The Gazette

Saturday, October 28, 1922

Cleveland, Ohio

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THE OHIO CONFERENCE IN UNION DE STRUGGLE FORTIETH YEAR No. 10 $5,00 REWA For information leading conviction of the party that m berberg, in her home, 1847 E. '22, and robbed her of two ring ring of about two and one-h gold and one a pearl ring su diamonds in yellow gold. All treated in the very strictest of party giving the information known. Information may be man & Felsman, 722 Leader, Silberberg, 1847 E. 73rd St., C 35,000 HEWAR For information leading to the arrival of the party that murdered Herbert in her home, 1847 E. 73rd St., N.Y., robbed her of two rings, one a dart about two and one-half karats in one a pearl ring surrounded by bands in yellow gold. All information in the very strictest of confidence surviving the information will never be known. Information may be brought to Felsman, 722 Leader-News Bldg., Berg, 1847 E. 73rd St., Cleveland, O. $5,000 REWARD For information leading to the arrest and conviction of the party that murdered Helen Silberberg, in her home, 1847 E. 73rd St., May 12, '22, and robbed her of two rings, one a diamond ring of about two and one-half karats in white gold and one a pearl ring surrounded by small diamonds in yellow gold. All information will be treated in the very strictest of confidence and the party giving the information will never be made known. Information may be brought to Beckerman & Felsman, 722 Leader-News Bldg., or A. Silberberg, 1847 E. 73rd St., Cleveland, O. GLOBE THEATRE WOODLAND AND E. 55TH ST. (Entire Week Commencing, Mon., Oct. 30) 5 CAREFULLY SELECTED ACTS OF 5 VAUDEVILLE HOOTEN & HOOTEN (The Long Tall Gal and the Short Preacher) Hear Him Deliver His Farewell Sermon If You Won't Laugh It's Because you Won't Hear or See Them AUDEVILI HOOTEN & HOOTEN Long Tall Gal and the Short Prea or Him Deliver His Farewell Sen you Won't Laugh It's Because you Hear or See Them HOOTEN & HOOTEN (The Long Tall Gal and the Short Preacher) Hear Him Deliver His Farewell Sermon If You Won't Laugh It's Because you Won't Hear or See Them There should be no doubt in anyone's mind now—as to where to spend one enjoyable evening each week—just come to the GLOBE THEATRE (Always a Good Show) And See 5 — Good Acts of Vaudeville — 5 And a FEATURE PICTURE LIBERTY CAPS For Men and Boys! —Price— Men's, $1 and $1.50 Boys', 75c to 95c 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. Thones: Central 7509-K and Ran. 5775. THE GAZETTE ESTABLISHED AUGUST 25, 1883 And Issued Every Week on Time Since CLEVELAND, OHIO, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1922 FRESH OHIO NEWS WRITTEN BY "THE OLD RELIABLE" GAZETTE'S CORRESPONDENTS THROUGHOUT THE STATE What Our People Are Doing Each Week - Church, Personal, Social, Lodge, Literary and Musical Marriages, Deaths, Etc. YOUNGSTOWN—J. E. Harvey is getting along nicely and will soon be able to resume his work. He was injured in an auto accident, recently—Dr. Chas. Bundy has been returned to Oak Hill Ave. A. M. E. church, as pastor, and Dr. J. M. Gilmore has been re-appointed distrup. for another year.—Dr. and Mrs. J. L. Johnson and daughter of Columbus, which sat Saturday, on route home from Cleveland in their auto—Mr. Clarence Vena of Toledo was here, Monday, from Columbus. Politics. CADIZ—Charles Christian, J. W. Johnson, R. F. Ballard and Lewis Johnson motored to Scio, Sunday, to see Byron R. Christian who is ill.—Elsworth Guy and Dr. Clifford Morton of Steubenville visited here Sunday.—Mrs. Flora Lucas was called to Milford by him by her son-in-law. Hanny B. Broadas who formerly lived here and was presented.—Mrs. Cora A. Verse of Wheeling was the guest, Sunday, of Mr. and Mrs. B. S. Lee.—Mr. Emory West and Miss Christian were married, the past week, by Rev. W. H. Lucas.—Miss Isabella Lucas has returned from Wheeling. HILLSBORO.—Mrs. Myrtle Francis of Detroit spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mal. Kittrell.—Mrs. Marie Young is in Cleveland for an extended visit.—Mr. James Campbell is quite ill.—Mrs. Ernestine Johnson is convalescent.—Rev. W. W. Stephenson preached at his charge in Piketon, Sunday.—to H. Harvey Ames, a distinguished him. Mr. Clarence Hudson entertained at dinner, last Tuesday evening, Rev. and Mrs. H. Williams and Prof. S. E. Dean. They have moved to their charge in Frankfort.—Clifford Zimmerman has the flu.—Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bolden and son, Birch; Mrs. Mildred Baker and Mr. Harvey Ames distested him. Mr. Clarence Hudson returned from Cincinnati, Saturday.—Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Bullard sold their property and moved to Xenia.—Mr. and Mrs. Bud Davis of Willington visited her father, Mr. Floyd Wins a Prize Baltimore, Mo. Md.-Floyd Williams of this city possesses the novel and unique distinction of having been rewarded by a group of women for his "long-suffering patience" and "heroism" in enduring the "endless din and gossip of a dozen feminine voices" for an entire summer. Williams was the only man staying at Adkina cottage. B r a d k. Heights. The women presented him with gold medal representing the top of a talcum powder can. A note that accompanied the gift bore a message commending him for his "admirable fortitude" in bearing it all. ADDITIONAL LOCALS Mrs. Marie Young of Hillsboro is here visiting. Among the many callers at The Gazette office, this week, were Mr. Baldwin of Chicago, who is en route to Hillsboro to visit relatives, and Editor Arthur W. Harris, of "The Call." Mr. and Mrs. Mondaaye, of Mona Ave., were called to Dayton, last week, by the death of his mother. She was critically ill but a short time. They have the sympathy of many friends in this community. Wm. R. Conners and Aty. Wm. R. Green called a meeting, Monday evening, at the "Negro" Welfare League's headquarters, E. 40th St., to consider the "turn-down" Green received, recently, when he went to the Wm. Taylor, Son & Co. store to purchase a hat. Among those at the meeting were: Aty's. Chas. W. Chesnutt, Alex. H. Martin, Harry E. Davis; Messrs. Dwight R. Williams, Geo. A. Myers, Geo. Hinton, Tom Fleming, Sam Woods and the editor of The Gazette. They effected an organization to work with motors in conjunction with the local brand of the N. A. A. C. P. of which Green is president. Dr. Adelbert M. Gibson, a graduate of Western Reserve University Dental Department, has opened new and fully equipped dental offices at 4505 Woodland Ave. and trust our readers will patronize him. If you want first-class work at reasonable rates, see Dr. Gibson. The Gazette takes pleasure in recommending him to its readers. John Captain, Sunday—Rev. J. J. Burr preached at his church in Gist Settlement, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Baber and family of Wilmington visited their daughter, Mrs. Douglas Gales, Sunday. SPRINGFIELD—Mrs. Della Williams of Toledo is visiting her sister, Mrs. Palmer of E. Euclid Ave. She is en route home from Cincinnati. Dr. and Mrs. Clarence Bishop, Dr. and Mrs. Peterson, Mr. Chas, Cottrell of Toledo. The Ohio Conference brought many visitors to the city from surrounding towns—Rev. E. W. Curry is in Portsmouth, assisting Rev. B. R. Reed in raising money for a new church in course of construction. Mrs. T. D. Scott is in city hospital recovering slowly from a fall.—Mrs. Ethel Swyne, who recently underwent a minor operation at city hospital, is getting along nicely.—Mrs. Narcissus Frame of Wilmington, the father of Peterson of Xenia were guests of Mrs. Ollie Huffman of Fair St, the past week.—The Friendship club of Clark St, Y. W. C. A., "hiked" two miles in the country, Saturday afternoon, chaperoned by Miss Tolles. The girls built a camp-fire, roasted weiners and marshmallows, playedukelies and gavels, and had a fine time. The fall festival was held. Thursday. The membership committee's "Silver Tea" and the Girl Reserves clubs' rally were successes. CORRESPONDENTS must mail all letters for publication at their main postoffice sufficiently early on Monday (or Sunday) of each week to have them reach The Gazette office on Tuesday morning, and always write also, their names and that of their city or town on the outside of the wrapper about returned copies. Unless this latter is done, proper credit cannot be given you. Lists of names, wedding presents, etc. obituary notices, inquiries for relatives and advertisements of all kinds, including items announcing entertainments to be held in the near future, must be paid for in line, six words to a line. Our rates for display advertisements will be sent on application. THE TEMPLE THEATER. "The big New York Review, 'Bandana Days,' The McCarvers The Tailors and Little Birdie Hudson, score big at the Temple Theater, this week, the McCarvers being really great acrobatic dancers The other attractions are also high-class, winning rounds of applause. The Tailors from the large audiences The Temple is showtime are ways of the best and latest. Manager Joe Clark is adept at selecting and securing the best for the Temple and deserves no small mead of praise. Starting Monday, with an entire change of program (on Thursday The Broadway Players will present the big musical comedy-drama, "A Night in Chinatown," followed by Tucker & Gresham, an added fea- ture attraction, William & Mary musical comedians and Legend Mack, singers and dancers. There will be the usual high-class photo- play. THE GLOBE THEATER The same high standard that has characterized the attractions at the Globe Theater since its re-opening, several weeks ago, is being maintained. Marjorie Cohen's Musical Comedy Co. is setting a terrific pace in "The High-Life Set." The dancing and singing being especially good. "Minstrel" Morris, the jugging jester, fully sustains the high praise of his act which preceded him to the city. He certainly does some very unique work on the stage. La Joye & La Joye, in "The Landlord & The Tenant" keep the house in an up-roar of applause from start to finish. Their usual photo-play is of the same high-class standard, pleasing everybody greatly. Next week's vaudeville attractions, Manager Bob. Davis assures us, are to surpass anything offered in the Globe Theater since he has been in charge. Hooten & Hooten. Single Billy Nichols. Fox & Yank. Mondayae & Darkfeather, and Taylor & Peggy are to attend attractions. We have witnessed the Mondaae and Darkfeather act and frankly pronounce it one of the most beautiful, astounding and high class, we have ever seen. Their costumes and electrical effects are really beautiful. THE CATHOLIC CHURCH In the Record, organ of the Catholic Church in Louisville, we read the statement of a returning visitor from Rome who says: "I will interest you to hear that in Rome I saw a Colored Bishop. He was seated right beside me at one of the papal masses. I also saw colored students for the priesthood 'n Rome." We have long been convinced that the Catholic Church is the broadest and fairest religious institution in the world as regards our racial group. In the last analysis the cause of so much race prejudice and hatred is to be laid at the door of the white man's Christianity—if he only observed fully one tenet, the golden rule—this is a great old world to live in. But for the most part it is all tinkling symbols and sounding brass. The Catholic church is the nearest approach to the rules as laid down and given by Jesus Christ the known of. It has been our desire and aim for a long time to run a series of articles telling what this great church is doing and has done for the Negro. We hope to return to eight pages soon and when we do we will carry out that purpose—Louisville (Ky). News, Sept. 9, '22. Superintendent of Service. Superintendent of service, St. Louis, Mo.—There is one Arbo-American who operates the dining service on two railroads as superintendent, Grant H. W. Williams, of Toledo, O., is in charge of the service on the Toledo, St. Louis and Western, between Toledo and St. Louis, and on the Ann Arbor Railroad, between Toledo and Fronkord, Mich. Won "Jim Crow" School Figure. Lawnside, N. J.—The local Board of Education has been forced to absorb a number of students in a segregated building, an addition to a primary school building. Another victory for our real men and women! 'Nother "Special Assistant." New York City. — Corporation Counsel O'Brien has appointed James S. Watson of Harlem as a special deputy assistant corporation counsel in the franchise tax proceedings at a salary of $3,500. Mr. Watson, the first Afro-American to hold such a position here, is a Mayor Hylan "booster." "Flight On!" Washington, D. C., Oct. 18, '22. Hon. Harry C. Smith. Editor Gazette, Cleveland, O. Dear Friend Harry; — I wish to congratulate you on the fortieth anniversary of The Gazette and also for the noble sight you made for the Republican gubernatorial nomination in Ohio. God bless and strengthen you to fight on for the race. Enclosed is my subscription for another year. Sincerely yours, Mrs. Julia Anderson Burdine. Women Organize to Stop Lynching. Buffalo, N. Y. — One million American women are be onboard in an organization called "The Anti-Lynching Crusaders," according to plans made public by Mrs. Grace Johnson, New York representative of the movement. Headquarters have been established at 521 Michigan Ave., of this city, under the directorship of Mrs. Mary B. Talbert, winner of the Spingar Medal for 1921, the first woman to achieve distinction. The Guaranty Trust Co. to New York, has accepted the office of depository for the Anti-Lynching Crusaders. Mrs. Louisa Godette, stenographer in The Gazette office, complains that there is a waitress (white) in Woolworth's 5 & 10 cent store, E. 4th St. and Euclid Ave., who absolutely refuses to serve our people at the store's lunch counter; that she (Mrs. Godette) had to wait some time, Monday, before being served by another waitress (white), and that during this time she was compelled to sit and hear an insulting conversation relative to serving her which was carried on the color-line waitress and another of the store has been notified of the incident and is not copy of our Ohio Civil Rights law that provides penalties ranging from $50 to $50 fog direct or indirect refusals to serve us in all public places in this state. Tuesday, Mrs. Godette was insulted in Hotel Statler when she went there to fill a Gazette business engagement with Miss Rebhan. Room 303, a lady active in Judge Florence E. Allen's campaign. An elevator boy refused to permit her to enter the elevator, claiming he was following instructions, until Miss Rebhan took up the matter with the assistant manager of Hotel Statler, telling him that that sort of thing must cease, at least as far as her guests regardless of race or color, and those connected with her would have been hotel. That settled it and the elevator boy could serve Mrs. Godette and did. Good for Mrs. Rebhan! She is the right kind. O! for more of them. SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS Rt. Rev. Joshua H. Jones Presides And Leads It Holding Local Republicans Responsible For The Segregation Attempt—Injunction Decision Today—Two More Great Meetings (Special to The Gazette) Springfield, O.—Our people were given another treat, last Tuesday evening, when Chas. A. Cottrill of Toledo spoke at Wiley M. E. church under the auspices of the local branch of the N. A. A. C. P. Mr. Cottrill came as a substitute for Mrs. J. W. Hunton, assist. sec. of the national organization, who could not get here in time. As with other speakers brought here by the Civil Rights Protective League, his speech was very inspiring and was enthusiastically received. After a complimentary introduction by Atty. Sully Jaymes, Mr. Cottrill began by saying that we are, "Afro-Americans first and Bishop Joshua H. Jones incidentally Republicans" and that "the race can not be crushed even by the prejudice of this country"; that "we should demand our rights and privileges, and exercise them." Referring to the school situation here, he said, as a member of the State Republican Executive Committee he would notify its chairman of the situation here and the danger therein; that he would also apprise him of the reproducible conduct in the matter of the chair of the Council of the State Republican Executive Committee vowable comment was made on the example of race solidarity evidenced in the local school fight. Mr. Cottrill said that instead of having separate schools for jobs, the same fight would place our teachers in the mixed schools; that "jim crowism" must be kept out of the schools in Ohio because their establishment meant that we would be kept behind. Referring to Principal Bullock who heads the local corps of "jim crow"-promoting teachers in Fulton school, Mr. Cottrill said that he had been informed by a Knoxville, Tenn. friend that Bullock had boasted, last spring, that he was to preside over a school in Springfield, Ohio. A fine tribute was paid to the five teachers who have conducted the plaques of the school. The audience was advised by the speaker to invite the "jim crow" teachers to prayer or class-meeting where they might be made true. Afro-American Christians think right and do right. In concluding, he expressed his confidence in the conscience and sense of justice of white friends here when properly informed, and said the man who would raise a hand against eleven millions of human beings in this country certainly was no friend of America. Notwithstanding the fact one meeting had been held, last week, the regular Friday night meeting was well attended as usual. While not intending to have a second meeting, in the week, the League was fortunate to have Fred D. Patterson of Greenfield who delivered one of the most pleasing addresses of the campaign. He is a prominent manufacturer of his city. The salient points of his address were: "Success comes from one's own efforts and that the struggle must continue until success comes, or life will be trampled out; that our greatest force is that we can suffer more than any people on earth and keep smiling; that each individual must have the same reward for the same achievement." "Don't give up the fight against segregation. Never sacrifice the race's vital intervals for dollars. Die free. If you have to die a pain. If the race has not the courage to fight for freedom. It does not deserve to be free, and if conditions continue as they have any able bodied man who does a natural death is not fit for the race. Let us make our own horrors." The result of the extension of segregation will be the degradation of UNION OF AMERICA THE COPY FIVE CENTS NCE "Crow" Schools H. Jones Presides Leads It ans Responsible For The —Injunction Decision are Great Meetings the race. Our girls will lose hope and go down, while the boys become worthless. The higher law governing our relations must be expressed through the human agency of good white and good colored people." As stated in previous issues of The Gazette, Supt. t. McCord and his emissaries, both black and white, are trying every contemptible trick in their stock to break the stranglehold the C. R. P. League pickets have upon his "jim crow" school. The latest was discovered, last Wednesday night, by two of the League's workers. In an effort to check what seemed to be a drive to increase the attendance of children at the Fulton school, the workers called upon a widow who had two children who continued to go to the school despite the mother's promise to keep them out. It was while the workers were talking to the mother that Rev. E. W. B. Curry's son appeared with a sick child, the widow he stated was to pour in by "mother. Oh! yes, Rev. Curry is "taking part in the school controversy." and is taking great pains to circulate his letter of denial with Supt. McCord's corroborative letter. Even his defunct paper, "The Reformer," has been resurrected in a vain effort to convince the body of his innocence. And then to be caught "red-handed!" Well, the hand was "mother's", but the flour was "father's." Our pickets were given a treat, last Friday afternoon, when they were served a dinner contributed by the employees of the Montgomery hotel. That's the spirit. Good! for the hotel employees. Z. Y. X. The pickets at the Fulton district school shatter their eighth week's march. In the time and mud with stronger determination than ever. Principal Bullock was called home to Kentucky by his mother's illness and ought to stay there. When he reached the depot, here, a committee of lady-pickets politely told him if his mother wanted her boy to teach school, the best thing for him to do was to find a school at home in Kentucky or somewhere else in that section of the country because the "jim crow" school would soon be a thing of the past. Mrs. J. S. Jackson of Columbus, who came here to attend the Ohio conference, went to League headquarters and said: "Hire I am, give me an apron and I will do to help the cause." She took her turn at picketing and walked a beat like a trained soldier. That's the spirit that prevails here among our people with a very few exceptions and they "keep under cover." Bishop J. H. Jones, just before handing out the Ohio conference appointments, gave the preachers and large audience in Trinity A. M. E. church, Sunday evening, a strong talk on "jim crow" schools, declaring he had no time for any one who would try to segregate our people when the law was against it. He went on record as being uncompromisingly opposed to "jim crow" schools and complimented the C. R. P. League for the stand it has maintained in this fight. The conference unanimously adopted the following Whereas, we are of the opinion that the present system under which our public schools are being maintained here in Ohio is a fair and just one, and has always given satisfaction to the great mass of citizens of all races where the school-laws have been justly interpreted and fairly administered; Whereas, the public school laws do not contemplate the education of the children of any particular race or group in any particular public school building especially set apart for said race or group, and Whereas, it has been brought to our knowledge that the Board of Education of the city of Springfield, Ohio, through the singular employed superintendent, is attempting to facilitate the 10.899 of our citizens by designating one certain superior public school building, and the Fulton School building, but the one of our children only, and from which school building all of the white children living in said district have been successfully withdrawn and sent to other photographed schools making said Fulton school an "all-colored" school managed by (Continued on Page Two) One Year ..... $2.00 Six Months ..... 1.00 Three Months ..... 5.00 Subscribers are requested to remit by postoffice money order or regi- istered letter Entered at the postoffice in Cleveland, Ohio, as second-class mail matter. Address all communications to HARRY C. SMITH Editor and Proprietor THE GAZETTE (Bell 'Phone: Cherry 1259) Blackstone Building, Cleveland, O. Member Ohio Legislature: 1894 to 1896; 1896 to 1898; 1900 to 1902 THE GAZETTE is the oldest, and has the largest bona fide circulation double that of any newspaper in the interest of Afro-Americans, publish ed in the state of Ohio, and com­ parison with any will immediately establish its rank as one of the NEWS IEST and BEST in the country. 10.000.000 Afro-Americans. 350.000 in Ohio. 35.000 in Cleveland. OCTOBER 28, 1922 A little girl in New Hampshire recently wrote to Senator George H. Moses, saying that she was a girl scout and had been asked by her teacher to ascertain on what two occasions the National Anthem should not be played in public. How many can answer that question? Senator Moses replied: "The Star Spangled Banner" should not be played in a medley, or while an audience is making its exit." This is a good thing to remember and to observe. Instead of dealing with the league of nations, the Turks found that Great Britain exercises complete control over the peace negotiations; in other words, that country dominates the league. The United States recognized the true situation when we were asked to join, and the Republicans of the Senate refused to approve the covenant. America was not then, and is not now, ready to reverse the decision of our own Revolution and place itself once more under the domination of Great Britain. Say what you please; that little Welshman, Lloyd George, as premier of England for the past six years, has established a record for wonderful results accomplished for his country that it will not equal in this century, if ever. How he "played" President Thomas Woodrow Wilson and all of the best statesmen of other countries since the World War is a matter of history. Able, shrewd, crafty and wonderfully successful little fighter, Premier Lloyd George! Au revoir! England will certainly miss your exceptional guiding mind. CENTRAL AVE. AND FLEMING Mayor Fred Kohler must have forgotten Central Ave. when he was praising the condition of the streets of Cleveland, the other day. That thoroughfare is so bad, left so by the Fitzgerald-Maschke "Starlight" Boyd-Councilman Tom Fleming regime, that Tom "jumped" the city during the recent B. M. C. meet here. Citizens of that section of the city were told, last year in a Central bath-house meeting, that funds for the new sewer, new street-car tracks and new pavement were "in hand" and that there would be no untoward delay in installing them, but there was and is. Why, Mr. Mayor, why? We understand the failure to do, of the Fitzgerald-Maschke "Starlight" Boyd-Tom Fleming regime, but we do not understand the present delay. Central Ave., as it stands, is a veritable mud-hole and disease-breeding street, possibly the worst in the city of Cleveland. Urged on by that impulse which is willing to risk a shameless falsehood in order to record a prospective scoop, the Hearst papers of recent date came out in shrieking headlines that an American war vessel had been bombarded by the Turks. The headlines were carried in Hearst's Washington Times, the office of which is but a stone's throw from the State Department, and it greatly excited and disturbed many residents of the Capital City. A few got in touch with the State Department and ascertained that the report was a baseless rumor. Too much can not be said in condemnation of this yellowist sort of yellow journalism, and the Hearst papers are the worst offenders in this particular. It would have been a mere matter of picking up the telephone and checking up the rumor, but the Washington Times preferred to make a sensation out of a lie, and that at a time when the diplomatic situation was acute and the State Department was being swamped with demands that we buckle on our six-shooters and go after Kemal Pasha. Our attitude toward freedom of the press is frequently availed of to exercise unbridled license. Perhaps eventually the Hearst press will be destroyed by its own psychology. A VERITABLEE "BUGABOO." Every time it is announced that there is a possibility of Jack Johnson's returning to the ring, sport-writers (white) on many daily papers in this country "throw cat fits." If ever they "had it in for anybody" that "anybody" is Jack Johnson. O, how they love (?) him! If it was because Jack sold out, to Willard in, that Havana, Cuba, flasco (fight) or because he was too careless and "raw" in his dealings with women, we could stand it without a murmur, but when their too apparent hatred is based almost entirely on a baneful, inexcusable and damphool American color and race prejudice it is positively disgusting and only excites sympathy for Jack. The average prejudiced American sport writer has no idea what a consumate ass he makes of himself, in the minds of all sensible readers, colored and white, every time he unburdens his prejudiced mind, railing at Jack Johnson. THANKS, MR. MAYOR. The appeal to Mayor Fred Kohler for relief from distressing conditions that have existed in wards 11 and 12, particularly in the last three or four weeks prior to last Saturday and Sunday, was splendidly met on those two days and has been nicely looked after ever since, to date. Mayor Kohler, Director Martinec, Chief Graul and the police of the city, are all entitled to the thanks of the good people of those two wards, for the extra service rendered since last Saturday. Our only hope is that they will continue the good work and slowly but surely drive from wards 11 and 12 and the city, the scores of criminals, dope-sellers, bootlegers, prostitutes and the parasites who live on women that infest those two wards. Last Sunday and Saturday were such a relief and improvement over the same days for the last three weeks prior that even the children in that section of the city noticed it. Against "Jim Crow" School (Continued From Page One) colored teachers, thus robbing our people of that sense or self-respect which is essential to the best development of all peoples, THEREFORE, BE IT RESERVED: That we, the members and delegates of the Ohio Conference of the A. M. E. Church (Third Episcopal District), in an meeting assembled in the city of Springfield, Ohio, do hereby register our unqualified disapproval and condemnation of any attempt on the part of the above-named School Board to change our sacred public school system as it now excludes such as the above, which as we believe, are based upon class hatred, racial discrimination and color prejudice. BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED: That while we heartily desire the employment of our competent and ANNO The undersign desire to call the stand squarely wi ment of Judge Fr Judge Homer G. Pleas Court. Because of our also because we be fitted to advise as office, these candy friends to do even Nov. 7th, '22. ANNOUNCEMENT The undersigned, practicing members of the Cleveland Bar, desire to call the attention of their friends to the fact that they stand squarely with the Cleveland Bar Association in its endorsement of Judge Frederick P. Walter, Judge Maurice Bernon and Judge Homer G. Powell, as candidates for Judge of the Common Pleas Court. Because of our experience as such practicing attorneys and also because we believe the Cleveland Bar Association is best fitted to advise as to the qualifications of candidates for judicial office, these candidates are our candidates, and we urge our friends to do everything possible to accomplish their election on Nov. 7th, '22. Alexander H. Martin John P. Green Wm. R. Green Chester K. Gillespie deserving as teachers in the public schools, we also feel that they should be employed under the same terms and conditions as any other race, and we condemn as ill-mannered, unfair, illegal and un-American any attempt to set our teachers and pupils apart to themselves in any particular building as though they were of a class undesirable and unfit to associate with other teachers and pupils employed in the same system; that we regard such action as an attempt to institute here in Ohio that insidious relic of the southern educational system known as the "jim crow" school. RESOLVED, that we believe that no violence is done to our civil rights when any group or community of our people have a separate school of their own, but most emphatically hold that no one group of the American people have the right to force upon another school any school facilities, house or collection of teachers against their will or free choice. Signed: (Rev's.) W. E. Lee, D. W. Butler, John Irvin, J. W. Arnold, Chas. L. Speavy and A. J. Allen; Committee. Hold Republicans Responsible. Republican politicians thrust the stand are watching the stand the Civil War protective League has taken in the first attack on the crow' school here. The League stand for our constitutional rights, is unamassively endorsed by all of our people and we are termined with our votes to hold the Republican party responsible for the outrage perpetrated in trying to establish in Springfield an "all colored (jim crow) school" in the Fulton district. There has been some "gumshoe" campaigning here by politicians sent from Columbus. They seeking information relative to the situation in this, Clark county. Well, what was said to them was a plenty. The "jim crow" teachers are not only trying the patience of our citizens but are becoming bold in their conduct. Not having anything else to do, they put in their time in plastering skulls and cross-bones on the windows of their school-rooms. Can any sane person, who has one drop of patriotic blood, coursing through their veins, stand in such action and not resent it? Remember teachers. it will be resented and the time is not far distant when the citizens ANNOUNCEMENT You are invited to visit the New Dr. A. M. Gill 4505 Woodland Ave YOUR PATRONAGE IS SO Phone, Randolph Hours: 9 A. M. ANNOUNCEMENT --- Be More Beautiful Remarkable Preparation Makes It Easy for Anyone to Quickly Grow Long, Soft, Silky, Lovely Hair. A wonderful preparation has been discovered that changes hair color and texture in a beautiful glossy sheen. It puts glowing hair into brittle, lifeless hair;砂发 sandrush and itching scalp. This marvel- EXELENTO QUININE POMADE It has given thousands the beautiful hair which is one of their chief attractions. It has made straight, silky hair more beautiful. Another marvelous beauty help is EXELENTO SKIN BEAUTIFIER, a delightful cream that quickly removes skin blemishes and clears up in an astonishing manner dark, shallow complexions. If your drugstreet cannot supply you, send us $50 in stamps or coin for full size packages of both products. Gain the attractive beauty, you soon can have, by getting the EXELENTO preparations NOW! Another marvelous beauty help is EXELENTO SKIN BEAUTY quickly removes skin blemishes and clears up in an astonishing manner. If your druggist cannot supply you, send us 6.5% in stamps of Pomade and beautifier or send 25% for a single package. Gain have, by getting the EXELENTO preparations NOW! EXELENTO MEDICINE COMPANY AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE BOUNCEMENT Named, practicing members of the Cleveland Bar Association of their friends to the face with the Cleveland Bar Association in Frederick P. Walter, Judge Maurice B. Powell, as candidates for Judge of the Court. Our experience as such practicing attorney believe the Cleveland Bar Association is to the qualifications of candidates that candidates are our candidates, and we are anything possible to accomplish their ELEENTO MEDICINE COMPANY, Atlanta, Ga. AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE—Write for Particulars --- THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., OCTOBEI, 28. 1922 Selmo C. Glenn John E. Ballard Perry B. Jackson Francis E. Young of Springfield will "hang your untitured harp on the weeping willow." The C. R. P. League's application for an injunction, closing the "jim crow" Fulton school, was heard in C. P. Court, Monday. The judge announced that he would render his decision, this week Fri- PrimeSportNews Rickard Very "Sore"! New York City.—The fight for the world's light heavyweight title between the Battling Ski and Kid Norfolk, which was to have taken place here Now. .30, is off. Tex Rickard has received a cablegram from Maurice Hellers, Ski's manager, which informed the Madison Square Garden promoter that Ski would be unable to fulfill the agreement, having decided to meet Joe Beckett, heavyweight champion of Europe, in London, Dec. 7. Rickard declared that Battling Ski will never fight in the United States unless he agreed to the terms that were reached in the cables exchanged following Ski's defeat of Carpentier. Rickard also revealed for the first time that the agreement specifically provided that if Ski defeated Norfolk he was to meet Jack Dempsey in a battle for the heavyweight championship of the world. Siki, Beckett and Carpentier. Ski, Beckett and Carpentier. Paris, France.—Battling Ski, the Sinegalees, light-heavyweight and a heavyweight champion of Europe as a result of his recent victory Georges Carpentier, former champion of six pounds, win, draw or lose, for his 20-round bout with Joe Beckett, England's best heavyweight, at the Olympia, in London, Dec. 7. Ski's weight will be about 185 pounds. Francois Descamps, Carpentier's manager, says that his refusal of Jack Curley's offer of $75,000 for Georges Carpentier to meet Harry Gibb in America was merely a postponement, he declares that Georges meant to recover (if he can) his title in a return bout with Battling Ski and then go to America. Carpentier has formally challenged Ski to meet him within six months. "After that contest, if he wins, he will gladly meet Greb," says Descamps. INCEMENT the New Dental Office of I. Gibson Ballard Ave. AGE, IS SOLICITED 9 A. M. to 4 P. M., 6 to 8 P. M. SKIN BEAUTIFIER, a delightful cream that astonishing manner dark, sallow complexions, in stamper coin for full size packages of both size, Gain the attractive beauty, you soon can COMPANY, Atlanta, Ga. WHERE—Write for Particulars MENT the Cleveland Bar, the fact that they ion in its endorse- Laurice Bernon and ge of the Common ing attorneys and association is best idates for judicial and we urge our their election on --- Arthur J. Riggs. This young lady gives all the credit for her beautiful hair and complexion to EXCLAMATION preparations Be Sure to Vote For Judge of the Ohio Supreme Court Politics has no place in the Courts. Party politics does play a legitimate part with regard to the Election of the Legislature and executive branch of the Government, because party politics express legitimate difference of opinion between different groups of people. There can be no honest difference of opinion however, as to the function of the Court. The Courts should deal out even-handed justice without reference to the wealth, influence, or party affiliations of the parties before it. This is particularly true in the Supreme Court of Ohio, which deals not merely with the rights of individuals, but also with the rights of groups and of the entire public. If elected, I want to be bound by no obligation save that of my oath, my conscience and my duty to the entire public. It is for this reason that I am running for the Supreme Court as an independen candidae. O. K. Printing Co. W. J. Foster and John M. Smith Prompt Service 3119 Central Ave. Prospect 2600. Wm. H. Austin's Classy Shining Parlor and Pressing Shop Ladies' and Gents' Clothes cleaned and pressed. Shoes cleaned and dyed, all colors. 3539 Central Ave. Try Us! 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. MRS.L.S.BRADLEY 8241 Preble Ave. Cleveland, O. Has Houses For Sale or To Rent Save Money Patronize This Sanitary Second-Hand CLOTHING and FURNITURE STORE 2257 E. 76th ST. (Between Cedar and Central) MRS. M. J. ALLEN FREE THIS BEAUTIFUL HAIR STRAIGHTENING AND SHAMPOO COMB This Comb Is Well Worth $1.00 Solid Brass, wooden handle 8¼ inches long weight 4 ounces. given as a present to all who take advantage of our great JUST WRITE TO US AND SAY— I am writing to you and shampoo combs shampoo combs. Send me particulari regarding your No. 1144 offer." I will send you the offer and address plainly, and roll particulari will be sent you. Do not wait, write to day for this offer will not be sent. Please send me Ford's Hair Fragrance, Ford's Hair Straightening and Shampoo Combs. Address your letter to THE OZONIZED OX MARROW CO. WARSAW ILLINOIS JUDICIAL PLATFORM OF FLORENCE E. ALLEN I believe in 1. Law enforcement 2. Justice for all 3. Business methods employed to the courts 4. Efficient work by public servants. 5. Respect for law, order, and the courts I believe that 6. Moral standards must a tively function in gove- nment. 7. Politics sh ould have no place in the administration of justice. Harrison B. McGraw, Chairman. JUDGE Judge of Politics has no place in regard to the Election of the cause party politics express people. There can be no honest Court. The Courts should influence, or party affiliation. This is particularly t with the rights of individu If elected. I want to be Meals at all Hours. Tables for Ladies and Gents D. O. K. RESTAURANT C. H. BROWN, Manager 3817 SCOVILL AVE. CLEVELAND, OHIO Phone, Ran. 3574. MUSTEROLE WILL NOT BLISTER For Coughs and Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism and All Aches and Pains ALL DRUGGISTS 35c and 65c, jars and tubes Hospital size, $3.00 TRADE·WITH US! Columbia Columbia Music Hall Note the Notes We treat you courteously. Buy Your Columbia Records and Grafanolas Here. We take your old records in trade. Hear Bert Williams' latest—A 5216. ART MUSIC SHOPPE 2290 E. 55TH ST. NEAR CENTRAL AVE. See us First for all Goods in our Line JOHN S. HALL Prices Reasonable. Satisfaction Guaranteed. JEWELER AND OPTOMETRIST 3133 Central Ave., Cleveland, O. Prospect 3659 Phone, Randolph 534 STEAM HEAT SAUNDERS HOUSE LODGINGS AND DINING SERVICE HOME COOKING Mrs. Pearlie Rivers, Proprietor 2364 EAST 55TH ST. CLEVELAND, O. PAINLESS EXTRACTION See us First for all Goods in our Line JOHN S. HALL Prices Reasonable. Satisfaction Guaranteed. JEWELER AND OPTOMETRIST 3133 Central Ave., Cleveland, O. Prospect 3659 SAUNDERS HOUSE LODGINGS AND DINING SERVICE HOME COOKING Mrs. Pearlie Rivers, Proprietor 2364 EAST 55TH ST. CLEVELAND, O. PAINLESS EXTRACTION Free Examination. Expert Bridge Work. 22-K Gold Used. Free Examination Expert Bridge Work. 22-K Gold Used. Solid Gold Teeth, Gold Crowns. White Crowns, Bridge Work..... Hours 8:00 A. M. to 8:00 P. M. DR. GREENFIELD'S, Dental Specialists OPPOSED TO PAIN 227 Euclid Avenue—Right Across the Street from Kresge's 5 and 10 Cent Store. Solid Gold: Teeth, Gold Crowns, White Crowns, Bridge Work ..... $5.00 AND UP Hours 8:00 A. M. to 8:00 P. M. DR. GREENFIELD'S, Dental Specialists OPPOSED TO, PAIN 227 Euclid Avenue—Right Across the Street from Kresge's 5 and 10 Cent Store. THE WALTER COMPANY INFORMING READ- SERIAL STORIES. uses the Family vials. Flumorous investment in THE YOUTH'S COMPANION For Boys, for Girls, for Parents, for the Young in Heart of all Ages. Packed full of entertaining and informing reading. Hundreds of Short Stories; Serial Stories. Then the Boys' Pages, the Girls' Pages, the Family Pages. The Current Events, Editorials, Humorous Miscellany. Altogether the best investment in "Good Reading." Costs LESS THAN Five Cents a Week Check your choice and send this coupon with your remittance to the PUBLISHERS OF THIS PAPER, or to THE YOUTH'S COMPANION, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 1. The Youth's Companion—52 Issues for 1923 ALL FOR 2. All the Remaining Weekly Issues of 1922 $2.50 3. The Companion Home Calendar for 1923 1. The Youth's Companion (including all the above) $2.50 BOTH FOR 2. McCall's Magazine, 12 Fashion Numbers 1.00 $3.00 Patronize "The Gazette" Advertiser Sure to vote For LORENCE E. ALLEN Independent Candidate for the Ohio Supreme Court The Courts. Party politics does play a legitimate part with Legislature and executive branch of the Government, be ititative difference of opinion between different groups of difference of opinion however, as to the function of the final out even-handed justice without reference to the wealth, of the parties before it. In the Supreme Court of Ohio, which deals not merely but also with the rights of groups and of the entire public, and by no obligation save that of my oath, my conscience is. It is for this reason that I am running for the Supreme case. Check your choice and send this coupon with your remittance to the PUBLISHERS OF THIS PAPER, or to THE YOUTH'S COMPANION, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 1. The Youth's Companion—52 Issues for 1923 ALL FOR 2. All the Remaining Weekly Issues of 1922 $2.50 3. The Companion Home Calendar for 1923 1. The Youth's Companion (including all the above) $2.50 BOTH FOR 2. McCall's Magazine, 12 Fashion Numbers 1.00 $3.00 Patronize "The Gazette" Advertisers FLORENCE E. ALLEN. Dr. LeROY N. BUNDY, Dentist, Guaranteed and Efficient Work! Extraction with Gas Administered. Twenty Years' Experience The "St. John", Cor. E. 40th St. & Central Avenue Excellent Service Hours: 9 to 12, 1 to 6, 7 to 8 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 and Surgeon 3843 Woodland Ave. cor. E. 39th St. Office Hours: 10 A. M. to 2 P. M.; 6 to 9 P. M. to Sundays by appointment. Special Attention to Diseases of Women and Children. Phones: Office, Rand. 4867 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. 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 plies in the city Try Us! Mrs. Jas. Turner, Proprietor.r CHESTER K. GILLESPIE Attorney-at-Law 508 SUPERIOR BLDG. Cleveland, Ohio. OFFICE PHONE, MAIN 3767 Res. 2229 E. 95th St. Office 'Phone, Main 910 L. LOMSKY 3820 Central Avenue We carry full line of Dry Goods Ladies' and Gents' Furnishings Forrest & Petite 10570 Cedar Ave. Cor. E. 100th St. Painting, Paper-hanging and Cleaning, Interior Decorating, Hard-wood Finishing. Sheet Metal Work, Spouting, Slating and Roofing of all Kinds, Furnaces Installed, Cleaned and Repaired. Metal Ceiling a Specialty. 'Phone, Garfield, 3616. Where To Purchase The Gazette NOTICE TO Subscribers not receiving The us at once. We desire every copy Send or bring locals and all office, 214-215 Blackstone Bldg. call there, please. We advise our readers to carry vertisements before making purchase in this paper should have the fact that they advertise is assured. All reading matter for publ Gazette must be in the office by at the latest. Display advertise NESDAYS! HARRY C. SMITH NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS Subscribers not receiving The Gazette regularly should notify us at once. We desire every copy delivered promptly. Send or bring locals and all business matters to The Gazette office, 214-215 Blackstone Bldg. If you wish to see the editor call there, please. 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 latest. Display advertisements accepted until noon, WEDNESDAYS! Bell 'Phone: Cherry 1259. Classified Advertising : : : Department : : : MEN WANTED—For detective work. Experience unnecessary. Write for details explaining guaranteed positions. J. Ganor, former government detective, St. Louis, Mo. WANTED—Colored men to qualify for sleeping car and train porters. Experience unnecessary. Transportation furnished. Write W. W. Bogges, Supt., St. Louis, Mo. FOR RENT—Houses and rooms to married couples without children. All conveniences and very desirable, close to street-car line and well located. Call Cherry 1259, between 2:30 and 6:30 P. M., and not earlier in the day. Extraordinary 10-Day Offer—To convince agents Mexican Diamonds, guaranteed 20 years, have rainbow brilliancy exactly matching finest genuine diamonds, we'll send perfect 1k $6 gem; only $1 C. O. D. Catalog and agents' sample outfit proposition, FREE! Act, quick. Mexican Diamond / Importing Co. Box 244, Las Cruces, N. Mex LOST—Diamond bar-pin, platinum setting. Lost in the vicinity of Champlain Ave. and W. 3rd St. and The May Co. Liberal reward! Call Hemlock 343#J. Address 9802 Clifton Blvd. CLEVELAND Social and N. Mrs. A. T. Abbott, E. 96th St., is still critically ill. Mrs. Wm. McNaughton, E. 69th St., has recovered from an attack of pleurisy. The Caterers' Association entertained, Tuesday evening at a clam bake. Mrs. Russell Fleming, E. 43rd St., was buried from Slaughter Bros.' chapel, Tuesday. Pneumonia. Mrs. B. M. Shook, E. 74th St., was hostess to the Lincoln Embroidery club at its last meeting. J. T. Shields, of Scovill Ave., was married, last week, to Miss Mary Binlon by Rev. J. E. Wilson. Mrs. Cyrus Wilmore, E. 43rd St., is critically ill at Lakeside hospital. The Ninth Cavalary, U. S. A., has just returned from Manila, Phillippines. The editor of The Gazette has about recovered from a several weeks' seige of the "grip." Seventy-five representatives from 25 states attended the annual Conference of the National Urban League in Pittsburgh, October 17-20. Mrs. Susie Huggins, of Central Ave., and Mr. Wm. Smith were married, last week Wednesday, it is said. Mr. Clarence Vena of Toledo, an employee of the State Republican Executive Committee at Columbus, called on The Gazette, Monday. Be sure to read M. Kaplan's advertisement, elsewhere in this paper. There is a sale for ladies, Monday and Tuesday, that no one of them should miss.—Adv. Mrs. Carrie Stanley Langston of Detroit, a native of Cleveland, who has been visiting her sister, Mrs. Susie Johnson, E. $9th St., for several weeks, returned home, Tuesday. Oscar Johnson, a former Cleveland, was here en route to Youngstown, after a three weeks' vacation in Virginia and New York City. Mrs. Wm. Gray, E. 103rd St., has returned from a three months' visit with her daughter, Mrs. Myrtle Hicks, in Pen Yan, N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Morton, E. 71st St., motored to Akron, Sun- *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. AGENTS WANTED! *ERNEST P. JACKSON'S* *3969 Central Ave.* *A. ZINAMON'S* *2921 Central Ave.* W. T. GRANT. 3512 Central Ave. *J. L. PICKETT 4921 Scovill Ave. SUBSCRIBERS The Gazette regularly should notify by delivered promptly. business matters to The Gazette If you wish to see the editor fewly examine The Gazette's ad- chases. Business men who adver- the patronage of our people. The once that they want it. ocation in current issues of The 4 p. m., TUESDAY of that week, ments accepted until noon, WED- 215 Blackstone Bldg. day, their guests being Mrs. P. W. Lemon and Mrs. Wm. McIntire. Mrs. Louisa Stewart, 9701 Cedar Ave., widow of Mr. Jesse Stewart, died, last Friday, and was buried, Monday afternoon, from Undertaker Wills' chapel in Central Ave. Mr. and Mrs. Landon O'Neal returned to the city, this week, to remain. They have spent the summer months in Sharline Heights, Youngstown and Ravenna. All agree that Miss Florence E. Allen is one of our best Common Please judges and should be elevated to the Ohio Supreme Court. Vote for her.—Adv. The bad tracks in Cedar Ave., between E. 22nd and E. 40th streets have caused the Cedar cars to be routed by way of Prospect Ave, between these two streets. The annual Hallow'en d a n c e, given by the Men's Club, will be held at Chamber of Commerce hall, Monday evening, Oct. 30, '22. Music by Richard Cheatham's Orchestra. Admission, 75 cents.—Adv. Major R. R. Wright, president of the Citizen's & Southern Banking Co., of Philadelphia, was our only delegate to the American Bankers' Association meet in New New York City, last week, which was attended by 10,000 delegates. Call Cherry 1259 before 6:30 p. m., if you want to rent the lower suite of a two-family house; five nice large rooms, large cellar and yard; bath, gas, etc. Close to car-line, on E. $2d St. No children. References required. All young women interested in forming a recreation club are asked to tea at the P. W. A., next Thursday evening. Miss Dorothy Smith, violin pupil of Mr. Jos. Balas, will teach violin and C. M. Lottier will teach mandolin, guitar, banjo and cello in the music department. Sheriff Chas. Stannard. "jim crow's" (segregates) our prisoners in the county jail. He is the first to do so, we understand. Stannard is a candidate for re-election. What are you going to do—indorse his insulting discrimination, vote against him, or not vote at all? Ask all of our voters you meet this question, this and next week. The N. A. A. C. P. local branch will hold another of its many mass meetings, Sunday afternoon, at Cory M. E. Church. Nat'l Sec. J. W. Johnson is to be the speaker. Mr. and people attended the Branch's Hunton meeting at Mt. Zion church, recently. Tom Fleming's case against the waiter in Thompson's restaurant who refused to serve him, recently, came up in Police Court, last Sat. and was again postponed. Tom had the fellow arrested. What Fleming ought to do is to sue the proprietor of that restaurant for $500 damages under our Ohio Civil Rights law. Watch and see if he does! Bishop N. C. Cleaves, D. D., will preach at Phillips C. M. E. chapel, 2633 E. 63rd St., Sunday, at 11 a.m. and 7:45 p. m. His daughter will join him in Oberlin and accompany him on the remainder of his tour. Dr. E. A. Clarke, pastor of St. John's A. M. E. church, will preach at 3 p. m. St. John's choir rendering the music. Rev. S. W. Warr is pastor of Phillips' chapel, and Warren E. Warr, writer. If you know the address of E. W. Smith, E. S. Pickell, Mrs. W. B. Zeigler, Charles W. Henderson, L. D. Todd, Mrs. Hattie Johnson or William Glasspie, please notify the Gazette at once. Call Cherry 1259. Your 'phone charge (in doing so) will be refunded. Important! Marcus Garvey, president of the U. N. I. A., spoke at Lane Metropolitan C. M. E. church, Sunday afternoon, to a crowded house. Robert L. Poston, general secretary of the organization, also spoke. Dr. L. N. Bundy is first assistant to the president. The Cleveland Community Fund for 1923 has the "Negro" Welfare Association, Wm. R. Conners, sec., listed for $12,95; the Phyllis Wheatley Association, Miss Jane E. THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., OCTOBER 28, 1922 Hunter, gen. sec., $34,565; our Old Folks' Hall, $,6,000. Mr. Huff, 2364 Broadway, wishes to thank the committee for assisting in the funeral of his son, Maceo A. Huff—Adv. Dr. and Mrs. J. L. Johnson and little daughter, of Columbus, who returned to this country, about six weeks ago, from Europe and Africa, were guests of the editor of The Gazette at dinner at the 'Hawaiin Dr. J. L. Johnson Gardens," E. 40th St. and Central Ave., last Friday evening. Dr. and Mrs. Johnson were on an auto tour of northern Ohio coming to Cleveland from Ft. Wayne, Ind. via Toledo, and leaving Cleveland for youngstown, Saturday morning, en route to Columbus. For about four years, up to recent months, Dr. Johnson served this country as Minister to Liberia; appointed by President Thos. Woodrow wilson. The funeral service of Adelbert Cahalan, oldest son of Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Callahan. E. 36th St. was held, Oct. 16, at Shiloh Baptist church, the pastor and Rev. B. K. Smith officiating. Mr. and Mrs. Cahalan and family wish to extend their sincere thanks to relatives, friends and neighbors for sympathy and beautiful floral offerings. Mrs. Emma Greenbrier Buchanan, of Los Angeles, Cal., who has spent three weeks in the city, visiting her niece, Mrs. Mabel Holmes Jackson, of Hudson Ave., will return west, about Nov. 1. She is being highly entertained by many old friends. Among those entertaining her niece, Mrs. Robert I. Drake, E. 71st St., and/or mother J. Sides, who has as guests at an elaborate dinner twelve long-time local lady friends of Mrs. Buchanan, Mrs. M. Faithful of Mt. Pleasant, guest of Mrs. Sadie Turner, of Quebec Ave. was also present. Mr. Wesley Jackson of Chicago was here, this week, to visit his mother and sister, Mrs. Geo Greenbrien, a brother, is expected in the city, this week, from Virginia to visit his sister. The local branch of the N. A. A. C. P. ought to take some action in the case of its president, Attorney Wm. R. Green, and the Wm. Taylor, Son & Co., of two weeks ago. Green claims he was not per- M. KAPLUN Proprietor of The Southern tral Ave., has moved to 2819 ducts The StarClou and invites all of his old pat- see his fine line of NEW SU COATS at especially low pr SPECIAL of Ladies' Suits and Silk Dr October 30 Temple Proprietor of The Southern Clothing Store. 2730 Central Ave., has moved to 2819 Central Ave. where he conducts and invites all of his old patrons and new ones to call and see his fine line of NEW SUITS, PANTS AND OVERCOATS at especially low prices. ```markdown ``` E. 55th St., near Central Ave. Joseph Clark, Jr., Mgr. Starting, Monday, Oct. 30, 1922 THE BROADWAY PLAYERS in a Big Musical Comedy-Drama "A NIGHT IN CHINATO 12 — People — 12 Beautiful Girls' Electrical Effects, Pretty C ADDED FEATURE ATTRACTION TUCKER & GRESHA Singers, Dancer and Talkers A. BIG SCREAM WILLIAM & MARY Musical Comiques That Singing Pair An entire change of program, every Mon. and Thurs. Two shows: 7 and 9:15 p. m. Sunday: doors open at 2 p. m. Continuous, until 11:30 p. m. Admission: Adults, 25c; Children, 10c. IT'S TOASTED LUCKY STRIKE CIGARETTE It's toasted. This one extra process gives a delightful quality that can not be duplicated mitted to try on a hat that he wished to purchase in that store and when he took the matter up with Manager DeAker, he was bluntly told that that was the policy of the store. This is something new in Cleveland, altho we understand it is not new in the southland. Surely, President Green and the local branch of the N. A. A. C. P. are not going to quietly submit to any thing of that kind, with both the law of the state and the sentiment of the community against it. Our people of Cleveland have contributed freely, giving thousands of their hard-earned dollars to the local branch of the N. A. A. C. P., and there are many of them who feel that the organization should make some benefit to are more likely to benefit to them, even if it does cost a little money. If the stand of Manager DeAker, of the Wm. Taylor, Son & Co., as quoted by Mr. Green is correct, a principle of vital interest to the progress of those of the race in this community, is being violated and if not eliminated promptly will be followed by other large stores of the city, with the result that it will not be long until Cleveland will be as bad as some southern cities in at least this one respect. Will President Green and the local N. A. A. C. P. act? The Hope Ald and Relief Association, auxiliary of the Anchor L. I. Co., 4316 Central Ave., celebrated its first anniversary, Tuesday. Over 500 visitors responded to the invitations. Music was furnished by the Anchor Glee club. Chester Chapman read a very interesting paper. Mr. Chas, Geode, a native of this city, who has been sick for about a year, died, last Friday. A mother, four sisters and a brother survive him and have the sympathy of many friends in this community and southern Ohio. Funeral, Tuesday afternoon, from the Ancestor Baptist church, Revs. H. M. Lowery and B. K. Smith officiating. Interment at Woodland cemetery. The Elks participated in the funeral services. The funeral of a Gazette alumnus, and Mrs. Mary Simms of Oberlin, attended the funeral. Floral offerings, profuse and beautiful. Barn Clothing Store, 2730 Cent- 10 Central Ave. where he con- tains and new ones to call and QUITS, PANTS AND OVER- rices. AL SALE Presses, Monday and Tuesday, and 31, 1922 Theatre "CHINATOWN" People — 12 Real Effects, Pretty Costumes ORE ATTRACTION GRESHAM Bler and Talkers SCREAM N & MARY Comiques aging Pair and Efficient Work! Twenty Years' Experience Phone: Bell, Randolph 6978 Sundays by Appointment ```markdown ``` Let us extract the how easy we all DR S. W. COR. E. 2 MISS L. 399 Inspect C "Cleveland's Delic KRAI IN T Let us extract that old aching tooth. Once you know how easy we can remove it, you will send all your friends to us. DR. H. V. BISHOP S. W. COR. E. 22ND ST. and WOODLAND AVE. MISS L. E. WARREN 3927 Central Avenue Inspect Our Hand-Made Garments "Cleveland's Distinctive Beauty Shoppe" Delicious! Appetizing KRAFT CHEESE IN TINS IN LOAVES ASK YOUR GROCER CUT THIS OUT BRING It is good for in the store on a BOSTON 43 ING THIS COURSE good for Fifty Cents worth of store on a purchase of three dollar TON REMNANT S 4310 Woodland Ave. 3577 Work J. H. SEARS SWISS-AMERICAN WATCH-MAKER ART CLOCK AND JEWELRY RE- STITTING, STONE-SETTING, ENGRA- U. N. I. A. Emblems Manufacturer OVIL LAVENUE Cleveland Am M. Gilb DADIES' AND GENTS' FURNISHING A Full Line—Reasonable Prices. New Store, 4924 Central Ave., near Beauty Air Dark Complexion Want to be respected, admired and loved that you have a beautiful complexion and splothes, and that your hair is so dressed. Your best friend is your how to keep them. TEN THE SKIN, no matter how dark your com- pleme matter if you will only use Dr. Fred Palmer's it quickly blanches, is perfectly safe and delightful or sent postpaid upon receipt of price, 25c; BUMPY COMPLEXIONS soon give beauty skin after using Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin W with his delicately perfumed Face Powder. Try improve. At your druggist or sent postpaid upon MUST HAVE SMOOTH, LUXURIANT H best way to get it is by using Dr. Fred Palmer's H straight, promotes its growth and cleans the s sent postpaid upon receipt of price, 25c: Write for Agents' Money-making Proposition BRING THIS COUPON It is good for Fifty Cents worth of anything in the store on a purchase of three dollars or more. BOSTON REMNANT STORE 4310 Woodland Ave. J. SWISS-A EXPERT CLOSE PLATING, S J. H. SEARS SWISS-AMERICAN WATCH-MAKER EXPERT CLOCK AND JEWELRY REPAIRING PLATING, STONE-SETTING, ENGRAVING U. N. I. A. Emblems Manufactured 3723 SCOVIL LAVENUE Cleveland. Ohio Sam M. Gibbs Visit Our New Store, 4924 Central Ave., near E. 55th St. If you want to be respected, admired and loved by everybody, see that you have a beautiful complexion, free of bumps and splotches, and that your hair is smooth and properly dressed. Your best friend is your "looks"—here's how to keep them. TO WHITEN THE SKIN, no matter how dark your complexion, is an easy and simple matter if you will only use Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Ointment—it quickly bleaches, is perfectly safe and delightful to use. At your druggist or sent postpaid upon receipt of price, 25c: OILY, SHINY, BUMPY COMPLEXIONS soon give way to a soft, smooth, velvety skin after using Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Soap, followed with his delicately perfumed Face Powder. Try this and watch your skin improve. At your druggist or sent postpaid upon receipt of price, 25c each. YOU MUST HAVE SMOOTH, LUXURIANT HAIR and the best and easiest way to get it is by using Dr. Fred Palmer's Hair Dresser—it makes the hair straight, promotes its growth and cleans the scalp. At your druggist or sent postpaid upon receipt of price, 25c: ```markdown ``` Randolph 3577 THIS COUPON Fifty Cents worth of anything purchase of three dollars or more. REMNANT STORE 10 Woodland Ave. H. SEARS AMERICAN WATCH-MAKER BK AND JEWELRY REPAIRING STONE-SETTING, ENGRAVING A. Emblems Manufactured VENUE Cleveland, Ohio M. Gibbs AND GENTS' FURNISHINGS Line—Reasonable Prices. e, 4924 Central Ave., near E. 55th St. Beauty Aids Dark Complexions— respected, admired and loved by every- have a beautiful complexion, free of ties, and that your hair is smooth and Your best friend is your "looks"— them. SKIN, no matter how dark your complexion, is am you will only use Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Soap, is perfectly safe and delightful to use. At paid upon receipt of price, 25c: HPY COMPLEXIONS soon give way to a soft, or using Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Soap, only perfumed Face Powder. Try this and watch your druggist or sent postpaid upon receipt of price. SMOOTH, LUXURIANT HAIR and the it is by using Dr. Fred Palmer's Hair Dresser—it promotes its growth and cleans the scalp. At your upon receipt of price, 25c: Agents' Money-making Proposition Dr. Fred Palmer's Laboratories Dept. D2, ATLANTA, GA. Dr. Fred Palmer's SKIN WHITENER PREPARATIONS Work Guaranteed Don't Throw Away Your Copy of THE GAZETTE After Reading it, But Give It to a Friend or an Acquaintance who Might Subscribe After Reading a Copy of It. S. A. T. For Governor CARMI A. THOMPSON For Lieutenant Governor WILLIAM H. CHATFIELD, JR. For Secretary of State THAD H. BROWN For Treasurer of State HARRY S. DAY For Attorney General C. C. CRABBE For United States Senator SIMEON D. FESS 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-size box Free MONEY made selling our Soup, Tartan, Stie, WRITE FOR DETAILS AGENTS WANTED TYSON & CO PARIS, TENN Dr. A. M. Gibson Dentist 4505 WOODLAND AVE. Hours: 9 A. M. to 4 P. M. 6 to 8 P. M. Sundays By Appointment Phone, Ran. NO. 1111 CIRCLET MORE THAN A ROOMSITE. America Standard Quality PRICE $100 The Circlet is more than a Brassiere. It's Self-Adjusting, and simply slips over the hard clasps at the waist and underarm, and smooths out ugly lines. If your dealer can't guess and actual best measure, name, address and 21.00. We'll send the Circlet pre-paid. Size to 8. Nemo Hygienic-Fashion Institute 120 East 16th St. New York, Dc 7 M. MENTHOLATUM brings refreshing relief from torturing, nervous headaches. A Talk To Mothers-- Not Frivolous, But Thoughtful Mothers. Each winter season brings coughs, colds, catarrh, pneumonia, "flu", and tuberculosis. Loving mothers dread VIVA these diseases. Thoughtful mothers often provide against ailments such as cough. Such mothers spend a few hours of anxiety and sleepiness vigi, watching a baby. Some mothers, inex- perlened do not know how to provide in advance for the colds and coughs that are bound here. Here is a simple inexpensive way practiced by over 300,000 mothers of testimony proves. Not faster than the first cold or spray spell, they make up a full pint of home made cough and cold medicine. Some Mentho-Laxene mixed with home made cough and cold medicine is pure no chloroform opium or narcotic drugs, that it is made from. Mentho-Laxene is so pure that adults like its delicious flavor and its marvelously quick action in stopping cold and coughs before the dangerous complications set in. It is also so inexpensive that it is a "thoughtful Mother" Get Essence Mentho-Laxene today and drive the cold and cough away. Best ever sold for $10. The Blackburn Products Co., Dayton, Ohio CHARACTER. Character, like a fine old tree, matures slowly and is a riper growth than 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. THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, 01 JANUARY 40, 1964 Every Colored Man Knows: The Republican party is the only political agency yet established through which the race has received any of its advantages. The Dyer Anti-Lyfching bill, or any similar measure, is to be enacted it will be at the hands of the Republican party which pledged it in 1920. DEMOCRATIC SENATORS WOULD TALK IT TO DEATH IF THEY COULD. The Dyer bill has already passed a Republican House of Representatives, receiving the vote of every Ohio congressman—all Republicans. Before it reached the Senate the tariff and other great measures of primary importance to the country as a whole had been placed on the calendar. Such a measure as this cannot be quickly passed by the Senate. As everyone knows who is familiar with the Senate rule, only after debate has been finished can a vote be obtained—the majority cannot force a vote so long as any considerable number of senators wish to talk upon a measure. The Democratic senators from the south have served notice that they do not propose to permit this bill to pass until they have debated it as long as they can. They did debate the tariff bill for 120 days and propose to debate this bill equally if they can. The Republican party will pass this bill in spite of this opposition if it is continued in power. Congressman Fess as a Senator would join Senator Willis in fighting for the bill. Senator Pomerene may be expected to join with his Democratic colleagues in fighting against the bill. He is asked, as such legislation is anomalous to that which would not vote for it. FOR THE REPUBLICAN TICKET IN OHIO THIS YEAR IS A A VOTE FOR THE REPUBLICAN TICKET IN OHIO THIS YEAR IS A VOTE FOR YOUR OWN INTERESTS Do not overlook Judges Hough and Day on the separate Judicial Ticket Experienced employers of men and judges of human nature in business comment upon the fact that the man who conspicuously makes good as an officer amid the hard realities of the battlefield likewise makes good conspicuously in private life. Judge Benson W. Hough, Republican candidate for re-election as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of Ohio, went to war in France as a colonel. He returned a brigadier general. He was elected in 1920 to serve two years on the Supreme Court bench for the unexpired term of Judge Donahue. His record in the year and eight months he has served on the Supreme Court bench shows he has made good as one of the judges in Ohio's highest tribunal. The clarity of vision, keenness of judgment and insight into the facts which enabled him to make good as an officer on the field of battle enabled him to make good in the Supreme Court of Ohio. He serves the people of Ohio as one of their highest judicial servants as well as he did in preserving American ideals and liberty in France. He should unquestionably be re-elected. DAY MAKES RECORD Judge Robert H. Day of Canton, judge of the Court of Common Pleas for the First Subdivision of the Ninth Judicial district, Republican candidate for judge of the Supreme Court, State of Ohio, has a remarkable record of legal and judicial experience and accomplishment, rare in most candidature. If experience, training and making good on the bench indicates qualifications for membership of the Supreme Court bench of Ohio, Judge Day is unquestionably an ideal selection for that position and will give a judicial service to the people of Ohio which will safeguard their liberties and government. Judge Day has been 31 years a successful practicing attorney-at-law. He served six years as prosecuting attorney of Stark County. Notwithstanding that county is the sixth in population in Ohio, Judge Day filled the office without an assistant. This record is said to be exceptional. In any event, it shows Judge Day is not only a capable public official but a faithful and hard-worked one who takes the charge of public trust seriously and makes good his duties through work. Judge he served 12 years with distinction. His exceptional ability as a judge so impressed the chief justices of the State Supreme Court that they assigned Judge Day to various courts in the state for hearing difficult cases. He has presided as judge in almost every county in Ohio and has heard from the bench cases tried in practically every important city in Ohio. If, For Example The Dyer Anti-Lynchship ure, is to be enacted it Republican party which Why It Is Not Necessary, receiving the vote of every Ohio man it reached the Senate the tariff is important to the country as a whole. Such a measure as this cannot be quickened can a law familiar with the Senate one knows who is familiar with the Senate as any considerable number of senators Democratic senators from the south propose to permit this bill to pass under they can. They did debate the tariff bate this bill equally if they can. The bill in spite of this opposition if it is Fess as a Senator would join Senator or Oromene may be expected to fight against the bill. He is quoted unconstitutional and that he would not A NOTE FOR THE REPUBLICAN TITLE VOTE FOR YOUR TITLE Do not overlook Judges Hough and his Ohio Republican Candidate Wm. H. Miller Columbus HOUGH MAKES GREAT Experienced employers of men and comment upon the fact that the man is officer amid the hard realities of the spiously in private life. Judge Benson W. Hough, Republican associate justice of the Supreme Court a colonel. He returned a brigadier general. He was elected in 1920 to serve five the unexpired term of Judge Dore eight months he has served on the board of the The clarity of vision, keenness of judgment enabled him to make good as an office to make good in the Supreme Court or he serves the people of Ohio as well as he did in preserving America should unquestionably be re-elected. DAY MAKES Judge Robert H. Day of Canton, for the First Subdivision of the Ninth date for judge of the Supreme Court record of legal and judicial experience candidates. H experience, training and making features for membership of the Supreme an unquestionable an ideal selection for services to the people of Ohio which wormment. Judge Day has been 31 years as a he served six years as prosecuting a standing that county is the sixth in the office without an assistant. This is any event, it shows Judge Day is not faithful and hard-working one who toulsy and makes good his duties thereby. As a common pleas judge he seems exceptional ability as a judge so imprime Supreme Court that they assigned J state for hearing difficult cases. He he county in Ohio and has heard from every important city in Ohio. Pretty Women HAVE PRETTY HAIR Wherever you find a Pretty Woman, you will surely find a woman with pretty hair. Heroin Hair Gloss and Temple Oil will make your hair soft, smooth, long and gloss. It has no equal for softening and pressing the hair, adding to its growth, impressing a smoof and smiling oil for the cells of the hair that have become dry. Order a can today and make your hair pretty. 25c Stamps or Coin by Mail. AGENTS WANTED: Write for particular Heroin Med. Co., Atlanta, Ga. 1 Monthly pains, neuralgic, sciatic and rheumatic pains, headache, backache and all other aches are quickly relieved by Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills Contain no dangerous habit-forming drugs. Why don't you try them? Ask your druggist 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. 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. maintenance wh 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 CORRESPONDENTS WANTED. "The Old Reliable" Gazette desires an active agent and correspondent in every city and town in Ohio and neighboring states having a number of Afro-American residents. Only a little time on Fridays or Saturday is required. We are especially desirous of hearing from persons in the following named cities: Toledo, Springfield, Dayton, Piqua, Lima, O., and other places, particularly in Ohio, where we have none. Write to the editor of The Gazette, Blackstone building, Cleveland, O., and terms will be sent promptly. Our readers will oblige us greatly by sending at once the addresses of persons is the cities named, and others, in the state, to whom we can write relative to the matter. 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 years and will continue to do so. PLAN FLOODLIGHTS ON TRAIN Illumination of Route Said to Be In Contemplation by a Leading Railroad System. Brilliant night illumination of its picturesque transcontinental route is the plan contemplated by a large railroad system in this country, says Popular Mechanics Magazine. The idea, as conceived at present, is to equip the observation coaches of its fast limited trains with a battery of powerful floodlights. These lights would be arranged to cover a range of approximately 160 degrees, with sufficient height and depth to illuminate the canyons, rivers, lakes and mountains in the vicinity of the right of way, as the train rushes on through the night. Power for operating the lamps would be furnished by the axe-driven generators with which railroad cars are now commonly equipped, and which ordinarily are never used to their full capacity. Although thus far the location of the floodlights has been confined to the observation car, certain officials have suggested the advisability of placing them along the full length of the train. Also, further to enhance the effect, it has been proposed to employ lamps, or reflectors of various colors, which would undoubtedly yield falryalike scenes, particularly when directed upon snow-covered surfaces. Railroad men in authority have nothing but praise for the scheme, and while eagerly awaiting the completion of the initial floodlighting equipment, have pointed out the fact that there is an additional and practical value of the brilliant lights as a protection against rear-end collisions. CAMEOS MADE BY MACHINERY Engraving, Such as Was Common in the Earlier Ages, Has Practically Become Lost Art. The engraving of cameos has practically ceased to be pursued as an art. Roman manufacturers cut stones in large quantities to be used as scarf studs and as settings in finger rings, and in Rome and Paris an extensive trade is carried on in the cutting of shell cameos, which are largely exported into England and mounted in brooches. The principal shell used is the large bull's mouth shell, found in East Indian seas, which has a sard-like underlayer. The black helmet of Madagascar and the pinky queen's conch of the West Indies are also used. The famous potter, Josiah Wedgwood, introduced a method of making imitations of cameos in pottery by producing white figures on a colored ground, this constituting the peculiarity of what is known as Wedgwood ware. These cheap cameos are largely machine made, or are turned out by rough workmen and touched up by the better type of artists. In some cases these cameos are made of stone, such as cornellian, sardonyx and coral, but none of them are of a high type of art. Under Advisement "A newly elected squire in Wisconsin," says a western lawyer, "was much elated by his honors, but was not sure that he could carry them gracefully. . . So he haunted the court house to gather stray crumbs of wisdom from higher courts which sat there. "One day he sat in judgment on his first case, and when the testimony was all in and the argument made, he announced: "The court takes this case under advisement until Wednesday morning next, when it will under a verdict in favor of the plaintiff."—Pittsburgh Dispatch. Mullin's Measure Mr. Morgan did not rise from his chair behind the air-tight stove in the sitting room when his wife hurried in and told him that Mike Mullins was in the kitchen and wanted to see him. "What do' you let him in for?" he asked reproachfully. "He wants to buy a boss, that's why," replied Mrs. Morgan. "You'd have made a great to-do if you hadn't." "No, I wouldn't," Mr. Morgan said, as he reluctantly rose. "I know Mullins' size. I can't do business with him. He wants a cheap boss. And I ain't got anything I can sell less'n $15."—Exchange. Wise Woman. "There's one thing I don't like about Mr. Gracolb." "What?" "He doesn't give his wife any credit for his success." "He couldn't very well do that. She didn't marry him until he was in a position to give her the luxuries to which she had been accustomed." No Inducement. "Rejected you, did she? Did you tell her you could support her in the style she was accustomed to?" "Yes, but she said she was looking for something better than that." And Consultations Are Frequent. Marks—My wife always consults me about every article of attire she buys—hats, shoes, gloves, everything. Parks—My wife does, too; that is, she asks me for the money. Not Everything to Be Desired. "Congratulate me, Jim. I am engaged to Betty Flyte." "I am awfully sorry, old man, but I can't consciously do it. I'm engaged to Betty myself." And Such Prices! "It's the woman who pays." "Yes, but she does it with her husband's money." Ohio's Anti-Lynching Law Leads the Country in Legislation Against The Mob and Lynch-Murder-The Work of a Member of The Race Also Ohio's Civil Rights Law. Section 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 inflicting death or injury by mob trying to lynch another. 6284. Limitations of action. 6285. Order to include recovery and costs in tax levy. 6286. Guardian's custody, etc., fees. 6287. County's right of action against member of mob. 6288. County's right of action against another county. 6289. Non-relief from prosecution. Our mob-violence or anti-lynching bill was introduced in the Ohio legislature in 1894 and re-introduced in 1896. It took Hön. Harry C. Smith the editor of The Gazette, just three years to secure its enactment into Section 6278. A collection of people assembled for an unlawful purpose and intending to do damage or injury to any one, or pretending to exercise correctional power over other persons by violence and without authority of law, shall be deemed a "mob" for the purpose of this chapter. An act of violence by a mob upon the body of any person shall constitute a "lynching" within the meaning of this chapter. (93 v. 161 2.) Section 6279. The term "serious injury," for the purpose of this chapter, shall include such injury as permanently or temporarily disables the person receiving it from earning a livelihood by manual labor. (93 v. 161 3.) Section 6280. A person taken from officers of justice by a mob, and assaulted with whips, clubs, missiles or in any other manner, may recover, as hereafter provided, a sum not to exceed one thousand dollars as damages from the county in which the assault is made. (93 v. 161 4.) Section 6281. A person assaulted and lynched by a mob may recover, from the county in which such assault is made, a sum not to exceed five hundred dollars; or, if the injury received therefrom is serious, a sum not to exceed one thousand dollars; or, if such injury result in permanent disability to earn a livelihood by manual labor, a sum not to exceed five thousand dollars. (98 v. 162 5.) Section 6282. The legal representative of a p.rson dying from injuries received from lynching by a mob, may recover of the county in which such injury occurred, a sum not to exceed five thousand dollars damages for such unlawful killing. Such sum shall be applied to the maintenance of the family and education of the minor children of such person so lynched, if any survive him, until such children are of legal age, and then distribute, share, and share alike, the widow receiving an amount equal to a child's share. If there be no widow or minor children surviving such decedent, such sum shall be distributed among the next of kin according to the laws of the distribution of the personality of an intestate. Such sum so recovered shall not be a part of the estate of such person so lynched, nor be subject to any of his liabilities. (93 v 162 6.) Section 6283. A person suffering death or injury from a mob attempting to lynch another person shall come within the provisions of this chapter. He or his legal representatives shall have a like right of action as one purposely injured or killed by such a mob. (93 v 162 6.) Section 6284. Action for the recoveries provided for in this chapter must be commenced, within two years from the date of such lynching, in any court having original jurisdiction of an action for damages for malicious assault. (93 v. 162 7) Section 6285. An order to the commissioners of a county, against which such recovery is had, to include it with the costs of action, in the next succeeding tax levy for such county, shall be a part of the judgment in every such case. (93 v. 162 8.) Section 6286. If the decedent so lynch has minor children surviving him, the fund shall be turned over to a regularly appointed guardian. Such guardian shall administer such fund under the direction of the probate judge, allowing not more than five hundred dollars for counsel fees in the action for such recovery. (93 v. 162 9.) Section 6287. The county, in which a lynching occurs, may recover the amount of a judgment and costs against it in favor of the legal representatives of a person killed or seriously injured by a mob from any of the persons composing such mob. A person present, with hostile intent, at such lynching shall be deemed a member of the mob and be liable to such action. (93 v. 162 10.) Section 6288. If a mob carries a prisoner into another county, or comes from another county to commit violence on a prisoner brought from such county for safekeeping, the county in which the lynching is committed may recover the amount of the money 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. 162 11.) Section 6289. This chapter shall not relieve a person concerned in such lynching from prosecution for similar offenses, and engaging therein. (93 v. 163 12.) law. The Ohio Supreme Court has several times upheld the law which has been very effective. Only one other state (Illinois) in this country has such a law and it is largely a copy of our Ohio law. Here it is—(in the statutes) under the heading oba sed. representative of victim of lynching by mob trying to lych another costs in tax levy. st member of mob. st another county. OUR OHIO CIVIL RIGHTS LAW Upon the request of many readers of The Gazette we print below the best of Hon. Harry C. Smith's Ohio Civil Rights law which the editor had enacted while a member of the 71st General Assembly, in 1884: The General Code of Ohio: Sec. 12940. Whoever, being the proprietor or his employee, keeper or manager of an inn, restaurant, eating house, barber-shop, public conveyance by land or water, theater or other place of public accommodation and amusement, denies to a citizen, except for reasons applicable alike to all citizens and regardless of race to the full enjoyment of the accommodation, advantages, facilities or privileges they shall be furnished less than fifty dollars or more than five hundred dollars, or imprisoned not less than thirty days nor more than ninety days, or both. Sec. 12941. Whoever violates the next preceding section shall also pay not less than fifty dollars nor more than five hundred dollars to the person aggrieved thereby to be recovered in any court of competent jurisdiction in the county where such offense was committed. This law has repeatedly been held constitutional and good law by the Ohio Supreme court. The trouble is our people will not use it as often as they should, but expect it to do for them what they should and must do for themselves, under it, in the courts. Judge Grant's Opinion of the Law. Misled by the foolish 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 the Court of Appeals in the Puritan Lunch Co. vs. Leonard H. Forman, decided in Akron, last fall, in which a judgment for ($500) five hundred dollars was sustained. If the Beacon-Journal had known what was going on in its own town, there would have been no occasion for criticism, editorially. THE LAW OF OHIO IS UNDER NO REPROACH, our our courts and juries, in administering it. Not a word was said by the Beacon-Journal when the Forman case was reviewed. Very truly yours, C. R. Grant. 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 aware that we will be governed by others in their own interest as well as worked by others for their own advancement and not oura—George W. Blount. Values in Business. I believe thoroughly, as everyone knows, in education—in all phases of education. I believe, as well, in all the learned and useful professions. But somehow, I feel that the 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 great deal of the so-called race problems can and must be worked out at six per cent. Dr. R. R. Moton. Do not wait for the collector to call on you, but call, send or mail your subscription money, or whatever you owe to The Gazette, at once, so as not to miss a single copy of "The Old Reliable" Gazette. Patronize Our Advertisers But Give Copy of It.