The Gazette

Saturday, January 21, 1922

Cleveland, Ohio

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IN UNION IN STRENGTH Don't Ge Buy a twenty-five FIELD for eleven days. You can take you on this ticket. You are seventy-five cents. This ticket will be 1, 1922. Tate Stars 3734 Central Ave. Mid-Winter F Given Harmonic C Grace Willis Th St. John's A. MONDAY EVENT Harry Edward Thompson, Admission SHUBERT-COLO WEEK BEGINNING Seats THE PROVINCE Pre Charles Don't Get in Line Buy a twenty-five game ticket to THE FIELD for eleven dollars, war tax paid. You can take your family or your friend this ticket. You also save two dollars twenty-five cents. This ticket will be for sale until 1922. The State Stars Base Ball Club Central Ave. Randolp End-Winter Festival of Saints Given by the Harmonic Choral Society Grace Willis Thompson, Directress AT St. John's A. M. E. Church MONDAY EVENING, JAN. 28, 1922. Edward Thompson, Baritone, will be the Admission 25 cents. JUBERT-COLONIAL THEATRE WEEK BEGINNING MON., JAN. 16 Seats Now. THE PROVINCETOWN PLAYERS Present Charles S. Gilpin Buy a twenty-five game ticket to TATE FIELD for eleven dollars, war tax paid. You can take your family or your friends on this ticket. You also save two dollars and seventy-five cents. This ticket will be for sale until May 1, 1922. Mid-Winter Festival of Song Given by the Harmonic Choral Society Grace Willis Thompson, Directress AT St. John's A. M. E. Church MONDAY EVENING, JAN. 28, 1922. Harry Edward Thompson, Baritone, will be the soloist. Admission 25 cents. The World's Only Negro Tragedian in EUGENE O'NEILL'S DRAMA The Emperor Jones Under the Management of Adolph Klaube Charles Gilpin is one of the 10 greatest artists New York season of 1920-21. Winner of the Spingarn Medal, 1921. Show your appreciation of his great art by att this play. The Emperor Jones Under the Management of Adolph Klauber s Gilpin is one of the 10 greatest artists in work season of 1920-21. Winner of the Spingarn Medal, 1921. your appreciation of his great art by attn this play. Under the Management of Adolph Klauber Charles Gilpin is one of the 10 greatest artists of the New York season of 1920-21. St. John's choir held its annual election, presided over by Rev. Edward A. Clarke. The following officers were elected: Harry Lucas, pres.; Lillian Hutchinson, vice-pres.; Mrs. Lisa Nickens, treas.; Ida B. Brown, sec.; Mrs. Ruth Basey, assist.; Elmer Dougherty, librarian; Milton Floyd, assist.; Carroll Scott, chorister; Alyce Stoard, assist.; Madame Rachel W. Turner, soloist. The Phillis Wheatley Association held its ninth annual meeting at E. Tech High school, Jan. 10. After the regular business meeting, a demonstration of work of the Association for the year was presented in the form of a pageant, called "The Festival of Gifts." The prologue consisted of a panorama of a queen and her four attendants, the woman presenting the Phillis Wheatley Association, and the four attendants representing the gifts of home-making, music, dramatic art and recreation. A voice off-stage told more fully of these flifts, dispensed through the P. W. A. A very interesting address was delivered by Dr. Joel B. Hayden. The P. W. A. thanks Mrs. Bayen. Boyer, Mrs. DaW, Mrs. James Meredith, Mrs. Joe, Thomas, Mrs. Chas. Jackson, Mrs. Mary Smith, her art club, and the mothers of the children who took part in the pageant, for assisting in making the costumes; also the Suwanne River quartet for its part in helping to make --- --- Seror Jones Cent of Adolph Klauber the 10 greatest artists of the 1921. **************** Singarn Medal, 1921. **************** his great art by attending play. the evening an enjoyable one. The Mothers' club, recently organized, held its regular meeting. Monday. The subject discussed was "Mothers of Yesterday and Today." A social hour followed and light refreshments served. Every Sunday evening, following the vesper, services, from 6 to 8 P. M., a delicious supper is served in the Annex by two secretaries, acting as hostesses. Sunday, Miss Ruth Washington and Mrs. Boatrice Oglesby will act as hostesses. Jan. 13, the girls in the junior and senior dramatic classes, assisted by the P. W. A. quartet, entertained the student body and faculty of Tucker School of Expression, Metropolitan Theatre bldg. The second term of the educational department opened. Jan. 9. Register now in dressmaking, plain sewing, gymnastics, swimming, basketball, domestic science, music, girl reserves, high school and playclubs. Because of the increased enrollment in the cooking class, at the Doan 'branch, larger quarters will be opened on the 2nd floor with a well-equipped kitchen and dining room fitted for table service. George A. Carrothers, assistant superintendent of the board of education of Cleveland, will speak at Vester Services. Jan. 22, at 4:30 P. M. A. very instructive health talk was given, Sunday, at vespers by Dr. L. L. Rodgers, substituting for Dr. Gregg, who was ill. --- THE GAZETTE ESTABLISHED AUGUST 25, 1883 And Issued Every Week on Time Since FRESH OHIO NEWS WRITTEN BY "THE OLD RELIABLE" GAZETTE'S CORRESPONDENTS THROUGHOUT THE STATE What Our People Are Doing Each Week—Church, Personal, Social, Lodge, Literary and Musical— Marriages, Deaths, Etc. WASHINGTON, D. C.—"It is the duty of congress to enact a law, which shall do away, if possible, with this frightful crime of lynching," said Representative Theodore E. Burton of Cleveland, Tuesday, in the house, including a speech in favor of passing the Dyer ant-lynching bill, based on Hon. Harry C. Smith's Ohio anti-lynching law. Under it the federal government could penalize a state or any subdivision thereof if it "falls, neglects or refuses to provide and maintain protection of the life of any person within its jurisdiction against a mob or riotous assemblage." The bill has been before the house more than two weeks and a date for its roll call has not been set. "Three main points are to be considered." said Representative Burton in beginning his address, "they are: "1--The gravity and extent of the evil. "Lynching is the darkest blot upon an otherwise splendid civilization. This crime is prevalent only in the United States. There is only one crime to which it can be compared, and that is cannibalism. At first lynching was limited to physical punishment. Lynchings were comparatively rare until after the Civil War, and even in the eighties the number of white persons lynched was nearly as great as those of the Negro race, but in the savagery of lynching, neither race nor sex has been spared; over 500 white men have been lynched and fifty-seven women have been the victims of mobs. Barbartiles almost beyond belief have been persecuted. It is still being acted in the twenty-eight years from 1890 to 1917, inclusive, the number of persons murdered in lynchings and of those brought to death by legal executions was approximately the same; 3,013 of the former and 3,193 of the latter. It is certainly absurd that the United States government should protect its citizens upon the sea and in foreign lands, but not at home. FRESH OH! WRITTEN BY "THE OLD RE CORRESPONDENTS T What Our People Are Doing Personal, Social, Lodge, Marriages, D CORRESPONDENTS must mail all letters for publication at their main postoffice sufficiently early on Mon- day (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. Un- less this latter is done, proper credit cannot be given you. Lists of names, wedding presents, etc., obituary nu- tices, inquiries for relatives and ad- vertisements of all kinds, including items announcing entertainments to be held in the near future, must be paid for in advance at the rate of 25 cents a line, six words to a line. Our rates for display advertisements will be sent on application. YELLOW SPRINGS.—Rev. Clarence Smith, pastor of the Baptist church, has decided to ask a leave of absence because of ill health. The A. M. E. church revival, under the direction of the pastor, Rev. Sholto, is proving a success. Much interest has been manifested by those not connected with either of the churches. Mr. Henry Williams, who has been studying law, intends to take final examinations soon to be admitted to the bar. We wish him every success. Give your order to the local representative for a copy of The Gazette, every. CADIZ.—Mrs. Elizabeth Compher of Martin's Ferry returned home after visiting her son, Harry Jackson.—Miss Reba West of Canton visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alex West.—Revs. W. P. Meyers and W. H. Lucas, Mesdames Lulu Ballard and Elvira Wallace attended the county Sabbath School convention at New Athens, Wednesday.—The revival meetings closed at St. James A. M. E. church with the church greatly revived. The home of Bishop B. F. Lee at Wilberforce was completely destroyed by "Popular opinion sustains such a bill. The leading newspapers of the country such as the New York Times, World, Tribune and Springfield Republican and the Cleveland Plain Dealer, with many others, both north and south, have given the most stinging condemnation to the practice of lynching, and while some depute her necessity of federal legislation, the prevailing note is, that if all the states do not, as Ohio, Illinois, West Virginia, Minnesota and Kentucky have, the federal government must. As regards the constitutionality of the bill. It must be frankly stated that certain decisions of the supreme court of the United States seem to be unfavorable to this measure. The one controlling argument for the bill, however, is that by its very terms it seeks not to assume the police power of the state nor to assume the punishment of ordinary cases of murder, but to punish the frenzied mobs which seek to punish real or alleged criminals, thereby assuming to themselves the most essential function of government in the administration of the law. Certain tendencies may be noted, however, in our jurisprudence such as the broadening of means to constitute certain ends, and last of all, an assumption by the federal government of powers which have been regarded as belonging to the states. It is the duty of congress to pass a law which shall do away, if possible, with this frightful crime. Thus the demoralization of communities and the lawlessness which is attached to lynching will be prevented; so that the weak as well as the strong will be protected; and the supremacy of the law assured." The liquidation program of the shipping board is assurance that the end of the present fiscal year will bring a report from that body based on facts and figures and not on estimates and guesses. It will be the first year the board has had the benefit of Mr. Lasker's ability and of those he has gathered around him. HIO NEWS RELIABLE" GAZETTE'S THROUGHOUT THE STATE Doing Each Week — Church, Literary and Musical—Deaths, Etc. fire recently. Just a few of the household goods were saved.—It is with deep regret we learned of the death of Col. Chas. Young of the U. S. Army, at Monrovia Liberia, Africa. HILLSBORO—Mr. and Mrs. A. Holland entertained Miss Matilda Blair at dinner, Sunday. Mrs. Martinez Wilson and daughter have returned to Cleveland. Clara A. Evans has been ill—Mrs. Joe Williams is about the same. Mrs. Ida Wilson is better. Mrs. Flora Hunter returned to Richmond, Ind. Saturday. Mr. Harry Golins was the guest of Miss Alverda Willis, last Thursday. Rev. J. J. Burr is conducting the revival at the Baptist church. They have six for baptism and many who want to be saved. All are welcome. Rev. and Mrs. W. L. Tolliver of Wilmington were here, last Thursday and Friday. He preached a fine sermon, Friday evening. They were guests of Rev. and Mrs. J. J. Burr. Mrs. Jessie Williams is convalescing. Mr. and Mrs. Asa Jackson and spn. Wilbur, and Miss Anna Williams visited Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Jackson in Columbus, Saturday and Sunday. Mrs. Arnett Tolliver and daughter of Pittsburgh are visiting her mother. Mrs. Ellen Lamb has been very ill. Rev. Homer King was the dinner-guest of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Young, Sunday. Rev. B. R. Reed is expected here, next week, to assist in the revival. He is moderator of the E. U. B. Association. Mrs. Louisa Young entertained Rev. J. J. Burr at dinner, Sunday. Mrs. Dalsy Ames is visiting her grandmother. Major W. T. Anderson was in Wilberforce recently. As a trustee, he is interested in 'the rebuilding of Shorter hall, recently destroyed by fire. The major has been one of the active supporters of Wilberforce University for years. SIR JOHN HENRY BURTON Exceptional Career of Our Ranking Officer in the U. S. Army Who Died, Last Week, in Africa Col. Charles Young, attache of the U. S. A. embassy at Monrovia, Liberia, Africa, who died there, last week Wednesday, was born in Kentucky 58 years ago but came to Ohio when quite young; whence he was appointed to West Point Military Academy, in 1884. He was graduated from that school in 1889 and commissioned a second lieutenant of the 10th Cavalry. In October of that year he was transferred to the 25th Infantry; then to the 9th Cavalry. In December, 1896, he was commissioned a first lieutenant. In 1901 Col. Young was made a captain and in 1912, a major, a rank he retained until 1916, when he became a lieutenant-colonel. A year later he was promoted to colonel—the highest rank in the U. S. Army attained by an Afro-American. He was in command of the 10th Cavalry, Sept. 15-28, 1916; May 24 to June 2, 1917. He was detailed to Haiti to make a general survey of conditions there. Col. Young commanded the 9th Ohio Battalion, 1888-89. His retirement for disability in life of duty took place June 2, 1917. Later, he pleaded for a chance to become active in fighting during the World War II, this was done him on the ground (?) that he was not physically fit despite the fact he rode a horse and walked from Wilberforce, O., to Washington, D. C., to prove that he was. Col. Young is survived by a mother, wife (at Wilberforce, O.), and two children, aged 13 and 15, who are said to be at school in Paris, France. The remains were buried in Liberia, Africa, but will be brought to this country in about six months. The Colonel owned a beautiful home and fine farm at Wilberforce. His most conspicuous work as a soldier was done in Mexico when U. S. troops were chasing Gen. Villa, some years ago. CHARLES S. GILPIN—THE EMPEROR JONES" "The Emperor Jones" is no folder for those who demand inexorably either sweetness or light of their drama but, as presented at the Shubert-Colonial last (Monday) evening, it is a singular and stirring play, wholly unique in style and method, and almost as exceptional in its penetrating and vivid revelation of the processes of the human mind under the pressure of extraordinary circumstances. Gilpin, a sonorous voiced and skilled actor, gives an excellent performance of an exhausting role. It ranks with the finest performances the theater sees.—Cleveland Daily Plain Dealer. For Mr. Gilpin's performance I have the greatest admiration. He proved again last night what has been proved so often that art is not a matter of color, just as it is not something with geographical confines. He is a splendid actor and even in this play which is a monolog for him, he does much more than exhibit fine elocution. He creates a full-length tragic character and develops it through every possible phase that the author allows. The production is beautifully made. Mr. Gilpin has been offered the chance to play Othello in London with Mrs. Patrick Campbell as Desdemona and it is said he is seriously considering doing so.—Archie Bell, well known critic in Cleveland Daily News. The foregoing is true. Gilpin's acting is "grreat" and he will eventually become a great actor if he is permitted to continue the exceptionally good work he is and has been doing in a theater on Broadway in New York City for quite a year. But the play, "The Emperor Jones." It is not one that will prove helpful to the race except as a vehicle for Gilpin to "go forward" in (as an actor). It is not, however, as harmful to our people as we had been led to believe by comment in papers of both races in the East and the South. We believe every member of the race, who can possibly do, should see "The Emperor Jones" if for no other purpose than to encourage our one actor. In this day and time, who has "broken the ice in the legitimate." Their patronage, for reasons obvious, is really necessary, too, in spite of the fact the Schubert-Colonial theater, of this city, was well-filled (very nearly full) on Monday evening. Go and see the play! H. C. S. SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS Would Crush Our Spirit of Manhood—Brutality, Savage-ry, Inhumanity and Inferiority of the South—The Dyer Bill. (Special to The Gazette.) The New YoFk Outlook advises the country to give its support to that element of Negro leadership which is cringing to the inhumanities of the south. The Outlook is wrong at heart. It is badly bitten with the virus of race-hafred, especially if the race aspires to equality with its race of white Americans. It has been the policy of such organs as the Outlook to propagate this policy of crushing the spirit of manhood among Negroes when it claimed for itself the same privileges white men sought. The Outlook has championed a special kind of education for Negroes and has used its influence to corner the money market for this kind, doing everything within its power to starve out the schools that gave Negroes the education every American should have. Any attempt to make colored men satisfied with the brutality and humanity of the south will fall. Any attempt on the part of colored or white persons to have Negroes everywhere accept the attitude of the south as the attitude of America toward colored people must ignominiously fail. There have been tories in every race. White tories fought Washington when he sought to break the fetters of English slavery on American colonies. Tories have always failed and they will meet the same failure in the case of the colored people. The would-be leaders who advocate submission to American iniquitous injustice will die hated and damned. The Outlook and all others of its lik may know now that the colored race is determined to have absolute American freedom and justice on equality with all other races. Southern savagery must die, the death that slavery died. The propagators of this southern wickedness must die along with it as the slave-holder died. There is no reason under the sun why South Carolina should not be compelled to be as just and as fair with the colored race as New York. So long as a separate justice, a separate standard of public accommodation, a separate school-system, a separate educational standard and separate governmental policy are maintained for the two races in the south this brutality of the south will continue. It is a work to which manly Negroes have set their powers of mind and body to do away with. In our fight we are going to be sane. We do not advocate violence but we do advocate giving white brutes their own medicine. We also believe that a colored man of character, education and ability is the equal of any man of any race, north or south. The inferiority of the white south to the colored face is shown in its inability to maintain law and order on the one hand and its inability to be just and fair on the other. We do not concede this superiority of white race over the colored race. There are exceptions but as a race no race has shown itself possessed with brutality, passion and savagery as has been shown by the white race of the southern states. All of this so-called race adjustment in the south is a subtle attempt to have the colored race satisfied with a mental position and always acknowledge the alleged su- Hon. J. Frank Wheaton Dead NEW YORK CITY—A large number of friends and acquaintances all over the country will be shocked to hear of the suicide here. Sunday, of the Hon. J. Frank Wheaton, result of inhaling gas. Family trouble is said to have been the cause. Atty. Wheaton was the first and I think the only Afro-American member of the Minnesota legislature. mrs. and Mrs. Silney Dorsey's recent reception at their residence in E. 13th St. is still a topic of conversation because it was one of the most elaborate and successful social functions held in this city our people for many months. The decorations were in exceptionally good taste, the food all that could be desired and the music delightful. From Fortress Monroe, Va., came a letter to the editor, Monday, sent by Royal A. Milton, of this city, who was en route to his old home in Virginia, telling of a very pleasant stop he made in Washington, D. C. last week, to see "the sights." Mr. Senator John P. Green, senior-warden of St. Andrew's E. church, was a delegate to the diocesan convention of the church, which held its sessions in Trinity Cathedral hall, the 17th and 18th. Mr. and Mrs. Tyler Brown, Stearns Rd., entertained a party of fifty guests, last Saturday night. Cards. IN UNION IS STRONG E COPY FIVE CENTS AT HEART" ok And Its Dangerous Kind Manhood—Brutality, Savage inferiority of the South— yer Bill. periority of the white race and leave to that race the administration of the government. The whole thing is a farce, until it comes up unqualifiedly for the equal right of Dr. William A. Byrd every man in all things irrespective of his racial idiosyncrasies. It would be a dismal day in Negro life, when its leaders and followers become satisfied to entrust their rights and safety in the hands of southern whites and northern hypocrites. Pass the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill Democratic politicians of the south are opposing the Dyer Anti-Lynching bill. This is to be expected. Mob law is an essential part of the democratic policy of the south. Intimidation, ballot-box stuffing and stealing, deliberate cheating and robbing the colored people of their rights constitute the bulwark of southern Democracy. The Harrisons of Mississippi, Heffkins of Alabama and Watsons of Georgia have profited and are now profiting by this unlawful Democratic highway-menism. The jury system of the south is depended upon to do the dirty work of this class of non-descript politicians. The Democratic officers of the law, from governor down to governor, are generally allied with the mob-leaders. The oath of jurman is as false as the criminal who takes your life. When the south fights a reform measure, it is evident that it should be placed on the statutes. Southern Democrats cannot be relied upon to punish each other, irrespective of the crime. Democratic judges cannot be riled upon to render a just decision Venal Democratic politics have vilified the entire fabric of law and justice. The brutality of the south has made America a by-word in civilized lands. Curb the south or the country is gone to the dogs. By passing the Dover bill a good beginning is made to bring about another emancipation in the south. (Rey.) Wm. A. Brid. dancing and a lunch were served. Members of Lane Metropolitan C. M. E. Church gave a banquet in honor of Bishop C. H. Phillips on his birthday, Tuesday evening. A program of merit was rendered. The editor of The Gazette, acknowledges the receipt of an invitation, to attend Mr. O. P. McMilrath's 50th birthday celebration from 2 to 8 p. m. Jan. 27th, (the day before our own birthday) at his residence, 532 E. 120th St., this city. The McMilrath family is one of Cleveland's oldest and best and "O. P." as he is frequently addressed by his oldest and closest friends, exceptionally well-known and highly esteemed by a host of friends and acquaintances. We hope to be with him for at least a brief visit on Jan. 27. To congratulate and wish him "many more returns of the day." Dr. Alfred Lawless, Jr., of Atlanta, Ga., gen'l supt. A. M. A., spoke at Mt. Zion Cong. church's meeting, last Friday evening. Rev. D. J. Flynn, of Charlotte, N. C., preached, Sunday morning, and the M. S. conducted a program in the evening. Rev. Harold M. Kingsley, pastor, was away, last week, at meetings in Chicago and New York. He will occupy the pulpit at both services, Sunday, preaching in the morning on "The Application of the Gospel Love," and in the evening on "Luther Boddy, Shall We Pity or Accuse?" The choir held a pleasant social at Atty. and Mrs. A. H. Martin's, last Friday night. The clothing and food committees, under the direction of Mrs. R. K. Hodges and Mrs. M. Gray, continue to do good work in helping the needy. One Year ..... $2.0 Six Months ..... 1.00 Three Months ..... 50 Subscribers are requested to remit by postoffice money order or reg- istered letter Entered at the postoffice ir Cleveland, Ohio, as second-class mail matter. Address all communications to HARRY C. SMITH Editor and Proprietor THE GAZETTE (Bell 'Phone: Cherry 1259) Blackstone Building, Cleveland, O. 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 IEST AND BEST in the country. 10,000,000 Afro-Americans. 350,000 in Ohio. 35,000 in Cleveland. JANUARY 21.1922 There are so very many persons out of work in ward 11 and in great need of employment we fail to see why Councilman Fleming's sister and son are kept employed at the Central bath-house. Give those jobs to some of the needy and more deserving. Mr. Mayor. Secretary of the Treasury Mellon has made work more difficult for the joke-smiths — he has simplified the income tax forms so that the ordinary citizen can make out his report without help. The jokesters will have to find a new subject for their jibes. The Gazette takes this opportunity to congratulate and thank Ex-Senator Theodore E. Burton of this city for the splendid and telling speech he made in the lower house of the Congress, on the Dyer Anti-Lynching bill. It is very encouraging indeed particularly to his many Affd-American friends in this city and state. Keep up the good work, Mr. Burton. A year ago, while Mr. Harding was President-elect, he was entertained with some Senatorial friends on Senator Frelinghuysen's yacht in Florida. The other day the party was again brought together at a dinner in Washington at which Senator Cummins of Iowa was the host. It is in frequent personal meetings of that sort that President-Harding maintains the most intimate relations with the legislative branch of the Government. --- The Cleveland correspondent of a Chicago race paper is in error. The recent amusing "recount" of ward 11 ballots cast at the election farce in that ward on Nov. 8, '21, was not the result of a Councilman Fleming resolution, nor was the recount in danger at any time because of an allied "lateness of filing" because there was no such "lateness," but the recount was the direct result of the notice for the same and the infunction we filed in common pleas court. Later on it will be shown how "to save the name of Fleming's hundred or more prefect officials." More amusing "stuff." --- George Swan, alias Green, age 40, of 2552 W. 30th St., charged with the murder of a Laurinburg, S. C. white man, eight years ago, was quoted in the daily papers, last week, as saying to Lieutenant of Detectives Emmett Potts, who arrested him at his home, last week Tuesday evening, that he would "be hanging from a tree in South Carolina by saturday night," something we hope the local branch of the N. A. A. C. P. made impossible. But did it? Laurinburg officers were here to take him back and ought not to have been permitted to do so, especially since local Negroes' great friend (?), Harry L. Davis, is governor of Ohio. In addition to Steve Ball, "Jersey" Gordon, Dan English, John Redd, "Hoofee" Lawson and a number of other city employees of color, it is said that Councilman Tom Fleming has his wife, son, sister, his stenographer, his law partner and wife and a number of others (personal friends) in different booths as election officials on election day, last November. Can you beat it? Then there were "Germany" Hudson, "Starlight" Boyd, Syd. Thompson, John Fulton, among the "busy bees," that day, for Mayor Fitz-Gerald and Tom. Every last one of them holding city jobs, must "walk the plank." Get busy and make application for their jobs—if any of them are still "holding on" to them. Tell Mayor Kohler all about it while you are at it—"for the good and welfare" of the community as well as ward 11, only a part of it. FREE TRADE PROPAGANDA FUTILE Senator McCumber, the new chairman of the Senate Finance committee, states that the first question which will be discussed and settled when the pending tariff bill is taken up in the Senate will be the American valuation plan "and that is going to take considerable discussion on the part of members of the committee." Wherever possible the committee will apply specific rather than ad valorem rates. The valuation plan will be made applicable only where necessary. Thus far the expensive propaganda circulated by the big importing houses of the country has not resulted in any weakening of the determination of the Republicans to enact a protective tariff law, nor is it probable that it will accomplish anything in the future. A NEW FIELD FOR PIONEERING The ratification by the Congress of the Republic of Colombia of the Panama Canal treaty, it is predicted, will result in the election next month of an administration favorable to foreign capital in the development of that country and is regarded as a long step toward the defeat of the wing of the Conservative party whose candidate is out on a platform for the nationalization of railroads built by foreign capital. Colombia is intensely desirous of securing the development of her resources, and she realizes that this will require foreign capital since the country has little if any capital for this purpose. The conviction that Colombia has abandoned the idea of railroad nationalization, which will grow out of the defeat of Ospina, the leader of the nationalizationists, will tend to encourage foreign capital to enter that country. Colombia is one of the richest of the Latin Americans, and one of the least developed. NO "IMMEDIATE PAYMENT" DEMANDED. We sometimes wonder whether the unfairness of the debt cancellationists is due to stupidity or plain mendacity. Here is one advocate of cancellation who introduces an argument with the remark, "If America insists upon immediate payment of that debt, . . . etc. No one on earth, either in the United States or elsewhere, has ever suggested or thought of suggesting immediate payment. All that anyone has asked is that there be not an immediate but an early agreement upon a definite plan of payment so that the United States may know just what it can count upon in the way of future payments. Most people who have studied the subject believe that it will take from 25 to 50 years to collect the debt. What the United States wants is a funding of the debt into negotiable bonds bearing a reasonable rate of interest so that the United States Government can use its own disrecession in keeping such bonds in its own vaults or disposing of them to the public as it may see fit. Any talk about this country insisting upon "immediate payment" is misrepresentation, pure and simple, and there is no honest motive back of it. NEGATIVE ACCOMPLISHMENTS. Along with its positive accomplishments, Senator J. E. Watson of Indiana, thinks the Republican administration deserves credit for some of the things it has not done. For instance, it has not followed the lead of the late Democratic administration in offering a "supreme sacrifice"; it has not followed that administration in fostering the principles of socialism; it has not harped individual initiative and enterprise; it has not encouraged the people to look to the government payroll as a relief from all their ills. It is well to keep these things in mind by way of contrast. The Republican administration has established the budget system and cut the tax burden $800,000,000; it has put the veterans' relief and rehabilitation service on an efficiency basis; it has brought some degree of order out of the shipping board chaos and is in a fair way to get the merchant marine in practical operation; it has increased the market value of liberty bonds to the extent of some $2,000,000,000; it has rescued the railroads from the McAdoo scrambling process and is trying to give the private managers a chance to get them back to normal; it has taken the lead in the greatest peace movement in the history of the world. While this administration has not been and has not claimed to be a worker of miracles, it has won the confidence of the people by both what it has and what it has not done. THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, OHIO, JANUARY 21, 1922 PRIME SPORT NEWS By Allen Harrison Dorsey New Yorkers Fall Pittsburgh, Pa.—Loen迪 club won the first leg of their basket championship climb for 1921-22 by easily defeating the Spartan club of New York City here, last week, at Labor temple, 29 to 16. The Easterners, who had mastered most of the leading quintets of their section, arrived confident of their ability to down the local cracks. At no time did they seriously threaten the home team. The largest crowd of the seaaw a waw. The same clubs meet at Manhattan Casino in the big city, Jan. 19th. Denver After Big Bout Denver, Colo.—Jack Kanner, local boxing promoter, is anxious to stage a Wills-Dempsey fight here. He declared he would hang up a $100,000 purse for a twenty-round decision bout, the Colorado state law permitting fights of that duration. The stockyard's stadium has a seating capacity of 15,000, with space for several thousand additional seats. Kanner has opened negotiations with managers of the two fighters and has received word from Paddy Mullins, Wills' manager, that his fighter will battle on any terms arranged. Kanner says Wills is the only worthy opponent of the champion. Foster in St. Louis St. Louis, Mo.—Rube Foster, president of our National baseball association, was here, last week, endeavoring to straighten out the tangleed affairs of the local team. The club is heavily in debt and the REMARKS ABOUT ADVERTISING People go where they are invited —A. T. Stewart. Advertising is as necessary an expenditure as the payment of taxes or rent. —W. Atlee Burpee. Constant and persistent advertising is a sure prplude to wealth—Stephen Girard. Nothing except the nint can make money without advertising. —W. E. Gladstone. Printer's ink will make more of the public wear a pathway to your store. See? The merchant who considers riches a burden should never advertise. His store may be like a summer resort in January. DO YOU advertise? 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 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 "get awake." TOOK THEIR "MEASURES." Thief Records to Novel Subterfuge to Stal Women's Jewels. NEW YORK—A steek and businesslike man appears at the door. Politely he informs milady that the head of the family has decided to purchase a new gown for mademoiselle. Would she be measured for it, and, incidentally, would she remove her jewels, as they might "tear the clothing?" She would! But when milady retires to make ready for the "measurement" her jewels disappear. Ditto to the measurer. In many cases, say the police, this swindle has been practiced in the last few weeks in Brooklyn and elsewhere in the metropolitan district. They have arrested Eddy Koch, 24, of 124 Allen street, Manhattan. They say he is known as "Dr. Franklin," and also as "The Measurer." The arrest was made at the corner of Pitt and Rivington streets, Manhattan. Koch was locked up on a charge of grand larceny on the complaint of Mrs. Anna Schare, of 2246 West 28th street, Coney Island. Mrs. Schare said that her "measure" was about to be taken Tuesday evening by Koch and that she removed her diamonds, valued at $1,600. Koch and her gems were gone, she told the police. YesterdayuW she told the police. With twelve other persons, who had been "measured," she identified Koch. OXFORD ADMITS WOMEN. Finally Falls in Line With Progressive Thought in England. LONDON.—The famous University of Oxford has opened its doors to women. This ancient and proud institution was believed to be an impregnable fort for the fair sex, and it was only after the most bitter opposition that the new concession was made. Strangely enough the innovation comes at a time when the university can hardly accommodate the young men, who are reporting in greatly increasing numbers owing largely to the fact that German Universities are now taboo. It is said that the election of Lady Aster to parliament started the movement which has resulted in the breaking down of many barriers to the women of England. SCOTCH FEAR PROHIBITION. It Is Expected that 90 Per Cent. of The Women Will Vote For It. GIASGOW.—A prohibition campaign is being waged in Scotland, which is said to be under the direction of "Pusyfoot" Johnson, who is now in America. The Scotch movement is thought by some to be preliminary to the "drying" up of England. Great numbers of pamphlets are distributed in the work, and the funds are said to come in part from across the ocean. It is expected that 90 per cent of the women will vote for prohibition. The fear of the success of the reform is so great that a noticeable movement has begun in the storing up of whisky refusal of the players to continue the series with the Cardinals, last fall, put them in disfaß with the fans. Foster paid the players the salaries due and signed them all to the contracts. The prospects local team in the league the coming season are still very much in the dark. Kearns Talks Los Angeles, Cal—Jack Kearns, manager of the heavyweight champion, declared while here, last week, that Dempsey was ready to defend his title as world champion at any time and against anybody and that such a match would be discussed whenever sufficient financial guarantee were put up by those who sought a match. "C. I" Here C. I. Taylor, well-known leader of the Indianapolis A. B. C. ball team, was in the city, Tuesday, and held an important conference with Pres. Geo. J. Tate. He left, the same evening, on a trip to Pittsburgh, Richmond, Philadelphia and New York. "C. I., who is a veteran in the present situation in our baseball family and threatens to do some plain talking at the coming league meeting. At a meeting of the board of directors of the Tate Baseball Co. last week, J. E. Reed, well-known fish merchant, was elected treasurer, succeeding Coleman A. Lewis, who was secretary and treasurer. Other elected: Geo. J. Tate, pres.; Jas. Pitts, vice-pres. and Coleman A. Lewis, sec. "against the drouth." A few concerns have taken out insurance to protect them if prohibition is put in force. AIRPLANE FOREST PATROLS Their Value Has Been Clearly Demonstrated Since Army Nurse Services installed, Says Army Air Service. WASHINGTON—Location of nearly 500 forest fires in time to prevent a dangerous spread has clearly demonstrated the value of the airplane as forest patrols, according to a statement issued by the Army Air Service. Six hanes from which forest air patrols operate were established between May 16 and July 1 of 1920. The aviators on the work have flown 1,995 hours over approximately 6,247,001 square miles of timber, have detected 464 fires in time to prevent any considerable spread. The first forest air patrol base was established at Fresno, Cal. Other bases are now located at Mather Field, Red Bluff and March Field, Cal., and Medford and Eugene, Ore. Six patrols operate out of Mather Field alone. Padlocks Purse To Trousers CHICAGO, Ill. — Money is hard enough to hold onto these days without being robbed wholesale. J. H. Marks, jewelry salesman drumming up trade in Chicago, was robbed 12 times within a month of the money and jewelry he was carrying. Believing he had enough adventures in a big city, Marks padlocked the remains of his "roll" in a tough pigskin purse, which he secured to a reinforced trousers waistband by a manganese chain. He then departed for his home town, sadder but wiser. Movies For Sunday Schools. PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—An organization of church and business men has been formed to supply churches with moving picture films, which will include dramas, travellogs, educational films and comedy. About 5000 churches have arranged for this service and many of them will use strictly religious films immediately after Sunday school. To meet the prejudices of the most ethical, all films will be supervised or written by churchmen. TAMPA, Fla.—A new world's record is claimed for Lieut. A. G. Hamilton, who recently dropped 20,900 feet by parachute from an airplane over Carlestrom aviation field, Fla. A second "chute" was used by Hamilton when within a few hundred feet from the ground, to cicket his rapid descent. Must Not Wake Cops. NEW YORK—It never pays to wake a sleeping policeman. So decided Irving Greenberg, of 318 Division avenue, Brooklyn, who has been operating a bus and who, the police say, stopped it in front of the Clinton street station early this morning and began to drum up trade in a loud voice which awakened patrolmen on reserve. He got a suspended sentence on a disorderly conduct charge. Alaskan Gold Output Decreases. Alaskan Gold Output Decreases. DAWSON, Alaska. The estimates made by mining company officials in Alaska put the probable gold output for 1920 at $4,500,000 for the Yukon valley and at $3,000,000 for camps in the interior of Alaska. The decrease is blamed on the dry season, and especially to the reduced purchasing power of gold, which makes mining less profitable. Pigeon Brings Rescue to Airship. HAMPTON ROADS, VA. While en route to the United States Navy air station here, a seaplane became disabled and fell into the Atlantic. The crew was picked up and towed to shore by a fishing boat. A pigeon carried aboard the seaplane was sent to the air station with the news of the mishap, and in short time a repair plane came to the rescue. Farm Given to Law's Victim. BIRMINGHAM, Ala.—When the wife and child of E. Wilson, of Blount county, Ala., returned from a visit to another state they found him serving a life sentence for their supposed murder. The victim of circumstantial evidence was released and was presented a nicely equipped farm by the state. COLORED RACE TO STAY IN AMERICA When English Return to England, Irish to Ireland, Negroes Will Seek Africa. "We Love Our God, Our Flag and Our Friends—We Have Always Stood Ready to Smite the Fees of Our Country." NEW YORK—"All New York knows him and all New York loves him! He is as clean as a hound's tooth!" That was how Collector of Internal Revenue Charles H. Anderson introduced Gov. Smith to the 1,500 delegates of the Grand United Order of Odd Fellows (colored) assembled in the 71st Regiment Armory in celebration of the seventy-seventh anniversary of their organization. This description was received with hearty applause. Gov. Smith replied that it was a privilege to be permitted to address the assembled Odd Fellows, and pointed out that the watchword of every benevolent order is unity, fraternity and brotherly love. In the course of his address, the Governor referred to Abraham Lincoln's immortal Gettysburg Address. This brought forth great applause. Continuing, the Governor said: "Probably at no time in our history is there greater need for united action than at present." W. David Brown, State Grand Master and National Treasurer of Odd Fellows, presided. Police Commissioner Enright represented Mayor Hyllan who was unable to be present. Commissioner Enright extended the welcome of the city in a graceful speech. Mr. Anderson, in part said: "Your presence here is an additional pledge of fealty to the Nation. This is the hour of unrest. The amateur thinker is in our midst mistaking the noise and tumult of the hour for its sober reality. There is much discontent in the world just now, but they greatly err who imagine that the white crest on the wave is a true measure of the depths below. "We are listening to some strange doctrines and facing some strange proposals. One of the strangest is that our race should cast away all allegiance to this country and return to Africa. "We do not belong to that group to whom nothing is desirable but the impossible, and precious few of us can ever be led into the pursuit of fantastic visions. "As to our migration to Africa, let me say that when all the English in this country voluntarily return to the banks of the Thames and all the Irish go back to the shores of the Shannon; when the Germans return to the Rhine and the French to the Rhone; when the Italians seek the Tiber, the Russians the Neva and Volga and all the Jews once more take their stand on Jordan's stormy banks, then, and not till then, will we consider a return to the fever-stricken banks of the dream Nile. Even then, like the prophet of old, we will probably have to he translated in a fiery charlot. "And why should we leave this country? We have done the States some service, and they know it. We have always stood ready to smite the foes and defamers of our country. We have fought in all the country's wars. "Whatever else may be said of us, this also must be said: That we love our God, our flag and our friends. In all this land there is not a black man's home so humble that it does not contain four objects of love and veneration—the Bible, the American flag, a picture of Abraham Lincoln and a picture of Theodore Roosevelt." COSTLY "CURD" WINDOW. Four Concerns Pay the Next Sum of $8,000 Per Month Rental. NEW YORK—Street frontage is so valuable in Broad street at the Curb market where the brokers take your money by wiggling their fingers, that a four-pane window on the ground floor of No. 38 rents for $8,000 a month. It is paid by four concerns, Nash & Co., Agostine & Co., M. Haltmayer and Joe Goldstein. Each has a man occupying a pane. Each "office" is just large enough for this employee and a telephone. The whole window is only 699 feet. If the boss tries to come into his office, the force would have to climb out the window. Each space is smaller than a telephone booth. Lioness Claws Boy BEACH, N. D.—While attendants were at lunch, Harold Edge, 11 years old, crawled under the animal tent at a carnival's cage and got close to the lioness's cage. The beast reached cut, held the boy with one paw and clawed him with the other, almost tearing his scab' off. His body was also horribly mutilated. It was necessary to shoot the lioness and the boy was rushed to the hospital, where more than 50 stitches were taken in his head, back, arms and chest. Women Jurors Sit BRISTOL, Eng.—For the first time in history women have formed a part of a jury in England. This was at Bristol. Six women were impanded and sat throughout the day hearing cases. At the close of the session the women were congratulated for "at last taking their proper place in the administration of justice in England." PORTLAND, Ore.-It would not seem probable that it would take a package seven years to go from the stat of Washington to Oregon via U. E. mail, but this is the long-time short-distance record held by a piece of mail just returned to R. H. Goodfellow, of Castle Rock, Wash. The party to whom it was sent died awaiting its receipt. Efforts are being made to improve the mail service. Three TURKISH Friendly VIRGINIA Gentlemen BURLEY The perfect blend of the three perfect cigarette tobaccos in one perfect cigarette one-eleven cigarettes 15¢ for 20 Compensated by the American Tobacco FIETH AVE. NEW YORK CITY JACOB SCHNEI BAKERY Fresh Rolls, Pies, Cake Central 1745 W 30 PAINLESS EXTR Fresh Rolls, Pies, Cakes Daily Central 1745 W 3028 Central Ave. PAINLESS EXTRACTION ```markdown ``` Solid Gold Teeth, Gold Crowns, White Crowns, Bridge Work Hours 8:00 A. M. to 8:00 DR. GREENFIELD'S, Dennis OPPOSED TO PAINT 227 Euclid Avenue—Right Across the Street Cent Store. Woodland—55th St. $100.00 In Merch Given Away E Wednesday Coal Bargains Call Main 3451—Central GENUINE POCAHON Pocahontas Shoveled Lump Pocahontas Forked Lump Pocahontas Coarse Mine Run These Prices are the Lowest Buy From Us and Save M COAL LAND DEVELOPMENT The National B Life Insurance C of WASHINGTON, DISTRICT OF Incorporated, 187 OLD LINE LEGAL RESERVE INDUSTRIAL ENDOWMENT & LIFE PO Paid Up Capital Assets Over GOOD, LIVE AGENTS WANTED with their own salary and the opportunity to en- business and to serve the 286,183 Colored of Ohio. Branch Office: Bowman Bldg., 3725 Central Wm. A. Gaillard, Ohio State Organizer. Patronize G Advertiser THE MAN WHO DARES. Solid Gold Teeth, Gold Crowns, $5.00 AND UP White Crowns, Bridge Work ..... Hours 8:00 A. M. to 8:00 P. M. --- $100.00 In Merchandise Given Away Every Wednesday Pocahontas Shovelled Lump ..... $10.00 Pocahontas Forked Lump ..... 11.00 Pocahontas Coarse Mine Run ..... 8.00 These Prices are the Lowest in Years Buy From Us and Save Money COAL LAND DEVELOPMENT CORP. The National Benefit Life Insurance Company WASHINGTON, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA Incorporated, 1898 OLD LINE HEALTH & ACCIDENT LEGAL RESERVE INDUSTRIAL & ORDINARY ENDOWMENT & LIFE POLICIES Paid Up Capital $100,000.00 Assets Over $650,000.00 GOOD, LIVE AGENTS WANTED with the right to name their own salary and the opportunity to engage in a high class business and to serve the 286,183 Colored Citizens in the state of Ohio. Branch Office: Bowman Bldg., 3725 Central Ave., Cleveland, O. Wm. A. Gaillard, Ohio State Organizer. Geo. E. Cohron, District Manager Patronize Gazette Advertisers --- 111 one eleven cigarettes "I honor the man who in the conscious discharge of his duty dares to stand alone; the world, with ignorant, intolerant judgment, 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 or the hearts of friends."—Charles Sumner. 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. 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. HNEIDER CERY 5, Cakes Daily 3028 Central Ave. TRACTION Free Examin- 22-K Gold Used. $5.00 AND UP M. to 8:00 P. M. Dental Specialists PAIN The Street from Kresge's 5 and 10 more. 5th Market Merchandise Every Sunday Ins Coal Central 1045 NAHONTAS $10.00 11.00 8.00 Lowest in Years Save Money DEOPMENT CORP. General Benefit Company CT OF COLUMBIA Lated, 1898 HEALTH & ACCIDENT INDUSTRIAL & ORDINARY LIFE POLICIES $100,000.00 $650,000.00 D with the right to name city to engage in a high class Colored Citizens in the state 5 Central Ave., Cleveland, O. Geo. E. Cohron, District Manager Gazette Tisers RACE PREJUDGE! "I am convinced myself that there is no more evil thing in this present world than race prejudice; none at all!" "I write deliberately—it is the worst single thing in life now. It justifies and holds together more baseness, cruelty and abomination than any other sort of error in the world." —H. G. Wells. Se Tee nee wire>)( Serres sate TEE dora ton we | Serene ook ss ‘ hee Or Hi wigs | SSE wee Coe ® SMALL a Se ea] Neen. nee - ae a Be [fr <e a . wee ie . “(e ye : F SS AL id ee ge nS bi < OF ‘eeeramonns Comtoon Cony. 29-9 5 Cay S) ° a, ts “Oifice, Rose. 1412. Res., Gar, 6557 if Puinceton. 47 “Office Hours—2 to 4 P My 6:80 x to 8:30 P.M. Dr. O. A. Taylor PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON 2208 FE, 55th St, Cleveland, 0. _eananapacnennanoal Dr. E. J. GUNN Physician & Surgeon 2208 Scovill Ave. Cor. 22nd St. Office Hours: 9 to 11 A. M., 2 to 4 and 6 to 8:30 P. M. Sundays, 8 to 5 P.M. folked st iethaate:ticam Prospect S058. 2 phone, Prospect 3087 Beh ‘Phone Randolph 5598 Residence, Raldolph, 4417 Hours: 9-3 A. M—1-3 P. M—6-8 P. M. * "Sunday's 8-5 P..M. E. J. GREGG, M. D. Physician and Surgeon 7 Service Diseases ‘Women and Children 2322 EB. 55th St., Te le Th ter emple Theater Bldg. Rooms 2-3. n Ss Pars Dr. E. A. BAILEY PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON 265 B, 40th St, Cor, Central Ave. Cleveland, 0. Office Hours: 4 to 7:30 P. M. Phone—Rosedale 2806 Central 1666 L, Residence—8012 Cedar Ave, | — Residence Phones — Cedar 1943 Princeton 1459 W, # Dr. Leon S. Evans # PHYSICIAN & SURGEON H 9315 Central Ave, over the f Peoples Drug Store, # Office Hours: 9 a. m. to 12 m, Band 6 to9 p.m. H —Oftice Phone— i Bell, Cayahoga, H Prospect 4583. Central 8832 Office. Phones: Main 2912; Central 1424-R Rosidenice, 614 1. 207th Bt. ‘Phone, Eddy 6583. JOHN P. GREEN Attorney-at-Law Room 610, Blackstone Building 1426’ West Srd Street Notary Public Polish Interpreter Cleveland, O Dr. J. L. Jackson PHYSICIAN & SURGEON 4807 Central Ave., Cleveland, o. Special Attention to Diseases of Women and Children. Phone—Office Rand. 4818 ‘Res., 2268 E, 86th Sto Phone Cedar 251. OFFICE HOURS 11 A. M. to 2 & M,, 5 to 8 P, M. i pone d Doctor of = Chiropractic H Karn $9,000 to $15,000 per yr. if Class now, forming for Feb. 15 i Webster School of H Chiropractic Baars m, ssth st. #' Dept. B., Cleveland, 0. 5% ON SAVINGS MORTGAGE LOANS The Empire Savings & Loan Co. ; ‘ 2316 E, 55th St. Randolph 6778 Cent, ATIS-W A PRIVILEGE It is a pnivilege to fearlessly ‘stand for the right— Not a snerifice, even though you | go down. ‘They count not the cost, whe ight the ood fight, And unflinchingly face the | sneer or the frown. Joseph C. Manning. - Where To Purchase The Gazette *JOSEPH’S “ERNEST P. JACKSON’S: 4219 Central Ave. 3969 Central Ave. JACKSON'S *A, ZINAMON’S: 4401 Central Ave. 2921 Central Ave. J. 8. HALL'S D. BARBER’S 3121 Central Ave. 2006 Central Ave. J. B. DENNIS’ W. T. GRANT, $705 Central Ave. 3512 Central Ave. “Subseribers not receiving The Gazette regularly should notify us at once. We desire every copy deliyered ore giy: Send or bring locals and all business matters to The Gazette office, 214-215 Blackstone Bldg. bY you wish to see the editor call there, please. We advise our readers to carefully examine The Gazette’s ad- ) vertisements before making purchases. Business men who adver- tise in this paper should have the patronage of our people. The fact that they advertise is assurance that they want it. All ee, matter for publication in current issues of The) Gazette must be in the office by 4 p. m., TUESDAY of that week, at the latest. Display advertisements aecepted until noon, WED- NESDAYS! HARRY C, SMITH, 215 Blackstone Bldg. Bell "Phone: Cherry 1259, O0 YOU KNOW WHY-~- You Gan Take Things Two Ways ? Classified Advertising .’. Department .°. FOR SALE—Automobile, A “Baby Grand” Chevrolet in goud condition $300, Call, Cherry 1239, For Rent—Store: Tailor ahop, 40 yuare’ tsde, ail the fxtures nee: gaoary. Tnqulte, 3868 Central Ave FOR SALE—Barber shop, 2624 E. 40th/St., near Woodland Ave. Max May, proprietor. Mas MEMORIA Sc as WANTED — Stonographer — A GOOD one who is aot employed every day; gach* Week, Address, Box 9, 215. Bfickstone Bldg., city. / WANTED! (Oud aiesiicoal ctbnaiest ana eeligead agente to sell the NEGRO HISTORICAL CALENDAR fia cikersastislon. Gs or sarees 3 1 JONES, Sito Cental Ave. Cleveland, HALL FOR RENT Operated by one of the race. All committees looking for a first-class hall for entertainments, private wed- dings, public speaking, etc. can se- cure Crystal Hall, 3843 Woodland Ave. cor. E, 89th St. and Woodiand Ave. Prices reasonable. Hall re- modeled. Mrs, J. D. Juckson, 3843 Woodla~d Ave, Randolyh -6344. Social and Personal Mr. and Mrs. O. J. Harris spent several days in Michigan, recently. Mr. Hakry Basey, B, 95th St., at- tended the funeral ‘ot his step- mother in Springfield, recently. Dr. and Mrs, B. H. Lawrence, newlyweds, are “receiving” in thelr home on E, 117th St. . Mrs, Leon Glark, athletic secre- tary/of the P. W. A. is convales- cing. Dr. and Mrs. B. F. Rucker have located In their recently purchased home on EB. 89th St. * Mrs, Lucy Paris’ funeral took place, Friday afternoon, from Sec- ond Emmanual Baptist’ church. St. John’s Mothers’ club will meet, . Wednesday evening, at 5. 97th st. ~ Is there any doubt NOW in the ‘mind of anyone as to what tace paper has the largest circulation and the largest following among our people in Cleveland and the state of Ohio? “The Old Reliable” Gazette has led for thirty-nine years and will con- tinue to do so, : The Optimistic club will meet, Wednesday, at: Mra. Bates’, B. sist te ‘ Miss Ida Gray, school teacher, is very ill aggin at Mrs. Wm. McIn- tire’s. x Mrs, A. E. Talbert, E. 39th St., died, Monday evening, leaving two small children. Pneumonia, St. Andrew's auto club gave a successful social, Sunday afternoon. at Dr. and Mrs. Joe Thomas’, £. 40th St. Mrs. M. E. Auther was in Mon- roe, and Detroit, Mich., the past week. She will spend part of the winter with her husband in Birm- ingham, Ala. \ Mrs. Esterlean Pippin of Central ‘Aye., underwent a second operation at Charity hospital, last week Thurs- day. : Rey. H. M. Kingsley was one of the speakers at a meeting of the Cong. Home Missions’ Council in N.Y. City, recently. ‘There is a letter at The Gazette office for H. Nicholas former resi- THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, OHIO, JANUARY 21, 1922 LE eee dent of 3921 Central Ave., this city Send in his address at once, if yor Know it, Be sure to read the Logan Laun dry advertisement elsewhere in thi paper. It is a race enterprise and good one, too. Patronize it!—Ady Mrs. D. A. Mottley, B, 46th St. was’ hostess to Cory’s W. H. M. S Wednesday, and Mr Mary ‘Slaugh ter, F. 96th St., delightfully en teriained the Present’ Day club ‘Tuesday afternoon. Quarterly meeting services a Cory M. H. church, Sunday. Rev D. EB, Skelton, D. $., will officiate assisted by Rev. J.’ B. Redmond pastor St. Andrews’ P. B. church's 30t anniverfary will be celebrated, Sun day at 10:30 a. m. Bishop W. A Leovard will be the special speake and there will be excellent musi by a choir of forty-two votees. Do not wait for the collector to eal on you, but call, send or mail you subseription money, or whatever yot owe to The Gazette, at once, soa: not to miss a single copy of “The Old Reliable” Gazette. i Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Pickett, for merly at 4712. Central Ave.,” hav moved thelr “shoppe” to 2287 Sco vill Aye.~ They handle a fine lin of tollette articles and made-to order corsets. Give them a visit; they are courteous and obliging. Patronize the Woodland-Kast 55th Market ‘The dealers are giving away tw« $20, two $10 and eight $5 merchan- dise certificates, good anytime for anything in the market, every Wed nesday.—Adv. ’ Miss Hallie Q. Brown of Wilber- force, national president of our Federation of Women's clubs, wil speak at St. John’s A, M.H. church, Sunday, at 3 p. m., undér the aus pices of the W. M. M. 8. All wo men’s clubs are invited, | Wm. H. Jordan, 1. 34th St., one of the men caught in the scaffolc erash at the new public hall, las week, is still in a serious condition at Lakeside hospital. Both of hi legs were broken. He is one o the officers. of . Western Reserv Lodge, K. P. What is Councilmar Fleming doing for our injured one in that accident? Ask him, Mrs. Pearl Rivers, proprietor _o the Saunders House, 2864 B. 55tt St., has a nice, roomy hall for ren which can be used for dances, publi and club meetings. ‘The place Well heated, electric. lights and th charges ar¢ reasonable. Ward 11 ‘Central’ Body meets there, evers ‘Thursday evening. Mrs. Rivers trie: {e please all, Do not fall to attend the Mid Winter Festival of Song at St John’s A. M. B. chureh, Monday evening; Mrs. Grace Willis Thomp son, directress, and Harry E Thompson, soloist. This will bi a.treat. Do not miss it—Adv. L, R. Carey, E. 30th St., gave : very nique ‘smoker tor’ friends Monday evening. The apartmen was a8 tastefully arranged as th viands served were toothsome. Al admitted that four years’ absenc from his profession as caterer sha not lessened his skill in the least. ‘The Universal Business Women's association's mass meeting, for th benefit bf our unemployed women was held at Shiloh Baptist chureh last. week Thursday evening. The invitation to address the meeting sent the editor of The Gazette’ the evening previous to that of the meeting, was recelved too late for him to comply, owing to an eartter engagement. $ Our readers who need coal shoul remember the Coal Land Develop ment Corp., whose advertisement wil be found elsewhere. ‘Their prices aré low.—Adv. fb Mrs, Emma T. Hines entertaines Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Chelf, Mrs. Min nie Kelly, Mr. Henry ‘Scripps, Dr. Bell of Chicago, at a lunchéon ix honor of Mr, and Mrs. Chas, Wilson who left Saturday for Boston. Mrs Lottie B. Torrence of Oberlin i visiting her sister, Mrs. Hines, o BE, 4th st. Mme. Lueretia Knox Mitchell dramatic soprano, Indianapolis gaye a splendid program at Lan Metropolitan C. M. E. church, Jas week Tuesday evening, under th auspices of the East End Culture club; Mrs. Ed Ramsey, pres. She was’ the guest of Mrs. Wm Mathews, E, 101st St. All persons in the'city who have Knowledge of illegal voting in war 11 on election day, Nov. 8 "21, 07 residents of that ward whose ballot: were not promptly deposited in the ballot-box or were opened and rea¢, or who Were not permitted to vote er who were in any manner show’ discourtesy, or who saw any irregu larities at the polls on Nov. 8, 21, ar requested to notify or come to ‘The Gazette office, ‘phone Cherry 1251 215 Blackstone Big. S. W, cor, W Third St. and Frankfort Ave. just a soon as possible between the hours 0) 8 and 6:80 p. m., and their complaint- wil be heard ahd property attended Fifty student nurses are needed immediately at the ‘city hospital, Ralph Perkins, welfare director, an- nounced’ on Tuesday. He stated the city is paying large salaries to graduate nurses for work which the student nurses could do, After three years the students will be- come graduate nurses with pay. of $25 a week and up, Perkins said. Girls, eighteen years old and over, with’ a year's high school educa: tion, are eligible. ‘The Webster School of Chiroprac- tie has secured a fine building of ten. rooms at 611% Central Ave. where they will be located after Feb. 15th, A free clinic for the worthy poor will be held, with a faculty of seven in charge. F. D. Webster, Chi. D., is the head of the school. , Dr. W, H. Jameson, gfand master of the U. B. of F. and 8. of M. T. delivered an eloquent address on “Race Ideals” at Spiro hall, last week Monday evening, to a large and appreciative audience and on Tues: day addressed a large assemblage on “Organization and Leadership.” He was the guest of Mrs. James Ofer, E, 34th St. Large crowds packed ithe Pros. pect Theater, Sunday afternoon and evening, to hear Rudolph Smith, West Indies leader of the U. N. I, speak on “The Destiny of the New Negro” and inaugurate the local branches of the organization's drive ‘for new members, Music was fur- nished by their own (Forest. City Lodge) band. ‘There are 6,000 U. N. I. A. members in Cleveland and six million in various parts of the world, according to the organiza- tion's’ records. ‘That $1,000 reward for infor- mation leading to the arrest and conviction of ward 11 vote jugglers, illegal voters, etc., on election day, Nov. 8, '21,' is being looked for- ward to by many, Don’t you want some or all of “it? Get busy! Money is especially useff, these “aull times,” William Clark, no address, was surprised in the ‘act of burglarizing the Woodiand Realty Co. offices at 3968 Central Ave., last week Friday morning, police say, when an officer discovered a box under a window in the rear of the building. He told police he had had nothing to eat fi, ime, Gave and thought he wes etting into Jackson's drug store at 3969 Central Ave, He is charged with burglary and larceny. Our advertisers want your trade. Those who do not ask for it in the columns of “The Old Reliable” Ga- zette certainly care little, if at all, for it, Therefore, we ‘urge our readers and all of our friends to patronize those who ask in this paper for your patronage, ‘The new front of the Empire Say. ings and-Loan Co, offices, 2316 E. 55th St., is a great improvement and they now present the appearance of a real banking institution and the public will undoubtedly show its ap- preciation by increasing very ma- terially its patronage. In the coin guessing contest the Old Folks’ home won the $10 prize, the correct amount being $105.43, the home guessing $105.56. Officers of the bank are: H, E. Murrell, pres.; R. K. Hodges, vice-pres.; H.'8. Chaun- cey, sec.; P. W. Lemon, treas.; A. H. Martin, atty Hon. Harry C. Smith, editor of ‘The Gazette, is the new president of Ward Bleven Central Body, the or- ganization that backed him in his successful campaign for city council in that ward, Election, last week Thursday “evening. A largely at- tended meeting. Atty. A. A. Trigk ig the new vice-president, Mrs. E. B. Mayo, secretary, and Miss Laura Warren, treasurer. The organiza~ tion is’ endeavoring through court action to uncover illegalities in the conduct of voting and registration in the eleventh ward, last election day. FET FT Then PRE TRE 2 ere ee re eee ot everyone knows, in education —in all phases of education. 1 believe, a well, In all tho, learned and useful professions. But: somehow, I feel that the Negro, like the rest of man- kind, ‘must learn to work out more of his problems along business lines than he has in the past; h8 must learn as others have learned, that a sgreat deal of the so-called race ‘problems can and must be Worked out at six per cent. ‘Dr. R. R. Moton. ‘Drawn for this paper By Fisher MISERABLE TREATMENT! Will Séek Redress in the City Courts ‘—Barred from His Church Courts Dee, 21, 1918, I moved into the C. M. B. Church parsonage, near the corner pt B. Sist St. and Cedar Ave. with a verbal agreemént to stay there as long as it was for rent. In March, 1921, L. H. Brown, pastor, $a0 one of ane | Metsppolian church's trustees went to court and had my family put out of doors, My wife and daughter were sick at the lime. The former has not been able to walk since. My family are mem- bers of the C. M. E. Church and 1 am also a member of its Ohio con- ference. I wrote:to the bishop rela. tive to the matter and he said that he could not do.anything about tt ‘The whole matter is a violation of the law of the C. M. E. Church, So this Is the way the property of the . M. B. Church in this city, 18 be- ing handled or used. I will finish my case in the courts of this city, since I cannot be heard in the Chureh courts. Yours for Justice, (Rev.). R. B, VINSON, 3602 Croton Ave., Cleveland, O. Syd. Thompson, Dana English, Steve Ball, Pete Hill (inspectors) and “Doc.” White, all in the street department of* the city, the last named having been made superin- tendent of catch-basins but recently —just before the new year; John Fulton, John Redd, John H. ‘Cossey and Jersey Gordon, in the garbage department; “Would-be” (W. B.) Hawkins, in the store-room of the sewer maintenance department, Hamilton Ave., east of B. 3rd 8t., are some of the FitzGerald-Maschke ap- pointees who were exceptionally ac- tive, last October and November, in thelr efforts to defeat Mayor Fred Kohler and every other candidate who did not have the FitzGerald- Maschke “O. K." Divorce them, too, from the city pay-roll, Mr, ‘Mayor, and continue the good’ work you have so well begun. Investi- gate carefully their records as city employees and we feel sure you will get all you want to justify their disniissal, For good and sufficient reasons, which you can learn if you so desire, DO NOT ask their imme- diate superior (employe, another “Fitz’-Masehke appointee) for the desired information, but “can” him, too. He is but “one of them.” Not so very many years ago Day- ton, Ohio, had a woman of the race principal of one of its public Schools, A her assistants were white “women. If memory serves us cbrrectly, her name Was Miss ‘Troy. Then came the demand from Negroes for a “jim-crow” Y. M. C. A. Now our people of’ Dayton are in the midst of another fight to pre- vent the establishing of “jim-crow” public (2) schools. ‘This is only one Of several fights since the “Jim-crow” Y. M. C. A. was started. Columbus, Cincinnati,” Chicago, “Philadelphia and other large northern cities have had similar experiences. Please remember thist \ 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 desirous of hear- ing fom persons: in the following named cities: Toledo, Springfield, Dayton, Piqua, Lima, ©., and other places, particularly in Ohio, where we have none. Write to the editor of The Gazette, Blackstone building, Cleveland, 0., and terms will be sent promptly. Our readers will oblige us greatly by sending at once the addresses of per~ ‘sons is’ the cities named, and others, in the state, to whom we can write ‘relative to the matter. gtetserecccesssecesoscoss 3 PROTEST AGAINST wrone, ¢ To submit in silence when we should protest makes co- wards out of men. The hum- an race has climbed on Pro- test. Had no voice been raise ed against injustice, ignore anee and lust, the inquisition yet would serve the Law, and gulllotines deelde our least disputes. ‘The few who dare, must speak and speak again }$ to right the wrongs of many. $_—Ella Wheeler Wilcox. Seeeeeeeeteesesereeteseees ‘Obituary Cambridge, Mass. — Miss Maria Baldwin, a’ member of the race, head-master' of the Agassiz school of this city, is dead. ‘This is an ele- mentary school attended by the chil- dren of the professors of Harvard University. Obiteary . Mrs, Eliza Vinson, wife of Rev. R, B, Vinson, died, Jan. 12, after fourteen months’ iliness. It was during that time that L. H, Brown and his board of trustees had her put out of doors tho she was a loyal and faithful member of the’C. M. E. church for twenty-seven years, Dr. Thomas notified all that she was not well enough to be moved at the time and she had not been able to walk since. But God will reward eyery One according to theit works. Mrs. Vinson's remains were inter- red in Harvard cemetery and the funeral services were held at Wil- liams C. M. E. church, Monday af- ternoon, Rev. S. W. Warr officiating. (Rev.) R. B. Vinson, SY REY ne pepe earn ee te ee crear eee eee : See us First for all Goods in our Line | JOHN S. HALL ; Prices Reasonable. Satisfaction Guaranteed. JEWELER AND OPTOMETRIST $121 Central Ave.. Cleveland, O. Prospect 3659 Tete teeeeeetaeeeteeerereeeseeeheeeseeeseeseseeoeeenes One Stitch in Time Saves Nine! AN EARLY VISIT TO THE DENTIST SAVES TIME, HEALTH AND EXPENSE ‘Bridge Work Gold Crowns Set of Teeth Gunsenered 68 $10 Up. Filling $1.00 Up Let us extract that old aching tooth—once you know how easy we can remove it, you will send all your friends to us, Albany Experts DENTAL SPECIALISTS . Opposed to Paint 2180 WOODLAND AVE. Cor. E. 22nd St. » Second Floor, q Of srowes f \ Ae (Ze \ ps eon { oy ye Ji J : 1) 4 Baie aoe as Af AN < ; — SRE 6 Ge i nh eS Vee US a ey DSL) eS i sss eR a 2g b NEVA Sigs y Uy Gs 7 i Ly So ) HDissues ayearN 434 Wee Start ayear jee nor 12 he ey o'aay : . The Youth’s Companion | should be in every home which demands “only the Best.” Live boys j and girls and their fathers and mothers, always find The Companion i Reliable, Entertaining and Up-to-Date. i Bitty, Nature ant Scneo.Corrent Events Bestar eee Sacre See ee Soe eee es ee Costs LESS THAN Five Cents a Week * OFFER No.1 OFFEK A £ tps toute Cocgeeton |i apa Youur eoraeuee = Abeer, FEL Josinaee? | a tigtees comemnion | *'ictiyeierien S100 All for $2.50 All for $3.00 ie BERG ee SNS RS TR SUBSCRIPTIONS RECEIVED AT THIS OFFICE. ‘OR forty years Sloan's Liniment Fe et Ue quickest relief for neuralgia, sciatica and rheuma- tism, tired muscles, lame backs, sprains and strains, aches and pains. Keep Sloan's kandy and apply freely, toithoub rubbing, atthe first twinge” Te eases and brings comfort surely and readily, You'll find it clean and non-skin-staining. Sloan's Liniment is pain’s enemy. havnnade se At all druggists—3Se, 70, $1.40. Sloan: pecan = ‘Thetorture ofskiniteh Millguickiyterehoved oy teiiee | Heres Skin” | ment Oneot be Hobson's Family Remedicn * Hobson's ques Eczema Ointmenta UA AG \\ Freesenercs, a Nn) eee As fe eS ir ro pra DXA eee - 3820 Central Avenue We carry full line of Dry Goods Ladies and Gents Fur- : nishings poseereereesesseseeseee? SAENGER The Pride of Carolina The State Agricultural and Mechanical College of Sonth Carolina Orangeburg, 8. C. Next session begins Septem- ber 28th and ends May 26th, 1921. No Tuition, no Room Rent, no Chargés for Water, Lights or Fuel. Entrance Fee $10.00, Board $12.00 per Month in Ad- vance. Books, Laundry and Personal Expenses Extra, Every Modern Facility. Standard Equipment, Military Discipline, |A Faculty of 67 Officers and Instructo¥s. For information and Cata- logue, Write. BR. §, WILKINSON, Pres. Orangeburg, 8.C. ‘ THE SAUNDERS HOUSE 2364-66 E. 55th St. Neat, clean rooms Home Cooking Meals at all hours. First-Class Dining Room Mrs. Pearl Rivers, Prop. Randolph 534. Earl Wilson’s . CIGAR SHOPPE And SHINING PARLOR ¢ 3034 CENTRAL AVE. . Out-of-town Papers and ‘Magazines Givo Us a | uy ‘Trial! : , _ Logan’s Laundry | Wet Wash and Flat Work Best equipped in the city for our people. | All work guaranteed! : We call for and deliver. - Prompt Service. We solicit | the patronage of the Public. Give us a trial, We will troat you right, | J. A. Logan, Prop. 2858 B, 48rd St Jus. ove up ABEL The # H. & M. Delicatessen | and Lunch Room Hot Meals at all hours | We will be glad to serve you. 2474 E. 40th J.T. Harney ‘ A. J. Meredith ‘Props. MRS.L.S. BRADLEY 8241 Preble Ave. Cleveland, O. Has Houses For Sale ore-€o Rent f “HUMAN NATURE'S FOULEST BLOT.” My ear is pained My soul is sick with every day's Of cae id tr with wrong and outrage, OF hich the earth in filled. » There is no flesh in man’s ob-( : durate heart. . It does not feel for man: the c natural bond | Of brothernwvod is severed as , the flax > That falls asunder at the touch of fire. } He finds ie fellow guilty of in | Not colored like his own: and , having power } To enforce the wrong, for such > a worthy cause } Dooms and devotes him as his : lawful prey. cg TARR PR BO tg Cog 6. } Thus man devotes his brother, and destroys: Tis human nature’s broadest foulest biot. —Cowper. 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 Rabbi Krauskopf in Denouncing Immorality Likes United States to Samson. SOCIETY WOMEN FLAYED Declares Divorces Have Increased at Such an Alarming Rate As to Excite Wonder Whether Marriage Will Not Be Discarded. PHILADELPHIA. — "A vamp destroyed Samson. "And now a modern Samson—the United States—is in the languorous death-compelling clutch of a modern, dimpled kneed, half undressed vamp." Such is the theme of a discourse by the Rev. Dr. Joseph H. Krauskopf in a recent sermon at Kenedes Israel Synagogue. In his review of "The Sin That Destroyed Babylon, Greece and Rome," Dr. Krauskopf said: "Society women adopt the styles of undress for reasons not very different from those for which they are adopted by the professional courtesans. "Plays unabashed in exposition of nakedness are presented that rob womanhood of the aurora and mystery that constituted it greatest charm and glory and that rob the home of its chastity. "Think of the young women who drive young men far out into the country at night and who regale themselves with strong drink taken from their father's cellars. "Whenever and wherever a people substitute the worship of gold for that of God and make indulgence of animal lusts its ruling passions, its decadence has set in and its day of ruin is not far distant. "Divorces have increased at such an alarming rate," says Dr. Krauskopf, "as to excite wonder whether marriage will not eventually be discarded." Then he added: "Samson, the one-time mighty giant of Israel, whom sensuousness robbed of his strength and eyesight and who was made a prisoner, a chained grinder in a mill and a sport of his enemies, stands before me as the perforation of the mighty giant, the United States. "As he refused to listen to the wise counsel of the high priest, and to curb his passions and to continue true to God and His people, and became a prey to the sensuous lure of Dellah, so are ever increasing numbers of our people turning a deaf ear to entreaties of priest, pastor and rabbi, spurning the teachings and warnings of God and following the seductive strains of every form of moral deprivation. "In their embrace, like Samson, we will be shorn of our strength, robbed of our vision, cast into chains of our own forging, made a slave and sport of enemies. Repentance will come, and lament will come, but repentance and lament will come too late." FORGE BILLS OF LADING. Greeks Collect $225,000 By Raising 2 Bases to 2,200. NEW YORK—Indicted recently by a federal grand jury in New York for forging and raising bills of lading, four merchants have been arrested. Credit was first established through several banks in Greece with various banks in this country. Actual shipments of two bags of coffee or rice were made to Greece, and when bills of lading were received from the steamship lines duly signed the accused men changed them from 2 bags to 2,200 bags of fine granulated sugar and insured the shipments for $46,000 each. They presented their bills of lading and insurance receipts and invoices covering 2,200 bags of sugar to the several banks in Greece and collected approximately $225,000. REVOLVING DOOR PUZZLE. It Threatens To Disrupt Polite Society at the National Capital. WASHINGTON, D. C.—Washington society is in the throes of a controversy regarding a matter of etiquette that threatens to make many old-time friends adopt the stony stare when they meet and even disrupt family circles. The big problem is also reported as rapidly spreading throughout the country and causing all sorts of revolutions. Is it proper for a gentleman to precede a lady friend through a revolving door so that he can push it for her, or should he observe all the old rules of etiquette and let the lady go first, to do her own pushing? Such is the problem which is now epidemic and which has even reached the ranks of the messenger boys here. Many suggestions have been made, including one that both parties go through the door to-gether. This seems to be acceptable to the young bloods of the town, but it doesn't take into consideration that some persons are fat and that mothers-in-law frequently happen to be along with son-in-law. But, whatever the solution, a number of specialists who have to do with the correcting of troubles cropping up in human thinking apparatus, are in favor of letting the controversy grow. They opine that it is giving food for thought and therefore a little exercise to brains that never had that kind of nourishment before. RELIGIOUS LIBERTY. Religious Belief Does Not Prejudice Admission of Allens to U. S. WASHINGTON, D. C.—That the United States was founded upon the principles of both civil and religious liberty was emphasized when G. H. Biddle, secretary of the International Libe 'Studente' Association attempted to cross the Canadian border to attend a convention of his organization in this country. He appealed to the department of justice against the action of immigration authorities in barring his entrance on account of religious belief. The department ruled that it was right for every man to worship God according to the dictates of his own conscience, or not to worship God at all if he so desired, and that the mere fact of membership in an organization should not prejudice the right of aliens to admission to the United States. KISS COSTS $3.00. Youth Thinks Prima Donna's Invitation Was Bona Fide. NEW YORK—The next time you go to the theatre, if a pretty show girl sings "Come to my arms and kiss me," just keep your seat. Charles Solcher, 19 years old, thinking the offer bona fide, jumped over the footlights in a Nw York theatre, kissing the leading lady. When brought to court he heard the same song by the same appeal; the judge had arranged this special performance for the benefit of the court. After the song was finished, he fined the young man $3 for his indiscretion. Of course if the men should ever get their rights, the law would then protect them against the allurements of the professional "vamps." SEE QUEEN'S GHOST. Shadow of Unfortunate Marie Antoin- nette Walks About Vaccines Park. PARIS.—For the first time since 1911, when France was threatened with war, reports have come of the appearance of the ghost of the unfortunate queen Marie Antolomee in the park of Versailles. Many villagers say they have met the veiled lady in black, dressed in the costume of her time, on lonely walks, after nightfall, and a party of tourists claim to have distinctly seen her under some ancient trees of the park. Some of the natives have declared that when they attempted to approach Marie's famous little dairy farm they felt invisible hands pushing them away. France, we must remember, is still "wet." Gave Life For Paint Brush. NEW YORK—Edward Plerson, of Pompton Lakes, N. J., a workman engaged in painting the iron work of the Gregory avenue "bridge linking Passaic and Wallington, N. J., gave his life in an attempt to save a paint brush. The brush slipped from his fingers into the Passaic river and he jumped after it. He recovered it and began to swim for shore, but sank with a cry while still in midstream. An hour later his body was recovered by Passaic police. Youths 75 Per Cent. of Drug Addicts. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.—More than 75 per cent. of the drug addicts in the United States are boys and girls approximating 16 years of age, Albert Weber, of New York, chairman of the committee on narcotic drugs and crime of the American Institute of Criminal Law and Criminology, declared in his report. Effective relief, he states, is through congressional legislation. DARWIN ERRED. Forgot to Include Luck in Survival Theory—New York Has Proof. NEW YORK—Charles Darwin, when he said the struggle for existence results in the survival of the sittest, forgot one essential element—luck. Proof of this was supplied by an infant 'member of New York's East Side tenement dwellers. When Mrs. Joseph Vecchio, the infant's mother, saw her son fall from a four-story fire escape she ran out panic-streken, expecting to see him crushed to death Instead, however, she found her child happily gurgling in a cushioned baby carriage in which he had landed, unharmed. BROWNSVILLE, Texas —Approximately 160 acres of Mexican territory is now on the American side of the Rio Grande as a result of the river changing its course during its recent flood stage. The area, which is in the lowlands 10 miles west of Brownsville, will, according to an agreement between the United Statee and Mexico, remain under Mexican jurisdiction. It is not announced whether it will be "wet" or "dry" in the spiritual sense. Buxy Bee Causes Hayes CAMBRIDGE, Md.-When Rev. J. B. Peters began fighting a bee which had invaded the automobile he was driving he ran into an electric light pole, knocking it down and cutting off the supply of current to Cambridge, Md. YOUTHFUL 'MOVIE QUEEN.' Family Savings Dwindle After Taxi Bills Are Paid. CHICAGO—Annuncita Ceasar, 13 years old, became tired of a humdum existence in the steel town of Gary, Ind., so she took the family savings of $240 and started on her way to Los Angeles to become a moving picture actress. She made her way as far as Meirose Park in a limousine. She was driven to the only hotel of the town, where she registered as "Elinore Phillips, picture picture actress." The hotel clerk notified the chief of police of the arrival of the "actress" and after a third degree quiz the girl admitted that she had fled from home. The girl had 35 cents left out of her $240 and the police have started an inquiry. She admits riding about Chicago in taxcabs. TO MAKE NEW FUEL DISTILLATE Former Waste Material to be Refined and Turned into Usable Product. $50,000 YEARLY SAVING Vinegar-Making More Profitable Than Fuel Manufacture—Formerly Cost Money to Have the Waste Material Carted Away. HONOLULU, Hawaii—A new industrial distillate plant, where denatured alcohol for motor fuel purposes will be manufactured in large quantities from pineapple waste, has been opened here by a California packing corporation. It was three months ago that it was decided finally to build the plant, and now everything is in place and ready to operate on a full-size scale. A test of the outfit was given recently and about 500 gallons of alcohol were produced, testing 94 per cent. C. S. Ash, chemical engineer of the corporations built the plant. He came to the islands in 1412 and is now in charge of the chemical research department. The value of the plant lies in the fact that it is not only turning into usable products a former waste material, but it is actually saving the expenditure of dollars and cents to this waste material hauled away. The pineapple waste, composed in the main of scales, core and lost liquids, is refined and turned into a profitable output where it formerly cost the corporation about $3.50 a ton to have the waste hauled away and placed on the pineapple fields. The coroporation's cannery uses between five and six million pounds of sugar during a season. Now by using the waste about 2,000.6 pounds can be recovered. In addition there is enough calcium citrate extracted after the sugar has been removed to more than pay for the operation of the plant. The building and equipment cost approximately $50,000 and the corporation expects to recover this outlay within the next year. J. P. Foster, of Pala, island of Manu, holds the patent on the motor fuel process, but there is not as much profit in making the fuel oil as in vinegar manufacture. About 20,000 gallons of motor fuel will be manufactured for the purpose of the plant and the rest used in vinegar making. The California plants of the corporation use a million and a half gallons of vinegar a year. One gallon of alcohol will produce seven gallons of 20-cent vinegar, while it would produce but one gallon of denatured fuel oil selling at 25 cents a gallon. The fuel oil, however, gives more power than most fuel products. Since it leaves no carbon deposits, it is remarkably clean. For every 2,000 pounds of fruit that go into the cannery, 1,200 pounds are canned; 450 pounds represent juice which in turn is transformed into 40 pounds of sugar and four pounds of citric acid, and the remainder thrown away; 350 pounds is waste matter which is thrown into the six large vats of 25,000 pounds. From this waste matter the distillers extract two gallons of alcohol and one and three-quarter pounds of citric acid. When waste is thrown into the six fermentation vats in the distillery, the mash is covered with water and allowed to ferment. After it has reached a stage of heavy fermentation, the liquid is drained off and nothing but the fiber of the pineapple remains. The liquid finally goes to the big still which can handle 36,000 gallons of liquid mash a day. Here the alcohol is refined and then run to the denaturing tank. The process of denaturing means that the pure alcohol is mixed with five per cent. sulphuric acid, two per cent. kerosene and one per cent. pyridine. To make the motor fuel this is further mixed in a preparation of 60 per cent. denatured alcohol and 40 per cent. sulphuric acid. After the liquid leaves the denaturing tank it is run into other tanks. The process of denaturing requires that ether be bought to start operations, but after the plant gets into operation, the denatured alcohol is used to make ether and ether used to make denatured alcohol. Before the liquid mash is sent to the still it is run into settling tanks and most of the impurities are removed. Here the mash is stirred in a big tank, lime added and, after filtering, a cake of calcium citrate containing 70 per cent, pure citric acid is obtained. Of course, the business is kept in operation only about 100 days each year, but it can be kept up throughout the year if molasses can be purchased here cheap enough after the close of the pineapple season. BOY FIRES TOWN. Hired By Ice Cream Dealer Who Scheduled to Collect Insurance. RICHMOND, Va. A dastardly act has just been unearthed at Chincoeague, Va., which village not long ago lost half of its business digrict by fire. An ice cream dealer conspired with a boy of 15 years to set fire to his store on which he held $700 insurance, and which he had tried to sell without success. Upon the promise of $10 for the deed, the boy poured oil over the floors and applied a match to some saturated rags. Meanwhile L. M. Boughter, the owner, stopped at a drug store and purchased medicine saying he was ill. He went to bed, where he stayed during the fire, which did considerable damage before it was extinguished. Boughter and the boy are held on charges of incendiarism. THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, OHIO, JANUARY 21, 1922 Ohio's Anti-Lynching Law Leads the Country in Legislation Against The Mob and Lynch-Murder—The Work of a Member of The Race Also Ohio's Civil Rights Law. Section 2278. "Mob" and "lynching", defined. 2279. "Serious injury" defined. 2280. Damages in case of assault. 2281. Damages in case of lynching. 2282. Damages recoverable by legal representative of victim of lynching. 2283. Person suffering, death or injury by mob trying to lynch another. 2284. Limitations of action. 2285. Order to include recovery and costs in tax levy. 2286. Guardian's custody, etc., fees. 2287. County's right of action against member of mob. 2288. County's right of action against another county. 2289. Non-relief from prosecution. 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 livelihood 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 county 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 the family of the person, for the minimum of such person so lynched, if any survive him, until such children such unlawful killing. Such sum shall be applied to the maintenance of 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, a sum not to distribute 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 8.) Section 6284. Action for the recoveries provided for in this chapter must be commenced, within two years from the date of such lynchings, in any court having original jurisdiction of an action or damages for misdemeanor (93 v 162 7.) Section 6285. An order to the commissioners of a county, against which such recovery has 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 representatives of a person killed or seriously injured by a mob from any of one 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 disurse such mob. (93 v 163 11.) Section 6289. This chapter shall Section 6289. This chapter shall 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. 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 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 other place of public accommodation and amusement, denies to a citizen, except for reasons applicable alike 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 and the 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, but expect it to do for them what they should and must do for themselves, under it, in the courts. Judge Grant's Opinion of the Law. Misled by the foolishly manufactured outcry for the passage of the Beaty bill, a few years ago, the Akron Beacon Journal published an editorial to which the editor of The Gazette replied, calling its attention to the fact that the Ohio Civil Rights law was good law and did not need amending. The following letter from Judge Grant, former presiding judge of the Court of Appeals of the Eighth District of Ohio, is self explanatory: Akron, O., April 25, 1919. My Dear Sir: Observing your letter in the Beacon-Journal, of this city, I venture to send you, under a separate cover, the Ohio Law Reporter of Feb. 3, last, containing the opinion of the Court of Appeals in the Puritan Lunch Co. vs. Leonard H. Forman, decided in Akron, last fall, in which a judgment for ($500 dollars was sustained. If the Beacon-Journal has what was going on in its own town, there would have been occasion for criticism, editorially. THE LAW OF OHIO IS UNDER NO REPROACH, nor our courts and juries, in administering it. Not a word was said by the Beacon-Journal when the Forman case was reviewed. Very truly yours, IS IT OF ANY USE TO CONTEN TEND, FOR RIGHTS? Colored Americans are the only race, responsible members of which are in favor of submitting to discrimination on the claim that their race "always will be discriminated against." The Jews are still contending, after over 1900 years of universal discrimination, and are winning even social rights today. The Irish at home have contended for 700 years and are winning because they will die rather than submit. The race that says it's no use to resist does so and the world then will say, "Negroes are not worthy of equal rights; they are by nature without self-respect and have no 'guts.'" The world respects only those who resent and resist prescriptions for race. Let us be worthy of the abolitionists, worthy of our own fathers who have died in every war to vindicate the title of their race to equal liberty, and forever resist denial of rights to all people, long race discrimination may continue. To submit is to deserve contempt. — Boston (Mass.) Guardian. ZETTE Afte subscribe Afte GALL STONES RECIPE FREE Most Stubborn Cases of GALL STONES quickly relieved F. MEINERS REMEDY CO., Dept. 6 Hales Corners, WI. ious! Appetizing FT CHEESE INS IN LOAVES BASK YOUR GROCER Tired Feet message gently with soothing A HEALING CREAM Mentholatum Cools, rests and refreshes Delicious! Appetizing KRAFT CHEESE IN TINS IN LOAVES ASK YOUR GROCER May Gilbert Praises EXELENTO QUININE POMADE silky hair that can be easily dressed, made happy thousands of women who had it. It will do the same for you. If your eless or if you have dandruff and itch-box of EXELENTO QUININE POMADE. 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