The Gazette

Saturday, February 24, 1923

Cleveland, Ohio

4 pages

Page 1
Page 1
Page 2
Page 2
Page 3
Page 3
Page 4
Page 4
Page text (machine-generated)
FOURTIETH YEAR, No. 27 Phone, Randolph 534 SAUNDERS HOUSE LODGINGS AND DINING SERVICES HOME COOKING Mrs. Pearlie Rivers, Proprietor 2364 EAST 55TH ST. TRADE WIN We treat you courteous. Buy Your Columbia Grafanolas H We take your old re- Hear Bert-Williams' latest—A C ART MUSIC SHOP 2290 E. 55TH ST. NEAR C Bell Phone: Randolph 7816 Fraternal Jewelry Fine Watch Repairing and Ad- Stone-setting and Engravi- 3723 Scovill Ave., The New White Owl Restaurant 4920 Central Ave., near E. 55 A. Roberts, Prop. Home Cooking. First Class. The Best Food in the Mar- Sea Foods of All Kind. SPECIAL—SUNDAY DIN Everything clean and neat. Give us convinced. (See the White Owl in the FOURTIETH YEAR, No. 27 Phone, Randolph 534 STEAM HEAT SAUNDERS HOUSE LODGINGS AND DINING SERVICE HOME COOKING Mrs. Pearlie Rivers. Proprietor 2364 EAST 55TH ST. CLEVELAND, O. TRADE WITH US! We treat you courteously. Buy Your Columbia Records and Grafanolas Here. We take your old records in trade. Hear Bert-Williams' latest-A 6216. ART MUSIC SHOPPE 2290 E. 55TH ST. NEAR CENTRAL AVE. White Owl Restaurant 4920 Central Ave., near E. 55th St. A. Roberts, Prop. Home Cooking. First Class Service The Best Food in the Market Sea Foods of All Kinds SPECIAL—SUNDAY DINNER Everything clean and neat. Give us a trial and be convinced. (See the White Owl in the window) DAYS Combination for bleaching will lighten the darkest complexion, removes blackheads, pimples, and will enhance your appearance. This Combination by mail $3.00. DAYS Perfumed Finishing Cream for treatment of wrinkles, filling out contour of face and an excellent base for powder. Leaves the skin soft and velvety. Five oz. Jars by Mail $1.50. DAY'S Combination Face Powder stays put, and sive odors of the body. Ornamental Gold Shaker-T Mall 50c. DAY'S Shampoo, best on earth. By Mail $1.00. DAY'S Hair Tonic beautifies the hair, removes d the hair soft and fluffy. By Mall $1.00. Day's Skin Soap, Toilet Waters, Etc. are Address: THE ODD F. D. Dav, 107 Public Square, Wellin stays put, and will remove offen- Gold Shaker-Top Container. By Mail $1.00. air, removes dandruff and leaves .00. aters, Etc. are the Best. s : D D D care, Wellington, Ohio DAYS Combination Face Powder stays put, and will remove offensive odors of the body. Ornamental Gold Shaker-Top Container. By Mail 50c. DAYS Shampoo, best on earth. By Mail $1.00. DAYS Hair Tonic beautifies the hair, removes dandruff and leaves the hair soft and fluffy. By Mail $1.00. Day's Skin Soap, Toilet Waters, Etc. are the Best. Address: THE ODD F. D. Day, 107 Public Square, Wellington, Ohio There are Singers, Comedians, Manipulators of Jazz Instruments, Great Steppers with new and eccentric steps. HARRIS & HOLLEY Who Were Seen Here Recently in "Plantation Days" Offer Their Comedy Sketch PUSH 'EM & PULL 'EM EY 66 Recently s" sketch 'EM INCL You just can't afford to miss this show. Secure your tickets early for the choice seats. 81 IN UNION IN IS SITENAM THE THE GAZETTE GLOBE THEATER COMMENCING MONDAY, FEBRUARY 26th THE NEW MUSICAL COMEDY REVUE “SHAKE YOUR FEET” 40 IN TWO ACTS AND 8 SCENES ARTISTS INCLUDING E. E. FUGH, WILL MASTIN, VIRGIA LICHARDS, JOE CARTUGHE, OF PORTSMOUTH, PERCY CULSTON, FOX & YANK, HARRIS & HOLLERY of “The Plantation Days Company.” THE NORFOLK JAZZ QUARTETTE and THE DIXIE LAND JAZZ KINGS And a Beauty Chorus Jam Full of CLASS, PEP and ABILITY THE ODD ESTABLISHED AUGUST 25, 1883 And Issued Every Week on Time Since THE SUN SHINING BRIGHTER In Old Kentucky Home—Notable Race Progress—Better Schools at Center of Program—Inter-Racial Commission Active. Louisville, Ky.—Notable progress in the betterment of conditions for our people and in the improvement of race relations was made in Kentucky, last year, according to reports presented at the annual meeting in this city of the State Commission on Interracial Cooperation. This Commission is headed by the Governor, and its membership of eighty, half of them Afro-Americans, is made up of representative leaders in all lines, including the State-Superintendent of Education, who is one of its most sympathetic members. It will be seen, therefore, that it is a most influential body, capable of bringing things to pass. The work is directed by Dr. James Bond, a race leader of ability and fine spirit, who has had the sympathy and cooperation of the best people of the state. The efforts of the Commission during the past year were largely directed toward better school facilities for our people. Remarkable results were attained, including the following: A $125,000 high school addition, a new school, and the improvement of others, in Louisville; a $100,000, high school in Lexington; enlargement of high school at Richmond; new buildings at Mayfield, Jackson, La Grange and other points; participation in proceeds of school bonds issues in Bowling Green, Owensboro and Middlesboro; and additional teachers and increased salaries in certain places. The director was asked by the State Superintendent of Education to outline a program for the betterment of our school system of the state, and suggested the appointment of an Afro-American supervisor, the raising of the State Normal to college grade, and the establishment of a new State Normal. This program was accepted, the first two steps have already been taken, and the third is confidently expected next year. The Director was asked to assist in locating the eight Afro-American summer Normals and was requested to address them all on the subject of interracial cooperation. He has taken the same message to the principal white colleges of the state and has been heard sympathetically everywhere. Some of these great schools have courses in interracial relations and plans are under way to put such courses in others. Better playground facilities have been secured in Louisville, Mayfield and Jackson, and plans are under way for a municipal swimming pool in Louisville. Legal aid has been extended in certain cases, privilege of membership in the Strawberry Association has been secured for our people of Warren County, a vigorous Health Week campaign was conducted, reaching 60,000 people, and one tense situation which threatened mob violence was cleared up. In addition to the State Interracial Commission, there are about seventy county committees in Kentucky, most of them functioning effectively. The method is that of frank conference and sympathetic cooperation. Would Divorce Her White Husband, Indianapolis,'Ind.—Mrs. Jennie Rickman recently discovered that her husband, Wilbur, is a white man, and has entered suit for a divorce on the grounds that she was not aware, of his claims, to white parentality until recently. The.Rickman's have been married twelve years and have three or four children. Wilbur has always passed as a Negro, but has a petition pending in court to have himself declared "white." He is 30 years old and claims, that until recently he has been, unable to prove his parentage, although he has a mother living in this city married to a colored man. It is claimed that his mother denies being a white woman, but it is generally thought that she is. 'Willbur has a brother in this city who is also married to a colored woman. Went Gone Abolished Want Cheney Abolished. Harrisburg, Pa.—Bishop Levi J. Coppin headed a delegation, last week, which asked Gov. Pinchot to abolish the Cheney Normal and In- Bishop Levi J. Coppin. industrial Institute, using the argument that the school was far below the other 13 normal schools in the state in point of equipment and advantages. "SHAKE YOUR FEET"A WELL NAMED SHOW Fast Dancing in The Great Revue Coming to the Globe Theater, Next Week. "Shake Your Feet," a new African-American musical comedy revue, which opens a week's engagement, Monday, at the Globe theater, is a show well named. Foot work is the dominant factor displayed by this aggregation of 40 players who contribute to an hour and a half of exceptionally diverting amusement. There are singers, comedians and manipulators of jazz instruments in great abundance but, it is to the steppers of the troupe that the prize laurels go. All the old familiar Negro dances are brought out as well as several newer eccentric steps that carn well merited applause. "Shake Your Feet" is in two acts and nine scenes and is given in the manner of the usual vaudeville and burlesque revue. E. E. Pugh is the star comedian and others among the featured members of the cast are Will Mastin, Virgile Richards, Joe Carmouche and Cleo Mitchell. The Norfolk Jazz Quartette and the Dixieland Jazz Kinks easily carry away the honors. The quartette sings two numbers with musical accompaniment and two, without, while the jazz band, appearing in the last scene, set in a cabaret, contributes four tuneful pieces that provide a rousing shouting finale. Harris and Holly, who were seen here recently in "Plantation Days," offer their comedy sketch, "Push 'Em and Pull 'Em," which proves to be the best individual comedy effort of the production.—Detroit (Mich.) Daily News. "Shake Your Feet" is really one of the greatest shows on the road and The Globe's many patrons are in for a real treat, next week. Do not fail to see it, tell your friends and acquaintances to do so also. Bishop Hartzell Wants to Return to Africa. San Antonio, Texas.—Although Bishop J. F. Hartzell, age 80, retired, served twenty years as Methodist bishop of Africa, he is planning to go back to Africa. Recently he said: "In spite of the fact that some of the countries of Europe have colonized vast areas of the land, the colonists never will grow in numbers until they can control the continent. The black races of Africa double their population almost every fifty years and it is a safe estimate that within the next 150 years there will be 400,000 natives on the continent. These vast numbers will not be denied their birth-right, and one of the greatest problems facing the civilized world today is whether or not they shall grow to be Christians or Mohammedans." A. 84,000 Verdict Cineluanni, O.—To Atty, Wm. B. Bush is due the honor of having won the largest verdict of any Afro-American attorney in this city. He represented Mrs. Laura Washington, of Glendale. In her appeal to the Common Pleas Court against the Industrial Commission of Ohio for an award on account of the death of her husband, resulting from injuries received at the place of his employment. At the first trial the jury gave her a verdict of $2,085. A new trial was granted. At the second trial, the jury could not agree, and at the third trial, last week, the jury gave her a verdict of $11,300 for 366 weeks, about $2,000 more than the first verdict. Too White to Marry Baltimore. Md.—Because Mrs. Catherine Hillin, age 46, was so white that she couldn't prove herself to be colored, a license clerk here, last week, refused to issue a license for her marriage to Emory Fells of York, Pa. REV. F. D. DAY. Rev. F. D Day, formerly one of the successful pastors of the A M. E. Church, has established a distributing agency for the higher grades of toilet-requisites at Wellington, Ohio. His business venture has proven very successful, thus far, and he attributes its success to a discovery (made while engaged in the barber business prior to his entering the ministry) of a combination of articles scientifically blended that actually bleaches the skin. Conceiving the idea, that members of the race would appreciate an opportunity to purchase the higher grade toilet-requisites from one of their own number, Mr. Day spent time and means to secure the best grade obtainable. In this, he was not mistaken as he is receiving orders from nearly every state in the Union. The growing demand for the bleach and other toilet articles will no doubt necessitate the employment of a greater clerical force. He has leased a two story brick building at 107 Public Square, Wellington, Ohio, where he has his laboratories and distributing agency. SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS 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. FRANKFORT—Hiss C. Polly is home, Mr. Frank Polly was here, last week—Mrs. S. H. Williams has returned—Mr. Wm. Jones is consalvescent—Miss Emma Dunson is—Rev. Adams, P. E., was entertained at Mr. L. Saunders—Rev. Williams preached little Earl Harris' funeral, last week—Mrs. Plpp went to Columbus, last week, to attend her son's wedding—Jimmie Hamilton of Leidenville and Gertie Uhl of Milford are here visiting—Mry. Williams was in Gillicothe, last week—Miss Ella Jones and Mrs. Julia Frye of Roxabell are ill. HILLSBORO—The Wesleyan revival closed, last week, with nine additions to the church. The evangelist, Mrs. Glenn of Springfield, went to Piketon to assist Rev. W. W. Stephenson in a meeting.—Mrs. Irene Alsop of Cincinnati, is visiting her parents.—Miss Mary Williams has recovered and is again at Lincoln. Miss Lyne Hudson taught in her absence.—Miss Elizabeth Johnson and Mrs. Ada Bason of Cincinnati visited their parents. Friday. Mrs. Ada Blanton, Mrs. Madge Hancock, and Arthur Kittrell are consalvescent.—Mrs. Jenny Johnson is ill.—Rev. Roy Greene left, Monday, for Frankfort to assist Rev. S. H. Williams in a revival meeting.—Mrs. Lousla Young is no better. CORRESPONDENTS must mall 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., ordinary notices, inquiries for relatives and advertisements of all kinds, including items, announcing entertainments to be held in the near future, must be paid for in advance at the rate of 25 cents a line, six words to a line. Our rates for display advertisements will be sent on application. SHARLINE HEIGHTS.—Rev. W. O. Harper of Youngstown, who opposed our candidate for Governor, last fall, preached here, last Sunday, for Rev. A. J. Blackman.—Rev. W. M. Berry, pastor of Triedstone Baptist church, is local representative of The Gazette. Be sure to give him your order for a copy, every week, and tell your friends to do likewise. "The Old Reliable" is a home paper.—Homer Harvey of Youngstown spent Thursday at Coalburg.—Mr. and Mrs. John Davis, Jr. of Youngstown have purchased a home and moved here.—Mrs. R. B. Harvey was here last Tuesday.—C. E. Murray and Mrs. Jas. E. Harvey are ill.—A number of our men have quilt the mills in town and are at the old Hauna furnace which has been idle over two years.—Rev. McComparer preached for Mrs. Reed, Sunday. --- --- --- IN UNION IT IS STRONG COPY FIVE CENTS CHIO NEWS RELIABLE" GAZETTE'S THROUGHOUT THE STATE going Each Week — Church, Literary and Musical— Deaths, Etc. SPRINGFIELD.—Mrs. Perle A. Winslow's infant, son was buried from the residence, Feb. 17.—A. J. Riggs continues quite ill. Mrs. Riggs is better.—Mrs. Wm. Strauss was hostess to the Culture Assembly, Wednesday evening.—Galeda S. S. class gave a very enjoyable valentine party, at Mrs. Thomas White's. The general topic of conversation here is the police raid on the headquarters of the local Ku Klux and the seizure of regalia, membership list, papers, etc., last week. Among the names of members, published in the local papers, were found those A. Mrs. Laura Walker. of Geo. E. McCord, Supt. of Public Schools, Harry C. Copenbaver and Stanley Hutchings, members of the school board, and Chas S., son of Senator Simeon D. Fess. W. M. Cortner, alleged Kleagle and organizer of the Springfield Klan, is under $1,000 bond, charged with conspiracy to riot, or cause disorderly conduct." The outcome of this case is being watched with almost breathless interest.—Mrs. Laura Walker, whose picture appears in this letter, was one of the faithful pickets at Fulton School. She was on duty, every day, during the entire four months of picketing, except during conference week. She has lived in Springfield for thirty years, having come here from Zanesville. While she has no children of school age, she was interested in the fight for the sake of those who had, and for the generations which are to come. YOUNGSTOWN. — The E. D. Bowles club was entertained at Mrs. Ben Livingston's, Monday evening. — Rising Sun Court of Calanthe members enjoyed themselves, Monday evening, at Mrs. P. Byron's when a surprise shower of groceries was given her.—Miss Harriet E. Shaw, Mrs. J. I. White, Mrs. Alice Steward, Mrs. Jennie Tucker Geo. Woods, Marvel Skaton and Theresa Machin are ill.—Mrs. A. Jenkins entertained, the Lidranso club. Wednesday afternoon. — Mrs. Mable Osborne of Cleveland (Continued on Page 3) --- The GAZETTE PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY One Year ..... $2.00 Six Months ..... 1.00 Three Months ..... .50 Subscribers are requested to remit by postoffice money order or registered letter Entered at the postoffice ir Cleveland, Ohio, as second-class mail matter. Address all communications to HARRY C. SMITH Editor and Proprietor THE GAZETTE (Bell, Phone: Cherry 1259) #14-215 Blackston Bldg., Cleveland, Ohio Member Ohio Legislature: 1894 to 1896; 1896 to 1898; 1900 to 1902 THE GAZETTE is the oldest, and has the largest bona fide circulation double that of any newspaper in the interest of Afro-Americans, published in the state of Ohio, and compared with any will immediately establish its rank as one of the NEWS BEST AND BEST in the country. 10,000,000 Afro-Americans. 350,000 in Ohio. 85,000 in Cleveland. SATURDAY, FEB. 24, 1923 Frederick Douglass—the greatest Afro-American! That Ku Klux Klan mess at Springfield, Ohio, ought to result in much good for the state at large. It looks like an indictment, on a very serious charge, for Alderman Louis B. Anderson of Chicago. Cleveland's City Council is in the midst of what is getting to be a bitter controversy over gas. --- Editor Abbott of the Chicago Defender is accused by the Chicago Whip of running away from the "Windy City" every time there is a vice crusade or the like. Surely Editor Bibb must be in error. Of course Abraham Lincoln is easily the greatest figure in American history even if he did issue his great emancipation proclamation as a war measure, pure and simple, and said --- What has become of that "Connors" committee that was to lead our people of this community in a fight on the Wm. Taylor & Son Co. that refused to permit Atty. Wm. R. Green, president of the dormant local branch of the N. A. A. C. P., to try on a hat in their store, several months ago? Will it be necessary to ask the National Urban League of N. Y. City which sent Secretary Wm. R. Conners to Cleveland? A NEW "PLAYHOUSE." The trustees of "The Playhouse," in E. 38th St., this city, have determined to have a new, proper and greatly needed home, and to that end will on March 1 launch a campaign to raise $250,000 to build and a quip a new plant. "The Playhouse" caters to all, without reference to class (race) or color, does a much needed work, has served its "apprenticeship" to splendid purpose under its very efficient director, R. W. Jelliffe, and his able assistants, and ought to have what it seeks. The campaign is to last two weeks and the canvass for funds is to be thorough. That is, all able are to be given an opportunity to and should contribute liberally to this great undertaking. Be generous as you can, for reasons obvious, and help to make this campaign an outstanding success. A GAZETTE ALUMNUS! When our good friend, the Rev. O. W. Childers, former pastor of St. James A. M. E. Church, this city was appointed pastor of Eaker St. church, Dayton, the situation there was so very bad from almost every viewpoint that other ministers in the conference gave him only one year to stay. He has been there now more than three, raised $12,000 for a building fund and purchased one of the best locations in the state for the new church. He plans to start a $60,000 structure this spring. It will be one of the most complete church-buildings in the connection. The membership of Eaker St. church has increased from 300 to 700 and the supremacy of the great A. M. E. Church is again established in Dayton. Of course, it has taken patience and hard work, but Rev. Childers, a Gazette alumnus, has the former in abundance and his "middle name" is the latter. Then, too, he has splendid ability and is really a Christian minister. A NATIONAL HUMILIATION President Harding frankly told Congress that if the Ship aid bill is not passed, "the executive branch of the government may proceed as best it can to end the losses in liq- idation and humiliation." It is costing the government $50,000,000 a year to keep but a fraction of our merchant fleet in operation. No more of the vessels can be put in commission because of the legislative restrictions on the operation of American ships that make it quite impossible to compete with foreign vessels. The passage of the ship aid bill will remove at a stroke the deficits now accruing, take the government out of the shipping business compensate for the handicaps now attending the operation of American ships, secure for America a permanent merchant fleet to transport our goods to market in time of peace and give us a naval auxiliary in times of war, keep in this country about $150,000,000 a year that is now being paid to foreign ship owners in freight charges, and salvage from utter loss the investment of $3,000,000,000 that our taxpayers made in ships during the war. All those advantages can be realized at a maximum cost of $30,000,000 a year, and an actual cost of probably considerably less. It will indeed be a national humiliation if Congress, by its inaction, permits the people's wealth to be dissipated, and denies them the benefits of the pending measure. A VERY IMPORTANT DECISION In the $40,000 damage suit of J. H. Roberts, against the St. Louis-San Francisco Ry Co., Judge Robert W. Hall, in the Circuit Court at St. Louis, Mo., recently ruled that the railroad company had absolutely no defense under the "jim-crow" laws of the South as applied to interstate passengers. Roberts was forced into a "jim-crow" car by railroad employees when entering Oklahoma from Missouri, en route to McAllister, Okla., and his suit was the result. Judge Hall's decision has been our contention for years Editor W. E. B. Du Bois. we did not believe that any state could enact a law that would take from our people any of their rights as inter-state passengers. Several years ago, The Gazette urged Prof. "Alphabetical" DuBois, of the N. A. A. C. P., to use some of that organization's money to file a test case in the U. S. Supreme Court and get a ruling from it, believing then as we do now that such action was of far more importance to our people than frittering away valuable time and much money chasing "Federal antilynching law" shadows. States can legislate for intra-state passengers but not for inter-state passengers, and this fact Judge Hall's very important decision makes plain. Now will the "eminent" Dr. Prof. Editor William E. B. DuBois, alleged head of the N. A. A. C. P., act? We hope so. DAVIS AND FLEMING. New Jersey's Afro-American legislator, the Hon. Oliver Randolph, has introduced an anti-Ku Klux resolution and bill. What is the matter with Ohio's only Afro-American representative? Is he afraid to do likewise, to even try to do something? The Hon. Harry E. Davis of this city is serving his second term of two years in the Ohio Assembly and to date has done absolutely nothing of material benefit to his people. Come Harry, wake up! Do not longer emulate the baneful example of one Councilman Tom Fleming who has sat silent in the City Council of Cleveland for about PETER H. BURKE Hon. Harry E. Davls. six years and has absolutely nothing to his credit of material benefit to his Afro-American constituency. The Ku Klux Klan is "again" aliens, Catholics, Jews and Afro-Americans. ITHE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O. SATURDAY, FEB. 24, 1923 It is generally understood that Davis is not only a member of the race but also a member of the Catholic Church. Therefore, he ought to have a double incentive to get active against the lawless organization that is so much "in the lime-light" here in Ohio as elsewhere, these days. GUM INDUSTRY HAS HUMBLE BEGINNING CHICLE BROUGHT TO U. S. BY CAN'T PLEASE THEM! Democrats absolutely refuse to be pleased with anything the Republicans may do. A while back they were denouncing the Republicans for what they were pleased to call "isolation." They wanted this country to do something to help Europe. Some of them wanted a complete conciliation of debts all around. Others wanted a large share of the debts remitted. They were quite agreed that under the Republican administration Uncle Sam is a Shylock, demanding the pound of flesh nearest Europe's heart. Use of the word "Shylock" became quite common in Democratic denunciation of Republican policies toward Europe. But how all that has changed. The Harding administration undertook to negotiate a funding of the debt with Great Britain, and an agreement was reached by which that country was to be given an extension of time and a reduction in the rate of interest. There was no conciliation of any of the principal. No sooner had it been announced that an agreement had been reached than Democratic leaders in Congress, reversing the attitude of their party, began a denunciation of the agreement because it did not exact full payment of the debt with interest. In their view the Harding administration is to be condemned for being too lenient with our former associate in the war. Only a few weeks ago the Republicans were criticised for not doing anything for Europe; now, when they have proposed a little lenency in the collection of the debt, and a remission part of the interest, the party is criticised for doing too much for Europe. Only a few weeks ago we were told that it is impossible for Europe to pay and that we were destroying our foreign markets by maintaining an oppressive attitude; now we are told that Europe can pay in full and ought to be made to pay. Only a few weeks ago we were at fault for "holding aloof" and now we are at fault for being too willing to help. In the meantime, there has been no change whatever in the Harding attitude toward the foreign debts. The administration has always expressed a desire to help Europe get back to normal, and has been ready to help in any proper way, but cancellation of the debt was held not to be a proper way. In fact, none of the nations owing us has ever asked for cancellation. The demand came from international bankers and from Democratic politicians. The Harding administration has attended to Government business in a business-like way, and, when the situation was discussed in all its phases, it was deemed best to extend the time of payment and reduce the rate of interest. But it is impossible to please the Democratic leaders. A PRIVILEGE --- OUR LESSON We must learn to govern ourselves and work together for our own advancement. If we do not learn to govern ourselves and work together for our own advancement, we may be very sure that we will be governed as well as worked by others for their own advancement and not ours.—George W. Blount. --- IS IT OF ANY USE TO CON TEND FOR RIGHTS? Colored Americans are the only race, responsible members of which are in favor of submitting to discrimination on the claim that their race "always will be discriminated against." The Jews are still contending, after over 1900 years of universal discrimination, and are winning even social rights today. The Irish at home have contended for 700 years and are winning because they will die rather than submit. The race that says it's of no use to resist, dews itself and the world then will say, Negroes are not worthy of certain rights that make nature without self-respect have no 'guts.' The world respects only those who resent and resist proscriptions for race. Let us be worthy of the abolitionists, worthy of our own fathers who have died in every war to vindicate the title of their race to equal liberty, and forever resist denial of rights in our native land, however uneasy the discrimination may continue. The result is to deserve contempt. Boston (Mass.) Guardian. GUM INDUSTRY HAS HUMBLE BEGINNING CHICLE BROUGHT TO U. S. BY GEN. SANTA ANNA; NOW IT'S $0,000,000 TRADE Humor Enfoils First Futile Efforts to Vulcanize Product. Of what importance are diplomatic pericles when one realizes that Mexico furnishes the United States with chiele, the basis of chewing gum? Anc that the United States in return furnishes Mexico with a certain percentage of the $60,000,000 spent throughout the word each year for that chewing gum. Why lock further in a common ground? This entente cordiale was established just fifty years ago, and the negotiations were as follows: Gen. Sant. Anna, who was the original revolving president of Mexico, came, during one of his slack seasons, to confer with a friend at Sang Harbor, Staten Island. This was in June, 1866. He brought with him for relaxation, a few pieces of tasteless, rubbery gum which he tucked away in his bureau crawler against a dry cay. Soon after, there came to call one Trichia Adams and his son, Thomas, Jr. One pleasantly led to another, and before to afternoon was over they had reached such a state of familiarity that the general had gone to his bureau, taken out his private stock of chewings and offered some to Mr. Adams. Being somewhat of a conservative, the latter insisted on knowing what it was before he put it in his mouth, and learned that it was the gum of the capota tree, known to its intimates as "chicle." Thus reassured, Mr. Adams took a chance, and was at once impressed with its positsions as a commercial rubber. He begged for a larger place and took it home with him for experimental purposes, to see if it could not be vulgarized. In conference with a chemist and a manufacturer of dental supplies he tried to produce from it a substance which could be used as a base for artificial teeth, but fate had larger things in stol, for this bit of American chicle and the vulcanizing had to be given up. Thus was saved to the world a piece of potential health building teeth preserving, dissection aiding, chest developing, soul tuning chewing gum. One day, as they sat about the dissecting table, gazing hopelessly at the defiant mass of chicle, the remark was made in bitter jest that apparently the only thing the blamed stuff was good for was chewing. At which the younger Adams, with that keen business acumen which Americans always attribute to Americans, immediately decided that since it was only chewing that chicle was good for he would capitalize its limitations and make of it a chewing gum. Up to that time there had been parafine and spruce chewing-gum, but nothing with the smoothness promised by this new substance. So the father, with some misgivings, finally saw his way clear to settle $55 on his son with which to put the first piece of chicle chewing-gum on the market. On an initial investment of $35 a yearly business of $60,000,000 may be considered a fair return—World Outlook. HAS WEALTH IN TIMBER Honduras Contains Many Millions of Valuable Tres. "It is estimated that there are in the Mosquitia territory, Honduras, 90,000,000 pine trees, more than 45,000,000 cedar and mahogany trees, and about 14,000,000 trees of miscellaneous varieties. Valuing the pine trees at 25 cents, United States gold, each, or $22,500,000; the cedar and mahogany trees at $8 each, or $225,000; and the miscellaneous trees at 10 cents each or $1,400,000 gives an estimated forestal value of $248,900,000 for this territory alone. The Mosquitia territory has an area of about 9,000 square miles, and is the second largest political division in the republic. The population of the territory is about 5,000, the land is low and level, and it is traversed by the Negro, the Patuca, and the Coco rivers which are navigable for light-draft vessels for many miles into the interior. TELLS HOW TO COUGH SILENTLY It's Very Simple, According to This Doctor's Directions. The following directions as to how to cough are given by Dr. A. A. Pleyte in The Journal of the Outdoor Life: Fold your handkerchief so that it is about five inches square. Place it flat in the right hand, if you are right handed, and with this hand hold it tightly over the mouth. Press the hand on the mouth as to hold it loosely over the mouth will not accomplish the purpose. Now, instead of coughing and trying to muffle the sound in your throat or mouth muffle it with your handkerchief. Practice if until a person ten feet away cannot bear you. The sound made in coughing is due partly to air passing through the bronchial tubes and trachea and partly to the resonance produced in the chambers above the trachea. This sound can be almost wholly avoided and the irritation to the lungs and air passages prevented by keeping the air passage open and letting your handkerchief do the muffling. Now, instead of expelling 120 cubic inches of air each expiration, you will expel a smaller amount, with more comfort to yourself am, to those around you and with much less harm to your To know how good a cigarette really can be made you must try a— LUCKY STRIKE CIGARETTE It's toasted HE'S EFFICIENT FARMER Chinese Has No Use for Modern Methods, Says Bishop. "Let the women help do the work," say the Chinese, when the water has to be lifted from the canal to irrigate paddy fields. Bishop Bashford estimates, in his new book on China, that although that country has in exceptionally heavy rainfall south of Yangtse, from fifty to seventy-five inches in many places, nait or three-quarters of the land is also under irrigation. The Chinese get the largest yield, per acre, per year of any farmers in the world. Meenwhile they also use the canals for water transportation and manage to grow enough fish in their irrigation trenches to make the rice they grow a little more appetizing. The smallness of the average farm and the cheapness of labor must dash the hopes of Americans who have expected to sell motor plows and harvesting machinery in China.—World Outlook. Salted whale meat is regarded as a delicacy by the Japanese. MRS.L.S.BRADLEY 8241 Preble Ave. Cleveland, O. Has Houses For Sale or To Rent Wanted 10 Colored Men To work tonnage; can earn from five to six dollars per day, Pay, every Saturday. Must weigh 180 pounds and up. ALSO AN EDUCATED FOREMAN who can handle men, and one, one with a knowledge of handling of firefighters, to bween 9 a. m., and 2 p. m. NUBY AND CO, 2517 Central Ave., Cleveland, O. For Beautiful Eyes 1920 Make the Use of Murine a Daily Habit. This Refreshing Eye Lotion soon makes Eyes Clear. Radiant. Beautiful Harmless, Enjoyable. Sold by all Druggists. Write for Booklet "Hearts Make the Eyes Beautiful" MURINE MURINE CO., 9 East Ohio Street, Chicago ```markdown ``` Pomade Hair Dressing and your hair will grow. Removes dandruff. Highly perfumed. Order a can today and after a few ap- plications watch your hair grow. SOLD BY DRUG STORES or BY 25c STAMPS MAIL OR COIN AGENTS WANTED, Write for Terms HEROLIN MED. CO. ATLANTA GA. FREE THIS BEAUTIFUL HAIR STRAIGHTENING AND SHAMPOO COMB This Comb Is Well Worth $1.00 Solid Steel, wooden handle given at a present to all who take the knife. BIG OFFER NO. 1144 JUST WRITE TO US AND SAY-- I would like to get a hair straightening and shampoo comb free. Send me particulars re- Be sure and write your name and address plainly, and full particulars will be sent you. Do not wait, write to day for this offer will not last long. We are doing this to advertise last long. We are doing this to advertise Ford's Hair Pomade and Ford's Hair Straightening and Shampoo Combs. Address your letter to THE OZONIZED OX MARROW CO. WARSAW ILLINOIS O.K. Printing Co. W. J. Foster - John M. Smith Commercial and Job Printing PROMPT SERVICE 3119 Central Ave. Prospect 2600 See us First for all Goods JOHN S. H. Prices Reasonable. Satisfaction JEWELER AND OPTOM 3133 Central Ave., Cleveland, O. This First for all Goods in our JOHN S. HALL Prices Reasonable. Satisfaction Guaranteed. JEWELER AND OPTOMETRIST Central Ave., Cleveland, O. 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 Better Than a Mustard Plaster 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 For Coughs and Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism and All Aches and Pains ALL DRUGGISTS 35c and 65c, jars and tubes Hospital size, $3.00 MISS L. E. W. "Cleveland's Distinctive Be Inspect Our Hand-Made 3927 Central Avenue OH, THOSE B "Taint Nobody's Business If I Do." "Four O'Clock Blues." "You Never Miss a Good Thing Till I Evil-Minded Blues." "Who'll Drive Your Blues Away." SCOTT'S MUSIC 3947 Central Ave., Cleveland, O. Records, Sheet Music, Rolls, Orchestration MSS L. E. WARR Cleveland's Distinctive Beauty Shop Inspect Our Hand-Made Garment Central Avenue Ran OH, THOSE BLUES! Not Nobody's Business If I Do." O'Clock Blues." Never Miss a Good Thing Till It's Gone." Minded Blues." Will Drive Your Blues Away." SCOTT'S MUSIC SHOP Central Ave., Cleveland, O. Sheet Music, Rolls, Orchestrations, Musical Dr. H. V. Biss — DENTIST Cor. E. 22nd St. and Woodland Ave. SPECIAL HOLIDAY RATES First-Class Work Guaranteed traction POSITIVELY Painless E. WARREN Dincitive Beauty Shoppe" Hand-Made Garments Rand. 4007 JOSE BLUES! Is If I Do." Thing Till It's Gone." Is Away." MUSIC SHOP d. O. Ran. 5965 Orchestrations, Musical Accessories H. V. Bishop — DENTIST — t. and Woodland Ave. HOLIDAY RATES Work Guaranteed TIVELY Painless NO PAIN MISS L. E. WARREN "Cleveland's Distinctive Beauty Shoppe" Inspect Our Hand-Made Garments 3927 Central Avenue Rand. 4007 OH, THOSE BLUES! "Taint Nobody's Business If I Do." "Four O'Clock Blues." "You Never Miss a Good Thing Till It's Gone." "Evil-Minded Blues." "Who'll Drive Your Blues Away." SCOTT'S MUSIC SHOP 3947 Central Ave., Cleveland, O. Records, Sheet Music Rolls, Orchestrations, Musical Accessories Ran. 5965 Dr. H. W — DEN Cor. E. 22nd St. and W SPECIAL HOLIDAY R First-Class Work Guara Extraction POSITIVELY Be More Beautiful 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 short, coarse hair into long, lovely tresses. It gives the hair a beautiful glossy sheen. It puts glowing health into brittle, lifeless hair; stops dandruff 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 Another marvelous beauty help is EXELENTO SKIN BE quickly removes skin blemihones and clears up in an autonishin If your druggist cannot supply you, send us 60% in stamps of Pomade and Beautifier, or send 50% for single package. Gain have, by getting the EXELENTO preparations NOW! EXELENTO MEDICINE COMP AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE- us beauty help is EXELENTO SKIN BEAUTIFIER, a de- sin blemishes and clears up in an astonishing manner dark, cannot supply you, send us £50 in stamps or coin for full sale, offer, or send £50 for single and large. Gain the attractive be- ne EXELENTO preparations NOW! TO MEDICINE COMPANY, AS US WANTED EVERYWHERE—Write for P ENTO SKIN BEAUTIFIER, a delightful cream that is in an astonishing manner dark, sallow complexion, a 50% in stamps or coin for full size packages of both packages. Gain the attractive beauty, you soon can ins NOW! E COMPANY, Atlanta, Ga. RYWHERE—Write for Particulars True Beauty Another marvelous beauty help is EXELENTO SKIN BEAUTIFIER, a delightful cream that can help you stand out in an astonishing manner dark, sallow complexions. If your drugs cannot supply you, you can use Pomade and Beautifier, or send 25% for single package. Gain the attractive beauty, you soon can have, by getting the EXELENTO preparations NOW! EXELENTO MEDICINE COMPANY, Atlanta, Ga. AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE—Write for Particulars True Beauty It's all in the way you care for your skin. YOUR complexion can be easily and the skin lightened, your neck and arms m your hands soft and smooth and your hair lo by simply using Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin These are the most exquisite of all skin w are used and preferred by thousands of the who owe their charming looks and beaut Fred Palmer. complexion can be easily and quickly beauti- lightened, your neck and arms made plump and as soft and smooth and your hair long, straight using Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener P the most exquisite of all skin whitener prepa- and preferred by thousands of the best men their charming looks and beautiful, healthy ner. easily and quickly beautified, your and arms made plump and velvety, and your hair long, straight and luxuriant hammer's Skin Whitener Preparations. Of all skin whitener preparations and thousands of the best men and women, and beautiful, healthy skin to Dr. YOUR complexion can be easily and quickly beautified, your skin lightened, your neck and arms made plump and velvet, your hands soft and smooth and your hair long, straight and luxurious by simply using Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Preparations. These are the most exquisite of all skin whitener preparations and are used and preferred by thousands of the best men and women, who owe their charming looks and beautiful, healthy skin to Dr. Fred Palmer. A FEW SIMPLE DIRECTIONS TO LIGHTEN THE SKIN: No matter how dark get it "just right" by using Dr. Fred Palmer's nounced by thousands of men and women as the me and most satisfactory of all skin whitener prepara is perfectly safe. Your druggist can supply you, or price. 25c. OILY, SHINY, BUMPY COMPLEXIONS: If you t complexion, and want a soft, smooth, velvety skin Palmer Skin Whitener Soap, and follow it with Dr which you will find the perfumed and adds a is a last-failable treatment. Get them from your c receipt of price. 25c each. CARE OF THE HAIR: Dr. Fred Palmer has devel the most wonderful Hair Dressing known to Makes the hair straight, soft, long and Insurance moves dandruff—makes the scalp healthy and helps hair grow. No hair too stiff or crinkly for it to pro- duce a box of Dr. Fred Palmer's Hair Dress from your druggist, or sent postpaid upon receipt price. 25c. DR. FRED PALMER'S LABORATORIES THE SKIN: No matter how dark your complexion lightly by using Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener, thousands of men and women as the most delightful, in factory of all skin whitener preparations—it quick fix. Your druggist can supply you, or sent postpaid. BUMP COMPLEXIONS: If you have a rough, a tough, a soft, smooth, velvety skin, try the unexact Whitener soft oil and follow it. Dr. Fred Palmer find delicately perfumed and adds life and lustre to your treatment. Get them from your druggist, or see it, 25c each. HAIR: Dr. Fred Palmer has developed derful Hair Dressing known to science, or straight, soft, long and luxurious—re-makes the scalp healthy and helps the hair to grow soft and crimped to the imb of Dr. Fred Palmer's Hair Dressing juggler, or sent postpaid upon receipt of PALMER'S LABORATORIES DEPT. F-2 ATLANTA, GA. Agent for this quisite These sell their every about ater how dark your completion, it is easy is Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Ointment, promised as the most delightful, most remarkable preparations—it quickly bleaches and supply you, or sent postpaid upon receipt of ONS: If you have a rough, bumpy or shiny skin, try the unexcelled Dr. Fred Palmer's Fred Palmer's Face Powder, and add life to the skin. This am from your druggist, or sent postpaid upon Palmer has developed, known to science, and luxurious—re TO LIGHTEN THE SKIN: No matter how dark your complexion, it is easy to get it "just right" by using Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Ointment - promoted by thousands of men and women as the most delightful, most remarkable and most satisfactory of all skin whitener preparations - it quickly bleaches and is perfectly safe. Your druggist can supply you, or sent postpaid upon receipt of price, 25c. OILY, SHINY, BUMPY COMPLEXIONS: If you have a rough, bumpy or shiny complexion, and want a soft, smooth, velvety skin, try the unexcelled Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Soap, and follow it with Dr. Fred Palmer's Face Powder, which you will find delicately perfumed and adds life and lustre to the skin. This is a never-failing treatment. Get them from your druggist, or sent postpaid upon receipt of price, 25c each. CARE OF THE HAIR: Dr. Fred Palmer has developed the most wonderful Hair Dressing known to science. Makes the hair straight, soft, long and luxurious - removes dandruff - makes the scalp healthy and helps the hair grow. Not too stiff or cumy feel. Get a box of Dr. Fred Palmer's Hair Dressing from your druggist, or sent postpaid upon receipt of price, 25c. DR. FRED PALMER'S LABORATORIES DEPT. F-2 ATLANTA, GA. Dr. Fred Palmer's SKIN WHITENER PREPARATIONS Agents Wanted for this line of exquisite beauty aids. These preparations sell rapidly upon the merit, as everybody knows about them. Write today for our liberal agents' proposition! --- --- --- W. J. WILSON W. J. WILSON W. J. WILSON This young lady gives all the credit for her beautiful hair and complexion to Emily Nutt, arrangements This young lady gives all the credit for her beautiful hair and completion to EXELENTO preparation NO PAIN Agents Wanted for this line of exquisite beauty alas. These preparations sell rapidly upon their merit, as everybody knows about them. Write today for our liberal agents' proposition! DO YOU KNOW WHY --- Human Beings Always Have An Excuse GRACIOUS, YOU ANNOYED SIMPLE LOOK WHAT YOU VOICE DONE SEE, WIFE A FILM BIT ME ON THE KNUCKLE AND I DROPED IT EXCUSE ME, I WAS SOFT IN THE TELEGRAPH POLES AND DIDN'T SEE YOUR FOOT OUCH! WELL BOSS I WAS EVERY BAD POCTA ACHIE IN MY EAR YOU MADE AN AWFUL MISTRE IN THIS VOUCHER WHERE HAVE YOU BEEN THIS HOUR OF THE RIGHT? YOU SEE, WIFE A BIG CLOUD FELL IN FRONT OF THE REAR END OF THE STREET FOAR AND WHAT EXCUSE HAVE YOU GOT FOR TAKING A DOSE OF CARBOLIC ACID? OH, DOC, I THOUGHT IT WAS COUGH MEDICINE 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. 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. JOHN P. GREEN ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Room 510, Blackstone Bldg.. 1426 West 3rd Street Cleveland, O. Notary Public Polish Interpreter Office Phones: Main 2912; Central 1424-R Res. 614 E. 107th St. 'Phone, Eddy 6533 Forrest & Petite 10570 Cedar Ave. 10103 eCdar Ave. 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, 8616. CHESTER K. GILLESPIE Attorney-at-Law 508 SUPERIOR BLDG. Cleveland, Ohio. OFFICE PHONE, MAIN 8767 Res. 2229 E. 95th St. Office 'Phone, Main 910 Study Chiropractic Day or Night Classes. Write for Catalogues and Free Information. Webster's School of Chiropractic (Four Years Old) Dept. B, 2278 E. 55th St. Cleveland, O. 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 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. ERROR DO YOU GRACIOUS, YOU ANNIWARD SIMP LOOK WHAT YOUVE DONE SEE WIFE FLY BIT ME ON THE KNIF AND I DROP IT 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 latest. 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 Bldg. call there, please. We advise our readers to car vertisements before making purpise in this paper should have the fact that they advertise is assura. All reading matter for public Gazette must be in the office by at the latest. Display advertised NESDAYS! HARRY C. SMITH, Bell Phone: Classified Advertising .. Department .. WANTED. —Men for detective work. Experience unnecessary. Write for details explaining guaranteed position. J. Ganor, former Gov't Detective, St. Louis, Mo. WANTED. —Colored men to qualify for sleeping car and train porters. Experience unnecessary. Transportation furnished. Write W. W. Boggess, St. Louis, Mo. WANTED. —Agents to sell Day's face bleach and other toilet requisites. Big profits! Address F. D. Day, 107 Public Square, Wellington, Ohio. WANTED. —Beginners desiring piano lessons can secure the same from Miss Louise Gillespie, 2229 E. 95th St. Gar. 1351-J. CLEVELAND Social and Personal Love not sleep, lest thou come to poverty.—Prov. 20:13. Rev. H. C. Bailey and many others are ill. The grip. Mrs. Mary Randolph, E. 49th St., is quite ill. Miss Mabel Clark's father died in Xenia, recently. Dick Sissle's case was on trial in police court, this week. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Slaughterter have purchased a nice home in Hough Ave., near Wade Park. A mass meeting will be held at Triedstone Baptist church, Sunday at 3 p. m. Mrs. Mable Osborne and Mrs. Katherine Ousley were in Youngstown, last week. Dr. R. R. Moton, of Tuskegee, Ala., Institute, will speak at E. Tech High school auditorium, Tuesday evening. Afro-American ministers of Knoxville, Tenn., refused Evangelist Billy Sunday's invitation to a "jim-crow" mass meeting. Good! Dr. R. R. Moton will address the Chamber of Commerce, Tuesday noon. He is coming to the city for that purpose. Dr. Ellis A. Dale learned of the death of a brother in Washington, D. C., last week. Likewise, Rev. W. B. Suthern. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Dennis left, last Saturday, for an extended visit with relatives in New York and Philadelphia. Do not wait for the collector, but call, send or mail at once your subscription money, or whatever you owe The Gazette, so as not to miss a single copy of "The Old Reliable." Miss Roberta B. James, E. 101st St. to attend to Oberlin, Saturday, to attend the announcement party of Miss Matilda Vance of New Orleans and Harold Hunt of N. Y. City. KNOW WHY ... Human Beings Alway EXCUSE ME, I WAS COUNTING THE TELEGRAPH MOVES AND DON'T SEE YOUR FOOT OUCH! WELL, I HAD BOO AND MOVE MY EAR THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND. O. SATURDAY, FEB. 24. 1923 *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. DOUGLASS DRUG CO. 4000 Central Ave. SUBSCRIBERS The Gazette regularly should notify by delivered promptly. business matters to The Gazette If you wish to see the editor fully examine The Gazette's ad- chases. Business men who adver- the patronage of our people. The ance 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. Cherry 1259. Agnes Anna and Bob C., children of Mrs. Neal Finley, 3505 Scovill Ave., who have been visiting in the South for three years, have returned home. Among the recent High School graduates were: Wendell C. Scott from E. Tech; Alice and Juanita Pierson and Helen O. Thomas, from Central. Dr. L. Perkins of Pittsburg was the guest of Mrs. F. D. Webster, last week, and attended the graduating exercises of the Webster School of Chiropractic. "Kunnel" Jas. Bronaugh Smith of "Georgah, sai." Insuited an Afro-American waiter in a Chicago restaurant, recently. Result: the waiter beat him up with dishes, and the court, next day, fined the "Kunnel" who also last $400 in the fractas. St. John's choir's tent recital will be given, Sunday, from 4 to 5 p. m. It will be assisted by Gertrude Maxwell, Holland, plano-solst; Martha Berry, violinist, and Luther Burke, tenor. All seats free. Silver offering Our advertisers want you 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. Wm. Conners, Capt. Frye and R. W. Jellife had a vocal fight at the "Ys" Cedar Ave. Boys' branch, Wednesday, over conditions in Ward 11 and the East End. It is said the battle was a hot one. That "Negro Welfare league" ought to be abolished. It long ago outlived its (war time) usefulness. John D. Rockefeller has advised Msgr. Joseph F. Smith, pastor of St. Philomene's church, that he will provide an organ for the church of Our Lady of the Blessed Sacrament. The building will be ready for services within a month. Rockefeller's gift will be installed for the dedicatory services. Geo. W. Carroll is visiting in Atlanta, Ga.; this and next month. Miss Anita Bolden of Quebec Ave., assistant pastor of Antioch Baptist church, is making extensive preparations for her early design for South Africa, where she will engage in missionary work for the next two years. Under the direction of Jos. Findley, Jr., the "Vagabond Players" we give their first production, Mar. 14, The Paunditorium. Self-development thrills and the production of dramas the object of the "Players." Also the starting of plans for a little theater. The plays to be given are two comedies and two tragedies. Miss Margaret Roller, E. 28th St., sister of Mr. Horace Roller, among our oldest residents, was burned to death, Monday morning. Her clothing caught fire from a gas stove. She was dead when Charity hospital was reached. Funeral, Wednesday afternoon, from Shiloh Baptist church. Mr. Roller has the sympathy of many friends in this community. Mrs. B. K. Bruce, mother of Prof. Roscoe Conkling Bruce, and this city's first Afro-American teacher in the local public schools, died in Washington, D. C., last YOU HAVE AN EXCUSE? BOSS IN VEAR BOOTH ON YOU MADE AN AWFUL M. STOKE IN THIS VOUCHER WHERE HAVE YOU BEEN THIS HOUR OF THE NIGHT? PRIME SPORT NEWS Ski and Carp. to Sign. Paris, France.—An agreement has been reached between the managers of Battling Ski and Georges Carpentier, says La Liberte, by which the fighters will sign soon for a match involving the light heavyweight championship of the world, the title Ski won from Carpentier in September. The paper adds that the fight will take place in the Buffalo Velodrome here on Sept. 9, next, and will be for twenty rounds of three minutes each, with four-ounce gloves. Sikl Plans Campaign Paris, France—Battling Skii is making ambitious plans, Brouillet his manager, tells L'Auto that after the Senegalese's bout with Mike McTigue, American middleweight, in Dublin, on March 17, he will issue a challenge for the heavyweight championship of the world. Mean-able he makes on Marcel Nills, Brouillet heavyweight, Brouillet says that Skii will go to May to fight a man who has not yet been selected. After that bout he expects to meet Carpentier, Greb and Jack Dempsey. Another Victory for Tut Washington C. H. H., O—Tut Jackson, whose skyrocket fictive career was more or less of a sensation in 1822, received another real test here, Monday night, when he engaged the Jamaica Kid, a recent week. She was a Miss Wilson, daughter of Dr. Wilson, one of Cleveland's pioneer Afro-American residents. Two of her sisters taught for years in the separate schools of Indianapolis. Mrs. Mary Randolph, wife of Mr. Geo. Randolph, E. 49th St., died, Wednesday morning, after a brief illness. She was one of the best women in the Baptist church and a power in the charitable work among our people of this city. Death is a distinct loss to the community and will be mourned by a host of friends and acquaintances. Funeral, Monday afternoon, from Shiloh church, E. 30th St. Some local Negroes, with apparently little or no self and race respect, have started a "jimcrow" skating night (Friday) at COLOR-LINE Luna Park. Negro skaters are charged 50 cents, the whites 35 cents, and there are extra charges for the former. All of our local organizations, including ministries, night to start in at once to discourage Color-line Luna Park attendance upon the part of our people. Dr. Jas. E. Mason, of Livingstone College, S. C., spoke at Mt. Zion Cong, church, Sunday morning, and addressed the S. S. The trustees gave a dinner, last Thursday, and the social service committee rendered a program in the evening. The pastor, last N.Y. City, last week, attending a conference will preach, Sunday morning, on "What is the Second Lesson of Lent." Memorial services, in the evening, in honor of Mrs. Fanny Ford and Mrs. Emily Lewis. Mrs. Charles Q. Clarke, formerly Miss Claire Douglas of Cleveland, but now residing in Chicago, is in the city attending her mother, Mrs. Lucy Douglas, who is very ill but will soon go to Chicago for an operation. Miss Clark's sister, Miss Flosless Douglas, one of our oldest public school teachers, is also ill, threatened with pneumonia. Last week Monday evening, our City Federation of Women's clubs held a Lincoln-Douglas banquet at the "Ys" Cedar Ave. boys' branch which proved interesting and successful. The K, K, K. Threaten! Cleves, O.—This little village is all agog over the appearance of white-robed figures at the homes of four Afro-American families early Monday. After tacking signs bearing the signature "K. K. K." to the doors of the homes, firing several shots and sounding the burglar alarm of the bank, the robed figures entered automobiles and sped away. The houses were the houses to leave by nightfall which, of course, they will not do. Winchester rifles have been installed in each home, however FOR RENT MARCH 1, '23. Five nice rooms—lower half of house—bath, gas, large cellar and yard, at 2417 E. 82nd St., near Scovill-Quincy Ave. car. Call Cherry 1259; 215 Blackstone Bldg. Drawn for this paper By Fisher sparring partner of Jack Dempsey, in a ten-round bout. Tut is now on his way to the heavyweight championship again. The Jamaica Kid weighed 180 pounds, Jackson about ten pounds more. The Kid has boxed four draws with Kid Norfolk, who nearly wiped Dempsey, about two years ago. He made the latter a winner. He made others who saw the fight. Tut defeated Jamaica Kid in twelve rounds, Monday night. Toledo to Have a Club. While in New York City, last week, Pres. "Rube" Foster announced, the team will host new teams to be represented in our National Baseball League, this year. Players from the Pittsburgh and other "dead" clubs of the League will be donated to Toledo to make it the equal in playing strength of the other clubs. A lease has been signed for the use of the Toledo American Association ball park. A manager for the club will be selected from the following players: Oscar Charleson, now the property of the American Giants; James Taylor, of the old Cleveland club; Ben Taylor, former manager of A. P. C. C. of Toledo; the veteran Pete Hill, former manager of the Detroit club. Arrangements are also being made by Foster to transfer the Bacharachs to either Cincinnati or Milwaukee. A League meeting is to be held in Chicago, March 15. Sad and sudden was the call Of him, so dearly loved by all. Your cheery way, your smiling face Are a pleasure to recall. For all of us you did your best, May God grant you eternal rest. Where Robert's coffee is served with pure cream. 1st: There's the standard bill of fare with its selection of popular items. 2ND: For dinner and supper, a special menu which includes fifteen or more meat combinations. 3RD: A different meat special and salad combination is featured on Sundays and holidays. White Owl's "special," with a meat combination, every day, 25c.—Adv. attended her brother Schuyler Burton's marriage to Glady Thomas, last week.—Mrs. K. Ousley of Cleveland is visiting her sister, Mrs. Otis James.—The first service of our Bysterian church was held, Sunday, at the B. T. W. Settlement.—Miss Odell Thomas entertained the Smart Set Club, Monday afternoon.—Born to Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Arthur, Wednesday, a son, Jos. Donald. CADIZ.-Mrs. W. P. Meyers visited in Wheeling the past week.-A number were at Sclo. Tuesday, at the funeral of Mrs. Emory West.-After a two weeks' revival services at St. James A. M. e. church, Miss Edith Randolph, evangelist, left, Monday. There was a large audience, Sunday, and a collection, $5, was given her. There were a number of converts and many added to the church which has been greatly Miss Randolph left a wonderful immeasurement of community. Rev. Samuel P. West preached an inspiring sermon, Sunday, and 94 persons communed. UHRICHISVILLE. — Clinton on "Chalk" Lawson, age 67, died on an interurban car just after leaving this place. Monday. Heart trouble. He was a well known horse trainer. A widow and three sisters, one in Cleveland, survive him and have the sympathy of the community.—Rev. S. P. West, P. E., administered sacrement and preached to a large convent.—Emma Pemberton is convalescent.—R. Peterson has pneumonia.—Many have been very ill with the gripe.—Mrs. Mary Christian has returned from Sheridan, Pa., and Miss Mary West, from Uniontown, Pa.—Mrs. G. Grayson and daughter. Dr. and Mrs. Morrison and daughter of Wheeling and Mrs. R. Livermore of Cleveland were called here by the death of their brother, Mr. Lawson. The funeral was largely attended.—Mrs. Mary Christian, Mrs. F. A. Forman and daughter and Mr. Jas. Adkins attended Mrs. E. C. West's funeral at Scio, Tuesday. Toledo to Have a Club. WHITE OWL RESTAURANT. 1920, Gladstone, MA. FRESH OHIO NEWS. (Continued From Page 1) and Efficient Work Twenty Years' Experience Phone: Bell, Randolph 6978 Sundays by Appointment Values in Business. I believe thoroughly, as everyone knows, in education—in all phases of education. I have 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 the same time. Dr. R. R. Moton. PROTEST AGAINST WRONG To submit in silence when we should protest makes cow-srds out of men. The human race has climbed on protest. Had no voice been raised against injustice, ignorance and lust, the inquisition yet would serve the law, and guillotines decide our least disputes. The few who dare, must speak and speak again to right the wrongs of many.—Ella Wheeler Wilcox. pains, headache, backache and all other aches are quickly relieved by Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills Ask your druggist NO. 333 Nemo $3 SELF-REDUCING CORSET Nemo Self-Reducing No. 333 is a real bargain. It has a low top and medium skirt. Made in dur- able pink or white couture; sizes 24 to 36—and costs only $3.00. If your dealer can get it, send name, ad- dress size, price to Nemo. Will send the couret Nemo Hygienic Fashion Institute 120 E 16th St., New York (Dept. S.) EXTRACTION PAINLESS EXTRACTION ```markdown ``` $5.00 AND UP A. M. to 8:00 P. M. D'S, Dental Specialists ED TO PAIN Cross the Street from Kresge's 5 and 10 Cent Store. Solid Gold Teeth, Gold Crowns, White Crowns, Bridge Work..... $5.00 AND UP Hcurs 8:00 A. M. to 8:00 P. M. THE WESTLY COMMUNITY FORMING read- merial Stories. res, the Sunday the Humorous investment in Packed full of entertaining and informing reading. Hundreds of Short Stories; Serial Stories. Then the Boy's Pages, the Girl's Pages, the Family Pages. The Current Events, Editorials, Humorous Miscellany. All together 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 5% ON SAVINGS MORTGAGE LOANS The Empire Savings & Loan Co. 2316 E. 55th St. Randolph 6778 Cent. 1715-W J. LOMSKY 3820 Central Avenue We carry full line of Dry Goods Ladies' and Gents' Furnishings Got a cold? MENTHOLATUM clears it out and makes breathing easy. "I honor the man who in the consecrious discharge of his duty dares to stand alone; the world, with ignorant, indolerant judgment, may conquer the world 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, of relatives or the hearts of friends."—Charles Sumner. ```markdown ``` 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. PE-RU-NA IN SERVICE FIFTY YEARS TABLETS OR LIQUID SOLD EVERYWHERE For Boys, for Girls, For Parents, for the Young in Heart of all Ages. Monthly pains, neuralgic, sciatic and rheumatic Free Examination. Expert Bridge Work. 22-K Gold Used. oi Help “The Old Reliable” to increase its circulation! Pega) Don't Throw Away Your Copy of THE GAZETTE After Reading it, But Give Itto a Friend or an Acquaintance who Might Subscribe After Reading a Copy of It. PROTESTS “MAMMY" STATUE! And Tells the Kind of a Monument ‘The “Mammies"? Would Have Erected in Their Memory— Hot-Shot From Thomas. Washington, D. C.—Prof. Neval H. ‘Thomas of Dunbar High school, this city, has written a letter to the local Evening Star, protesting against that newspaper's editorial endorsement of the plan to erect a memorial to “‘col- ored mammies” of the South in the national capital. After pointing out ‘that the measure is sponsored by Senator John Sharp ‘Williams of Mis- sissippi, he continues: “We are glad that the white race appreciates the divine virtues of truth and loyalty which the ‘black mammy" bad, and has in abundante, but it overlooks the other divine vir- tue that is here, a divine love for her offspring. She bore her sufferings in patience because she believed that through them America’s conscience would quicken aud give her shildren and her children’s children the jus- tice they so richly deserve. My own beloved mother was one of those un- fortunates who had the flower of her youth spent in a slave cabin, and I Know the heart of a slave mother, its intense longing for better things for her children. “Every ‘black mammy’ who looks own from Heaven today upon this Aisordered world delights to see her Deautiful daughters and granddaugh- ters aspiring and attaining unto the Beautiful and the true in spite of their handicaps which the southern spirit which proposes this monument throws around them. She loves to see them reading the best in ltera- ture, filling positions of usefulness, taking honors at the best universi- ties in the land, and reigning over cultured homes, ‘not as ‘old mammy’ but as a dutiful wife and tender mother. “So if the South has such deer gratitude for the virtues of this de Yoted group from which it reape vast riches, let it remove the num Derless barriers it has gone out o its way to throw up against the pro gress of the noble Negro womanhoot Who sprang from these ‘mammies' Democracy is the monument whicl the ‘colored mammy’ wants erected to her, and not a marble shaft, whiel at best will be but a symbol of ow servitude to remind white and black alike that the menial callings are our place in the scheme of things.” fi “FAIR HARVARD?” - What Oswald Garrison Villard’: Magazine Thinks of Its Race- Lines Against Afro-Americans and Jews. Some of Harvard's graduates have responded with a vim to President sowell’s denial gf the black man’s right to share in democracy. | Con- gressman Hamilton Fish, of the Class of 1910, a former Harvard football captain who was an officer ‘of a Negro regiment during the war, writes: “It was good enough then in de- fense of our country to sleep along. side of our colored comrades, but it seems too much now to ask under. graduates even to live under the same roof with cultured Negroes, al though separated by partitions. This ig not the spirit of democracy; it is not the spirit of New England. And it is not the spirit of Harvard.” One of Harvard's most distin guished graduates of Civil War day: writes that it is “shameful coward ice” to “accept dictation from the narrow-minded advocates of a preju dice which was. never reasonable, even when it was prevalent, and which has long since become antiquated, effete, and (I had supposed) lifeless. . . . If any young man should decline to come because of his prejudice against some possible comrade I should say that the college was well rid of so narrow-minded a youth. If he is logical he will feel obliged even to get out of the very world itself, which he must find open to the same ‘biection.”” \ = Se \ : And John Jay Chapman, Class of 1884, went to the very root of Mr. Lowell's mental confusion when he ‘said: “So far as ‘livng with Negroes’ is concerned, the southern students and their parents have no objection to it. They are entirely accustomed to it, and they like the Negro. If any ‘white parent tells President Lowell that he cannot bear the ‘thought of his son's sleeping in a room which abuts'on the same quad- rangle with a Negro’s room, or eat- ing in the same dining hall with a Negro, that parent deceives Mr. Low- ell, What the southern parent de- mands is that some stigma be put upon the Negro, He wishes Harvard to hang ous.a flag discriminating against the black man.” ‘There is the point. Harvard, so long as It follows President Lowell's Jead im this matter, ts accepting and preaching the southeri doctrine that every. man with Negro blood in his veins is inferior to every all-white man, It is not true; Booker Wash- ington, on whom Harvard was proud to confer an honorary degree in 1896, and a score of other Negroes have stood out among Harvard graduates. ‘There is a kind of boarding house snobbery in Mr. Lowell's policy which fits ill the distinction which nas been Harvard's. In fairness to Harvard it must be added that it is the very glamor of her tradition which has exposed her to so much public attack. From the days when Robert Gould Shaw, of the Class of 1860, marched to’ his death at the head of the first Massa- chusetts Negro regiment in the Civil War, Harvard and Harvard men have stood out in the struggle to make real the implications of the Emanci- pation Proclamation. Other coileges, like Princeton, to their shame, make No pretense at democracy, and bar Negroes altogether, Harvard still welcomes Negroes to most of her dor- mitories and eating-halls, as do most other northern colleges,” It is only in the freshman halls, where resi- dence is (for white men) theoret!- cally compulsory there is not room enough for all) that the color line is drawn. But to draw it anywhere is to raise the black flag of race dis- crimination. You do not have to | slap a man in the face for more than one year to make plain your con- ‘tempt for him. Harvard owes it to herself, to a magnificent New Eng- land tradition, and to American democracy to ‘refuse to make any racial discrimination, anywhere, at any time. —Editor Oswald Garrison Villard in “The Nation,” N. Y. City. _ CORRESPONDENTS WANTED. “The Old Reliable” Gazette desires an active agent and co! yndent in every city and town in. Ohio anc seighboring states having a number of Afro-American residents. Only little time on Fridays or Saturdays is required. We are especially desirous of hear- ing from persons in the following named cities: Toledo, Steubenville, Zanesville, Wilmington, Xenia, Washington C. H., Lancaster, Ham- flton, Dayton, Piqua, Lima, O., and other places, particularly ‘in ‘Ohio, where we have none, ‘Write to the editor of The Gazette, Blackstone building, Cleveland, 0. and terms will be sent promptly. Our readers will oblige us greatly by sending at once the addresses of per- sons is the cities named, and others in the state, to whom we can write relative to the matter. FACTS People who Advertise Can sell Goods. People who sell Goods Can make Money. People who make Mon- ey can advertise goods, The Best Advertising Medium is “The Old Reliable” GAZETTE. —_—______ AAAAAAAAAAA AAA AAAS REMARKS ABOUT ADVERTISING People go where they are invited —A. Tr. Stewart. | Advertising 1s as nocossary an ex penditure as the payment of taxes or rent—W. Atlee Burpee. Constant and persistent advertis: ing is a sure prelude to wealth— Stephen Girard, Nothing except the mint exn 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 burden should never advertise. His store may be like a summer resort im January. Do YOU advertise? While it is true that occasional ad- vertising will bring extra business, it is equally true that constant, persist- ent advertising will keep business growing during “dull days.” The merchant who never advertises under any eireumstance or condition may imagine he is wise. but his com- petitors have no desire to distur his Imagination. It's a good time to “get “HUMAN NATURE'S FOULEST BLOT.” My ear is pained |My soul is sick with every | day's report | Of wrong and outrage, with which the earth is’ filled. ‘There is no flesh in man's ob- | durate heart. It does not feel for man: the | natural bond Of brotherhood is severed as the flax That falls asunder at the touch | of fire. | He finds his fellow guilty of a skin Not colored like his own: and having power To enforce the wrong, for such & worthy cause Dooms and devotes him as his lawful prey. Thus man devotes his brother, ‘and. destroys: ‘Tis human nature's broadest foulest blot. —Cowper. HE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND. 0. SATURDAY, FEB. 24, 1923 a es ‘Lyn URGE QUARRYMEN Ob:o > Anti “Ly , 10 AVOID WASTE Leads the Country | Against The Mob and Lynch-Mi EXPERTS CITE points To ez |%#Member of the Race—Also Ob OBSERVED IN ECONOMIZING Our mob-violence or anti-lynching |law. 1 ON MARBLE bill was imtroduced in the Ohio leg- icon fslature in 1804 and re-introduced in | bas, be SS 496. It took Hon. Harry C. Smith, | has suc Stone Resources Not Inexhausti- | the editor of The Gazette, just three | opy.o iiaseescicectains years to secure its enactment into | (ia the vestigators. Me bs ‘The utilization of waste, that ever important subject to the people of the United States, is being stronsly urged upon marble quarrymen throughout the country by experts of the bu reav of mines. Ottecials of the bureau have just recently completed a most interesting study of marLle quarrying in this country, and as a result of their long investigations have given the marble ‘men some very interesting things to think about, not the least of which is the utilization of their waste and the whoie waste problem. ‘The stone resources of the Uhited States, although great, are by no means inexhaustible, especially the fine grade of marble, In giving theit ideas to the marble men the experts of the bureau point out that aside from the value of the rock, much of which has always been wasted, the waste material ircumbers the ground and interferes with their yard opera: tions. ‘The failure of some quarry com: panies, the officials think, is due to the quarrying of excessive amounts of material that remains unutilized, ‘As in every other business, the prob: lem of waste in the marble quarry. ing business is twofold. Ia the first place, it has to do with all types of improved equipment and modern methods of excavation which tend ‘o keep the proportion of waste at a minimum, and in the second place it must deal with the various uses to which waste material may be applied, In other words, it is a problem, first, Jor waste elimination, and, second, of the utilization of whatever waste is unavoidable, Although the proportion of waste may be kept at a mimimun by the adoption of evonomicar quarry met: us and efficient machinery, there 1s always, it has been found, more or jess unavoidable waste, Many manu- aciurers in various lines of industry have found that the manufacture and sele of by-products from otherwise weste materials have pliced their iu- custries on a profitable basis. Tureau experts say that the tro mendous heaps of waste material touad near many marble quarries tes- ify 10 the necd of greater develop macat along th» line of waste utiliza Ucn ea well as waste avoidance. fa thelr recommendations, the t- resu experts give the quarrymea mich to thnk over reletive to the utiliza tion of thelr waste. In addition ties Bie some interesting new ways of Coing prectical things and aleo ure Uigt the quarries try the cost: counting method, Altogether, Us bureau has doue a great deal for marble men in {ts investigation, aad devbtiess many .of thom wil bene:'t :n co far as they apply the metho. urged by oftcials of the bureau, HOCS PAID FOR HOME Sow Costing $109 Vielded 33,502 Worth of Pigs, ‘tho story of the way in which Eenry Lesenmeyer of lowa bus be conie a leading swine breeder is tow ia Worm and Home by Fred L. Petty. At is the story of @ struggle from a slvaweek job as-harness maker to 4 prosperous harness shop of his owu sid from that, by slow degrees ga 4a the face of many discouragemé ata #ad losses, to his present standing as one of lowa’s most successful hox breeders. ‘the start in pcro-bred hozs was mawe Wilh One registered sow kept in 8 per on a town lot. From this ti establishment grew to a five-acre iv: ‘on the edge o. town, then to a Liitle faim where cholera destroyed lis werd, back to the five-ncre Seid ass ten spermansnt success and bi. profits, Now be has the thiriy acve> of ine roiling land, a big fue hous “new barns and hog houses and furii« improvements are projected" for the near fauwe, ‘ *U always took an interest In stoct: especially hogs, and liked to handle thera,” said Mr. Fresenmeyer, “One ayy - was con:ing home from the siup AM. Room and saw several then groupes around a pen in a neighboring livers term. I went in and found them look ity at a big fine Poland-China sow 1 knew nothing at that time of the pure bred business, but the sow Jovi: #8 gool to me. She was of big type ‘aie weighed 700 pounds. 1 paid #100 Yor her. ‘This looked like a lot ot money to my wife and me, and we talked it over pretty carefully before tucing. It was % good buy, however. avon that sow J ralsed eighteen pics the Uirst year chat sold at $40 a head. i kept ber untll she dled, and sol? 25.500 worth of ber own pizs. . ‘These ent ost to jocal farmers at §25 to Leter | 3fr, Ecsenteyer. boosbt ae F S25 aad abe, tou, d «Later be gaia 445 ’ honr.A ‘Wonder, wll wo. ue by Improv. Okio’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 aa, a defi 5278, “Mob” and “lynching” in ed. i279. “Serious injury” defied. Sat Remaete @ cite ‘or es weet: Da a case 0 : ; : 6282. Damages recoverable by legal representative of victim of lynching 5288. Person suffering death or inj ury 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 again st member of mob. 6288. County’s right of action again st another county. 6289. Non-relief from prosecution. Note: Two books will be given with a 2-Year’s Subscription, etc.) Our mob-violence or anti-lynching | la bill was introduced in the Ohio leg- ha islature in 1894 and re-introduced in |S 1896. It took Hon. Harry C. Smith, | ha the editor of The Gazette, just three | :0 Years to secure its enactment into | (i Me bs ie i defin ed. 5278. “Mob” and “lynching” in i279. “Serious injury” defined. 9280. Damages in case of assault. i281. Damages in case of lynching. 6282. Damages recoverable by legal re 5283. Person sulfering death or inj ur 6284. Limitations of action. 5285. Order to include recovery and cc 5286. Guardian's custody, etc., fees. 6287. County’s right of action again st 6288. County’s right of action again st 6289. Non-relief {rom prosecution. Section 6278. A collection of peo- ple assembled for am unlawful pur- Pose and intending to do damage or injury to any one, or pretending to ex- fercise ‘orrectional power over other persons by violence and without au- thority of law, shall be deemed a “mob” for the purpose of this ehap- ter. An act of violence by a mob up- ‘on the body of any person shall con- stitute a “lynching” within the mean- ing of this chapter, (93 v, 161 2.) Section 6279. The term “serious in- Jury,” for ths purpose of this chap- Yer, shall include such injury as per- manently 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 as- saulted with whips, clubs, missiles or im any other manner, may recover, a3 hereafter provided, a sum not to ex- ceed one thousamd dollars as damages from the county in which the assault ts made, (93 v. 163 4.) Section 6281. A person assaulted and lynched by a mob may recover, from the county in which such as- sault is made, a sum not to exceed five hundred dollars; or, if the im- ETHEL M. DELL HER BOOKS ss:Bare of Iron, The SiiKeeper of the Door, The Knave of Diamonds, The ‘cRocks of Valpre, The s.:Way of An Eagle, The + Ohrtetine ot the, Young. Weart Chinen’ Label Thee Jo Frank Davis Limlwous Paes, The, Carolyn Wells JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD + HIS BOOKS -Stesle of the Royal Mounted ...tHonor of the Big Snows God's Country and the Woman Shepherd of the Sea, The, Yehry. Lescrans North “of “the “Law, Samuot ‘Alexander. White Bigadway Babe Johnston 2Mo- Bivign Gt Cactus, Robert Ames UP FROM SLAVERY By Booker T. Washington’ | FRANK L. PACKARD’ “ine Ble Sonus eae sn ++-Erom Now On “cueheier EAS HAR mo s-soburthor Aaventures of +++:Night Operator, The “chit ne Note: Two books will t | ei A able” to incre HE GAZE’ o Might Subse ~ The Old Reliable” Gazette NO RED TAPE The Book Will be Sent Free E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM MYSTERY STORY WRITER OF INTERNATIONAL FAME . css-Anna, The Adventareas se Maker of History, A. LDetmayah the I taletueton, The 2 Blox ‘with broxen seats, the |. 2.1 oMaster Summer, ‘The Cinema Marder, The Sateen Makers "The ES Gatous Guese rhe TEUMsStoner, he LoDevite vam: ine IBIS" Grex’of Stomte Carte LGReatimpersadatlon, he TEAS Slane a Bese enasieenia Eee tat eg “CUI GIous Prince, Tae EIB Hluee of Stoners, Coeeaaaney date ae SORRY SORA ene CSBeted Way Ene ™* Sclyway'ad nese Women ene Ears Aubettnaae he: el pee law. The Ohio Supreme Court hae several times upheld. the law. which has been, very effective. | Only one other state (ilinois) in this country has such a law and it is largely & ‘opy of our Ohio law. Here it ‘(ia the statutes) under the heading be ed. representative of victim of lynching ury by mob trying to lynch another costs in tax levy. st member of mob. st another county. jury received therefrom is serious, a sum aot exceeding one thousand dol- tars; or, if such injury result in per- manent disability to earn a livelj- hood by manual labor, a sum not to exceed five thousand dollars. (98 v, 182 6.) Section 6282. The legal representa- tive of a person dying from injuries received from lyinching by a mob, may recover of the county in whieh such injury occured, a sum not to ex- ceed five thousand’ dollars damages for such unlawful killing. Such sum shall be applied to the maintenance of the family and education of the minor children of such person so lynched, if ‘any survive him, until such children are of legal age, and then be distri- buted to the survivors, share and share alike, the widow receiving an ‘amount equal to a child's share. If there be no widow or minor children surviving such decedent, such sum shall be distributed among the next of kin according to the laws of the distribution of the personality of au 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. (98 v 162 6.) | Section 6283. A person suffering ‘death or injury from a mob attempt- eeenbiessieeeestieae IS tants “! YOUR CE 424k sas gs, ing to lynch another person shall come within the provisions of this chapter He or his legal representatives shal have a like right of action as one pur posely injured or Killed by such a mob. (93 v. 162 6.) Section 6284. Action for the re- coveries provided for in this chap- ter must be commenced, within two years from the date of such lynching. in any ‘court having orignal jure diction of an action for damages £01 malicious assault. (93 v. 162.7) Section 6285. An order to the com- missioners of a county, against whicn such recovery is had, to include it with the costs of action, in the next, suc ceeding tax levy ‘for such county, Shall be a part of the judgment in every such cise. (93 v. 162 8.) Section 6286. If the decedent _ 20 tynched has minor children surviving him, the fund shall be turned over to a regularly appointed guardian. Such zoardian shall administer such’ fund under the direction of the probate judge, allowing not more than. five hundred dollars for counsel fees in the action for such recovery. (98 v. 162 9.) Section 6287. The county, in which a lynching occurs, may recover the amount of a judgment ‘and costs against it in favor of the legal rep- resentatives of a person killed or ser- tously injured by a mob from any of the persons composing such mob. A person present, with hostile intent, at such lynching shall be deemed = mem- ber of the mob and be liable to such action, (98. 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) com- mitted may recover the amount of the judgment and costs from the county trom which the mob came, “unles there was cont negligence on the part of oficiele of euck county ia failing to protect such prisoner or dis- purse such mob. (93. v 163 11.) Section 6289. ‘This chapter shall not relieve a person, concerned in such lynehing from prosecution for homicide or assault. for engaging therein. (93 ¥. 163 12.) OUR OHIO CiVIL RIGHTS LAW Upon the request of many reader. ot The Gazette we print. below. the text of Hon. Harry . Smith's Ohio Civil Rights law which the editor had enacted ‘while a member of the Tist General Assembly, in 1894: The General Code of Ohio: tec, 1008. Whee bee. ie ~~ SS ————— scription, etc.| N Spy wlation! . Reading it, But Give Reading a Copy of It. proprietor or his employee, keeper or manager of an inn, restaurant, eat- ing house, barber-shop, public eom- veyance by’ land or water, theater or other place of public accommodation and amusement, denies to a citizen, except for reasons applicable alike to all citizens and regardless of race or color, the full enjoyment of the ac~ commodations, advantages. facilities or privileges thereof, shall be fined nat less than fifty dollars nor more than five hundred dollars, or imprisoned not less than thirty days nor more than ‘uinety days, or Soth. Sec. 12941. Whoever violates the next preceding section shall also pay not less than fifty dollars nor more than five hundred dollars to the per- son aggrieved thereby to be recov- ered in any court of competent fur iediction in the county where such of- fense was committed. This law has repeatedly been held constitutional and good. law by. the Ohio Supreme court. ‘The trouble is our people will not use it as often as they should, but expect it to do for them what they should and must do for themselves, under it, in the courts, Judge Grant's Opinion of the Law. Misled by the foolishly manufac~ tured outery for the passage of the Beaty bill, a few years ago, the Ak- ron Beacon Journal published an edi- torial to which the editor of ‘The Ga- zette 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 let- ter in the Beacon-Journal, of this city, 4 venture to send you, under a sep- arate cover, the Ohio Law Reporter of Feb. 3, Inst, containing the opinion of ‘the Court of Appeals in the Puritan ‘Lunch Co. vs. Leonard H. Forman, de- cided in Akron, last fall, in which a judgment for ($500) five hundred dollars was sustained. If the Beacon- Journal kad known what was going on in its own town, there would have been fo. occasion for criticiam, veditolaly. THE LAW OF OHIO IS UNDER NO REPROACH, nor our courts and juries, in administering it. Not a word was said by the Beacon-Journal when the Forman case was reviewed. Very truly yours, C. R Grant. - MARY ROBERTS. RINEHART’S STORIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN ++-Affinities and Other Stories sss-After House, The Si:Bab, A Sub-Deb [ilitong Live the King LU iMore Tish +++-Poor Wise Man, A 2s-Sight Unseen and The Confession ces Tish 2S lWhere There's 2 Will ses:Window at the White Cat, The -+-Reddier, The. Henry C, Row sss Wreckers, The, Francis Lynde UMASter Cheistian, The. Stasi ‘Cora! HONORE WILLSIE’S Stories of the West <++-Forbidden Trail, The Lil Heart of the Desert, The ScclLydia of the Pines 2st Siem s-s-Balored Vagabond, "he. -+=Cabbages and Kings. 0, Henry Jltiiree Sttusketoers; The.” “Alex de bone WILLIAM PATTERSON WHITE” STORIES OF THE EARLY WEST sesHidden Traits Lilkyneh Lawyers iiOwner of the Lazy p, iiiiParadise Bend s-Thirioonth Commandment, Te. apert Hughes -++-Yortaous Wives. Owen Johnson “Woman Thou Gavest ate, The ‘Sait Cane TARZAN SERIES By Edgar Rice Burroughs s-s:1 Tarzan of the Apes IIU12 Return of Tarzan, The ils Beasts of Tarzan, The NI4 Son of Tarzan, The CITB Tarzan and the Jewels of Opar