The Gazette

Saturday, September 2, 1922

Cleveland, Ohio

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HIT HIM OVER THE HEART AND IN UNION IS STRONG FORTIETH YEAR No. 2 JACOB SCH BAKER Fresh. Rolls. Pies, Central 1745 W Meals at all Hours. Tables D. O. K. RESTA C. H. BROWN, M 3817 SCOVILL AVE. Phone, Ran. 3 Sam M. LADIES' AND GENTS' A Full Line—Reasons Visit Our New Store, 4924 Centra IT HIM JACOB SCHNEIDER BAKERY Fresh. Rolls. Pies, Cakes Daily Central 1745 W 3028 Central Ave. at all Hours. Tables for Ladies and Gents D. O. K. RESTAURANT C. H. BROWN, Manager SCOVILL AVE. CLEVELAND, OHIO Phone, Ran. 3574. am M. Gibbs LADIES' AND GENTS' FURNISHINGS A Full Line—Reasonable Prices. Our New Store, 4924 Central Ave., near E. 55th St. JACOB. SCHNEIDER BAKERY Fresh. Rolls. Pies. Cakes Daily Central 1745 W 3028 Central Ave. Meals at all Hours. Tables for Ladies and Gents D. O. K. RESTAURANT C. H. BROWN, Manager 3817 SCOVILL AVE. CLEVELAND, OHIO Phone. Ban. 3574. Sam M. Gibbs LADIES' AND GENTS' FURNISHINGS A Full Line—Reasonable Prices. Visit Our New Store, 4924 Central Ave., near E. 55th St. "Say It With Music!" Buy Your Columbia Records and Grafanolas Here. We take your old records in trade. We treat you courteously. ART MUSIC SHOPPE . 55TH ST. NEAR CENTRAL AVE. ART MUSIC S 2290 E. 55TH ST. ART MUSIC SHOPPE 2290 E. 55TH ST. NEAR CENTRAL AVE. A LIBERTY CAPS For Men and Boys! —Price— Men's, $1 and $1.50 Boys', 75c to 95c ALL STYLES—LARGE STOCK—ALL COLORS Hats and Caps Made to Order! —2025 E. 55th St., near Woodland Ave. and 7904 St. 'Phones: Central 7509-K and Ran. 5775. BESTON REMNANT STORE 4310 WOODLAND AVE. Every Wednesday Is Dollar Day ALS: Ladies' Shoes, $1.00; Men's Shoes, $2.25; Ladies' and Children's Bathing Shoes, 25c come Every Wednesday and Get Bargains YOU SAVE MONEY HERE! th B. M. C. Meeting of the G. U. O. of O. F. FALL STYLES—LARGE STOCK Hats and Caps Made Two Stores—2025 E. 55th St., near W. Clair Ave. Phones: Cent BOSTON REMNAL 4310 WOODLAND Every Wednesday Is SPECIALS: Ladies' Shoes, $1.00. Ladies' and Children's Bath Come Every Wednesday and YOU SAVE MONEY 20th B. M. C. of the G. U. O. of FALL STYLES—LARGE STOCK—ALL COLORS Hats and Caps Made to Order! Two Stores—2025 E. 55th St., near Woodland Ave. and 7904 St. Clair Ave. Phones: Central 7500-K and Ran. 5775. 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, 25c Come Every Wednesday and Get Bargains YOU SAVE MONEY HERE! 20th B.M.C.Meeting at Cleveland, O., Sept. 11-16, 22 Monday, 10 a. m.—Grand Reception to d. and visitors. Monday Evening—All Star Concert, St. Church. Tuesday Evening—Moonlight Boat-ride of Erie, and Ball at I. O. F. Hall, E. 55t Wednesday Evening—GRAND MILITARY BALL AND PROMENADE at Cleveland new $7,000,000 Auditorium. y, 10 a. m.—Grand Reception to delegates and visitors. Evening—All Star Concert, St. John's Church. Evening—Moonlight Boat-ride on Lake and Ball at I. O. F. Hall, E. 55th St. Day Evening—GRAND MILITARY BALL AND PROMENADE at Cleveland's new $7,000,000 Auditorium. Monday, 10 a. m.—Grand Reception to delegates and visitors. Monday Evening—All Star Concert, St. John's Church. Tuesday Evening—Moonlight Boat-ride on Lake Erie, and Ball at I. O. F. Hall, E. 55th St. Wednesday Evening—GRAND MILITARY BALL AND PROMENADE at Cleveland's new $7,000,000 Auditorium. Thursday, 10 a. m.—Grand Parade, ending at Luna Park. Competitive and Exhibition Drills. $500.00 IN PRIZES. Dancing on Park plan. Continuous music. 2:00 to 11:30 p. m. This will be the longest and largest parade of our people ever held in the State of Ohio. Friday Evening—Block dance and Moonlight Boat-ride on Lake Erie. Sessions of the Order, every day except Thursday ```markdown ``` Glumbia Now the Music! of the THE GAZETTE ESTABLISHED AUGUST 25,1883 And Issued Every Week on Time Since CLEVELAND, OHIO, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1922 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. $500,000 Estate of Noted Philanthropist in Southern Court CADIZ.—Mrs. Ada Cochran of Oberlin is visiting her sister, Mrs. Charles Cochran.—Melvin Christian, Jr., visited in Warren, last week.—Miss Laura White of Wilberforce, is spending her vacation with her mother, Mrs. Ella White.—Mrs. Maud Cooper of Zanesville is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo Howard.—There will be a pew rally at the A. M. E. church, Sept. 10. Much interest is being manifested in the attendance rivalry between the men and women, each to be seated on opposite sides of the church.—Miss Jane Davis and Theresa Emory of Warren, and Miss Dorothy Robinson of Massillon are visiting Miss Genevieve Lee.—A large number attended the West-Freeman reunion at Mt. Pleasant, Saturday. YOUNGSTOWN--The mason's picnic, Aug. 24, at Idora park was a great success and enjoyed by all. The Valley Oils were defeated by the Homestead Grays in a fast, sensational ball game. We wish to thank the park management for giving us an opportunity to share in the profits.—Mrs. C. W. Nelson is visiting in Chicago.—East Youngstown citizens have organized a "new" club which as yet has not been named. It is not a new club we need but more support and loyalty for what we have. It is the same, every year; same material with a different head—all seeking to be "leaders" and but few qualified.—Struthere's St. Paul M. E. church rendered a fine sacred concert program, last Friday, which will be repeated, Sept. 6. Rev. J. H. Hayes, the new pastor, is doing great work, not only in the pulpit but also in teaching race progress and uplift.—Rev. P. L. Herold, pastor of Shiloh Baptist church, left Monday for San Francisco to attend the National Baptist convention. — Tell your friends and acquaintances to order The Gazette, from the local agent, H. L. Parrish, and get a copy every week.—Atty. Wm. R. Stewart left, Aug. 10, in his Marmon car for Cleveland where he was joined by Miss Jennie Porter and Mr. and Mrs. Chas, Alexander of Cincinnati, and proceeded to Niagara Falls; thence to Mt. Clemens, Mich, where they spent their vacation. HILLSBORO.—Mrs. Chas. Fears and daughters left, last Thursday, for Cleveland. They visited her parents. Closing Chapter in History of Thomy Lafon Written—Proved a Financial Genius New Orleans, La.—The closing chapter in the history of Thomy Lafon, poet, wealthy philanthropist and capitalist of thirty years ago, was written last Thursday when a final accounting of his estate, valued at nearly half a million dollars, was filed in the civil district court. Lafon, who was a "free man of color," died thirty years ago, leaving almost his entire estate of $413,808 to charitable institutions, both colored and white, in this city. The Thomy Lafon Old Folks Home for Aged Negroes is only one of the many which attest to his generosity. A Mother With "A Broken Heart." A Mother With "A Broken Heart." Chicago, Ill.—The constant pining away, caused by an aching heart, hastened the death of Mrs. Margaret A. Renfro at the Oak Forest sanitarium, Aug. 19. She leaves four children, a mother and two sisters to mourn. According to Margaret M. Renfro, an 18-year-old daughter, her father, Rev. W. H. Renfro, pastor of an M. E. church, at Columbus, O. deserted her mother and six children six years ago, leaving them without a coint or a home; that her mother never was the same again, brooding constantly over the broken home and the death of two of the six children. She added that her mother never had a happy day after the description she had given her husband in came for the act. Our 1995 Close Convention. N. W. N. J. - The international convention of the L.I.P.O. E.W. association of business. Friday with the selection of Chicago as the convention city for next year. J. Finley Wilson, editor of Wash- ington (C.O.) magazine. Was chosen as a named trader. Mrs. Mary Grievous of Cincinnati spent the week-end here. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. McFarland and son of Indianapolis visited relatives here. Mrs. Frankle White of Cincinnati visited her parents, last week. Mrs. Nettle Barber of Cincinnati and grandson are here visiting relatives — Mr. Lawn Trimble spent Sunday in Cincinnati. He returned, Monday, with his wife.—Rev. J. J. Burr conducted the funeral service of Edith Makings at her parent's residence in Wilmington, Sunday morning.—Rev. W. L. Tolliver and congregation of Wilmington Baptist church entertained the E. U. B. A. (50th anniversary), from Tuesday to Sunday. It was one of the best meetings ever held. Rev. J. H. Coleman and congregation (A. M. E.) welcomed the eighty odd delegates into their homes. Also, visitors from many parts of the state, Rev. I. V. Bryant, of Huntington, W. Va., and Rev. R. D. Phillips of Columbus were the principal speakers. Sunday. Servers were preached by Revs. J. G. Orr. P. H. Hill, I. B. Plus, A. M. Howe, Forrest Mitchell, J. J. Burr and G. W. Washington.—Mrs. Alline Burton visited in Jonesboro and New Venna, last week.—Mrs. Blanche Gilmore of Cleveland is visiting her parents.—Miss Anna Bryant returned to Cleveland, last Thursday. She visited Mrs. James Trimble. Miss Louise Williams entertained in her honor, last Wednesday.—Birch Bolder and Clarence Pleasant spent Monday in Columbus. Several from here attended the Association at Wilmington, last Thursday and Sunday. CORRESPONDENTS must mail all letters for publication at their main office sufficiently early on Monday for Sunday) of each week to have them reach The Gazette office on Tuesday morning, and always; more also their names and that of their city or town on the outside of the prisoner about returned coming. Unless this latter is denied proper credit cannot be given not. Lists of some wedding presents etc. obliquely inquiries for relatives and portraits of all kinds including those from previous inventors must be held in the room future, must be for advance at the rate of 25 cents, a line six words to a foot. Our rate for display advertisement will be sent on application. For many years, the office of Lafon was one of the financial centers of the city. City and state bonds were led by him in large numbers, and his outstanding loans ran into large totals, men whose memory runs back a quarter of a century declare. A few weeks ago, the last piece of real estate owned by Lafon when he died, located at the uptown river corner, was sold at auction, bringing about $65,000. This amount, less several bequests and expenses incidental to closing the affairs of the estate, was Thursday formally paid over to the Asylum of the Sisters of the Holy Family and "fins" was written in the history of a man known to practically every charitable institution of the city. Sandusky, O —Practically all of the $100,000 estate of the late Attorney James M. French: Afro-American business man here, is to be invested for the benefit of Oberlin college, according to his will, just admitted to probate here. The income for fifty years is to be given to the trustees of the college for the benefit of deserving Afro-American students to aid them in securing an education. At the end of fifty years the principal is also to be used for the purpose specified. If Oberlin does not accept the proposal in Willisforth college, it is to be given the grant. Mr. French has a number of other positions in Cleveland. Jeddons White Woman Kills KILLED THE "CRACKER" by an unknown soldier in the army. He objected to his sitting beside him in a cone on the front of the trench. His book was collected with a blow over the spine that resulted in a deformity. He was then treated with a cream of potassium sulfate and a cream of sodium sulfate. He took a boat with the man who appeared with his abscess language. Seeing that he could not force the man to get up in a fit of unconsciousness, she the trucker will hoster in the mouth. Before an of the other passengers could进来. Foster struck him the blow that crumpled him up in his seat. He could not be revived. The two men with Foster, staved on the train until it reached home when they gave themselves up to the police. Foster was held, while the others were released on their own cognizance. MRS. PRINCE SEEKING ALIMONY Sued for Divorce by Rev. R. J Prince Now of Cleveland, O. Chicago, Ill. Mrs. Katherine J. Prince, who is being said for divorce by her husband, Rev. Boston J. Prince, of Cleveland, Q. was denied alimony. Last Friday, in Judge Harley's court, she was sued for divorce by her husband in March, after he had discovered, as he claimed her relations with William Blandolph Smith, a clerk of the circuit court. In his bill the pastor alleged that his wife had taken advantage of his absence, while preaching, to entertain her lover at their home. He also mentioned improprieties with several other men. She says Dr. Prince M. is receiving a salary in exchange for 925 per month and declares that she is poor and dependent for her support upon the charity of her friends and relatives. Dr Pixie was represented by Mrs John I. Randle, who convinced the court that the woman was indecent and should be her监护. LIVE NOMINATIONS the district of Jersey for station of Jersey ton Hertfordshire and district of Hertfordshire in the 4th district of the horse is required for constable in the 5th district. All of the nom are candidates on the register publican ticket Another White Appountry Washington D. C. Considerably more comment is being indulged in here over the sending by President Harding of the name of Capt. Henry H. Hough (photograph) of S. Navy to the Senate for confirmation as Governor of the District of Hawaii. It is intended that the Island have a population of 27,000. Dr. R. H. Boyd Dead SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS ADDITIONAL LOCALS --- ANOTHER KU KLUN OUTRAGE. Similar to the One Committed on a Physician in Texas, Some Months Ago. five minutes after he had been bound by a police officer, he would be able to all iside spite and bound to subjut to an operation Jerriigan had been arrested. Aug 15, on a charge of having made an improper remark to a woman white, the technical charge being disorderly conduct. After a hearing Jerriigan was released, innocent of the charge. After the operation the Kluxes tossed him into an automobile and returned to the city, dumping him, almost lifeless from exhaustion and loss of blood, into the street at the front entrance of the Charity Hospital, where he is now a patient, shortly before mid- night. V. Deputy U. S. Marshall. Washington, D. C.—William A. Johnson has been appointed as deputy U. S. marshal under Marshal Edgar Snyder and entered upon his duties, recently. Mr. Johnson, a son-in-law of Atty, Thomas L. Jones, is the only Afro-American deputy U. S. marshal in the U. S. Big name; little job. Succ. 109. Husband's Lunching Susan Husband & Lynchling. McCormick, S. C.-Mrs. Janie Bell, widow of Herbert Quarles, who was lynched after an alleged attack upon a woman (white) in this county, last June, has brought suit against McCormick county for $2,000. Thomas R. Monning is in Dayton and Columbus. Mr. George Leske, of 193rd St. died, Monday evening, at the City hospital. The Gazette of Dayton and Columbus please. Mr. Smith of Oberlin is pursued on Mr. M. P. Scott, E. and St. Mr. Coulson is with his brother and Mr. and Mrs. Joan Cousins reached, Tuesday, from E. Bour- shire, Vaughan of Michigan. Mr. L. John is with his husband as guard at Mrs. H. A. Hood in of Boston. Mr. A. A. Atkinson is with sided the Turk Cemetery, other in Oberlin. Mr. L. Paul Park is with Mr. Bob John is with the Johnson in E. L. A. Mr. T. J. Hickey, B. St. and A. W. and general Mr. A. Sharp, and Mr. H. Hawes, M. of Green and who served in the home from Alton. and party. Thursday afternoon in honor of several visitors Mr. and Mr. Robert K. Bidgee, a fishery Sunday morning at Willow beach in honor of their Mrs. E. E. Ward. A little of the day was dedicated to the young people of St. James A. M. E. purse to The L. A. A. Mr. Henry B. B. M. M. B. E. E. It was given for the town of Worcester to the GLE COPY FIVE CENTS AND EARNS LIVING AT 132 Afro-Brazilian Medicine Man and Ticket Seller. Burcos Arre, Brazil - Antonio Rosas, reputed to have been born in 1812 years ago in the African Congo, still is earning a living here as a well-known and ticket seller. He was not told to put up a fight when three men held him up and robbed him, recently, and said he would have made a better showing if he had not "taken a drop too much" Antonio claims to have been captured in the Congo when a child by French slave traders. The ship on which he and others were placed was captured by an English vessel and taken to Madeira. He was brought to Argentina at the age of eight. He saw the birth of the Argentine nation in 1810 and slavery abolished in 1813. In later years he adopted the surname of Rosas after the famous Argentine character, Rosas, of whom he was an admirer. White Soldier Marries Colored Girl. Des Moines, Ia. - Holmer Homerickhouse, a (white) soldier, stationed at Fort Des Moines, deserted the army and married Miss Sadie Griffith, of this city last month. He was captured here, last week, and held for courtmartial. The ceremony was performed by a Rev. Saunders of this city, a member of the race. Races Should Intermarry! Williamstown. Mass. — Speaking before the Institute of Politics at Williams College, Aug. 19, '22, Dr. Manuel de Oliveira Lima, of Brazil, said that intermarriage between the colored and white races is frequent in his country and that as a result there are "No discontented races to be found in Brazil, as you certainly have in this country." AL LOCALS eral policemen, one man sprang over a fence from a second story window to escape. Another man diving after him landed in a policeman's arms. Seven men were held for gambling and for permitting gambling. Other raids in Ward 11 by the same squad netted still more, one house yielding four men and women. Last week Thursday evening at Shiloh Baptist church! Mrs. Halle Jackson and her talented daughter, Nettie, gave a fine entertainment that was featured by a play, controlled London Society," which proved to be an exceptionally commendable production of thirteen characters and liberally supplied with instrumental and vocal selections that were splendidly rendered Good for Miss Nettie! Sunday evening, St. John's excellent choir will render Gounod's "Galila" with Mrs Rachel Turner singing the solo parts. Preceding this condition the pastor, Rev. E. C. Clark, will give a twenty-minute talk on the wonderful composition. At the morning service Mr. Arthur Talbot will rote the Leaper," by Wills "Mrs Turner gave a fine condition of Handel's "I Know That My Redeemer Layeth" from the great oratorio "The Messiah," at last Sunday morning's service. ST. JOHN - W. M. M. S. has elected the following officers for the ensuing year: Mrs. Ella White and Miss Marie Taylor, honorary presidents: Mrs. Flora Beers, pres. Mrs. Fiosseau Hackett, first vice-pres. Mrs. Ida B. Wells, second. Mrs. Amanda Taylor, sec. Mrs. Bertha Austin, assist. Mrs. M. F. DeBraun, cor. sec. Mrs. Clara Hackett, contingent treas. Mrs. Estella Merritt, treas. Mrs. Ida Nichols, sec. treas. of young people: Mrs. N. Hollingsworth, Mrs. Guisevie Dean and Mrs. Margaret Anderson, ex board. Bishop Lane Lane of Jackson Tenn. for whom Lane Memorial (Metropolitan) C. M. E. church was named will preach at Phillips chapel 2002 E 63d St. at 11 a.m. and Sunday Rev J. L. Browning, pastor of Just M. E. church, will officiate at 11 a.m. ```markdown ``` 2UBLISHED EVERY SATURDA} SUBSCRIPTION RATES (in Advance) OE Weak is. ees ioe oni GR0 Six Months .............c.05 1.00 Three Months ........00..60. 8 Subscribers are requested to remit bs postoffice money order or reg- istered letter Entered at the postoffice ir Cleve- land, Ohio, as second-class : mail matter, Address all communications to HARRY C. SMITH Editor and Proprietor THE GAZEITE (Bell "Phone: Cher=y 1259) Blackstone Building, Cleveland, O. Member Ohio Legislatu-e#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, publish ed in the state of Ohio, and compar ‘sons with any will immediately es tablish its rank as one of the NEWS. IFST AND BEST in the country. 10,000,000 Afro-Americans, £850,000 in Ohio. 15,000 in Cleveland. SEPTEMBER 2, 1922 “Emperor Jones,” Bugene O'Neill's play which was seen in the Colonial theater, this oity, last. win- ter, 18 preparing to goon tour for ita third season, Charles Gilpin, ‘who played the title role during the two previous’ seasons, will remain in his original role, ‘The production iy seheduled. to open, Sept. 30, at Montreal. While it is a splendid vehicle mm which to display his won- derfat talent as an actor, the play Usolf nig harmful to the xyica, we are sorry to say. It ts a pity that Be itt cannot! be. tarred» in sometfing helpful to our people. vet =i — SOMBPHING TO STRIKE POR. Vice Preataent — Coolidge ~ says strikes are a sign of prosperity. In periods of depression, when there are more workmen than jobs, there are yery few walkonts, but when conditions are reversed, and thére are more Jobs than men to fll them, radical workers are encouraged. to make new demands and strike for thelr enforcement. The country is highly prosperous despite the rail and coat strikes, What it would have een without them it is not difficult to imagine. THE BLUE MR. BLYTHE. Sam Blythe, d rebasher of poltt- fea} (lstory who never in his’ life made a specific constructive sugges- Haas GGewith an artidle antici ing the Republican Admintatratton ana, partioulatty condemning bureau: racy. Evidently Mr. Blythe, who tused to sob every time 1. Woodrow Wilson looked sad, does not. know that bureaucracy made its greatest gains in American government under the recent Democratic regime. We challenge him to designate specific- ally which of the Wilson bureaus or commissions he thinks ought to be abolished. He says 90 per cent of them are not worth 5 per cent of what they cost. Come on now, Sam, be epecitte in your condemnation of the autocrat before whose throne you used to drivel. tt LEAGUE BUTTS IN, ‘The league of nations has spent three years trying to gain prestige in Europe, and failed. Now it thinks there is a likely fleld for exploita- tion in South America, and reports ‘say that the way to South American esteem {s to be greased by the elec- tion of a league president from that continent. South Americans, how- ‘ever, ate able to see beyond the end of their noses, As they become bet- ter aware of what the Monroe Doc- trine and the protection of the United States mean to them, there is a ‘growing bond of intimacy with the people of this country. The attempt of the league of nations to butt in and disrupt the natural community of interest that does and should exist among all countries of the Western Hemisphere will come to naught. nl ~ PASS IT ALONG. ‘There has recently been organized in New York “The Patriot League for the Preservation ot American History," “The immediate purpose of. this organization,”” reads the an- nouncement, “is to purge the public schools of the Anglicized school his- tories and establish in thefr stead text books that teach the true Amer- fean annals and inculcate the true American spirit.” That there {s need for such @ work has been abundantly demonstrated by the Investigations rarried on in New York City and elsowhere. A lengthy report by an official school board of New York condemned ten histories used in that elty, yet the publishers of one of the worst of them say that the book ts used in 4,200 schools, The Califor- nia State Board of Education is re- viewing the American history text books of that state, and various county and clty school boards are dong Ukewise. ‘The Patriot League will serve as a clearing house for information on school histories, and establish chapters in communities where existing patriotic societies are A GOODBYE, ORMOND: Poor Forte—Ormond, we mean— has nally “given in" and, worse Il, been “let out” by the “latest new Cleveland Advocate manage- ment. He started the paper about nine years ago and what he has suffered for it in that time would Ai a book. Last and this year it “died,” several times, only to be resurrected by him, with the help Jot “angels,” and the apparently Jendiess struggle for existence under his direction continued, until last week, when his newspaper “obit- uary” was written in three short paragraphs and published on. the first page of his “journalistic baby.” Nine of the best years of nis Wife have been literally wasted In an effort‘ into which, like many otherg in the last forty years of the existetice of The Gazette, he was induced to enter by selfish and Jealous Negroes who one by one deserted him as often as he reached the point where he needed thetr financial support to continue the Publication of the paper. "Twas jever thus! They “sicked” him and many. others, equally unfortunate on “The Old Relfable” Gazette be eause they, could not control it and tor other lesser and oven moro foolish reasons, and their white po- Hitleal bosses “pushed slong the gume.” ‘They are the ones who should suffer and be punished; for what they lave done to Fort amounts almost to a erime. He & fe man of family and has been for yours. And still. he should hay Kriown better. IF not that, then b should. have learned 5 years ago. Me would not listen to real friends who advised. iim t “let go of the red-liot poker,” but Ustgned to the aforementioned sel fsh and jealous Negros who “egged’” him on and on, until the crisis of tast week arrived and he could go on no-longer, There are others in this community that ouglit to be able to get from Forte's miser- able experience as a newspaper pub- lishre what, they know they need, But will htey? We doubt it, As we have said in the other somewhat similar seventeen cases, in the las forty years, Goodbye, Ormond! TRAP ELECTROCUTES INSECTS Gurrent is Very Slight, ‘but Does Ef fective Work ‘An electrocution trap for ‘asects Is 61@ of the latest Inventions to brin: ermfort to mankind. Upon an insulated frame Mo usked actal conductors are coiled ic a spirat with sufficient space between the windings. The ewo conductors are cou nected with a source of electricity in such a manner that (he curr rt cannot sireulate unti. it fs actually used in killing an insect. This is one ot the adyantos: 4 of the invention, for in this way n, currem can be wasted. insects may be atiruct- ed to the electrocution eithe: vy water tr by any other attractive substance, At night time electric lights are the fest, As quickly as an tngect touches the bait or the light and cmes m cou tact with any two of the live wires they drop down into the bottom of the trap, The current is very silxht and passes thru the insect only for a mo eg SE er eS ae ee eae ra Writing in Harper’s Magazine, Lou ise Closser Hale tells the story of Bar tara Fitchie as it was told to her re- cently at Frederick. Her version shat- vers another lit-rary myth. “{ fought with the South,’ said the veteran, “He did, continued bis wife, ‘and say bothers fought for the North. The two-armies used to come raidin’ thru tue town, and pickin’ each other off right in the street sometimes. “Woule you be seared’? 1 probed, “Seared? Why Y'd be that scared hat I couldn't tell the colors of the uniforms, Thought 1 saw my brothers in the front yard, and they were Rebs. Rut they never hurt women, neither cides “No, nobody ever hurt women in those days,’ raid the old soldier. _ “But us girls used to have good iimes with both sides. We'd Joke ay Inugh with tho Rebs, and they'd suy they would come back and matry us and while that would make us hopin mad, some of ‘em did come tek nnd marry us. The'old old Indy and the M4 old gentleman smiled at each ott en, “ePhis ain't (ellin’ her about the “Io, imsinuated the husband. “No, ‘tain't. Daughter, run up and get that pleture of Mrs. Quantitle. Yuu know, ma'am, we always fell a batllo ‘ahead and wlen (ke orders caine fra Lee for General Jackson—theve didn't nany call him Stonewal! » then—to tiareh his troops thru the town to solge Harper's Ferry, we felt san tbing im our bones. He came by way af that ereek. “Not past Mrs. Fitchie's house?” *Notm, just thir side of it. We were al, on the stoop watching for Mr. Jack yon, who we had heard always rode with a Bible under his arm. There was good deal of delay along the road, be- ccnse, you know, ma'am, they waited fer the commissary. The Confederate band was playin’ down at the drug store, and st was Hil, D, A. Hill there were two in this corps—whe THE GAZETTE. CLEVELAND, U., SEPTEMBER 2. 1922. fined his horse alongside of us and Ve were all exiting up. “AM this time Mes. Quantellte had a little Union faz im her hands, 1's tre mule when av army romes throug’ a town that onty the flag of ihe arms s shown, co I reckon hers was about ne only one flying. Mts, Fritenie was very old lady and was sick in bed that day." “put didn't anybody protest abont wn ““Woll, Mr. Hill said, “Madam, you suabt to tke that flag of vours and meke am apron of ft.” but quick as a fash she came back, “You ought to tuke yours, sir, and make breeches ‘ont of IL" They’ were terribly ragged, that corps. “then Hill rode on, and no sone: nad he gone than one of the privates, xettin’ into line, grabbed it with tis havonet-and used some lanzuaxe that wasn’t very nice. Mrs. Quantrille was ay perky as you please. She made a tues about it, and said the wan oueht to be arrested for rudonexs te # :ady Fo one of the officers rode on sbiead end ssid he'd seo to it. Southern gen: tumen were very particular 2bout lat stage before a lady. 1 don't suppo: anything was over done, bee.t@ ther vaca grad deal to sink aboot gust be fire @ baitle. | “But Mrs, Quantrilie. said, “Girls Jaye any of you rot a tag?” We uses te all carry Union flags in the boson of our basques, and May went into the Fall and took bers out. So by the tam General Jackson exme along she 62s aying one again, He never said a word that Lean remember, and we were all so exe'ved bowin’ to bie th fe had to laugh aflerward, because we forgot to look for his Bible. Yes wo. did. It was the other Hill of /ckson division Lalways eall nim the tial op the cream eolored horse—whie fruv n'y np the rear, And he snid to Mrs. Quaa trille, *You ouzht- to be shot for ¥ in’ Mist flan.” 1Ge pistol was at OF ntoteh, batt she didn't shoot her. And hs. Quantrille, who always. ti ie ityiwiox © 1 hand ond t Soh t Aas ti ‘Yani 5 abamleki rhe write just Ne con't tet the sult BANK HOTE JS HARD TO IMITATE baper Money of European Government io Easier to Gounterfelt- Some Eopend en Color Work Accoulirs to officials of the Treas iy Deperinent, not only da Ameri en engravers of bank gotes exeet ali (lees in the oriictie quality of then desis, but they Hbewise excel in the ingenuity of thelr provisions agai Jacob Toikins of Newburyport Mass, invented the method of trans erring designs {om hardeued ste plates to steel ezlinders ani of re (tansferring to flat plates, tous enn bling the enazaver to devote the the nueossery to accomplist his best work in the original aud reproduce at at wil Asa Spencer, mnother Yankec, coutey buted another mitccment, tae genme wwe Inthe, whieh renders dincurt th successful countesfGtins oh papel money. Most Worepoum anverauents teren for the prowetion ot Lavy ener tian ¥ upon color wort. Sova ot th Targe banks of tisce euylos est om funeers in their buses of cuss a And printing, a proceeds LL st gavel American expet's, who camer sew th connection betwen engince: ug an fugraving. Many italian beak note. are easy to counterfeit, A (2w year ago the bank of Spain was chliged abandon its own piaut, since its aote. were imitated so successfwly tha the counterfeits were withom ques don accepted by the bank itself. A pr vate concer now does the work ‘The bank of Greece employs th American method, having suffered ‘snd experience with notes of German Austrian and English make ‘ ‘The American experts do not hold t ‘he popular notion abroad that th utes of the bank of England eanno ve counterfeited. They contend tha VWese famous notes can be imitate readily enough, for little a‘tempt | ‘made to protect them beyond the us of a watermarked paper, and this wa ter mark can easily be copied. A sex sitiged gelatin film soaked in cold ws ter alter contact with an original ws ter mark will show every detail i clear relief, A thin fim of coppgr deposited uy ‘on this forms the basis upon which: -natrix cn ceilutoid is made. {fa sree of paper be pasted upon the motri and rubbed wit’ glass paper -be exac water wark is reproduced. Neverthe less, the Bugtish law seems to, dete counterfeiters, ‘One practical safeguard of ezeat e: foctiveness is the custom of the Kan’ 9. England of canceling every not that is returned to the bank and iss ing another in .ts place, PORTABLE DARKROOM CABINE’ Something for Tourists Who Carry Camera A portable dark cabinet has been in vented, which does away with manv inconveniences encountered by photo grapherwin developing vieir ne:atives without the advantage of a sucable ark room. A metal framework sup- paris a table or shelf adjustable to ony desired height. Extending above the table ate two reds supporting a square frame to which is attarord x large hood, This bood completely en: ‘clopes the table and affords enough Twom for the upper pottion of the pho: tographers, body behing the tabe A inole in one side of the eovering is \sed for introducing the maveriats in the cabinet, Another hole im sts lower part is proyided with a strap or elas We band which passes arvund the waist of the operator ~s he enters the PRIME SPORT NEWS HAS HIS ein HAYMAKER READY TO DELIVER i. j cs —. e aia ae “a ve aa: sre a eee tied, | i ( er pe ‘i DOESN'T Loox i aC PARTICULARLY gs ek ee cf DANGEROUS PP es ors \g SE ? a8 a ‘ ey fal Gy, / s 4 fay ia : ie See a Bee Z 4 oF an \ yy Te | yaiely rN BAC ANO a , SHOULDER MUSCLES) TUT JACKSON © yh Hails to Even Look Like a Boxer. Brooklyn, N. Y., Aug. 29.—Harry Wills, the “Brown Panther’ of New Orleans, made short work of the widely advertised “Tut” Jackson, heavyweight of Washington C. H. ©. ih their scheduled fitteen-round boltt. tonight, before a crowd of about 20,000 inquisitive fans, at Ebbetts Field, Brooklyn. With a destructive body assault, which -he started when the gong sent the men jon their journey, Wills battered Jackson into submission in the third round. A ‘powerful left hook to the stomach, delivered as, Jackson tore in at Wills, was the blow that ended whatever ambitions Jackson ntichethhl’ of ‘diatiaciny Wilk sé Jack Dempseys most formidab! rival. ‘The puach eurlet Jackson up on the floor of the ring Uke a w rag. The Ohioan was counted out, strvggling to arise, after the third round had progressed exactly two minutes and five seconds, When he had completed the count over the prostrate boxer Referee Claude Tib- betts, imported from Albany espe- cially for the bout, stooped and with the aid of Wills, assisted Jack- son to the latter's corner. The re- sult surprised nobody. It was. ex- pected before the pout that Wills would not be forced to extend him- self to beat Jackson. A knockout vietory for the Brown Panther was expected in five rounds or less. Wills, therefore, did just what was expected of him, and without any display of exertion whatsoever. The bout was not at all impressive or interesting, “Tut's” manager, Billy Palmer (white), was undoubtedly after the money because it was not many weeks ago that he said in the dafly press of the state that “Tut” was inexperienced as a boxer but had exceptional hitting power. This is undoubtedly true but it is not enough, when facing such experts as Jack Johnson and Harry Wills, as Tuesday evening’s flasco proves beyond the shadow of a doubt. ‘The Indianapolis A. B. C.’s won both games of the dovble header, n004, says the Popular Science Montls- ly. ‘The cabinet is lighted by a window of ruby glass directly over the table and opposite the photographer. Fresh air is supplied by means of a mask with a rubber tube leading to the out- ‘ide. Tourists who make many pic- tures can make,good use of this cabl net. “DIVINING ROD” IS NO JOKE ee ee Discovering Water Selontific experiments: with the dt Ping rod conducted by Germans ov ora peciod of months in the desert wastes of Syria and Eastern Exspt— Aoprowmately in the district of the new raltway line bean built toward the Suez Canal—not oniy have result /e7 in the discovery of water but have uroved that the scorned and flouted Ful is about 70 per cent infallible, ac srding to Dr, Th. Preyer, formerly in be German consular ofte, who Js practical selentist himself. He admits that he should belons to teat majority of intelligent persons who deride the divining rod as a swin dle if he had not been able to see it ork for four months. Dr. Preyer admits that he does not ynow the secret of the divining rod and that seemingly @ peculiatly stted ‘man must use the instrument to have srecess. He believes that science, will discover that subterranean streams owing under pressure emit rays like tne radio active rays of some sprinc: which force their way thru the earth and affect ceriain peculiarty consti tuted persons. ‘The novel bedroom cick faiely pro tuced in New York is mounced on a oox of dry cells, and has @ tiny lamp alb jast below the dial with a cord to ran from the table of dressing stanil to the bed. Pressing a button at the cad of the cord shows the occupant of the bed what the time is, while a switeh on the call box can be used for turning on current for cvntinuous Lighting. ; AO eg aa Sunday afternoon, from the Tates by the scores, respectively: § to 7 and 5 t 2. ‘Tho first went ten in- nings. Two errors by Johnston, who had been moved from left to first, did the business in the last inning, the Tates’ three-run rally in the ninth tying the game, In the firet game, Boyd made a two-base hit, Leonard a three-baser and bome-run,. and Strong a home-run. In the second game, Barnes made & two-base hil Monday, the “Hoosiers” (A. B. Gs) “murdered” the Tates, mak- ing twenty-one hits, _among® the number being two two-bage and two three-base hits and a home- ran,’ Williams, the new short-stop a bare hit, a two- bio 2 Te was an wiv! walloping, a near “slaughter.” on, eenier-fielder of the A. B. C's, mete a home-run in the second ame, Sunday, and ran wild on the bases, Monday, he made a ingle, double and home run, His Yas running and timely hitting were very damaging to the lowly Tates. Blackman, third baseman of the visftors’ got a pair of triples and a one-baser, Monday afternoon. ‘Tuesday's game was called off ow- Ing to a change in the league sched- ule, Interesting Notes, Young Cockrell of the Hilldale (Darby, Pa.) team pitched a_no- run, no-hit game against Rube Fos- tor’s Chicago American Giants, Aug. 19, Last week Wednesday, the Chi- cago Giants won a 20-inning game from the N. Y. Bacharach Giants by a score of 1 to 0. Treadwell pitched for the latter and Rile and D, Brown for the former. Hyppolite Chevalier. _ one-time great jockey, now considered an old man at 44 because there is no longer room in the turf field for him, was called into a Chicago court, last week, to answer a charge jot vagrancy. heaiieie pe Besar “What'll we do about these charges that you are going to have an untim- ited campaign fund available?” “Admit them,” replied Senator Sor- ghum, “Financial responsivility never hurt anybody.” Is there any doubt NOW, in the mind of anyone, as to what race 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 wore: aun’ will: continue ta ae bee IS IT OF ANY USE TO CON- TEND FOR RIGHTS? Colored Americans are the only race, responsible members: of which are in favor of sub- mitting to discrimination on the claim that their race “al- ways will be discriminated against.” The Jews are still contending, after over 1900 years of universal diserimina- tion, and are winning even so- cial rights today. ‘The Irish at home have contended for 700 years and are winning because they will die rather than sub- mit. The race that says it’s of no use to resist, downs itself and the world then will say, “Negroes are not worthy of equal rights; they are by na- ture without self-respect and have no ‘uts."” The world re- spects only those who resent and resist proseriptions for race, Let us be worthy. of the abo: litionists, worthy cf our own fathers who have d‘ed in every war to vindieate the title of their race to equal liberty, and forever resist denial of rights in our native land, however long race discrimination may continue. To submit is to de- serve contempt. — Boston - (Mas:.) Guardian, Better Than « Musterd Plast: For Coughs and Colds, Head- ache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism and All Aches and Pains i ALL DRUGGISTS cic Nore BLI Se 26 nod te are ne tubes +osessneeessettaeeneeeseeesbagasteeseteegeseseeenen ; See us First for all Goods in our Line JOHN S. HALL p Prices Reasonable. Satisfaction Guaranteed. ; JEWELER AND OPTOMETRIST } 3121 Central Ave. Cleveland, 0. Prospect 3659 | rote Sethe etesteeeto Seto te tet t eee teers tt ee re oene teens | PAINLESS EXTRACTION i Free examin : wert eldge E White Coen Bagge wen 99.00 AND UF B Hours 5:08 A. M. te #00 P.M DR. GREENFIELD’S, Dental Specialists OPPOSED TO PAIN 427 Becihd Avenae—Riht Acrow the Street from Krevge’s § and 18 Sant Stave. BA cigarettes gine 9 ee UN 10% They are GOOD! 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. iad a little time on Pridays er Saturdays is required. We are expecially desirous of hear: ing from persons in the following named cities: Toledo, Springfield, Dayton, Piqua, Lama, 'O., and other places, particularly in Ohio, where we have none Write to the editor of The Gazette Mackstone building, Cleveland, 0. and terms will be rent promptly. Ou readers will oblice us greatly by sending at once the addresses of ner sons. is the cities named, and others in the state, to whom we can write relative to the matter Wee t nets eeeeereeeee : : q “HUMAN NATURE'S i > FOULEST BLOT.” 3 My car is pained My soul is sich with every day's report Of wronz and outrage, with which the earth is filled. There is no flesh in man's ob: durate heart, Ht doce not feel’ for man: the rural bone OF brotherawod is severed ox the flav That falls asunder at we touch He finds hie fellow guilty of skin Not colored Uke his own: and having power To enforce the wrong, for such a worthy cause Hooms and devotes him aw bik lawful prey. 4 Thos man devotes his brother, and destroya: ‘Tis Shuman nature's brondest Foulest blot. Cowper. The Most Gxeuisite J ielliter oaeden = \ femme] Ce 7 lp ie ‘ou ome 1 to pourelt and peat frond to ate Jourt ao attractive as’ peaatle a2 Sit tanen aad bere ere a few suswetionn for tnproviag. jour looks generally ‘To When the Shin no matter ow dark Jour complesion, Dr. Fred Palmers Sin Wieser Onticact Veco icky, Perteciy safe end dligttcl to we. AE Jour dragster went postpaid upon re teint of prise, 2. Tf your complerion le shiny ot bumor. ou can take H ett and smooth by ting De Fred, Paimer's tin ‘Whitener San alowed by ho Ture Forde At yee Grunt sent povtald pom seebt of priee, te mach Jo Seouin the Bale 64 mabe tt stom De Pred Palmer Halr Dresee wil mals oar bate straight, cary to dren and at. Tractive {a looks sad ‘not bare rand of tt At your drugglet or sent pstpald upon ralph of ele, 286 WRITE FOR" AGENTS" ATTRACTIVE PROFONTION Dr. Fred Palmer's Laborateries, Dest. Ch, ATLANTA. Gh. rE Oe eno a MORASS NW PREPARATIONS: es > STS CP eAPREE ee ruts eAUTIF! HAIR STRAIGHTENING AND SHAMPOO COMB This Comb Is Well Worth $1.00 BIG OFFER NO. 1144 NSLIUEE ee ater meena et me OZONIZED OX MARROW CO. WARSAW - . ILLINOIS: aan ri os: ‘ kaa ee “Rs! oF na - A See LN Ie Pa PR) Rasanee Ce ae Soft, Silty, Long, Wavy By sna Pomant HEROLIN nar°2itSiove | 25 nts, BY MAIL |HEROLII MED. €O Y sect bites make i you unhappy. i{MENTHOLATUM cools and soothes, and gently heals. MRS.L.S. BRADLEY 8241 Preble Ave. — Cleveland, O. Has Houses For Sale \ or To Rent Be aie er he eee a ete = Wm.H. Austin’s | = Classy Shining Parlor | = and 4 = Pressing Shop ; . Ladies’ and Gents’ Clothes ; E cleaned and pressed 1 = Shoes cleaned and dyed, all 3 = colors. 3 3539 Central Ave. 3 z ‘Try Ust 3 dSLR : O.K. Printing Co. EW. J. Foster and John M. Smith = Commercial & = Job Printers : Eromips Sanit : 3119 Contral Ave. : Prospect 2600. Ss niiininyiimaisinitn Patronize Gazette Advertisers Dr. LeROYN. BUNDY, Dentist, Guaranteed and Efficient Work! Extraction with Gas Administered. Twenty Years' Experience DO YOU KNOW WHY --- You Ought to Use More Discretion In Choosing Wifey's New Hat? MY I WISH I COULD HAVE THIS TITLE ON OUT JOHN WON'T STAND FOR THE DINOSAUR I KNOW! WONDER IF I CAN FOLLOW NOW? JOHN, WHICH HAT DO YOU LIKE DEST THIS ONE OR- THAT'S PRETTY! OR THIS ONE? GEE! THAT'S A FRIGHT! SO YOU LIKE THE LITTLE ONE DEAR? BETCHA! THAT'S GOT ALL THE STYLE! THANKS LOVE! I'M GLAD YOU LIKE IT! IT'S THE $50 ONE! I CHANGED THE TAGS FOR A LITTLE JOKE! Dr.W.F.Richie,Ph.C. Dental Surgeon Gas Administered 2286 E. 55th St., near Central Ave. Office Hours: 9 to 12 a. m. 1 to 4 and 6 to 8 p. m. Sundays by appointment. Phones: Office: Rand. 6688; Residence, Cedar 869. DR. J. J. BROWN MASSEUR Massage, Swedish Movements, Vibration, Electric-Light, Rectal Dilation, Electricity, Dietetics. WILL MAKE HOME CALLS, Treatments By Appointment Only: Randolph, 1772 W. Res. 2191 E. 36th St. Dr. P. H. White Physician andSurgeon 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. Phone: Office, Rand. 4367 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 T. 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, Proprieto.r CHESTER K. GILLESPIE Attorney-at-Law 508 SUPERIOR BLDG. Cleveland, Ohio. OFFICE PHONE, MAIN 3767 Res. 2220 E. 95th St. Office 'Phone, Main 910 A PRIVILEGE It is a privilege to fearlessly stand for the right— Not a sacrifice, even though you go down. They count not the cost, who fight the good fight, And unflinchingly face the sneer or the frown. Joseph C. Manning. DO YOU KNOW WHY MY I WISH Could MAY UTTLE O BUT SO LONGLY FOR T DRINK I MAY WONDER I AM POOL Where To Purchase The Gazette 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. We advise our readers to carefully examine The Gazette's advertisements before making purchases. Business men who advertise in this paper should have the patronage of our people. The fact that they advertise is assurance that they want it. All reading matter for publication in current issues of The Gazette must be in the office by 4 p. m., TUESDAY of that week, at the desk. Display advertisements accepted until noon, WEDNESDAYS! *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. NOTICE TO Subscribers not receiving The us at once. We desire every copy Send or bring locals and all office, 214-215 Blackstone Eldge call there. please. We advise our readers to carry vertisements before making purchase in this paper should have a fact that they advertise is assured. All reading matter for pub Gazette must be in the office by at the latest. Display advertise NESDAYS! HARRY C. SMITH Bell 'Phone Classified Advertising 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. FOR SALE! 2215 EAST 87TH, NR. CEDAR. Consists of S rooms and bath; h. w. floors and finish; elec. lights; in first-class condition; act quick; will not last long; house vacant; easy terms; open Saturday and Sun; weekends; free parking; any other time by appointment, by calling Main 8115 or evenings, Fairmount 2873 W. 1056 Leader-News Bldg.-Adv. CLEVELAND Social and Personal CLEVELAND Social and Personal Mrs. Mary Blan, of Macon, Ga., is here for an indefinite stay. Little J. Earle spent the week-end with his grandmother, Mrs. M. Patterson, in Buffalo. Charles McGill's address is wanted by The Gazette. Do you know him? If so, tell him, at once, please. Mr. and Mrs. Winton Williams of Dayton were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Moore, E. 97th St. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Sayles, E. 90th St., returned, recently, from Buffalo and Niagara Falls. She left, last week, to visit in Detroit. Miss Anna Bryant and Mrs. Chas. Fears and daughters have returned to Hillsboro. Mrs. Blanche Glumore is also visiting her parents there. E. W. Smith, Wm. Sweegr, E. S. Pickle, Mrs. W. B. Zeigler, Wm. Glaspie and Mrs. Sophronia Smith have letters awaiting them at The Gazette office. Tell them, please. Mrs. A. L. Preston of Colonial Court has just returned from an enjoyable trip to Washington, D. C. Buffalo, Philadelphia and Detroit. She also visited the Douglass home, "Cedar Hill," Anacostia, D. C. President W. J. Hale of Nashville, one of our leading educators in the South, and Dr. E. A. Bailey, his brother-in-law, were callers at The Gazette sanctum, Saturday. Come again, gentlemen. Edward Turner, E. 90th St. won a Ranger bicycles' last week, in a local newspaper's subscription contest. He is in the 5th grade of Bolton school, and is one of several to be so fortunate. Do not forget that you can do the very best in every way by patronizing the Sam M. Gibbs ladies' and gens' furnishing store at 4924 Ave.' near E. 55th St. Go in and be convinced.—Adv. One of the most interesting entertainments of the season was the "reunion of States" at Phillips C. You Ought to Use More Discretion $10 THAT'S PRETTY! JOHN, WHICH NOT DO YOU HAVE DEST THIS ONE OR- *ERNEST P. JACKSON'S 3969 Central Ave. *A. ZINAMON'S 2921 Central Ave. D. BARBER'S 2006 Central Ave. W. T. GRANT, 3512 Central Ave. *J. L. PICKETT 4021 Scovill Ave. SUBSCRIBERS The Gazette regularly should notify by delivered promptly. business matters to The Gazette If you wish to see the editor werefully examine The Gazette's ad- chases. Business men who adver- the patronage of our people. The nance that they want it. ication in current issues of The 4 p. m., TUESDAY of that week, ments accepted until noon, WED- 215 Blackstone Bldg. Cherry 1259. M. E. chapel, E. 63d St., last Thursday evening. R. A. Wilson, chair- man of the committee, and Rev. S. W. Warr, pastor. Mrs. Carrie Briscoe, Mrs. Mary Johnson and Miss S. M. K肌nney, of Washington, D. C., were recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Thos. O. Queen, E. 106h St. Mrs. Johnson is Mrs. Queen's sister and Mrs. Briscoe, her niece. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur T. Abbott have returned from a vacation of several weeks in Michigan. Her daughter, Mrs. Mary Shaughter, returned, this week, from an extended visit in several southern Ohio cities. Allan H. Dorsey, age 33 of 3405 Scovill Ave., and Evelyn A. Allen, age 32, 2293 E. 95th St., were licensed to wed, Aug. 25th, 22. Dorsey's connection with The Gazette was severed, several weeks ago. He was its advertising solicitor and collector for about two years. Our Men's Cleveland Association emancipation outing at Puritus Springs. Monday, proved the usual successful and very enjoyable affair. The crowd was in evidence in the evening, as usual, and all voted it an exceptional event. Those in charge are entitled to unstinted praise for their palstaking efforts. The Shakespearean Dramatic club of Gethsemane Baptist church presented "Julius Caesar" at the church. E. 30th St. and J. Scovill Th. 30th St. and J. S.Dmart, smart, and Rv. W. M.Page, pastor. A. P. Turner dramatized the play. Augmented by the Pittsburg delegation at Columbia, Cleveland and camps' representatives, Amanda Wooden, left Sunday night in a special car for their district convention at Indianapolis. The Second Reg. and Ladies' bands' of the order, were in the party. George E. Cohron and Miss Helen Hale, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Tuck of Oberlin, who were married there, recently, will locate here. Mrs. Cohron was a member of Howard University's faculty. He came to Cleveland from that city, about a year ago, to manage the local office of the N. B. L. Insurance Co. Mrs. C. J. Sayles, of Scovill Ave. a long-time subscriber of "The Old Reliable" Gazette, who a few months ago became a grandmother, recently won second prize in a race She is apparently "light on her feet as a feather." Those at the Spira hall entertainment of the U. B. F. & S. M. T. week before last, think so, anyhow. Miss Jennie Porter and Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Alexander of Cincinnati and Wm. R. Stewart, Esq. of Youngstown returned to the city, last week, from Niagara Falls, and left for Mt. Clemens, Mich., in Mr. Stewart's Marmon car to spend the remainder of their vacation. While in the city they were entertained by Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Murrell of Central Ave. and Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Murrell of E. 49th St. A musicale was given. Thursday evening, at the Euclid Ave. Baptist church, E. 18th St., by the Shiloh Baptist church building club On In Choosing Wifey's New Hat? OR THIS ONE? $50 GEE! THAT'S A FRIGHT! THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O. SEPTEMBER 2, 1922. of which G. H. Ambrose is musical director and Miss Josie E. Hunter, chairman of program committee. It is said that Shiloh's 800 members voted unanimously for Rev. Boston J. Prince as Rev. C. G. Fishback's successor as pastor. Rev. Fishback died, recently. Mt. Zion Cong. Christian Endeavor surprised Mrs. M. Imes, 2311 E. 33rd St., Sunday evening, She served peaches and cake. It entertained the community and eight visiting ministers from the Congregational Workers' Convention held in Chicago, from 4 to 6 p. m., Wednesday. The K. T. C. auxiliaries, the first year winners of Mt. Zion three-year tennis pennant, were entertained by the A. B. T. C. at Mt. Zion community from 6 to 9 p. m., Wednesday. The Men's Club will hold a morning dance, Labor Day, Monday, Sept. 4th, 1922, at I. O. F. ball, No. 2064 E. 55th B. 10:30 a. m. to 3:30 p. m. Cheatham's Orchestra, Cards, 55 cents, including tax—Ady. The Alliance Gospel quintet left, Aug. 26, for Buffalo. From there the singers will go to Toronto, Ont., and sign up with the Canadian branch of the Christian Missionary alliance for a tour of western Canada which will take them as far as Edmonton, Alberta, and Winnipeg. They will not return before December. The quintet made such a good impression at Willowvale tabernacle in Toronto during the recent mammoth meeting there that the band included interested organizations organization work in Canada. The personnel of the quintet is as follows: Floyd Lacey, first tenor; J. W. Parker, director, and Spurgeon Jones, second tenors; Harry D. Hodges, first basso, and Alexander E. Talbert, second. Do not wait for the collector to call on you, but call, send or mail your quintet to where you owe to The Gazette, at once, so not to miss a single copy of "The Old Reliable" Gazette. All persons in the city who have knowledge of illegal voting in ward 11, Aug. 8, 22 or 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 discountey, or who saw any irregularities in the votes on the ballot, 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. FACTS People who Advertise Can sell Goods. People who sell Goods Can make Money. People who make Money can advertise goods. The Best Advertising Medium is "The Old Reliable" GAZETTE. REMARKS ABOUT ADVERTISING 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 NOT 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." Drawn for this paper By Frank Leef SO YOU LIKE THE LITTLE ONE DEAR? BETCHA! THAT'S GOT ALL THE STYLE! $10 COLOR-LINE LUNA PARK! Our pastors should do their clear duty to their congregations and warn them to shun color-line Luna park as they would a place filled with small-pox. Negroes loyal to their race and with self and race respect and pride CANNOT enter color-line Luna Park, before, during or after its season closes. The principle is the same! Mark those Negroes who would fole there the ignorant and who would know of the insufferable conditions existing there all year while the park is open — the discrimination against the race in Luna park's dance hall, skating ring and swimming-pool —, in order that they or their organizations may make some "tainted" money for themselves and that color-line Luna park management! BE MEN AND WOMEN! Do not lick the hand that smites you! The Liberty Cap Co. makes your cap to order. Assure yourself of correct style, perfect fit and a variety of shades to choose from, by placing your fall order with them early. The prices are right. Be sure to see their adv., elsewhere in this paper and patronize them—Adv. We are looking for a good man to represent our National Business Institution in Cleveland territory. The man we will select must be of neat appearance, honest, furnish references and hold the intelligent respect of his people in this community. Call at room 707, No. 750 Prospect Ave., and see Mr. Barr.—Ady. 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. I believe thoroughly, as everyone knows, in education—in all phases of education. I believe, as well, in all the hard work useful professions. It is my duty to help Negro, like the rest of mankind, must learn to work out more of his problems along business lines than he has in the past; he must learn as others have learned, that a man with problems can and must be worked out at six per cent. Dr. R. R. Moton. Character, like a fine old tree, matures slowly and is a riper growth than and success that is forced as hothouse products are forced. Character in a newspaper develops through years of service to the people. For forty years The Gazette has been serving our people of this country. It has gathered a reader clientele whose tastes it reflects, and whose power and responsiveness to buy are direct measures of its present importance to every advertiser. "If you write verses advertising soup, soap and cosmetics you'll never be known as one of the immortals. "Probably not," said the commercial bard. "Neither will posterity write indignant letters to the press because the present generation permitted me to starve." Now We Know. "Why are they called pyramids, dad?" asked George, who was looking at a picture of those wonders of Egypt. "They are called pyramids, my son," replied the father, without hesitation, "because they 'appear amid' the general desolation of the desert." Jim—Yes, and his family thinks it's a case of hypnotism. Tom—I don't know but I think that it is a case of chemical attraction.—Science and Invention. No Encouragement Necessary "Do you believe in encouraging boys to fight?" "No more than in encouraging ducks to swim." THANKS LOVE! I'M GLAD YOU LIKE IT! IT'S THE $50 ONE! I CHANGED THE TAGS FOR A LITTLE JOKE! Values in Business. CHARACTER. A Thrifty Muse New We Know Why ? Suffer APPETIZING FT CHEESE INS IN LOAVES K YOUR GROCER Delicious! Appetizing KRAFT CHEESE IN TINS IN LOAVES ASK YOUR GROCER 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. It old aching tooth. Once you know we can remove it, you will send your friends to us. R. H. V. BISHOP 22ND ST. and WOODLAND AVE. Let us extract that old aching tooth. Once you know how easy we can remove it, you will send all your friends to us. May Gilbert Praises EXELENTO QUININE POMADE silky hair that can be easily dressed. Made happy thousands of women who had it will do the same for you. If your eless or if you have dandruff and itch-box of EXELENTO QUININE POMADE. Price by mail 25c on receipt of stamps or coin. WANTED—Write for Particulars CINE COMPANY, Atlanta, Georgia IN BEAUTIFIER, an ointment for dark, sallow skins, in treatment of skin troubles. YOU can have soft, silky hair that can be easily dressed. EXELENTO has made happy thousands of women who had coarse, nappy hair. It will do the same for you. If your hair is brittle and lifeless or if you have dandruff and itching scalp, try a box of EXELENTO QUININE POMADE. For sale at all drug stores. Price by mail 25c on receipt of stamps or colu. AGENTS WANTED—Write for Particular EXELENTO MEDICINE COMPANY, Atlanta, Georgia We make EXELENTO SKIN BRAITFIER, an elastim for dark, sallow skins, used in treatment of skin troubles. 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. NO 1111 CIRCLET MORE THAN A PRINTING PRICE $1.00 Austria STANDARD QUALITY The Circlet is more than a Enclosure. It's Self-Adjusting, and simply slips over the head, clamps at the waist and under-arm, and smooths out ugly lines. If your dealer can tgetit, send actual bill measure, name, address and $1.00. We send the Circlet pre-paid. Sizes 34 to 48. Nemo Hygienic-Fashion Institute 120 East 10th St., New York, Dept M. CATARRH OF THE STOMACH OU CAN'T ENJOY LIFE with a sore, sour, bloated stomach. Food does not nourish. Instead it is a source of misery, causing pains, belching, dizziness and headaches. The person with a bad stomach should be satisfied with nothing less than permanent, lasting relief. The right remedy will act upon the linings of the stomach, enrich the blood, aid in casting out the catarrhal poisons and strengthen every bodily function. The large number of people who have successfully used Dr. Hartman's famous medicine, recommended for all catarrhal conditions, offer the strongest possible endorsement for PE-RU-NA IN SERVICE FIFTY YEARS TABLETS OR LIQUID SOLD EVERYWHERE Patronize Our Advertisers Delicious KRAFT IN TINS ASK YOU Pay an Early Visit Solid (22 gu Filling Set of Let us extract that old ac how easy we can re all your fr DR. H. V S. W. COR. E. 22ND ST MA EXE YOU can have soft, silky hair. EXELENTO has made happy coarse, nappy hair. It will hair is brittle and lifeless or in ing scalp, try a box of. For sale at all drug stores. Price by AGENTS WANTED. EXELENTO MEDICINE CO. We make EXELENTO SKIN BEAUTIFIES used in treatment. 5% ON SAVINGS MORTGAGE LOANS The Empire Savings & Loan Co. 2316 E. 55th St. Randolph 6778 Cent. 1715-W BEST EVER MADE We will send a gift-site box with our address, 616 Free MONEY made sidereal our Ticket Article. Per- form, Send, Talent, Mile WRITE FOR DETAILS. AGENTS WANTED TYSON & CO. PARIS, TENN J. LOMSKY 3820 Central Avenue We carry full line of Dry Goods Ladies' and Gents' Furnishings Forrest & Petite 10570 Cedar Ave. Cor. E. 106th St. Painting, Paper-banging and Cleaning, Interior Decorating, Hard-wood Finishing. Sheet Metal Work, Spouting, Shating and Roofing of all Kinds, Furnaces installed, Cleaned and Repaired, Metal Ceiling a Specialty. Phone, Garfield, 3616. ```markdown ``` Monthly pains, neuralgic, setatic and rheumatic pains, headache, backache and all other aches are quickly relieved by Contain no dangerous habit-forming drugs. Why don't you try them? "You'll Be Tickled, Too, When We're Thru The Bonita Cleaning, Repairing and Pressing Club. Our work is first class. Try us. We Call and Deliver. W. B. Goodrich and M. H. Johnson 2370 E. 30th St. In Columbus, Go to W. H. Price's store, No. 1654 E. Long St., for copies of The Gazette. Says her hair has grown 28 inches long by using this wonderful hair grower 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. Nothing But A Political Trick To Fool Hamilton County Afro-American Voters And Put U. S. Attorney-General Harry M. Daugherty "in a hole' The Notorious Ballot-box Stuffing in the South, Years ago, "Out-Heroded" in Ohio. Cincinnati, O.—When the Hamilton County (Cincinnati) Republican organization for the first time in 1982, the county yearly refused several months ago, to place a member of the race on its slate for nomination for the Legislature, Aug. 8, '22, and then turned down flat at that time a delegation of our people, headed by the Rev. J. Franklin Walker, which appealed to them to do so, it emancipated from political serfdom many thousands of the 25,000 Afro-American voters in this city and county who could not have been "pried loose" in any other way. Right in the midst of this, along came that RACE POWER, the editor of The Gazette, with OUR Harry Clay Smith for Governor candidacy, during the recent primary, and with a speech we shall ever remember stirred hundreds of our people. In the biggest meeting the campaign had before been stirred. He and Dr. Walker and C. E. Hunt, who introduced the editor, discussed the local situation thoroughly and drew the only deductions that were possible under the circumstances—told our people the truth, that they (here as elsewhere) had been political "door-mats" so long that not even political leaders, particularly those in Cincinnati, had the least bit of regard or respect for them, their rights or their privileges, locally or generally, and that they never would have held on our policy learned to invest in the poll such aggravation unfair and insulting investment as the Hamilton County Republican organization had so recently handed them for the second time in two years. To this the vast audience rallied with storms of applause that could have been and doubtless were heard for several blocks. No sane person will question the general feeling of resentment that rests in the bosoms and minds of our people of this city and county, and they are going to make it felt on election day in November! That the local political leaders (white), and their few black henchmen, are fully alive to this condition of affairs political is proven in their latest "smoke-screen" move — to the Republican organization's pseudo endorsement (for that is all it really amounts to) of A. Lee Beaty, former member of the Ohio Legislature, one of its Negro henchmen for an appointment as an assistant in the office of the U. S. District Attorney for southern Ohio. There is little or no probability of his appointment, and if he were appointed, it would not be anything like an adequate substitute for the membership in the Ohio Legislature we have been arrogantly robbed by the prejudicial Hamilton County organization, and they will learn this to their sorrow in November. Two years ago, it stabbed our candidate in the back and to political death after placing him on its state and securing his nomination. This, too, in a Republican landslide that carried all the rest of the county Republican ticket to victory on election day. We have not forgotten this even if some of them are foolish enough to think so. It was what caused, last fall, thousands of our people to cast their votes for Judge Joseph B. Kelley, the independent candidate for mayor. To all of the foregoing must be added the work of the organization's "slight of hand" artists in the booths of this city and county, on the 8th of this month, when they not only cut our candidate, the Hon. Harry Clay Smith out of THOUSANDS of votes, only permitting him to have, on the face the returns, something of 42 votes (this too, in county that boasts a land of 25,000), but he actually on the face of the returns, mind you, turned this county's "wat" vote into a "dry" vote, election day and evening, by changing it from Durand to Thompson, candidates for the Republican gubernatorial nomination. That is certainly "going some", as all must admit, but it IS just exactly what was done here on the 8th of this month. The Cleveland Republican organization, which was working hand in hand with the Republican organization, so have done much the same thing there, certainly as far as our Hon. Harry Clay Smith for Governor candidacy was concerned, to say the least. It gave him but 1,681 votes in a city and county that has over 10,000 male Negro votes. Rud, Hynicka, head of the Hamilton County Republican organization and a member of the Republican National Committee from Ohio, is a crafty political leader. He feels sure, with the help of his black menchens, that he can "soft-soap" our people here, until after election, with this Beaty recommendation "smoke-screen" nonsense but he will fail, this time sure. We have had much of this mistreatment, for many years, but in the last two years far too much, more than any group in the party could stand; indeed, more than double that any other group in the party would have stood one-half of two years. Many white politicians believe, the recommendation of the appointment of Beaty is purely an effort of Hynicka and his associates to win back the "black brigade" to the organization's fold until after the November election. Others profess to see in the indorsement a well-disguised opportunity to slap back at U. S. Attorney-General Harry M. Daugherty for his comments upon Hynicka's methods previous to the Ohio gubernatorial campaign. They argue that if Beaty is turned down by Daugherty, then on his head must rest the onus of having antagonized the race. If Daugherty appoints Beaty, then the organization, they say, is relieved of the responsibility that he did not have to appoint him, and public sentiment (white) against the appointment will be turned upon Daugherty. In other words, as it was expressed, "Daugherty will be put in a hole. Hell he be damned if he does and damned if he doesn't, and the organization will have evened up with him a bit for his past treatment." All of which is interesting, as it shows very nicely how our white Republicans here in Cincinnati view the matter and lightly they regard those of the race here who have so long been their political "meal-ticket." As we have said, a half dozen apperances of the Pattys "smoke-screen" recommendation only points to, would not satisfy our people for the loss of our only effective position, member of the Ohio Legislature, and Mr. Hynicka and his prejudiced Republican cohorts are going to learn this to their sorrow on election day, next November. Then they will be unable to deliver this county's vote like they did on Aug. 8. 8."22. Mark our prediction! SCORES G. O. P. PRIMARY. Donahey Says Certain Republican Candidates' Pockets Were "Bulging With Money"—No Joke Either. Columbus, O., Aug. 22—The "menace of Thompsonism in Ohio, as Newberryism in Michigan," was held up as a possibility in the coming campaign for governor by A. V. Donahey, New Philadelphia, Democratic candidate for governor, in his address today before the Democratic state convention. "The recent Republican primary reeked with money." Donahey declared. "Hired workers (for candidates Thompson and Knight) fled about the state, the pockets bulged with the spot of corrupt politics. The 'barrel' is to be on tap this year and the preliminaries prove it beyond a doubt." Donahay asserted the Republican primaries this year were a "disgrace" and he is right in the statement. "There was no honest election in many places in Ohio," he said. And this is too true, particularly in Cleveland and Cincinnati. "If elected and the people give me a friendly general assembly, I propose to clean up the primaries, and investigate the lavish expenditures of money. Can a man, who spent more money to secure a nomination than he will receive in salary, if elected, have a proper regard for his oath of office?" Carmi A. Thompson and his campaign committee admit spending over $25,000 and Congressman C. L. Knight, who was also a candidate for the Republican nomination, and his committee, easily spent as much. STATEMENT OF EXPENSES Statement of Harry Clay Smith. Address 2322 E. 30th Street, Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, Ohio. The undersigned respectfully states that he was a candidate for the Republican nomination for the office of Governor of Ohio at the Primary Election held on the eighth day of August, 1922, and that the following involvement of the contributions and expenses in connection with said candidacy: I. Harry Clay Smith, being duly sworn, say the foregoing is a full and true statement or account of all contributions made or received by me, and of the disposition thereof made and all liabilities incurred by me, to my knowledge. Worse than the spending of so very much money is what many of the Republican organizations' judges and clerks in the election booths of Cleveland and Cincinnati did to several of the candidates on the day and evening of the recent primary, in their zeal for Thompson, it is said. AN HONEST PRIMARY ELECTION? In spite of the "cutting" our candidacy for the Republican nomination for Governor received in Cleveland, Cincinnati and at least two other of the large cities of the state, on Aug. 8, 1922, we have every reason to feel proud of the showing made at the recent state primaries. No, we were not last by a good deal! It is more than a creditable to have received more votes than at least two or three of the other candidates, in a field of nine, and ours the only Afro-American candidacy in the number. As a friend well says, we made history, ASKS BOARD TO HOLD BALLOTS State Secretary Hears Count Wasn't Correct. Columbus, O., Aug. 20.—Secretary of State Smith today announced that he had asked the Hamilton county board of electors not to destroy its primary election ballots. He said reports had come to him alleging more votes were cast for some candidates, both Republican and Democratic, in certain Cincinnati precincts than were counted for them. Secretary Harvey C. Smith, Hon. Harry Clay Smith, Congressman Knight and Mr. Duand, all candidates for the Republican nomination for Governor, are said to have been given a very "raw deal" in Cincinnati, Cleveland and Dayton, particularly, by the local Republican organizations' representatives in the booths of those cities. THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O. SEPTEMBER 2, 1922. spending of so very what many of theizations' judges the election booths Cincinnati did to candidates on the of the recent prieal for Thompson. MARY ELECTION? including Toledo, more than 5,000 two years ago and a few weeks ago, that our people of Ohio, and their white friends, have every reason to feel proud of. In his own precinct of ward 11, Cleveland, Harry Clay Smith received, on August 8, twenty-three votes; Carmi A. Thompson, 14, and Harvey C. Smith, 3—on the face of the returns! And he was lucky to be allowed that many. Great is THE SYSTEM worked here, in Cincinnati, Dayton and other Ohio cities, these days, and for several years past. It must be destroyed—THE SYSTEM! RECOUNT IS DEMANDED. Sheriff Nomination Candidate Says He Was "Counted Out." Tiffin, O., Aug. 18—Adolph L. Lescher, defeated for the Republican nomination for sheriff of Seneca county today demanded a recount of the vote. Lescher complained to county election board officials that he had been "counted out," and said he would appeal to the secretary of state for a recount. He was "defeated" for the nomination by George N. Reed, Fostoria, World War veteran, by 1,413 votes. KNIGHT'S MANAGER MAKES STATEMENT The following statement was issued from Knight for Governor Headquarters, at Columbus, by State Senator George H. Bender, Manager for the Knight campaign: "I neglected to state the other day when I formally denied that we had started certain stories against Col. Carmi A. Thompson, that we were also accused of having called him the millionaire carpet bagger from Minnesota.' We want to get our hands on the man who said that we did the We didn't. This term was applied to Thompson by Bill Durbin, Democratic Chairman. If Col. Thompson wanted to desert Ohio and live in Minnesota, that is his business. If he wanted to work for the late Jim Hill, that was also his business. He had a legal right to stay away from Ohio just as many years as he pleased, and because he comes back and runs for Governor is no good reason for calling him a 'millionaire carpet bagger.' As a matter of fact he could not get all of his possessions into one carpet bag." KNIGHT AGAINST CONSTABULARY KNIGHT AGAINST CONSTABULARY The state constabulary, notably in Pennsylvania, is used not so much to protect the public as the privileges of special interest. In the recent past this constabulary outrageously violated the rights of peacecraft assembly and even invaded and ejected from churches those who had their assembled for lawful if indeed not for religious worship. NEW MACHINE FOR FLOUR MILL Device for Automatic Weighing and Sack Filling is Mage An automatic weighing and sack filling machine for use in flour mills has been perfected and patented at Monroe, N. C. The flour enters a metal bin, and when a certain amount has entered the pull of gravity from the flour overcomes the pull of gravity from the weights which hold the bin up this causing the bin to descend. In its descent it stops more flour from entering and opens a door in the bottom, precipitating the flour into the sack. The weights then pull the bin back to the original position. By changing the weights the machine can weigh 25, 50 or 100 pounds. A Run of Luck "The closest call I ever had," said the ruddy-faced passenger, "was out in Arizona. Our train ran onto a bridge where the supports had been washed away by a flood. And the train into the river." And the train lack could have it, just at that moment it was being held up by train robbers. INTERESTED "Do you see that chromo over there in the blue dress?" asked the man of a stranger standing next to him at a party. "Yes," replied the man addressed, with interest. "Let me give you a quiet tip. She's a lemon. She walked all over my feet. Don't try to dance with her." "I'm not likely to. You see, she's my wife!"—Yonkers Statesman. The Unrevealed. "Daughter," said the cautious mother, "you should know, absolutely, that you love James above all things, before you marry him." "For mercy's sake, mamma," pouted the girl, "you are so unreasonable! How can I know how much I love him until I marry him and give him a chance to treat me mean and see if I can stick to him!" A Veteran. "How high are we now, captain?" asked the timorous passenger in an air liner. "Oh, about five thousand feet," said the captain. "Dear me! Isn't that too high?" "No, ma'ma. We always travel at the same altitude. Why, this air lane is so well worn that I know every bump in it." "I hear you and your wife had some words last night." "We did, but I never got around to using mine." — American Legion Weekly. Portugal's Valuable Colonies Portugal's Valuable Colonies She was the earliest European colonizer in Africa but in her various wars lost much of her possessions. Today she has the Cape Verde Islands ctl. 480 square miles, with 150,000 inhabitants; Portuguese Guinea with 3,940 square miles and 850,000 people; Principe and St. Thomas Islands, containing but 360 square miles and 43,000 souls; Angola, covering 484,800 square miles and the home of 4,200,000 blacks and Mozambique er Portuguese, East Africa with an area of 29,000 square miles and 3,200,000 population. Outside of the Portuguese officials, a small representation from the army and a few business men and traders of European birth the entire population are illiterate blacks. But little has been done to improve the country or its inhabitants. The island possessions are devoted chiefly to agriculture, coffee, millet, cocoa, rubber and jio hora being the principal products. From Portuguese Guinea ivory, oil seeds, wax, hides and timber are exported. This territory is one of the most backward possessions in the world. Angola has a coast line of over 1,000 miles. Its chief products are coffee, rubber, wax, sugar, vegetable oils, sesal, cocoa nuts and fryce. There are deposits of petroleum and asphalt which are at present being worked by a British syndicate. Malite, copper, iron, petroleum, asphalt, salt, gold and asbestos exists in fair quantities, but are so far from transportation they cannot be mined profitably. The yearly exports and imports each reach approximately $5,500,000. There are about 1,000 miles of poorly equipped railroads in the tributary. Mozambique or Portuguese East Africa, of which Lourenço Marques is the capital is perhaps the best known Portuguese African possession. Its exports are rubber, eres, wax, and ivory chiefly elephant tusks, and its requirements, like Angola's are cotton goods, ammunition, arms, provisions, tools, hardware, candle, cutlery and liquors. It has less than 500 miles of operating railways and much of its traffic is carried by boats on the Zambesi and Shire rivers. Portugal endeavors to control both the export and the import trade of her African colonies, but Germany and England supplied a great share of the materials not produced by the mother country. While the larger cities have financial connections with Europe through Portuguese banks, still the bulk of the trade here, as in all parts of Africa is done by barter, trading posts are to be found throughout the land. The methods of the Portuguese officials hinder, rather than aid, those inclined to develop this territory.—Leslieg. HOW TO MAKE ORCHARD Colorado Men Transfer Barren Hill Into Fertile Tract The conversion of a barren hilltop into one of the best orchards in the Grand valley, Colorado, has been accomplished by an ingenious method in irrigation. For several years the area has been considered practically worthless because of the absence of water upon it, while surrounding lands under irrigation were valued in some instances at more than $1,000 an acre. The present owner of the tract purchased it for a nominal sum and then had constructed a large water wheel equal in height to that of the hill, which was placed in a ditch at the base of the knoll. "Iume was built to reach from the top of this to the summit of the hill. On each of the paddles of the wheel water troughs were attached in such a manner that as the wheel revolves water is carried to the ilume without employing any other power than that provided by the current of the water; the canal. In this manner the hill is thoroughly irrigated.—Popular Mechanics. Find Greek Manuscript Several years ago it was reported that a Greek manuscript of the gospels, nearly as old as the manuscripts which formed the basis of the New Testament text, had been found in Egypt. The manuscript was embraced in a volume of vellum and had probably been preserved in an ancient monastery or tomb, it was believed, although the Arabs who found it would say nothing on that point. The ancient writing was purchased by an American, C. L. Freer, who brought it to this country. The manuscript is believed to date either from the fourth or fifth century and it is of considerable importance to Biblical scholars in that it gives them new material, particularly on the texts of St. John and St. Luke. The text is remarkably clear and, as is the case with practically all manuscripts of that period, is practically devoid of punctuation, capital letters or accents. After the fourteenth verse of the sixteenth chapter of St. Mark's gospel, as recorded in this manuscript, which Jesus upbraids his followers for their unbelief, the new text contains words which do not appear in any other manuscript of the New Testament.—Pathfinder. THE MASTER OF THE WORLD Lecturer—Allow me before I close to repeat the words of the immortal Webster. Farmer, Wayback—Land sakes, Marble, let's git out o' here. He's a-goin, start it out in the dictionary. 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. Our mob-violence or anti-lynching 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 years to secure its enactment into (in the statutes) under the heading # Mobi 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. Person suffering death or injury by mob trying to lynch another. 6284. Institutions 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 "jynching" within the meaning of this chapter. (93 v. 161 2.) Section 6279. The term "serious injury," for this 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 a persecution, if such injury resulted in livelihood by manual labor, a sum not to exceed five thousand dollars. (93 v. 162 8.) Section 6282. The legal representative of a p. person dying from injuries received from lynching by a mob, may recover of the county in which such injury occurred, a sum not to exceed five thousand dollars damages for such unlawful killing. Such sum shall be applied to the maintenance of life of the victim of the mind children of such person so lynched, if any survive him, until such children are of legal age, and then be distributed to the survivors, share and share alike, the widow receiving an amount equal to a child's share. If there be no widow or minor children surviving such decedent, such sum shall be distributed among the deceased of kindness, the laws of the distribution of the personality of an intestate. Such sum so recovered shall not be a part of the estate of such person so lynched, nor be subject to any of his liabilities. (93 v 162 6.) Section 6283. A person suffering death or injury from a mob attempting to lynch another person shall come within the provisions of this chapter. He or his legal representatives shall have a like right of action as one purposely injured or killed by such a mob. (93 v 162 6.) Section 6284. Action for the recoveries provided for in this chapter must be commenced, within two years from the date of such lynching, in any court having original jurisdiction of an action for damages for malicious assault. (93 v. 162 7) Section 6285. An order to the commissioners of a county, against which such recovery has been, 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 seized by mob from any of the persons composing such mob. A person present, with hostile intent, at such lynching shall be deemed a member of the mob and be liable to such action. (93 v. 162 10.) Section 6288. If a mob carries a prisoner into another county, or comes from another county to commit violence on a prisoner brought from such county for safekeeping, the county in which the lynching is committed, 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 dis pursue such mob. (93 v 163 11.) Section 6289. This chapter shall not relieve a person concerned in the case of a 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 RIGHTS law which the editor had enacted in connection with 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, barbershop, public conveyance by land or water, theater or amusement, accommodation and amusement, denies for 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 or more than ten dollars, imprisoned not less than thirty days or more than ninety days, or both. Sec. 12941. Whoever violates the next preceding section shall also pay not less than fifty dollars nor more than five hundred dollars to the person aggrieved thereby to be recov- ildation 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 that it does not use it as often as they should, but it does 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 outery 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. Hon. Harry C. Smith. 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 Court of Appeals in the Puritan Luncheon, on December 26, decided in Akron, last fall, in which 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. 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 interested in helping by others in their own interest as well as worked by others for their own advancement and not ours—George W. Blount. RACE PREJUDICE! "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. "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 Summer.