Fige sch die tee tease Colotate te pasture, Ai le seal oe ta Sue Nero Oe aac tte ils Be et ar eer cule ee on Tae aates Fe ‘Mother! You must say “California” GROW LONG AND BEAUTIFUL HA oo fe - ey fi it = A small bottle of “Danderine” costs but a few cents at any drug store, “Danderine” is to the hair what fresh showers of rain and sunshine are to vegetation, making the hair grow long, strong and beautiful. Besides beautify: {ing the hair, “Danderine” stops hair fall- ing out, all dandruff disappears and sexlp never itches. ‘Try “Danderine” and just see what long, soft, attractive hair you can have, Steeereeserssesesessoesees THE MAN WHO DARES. “I honor the man who In the conscientious dischange of his duty dares to stand alones the world. with ignorant, tne] tolerant judzment, may ‘con. demn, the countenances of 3 relatives may he averted, and 4 the hearts of friends grow cold, but the sense of duty ee a ea ae the applause of the world, the countenances of relatives or the hearts of frlends.”— Charles Sumner. | YOUR OPPORTUNITY 500 persons wanted to invest $5 or more in The Chattanooga Defender Publishing Co.. Inc., Capital Stock, $20,000. We pay a handsome return. For full particulars, write The Chattanooga Publishing Co., 509 E. 9th St., Chattanooga, Tenn, SHREK x si MATTIE HUNTER 4217 Cedar Ave. HAIR CULTURIST Kashmir and Walker Systems Hair and Skin Treatment APPOINTMENTS PREFERRED Rosedale 5217 J. S S00 S AOE Sovsesietecsesersetepesereetersesenerererereererereee t See us First for all Goods in our Line JOHN S. HALL Prices Reasonable. Satisfaction Guaranteed. JEWELER AND OPTOMETRIST $121 Central Ave., Cleveland, O. Cent. 8846 W : ‘ PATRONIZE 3 JOE HEDGES’ POOL ROOM é AND BARBER SHOP ; Que of tho Best in the tity. Everybody Wele , BUY : boat ELIABLE SHOES _ : ELIABLE STORE 7 ELIABLE PRICES — | ORCS BERSMOAN 2806 E. 55th St. near Central Ave. LOOK! MEN'S SUITS PRESSED eee eres sreeee ++ B5e * OVERCOATS PRESSED Gs @iuticcemeccarscettsONe SUITS CLEANED eke seen dan se teeeeeneeee ++ $2.00 LADIES’ CLOTHING CLEANED AT POPULAR PRICES. Cox Dry Cleaning & Tailoring Co., 2738 Central Ave. ot e Off Corns! ss a orns. g Doesn’t hurt! Lift touchy coms and ¥ iN? calluses right off with fingers J ay Apply a few drops of “Freezone” upon that old, oS bothersome corn, Instantly that corn stops ; hurting: Then shortly you lift it right off, toot and all, without pain or soreness. Wen Hard corns, soft corns, corng isk between the toes, and the me hhard skin calluses on oy bottom of feet litt right® off—no | faabug! > a | | $ °Q | S Tiny bottles of “Freexane?” cast ij but a few cents at drug stores 4 IMPROVE YOUR LOOKS Appear Your Best at All Times << ce eae W) NIG nem G Ti) i Deca y ik ii) hy @ A Paint @ i Wy yp eae WH? VALINE eer nine ns lt) “a= WW isi ce ee You Ne fe ne oui ee Can @ Dy \\) Ben iy Ha Sonya a Have \¥ Ge OWA Si crass. areca Hair Qa Qpany seein Like (MANN Neg casita ES This $8) COWS ienoun nencne co 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 1 Onas Most Powerful Aborigines, Battle Others For Existence. When the white man first came to the islands of the Fuegian archipelago he created considerable stir. The Indians had never seen a ship before, and they could not imagine what it was doing in their particular waters. Immediately they started signaling by means of campfires to the interior tribes, so that the whole coast appeared to be one chain of blazing fires. That is why the white men called the principal island Tierra del Fuego—land of fire—which, in other respects, was a bad mistake. Tierra del Fuego is continually cold and damp; the inland channels that intersect the island are always frozen, and at all times an ice fog prevents the sun from doing its duty in thawing out the ground. It is not strange that such a climate the Indians should be in in an early state of evolution, with little ambition and no facilities for comfort. Like the Eskimos in winter, they huddle into small huts which in shutting out the snow also preclude the possibility of ventilation. They wear little clothing but the skins of animals. The women do not weave and work in pottery as do the North American Indians, and they seem altogether to lack the incentive to build and create. Many of the tribes of whom the Onas are the chief, are still nomadic. They do not remain in any one habitat for any length of time, but in their bark canoes—their one product of actual thought and effort—they travel around the inland waters, living on whatever food is the easiest to procure. Whenever a whale is washed up on the beach they immediately take up their residence beside the carcass until it is completely devoured. Since the arrival of the white man in greater numbers, and the cultivation of the land throughout the interior of the island for agricultural purposes, the Indians have gradually adopted many of the ways of civilization, but they still resent the intrusion. The Onas have always been particu- ularly hostile, and at times the war fare has been extremely bitter, but as usual, the white men have con- quered. It is the survival of the fittest again, and the Indians are fast dying out. MAKE UNGROUND WHEAT BREAD Said to Have Higher Food Value Than Ordinary Kind. The Italians are credited with having invented a method of making bread direct from wheat without grinding it. After being well washed the wheat is soaked in warm water for three days, by which time it has become quite soft. The grain can then be kneaded in the ordinary way, made into loaves and baked after being allowed to "rise." Bread made in this way has a much higher food value than the ordinary article, as even the husk has useful dielectric qualities. The wheat should be of good quality for this purpose, and, of course should be free from dirt, seeds or other species of grain. Hence, altho no grinding is needed, the processes which precede this operation must be carried out. In view of the shortage of labor and fuel this process of making bread should be particularly worthy of adoption at the present time. BOULEVARD IN DESERT Plank Roadway Laid in Sand in Arizona. Between the imperial irrigation district and Yuma, Ariz., the sand is so fine and dry that when a handful is picked up it trickles out of the closed nest like the grains in an hour glass. Imagine, then, the difficulty of traveling over this country in a heavy vehicle, and especially in an automobile. But the significant fact is that the state highway runs through fifty miles of such sand. Until the California highway commission found a way to combat the sand it was risky for an automobile to travel over this dangerous route, Six miles of portable plank roadway have now been constructed through the worst sections of this desert, says the Popular Science Monthly. This roadway, eight feet wide, with double width turnouts every 1,000 feet, consists of planks spiked to stringers. CLOCK RUNS FOR 119 YEARS Wheels Stop After It Strikes Twelve Strokes. The clock in the old tower of St. Paul's Church, New York, N. Y., which had ticked off a century of time when war was declared against Spain in 1898, struck 12 ponderous strokes at noon a few days ago, and then for the first time in 119 years its wheels ceased to whirl. New works have been installed. WORK IN THE HOME SEVERE ON HEALTH So Declare Labor Bureau Experts, Who Cite Statistics to Prove Their Statements. A girl who goes out into the world to earn her living does not have a shorter and sicklier life than the girl who remains at home, or who marries, or who goes to work in some one else's home. The safest possible place for a girl who desires a long and healthy life is in the private office of a business man or in some gainful profession in her own office. This is on the authority of the bureau of Labor and Commerce, and the United States census, who tells us in prosaic but unmistakable terms that the business man's private secretary has the best possible chance among women for attaining a ripe old age, while the business man's wife (if she does her own work) or his servants have the worst. Here are figures. Among women engaged in the higher clerical occupations or in the practice of their professions the death rate is 2.7 per 1,000 per year. Among women employed in stores and offices the mortality is 5.6 per 1,000. Those employed in kills, laundries and factories die at the rate of 5.1 per 1,000, while the death rate among domestic servants is 17.1 per 1,000 — a staggering jump, which places the risk of the girl who serves us almost on par with that of the soldier who fights for us. Quite without exception the women who are engaged in what we have always held as the most normal and the most healthful of occupations — women's age-old heritage of housework—run the greatest risk of disease and early death. This same ratio so far as data are available, obtains with women who are fulfilling the duties of wives and mothers—in addition to those of the domestic. NEW PORTABLE DISINFECTOR Government Buys Six for Use of U. S. Army. The Government has recently purchased for our army six disinfectors of a new portable type of purifying fifty uniforms and kits in forty minutes. Either steam or formaldehyde and ammonia are employed as germicides. The outfit consists of a five-horse power upright steam boiler and an airlight chamber, six feet long, mounted on a metal running gear. The rear end of the chamber is provided with a heavy door which can be hermetically sealed. Within is a rack mounted on wheels from which clothing can be hung, while small articles can be placed on an iron grating. After the chamber has been filled with steam from the boiler for the proper length of time, the garments are dried by currents of sterilized air and are then ready to be removed. REINDEER AS MEAT SUPPLY Secretary Lane Urges Wider Use of Venison by People. Reindeer meat to combat the reign of dear meat is suggested by Secretary Lane of the Department of the Interior, who is a strong believer in the future of the reindeer industry of Alaska. Right here at the gates of America, the Secretary points out, is a new source of supply, demanding recognition, with rapidly multiplying herds, which will in time develop into one if the most important sources of the meat supply of the United States, Secretary Lane believes. He expects that the phenomenal growth of the Alaskan herds will continue in the future as it has in the past, and that, with the improved transportation facilities resulting from the completion of the new Government railroad, reindeer venison will occupy a conspicuous place on the American dinner table of the future. MUCH FOOD IN SMALL BULK War Bread and Biscuits That Swell Like a Soonie The British "Tommy," when fresh bread is not available, is supplied with what he calls "dog biscuit." It looks just like that, being a thick cracker four inches square and weighing three ounces. Of whole wheat flour pressed solid, it might be described as a condensed loaf of bread. The French have a "war bread" somewhat similar, which, when put into hot water or soup, swells up like a sponge. The famous German "pea sausage" is composed of pea meal, bacon and fat. It was the invention of a Berlin cook, who discovered a process whereby pea meal could be made proof against deterioration. One sausage, eight inches long, yields twelve plates of nutritious soup. BUYS LITTLE ENGINES. That the Russians have made extensive plans for establishing easily adjustable rail communication between various divisions of their fighting armies and between the armies and the supply bases, is shown by the fact that the Russian government has ordered 350 liquid fuel locomotives of a special type from a Philadelphia locomotive works. These tractors weigh seven and a half tons each and run on tracks approximately twenty-nine and a half inches wide. These narrow guage tracks can be moved about easily. Popular Mechera. a. THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, OHIO, JUNE 5. 1920. Our mob-violence or anti-lynching bill was introduced in the Ohio legislature in 1894 and re-introduced in 1896. It took Hon. Harry C. Smith, the editor of The Gazette, just three years, to secure its enactment into Section 6278. A collection of people assembled for an unlawful purpose and intending to do damage or injury to any one, or pretending to exercise correctional power over other persons by violence and without authority of law, shall be deemed a "mob" for the purpose of this chapter. An act of violence by a mob upon the body of any person shall constitute a "lynching" within the meaning of this chapter. (93 v. 161 2.) Section 6279. The term "serious injury," for the purpose of this chapter, shall include such injury as permanently or temporarily disables the person receiving it from earning a paycheck by manual labor. (93 v. 161 3.) Section 6280. A person taken from officers of justice by a mob, and assaulted with whips, clubs, missiles or in any other manner, may recover, as hereafter provided, a sum not to exceed one thousand dollars as damages from the city in which the assault is made. (93 v. 161 4.) Section 6281. A person assaulted and lynched by a mob may recover, from the county in which such assault is made, a sum not to exceed five hundred dollars; or, if the injury received therefrom is serious, a sum not exceeding one thousand dollars; or, if such injury result in permanent disability to earn a livelihood by manual labor, a sum not to exceed five thousand dollars. (93 v. 162 5.) Section 6282. The legal representative of a person dying from injuries received from lynching by a mob, may recover of the county in which such injury occurred, a sum not to exceed five thousand dollars damages for such unlawful killing. Such sum shall be applied to the maintenance of the family and education of the minor children of such person so lynched, if any survive him, until such children are of legal age, and then be distributed to the survivors, share and share alike, the widow receiving an amount equal to a child's share. If there be no widow or minor children surviving such decedent, such sum shall be distributed among the next of kin according to the laws of the distribution of the personality of an intestate. Such sum so recovered shall not be a part of the estate of such person so lynched, nor be subject to any of his liabilities. (93 v 162 6.) Section 6283. A person suffering death or injury from a mob attempting to lynch another person shall come within the provisions of this chapter. He or his legal representatives shall have a like right of action as one purposely injured or killed by such a mob. (93 v 162 6.) Section 6284. Action for the recoveries provided for in this chapter must be commenced, within two years from the date of such lynching, in any court having original jurisdiction of an action for damages for malicious assault. (93 v. 162 7) Section 6285. An order to the commissioner of a county, against which such recovery is had, to include it with the costs of action, in the next succeeding tax levy for such county, shall be a part of the judgment in every such case. (93 v. 162 8.) Section 6286. If the decedent so lynched has minor children surviving him, the fund shall be turned over to a regularly appointed guardian. Such guardian shall administer such fund under the direction of the probate judge, allowing not more than five hundred dollars for counsel fees in the action for such recovery. (93 v. 162 9.) Section 6287. The county, in which a lynching occurs, may recover the amount of a judgment and costs against it in favor of the legal repressors. If the person killed or seriously injured by a mob from any of the persons composing such mob. A person present, with hostile intent, at such lynching shall be deemed a member of the mob and be liable to such action. (93 v. 162 10.) Section 6288. If a mob carries a prisoner into another county, or comes from another county to commit violence on a prisoner brought from such county for safekeeping, the county in which the lynching is committed may recover the amount of the judgment and costs from the county from which the mob came, unless there was contributory negligence on the part of officials of such county in failing to protect such prisoner or disprove such mob. (93 v 163 11.1) Section 6289. This chapter shall not relieve a person concerned in such lynching from prosecution for homicide or assault for engaging therein. (93 v 163 12.) 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 law. The Ohio Supreme Court has several times upheld the law which has been very effective. Only one other state (Illinois) in this country has such a law and it is largely a copy of our Ohio law. Here it is—(in the statutes) under the heading ed. representative of victim of lynching.ury by mob trying to lynch another. costs in tax levy. st member of mob. st another county. Civil Rights law which the editor had enacted while a member of the 71st General Assembly, in 1894: The General Code of Ohio: 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 other place of public accommodation and amusement, denies to a citizen, except for reasons applicable alike to the proprietor and regardless of race or color, the willful placement of the seo-communications, 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 them what they should it to do for themselves, under it, in the courts MANY THINGS MADE OUT OF PAPER NOW Already Fiber Has Taken Place of Since the establishment of the Forest Service the public has learned a host of things about lumber, but more interesting to the lay reader are the results of experiments with lumber waste. Who in the last generation would have dreamed that some day we would be making artificial skins from sawdust? Yet that is exactly what is being done. Other fabrics are successfully being woven also. That all our clothing eventually may be made from wood pulp paper fabrics, and be both durable and inexpensive, is not beyond present possibility. Lumber waste that once was considered worthless now is mixed with small quantities of wood pulp, made into paper, sometimes mixed with cotton or wooden fleece, and then spun into "silk" neckties and "silk" socks. Nor are these the only commodities that are being so made with success. It is already a matter of economy to manufacture articles from spun paper which range in diversity from furniture and rugs to suit cases and flour bags. Equally as interesting is the manner in which the paper is spun into twine and into thread. In a process for making twine the paper is first cut into long strips about one inch wide. These strips are then passed thru a machine which corrugate them in the direction of their lengths. These are then twisted by hand into the shape of twine. The twine is finally reduced to the proper diameter by feeding it into other machines, which wind the thread up tightly. A process of this kind is used for making the larger size twines and ropes, and for heavy cables for towing ships. For making the thread that is used in clothing, another preliminary process must be used. In this a wide sheet of moistened wood pulp is tied into a compression roller under another sheet of either cotton or woolen fleece of the same width. Both sheets are quite soft, so that after they have been forced thru the heavy rollers they will come out with their fibres interengaged and in the form of one solid web. The duplex web so formed is then placed in a cutting machine and divided into long narrow strips. These may then be hand-twisted and spun in a manner similar to that used in making the finer twines described above. Thus paper mattings are taking the place of burlap wall papers; they are serving as backing for linoleums and oilcloths, and they are being used in great great quantities in the making of fancy paper novelties. And these facts become all the more amazing when we consider that the entire spun paper industry is but a few years old. By far the most astonishing progress, however, has been made in the substitution of spun paper for expensive cotton and flax in the making THE GAZA who Might St Lieut. Col. Otis B. Duncan and Dr. Leroy N. Bundy Will deliver two thrilling messages to the people of Cleveland, Friday Evening, June 4, 1920 at 8 o'clock at ENGINEERS' HALL, COL. DUNCAN was the highest ranking colored officer overseas. He will speak on "RECONSTRUCTION" Dr. Leroy N. Bundy of East St. Louis fame will speak on the "NEW NEGRO" Jackson's Pharmacy, Brown Drug Store and Peoples Drug Store of artificial linen. The United States is not alone in this, however Germamany and Austria are now using paper far more extensively than are we; in fact their use of it has enabled them to solve many of their war problems. MAN CURED OF A BROKEN BACK Surgery Saves Life After Injury by Automobile. Robert Baldwin, 21, of Bellevue, Del., whose back was broken on Feb. 2 when an automobile he was driving turned over on him, has been released from Delaware Hospital at Wilmington, Del., as cured, after one of the most delicate and remarkable operations ever performed at that institution. As soon as he had been admitted to the hospital he was placed on the operating table and the tenth vertebra removed from his spine. This bone was broken, and in addition three other vertebra were dislocated. Dr. Harold Suringer of Wilmington, performed the operation, which is said to be one of the most difficult and rarely successful. Upon his discharge from the hospital, on a recent morning, Baldwin walked a distance of a city block with the aid of crutches. His legs were weak, but he found no trouble in getting around with the crutches. He is arranging to be exhibited before surgical clinics in several cities. WHY STORM EXPLODES HOUSES Funnel Cloud Transforms Building Into a Bomb. The most remarkable phenomenon connected with tornadoes is the explosion of houses, which literally burst, scattering their fragments in all directions. Sometimes substantial dwellings are carried high into the air and then explode. It is now understood that this is due to the fact that the funnel cloud (revolving at a rate of at least 500 miles an hour) has a vacuum inside. Thus it sucks up everything in its path, even emptying wells. It sucks all the air from around a house over which it passes, and the house (a vacuum being thus created outside of it) promptly explodes owing to the pressure of the air, at thirty pounds to the square inch, from within. The house, in a word, is transformed into a bomb. INVENTS BULLET-PROOF GLASS Philadelphian Welds Celluloid Between Two Panes. Plate glass invented by a Philadelphia, made by welding a thin sheet of celluloid between two panes of ordinary glass, is said to be bullet-proof and cannot be splintered with powerful blows of a hammer. Lieut. C Dr. H Will deliver two th Friday ENG COL. DUNCA seas. He will speak Dr. Leroy N. E Tickets 55c Jackson's Pharmacy, 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 under- stand it."-Abraham Lincoln. 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 destruous of hearing from persons in the following named cities: Springfield, Dayton, Piqua, Lima, O., and other places, particularly in Ohio, where we have now. 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. ZETTE Afte subscribe afte 44 "My Complexion Is Much Brighter!" "If every woman knew what I know about the secret of a good complexion, she would not hesitate one minute but would use Palmer's "SKIN-S U C C E S S" Ointment, which has done so much for my complexion." This is what a prominent woman of the South has said about this wonderful Ointment. Thousands of other women throughout the world owe to it their charm of complexion and their personal attractiveness. Your druggist will tell you all about it. PALMER'S "SKIN-SUCCESS" REGISTERED IN U.S. PATENT OFFICE Ointment Palmer's SKIN-SUCCESS Ointment—35c·75c Palmer's HAIR-SUCCESS Dressing—35c Palmer's SKIN-SUCCESS Soap—25c The Morgan Drug Co., Brooklyn, N. Y. Cor. St. Clair Ave. and Ontario St. Including War Tax TICKETS ON SALE Brown Drug Store and A PRIVILEGE It is a privilege to fearlessly stand for the right— Not a sacrifice, even though you go down. They count not the cost, who fight the good fight. And unflinchingly face the sneer or the rrown. Joseph C. Manning. 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. Reserved Seats $1.10 T Peoples Drug Store "HUMAN NATURE'S FOULEST BLOT." My ear is pained My soul is sick with every day's report Of wrong and outrage, with which the earth is filled. There is no flesh in man's obdurate heart. It does not feel for man: the natural bond Of brotherhood is severed as the flax That falls asunder at the touch of fire. He finds his fellow guilty of a skin Not colored like his own: and killing power To enforce the wrong, for such a worthy cause Dooms and devotes him as his lawful prey. Thus man devotes his brother, and destroys: 'Tis human nature's broadest foulest blot. —Cowper. it, but Give