The Gazette
Saturday, July 29, 1922
Cleveland, Ohio
Page text (machine-generated)
CONTEMPTIBLE CAMPAIGN LIES!
THIRTY-NINTH YEAR
CONT
Meals at all Hours.
D. O. K. RE
C. H. BRO
3817 SCOVILL AVE.
TY-NINTH YEAR No. 42
ONTEM
at all Hours. Tables for Ladies and Gents
D. O. K. RESTAURANT
C. H. BROWN, Manager
7 SCOVILL AVE. CLEVELAND, OHIO
THIRTY-NINTH YEAR No. 42
Meals at all Hours. Tables for Ladies and Gents D. O. K. RESTAURANT C. H. BROWN, Manager 3817 SCOVILL AVE. CLEVELAND, OHIO
"Say It With Music!"
Glenada
Note the Note
Buy Your Columbia Records and Grafanolas Here.
We take your old records in trade.
We treat you courteously.
ART MUSIC SHOPPE
E. 55TH ST. NEAR CENTRAL AVE.
an Early Visit to Dr. H. V. Bishop
Solid Gold Teeth, Gold Crowns,
(22 Kt.) and Bridge Work,
guaranteed $5.00
Filling $1.00 up
Set of Teeth $10.00 up
Opposed to Pain.
us extract that old aching tooth. Once you know
how easy we can remove it, you will send
all your friends to us.
DR. H. V. BISHOP
W. COR. E. 22ND ST. and WOODLAND AVE.
VOTE FOR
Edward S. Black
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR
STATE SENATOR
favor a minimum wage for women, an old
pension, light wine and beer, increase
beds under workmen's compensation, opposed
the Ku Klux Klan. Your vote is needed and
restly solicited.
Vote for
FRANK G.
CARPENTER
Republican Candidate
For
PROSECUTING ATTORNEY
Primaries
August 8, 1922
ART MUSEUM
2290 E. 55TH ST.
Pay an Early Visit
Solid C
(22
guard
Filling
Set of
Let us extract that old ach
how easy we can rem
all your fri
DR. H. V
S. W. COR. E. 22ND ST.
VOTE
Edward S
REPUBLICAN C
STATE S
I favor a minimum w
age pension, light win
awards under workmen's
to the Ku Klux Klan. Y
earnestly solicited.
Vote
Republican
ProSECUTING
Prima
August 8
ART MUSIC SHOPPE
2290 E. 55TH ST. NEAR CENTRAL AVE.
Pay an Early Visit to Dr. H. V. Bishop
Solid Gold Teeth, Gold Crowns,
(22 Kt.) and Bridge Work,
guaranteed $5.00
Filling $1.00 up
Set of Teeth $10.00 up
Opposed to Pain.
Let us extract that old aching tooth. Once you know
how easy we can remove it, you will send
all your friends to us.
DR. H. V. BISHOP
S. W. COR. E. 22ND ST. and WOODLAND AVE.
VOTE FOR
Edward S. Black REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR STATE SENATOR
I favor a minimum wage for women, an old age pension, light wine and beer, increase awards under workmen's compensation, opposed to the Ku Klux Klan. Your vote is needed and earnestly solicited.
Vote for
FRANK G.
CARPENTER
Republican Candidate
For
PROSECUTING ATTORNEY
Primaries
August 8, 1922
Announcement
We wish to advise our patrons that THE CATEY has positively no connection proposed "Emancipation Park under the auspices of Association."
This organization looks attempt to mislead the pu
we wish to advise our many friends and
mens that THE CATERERS ASSOCIATION
positively no connection whatever with the
used "Emancipation Celebration" at Luna
under the auspices of "A Service Catering
iation."
its organization looks with disfavor on this
pt to mislead the public.
The
We wish to advise our many friends and patrons that THE CATERERS ASSOCIATION has positively no connection whatever with the proposed "Emancipation Celebration" at Luna Park under the auspices of "A Service Catering Association."
This organization looks with disfavor on this attempt to mislead the public.
THE GAZETTE
ESTABLISHED AUGUST 25.1883 And Issued Every Week on Time Since
CLEVELAND, OHIO, SATURDAY, JULY 29, 1922
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.
CADIZ.—Mrs. Margaret West has recovered from her illness of a few weeks ago.—L. L. Strother of Canton is visiting his daughter, Mrs. Bertha Redman.—J. P. Lucas and Miss Josephine Lucas visited in Cleveland, Sunday.—Three companies of the O. N. G. are encamped at Chautauquan park, on account of the disorders in the coal fields of eastern Ohio.—A. J. Brooks of Unity Lodge, K. P. and Mrs. Stella Bell of the Court of Calanthe are attending the grand lodge at Ubana.—Rev. A. L. Holland is holding revival meetings at Flushing.
EAST YOUNGSTOWN.—A rally for our candidate for the Republican nomination for Governor, the Hon. Harry Clay Smith, will be held by the Ministerial Alliance at Shiloh Baptist church; Rev. P. A. Herold, pastor. H. L. Parrish has opened a Harry-Clay Smith for Governor Club headquarters at 3578 Wilson Ave. All information free. Our Republican league has gone on record and is actively supporting Mr. Smith. It meets, every Tuesday evening.—W. L. Washington has received his patent for an emergency auto gas tank.—Give your order for The Gazette to the local representative at once, and get a copy every week. Many have already done so.
WILMINGTON.—Fannie L. Jordan, and Hester Kenney, Parker Pacy, Louis Davis, Joe Hurst and Wm. Glenn of Cincinnati and Mr. Angus Ridden of Wilberforce are visiting Miss Lucille Frazier.—Mr. Louis Cole of Dayton is visiting his sister, Mrs. Martin Crockett and Mrs. Margaret Davis.—Mrs. Maude Birk and son, Ross, of Chicago are here visiting relatives stopping with Miss Hattie Crockett.—M. G. Duggar was delegate to the state S. S. convention at Columbus. Miss Maureine is there visiting.—Miss Esther Chapman dined with Mrs. Ed. Young, Sunday.—Mrs. Atchison and daughter, Thela, dined with Mr. and Mrs. Viola Johns, Sunday.—Gladys Tolliver and Helen Keller, Mr. and Mrs. Wallace and Follen motored to the Hillsboro fair, last Thursday. Miss Tolliver spent Sunday evening with Bouah Garrett.—Mrs. Francis Hart's funeral was preached at the A. M. E. church, last Thursday, by Rev. W. L. Tolliver, assisted by Rev. John Coleman. A large attendance.—Services at the Baptist church, Sunday, were well attended. The B. Y. P. U. program was very good. Miss Amanda Winslow in charge.
HILLSBORO.—Mr. and Mrs. Squire Willem and daughter have returned to Chillicothe.—Arabelle and Leonna' Williams of Sardinia were
CASTIGATÉS TOM FLEMING!
And Asks John P. Green a Question
—That Alleged Luna Park
"Emancipation Celebration"
an Insult and Outrage
A Political Meeting.
Editor Gazette, 'My dear Mr Smith':—The Cleveland Association of Colored Men, an organization of progressive citizens, founded and chartered in 1909 to promote the various interests of the Negro found it impossible to hold its annual picnic at Luna Park because of the unbearable conditions imposed upon them by the terms of their contract. This contract curtailled the activities of the picnicers and gave them right to enjoy only a few of the many attractions of the grounds. For this reason, the C. A. of C. M. withdrew from Luna Park and called into conference many of the leading civic and fraternal organizations and put its case squarely before them, with the result that no one of the race has attempted to hold a picnic at Luna Park for the past four years. Now the "Service Catering Association," trading on a name made popular in our city by their (The Caterers' Association) many sided activities has flooded the East End with bills announcing an "emancipation celebration" to be held at Luna Park, Aug. I. 22, Tuesday. It is said that Thos. W. Fleming, a man once popular in the C. A. of C. M., a man that through force of conditions has been our only race man in City Council, a man that poses as a leader, a man that should be behind all such movements as the one fostered by the C. A. of C. M., namely to take this picnic away from Luna Park.
guesses of Morrill Green, last week. Rev. J. J. Burr preached at Gist St. element, Sunday, and was guest-told by Roy. Harvey Johnson — Mr. and Mrs. Harley Hill and family, near Green field, attended the fair. Thursday Mr. John Williams, Sr. died. Sunday, after a lingering illness, Mrs. T. H. Dunn of E. Monroe, attended the fair, Friday, and was the guests of Mrs. J. Burr — Mr. and Mrs. Charles Williams of Fairfax were guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Graagton, Thursday — Mrs. S. H. Williams has returned from a visit in Lincoln hall — Mrs. Helen Powell is visiting Dayton. Henry Woods is quite ill — Miss Gladys Tolliver of Wilmington was the guestest, last week of Mrs. Gertrude Christy. She returned home, Saturday — Ellen Cumberland and Nancy Hudson of Sardinia visited Mr. and Mrs. John Hudson, last week — Mr. and Mrs. Wallace, Miss Helen Keller, Mrs. Folorin, Frank Chapman, Bernice Steward, Wilford Wilson, Kenneth Tolliver, Carl Chapman of Wilmington, Mr. David Greene and daughter, Viola, Miss Alpha Steward of Leesburg attended the fair, last week — Mrs. Arnnett Tolliver and daughter of Palm-sville are visiting her cousin, Mrs. Viola Thomas — Mrs. Coubs, son and wife of Higginsport and and Mrs. William Jackson of Cincinnati and son were guests of the former's sister, Mrs. Harvey Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Holland and son, Floyd, motorized to Chillouthe, Sappad, to visit relatives. Their son, Lorenzo, returned with them, after a week's visit — Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Bullard's guests were Miss White and Mrs. Bullard, nieces, from Georgetown, Mrs. Myrtle Taylor and children of Indianapolis are visiting Mrs. Jake Evans — Mrs. James Clark and children returned, Monday, from a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bruce. Full account of the Harry Clay Smith meeting, this Friday evening, at New Hope Baptist church, in our letter, next week.
CORRESPONDENTS must mail all letters for publication at their math postoffice sufficiently early on Monday (or Sunday) of each week to have them reach The Gazette office on Tuesday morning, and always write also, their names and that of their city or town on the outside of the wrapper about returned copies. Unless this latter is done, proper credit cannot be given you. Lists of names, wedding presents, etc., obituary notices, inquiries for relatives and advertisements of all kinds, including items announcing entertainments to be held in the near future, must be paid for in advance at the rate of 25 cents a line, six words to a line. Our rates for display advertisements will be sent on application.
septis orders from the big political boss and tramples in the dust the wishes and feelings of 35,000 Negroes in Cleveland alone, and at tempts by his presence on the program, to make the celebration a success. Should a man of this stripe be our spokesman and so-called leader? Should we follow him in his attempt to destroy the "race's self-respect"? It is said Mr. Fleming has fed from the political trough for some 10 years or more and the feed has made him fat in body and pocket. And now it is time for him to follow the path of a former well-known leader who remarked: "Get on, get honor and then get honest self-respect and race respect." Tom informed me that I was a radical and thin-skinned because I object to going to a park where the management tells me, "No, you can't use that part of the park; it is for whites only." And Tom furthermore stated that he was getting along very fine by assuming the attitude (bowing to prejudice and color-lines instead of fighting them) that he does. Of the Hon. John P. Green, we ask, in all fairness: "How can you afford to be led and hood-tied by such bunk as the alleged celebration" at Luna Park? Elroy Willis, Jack Thompson and Wilbert Hayes do not "draw enough water." In my mind, to induce the foxy Gen. Zimmerman to sign a contract for a picnic date at Luna Park. They are only the goats in a political frame-up for Carmi A. Thompson, a candidate for the Republican gubernatorial nomination. It is to be hoped that the race people will read this and see the wisdom of staying at home, Tuesday, Aug. 1, 1928. Dwight R. Williams.
Dight R. W.
Aaa. Sec. The C. A. of C. 1
PROF. NEVAL H. THOMAS
WASHINGTON, D. C. Senator William E. Borah addressed a large mass meeting of our people at the A M E. Zion church in South Washington on "The Unconstitutionality of the Dirt Anti-Lynching bill." recently he expressed his surprise at being asked to address a colored audience since the entire race knows of his opposition to the measure that is so near the Negro heart. He congratulated the race on its judicial attitude in wanting to hear all sides of the question. He defended his position with a long array of judicial precedents, and said that he would violate his own as a Senator if he voted for a bill which he believed to be unconstitutional. He said that one sovereignty could not impose a fine upon another, and that state pride would resist every effort to impose such penalty by the national government, thus leaving the Negro as defenseless as he is now.
Prof. Neval H. Thomas replied from the floor to many of the Senator's arguments. He said: "No man living knows whether the Dyer bill is constitutional or not. The distinguished Senator is likewise distinguished as a lawyer, but over and against his learned opinion is the learned opinion of Moorfield Storey, than whom there is no greater lawyer in the world, and that of the U. S. Attorney General. The Supreme Court, in all probability, will divide on it, as it does in so many of the great questions it is called upon to decide. One learned member of this great tribunal once said, 'The only reason we are right is because we get the last guess.' The laws are voluminous and indefinite. 'There is no fixed judicial science,' as the Nation puts it. Often a most vital question is decided by a five-four vote, five learned judges saying the law is one thing and four equally learned judges saying it is another."
A WHITE FRIEND.
ON THE HONOR ROLL
Washington, D.C., July 24, '22
Hon. Harry Clay Smith,
Editor Gazette, Cleveland, O.
My dear Mr. Smith:—I beg to enroll as a dollar contributor to your campaign, fund, for Governor of Ohio. I wish that all of those who read The Gazette, who appreciate you for your manly qualities and leadership as I do would take interest in the fight you are so splendidly making. May I express the hope that you will not, in the least, be disconnected because of campaign attacks or diverted, for a moment, from your campaign work by reason of the mud-throwing of persons whose design is to overcome your good works. Sam Jones, the evangelist said: "A fire does not bark at a dead horse. It is a live horse going down the big road and making the fly, at every jump, that causes every cur and flee to run out of the yard and yelp." General Clarkson, when my enemies in the south were busy attacking me, wrote me: "Go on with your work, do not stop to throw rocks at every dog that barks at you." I sincerely hope you get the support of the people of Ohio. I hope that your friends out of Ohio will have deep interest in your fight and back you up in it.
CAN BE ELECTED!
Our choice for Governor is the Hon. Harry Clay Smith, of Cleveland. 1st, because he is a Republican; 2nd, because he is competent to fill the position; 3rd, because he is a member of the Negro race. A very prominent colored citizen asked us if Harry Clay Smith was a Negro. He said, if he was, why vote for him knowing that it would be impossible to elect him Governor of the state. Well, we said that it was about time the Negroes were beginning to imitate the white man's virtues as well as his vices. They vote for their own regardless of political affiliations, and thereby make it possible for them to be elected. We must learn to do the same.—Warren A. M. E. Church Bulletin. Toledo O. Rev P. A. Nichols, editor
SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS
Aroused as Never Before Our Peoples' Slogan Every where is "We Will Win That Nomination" Wonderful Meetings
June 21, 2021
Luke assailed by old time latters within a work has been the most fortune of the Hamilton County Republican organization, the revolt of the liberals which began two days ago on the announcement of R. K Hynicka that he favored the same candidate for Governor (Carmi A Thompson) that is backed by the Anti-Saloon League, being followed, last night, by a grilling fire from the Negro voters at a meeting in Metropolitan Baptist church, at which the principal speaker was the Hon. Harry Clay Smith of Cleveland, candidate for the Republican gubernatorial nomination. Countless have been the battles won here by the Hynicka forces in large part because of the supporting column of the faithful "Black Brigade," as the solid phalanx of Negro voters in Cincinnati long has been called in admiration by Republican politicians. Last night, Negro leader after leader arose and in wrathful eloquence poured forth his scorn of and defiance to the Hynicka organization.
"For 45 years the colored people of Hamilton county have been accorded a place on the county ticket (member legislature), but this year you will look in vain on the ballot for the name of, a colored man of woman!" exclaimed Rev. J. Franklin Walker, pastor of the church. We have never desired these nominations because of the job. What we valued in them was the recognition accorded our race. This year it has been denied us. We resent this slight, and what is more we will make our resentment felt in the election."
Similar speeches were, made by Wm. Ware, Dr. E. Duval Colley and J. M. Tadlock. It was asserted by Mr. Tadlock that an organization had been perfected by local Negroes in 26 wards and five townships of this (Hamilton) county.
Hon. Harry Clay Smith is editor of The Gazette, a weekly newspaper published by him for forty years, at Cleveland. He declared, last night, that his campaign was not prompted by any white politician but by his own people solely. He said when he entered the primary, two years ago, for Secretary of State it was mainly to show all the proportion of the Negro vote in Ohio. He was severe in criticism of Secretary of State Harvey C. Smith. Editor Smith told of the contemptible lying reports current that he hired only white help in his newspaper office, that his "wife or woman was white," etc., being circulated by paid Thompson political hirelings, but held Carmi A. Thompson personally blameless, saying "Thompson is an honorable man." The meeting, last night, was held under the joint auspices of the Universal Improvement Association and the Hamilton County Negro Republican League, Mr. Smith spoke on "The Lilly White- Republican party of Ohio," and told the great audience, for the church was packed to the doors and many were unable to get in, that if a little less than half of the colored vote of Ohio is cast for him on Aug. 8, "22, he would win because there were so many (8) white candidates to cut up the rest of the Republican vote of the state. The great audience was extremely enthusiastic but when Mr. Smith made that statement the cheering could be heard for two blocks. There were scores of cries "We'll stand by you, we'll stand by you!" He talked for more than an hour and not a person left his or her seat. It was certainly a wonderful meeting.
ANOTHER GREAT MEETING.
ELYRIA. O—Last Friday evening, the park in the heart of this city was well filled with an enthusiastic audience that was about three-fourths white (men and women) to hear the Hon. Harry Clay Smith of Cleveland, our candidate for the Republican nomination for Governor, and they certainly heard SOME speech. He was neatly introduced by Kev Hayen, one of our oldest and most highly respected residents. For nearly one hour Mr. Smith discussed the issues of the campaign in such a way as to literally annotated his many white hawkers who were certainly most generous with their appliance as of course
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LE COPY FIVE CENTS
LIES!
NTHUSIASTIC!
Well As Northern Ohio
Our Peoples' Slogan Every
Win That Nomination"—
Fuil Meetings
were those of our people in the splendid audience. All of the latter were so proud of him. He has left a wonderfully good impression here and many white as well as all of our people say they will vote for him on Aug. 5, 1922, because they are thoroughly satisfied as to his ability to fill the position and because of the excellent record he made when a member of the Ohio Legislature, for six years. The contemptible lies which low-down Cleveland Negroes, who are supporting Carm. A. Thompson, started in the state recently, have reached here, but, since we know Harry Clay Smith, are being ignored as they should be everywhere because they are The Purist and simple, and concocted for the purpose of use as a "smoke screen" to cover certain Negroes' failure to support our own candidate and to enable them to get money from white candidates who will not know them and all the rest of us after election as has been the custom and rule for lo, these many, many years. This, also, Mr. Smith made clear in his excellent speech. We must stand together in this fight—for the good of those of the race in Ohio. Honest white people both men and women, are telling our people this daily, through Ohio. The Women's Civic League (white) have just wired Mr. Smith asking him to come back here. Saturday evening, and speak again, but for them.
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Thompson
410 Elm St., entertained Robert W.
Pulley, our candidate for sheriff, and
Mr. Edw. Copes of Lorain at a deliciou
six o'clock dinner, Friday
evening, in honor of Mr. Smith after
Mr. Copes had taken Mr. Smith and
Mr. Pulley for a delightful drive
thruout Elyria in his beautiful
new Buick "sport" roadster (maroon) worth nearly $2,000. Elyria, Lorain and Oherlin windows are full of Mr. Smith's pictures and we are working day and night that success may crown this race fight.
Mr. Smith will speak in southern Ohio on Friday, Saturday and Monday evenings. Sunday, he expects to rest, either in Columbus at the Letchford house or at home in Cleveland.
VOTE FOR HARRY CLAY SMITH.
Ohio owes it to herself and Harry Clay Smith to give him a fine vote in the primary contest being waged for the governorship. Mr. Smith's legislature has the state's titles him. This consideration. This running for the governorship of Ohio by Harry Clay Smith is epoch making. It has been considered the proper thing for every race to vote for white men when they aspired for office. There has been a feeling that colored men were called upon to vote for others and not for themselves. Mr. Smith believes that any American citizen has the right to aspire to office so long as his ability and legislative experience warrant it. White men have as much right to vote for Harry Clay Smith, if they are Republicans, as colored Republicans have. The one thing that should determine the casting of their franchise is, does this man or that represent the best interest of the Republican party and will he if chosen make the best possible governor? For a white man to cut Harry Clay Smith because he is an honorable colored man, is to convict this renders him a bad citizen. As colored men have voted white men into office, they should see to it that they (the whites) give colored men a chance also, for by doing they are helping to boost the fortunes of the party and the honest fighter for the best things that can come to Ohio. In other states there are colored men running for office and in many instances they represent the best of the race. In others they represent that element which is a menace to all races. Harry Clay Smith is running as a Republican, not to weaken his party to strengthen it. In other places there are those who are bought to run independently to weaken their party and, by indirection, aid Democratic aspirants. These men have written their own opinions, doomed and damned. Let colored men everywhere aspire for any office within the gift of the nation that they can acceptably all but not the ignorance who is too ignorant to know he is ignorant. Keep up infamy upon himself and the race. Remember, an uneducated man can be bought by more than one party, should not be considered by intelligent voters. Note for Harry Clay Smith!
(Rev.) Wm. A. Hyrd.
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THE GAZETTE
(Bell "Phone: Cherry 1269)
lackstone Building, Cleveland, O.
Member Ohio Legislature: 1894 to
1896; 1896 to 1898; 1900 to 1902
THE GAZETTE Is the oldestaand
has te larzent ons fide circulation
thyt of any newspaj in the
Hee MS Recoshmericensy publish
‘ed in the state of Ohio, and compar
Hoon with any will immediately or
talc ts rank an ane of the NEWS
1FST AND BEST in the country.
10,000,000 Afro-Americans.
950,000 in Ohio.
35,000 in Cleveland.
JULY 29, 1922
To date, we have simply been
amazed at the enthuslastle response
to our candidacy upon the part, of
the masses of our people wherever
we have gone in the state.
r Ail
When broad-minded ‘and honest
white Republicans, some leaders, tell
our people “to their teeth’ that they
are not worthy of consideration If
they do not support their own can-
didate for Governor what is left for
the W. M.N, and their kind? .. .-
4 arte
‘Tlie W. M. N. in Ohio politics, has
already” begun to “take to the
woods.” ‘The sentiment among our
people of the state for their candidate
for the Republican nomination for
Governor is too strong to be with-
aeand:.- Geet?
Congressman Knight's statement,
in his speech at Triedstone Baptist
ehuréh, this city, a week ago last
Sunday, that he is “a native of and
from Georgia and PROUD OF 11,"
caused an exodus from the .chureb
‘and has made considerable trouble
for those who permytted tim to
speak in the church, especially on
Sunday morning and at the service
hour, ‘Knight !* a candidate, too.
t —llili— |
‘The Cleveland Civic League Fe-
port on the activities of this city’s
edtnellmen for the period from Jkn.
1 to July 1, ‘22, made public a few
days ago, after showing Cleveland's
Negro couneliman in anything byt a
favorable light concludes Its! stort
‘and anything but complimentary
reference to his thus, “SPE,
SELDOM"! ‘The report Is a eras
one, we regret to say. Councilman
‘Tom Fleming should and undoubted-
ly will go just as soon as the people
ean get a chance to send him back
into private life where he belongs.
ae
THE OUTLOOK. '
‘The editor of The Gazette started
his second speaking tour of southern
Ohio, in this campaign, last evening
(Priday) at Hillsboro where he ad-
dressed a mass meeting in’ New
Hope Baptist church; Rev. J. J.
Burr, pastor. He will speak in and
visit a number of cities and towns
in that section of the state before
returning to Cleveland on Tuesday
morning. Our prospects of success,
bright two weeks ago, grow more
promising with the passing of each
week. Our good people throughout
Ohio are up and doing and very en
thustastic indeed in the effort to wir
the great and grandest political vic-
tory ever to come to our people in
the history of thts country. “Pu
your shoulder to the wheel, brothe
and sister,” and let us show all tha
the large Afro-American vote. {t
Obio 1s a potent factor that will nc
fonger be Ignored and insulted with
impunity by party leaders or other
without thp reckoning day coming,
and soon, Remember that one-hal
‘of our yote of the state cast for our
candidate for tho Republican nom
nation for Governor on Aug. 8, "22,
will win for us because of the large
feld of white candidates, There ar
wight of them and fgur or five {
not six of them will run very close
together, thus splitting up the whit
yote of the state so ax to make vic
tory absolutely suro for us, IP WE
ONLY VOTE. Let every loral and
self and race respecting member o
the race in Ghio make bimselt ané
herself a committee of one to ve
that our peple vote, Aug. 8, next
Soar. ete ae
“FOOLISH NEGROPS.”
Congreapman Knight of Akron,
‘also © candidate for the Reublican
ominstion tor Governor, recently
told Robert W. Pulley of Oberlin,
a candidate for the Republican nom:
{nation for sheriff of Loratn county,
so Mr. Pulley Informed us, recently,
that
“Colored people would he foolish
not (0 vote for thelr own candi.
dates," montioning particularly Mr.
Pulley and the editor of this paper.
Mr. Knlght ix right in tig atate-
mont and could "Ko furthor."" Those
“foolish” Negros (only a tow, we
are glad to say) who are traveling
about Ohio, under the pay (ox-
Denses, ote.) of certain white can-
Aldates, spreading the venomous
campalens Hox against the writer
that were hatebed in this cliy, last
fall, by the low element of ward 11
of Cleveland who tried in vuln to
plaster ux with the mud and) im
moral filth that they were wallowing
fk Ciwax ever thus), will find that
tholr dirty, contemptible and lan
derous lying uttacks will only act
uy @ boomerang and recoil, harm-
ing most the white candidate, thelr
political master, Whose interests
they’ seok to seeve by thelr miner
able, poisonous froth, This week
we have boon warned by our peo-
ple in different (parts of the state
that there. were three of these
“foolish” and traitorous Negroes
and all three are working for Car-
mi A. Thompson, another candidate
for the Republican nomination for
Governor, We do not want to de-
Meve that he knows to what deptht
these three “foolish’' Negroes are
stooping in an effort to promote his
Interests, but if he does not stop It
WE WILL and will also see to
it that the onus of it all will be
placed right where it will belongs
at his door! As for the three “fool-
{sh Negro men referred to—Seat!
you dirty rattlesnakes!
JACKSON VS. FLEMING.
The editor of Phe Gazette is in-
debted to Alderman R. R. Jackson ot
Chicago for a copy of his ordinance
unanimously passed by the Chicago
Council, June 21, ‘22, which bars all
such organizations as the Ku Klux
Klan, He writes us that there was
not a dissenting yote among the
twenty-two Republican and forty-six
Democratic members of the council
present at that meeting. This is a
wonderful showing, even better than
that made when he passed his other
ordinance, some weeks ago, prevent-
ing discrimination in the moving-
picture shows of Chicago an pro:
hibiting the showing of pictures and
subtitles harmful or insulting, ete.;
to any race or class of citizens, Major
Jackson is a REAL councilman, serv-
ing his second term, Our people of
Cleveland have, for six or more
years, ben represented (?) in the
Joeal City Connell by “Councilman”
Thomas W. Fleming, who has to his
credit absolutely nothing of special
material benefit to the race in this
community and, if memory serves us
correctly, has never even TRIED to
do anything. And Cleveland needs
local legislation, like Alderman Jack-
son's measures referred to In the
foregoing, almost if not quite as
much as Chicago. In plain words,
Tom Fleming's membership in the
Cleveland City Council for six or
more years has been one great big
JOKE, as far as our people are cou-
cerned. That they have suffered this
infliction so long, with only here and
there a word of personal complaint,
is the sixth, seventh or eight wonder
of the world—we are not sure
which.
Ww. M. NUS.
When you find a “Negro” trying
to. “pour cold water" on our Ohic
gubernatorial nomination candidacy
reeall and remember the “Negro”
with “a white man's political ring
in his nose” and possibly some of
that same white man's money im bis
pocket. ‘They, such “Negroes.” and
they are not numerous, thank the
Lord, haye ever been the bane ot
the race. Some times these “Ne-
Rroes” pose as ministers of the Kos
pel, strange to say, They, all, are
traitors to the race. Black-lst them
ostracise them, make them know
they are persona non grata, as fai
jan the loyal members of the race are
concerned. They are W. M, N.’s!
Whatever of progress this race o}
ours has had in the past fifty years
and more, has been made with jus
this same handicap astride it
jsifoulders, So it is nothing new. Ir
the matter of our candidacy, thi
year (and two years ago), the W
IM. N. invariably approaches one with
that old “bunk,” “it will make ene
mies for the race,”" “it ts not tim
to do so and so,” “a colored mar
(speaking of ond’of their own race
too) has no chance,” and a dozer
land one other like fool expressions
Do not pay any attention to then
but treat them as suggested in th
foregoing, for they aro traitors
much worse than the white politica
masters they serve for money
promises of positions which the:
rarely ever get. ete., etc. May Go
forgive them and all their pustilant
mous kind, and MAKE them think
alk and act differently—“for th
}ood and welfare of the race.” Be
ware of the W. M.N.! If wo ba
Mstened to them, in the past, am
lmade mo eMlcrt, a8 they wished
THE GASETTE, CLEVELAND, 0., JULY 29, 1922
where would we, as a race, be now;
jor if we pay attention to their dan-
serous fool talk now and do not
make the best effort we can to help
Jourselves in everything, what prox:
ress will the race make In the pres-
ent and future? We have waited
long and patiently on their white
political masters to do for ux what
Wo wore and are clearly entitled to,
and what ii the result? We are
worse off today, from almost overy
viewpoint, than we were twenty:
five years ago, ‘Toll the W. M. N.'s
to throw away thelr white gods and
nerve the only God and thelr race,
and let us act all the moro vigor
ounly on oue own thought nd tna
tive, We CAN win, and, tno, with
out the WoMO NJ's Gwhite men's
Negroes)
ss
MUNA PARK AND TOM: PLEMING
Auk any member of the old Ninth
‘Ohio Battalion, who wax at camp
near Chillicothe when Colonel and
now Gen, Zimmerman, manager of
Luna Park, wax there, what they
know and think of him, -and you
will understand why the dance hall,
skating pavilion and bathing pool
there are still closed to Nogeoos
even on days when our people so
fur forget their selt and race res
pect w to go there on the “sep:
arate” day they contract for
Get Capt. Wm, Green (or his fa-
ther, John P. Green) to tell you
how “immerman treated Capt.
Green personally and his black
soldiers at that camp, and then tell
ft to all you meet.) Councilman
‘Tom Fleming will inne every. self
and race respecting Négro in the
city if he goos to that park, Tues-
day, with his Carmi A. Thompson
political -mecting, ‘and, too, trying
to fool our people of this section
of the state into believing that it
is an “emancipation celebration.”
It really will amount to an out-
rage against the race which our
good, losal, self and race-respec-
ting people of this community
should meyer forget and be a mighty
long tine in forgiving. The low
ost white “strollop” and the low-
est white male brute can enjoy
levery amusement of Luna park at
her Tind his pleasure, but decent, in-
telligent ax well as othfr Negroes
fare barred, as Indicated in the fore-
going, thus placing them beneath
the lowest white “strollop” and
vilest white male brute in the com-
munity, as far as Luna Park Is con-
Jeerned. And Tom Fleming is appar-
ently most to blame for this rank
insult, ‘Starlight (A. Dy Boyd.
the: most notorious Negro. gambler.
and worse, Cleveland has ever had
in our time, did not stoop to do the
like of this for his kind of our
peoples, and we have been a resident
of this city for more than a half
century, It was bad enough for
Counciiman ‘Tom Fleming to turn
his back on his own people, those
who secured him the job he has held
for six years, and. support a white
nan, as against one of his own race,
for the Republican nomination for
Governor, but to have the impros-
sion go abroad that he is respon-
sible for that Luna park outrage of
next Tuesday is infinitely worse.
May God forgive him! It will be
some time before our peopl of
Cleveland will be able to do so.
And they will not forget Carmi A
Thompson either whose local man-
ager, Maurice Maschke, Councilman
Tom Fleming's political boss, un-
Joubtedly promoted or encouraged
Tuesday's Luna park outrage of our
people of this community.
Less but of the same kind is the
contemptible les Cleveland Negro
hinélings of the Thompson regime
are spreading thruout Ohio against
our candidate for the ~ Republican
nomination for Governor. ‘They (the
dirty lies) are acting as a boome-
fang thru no fault of the contempt
(ble individuals who spread them,
however, but becausn they are so ri-
diculous, untrue, rutten and unbe-
Meveable that they but spur the loyal
members of the race, who hear them,
to greater efforts In behale of their
eandidate, Harry Clay Smith.
It has reached the point where our
people must make it costly to any
member of the race, who affronts
and insults them in matters of vital
importance to thelr progress. espe
ciall when, as in the two instances
referred to in the foregoing, they add
positive fujury to the affront and in
sult, We have had quite enough, en-
tirely too much as u matter of fact,
et De EP NG Pee
THE YOUNG FOLK CONTRIBUTE
Washington, D. C., July 17, 1922
Hon, Harry Clay Smith,
Editor Gazette, Cieveland. 0.
| My dear Mr. Smith:—-My brother
and I wish to be enrolled on your
honor list, How fing It would be
if hundreds of boys and girls would
join with men and women and
show that we possess race pride and
believe in race advancement, by
helping to support your campaign.
financially. It car BASILY be doue, i
many of us wil make only a small
sacrifice,
We eiclose five dollars each and
hopo earnestly for your success.
Sincerely,
Louise and Lenoir Cook.
YOUNGSTOWN.—Thos. D. Berry,
eldest son of the late Mary Long
land P. Ross Berry, died, last week
Wednesday evening, following an ill-
sese of six monthe. His death,
PRIME SPORT NEWS
BOSTON REMNANT STORE
4310 WOODLAND AVE.
Every Wednesday Is Dollar Day
SPECIALS: Ladies’ Shoes, $1.00; Men's Shoes, $2.25;
Ladies’ and Children’s Bathing Shoes, 25¢
Come Every Wednesday and Get Bargains
YOU SAVE MONEY HERE!
Langtord-Tate Mateh.
Chicago, Hl —Sam. Langford and
BIN Tate, heavywolghts, were match:
od, duly 21, to box ton rounds tn
Tulsa, Okla. Aug. 4, Tate will meet
Fred Fulton in Portland, Ore, Aug
a
hun
| Akron, 0. Tut Jackwon will give
Akron Cane a sample of his, war
Sunday, Safackyon has scheduled a
“eotacqualnted™ medting with the
local bugs at Stop 62 on the Akron:
Kenttuvenna tine. He will box
roveral exbibition rounds with apar-
Hing pastors Htornie Strapp, veteran
promater, hay been endeavoring to
book Jackson” here
‘Tut Starts Training,
Washington ©, HW, O. Tut Jack
son, local undefeated heavy woikht
With forty. knockouts tw his credit,
and sions posted against him, who
Tn to moot Mares Wills, heavy weight
at Chbets neld, Brookiyn, AuR. 8, be-
Ran sutensive training, Monday, at
‘the ball park hore and a.smatl admis
ston feo is charged, — Several ring
experts wil be his boxing partners
Tit has kept ap his training at
vaudevitte performances since the
fall down, of the Jackson-Johnyon
though nol unexpected, came ax a
great shock to his many friends and
Felaciyes Hiraldes a wife (former
Miss Nona Evans of Cleveland) and
daughter, he is aurvived by the fol
lowing brothers and sisters; Chas,
L. and‘ Wilson M. Berry, Mrs, Mar
fearet sims. Mra. i. Lynch and
Mrs. Thos. Tasior, among our Brat
people of this elty. AW) have the
heart-felt sympatliy of the .commy-
nity
Baton, O. July 22. “22
Hon, Harry Clay Smith
Biitor Gazette, Cleveland, 0.
| My Dear Sit:—Thruout southers
‘Ohio our people are “heart and soul”
with you in the great effort you are
leading tor those of the race in
Ohio We ure determined to nom-
nate you and are working to that
end.
Pat me on the honor roll for two
dollors, please,
Sincerely yours,
JA. Johnson,
President Harding Stop ‘Them?
United States Negro troops are
sent to Texas, # special trainload, to
act as police among the striking
railroad men. ‘There ought to be ne
race prejudice, but there is race
prejudice, The sending of those men
is unwise, unjust to the Negro troops
calenlated to breed more race hatred
hereafter, and everybody concerned
ought to know it. The first test of
the Ku Klux Klan’s political: power
in Texas shows real power, The man
with the Klan’s backing for senator
leads, That makes the sending. of
black trops to Texas stili_ more un-
wise —Arthur Brisbane, *
THE ONLY Way.
Washington, D.C. July 19, "2
Mon, Harry Clay Smith
Editor Gazette, Cloveland, 0.
Dear Harry: 1 am very glad yo
nomination for Governor and sincere
Iy hope you will get a large vote
and be successful. tix only , by
Such action that we ean ever hope
to get recognition
Very sincerely your
Andrew F. Milyer.
a vn
|
| “
| " c
_ 4
ROBERTA B. JAMES:
A Gazette Office Employe,
1 you suffer with FEMALE. TROUB.
tans, Cuen “as Ovariat! Bains, Patna tn the
Iower "part of gent" Stomach, Bearing
down tains, ‘Whites, Headache, Backachs
farutul or irregular Periods. Tf you have
that teed, “wornout, Nervous. aad. run
Gown ‘feeling so, cotamion to women. If
son hove tried all Kinda of medicines. and
intone, and teen thoogh you have. been
iat au uperation. was ecossary
You ‘Mtiy"' ne” MADE "Wenl” AND
SYkONG AGatN. Write for PRED book
Jet of taformation and advice today,
THE FEIVO MEDICINE CO.
Memphis, Tenn.
bout and should be in fine shape to
wet WHR. A large number of
Jackson's admirers In Ohio will go
to Brookiyn to see the-serap, which
is regarded ay. the most impartant
Heavyweight event sine Jack Demp=
py tonnes Carpenter
“Phe Tats Larse 10 Monarchs,
4 road tour lite lant weok, Wore
niyo beaten hy the Kanwas City, Mon
avetiow in the fooeth and Git game
last week Tuesday and Wednesday,
Score: 4 tat and T to 4. They
won Uo fitst game of the double-
houder on Sunday provions, lost the
socond, and were beaten In the third
kame on Monday. Strong. plteher,
Kot a twobase hit and Bonner a
Mreo-baser, ‘Taeaday | one at three
hive On Wodneaday} inthe fourth
vd last gan of the serlen, Leonted
mii Henderson KOU twe-tane] alts
The Cubans” and Tellings’ «white
two games at Tate eld, later.in the
work, rosilted fn a 11. game, the
Cubans losing te other +
On Saturday, the Tatos played the
Groat Anerionns (white) at Mans
field, winning 18 to 11 MeClaine
Kot tw Uworbaso MIM, Taylor. and
Johnston one sich MeChatne and
Taylor oach-got a home run
CHAS. W. SMITH FOR SHERI:
Why Our People Should Now Again
Vote for Sherif Stagnard—
Local Political History,
Editor Gazette, Dear Sir: —Under
the capilon of what the present
sheriff owes fou as a group and the
manner In Which he hus pal his ob
Jour paper to eal! attention to the
Jvotitival history of Cuxahoge Coun:
for hte past twelve years, We
d the name of the present aherit
wpbearing resulirly at tworyear {n=
tervals on the ballet for slection to
the office which he now holde, A
further inspection of the records will
show that each succeeding period has
been conspicuous by the unswerving
loyalty of the members of our group,
to the canse of the present sheriff
He has met his obligation to onr race
by his apparent disreeard for the
things that are essential to our peace
of mind and home security. If the
Aaily papers have quoted him correct
Wy. we believe that his attitude on
the Ka Klux Klan and recently pro-
posed meeting in Cuyahoga County.
is sufficient proof of the fact that
this gentleman as a county: offtelal ts
injurious to our group life and should
he removed as soon as possible. The
sheriff comes from the confines of
his “jim-rrow™ jail, at this time, s9-
liciting and expecting vour support
at the primaries. Aug 8 If in the
face of his attitude toward our group,
You can still support him. then the
Dyer bill should fail of passage, the
Jasper county horrors should con-
dnue and the Tulsa affair become a
regular Sunday diversion. Taking all
this into consideration Tam inclined
to believe that the sheri has proved
unworthy of our support. In con-
clusion, let me say. Tam going to
vote for and advise my friends to
support Chas. W. Smith for sheriff of
Cuyahoga County, Who are you go-
ing to vote for and support?
Geo. Moore,
ke
A Brigadier General!
Chicago, I-—By special order No.
85, issued from the office of the ad-
jutant general of the state of Minois
at Springiield, Franklin A. Denison
yon his own request, has been
placed upon the retired Ist with
tank of briradier general, Cot Denk-
son commanded the old bight ML
Inf. regiment, and was in Pranee
with ii during the World War until
‘invaitded home. “Rheumatism,”
| G
a Hy
for Dark Gomplexions—
1t you want to be respected, admired and
lowed by “everybody, vee that You have a
beautiful complonion, free of bumpe "and
tet, and that your hie fe moth and
Proveriy'dresed. “Your beve fiend ta your
Pte heres how to Kee. them.
‘Te Wlem the Bln, ‘noma dark
matter if you will only wo Dr. Fred
Palmer's. Skin “Whitonee Ointaient it
Aauchiy bleaches, te perfectly safo and dee
ilehttel ts uses” At Sour druceist oe vote
piston pun rated ot pee seed
Biv, hing, Honey’ Comhatone soon sive
ee ne or eee eerie te
Tine ‘pr, Pecd""Palmor’ Skin Whitenee
Soon, feliowiog. wih His “Galtaitie pox
femied Pace Powder. Ty. this and oeich
four skin improve.” At ‘our’ drugeit oF
fat fovtoall on, sevigt ot pre, Bie
You" Must Have Smooth, Luxariant Hair
Sd he test and stfst way to ee {t's
fy wsing De Feed Pater Hale Bremen
Wy malts the bate tile, prosplas Ia
oot a chants ie octle Be ee
‘Tage or eent poewwald upon recipe of
price Bac.
Wille for Acents’ Moner-making
epenas
_ Dr, Fred Palmer s Laboratories
Dept. C2, ATLANTA, GA.
| Mes) }
FES Suri
SS (OR a
Be Museo
ee ee ee
; See us First for all Goods in our Line }
; JOHN S. HALL ;
q Prices Reasonable. Satisfaction Guaranteed. }
q JEWELER AND OPTOMETRIST :
$3121 Central Avex Cleveland, 0. Prospect 3659}
Sane seeeeeeeecusseneseneneeness uneeune
8
: JACOB SCHNEIDER :
+
: BAKERY :
: Fresh Rolls, Pies, Cakes Daily 5
: Central 1745 W 3028 Central Ave. §&
*
SAS OR SURES SRE deee ee oN ESeoESneRcenseseae
Bite Than « Maviord Pisin For Coughe and Colday Head
ache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism
TE f and All Aches and Pains
| ALL DRUGGISTS
Peer 25e and 65 jars and tubes
men epikal alas 43)
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LIBERTY -CAPS4p
HATS AND CAPS.-
MADE BY LIBERTY CAP MEG. CO.
Order made Caps and Hats a speeialty. Boys? and |
Men’s Caps in lurge variety.
Also Straw Hats Low Prices!
TWO STORES |
2625 E. 55th St. near Woodland, 7904 St, Clair Ave. |
Phone, Central 7509-K. :
(GMURUoaucovecaiycea Nudd iagranaeaastanaqiaer tat
THE WOOLEN MARKET;
We Advise You to buy Your | i
FALL AND WINTER CLOTHES Now. E
A small deposit will secure you from the higher price.
Wm. Bryar, Tailor - :
“CLASSY CLOTHES MADE RIGHT” f
2280 E. 53TH ST., NEAR CENTRAL AVE. ©
: PAINLESS EXTRACTION
Solid Gold Teeth, Gold Crowns, .
| siehirngghor $5.00 AND UP
: DR. GREENFIELD’S, Dental Specialists
OPPOSED TO PAIN
$ 227 Euclid Avenue—Right Across the Street from Kresge's 5 and 10
ALL IN ONE! ¢&®
|" —<== 7 B
ewan! Panpues aes
ae Malt & Hops E=3 So]
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ga acetic tend piglets name adel srr re
CANADIAN MALT EXTRACT COL LTD. Dept. 4A, 44-48 Peart St., TORONTO, Canada
hs AN
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gauezssgaatnstingscavsnavaggattents2s00
“You'll Be Tickled, Too,
When We're Thru
The Bonita
Cleaning, Repalring and. Brow:
ing Club, Gur work by firme
claws. Tey wn
$-Ave Galt alto
Lyin ciegabish inn
i Me Johnston
i 2aT0 Kart Se
:
: Wm. H. Austin’s
: Classy Shining Parlor -
- and
: Pressing Shop :
E adios’ and Gents’ Clothes §
aed "kod Phat
= Shoes cleaned and dyed, all
E colors
: 3580 Central Ave,
Tey Us!
uss tasuatouauaniaraeagseapeseen
Patronize
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HAIR STRAIGHTENING
AND, SHAMPOO COMB
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rw oasis Som on
WARSAW . . LUNGS
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PWIA TERS
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Dr. LeROYN.B UNDV, Dentist, Guaranteed and Efficient Work! Extraction with Gas Administered. Twenty Years' Experience
The "St. John", Cor. E. 40th St. & Central Avenue Excellent Service Hours: 9 to 12, 1 to 6, 7 to 8
DO YOU KNOW WHY - - - A Man Can't Find His Things - - - Sometimes?
I'll lay my HID ON THIS TABLE SO THE WEE WON'T KICK.
SHE SAYS NEVER KNOW WHERE I PUT MY THINGS.
I'M GOING TO SUEEP THIS PLACE OUT ILL CAN HANDY'S HAT SOME PLACE ELSE.
WELL, DUG GUNNIT. I'VE LOOKED ALL OVER THIS JOINT FOR THAT HAT I KNOW I HAND IT ON THIS TABLE.
WIFE - OH ANNIE - I CAN FIND MY HAT.
THERE IT IS! RIGHT WHERE YOU PUT IT WHY DON'T YOU REMEMBER WHERE YOU WOULD THEN THINK?
DR.J.J.BROWN
To Make Home Calls.
Doctor of Massage, Swedish Mov-
ments, Etc., will administer treat-
ments at the homes of persons su-
fering from Nervous Troubles, Loss
of Sleep, Headache, Backache, Cold
Hands and Feet, Constipation,
Menstrual Troubles, etc., Change of
Life, General Breakdown or Languid Feeling.
tments By Appointment Only
Res. 2191, E. 368th St.
Res. 2191, E. 368th St.
Dr. P. H. White
Physician and Surgeon
3843 Woodland Ave. cor.
E. 39th St.
Office Hours: 10 A. M. to
2 P. M.; 6 to 9 P. M. Sundays by appointment.
Special Attention to Diseases of Women and Children.
Phones: Office. Rand. 4307
Residence. Rand. 3549.
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 St.
Phone Cedar 251.
OFFICE HOURS
11 A. M. to 2 P. M., 5 to 8 P. M.
JOHN P. GREEN
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Room 510, Blackstone Bldg.,
1426 West 3rd Street
Cleveland, O.
Notary Public
Polish Interpreter
Office Phones:
Main 2912; Central 1424-R
Res. 614 E. 107th St.
'Phone, Eddy 6533
THE FEDORA
Lunch Room and
Restaurant
3211 Scovill Ave.
Good Home Cooking
The best pies in the city
Try Us!
Mrs. Jas. Turner, Proprietor.
CHESTER K.
GILLESPIE
Attorney-at-Law
415 SUPERIOR BLDG.
Cleveland, Ohio.
OFFICE PHONE, MAIN 3767
Res. 2220 E. 95th St.
Phone, Garfield 1351 J.
They Look Like New
We Clean and Block all
styles of hats. Panamas
Our Specialty.
LADIES' AND GENTS'
SHOE SHINING PARLOR
P. Major, Prop.
4704 Central Ave.
DO YOU KNOW WHY
I'll lay my
HO ON THIS
TABLE ON THE
WEB WON'T WICK
Where To Purchase The Gazette
NOTICE TO
Subscribers not receiving The
us at once. We desire every copy
Send or bring locals and all
office, 214-215 Blackstone Bldg.
call there. please.
We advise our readers to car-
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tise in this paper should have the
fact that they advertise is assura.
All reading matter for publ
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at the latest. Display advertiser
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HARRY C. SMITH,
NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS
Subscribers not receiving The Gazette regularly should notify us at once. We desire every copy delivered promptly.
Send or bring locals and all business matters to The Gazette office, 214-215 Blackstone Bldg. If you wish to see the editor call there, please.
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Bell 'Phone: Cherry 1259.
Classified Advertising
... Department ..
FOR RENT. — Two furnished rooms. Call Prospect 2738.
WANTED—Colored men to qualify for sleeping car and train porters. Experience unnecessary. Transportation furnished. Write W. W. Bogges, Supt., St. Louis, Mo.
CLEVELAND Social and Personal
There is a letter at The Gazette office for Wm. Glasspie, E. 82nd St. Dr. J. B. Goggins has moved his office from 2279 E. 43rd St. to 4320 Central Ave.—Adv. Mrs. Frances Young and Mrs. Jennie Watts, E. 82nd St., are spending their vacation in Idlewild, Mich. Slaughter Broe's progressive undertakers, have purchased the property west of their present building. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Atkins, E. 163rd St., spent their vacation with relatives in Oberlin. Miss Mary J. Boone, bookkeeper for the Anchor Life, was called to Louisville, Ky., by her father's death. Miss Emma T. Williams, E. 79th St., entertained at dinner, in honor of Miss Grace Lucas, of Windsor, Ont., niece of Rev. S. A. Lucas and Mrs. Ed. Gales. Covers were laid for eight.
Members of Mt. Zion Cong. church organized a literary society, Monday evening. The midsummer rally will be held, July 30th. Pres. E. A. Sumer of Talladega College will preach at Mt. Zion, Aug. 6.
Mrs. C. J. Sayles and Andrew Simpkins, of Scovill Ave., were in Sandusky, recently, to attend the corner stone laying of St. Stephens A. M. E. church The American Woodman band of this city also attended, participating in the ceremonies.
Twenty-three thousand women and four thousand men, who did not vote in 1821, must rgister on August 7 between 3 p. m. and 8 p. m., or be barred from voting in the ensuing primaries.
The federal civil service commission has announced that the examination for postmasters, to have been held. Tuesday, has been postponed to Aug. 7.
Mrs. J. C. Crawford of Knowlton Ave., gave a reception, Tuesday afternoon, in honor of her guest, Mrs. Frye of Springfield.
Congressman C. L. Knight of Akron is a wise man. The Akron Informer, our race publication there, says that he expects our MEN and WOMEN voters to cast their ballots for their own candidate, Harry Clay Smith. So does Carmi Thompson and all other sensible white candidates, whether they say so or not.
The Lincoln Embroidery club gave a surprise birthday party Tuesday
A Man Can't Find His Things
I'M GOING TO SWEEP THIS PLACE
OVER ALL LAY
MURDER'S NOT
SOME PLACE ELSE
*JOSEPH'S
4219 Central Ave.
JACKSON'S
4401 Central Ave.
J. S. HALL'S
3121 Central Ave.
J. B. DENNIS'
3705 Central Ave.
*B. KLEIMAN'S,
3061 Central Ave.
evening, for Mrs. Cornelia Nickles and Mrs. B. M. Shook, Sr., at the latters home, E. 744th St.
Civil service examinations for an automobile mechanic helper, and a painter for motor vehicle service, will be conducted at room 501. Federal building at 9 a. m., Aug. 19. Salary for helper is $1,500; for painter, $1,800 to $2,000. There are many of our young men who are experts and they should go after these government jobs. Get busy!
Ex-Congressman Henry I. Emerson (a candidate) spoke at Antioch Baptist church. Sunday, mainly on the Dyer bill.
A musicale was given, Thursday morning, by Miss Elizabeth Hall and Mrs. Kitty Skeene Mitchell at Bishop C. H. Phillip's residence, 10828 Drexel Ave. Both the audience and participants were mixed. Mrs. Sadie Fairfax and Louise Cheeks played the piano. Mrs. Berry gave a reading. Phyllis Johnson gave several interpretive dances and Mrs. Mitchell sang charmingly. It proved an exceptionally enjoyable affair.
Dr. J. K. Nickens is meeting with splendid success with his illustrated lecture in Indiana, making Indianapolis his headquarters. He is expected to return to Cleveland by Aug. 1.
The civil service commission announces that because of the small number of applicants taking the recent examination for computer for the coast and geodetic survey, law clerk, typist, laboratorian, observer in meteorology and radio inspector, examinations will be conducted again. Information may be secured at 501 P. O. Building.
Frank G. Carpenter, Esq., age 44, Republican candidate for prosecuting attorney, was born at Wabash, Ind. He is a graduate of Hiram College and Indiana Law School and practiced law in his native city, Indianapolis (Republican) county prosecutor (Republican) county prosecutor married a Cleveland lady and they have three charming daughters, who are attending the local grade and high schools. He has practiced law twenty years and is not only deserving but well qualified for the office he seeks. Mr. Carpenter is a candidate The Gazette urges its readers to support.—Adv.
Our advertisers want your trade. Those who do not ask for it in the columns of "The Old Reliable" Gazette 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.
All persons in the city who have knowledge of illegal voting in ward 11 on election day, Nov. 8, '21, or residents of that ward whose ballots were not promptly deposited in the ballot-box or were opened and read, or who were not permitted to vote, or who were in any manner shown discourtesy, or who saw any irregularities at the polls on Nov. 8, 21, are requested to notify or come to The Gazette office, 'phone Cherry 1259, 215 Blackstone Bldg., S. W., cor. W. Third St. and Frankfort Ave. just as soon as possible between the hours of 3 and 6:30 p. m., and their complaints will be heard and properly attended to.
G. L. Cheatham, president, and Alex. O. Taylor, secretary, were in
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., JULY 29, 1922
Sam M. Gibbs
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Urbana, this week, in the interest of the A. L. & K. Insurance Co., and attending the K. P. convention, Capt. W. J. Howland and Col. Chas, S. Royal motored to Urbana.
In addition to the best photoplayss, drama and comedy, etc., etc., there is a special vaudeville attraction, this week Thursday, Friday and Saturday
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In Columbus,
Go to W. H. Price's store, No. 1684
E. Long St., for copies of The Gazette.
Cleveland, O., July 18, 1922.
Hon. Harry Clay Smith.
Editor Gazette, Cleveland, O.
Dear Friend: I am in hearty sympathy with the effort you are leading for our people, and as an earnest of good will, I am sending you $1 toward your campaign fund.
More of our people ought to join the $1 drive and not sit quietly by and see your campaign for the expense for the glorious fight you are leading for them.
Very truly yours,
Bryant Freeman.
OUR OHIO VOTE.
There are between 135,000 and 150,000 male Colored voters in Ohio and over 75,000 female, making in all over 200- 000 Colored voters in the state. Harry Clay Smith.
TEMPLE THEATER
Friday, July 28 — "Home Stuff," a Metro classic. Pathe Review. "Conquering Hero," comedy.
Saturday, July 29 — "A Wise Kid," comedy-drama. "A Golf Insect," "The Vanishing Trail," No. 8.
Sunday, July 30 — "THE MATCHMAKER," "Red-Hot Rivals," big comedy.
Monday and Tuesday, July 31 and August 1 — SPECIAL FEATURE—"WHERE IS MY WANDERING BOY TONIGHT?" From the old song of the same name. Added attraction—Pathe Review.
Wednesday, August 2 — "Over the Wire," a splendid feature "The Haunted House," comedy. Movie Chat and International News.
Thursday, Aug. 3 — "Big Game," a feature photoplay, Pathe Review and "Haunted House."
Friday, Aug. 4 — "Moonlight and Honey," a Paramount comedy-drama. Pathe Review. "F. O. B. Africa," a great comedy.
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The above is an excellent portrait of the Hon. Harry S. Day, mayor of Fremont, O. who, as an official and as a private citizen, has always stood ready to help poor people in his own city. He is now a candidate for the nomination for the office of state treasurer on the Republican ticket and if you believe in helping one who has always stood ready to help our people, then be sure to go to the polls and vote for him on Aug. 8.
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Don't Throw Away Your Copy of THE GAZETTE After Reading it, But Give It to a Friend or an Acquaintance whe Might Subscribe After Reading a Copy of It.
Miserable Course Adopted By A Few Negroes
White Candidates Trying to Split Our Vote-They Know We Can Win if We Vote Solidly for Our Own Candidate
A letter, from Youngstown, received by the editor on Tuesday, July 18. '22, informs The Gazette that
"Miss Hallie Q. Brown of Wilberforce had a meeting called for women of the race here, last Saturday afternoon, July 15, '22. sitting she had a message to deliver to them. It proved to be an attempt to organize a Carmi A. Thompson club here. I had an idea what it would be, so sent my wife to hear what she had to say. Well, if ever a man was slandered, this Brown woman certainly lied you. I heard the same of lieds when I was in Cleveland, last fall, during the campaign, but no one there, that is no decent, clean-minded person, paid any attention to them because they knew that the bad people in your ward had concocted them (just as they always do) to cover their own nith and defeat you if they could. Well, after she had run you down, and told她 that Secretary of State Harvey C. Smith, would not do either, and that Congressman Knight was the whiskey men's candidate, she called for the women to enroll their names to work for Carmi Thompson. Then the women were asked to speak. Our very first one to do so, one the leading ladies and those who had twenty you vote, arose and because she intended to vote for our own candidate for Governor, the Hon. Harley Clay Smith. Halle Brown called, why. Why? She when the lady got done telling her why, the meeting on the mat and being counted out. Several other ladies followed and when they got done, it was all off as far as the projected Thompson club was concerned. Only four enrolled! Halle then got up and said she would be back in two weeks for a mass meeting and may be'do better. She will always remember THAT 'mass meeting' if she comes. Mrs. Senator Tiff (white), 19th district manager of the women voters for Thompson, and some friends were at the meeting but left after our ladies got done talking for you. The Roberts club, a fine organization of men in this city, in third or fourth layer of organization to endorse your candidacy in the last ten days. They did this, Saturday evening, after Halle got thru. Halle says that some Cleveland women brought the stuff (contemptible lies) she rehashed about you to the Toledo convention. Dirty, very dirty."
Working for a White Candidate
Cleveland, O., July 18, '22.
Miss Hallie Q. Brown.
Wilberforce, Ohio.
Miss Brown:—In a letter just received, a friend in Youngstown, whose wife was in a meeting in that city on a recent Saturday afternoon, writes me that you made a number of statements in the meeting relative to me that are not only NOT true, but slanderous! If you are quoted correctly I wish to tell you that they were lies developed in last fall's councilmanic contest in ward 11, this city, when I led the good people of that ward in an effort to throw off the baneful "Starlight" Boyd-Tom Fleming yoke which had imposed on them a political rule that made the low element in the ward entirely too numerous, objectionable and harmful, and also placed that low element in the ascendency as far as vital ward interests were concerned.
It is hardly necessary for me to add that if necessary I will resort to legal methods to preserve my good name and standing from such miserable lying campaign attacks as those you are alleged to have repeated (in the meeting referred to) and in the interest of a white candidate, too, for the Republican nomination for Governor. Do you believe that you would stoop to such contemptible political methods and trust that it will prove that you are incorrectly reported.
state of Ohio. I enclose the small sum of five dollars, hoping that your candidacy will elicit a larger mass of small contributions, since your fight is the sight of the Negroes of the nation. Your brilliant success as a legislator, and your twice-honored championship of the rights of our great people, give you the incontestable claim upon the
A.
Harry Clay Smith
suffrage of every Negro in the state.
Your remarkable campaign for the secretaryship of the state, two years ago, and the brilliant success of the Negro ticket in Virginia, are giving the finest education and the best incentive to education which black men can receive. In addition, it is notice to our oppressors and to their Negro-hirelings that we are weary of our slave status in the land that boasts itself a democracy, America, both black and white, must learn that it is just as fitting that a black man or a black woman occupy high offices of public trust, from the President of the United States down to the town-crier of the tiniest hamlet, as it is for the whitest man in the world.
Yours in the cause.
Neval H. Thomas.
AN APPEAL AND CONTRIBUTION
Omaha, Nebr., July 7, 1922.
Hon. Harry Clay Smith,
Editor, Gazette, Cleveland.
Dear Harry:--Since you have announced your candidacy for the Republican nomination for Governor of the greater state of Ohio it becomes the duty of every race-loving Negro to contribute and help bear the expenses of your campaign. You cannot bear the burden alone. Your success means an elevation for every colored man and woman in the United States which will make our white friendts say:
"In the past we have not given the consideration we should have given to our loyal colored supporters who stood by us all through these many trying conflicts; since they have the courage to break over the lines of suppression and press forward for their rights, something must be done to elevate and protect them as American citizens by having them share in the distribution of offices throughout the United States, the same as other races."
This effort alone, in trying to nominate and elect Harry Clay Smith Governor of Ohio, is the crowning point which will bring about the recognition due the race. Now let us talk it up, work it up and help bear the expenses. People of Ohio do your whole duty as never before. Forget past differences and rally to the support of your candidate. Lay aside all personal envy for the sake of the race and contribute as liberally as possible out of your small earnings to help make Harry Clay Smith's campaign a triumphant success. Today the eyes of the United States are centered on Ohio's colored population of nearly 200,000 voters, looking to see them show their willingness to work for the advancement of the race.
May God speed and crown your efforts with success. Let Ohio be the first to show the world what we can do when we try. Give us the Moses out of Ohio with victory stamped on his forehead, which will encourage every state in the Union, where Negroes are holding the balance of power, to wake up and protect their interests. Now let every one contribute freely and put his shoulder to the wheel and press forward to victory. May God help you people in Ohio to give us that great hope by doing your whole duty and nothing else.
Please find enclosed draft for five
dollars ($5.00). Will send more.
With best wishes for your success.
I am,
Your friend.
Ferdinand L. Barnett.
THE GAZETTE. CLEVELAND. O., JULY 29, 1922.
WHY WE SHOULD STAND TOGETHER
In Politics as Well as in Other Things—What the President Said—Our Leaders Deposed, Etc.
St. Louis, Mo., June 25, 1922.
Hon. Harry Clay Smith.
Editor Gazette, Cleveland, O.
My dear Mr. Smith: — I have learned with a deal of pleasure that you have entered the race for the Republican nomination for Governor of Ohio, and I wish you every success. It is certainly high-time for you to be president, and I would know that the only limit to our aspirations is our ability to acquire.
The last two years have wrought a great change in the conditions surrounding us politically. We have been told by the President of the United States that there were too many of us in the Republican party. We have beheld our leaders deposed and recognition denied by the very men we helped vote into office. These have not been exceptional cases, but rather the rule. Politics is a game of give and take—mostly take, as it has been played. If the Afro-American wants anything political, he must take it. You ought to receive the if you want to be-minded Afro-American in Ohio, as well as that of thousands of fair-minded white men and women of the "Under-ground Railroad stripe", not because of race, but as a matter of MERIT and in the spirit which calls for a display of genuine Americanism.
Yours truly.
J. M. Batchman, Industrial Commissioner, 12th Congressional District.
"LOOK WHO IS HERE."
Editor Columbus Ohio State Journal:
Several weeks ago your news columns carried a press dispatch from Cleveland which stated that Harry Clay Smith, editor of a newspaper, was considering the advisability of announcing himself as a candidate for the Republican nomination for governor of Ohio. The suggestion of Ohio and the item was carried in a "box" on your first page under the caption of "Look Who Is Here!"
Permit me to ask why an Afro-American should not aspire to the Republican nomination for governor of Ohio or any other Republican state. The Republican party certainly owes everything to the Afro-American power on his back before the civil war and has been astiride his neck ever since. In the more than 40 years that I have been a close observer of political matters the Republicans have elected their candidate for president but three times—1872, 1904 and 1920—when they could have won without the aid of the Afro-American vote and the same limitation applies to Republican states which have been held in the Republican column year after year solely by this vote. Why not an Afro-American governor for Ohio and any other Republican state? Brazil has a colored man as President that republicans in an Afro-American position to which he may aspire and which he has the ability to fill? Echo answers "Why not?"
KORA F. BRIGGS.
Columbus, April 13.
CONTRIBUTES TEN DOLLARS!
And Says The Race Must Help Be cause It Is Their Fight Our Candidate Is Leading on Their Insistence—The Right Spirit!
Washington, D. C., June 23, '22.
Hon. Harry Clay Smith,
'22.
Since you have the courage to make this fight for the benefit of the race, we of the race must work in harmony, work unceasingly and help finance your campaign! Therefore, please find enclosed money order for ten dollars for that purpose. With best wishes for your success, I am
Only Traitors to the Race Can Fall to Do Their Full Duty, This Time—Work and Vote for Our Own Candidate.
Cleveland, O., July 20, '22.
It is now time to bring about a change. For more than fifty years, the Republican party's candidates, from the presidency down to the smallest office, have been riding into office on the shoulders of the Afro-American voters of this country. And, as a rule, we have only received a few insignificant favors in return. Now, we have come to the political fork of the road and have decided to have a candidate of our own race nominated this fall, as the Republican candidate for governor of Ohio—a man who has made good not only with his race but with every good citizen of the state, and a man who is well known to the people of the state for the good work he has done. I have reference to the Hon. Harry Clay Smith, editor and owner of The Gazette for nearly forty years, a paper which has been issued every week on time since established, August 25, 1883. He is also the father of Ohio's Civil Rights law and Ohio's Anti-Lynching law of which the Dyer Anti-Lynching bill, passed by the lower house of Congress and now pending in the U. S. Senate, is largely a copy. These laws have made the state one of the greatest in the United States and kept her name out of
Congressman Knight (white) of Akron, also a candidate for the Republican nomination for Governor, in the daily press recently asked Carmi A. Thompson of Cleveland, another candidate, to agree to limit their campaign expenses to $10,000. This will explain why it is absolutely necessary for our people to help financially, also, in the effort I am leading for our people and on their insistence. Of course, we will not have to go to any such expense as $10,000, but whatever it may be it will undoubtedly be far and away larger than I can ever hope to stand alone, because I am not "a man of means," but shall stand my part of the expense. I have no one to look to for financial help but OUR people and the few white friends who have voluntarily come to our financial assistance.
(Cut this out.)
Fill Out and Mail This With Your Contributions to the
HARRY CLAY SMITH FOR GOVERNOR CLUBS' CAMPAIGN FUND!
214 Blackstone Bldg., Cleveland, Ohio
Put me on the honor list for
$......
Name ...
Address ...
All contributions will be published in The Gazette unless otherwise ordered by the contributor.
the newspapers' bloody columns, filled with the accounts of the barbaric burnings and lynchings of our people in the Southland. This is a part of the record he has to recommend him in the race for the Republican nomination for governor. I hereby challenge any of the other eight candidates, (white) of the Republican party, or those of the Democratic party, to show the people such a splendid record. So we have a man that we are not ashamed to have stand as our candidate, and can stand shoulder to shoulder with any in the race. We, who respect ourselves and are loyal to our race, can exercise or act actively support him. Now is the time for the ministers to practice what they have been preaching, or prove themselves traitors to the race. Our politicians and business men cannot, as few men, fail to do their duty, unless they have political "rings" in their noses" or a white candidate's political money in their pockets. And if you have, I will warn you now that you cannot fool our people in the present and future as you have in the past. You may just as well make up your minds now to be honest with our people. It is silly to say that we cannot nominate our candidate. We can, if we try. Two years ago, when a candidate for the office of Secretary of State, Mr. Smith received more than 61,000 votes. A few more votes than that, this time, will surely make a difference. There are 200,000 colored voters (male and female) in Ohio. If only half of them will vote for our candidate on Aug. 8. '22, he will win the nomination, and if nominated, he will be the next Governor of Ohio.
We Have Many With Crab Nature.
Dr. Booker T. Washington gained considerable popularity as a story teller, and among the best stories which he told is one about the crab. In substance the story runs as follows; Mr. Washington stood watching a basket of crabs, one day. All seemed to be struggling to get out over the top of the basket. One reached very near the top, and it seemed as though he would crawl out. Mr. Washington called the owner's attention, asking.
"Aren't you afraid these crabs will get out of this basket?"
will get out of this basket.
"Oh, no," replied the owner,
"You do not know crab nature; as fast as one crab gets a little above or ahead of the others, the other crabs pull him back. It would be impossible for one to get so far ahead, as to get out of the basket, because it is the nature of the crab to pull back."
Harry Clay Smith.
This With Your
pons to the
GOVERNOR CLUBS'
FUND!
g., Cleveland, Ohio
honor list for
ed in The Gazette unless other-
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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 prelude to wealth —Stephen Girard.
Nothing except the mint 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?
What it is free 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."
A PRIVILEGE
It is a privilege to fearlessly stand for the right—
Not a sacrifice, even though you go down.
They could not the cost, who fight the good fight.
And unflinchingly face the smear or the frown.
Joseph C. Manning.
IS IT OF ANY USE TO CON-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 of no use to resist, down itself the will of the world, will "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, and to long race discrimination may continue. To submit is to deserve contempt. — Boston (Mas. 3). Guardian.
ETTE After
scribe After
Against The Mob and Lynch-Murder—The Work of a Member of The Race—Also Ohio's Civil Rights Law.
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 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
Section
6278. "Mob" and "lynching" defined.
6279. "Serious injury" defined.
6280. Damages in case of assault.
6281. Damages in case of lynching.
6282. Damages recoverable by legal representative of victim of lynching.
6283. Persistent death or injury by mob trying to lynch another.
6284. Limitations of action.
6285. Order to include recovery and costs in tax levy.
6286. Guardian's custody, etc., fees.
6287. County's right of action against member of mob.
6288. County's right of action against another county.
6289. Non-relief from prosecution.
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 temporally 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 such unlawful killing. Such sum shall be applied to the minimum value of the sum of the damages of the children of such person so lynched, if any survive him, until such children are of legal age, and then be distributed to the survivors, share and share alike, the widow receiving an amount equal to a child's share. If there be no widow or minor children surviving such decedent, such sum may be distributed to the widow of the 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 lynching, in any court having original jurisdiction of an action for damages for malicious assault. (93 v. 162 7)
Section 6285. An order to the commissioner of a county, against which such recovery has 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. (98 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 repose of the victim, the killed, the lousy injured by a mob from any of the persons composing such mob. A person present, with hostile intent, at such lynching shall be deemed a member of the mob and be liable to such action. (98 v. 162 16.)
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, and 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 disperse such mob. (93 v 163 11.)
Section 6289. This chapter shall not relieve a person concerned in such lynching from prosecution for suicide or other offenses 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 residence, citizen, except for reason applicable to all citizens and regardless of race or color, the full enjoyment of the accommodations, advantages, facilities or privileges thereof, shall be finet 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 persecutor, but only if he is arrested in any court of competent jurisdiction in the county where such offense was committed.
This law has repeatedly been held constitutional and good law by the Overseas Court of Appeal. 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 outey 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.
Editor The Gazette Cleveland, O.
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) five hundred dollars was sustained. If the Beacon-Journal had known what was going on in its own town, there would have been no 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.
"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."
"I honor the man who in the conscientious discharge of his duty dares to stand alone, the world, with ignorant, insolent judgment, may conquer, the hearts of relatives may be sworn, and the hearts of friends grow cold, but the sense of duty done shall be swoter than the appliance of the world, the countenance of relatives or the hearts of friends"—Charles Summer.