The Gazette

Saturday, July 12, 1930

Cleveland, Ohio

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HOOVER ADMINISTRATION'S TWO JOBS! UNITED STATES OF AMERICA FORTY-SEVENTH HOOV See Us First for JOHN Prices Reasonable JEWELER Eyes Carefully Examined 8188 Central Ave., Cleveland See THE WAKEMAN First before deciding week-end THE WAKEMAN Is the coolist, quietest and in the state. 121 acres a large dance hall, a reed river bathing and specia 75 cents each. R Make Reservations for Wakeman is 48 miles west nine miles west of Oberlin. Phone G. A. Morgan, C HEnd FREE IN HAVE GENERATE SYSTEM ON YOU SEVENTH YEAR. No. 48. The Us First for All Goods in Our Line JOHN S. HALE Prices Reasonable. Satisfaction Guaranteed. JEWELER AND OPTOMETRIST Carefully Examined and Glasses Properly Fitted. Central Ave., Cleveland, O. Cherry 1870 THE WAKEMAN COUNTRY CLUB It before deciding where you will spend your week-ends or vacation. THE WAKEMAN COUNTRY CLUB Poolist, quietest and most pleasant place of its kind. estate, 121 acres of shady, rolling and level land. dance hall, a reception room, good fishing and bathing and special Sunday chicken dinners for 55 cents each. Rooms are $1 per person. Reservations for Private Parties and Picnics. n is 48 miles west of Cleveland's Public Square and is west of Oberlin. Take route 20 to Wakeman, Ohio. G. A. Morgan, Cleveland, Ohio, for reservations. FORTY-SEVENTH YEAR. No. 48. See Us First for All Goods in Our Line JOHN S. HALE Prices Reasonable. Satisfaction Guaranteed. JEWELER AND OPTOMETRIST Eyes Carefully Examined and Glasses Properly Fitted. 8188 Central Ave. Cleveland, O. Cherry 1878 See THE WAKEMAN COUNTRY CLUB First before deciding where you will spend your week-ends or vacation. Is the coolist, quietest and most pleasant place of its kind in the state. 121 acres of shady, rolling and level land, a large dance hall, a reception room, good fishing and river bathing and special Sunday chicken dinners for 75 cents each. Rooms are 81 per person. Make Reservations for Private Parties and Picnics. Wakeman is 48 miles west of Cleveland's Public Square and nine miles west of Oberlin. Take route 20 to Wakeman, Ohio. Phone G. A. Morgan, Cleveland, Ohio, for reservations. HEnderson 7821 FREE INSPECTIONS VE GENERATOR AND ELECTRICAL STEM.ON YOUR CAR INSPECTED, FREE HAVE GENERATOR AND ELECTRICAL SYSTEM ON YOUR CAR INSPECTED, We carry a complete line of brake lining and auto parts. The North Open Evenings 5620 W 1148 P North East Ignition Co enings 5620 WOODLAND AVE. Open Sunday 1148 PROSPECT AVE. The North East Ignition Co. Open Evenings 5620 WOODLAND AVE. Open Sunday 1148 PROSPECT AVE. TWO INTERESTING BOOKS By JOSEPH C. MANNING FADEOUT OF POPULISM Tells how and why our people of the South are d Their Constitutional Rights. Brought down to a discussion of the Klan and Anti-Saloon League Politi $1.00. From Five to Twenty-Five. This is Mr. Manning's life story embracing the per 1870 to 1895. Price, $1.00. FADEOUT OF POPULISM Now and why our people of the South are deprived of Constitutional Rights. Brought down to date by men of the Klan and Anti-Saloon League Politics. Price From Five to Twenty-Five. Mr. Manning's life story embracing the period from 1870 to 1895. Price, $1.00. Tells how and why our people of the South are deprived of Their Constitutional Rights. Brought down to date by discussion of the Klan and Anti-Saloon League Politics. Price, $1.00. BOTH BOOKS FOR $1.50. T. A. HEBBONS, PUBLISHER, 184 W. 185th St., Dept. B, New York City. 1930 Lake Cruise DeLUX 5 DAYS 5 NIGHTS CAB LAD SEAANDBEE 30 Lake Cruise DeLUXE 5 DAYS 5 NIGHTS 1930 Lake Cruise DeLUXE 5 DAYS 5 NIGHTS To SAULT STE. MARIE MACKINAC ISLAND CHICAGO and RETURN PLAN YOUR VACATION to leave on the Great Ship "SEEANDBEE" from Cleveland, September 8th; returning Saturday, September 13th. Cruise includes Lake Erie, the Detroit River, Lake St. Clair, the St. Clair River, Lake Huron, beautiful St. Marys River and Lake Michigan. Stop-overs at the famous "Soo" Locks, with sightseeing trips at Chicago and Mackinac Island. Wonderful scenery. Endless entertainment. Excellent meals. All expense, including fare, meals, stateroom accommodations and sightseeing trips . . . From Cleveland, only $75.00 Ask your Tourist Agent or write us for free special C&B Line Cruise DeLuxe Folder The Cleveland and Buffalo Transit Co. E. 9th Street Pier . . . Cleveland, Ohio Daily Steamer Service between Cleveland and Buffalo, also Cleveland and Pt. Stanley, Canada All Expense $75 R R THE GAZETTE ESTABLISHED, AUGUST 25, 1883 And Issued Every Week on Time Since CLEVELAND, OHIO, SATURDAY, JULY 12, 1930. FRESH OHIO NEWS WRITTEN BY "THE OLD RELIABLE" GAZETTE'S CORRESPONDENTS. Marriages, Deaths, Etc. CORESPONDENTS must mail all letters for publication at their main postoffice sufficiently early on Sunday or Monday of each week to have them reach The Gazette office on Tuesday morning, and always write their names and that of their city or town on the outside of the week about returned copies, if proper credit for them is desired. Lists of names, wedding presents, programs, obituary notices, inquiries for relatives and advertisements of all kinds, including items announcing entertainment to be held in the near future, must be paid for in advance at the post office, or to a line. Our rates for display advertisements will be sent on application. CADIZ. —Mrs. Edna Anderson children and Mrs. Bessie Weaver of Newark were guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Lucas, last week. A number of the Married Ladies' club attended the state convention of our Federated clubs in Steubenville, recently. —Mrs. Maggie West has returned to Newark. Mrs. Wight of E. Liverpool was a week end visitor here, recently. —Mrs. M. Taylor and son of Coshocton were guests, Sunday week, of Mrs. Parthena Doubt. —The Homestead Grays one of our best ballteams, played in Dennison, recently. —Rev. R. E. Hutchinson and mother of Steubenville, and Rev. J. E. Terrell of Plymouth. St. James, M. P. Troy. Sended St. James, M. P. Troy. Sended St. James, M. P. Troy. Presented in the afternoon. —Mrs. Mina Elexander is improving. —Wesley Duling and young bride of Cleveland visited Mrs. Nannie Duling, last week. ZANESVILLE. — Rev. Oliver W Childers, a native of this state, pastored our largest A. M. E. church at Dayton very successfully, some years ago. He also pastored St. James' A. M. E. church in Cleveland. Later he was transferred to the Pittsburgh conference of his church and given its largest church in that city to pastor. There he served splendidly for several years, and until being transferred, recently, to Boston to pastor historic old Charles St. A. M. E. church, succeeding Rev. J. Albert Sterrett, the new pastor of St. John's A. M. E. church of Cleveland. Dr. Childers has many friends here, in the "Gem City" and elsewhere in the state of Ohio who are wishing him his usual spend of success in his life — as Los Lars of 726 Kelly St., the local agent for "The Old Reliable" Gazette and will gladly supply all persons with copies of the same who will be kind enough to give him their order. Read this paper and keep up-to-date in your knowledge of the race's worthwhile news. YOUNGSTOWN —Mr. John Anderson, Miss Sophia Parker, Mrs. Sandy Duff and daughter spent July 4 in Franklin, Pa. —Mr. Winfrey Waugh motored to Pulaski, Va. to visit his father. He returned Sunday —Florence Wright and Bertha Hawthorne spent the 4th in Pittsburg. —Mrs. Edna Brown of Cleveland spent a week with Mrs. Glenn Jenkins. —Mrs. James Harris, who hospital, recently, is improving rapidly —Mary E. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Dent, arrived from bridgeport to spend the summer with them. —Mrs. G. Campbell of N. Y. City is visiting her son, Charles at 357 Kenmore Ave. —Mrs. P. H. Hill *left for Nashville, Friday evening. Rev. Hill accompanied by Mrs. Sara Clark, Mrs. Mary F. Bias, Masters Paul Wright and Walter Davison attended Rev. J. C Taylor. He was killed by an auto in Toledo. June 29. Rev. Hill witnessed the assassination of President Lincoln. Rev. Hill preached there at Friendship Baptist church, July 7. —Wm. Wright leaves, Monday, for Saranac. N. Y. to spend the summer. HILLSBORO—F. C. Brady, of S. Haven, Mich., visited his brother, Wm. Paxton, recently—Mrs. Irene Redman of Circleville was here, July 4, and will spend the summer in New York—Miss Mary Burr and H. A. Payne of Cleveland were guests of Rev. and Mrs. J. J. Burr, Thursday to Saturday. They visited Mrs. Martha Taylor at Georgetown, also. Mr. and Mrs. John and Wm. Johnson of Cleveland visited relatives. Ger. J. J. Burr and Mrs. Chas. Golns entertained them and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Johnson at dun- ner, Friday—Mrs. Chas. Slaughter and son, of Covington, Ky., are visiting her mother, Mrs. Amanda Trimble—Miss Helen Johnson, who is attending the C. U., spent the weekend with Mrs. Julia Kilogree—Mr. and Mrs. Frank Johnson entertained his brothers, William and John, Ray Mrs. Chas. Goins, son, and Mrs. Jane Young at dinner, Saturday—Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Dixon and Mrs. Dora Ames visited in Columbus, the 4th. Wm. Rhyne and sister brought them home, Saturday—Mrs. Jane Young entertained Mrs. Irene Redman at lunch, Friday—A. F. Donaldson of Columbus spent Friday to Sunday evening with his mother. Wm. Pope entertained Mrs. J. A. Burr and daughter Miss Arnita, accompanied Miss Mary Burr and H. A. Payne to Georgetown, last Thursday evening. MURPHY'S MELANGE. "Heard and Seen in Haiti" by the Editor of the Baltimore Afro-American—Interesting. Haiti is about the size of Maryland and occupies but one-third of the island, the other two-thirds belong to Santo Domingo. Two bath rooms serve the entire Excelsior Hotel which is the headquarters for the Moton Commission and which also housed the Forbes Commission. In keeping with the European custom a bath is something to be tolerated not enjoyed. Nearly everybody has outside privies. Every male in Haiti wears a coat. Americans in shirt sleeves are tolerated as slightly "cracked". Small boys wear jackets and keep them on in the school. The workman mows the Palace lawn "en coat", the farmer hacking down weeds with a machete in over hair wavers. Even the beggar at the entrance to the Cathedral is shy on shoes but long on coat. Except the Haitian White House, which they call the Royal Palace, there are scarcely a dozen buildings in downtown Port au Prince with windows or window panes of glass. The Excelsior Hotel has doors only, usually four to six feet wide and ten feet high. These slatted doors in reality are shutters, the slats of the windows, and the windows of the Haitians term them la jalousie. Cellings are high, usually 16 to 18 feet. The typical peasant woman is barefooted and barelegged. But two garments cover the rest of her body as she walks through the streets carrying everything from a five-gallon can of water to laundry, fruit and live poultry in a wicker basket balanced on her head. Coming a long distance from the outlying farm, she sits sidewise on Shetland slightly above the Shetland addition to its human burden, the beast also carries considerable plunder from farm or shop. Ex-American Marine Serg't. T. perry (white), former palace guard who married the daughter of former Haitian President. Lusia Borno, is employed by the U. S. School Administration, here but had to resign from the U. S. navy before he married. He now moves in the best Haitian society. American whites are drawing a color-line socially. Haitians retail and consume American clubs as they have long barred the Syrians from their homes and clubs. Syrians are treated here as Jews are in the United States. Indianapolis, Ind.-Chief Justice Benj. F. Willoughby, recently declared that "there is nothing in the Fourteenth Amendment to the U. S. Constitution guaranteeing equal rights." Judge Willoughby spoke during the hearing of oral argument in the case of Alberta Cheeks against the University of Montana public schools. It was contended by her counsel that she was barred from Emerson High school at Gary because she was a "Negro." Lynched for Demanding Wages Austin, Tex —For seeking to collect his wages, Jack Robertson was lynched, last week, between here and Round Rock by a posse of 150 planters who took up the hunt ten minutes after Robertson had shot in self-defense his employer, R. L. Eggar of Round Rock, and wife. THE OPENING GRAND. Tried Stone Out-Door Relief Society's Farm and Home, a Fine Piece of Property Located Near Cleveland. The formal opening of the Farm and Home of Tried Stone Out-Door Relief Society, last week Friday, proved an exceptionally enjoyable and successful affair. There was a large attendance and everybody was greatly pleased with the fine farm the organization has acquired for its purpose. The exercises were opened with prayer promptly at p. m. Most female members also was exceptionally pleasing in her introductions. The speakers were: the Hon. Harry C. Smith, editor of The Gazette; the Hon. Perry B. Jackson, our only member of the Ohio Legislature; the Hon. John P. Green, former Ohio State Senator. J. B. Ex-State Senator John P. Green, and the pastor of the church, Rev. J. R. Yewell, in the order named. All were most enthusiastically received and applauded during the course of and at the close of their careers, hired a new chair. A furnished splendid music and refreshments were served throughout the afternoon. Mr. Carl Hunter, manager; Miss Brewer, master-of-ceremonies and the pastor are entitled to a great deal of credit for the wonderful success of the affair. There is an up-to-date two-family residence and a large single on the property and both are modern in their equipment. The farm lies near the lake and less than a half mile north of Lorain Road at Stop 19 on the Lorain or Elyria car-line. Elsie Hammond is president of Tried Stone Out-Door Relief Society, Inc.; Hattie Moore, sec., and Lois Branch, fin FINAL MORGAN DECISION! Modest Director Burton Says It W O. K. and Gives Credit to the City's Law Department. City of Cleveland Department of Law July 5, 1930. Hon. Harry C. Smith. Editor. Gazette, Cleveland Dear Sir:—This will acknowledge, with thanks, receipt of a marked copy of The Gazette for July 5th, calling attention to your article as to the Garrett A. Morgan case. In view of the disagreement between the Court of Common Pleas and the Court of Appeals in this case, I have recently examined the same record and am happily satisfied the Supreme Court would abide by the decision of the Court of Appeals on the weight of the evidence. Accordingly, it seems clear that although the difference of opinion between the two lower courts indicates the need which existed for a ruling by the court, yet it would be an imposition to permit of any further delay. You, therefore, may be interested to know that the City, before the end of June, paid to Mr. Morgan the $2,000.00 voted by the City Council, and received a sum at the rate of six per cent, per annum from the effective date of the councilmatic action, November 3, 1929. Your reference to the efficiency of this Department is appreciated. Any such efficiency is due to the personal efforts of the entire membership of the Department, many of whom have been in the employ of this Department for a long time and therefore are able to give the City the benefit of experience which is of great value to all concerned. Your names are HAROLD H. BURTON, Director of Law May Die of Wound. Cincinnati, O—Wm. Lewis, age 28 a mail carrier, was near death here last week Friday, after having been shot by detective Ray Elsenhoefer, who said he failed to surrender and fired first after a reported shooting affair at the home of another Afro-American, "Bunk!" SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS FOR FIFTY YEARS WELL KNOWN S. C. NURSE, KNOWN AS "AUNT RACHEL", SERVED LEADING FAMILIES. A New Edition of Phillis Wheatley Poems—Hampton and Tuskegee Get More Money—Soldiers' Wives Forced to Be Servants—Prize Winners—Doings of the Race. The Midwest Life Insurance Co. of St. Louis has been taken over by the insurance department of Missouri. Lucius Lee, age 14, saved Edwin Clifton (white) from drowning in Sowhee Creek, Meridian, Miss., recently. Mrs. Elizabeth B. Thomas of Hudson County, N. J., is a Republican nominee for the Legislature of that state. Wm. Lovelace is our first county probation officer in Cincinnati. He was appointed, June 28, by common pleas judges. an Assistant U. S. Attorney General, salary $5,000. He and Atty. Wm. C. Hueston of Gary, Ind., recently appointed an assistant solicitor (salary $4,500) for the Post Office department at Washington, D. C. are graduates of the University of Kansas. Ever since he was born, some fifty years ago, George Watson, of Columbia, S. C., has had an obsession for feminine attire and feminine vocation, and as a result he is in the toils of the law. He is well-known in that city as "Aunt Rachel" and has served several leading families (white) as a nurse, and established Dr. I. Garland Penn of the M. E. Church board of education, a resident of Cincinnati, whose wife died a few weeks ago, is seriously ill. The future belongs, not to the white man, but to the colored man.—Rev John Haynes Holmes (white), pastor of Community Church, N. Y. City. Courtland Lewis, veteran clerk in sub-postoffice station N, Eighth and Baymiller Strs., Cincinnati, O., has been appointed superintendent in charge. The New York Colonization Society has taken steps in the Supreme Court to spend $82,267 of its future income to aid Liberia, Africa, in education and sanitation. The will of the late Dr. Wm Matheson, famous chemist and scientist of New York City, will not Hampton (Va.) Institute, $20,000 and Tuskegee (Ala.) Institute, $10,000. P. B. Young, editor of The Norfolk (Va.) Journal and Guide, has succeeded Bishop John R. Hurst, deceased, as a member of the board of trustees of the Jeanes Foundation rural school fund. Native African implements of iron, brass and clay showing a highly developed artistic ability is one of the last additions to the National Museum and is now being made ready for public exhibition at Washington, D. C. Dr. Leslie Pinckney Hill, principal of Cheyney Training school for "Negro" teachers, near Philadelphia, is credited (?) by Pennsylvanians with giving the most encouragement in the last ten years to "jim-crow" schools in that state. Atty. Edw. H. Wright, long a political leader in Chicago and a former County Commissioner, assistant corporation council and member of the Illinois Commerce commission, is very ill at the Mayo Brothers' hospital at Rochester, Minn. A special Chicago Musical College scholarship, with Percy Grainger internationally famous concert pianist and teacher, was won, recently, by Miss Haze Harrison of Chicago and Mrs. James C. Williamson of Cheyney Institute, Pa., in a class of thirty white contestants. London Stanley, Jr., was the winner of a gold medal in the west side (N. Y. City) continuation school, in a contest, conducted under the auspices of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, the best poster asking humane interest and treatment for animals. "Since 1920, due to the heavy cityward and northward migration of the earlier years of the decade, the number of Negro farm owners in the South has increased by 4,000 and the number of tenants and croppers by 235,000.- Prof. B. F. Hubert of our State College, Savannah, Ga. In the first six months of 1920 there were nine lynchings, one white. This is five more than the number for the first six months of 1929; four more than for the first six months of 1928, and is the same as for the first six months of 1925, 1926 and 1927. A member of the 10th U. S. Cavalry, writing the N. A. A. C. P., N. Y. City, said, recently: "Prior to March, men re-enlisting, this year, for another term in the regiment, were ordered to serve upon the wives wives would be servants to white women." Meaning, doubtless, wives of commissioned officers. Atty. David E. Henderson of Kansas City, Kan., has been appointed THE GAZETTE is the oldest class publication of the kind, and has the largest bona fide circulation among Ohio Afro-Americans, double that of any other newspaper published in this or any other state, and compass with any will immediately establish its rank as one of the NEWBIEST AND BEST published in the interest of Afro-Americans. E COPY FIVE CENTS JOBS! ANDERSON APPOINTED. ELL KNOWN S. C. NURSE, T RACHEL", SERVED G FAMILIES. Wheatley Poems—Hampton re Money—Soldiers' Wives ants—Prize Winners— of the Race. an Assistant U. S. Attorney General, salary $5,000. He and Atty. Wm. C. Hueston of Gary, Ind., recently appointed an assistant solicitor, (salary $4,500) for the Post. Office department at Washington, D. C., are graduates of the University of Kansas. Ever since he was born, some fifty years ago, George Watson, of Columbia, S. C., has had an obsession for feminine attire and feminine vocation, and as a result he is in the toils of the law. He is well-known in that city as "Aunt Rachel" and has served several leading families (white) as a nurse, and established quite a reputation. Another edition of "The Poems of Phillis Wheatley", the first Afro-American poetess, has just been published. The last was issued in 1909 with first E. S. Wright, Jr., of the Christian Recorder. The present edition is edited by their presenter, Charlotte Ruth Wright, B. S., a graduate, this year, from the University of Pennsylvania. Among the interesting things revealed by the recent U. S. census is the increase in the number of interracial marriages, they being far more prevalent in this census than in any other previous enumeration; and the breaking down of religious barricades which heretofore have stood in the face of many barriers between members of varying faiths. This is particularly true in the case of Jewish men and women who are marrying gentiles. WAKEMAN COUNTRY CLUB Is Really an Ideal Place to Spend Your Week-Ends and to Visit— Just a Nice Auto Ride and over the Best of Routes By following Route 20, it is a pleasant drive to the Wakeman Country club, near Wakeman, Ohio, and only 48 miles from Cleveland's public square. On the large spacious club lawn, shaded by tall pine trees that sent the air with the perfume of their cones, one looks down a valley at the winding Vermillion river in all its beauty. To the right sees hillsides studded with yellow flowers—all the colors of the rainbow—flowers in the valley make the scene one of beauty. To the left, tall trees that are a part of the large orchard, and several cottages that mark the level and beautiful allotment grounds. To the right are the giant willow trees, probably the largest in this section of the country, with gentle rolling slopes showing back of them and forming a picture that thrills. Therefore, it does not surprise when one sees a groundhog, rabbit or some wild animal in search of food. Go to the Wakeman Country club and see, for yourself, the most beautiful spot in Ohio and you will want to spend your weekends and vacations there eating honest-to-goodness country meals that are served in the convenient and comfortable hotel on the grounds. THE "PO' WHITE" And the "Low-bred Negro", Segregation and "Jim Crowism" —The Truth. Just as the poor whites have attained the ascendancy in the South, so have many low-bred Negroes attained some supremacy in the North. They have the vanity that possession brings, but not the pride that springs from heredity and early training, consequence, segregation and "jim Crowism" not cut into their souls. The ambition welcomes competition and asserts manhood is foreign to them, and so they really cannot understand why any Negro should object to being segregated. While there are exceptions, tracing back will show the accuracy of our deductions—the slave psychology that still animates Negroes in high places who generally find favor with whites, whose breeding and education have not been sufficient to eliminate their prejudice concomitant with a narrow mentality.—W. P. Dabney, Editor, Cincinnati Union. --- PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY SUBSCRIPTION RATES (Im Advance) One Year 2..... 0.2. 0e eee + $2.00 ix Months .........-.-.+- 1.00 G@ubscribers are requested to remit ‘by postoffice money order or registered letter. Entered at the postoffice in Cleve- land, Ohio, as second-class mail matter Address all communications to HARRY ©. SMITH Editor and Proprietor THE GAZETTE 226 W. Superior Ave., Clevelar.d, 0. (Bell "Phone: CHerry 1259) Member Ohio Legislature: 1894 to 1806: 1896 to 1898; 1900 to 1902. 3 Nas " = icn aes ee Fhe aes eEy Th ex, Oy ae Pn 2S i ie 10,000,000 Afro-Americans. 850,000 in Ohio. 60,000 in Cleveland. pens tiglaabiernic eee SATURDAY, JULY 12, 1920. Eee Is Atty. D. E. Henderson, of Kan- sas City, Kan., to be an assistant or special Assistant U. 8. Attorney General? He takes office July 15. ‘Congressman Oscar DePriest ought to have the navy department court- martial that U, S. sallor (white), whom the sherif! wrapped on the jaw, last Sunday week, because he was leading a mob to lynch an Af- ro-American, Rainey Williams, con- fined th Jefferson county jail at Beaumont, Tex. on a charge of as ‘sault, SAF With our foreign trade for the first five months of this year run- ning eight hundred million dollars behind that of the first five months of last year, and a new tariff law that not only materially increases the cost of living but greatly” increases the illfeeling toward this country held by nearly every other country on the face of the globe, the outlook for an early improvement in the distressing hard-times affecting near- ly every section of the country fs not very encouraging. ewe DE PRIEST AND THE KLUXERS ‘The Mosaic Templars’ convention, which Congressman Osear DePriest was asked to address on July 17 has been transferred from Birmingham, Ala., to Little Rock, Ark. So the parade of more than 2,500 klansmen thru the “Negro” section of Birming- ham was not in vain, after all. They also burned in effigy an image of the Illinois congressman and threatened him if he came to that city to de- liver the address as scheduled. Ala- ama is DePriest's native state, about the only thing in all his life he is really sorry for, the congress- man occasionally remarks. The transfer, from Birmingham to Little Rock, is possibly the best solution of the problem after all, altho we are not enthusing in any marked de- gree as a result of the latest selec- tion of the meeting-place. —jili— - "HE TRUTH AT LAST. Dana G. Monro (white), 1s the new U.S. minister to Haiti. He is to replace American High Commis- sioner (Gen.) John H, Russell, whose direction of the “American Occupa- tion in Haiti” has resulted in so much hafm to the natives and the country. It is to be hoped that the U. 8, naval (marine) control of Haiti will soon come to an end ar recommended by the recent U. S. Haitian Commission. It was thir American Occupation that, several years ago, was responsible for the ‘American daily newspapers’ ridicu lous publications to the effect that Haitians were opposed to the ap pointment of an Afro-American ar U, S. minister to Haiti. On learn ing of the recent appointment of Minister Monro a leading Haitian ‘newspaper declared “that American politics and not Haitian prejudice prevents the naming of a black man” as U. S. minister to Haiti. i ANOTHER ONE GONE! Possibly the bitterest enemy of the race in the last quarter of a century was former U. S. Senator James K. Vardaman of Mississippi who died, recently. U. S. Senator Tom Heflin of Alabama, a kluxer and Vardaman's successor as a “Ne- gro-hater,” is about to bé killed politically because of his failure to support the last Democratic candi date for president, Gov. Alfred E. Smith of New York. Heflin says he opposed President Hoover's nomina- tion of Judge Parker of North Caro- lina for a place on the U. 8. Supreme Court bench “tor two reason: First, because Parker rendered a decision not only unfriendly but unfair and dangerously antagonistic to organ- fzed labor. Second, because he ren- dered a decision in the Richmond, ‘Va., segregation case fn favor of Mesroes.” Of course, we do not wish for Heflin’s death, but feel sure his removal from the U. S. Senate would prove a positive benefit not only to our people but the entire country. Alleged statesmen of his and Varda- man’s kidney are a positive hind- rance and harm to any legislative body in the country. = A SOLUTION. Two Alabama “crackers” were killed and one was dangerously wounded, and two of our men, uncle and nephew, were killed as the re- sult of an unwarranted mob-upris- ing at Emelle, Ala., the first of the week. In the foregoing {s a solution to an exceptional degree of mob-vio- lence in the South or in any other Part of the country. When mobo- crats generally know that one or more of their number is sure to be killed, there will be fewer of such demonstrations. We congratulate the Robertsons of Emelle on the good work they did and on the es- cape of the father and three brothers of the younger of the two Robert- sons killed by the mob. ata (CHILDERS-STERRETT. Rev. J, Albert Sterrett, the new pastor of St. John’s A. M, B. church, who came.to the city, recently, trom historic old Charles St. A. M. E. church, Boston, has been succeeded there by Rev. Oliver W. Childers, un- til recently pastor of the largest A. M. E.° church in Pittsburgh. Dr. Childers years ago pastored very suc- cessfully indeed St. James’ A. M. E. church of this city, and has many friends here who wish him every suc- cess in his newest charge. The Boston church greatly regret- ted Dr. Sterrett’s transfer to St. John's and mado strenuous but in- effectual efforts to have Bishop Joshua H. Jones return him imme- diately to that city. Dr. Sterrett delivered the commencement address at Wilberforce University, this year, at which time he was given the de- gree, LL. D. Editor \. Monroe Trot- ter 02 The Boston Guardian speaks very highly indeed of him as “a dis- tinguished citizen and orator, a flam- ing pulpiteer, a Christian gentleman and courteous friend of everybody”; also saying Dr. Sterrett “stood shoul- der to shoulder” with him ‘in the fight for freedom” while in Boston. Welcome to Cleveland, Dr. Sterrett! We need you and sure have missed Dr. Childers. NOW IT'S GORDON PARK! Mrs. M. Pickell, sister of Dr. Leon Evans, and her two daughters were at Gordon (pubile) Park, July 1. ‘The older, Lois, is 14, while the younger is about nine years of age. ‘They went in bathing. Several youngsters. (white), ranging trom 18 to 20 years, grabbed Lois around the ankles and threw her down in the water Each time she got up they would repeat the “ducking.” This at least three or four times, and the younger sister was: treated likewise. The mother, who was standing on the bank, called to the young ruffians to let her children alone. They replied: “We don’t want any N——s in this water. Go to the other end of the beach where you belong.” The scoundrels treat- od the girls so badly that the mother was compelled to go to a policeman near who referred her to the life suards. Mrs. Pickell and her daugh- ‘ers refused to leave that part of the seach, however, very properly say ‘ng: “This is a public place, a free country, and my children are going ‘n here if anyone does.” So she ‘nade them go back into the water. When they went back, the second ime, the ruffians held Lois under che water so long it frightened the ‘nother who thereupon waded into he water and began to beat the scoundrel over the head with her ambrella. She was in the water up to her breast but made him leave ter daughter. A few days later, Mrs. Pickell. made complaint to our Assistant Police Prosecutor Roger N. Dillard, giving the scoundrel’s rame—Barney Gailwicz, age 18..At- orney Dillard summoned him to the yolice prosecutor's office and asked tim why he did such a thing and {he didn't know that it was against he law. To which he replied; “Well, { didn’t know. I thot that one park vas for colored and one for white.” Dillard immediately issued a warrant wd had the ruffian arrested there und then for assault and battery. He vas arraigned in municipal court, fuly 8, before Judge Green. Mr. Dillard asked the judge, on part of he state, to continue the case until July 15, to give him a chance to jummon the life-guard, the police- nan and several other witnesses who aw the attack. Dillard told the ‘ourt that such contemptible action, m the part of the fellow and others, would soon cause a riot, ‘and he is ight for that very thing caused the errible Chieago riot of some years 0. When the policeman referred he mother to the lifeguards for rotection in the face of the fact hat he witnessed the entire affair, ras he “doing his duty", Safety director Edwin D. Barry? We do jot believe that YOU will stand for wich as that. This park and bath- ug-pool matter must be settled, this ummer, and settled right regardless f the fact that “The Blossom Trip- ets", Councilmen George, Payne nd Bundy, show so little interest in THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, 0., SATURDAY, JULY 12, 1930. ’ BLAME S MOB VIOLENCE ACT....... Congres Says 1 of al OR ANTLLYNCHING LAW LEADS THE COUNTRY) | pono» IN EFFECTIVE LEGISLATION au ee Against the Mob and Lynch-Murder—Three Years” | trvea ti at Town Work of a Member of the Race—Also ing on faeces Atve-An ; His Ohio Civil Rights Law. dons 'o that the ee an instit Our mo.rriolence or anti-lynehing very effective. 1pinole, Pennsylvania |*t® £0r,! bill was Introduced in the Ohio jes tat aoe have followed Oslo’) cn joad aud enacted ‘mob violence oF| °° lnlature in 1894 and re-introduced tn| {08d and enacled mob, violence, 2f| wy th 1896. It took the Hon. Harry C.| of our Ohio !aw. Several other north: | 10.” th. Smith, editor of The Gazette, just/ern states and at least one border | f° \ 41 three ‘years to secure its enactment| state (Kentucks) have also enacted | !°PA1y {nto law. The Ohio Supreme Court| anti-iyuching laws, in, recent. years, |, {0 ch has several times upheld the consti-|like Pennsylvania and New Jersey. |j/0'. ‘Ne Rae mer erRh Siroee ayers faeienasl [ne cence ane See later on 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 representavive of victim ot lynching 6283. Person suffering death or injury by mob trying to lynch another. 6284. LAmitations of action. 6285. Order to include recovery and costs in tax levy. 6286. Guardian's custody, etc., fees. 6287. County's right of action against member of mob. 6288. County's right of action against another county. 6289. Non-relief from prosecution. Section 6278. A collection of peo- ple assembled for an unlawful pur- injury to any one, or pretending to exercise correctional power over oth- er persons by violence and without authority of law, shall be deemed a “mob” for the purpose of this chap- ter. An act of violence by a mob upon the body of any person shall const!- tute a “lynching” within the mean- ing of this cnapter. (93 vy. 161 2.) Section 6279. The term “serious injury,” for the purpose of this chap- ter, shall include such inquiry as per- manently or temporarily disables the person receiving it from earning a livelihood by manual labor. (93 ¥. 161 3.) Section 6280. A person taken trom officers ot justice by a mob, and assaulted with whips, clubs, mis: ailes 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 as- sault is made a sum not to exceed five hundred dollars; or, if the in- Jury received therefrom Is serious, a sum not exceeding one thousand dol- lars; or, if such Injury result in per- manent disability, to earn a livelt- hood by manual labor, a sum not to exceed five thousand dollars. (93 v. 12.6.) - Section 6282. Tne legal represen- tative of a person dying from injur- Jes recelved from lynching by a mob, may recover of the county in which such injury occurred, a sum not to exceed five thousand dollars dam- ages for such unlawful killing. Such sum shall be applied to the mainten- ance of the family and education of the minor children of such person 60 lynched, {f any survive him, until such children are of legal age, aud then be distributed to the survivors, share and share alike, the widow re- cetving an amount equal to a child’s share, If there be no widow or min- or 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 90 recov- ered 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 attempt- ing to lynch another person shall come within the provisions of this chapter. He or his legal representa tives shall have a like right of action as one purposely injured or killed by such @ mob. (93 ¥. 162 6.) Section 6284. Action for the re- eoverles provided for in this chap- ter must be commenced, within two years from the date of such lynch- ing, in any court having original jurisdiction of an action for dam- Ages for malicious assault. (93 v. 162 7.) Section 6285. An order to the commissioners of a county, against which such recovery 1s had, to in- clude it with the costs of action, in the next succeeding tux levy for such county, shall be a part of the judg- ent in every such ease. (93 v, 162 Section 6286. If the decedent s0 lynched has minor children surviv- ‘ng him, the fund shall be turned over to a regularly appointed guar- dian. Such guardian shall adminis- ter such fund under the direction of the probate judge, allowing not more than five hundred dollars for coun sel fees in the action for such re- covery. (93 v. 162 9.) it and other equally important mat-| tive to the ters. Asst. Police Prosecutor Roger |} ————— N. Dillard 19 showing our people of tits community the wisdom of hay-| ing a representative of the race in| that department of the city service.| QUIDS They appreciate what he is doing and | will not forget it. Keep up the good | work, Roger! t ee YOU KNOW ME, AL Friend Al TE could ind s woman who would under stand eT ould giv Waray salar) chek soery SITE Thi When I star Laddng they shin | enn Huei now Von bad with Edm because she wae AUTTein, tata money and'T made some creck Shout ber moter he bay bees vatng ver shetlete Marguard started topic forthe indians SOLE Wo meet Soe tthe race te other eens when veh bo Say sty 3op ht taco the ell looking dlls peeks trou Spots Gre tte posts The Br. made some Sleek test me soning ts well rene, ond al Stites “it'you pt gold on any fh it look ood in on sasaton “And she says, Afi det you put some gold on me then vow stupid boob” : ‘SUT atin sy nothing benune | ide want tor rerum nach ste Shiy'slnce where we nat had one bot look ke Ses couhd ely em over to Pers to got ont Frets Frege | Yours as wrual, Sct. | yet anecire, Spee Tae and New Jersey have followed Ohio's lead and enacted mob violence or anti-lynching laws which are copies of our Ohio ‘aw. Several other north- ern states and at least one border state (Kentucky) have also enacted anti-lynching laws, in recent years, like Pennsylvania and New Jersey: The Ohio law follows: a | 4 representasive of victim ot Jynching ry by mob trying to lynch another. costs in tax levy. 1st member of mob, st another county. Section 6287. The county, in which a lynching occurs, may recov- er 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 com- mit violence on a prisoner brought from such county for safekeeping, the county in which the lynching is committed may recover the amouat of the judgment and costs from the county from which the mob came, unless there was contributory negli- gence on the part of officials of such county in failing to protect such pris- oner or dispurse such mob. (93 v. 163 11.) Section 6289. This chapter shal: not relieve a person concerned in such lynching from prosecution for homicide or assault for engaging therein. (93 v. 163 12.) OUR OHIO CIVIL RIGHTS LAW Upon the request of many readers of The Gazette we print below the text of the Hon. Harry C. Smith's Ohio Civil R'ghts law which the edi- tor had enaced while a member of the 7ist General Assembly, in 1894: ‘The General Code of Ohio: Sec. 12940. Whoever, being the proprietor or his employee, keeper or manager of an Inn, restaurant, eat- ing house, barber-shop, public con- veyance by land or water, theater ar other place of public accommodation and amusement, denies to a citizen, except for reasons applicable alike to all citizens and regardless of race or color, the full enjoyment of the accommodations, advantages, facili- tles or privileges thereof, shall be fined not less than fifty dollars nor more than five hundred dollars, or imprisoned not less than thirty days nor more than ninety days, or both. Sec. 12941. Whoever violates the next preceding section shall also pay not less than Mty dollars nor more than five hundreds dollars to the per- son aggrieved thereby to be recov- ered in any court of competent jur- isdiction in the county where such offense was committed. ‘This law nas 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, HERE'S AN OPPOKTUNITY! “The Old Reliable” Gazette desires an active agent aud correspondent in every city and town In Ohio and neighboring states having a number of Afro-American residents. Only a little time on Fridays or Saturdays is required to make some money. We are especially desirous of hear- ing trom persons in the following named cities: Springfield, Colum- bus, Toledo, Steubenville, Zanesville, Wilmington, Xenia, Washington C. H., Lancaster, Piqua, Lima, O., and other places,” particularly in Oblo, where we have none. Write to the editor of The Gazette, 226 West Superior Ave., Cleveland, O., and terms will be sent promptly. Our readers will oblige us greatly by sending the addresses of persons in the cities named, and others in the state to whom we can write rela- tive to the matter. Subscribe Now MOBS, = =| |= eT eo See LT HE\\2 4 / fj SENDS <Z BLE |S] | vou pow | IHADA Goos war G HE - WELL ILL | = OF AD ME A GILL YE0'StEN a | waar VY 1] COA THE] Guo Tekst |] BOHE |) TEaRos [ DORE. STILL /IGEEN To WAS EB] Hoserral | TxD Sout ASevr // at ED.4 Pr HE [THE HOSPTAL |[ THRE p | SESAUSE | cperenTEO. taar /( Sas open woes 2 AND HAO THE [A MATTE® D2Nwag Gha| NOTHIN’ | Ou AKIO Tey ‘ SAYS (OPENED | eyrauscr | Homeviesr | 2 3S y ISTHE / HE COULDNT. s YY MISTAIE" Sreheo / NURSE THIS o a Ky MATTER/ FINO NOTHIA' ee TATELY ‘SIDE OF THE “4 b i y WRONG WHEN SS GEARDED SEEN EP j; HE COT ME cs — \tAoy CE VEEN y, Z OPEN va, — FE Zidcsie ed Yi as LS 4 jaa —{"« = x & BS : 7 a OW A} h wy Ye NI VY) 4 6 Yy yy | (se [ di i A a Fa | ai a y KAI WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, AT 8:45 P. M. NIGHT BASEBALL Kansas City Monarchs vs. Homestead Grays | Hooper Field—Sykora and Beyerle Rds. 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JACK KEEFE BLAMES SEPARATE SCHOOLS For Major Problems of the Raco— Congressman DePriest's. Secretary Says Dual System is the “Root of All Evil” in Communities. Pomoney, Md.—Branding the sep- arate school systems as ‘‘the root of all evil, and which retards race progress in most southern cities and some in the North, Morris Lewis, secretary to Hon. Oscar DePriest, urged their abolition in an address at Town Hall here, recently. Speak- ing on the subject, “Our American Citizenship and the Right of the Afro-American to All Our Institu- tions Offer," Mr. Lewis declared that the separate school system is an institution which does not oper- ate for the best interest of any group. Must Explain to Children. Continuing, he said: ‘There is al- ways the necessity of explaining to the American youth why, at certain ages, they must sever the generally friendly relations which have exist- ed in child life, It is at this period that the seed is sown which reacts later on as racial prejudice. When children of both races are very young. they play naturally together, Opened By Mistake to Vor y BTA dee nese h 2 JS ua D THIS Y mel Zo al |p S| eS z y ee i) y v ! 4 > » y S SS I Y yt yA M but as soon as they reach school age, they are separated by their parents. ‘The white child goes to one school and the Afro-American child to an- other, When they must part, the reaction on both is similar and they both start out in life, one with a su- perlor complex and one with a biting hatred. American Citizen. “What we really need today is to create real American citizenship. The U. 8. Constitution and the Dec- laration of Independence mean now just what they meant when they were drawn up. Under these docu- ments we were all born free and equal.” “THE FESS" AND “THE "FESSOR" As “Diagnosed” by a Writer in an Eastern Contemporary—Inter- esting and Amusing. Ohio U. S. Senator Simeon D. Fess is sure a mud-head. Forced a con- troversy on 'Fessor (N. A. A. C. P.) Wm. Pickens because the organiza- tion gives FESS the vocabularie “yun-aroun'" for supporting Judge Parker's nomination to the U. 8. Su- preme Court. The FESS says the "Fessor is a Communist, and preacter Pursuit of Happiness. 'Twould not Favs of Haoplnene mould et bo criminal for the, "fensr tg trout as ea teleae eh: cis mms moe antes ee sor a commusit—area inate er ed “Baron Bastu Basutoland” by the Emperor Marcus in 1916 and spent a few days in Moscow a couple o° make it easy for the ‘Fessor to make FESS fester, and to wrap a fast ane esi and 0 OD, Oat c. P., can’t beat FESS, But he has made it possible for it to get many a free feed and membership dollar, er Subscribe No By RING LARDNER > { Zi WE SENDS |f weer VA me acer. BOHE 7) FOR Two | =I] SAY HONSRED, AGoor // BUtKS ConICH UIK THAT / says "OPENED: z BY MISTARE" | ; QNIT pa oth, = Ye vy ma ! N | CHILDREN hate to take medicine as a rule, but every child loves the taste of Castoria. This pure vegetable preparation is just as good as it tastes; just as bland and just as harmless as the recipe reads. Subscribers not receiving T us at once. We desire every Send or bring locals and a office, Suite 302, Johnson Blo site the Hotel Cleveland. If there, please. We advise our readers to advertisements before making advertise in this paper should The fact that they advertise in All reading matter for pub Gazette must be in the office week. at the latest. Display 4 p. m., WEDNESDAYS! HARRY 226 West Superior (Opposite, H Notary Public Classified Adverti When Baby's cry warns of colic, a few drops of Castoria has him soothed, asleep again in a jiffy. Nothing is more valuable in diarrhea. When coated tongue or bad breath tell of constipation, use its gentle aid to cleanse and regulate a child's bowels. In colds or children's diseases, you should use it to keep the system from clogging. Castoria is sold in every drug store; the genuine always bears Chas. H. Fletcher's signature. War Don't t wrong p When you ask for Dr. Fred Preparations—be sure you clerk hand you the wrong people have been deceived to say Dr. FRED Palmer's Palmer's Skin Whitener for their merit and when you are getting the best. Inside Skin Whitener. Prepara- SUBSTITUTE. warning! don't take the wrong package for Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener be sure you get them. Don't let the the wrong package. Hundreds of deceived—just because they failed D Palmer's. The original Dr. FRED Whitener Preparations have proven when you buy them, you know you best. Insist on Dr. FRED Palmer's Preparations—AND TAKE NO Ask for and get Dr. FRED Palmer's SKIN WHITENER PREPARATIONS from your druggist Warning! When you ask for Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Preparations—be sure you get them. Don't let the clerk hand you the wrong package. Hundreds of people have been deceived—just because they failed to say Dr. FRED Palmer's. The original Dr. FRED Palmer's Skin Whitener Preparations have proven their merit and when you buy them, you know you are getting the best. Insist on Dr. FRED Palmer's Skin Whitener. Preparations—AND TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. A generous trial sample of the Skin Whitener, Soap and Face Powder sent for 4e in stamps. Address, Dr. Fred Palmer's Laboratories. Dept. 21, Atlanta, Ga. --- TOY STORE FEMALE TROUBLES Write For New Treatment FREE BOOK Proves Successful A new treatment for female troubles has been discovered, which from reliable information is filling a great need, many operations are now unnecessary, and the beauty of it is. this new treatment can be used by any woman in the privacy of her own home at very small expense. It is something new,—entirely different, a patent medicine. If you suffer with FEMALE TROUBLES, such as Ovarian Pains, Bloating, Diarrhea, Stomach, Bearing-down of Pain Headache, Backache, Whites, Painful or Irregular Periods. If you have that tired worn-out, Nervous and faint downward arm or to women. If you have tried all kinds of medicines and doctors, and even though you have been told you are an IVF procedure was necessary YOU MADE WELL AND STRONG AGAIN. Just send your name and address to MEMPHIS, TENN, today and they will send you a free booklet describing this wonderful new treatment happiness to so many other women. Here's Instant Relief From Bunion Pains and Soft Corns Here's Instant Relief From Bunion Pains and Soft Corns Actually Reduces the Swelling—Soft Corns Dry Right Up and Can Be Picked Off Get a two-ounce bottle of Moone's Emerald Oil (full strength) today. Every well-stocked druggist has this, and it will reduce the inflammation, soreness, and pain much quicker than any remedy you ever used. Your bunions may be so swollen and insecure that you think you can't go another step. Your shoes may feel as if they are cutting right into the flesh. You feel sick all over with the pain and torture and pray for quick relief. What's to be done? Two or three applications of Moone's Emerald Oil and in fifteen minutes all the pain and soreness disappears. A few more applications at regular intervals and the swelling reduces. And as for soft corns, a few applications each night at bed time and they just seem to shrivel right up and scale off. Druggists guarantee Moone's Emerald Oil to end your foot troubles or money back. O. K. Printing Co. W. J. Foster - John M. Smith Commercial and Job PRINTING PROMPT SERVICE 3113 Central Avenue PProspect 7313 Cedar Branch Y. M. C. A. Cor. Cedar Ave. and E. 77th St. A HOME FOR YOUNG MEN! RESTAURANT - HOME COOKING Individual Beds $2.50-$3.00 EN迪cott 9094 Where To Purchase The Gazette FRANK L. HANDY'S 4401 Central Ave. 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, Suite 302, Johnson Block, 226 Superior Ave., West, opposite the Hotel Cleveland. 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 noon, WEDNESDAY, of that week, at the latest. Display advertisements accepted until 4 p. m., WEDNESDAYS! HARRY C. SMITH 226 West Superior Avenue, Cleveland, O. (Opposite, Hotel Cleveland.) Notary Public Bell 'Phone: Cherry 1259 (Call, in the Afternoon.) Classified Advertising Department WANTED.—Information as to the whereabouts of Mrs. Ella Smith, who in March of 1925 lived at 2351 E. 46th St., and moved to 2417 E. 82d St. (Dn. ), and who at that time was suffering greatly from bronchial asthma, is desired at once by the editor of The Gazette. Address, 226 W. Superior Ave., Suite 302, Cleveland, O. CLEVELAND Social and Personal Mr. and Mrs. John and Mr. Wm. Johnson visited in Hillsboro, July 4. Dr. and Mrs. Arthur Scott spent last week in their cottage at Idlewild, Mich. Mrs. Lena and Ella Donald and Vivian Howard have entered Columbia University summer school, N. Y. City. Rev. and Mrs. W. B. Suthern and daughter motored to an Episcopal conference at Syracuse, N. Y., recently. Mr. Wm. Lee, headwaiter of the C. A. C., and daughter, Pauline, attended a relative's funeral in Uniontown, Pa., recently. Clyde Moss and Rev. Henry Estes were elected president and vice president: James Stewart, Jr., secretary and G. L. Matlock, treasurer. Mrs. Irene Hardy Hanley, E. 43rd St., and aunt, Mrs Mattie Lott, motored to Atlanta, recently, to join with friends in a trip to California. Prof. and Mrs. Chas. S. Smith arrived in the city the first of the week and are visiting their daughter and son-in-law, Mrs. and Rev. Russell S. Brown of South Boulevard. John H. Early, violinist, and Orrin Suthern, organist, of St. Andrew's E. church, gave an excellent recital at Shiloh Baptist church, recently, which showed the new $12,500 organ to good effect. Leland, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Atkins, E. 8,22d St., was an honor student at Addison Junior High, this year, and president of the Safety Council at Quincy school before going to Addison. Stonewall Thompson, sentenced from this county, died of a hemorrhage on the baseball grounds at the Ohio penitentiary in Columbus, last Saturday. He was suffering from tuberculosis and had served six of a 10-to-25-year sentence for robbery. Miss Nannie H. Burroughs of Washington, D. C., will present a play, Monday night, July 14, at the Messiah Baptist church, entitled "When Truth Gets a Hearing", written by herself. Twenty ladies are in the play with Miss Burroughs. Mrs. Gertrude McKenzie and daughter, who have been living with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hodges for several years, have located in Philadelphia. Miss Margaret McKenzie is a graduate of East High and had studied one year at Western Reserve university. Rev. Geo. C. Parker, editor of the Christian Index, organ of the C. B. E Church, has been pastoring Lane Memorial Church here in recent weeks. The pastor, Rev. L. H. Brown, who had both legs amputated at a local hospital, has finally been removed to his home in Cedar Ave. Editor Parker is professor of systematic theology at Lane Memorial college, Jackson, Penn. H. SMITH'S 8007 Scovill Ave. POPE DRUG STORE, 8301 Cedar Ave. THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O.. SATURDAY, JULY 12. 1930 OLD KING TUT SAID, "I WAS A LONG TIME DEAD, BUT YOU CAN'T KEEP A GOOD MAN DOWN" GLUB GLUB A THING Could BE HUNGER THAN TO BE IN CAROLINA WHY NOT PUT ONE IN THE DINING ROOM TABLE TO NEUTRALIZE THE NOISE OF EATING? WE HAVE THE DESK-PHONOGRAPH AND THE BOOK-CASE-PHONOGRAPH- THE BED-PHONOGRAPH WOULD KEEP YOU ENTER- TAINED WHEN YOU'RE HOME, SICK. THE NEW BATHING TABLE FOR BABY. THE STOVE- PHONOGRAPH SHOULD KEEP THE COOK MOVING American News Pictures, Inc. ROSENBERG'S DRUG STORE N. W. Cor. Central Ave. and E. 55th St. MRS. VIOLA BOLDEN'S 8609 Quincy Ave. J. S. HALL'S 3133 Central Ave. C. C. Thomas, E. 83rd St., a former resident of Detroit, spent the last ten days visiting in that city and Windsor, Ont., Ca. Mrs. L. S. Jones and son, Louia, returned recently from Circleville, where she was called by the sudden death of her brother, Mr. Geo. Foster. Frances Lewis was elected second vice-president, Alice Green, parliamentarian, and Earline Howland, chief editor (for the juniors) of "The Queen's Garden", a monthly publication of the organization, at the state federation of our women's clubs, meeting in St. Louis, recently. Cleveland Junior Federation of girls' clubs carried off the honors at the state meet by reporting 100 members and a contribution of $25 to the convention. This city has the largest club in the state. Rev. J. C. Austin, pastor of Pilgrim Baptist church, which has a membership of more than nine thousand, will preach at Messiah Baptist church, E. 46th and Woodland Ave. July 27. Dr. Austin is exceptable able, a splendid chorus of fifty voices will assist him. All persons desiring to become members of this chorus will be welcomed and are asked to be at Messiah Baptist church at 4 p. m., Sunday afternoon. Prof. T. N. Hopson, director. The recent campaign of the N. A. A. C. P. local branch netted $75. Mrs. Agnes Harris' group led with $264.50. Mrs. A. S. Scott raised $95 of this amount. Crosby Ramey's team brot in $205. Arthur D. Morton reporting $100 of this amount. Among the leading workers in the drive were Mrs. W. S. Biggs and Mrs. R. Green, president of the church, who is Eleonora derer is on her annual vacation in France, possibly one reason why the local branch is more ineffective than usual. Mrs. Ella White, E. 36th St., represented our local churches at the Inter-racial Conference held by the Federated churches in Oberlin, recently, and was our only representative in attendance. Mrs. White, one of the oldest workers in St. John's A. M. E. church, is also a representative of one of our oldest Cleveland women. Our loved sister, Mrs. Willa Patterson Smith and husband of Canton, have moved to Cleveland and are stopping temporarily, with her sister, Mrs. Agnes Harris, E. 40th St. East Tech high school, this year, graduated 24 of our boys and girls in a class of 250. Their names: Mary Allen, Lucille Bruton, Dorothea Gillaspie, Katherine Glenn, Lillie Gorman, Isabel Hines, Odeal Hutchins, Oscar Johnson, Hubert Kildd, Frank Kline, Robert Kline, Nair, Sherwood Phillips, Margie Price, Maud Queen, Verena Skinner Florence Stewart, Clarence Walker Wm. White, Minnie and Virginia Young, Henry Lawson, Dorothy Thorngton and Irene Morris. Flora Maxey was our only graduate from Wes high in a class of over 300. From Glenville high were: Mary Howell Williams, Anne Davis, Lydia-House 300 in the class. From John Hay 10; Lloyd Wooding, Louise Hatcher, Elizabeth Richards, Sophi Williams, Anne Davis, Lydia-House Flora E. Wilson, Margaret S. Carlton Thelma Jackson and Josie Jackson "Reds" March in Protest! New York City.—Last week Tuesday afternoon, two thousand colored and white workers marched in solid ranks down Seventh Ave., from 144th St. and Lenox Ave. to 110th St. and Fifth Ave., in a mighty protest-demonstration behind the body of their murdered comrade, Alfred Levy, a colored worker. He was brutally beaten up and murdered by police and Garvey leaders when they attacked a Communist lynching-protect meeting. June 26, at Lenox Ave. and 132d St. The ROUNDER WHAT'S DOING! "The Blossom Triplets", Councilman George, Payne and Bundy, pledged the people, last fall during the campaign, that they would see to it that the Woodland Hill bathhouse and pool were enjoyed also by our people, of that part of the city particularly, but have done absolutely nothing to date to bring this about. The same thing is true in the case of the miserable Central Ave. streetcar line. They promised better services on our shingles. Possibly this and other failures to keep pledges made to constituents, last fall, when they were begging for votes, is explained in the following clipping from a recent issue of The Cleveland Daily Plain Dealer: "The three colored councilmen are definitely aligned against Maschke in the Eleventh Ward control fight and are openly backing Day in the primary fight against Harris. They maintain they are not antagonistic to Maschke or the Republican organization, but they insist that Maschke must keep his hands off the colored wards and that the decision as to how the votes in those wards shall be cast shall be made by the voters themselves and not in the National City Building. The voting is a rotten reflection and underserved! It is pretty generally understood that it was given to The Plain Dealer's political writer by Payne or Bundy, or both, with the help no doubt of Councilman George. They are so very, very busy telling Mr. Maurice Maschke and the Republican organization what to do these days, and how to do it that they have lost sight and memory of the many promises they made to constituents, last fall, when down on their haunches begging for votes with which to be elected members of the Cleveland City Council. This same is true of their entirely too numerous promises of jobs and positions, practicalities and policies that they fail to keep. "Aronsmit" ("fire") "The Blossom Trolls" "Scat" At the recent Republican Ward Leaders' association meeting at Hotel Winton, twenty-seven of them voted for the George B. Harris (Maschke) candidacy and sixteen of them for the Arthur H. Day candidacy, for the Republican nomination for County Prosecutor. One ward leader ducked; that is, failed to vote for either Harris or Day. Immediately afterward the for-profit county leader announced unanimously to support the Harris candidacy. This was promptly published in the daily newspapers which have uniformly refused ever since to recognize the unanimous vote and endorsement of the Harris candidacy. But George Heimberger, secretary of the Ward-Leaders' Association, covered the ground beautifully, when he said that the ward leaders would be united in their support of the Harris candidacy and that there would be no split in the organization. This of course puts Bundy and the 17th Ward Republican club endorsement of the Day candidacy very much without the breastworks. He said that the colored League of Republican clubs of Cuyahoga County" which at President Bundy's request, in a resolution, declared against the re-election of U. S. Senator Roscoe C. McCulloch, the local Republican organization's candidate. Councilman Bundy's other blunders, mistakes, etc., since the first of the year, are entirely too numerous to be chronicled at too time. He will be taken to the time, later this year and next in the fall-time, when all three of "The Blossom Triplets" will be taken for a "political ride." Selah: Monday evening at the Western Reserve club, the "Jackson for State Representative Campaign Committee" of two years ago was re-organized, and very properly started out immediately to put over the renomination of Hon. Perry B. Jackson, our only member of the Ohio State Representative Committee. Wakefield was re-elected chairman, of course, and there was a long list of announced speakers which included Hon. Maurice Maschke, Chairman A. J. Hirstius, Hon. Harry C. Smith, Hon. Harry E. Davis, Atty. Alex. Bernstein, Councilman Herman H. Finkle, Atty. Louise J. Pridigeon, Mayor Arthur R. Johnston. "Col." Sidney B. Thompson, Mrs. Mary B. Martin, former Councilman Thos. Fleming and wife, Mrs. Lethia C. Flemming, Mrs. Lethia boosters, and the battle started off. boom Aty. Moses H. Dixon, our only other candidate for representative, was there in all his pristine glory. Mose is some talker, too. And there is no reason why we Everyone is attracted to the woman whose hair is smooth and sparkling with glossy luster—arranged in a becoming style....Your hair can be beautiful if you visit your Poro Agent regularly and follow the Poro treatment faithfully. She can show you how to have a luxuriant growth of hair that will be the envy of all your friends. Billions of Chuck are credited every year to the in- of that inimitable style of comic ings whose characters are neve- fused with those of any artist oth RUBE G Billions of Chuckles are credited every year to the inventor of that inimitable style of comic drawings whose characters are never confused with those of any artist other than RUBE GOLDBERG Watch For Them! MITURE THING COULD BE FINER THAN TO BE IN CAROLINA --- shouldn't have two representatives, members of the next Lower House of the state legislature since we are not to be represented in the upper house, the State Senate. J. Walter Wills' candidacy doesn't mean a candidate is not a member of which are: He has never served a day in the lower house, the stepping-stone to the upper; and that "Blossom Triplet," Bundy, put him up to "buck the Republican organization" so he stated at a meeting of his so-called "congressional ago." Mose is strong for Perry, and Perry is strong for Mose. "Dah now!" Stalling! Walhalla, S. C. — Excessive heat caused continuance until next fall of the trial of seventeen accused of lynching Allen Green, recently. MYSTIC LUCKY RING BE LUCKY Have more friends, love more business, love more business, love this Magic Ring is said to have Magic Power to bring Sure Winner. Looks like a green black Money ring just sturge. For your 49 pence package, just buy it. RO AND SKIN A GOLDI OLDBERG The readers of this newspaper are to join millions of other Americans in the enjoyment of his delicious humor which will appear in strip form REGULARLY IN THIS NEWSPAPER How One W 20 P Lost Her Double Chin—L Lost Her S Gained Physical Vigor—Viva One Woman Lost 20 Pounds of Fat Double Chin—Lost Her Prominent Hips— Lost Her Sluggishness physical Vigor — Vivaciousness — a Shapely Figure How One Woman Lost 20 Pounds of Fat Lost Her Double Chin—Lost Her Prominent Hips—Lost Her Sluggishness Gained Physical Vigor—Vivaciousness—a Shapely Figure If you're fat—remove the cause! KRUSCHEN SALTS contain the six mineral salts your body organs, glands and nerves must have to function properly. When your vital organs fail to perform their work correctly—your bowels and kidneys can't throw off that waste material—before you realize it—you're growing hideously fat! You half a teaspoonful of KRUSCHEN SALTS in a glass of hot water every morning—in three weeks get on the scales and note how many pounds of fat have vanished. Notice also that you have gained in energy—your skin is clearer—your eyes sparkle with glorious health—you feel younger in body—keener in mind KRUSCHEN will give any fat per a joyful surprise. Get an 85c bottle of KRUSCHEN SALTS (last four weeks). If even the first bottle cannot convince you that the easiest safest and surest way lose fat—if you don't have a super improvement in health—so glorious energetic—vigorously alive—yoy money gladly returned. STEVE HIMSEEF I WANT TO SEE STEVE - I'M AN OLD FRIEND OF HIS GO RIGHT IN STEVE, YOU'RE ONE OF THE FINEST MEN I EVER MET I'M GLAD YOU LIKE ME FOR MYSELF ALONE I'M SELLING DOME OIL STOCK- NOW-- ? ! --- --- PORDI HAIR GROWER Mrs. Catherine Burke The Manager FOR BROADWAY TOLLWAY HAIR TONES FOR BROADWAY TOLLWAY HAIR TONES FOR BROADWAY TOLLWAY HAIR TONES AND BROADWAY TONES MADE IN NEW YORK the ncs, per- elles are of hot shots any Notice also that you have gained in energy—your skin is clearer—your eyes sparkle with glorious health—you feel younger in body—keener in mind. KRUSCHEN will give any fat person a joyous surprise. Get an 85c bottle of KRUSCHEN SALTS (lasts four weeks). If even this first bottle can convince you this is the easiest, safest and surest way to lose fat—if you don't feel a superb improvement in health—so gloriously energetic—vigorously alive—your money gladly returned. By RUBE GOLDBERG 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 It NEW SPHERO-PRISMATIC LIGHT DEFLECTOR UNITED WORLD SINCE 1921 BILL, THE BUS DRIVER SAYS "Better gamble with your dough than with your life, 'cause you can always earn more dough." (By MARCUS A. DOW.) I was ridled in 'a train gain' about sixty miles an hour when the rattler come to a sudden, grindier 'jinrin' stop. Some of us passengers got out to see what was all the sudden halt for. A completely busted automobile scattered a hundred feet along the right of way told a mute but awful story. Over in a field where it had been tossed by the train lay a shapeless lifeless thing which a moment before had been a living 'human bein'. Some guy pointed to a sign on the crossin' nearby, "Stop, Look, Listen." Had this guy believed in signs he would probably be alive today. When you gamble with your life at a railroad crossin' you are puttin' your life up against a few lousy seconds of time. You gamble for time and your own life is the stake. There ain't no percentage in gamblin' with death. Shakin' dice with old bony fingers is bum sport, 'cause he gets most of the breaks. A man bettin' on a horse stakes a few measly dollars that the horse he picks will win, and if it happens for once, he'll gain a few dollars, otherwise he loses his stake. But if you drive over a railroad crossin' and don't slow down and shift into low gear and don't take the time (or the trouble, if you call it that) and the precaution of lookin' both ways and listenin' for trains, I say if you don't do all that, you put up your life for the stake and gamble that you'll win. If you want to bet your life, -why not bet on a sure thing. Wait until you know it's a safe bet. Be like the Scotchman at the dog race. He watched five and saw the mechanical rabbit shoot down the track and get home ahead of the dogs every time. Before the sixth race Scotty goes up to the bettin' booth and says, "I'll bet on the r-rabbit." He was bettin' on a sure thing. Stop, look and listen, is a good old fashioned rule. But its an ounce of prevention that's better'n all the gambler's luck in the world. Strong Inner Tube Real Economy to Any Driver Air pressure is as important to a tire as oil is to the engine—its very life depends on it. Leakage of only a few pounds of air pressure in a balloon tire is much more serious than in an old high pressure tire, because it considerably increases the movement and flexing of the tire, produces faulty tread wear quickly and increases the possibility of bruises and premature failure of the cord carcass of the casing. While the usual tendency is to put an old tube in a used casing and in many instances even a new casing, this is poor economy, because an old tube is generally thinned out and enlarged in size, which not only greatly increases the porosity or normal air loss of the tube, necessitating frequent inflation, but is almost certain to cause tire trouble due to the stretched out tube not fitting the casing and the resultant formation of wrinkles and pinches. A tire which is driven flat is quickly ruined. Grave of Pet Horse Is Halting Work of Road A horse's grave is delaying the widening of one of Texas' principal highways. Before automobiles became common, Dr. W. W. Fowler made his calls behind Coley, a standard bred horse. Pensioned, Coley died and was buried where he used to watch automobiles pass on the highway. Just before Doctor Fowler died he asked his hairs to see that Coley's grave be not disturbed. State highway department officials have been unsuccessful in preliminary efforts to obtain permission to move the grave and its painted fence. Pedestrian Given Right at All Street Crossings It is of prime importance to all motorists to know that a pedestrian has the right of way at a crossing, despite traffic signal shifts. This ruling is upheld by the United States Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia. In effect the court holds that pedestrians have the right of way not only at uncontrolled crossings, but also when they have entered an intersection on a green light and further holds that the pedestrian has the right of way until he reaches the opposite curb, without regard to the change of lights during his passage of the crossing. "When a pedestrian steps from a curb to cross the street, having a green signal with him, he does so by way of invitation and he cannot be charged with contributory neglect if the signal switches when he is in the street. Caught in this position, the obligation rests upon the motorist, not only to observe the situation, but to wait until the crossing is clear," the decision declares. Motorists Urged to Use Me. Custinia A T More Caution at Turns Dr. Arnold H. Kegel, health commissioner of Chicago, declares a large percentage of pedestrian-vehicle accidents result from "thoughtless right-hand turning" on the part of drivers. Urging motorists to exercise more caution when turning at street intersections, he said: "A person starting across the street and walking in the same direction you are driving has his back to you as you approach the corner where you are going to turn. Even if that person sees you he does not realize you are going to turn right until you are very close. Surprise and panic and fright all combine to confuse him. "Have your car under such positive control that you can avoid an accident regardless of what that person does. Children, especially are being injured, crippled and killed because some cars are not fully under control while making right-hand turns." Vision Goggles Proving Boon to Boston Police Traffic Officer Fred Deady of Boston wearing a pair of the new rear vision goggles which the police department is trying out here. The Getting a New Point of View. novel spectacles permit him to have an unobstructed view ahead and, at the same time, give him an idea of what is going on behind. AUTOMOBILE FACTS The real cause of noisy and screechy brakes is looseness, and the screech is a high pitched vibration. British magistrates have held careless pedestrians liable for road crashes and ordered them to pay damages. The navy parachute jumper who was injured in an automobile accident probably has his own opinion of the relative safety of air and ground transport. Should the engine seem very rough at speeds of from 22 to 28 miles per hour when accelerating on a moderate hill the vibration damper may need attention. It may become rusty after a winter of use. How the new sphero-prismatic light deflector makes it very easy for the auto driver to see the traffic signal lights, thereby preventing his using the old alibi. "I didn't see the lights." The dotted lines show how the driver looks into the prism on the windshield and sees the reflection of the "stop" or "go" signal. THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY, JULY 12. 1930 1 COMES NOW A "WHITE SEASON" WITH EMPHASIS ON WHITE FOOTWEAR WHITE is so important this summer that the average man cannot afford to go with at least one pair of white AND again summer "goes stepping" with a smile in gay young frocks of colorful prints. The very swankiest prints silhouette their bright flower motifs against pure white backgrounds this season—an effect which is delightfully summery. The charming little frock in the picture is decidedly new. In the first place the bemberg canton crepe of which it is made patterns crimson and green poses on white—a refreshing color scheme this and so distinctly a this season feature. Indeed these dainty prints are proving quite the fabric fad of the hour. Very often the print is in a single color such as a stencil effect in pale green on white, perhaps navy on white or that which is quite the thing this season—black on white. It is plain to be seen that this duremale is exceedingly fashion-wise, for she knows what's what in accessories, wearing a white cheapau and white kid shoes, as she does, with this color-touched white frock of hers. COMES NOW A "WH EMPHASIS ON WHITE is so important this summer that the average woman cannot afford to go without at least one pair of white shoes, and as many more as her social position demands. Long white sports coats are posed over either white or pastel frocks, and with these coats white kid shoes, either all white or delicately trimmed with pastel, black or blue are smartest. The white kid shoe trimmed with brown leads for street and spectator sports wear, and will be worn with pastel frocks and suits regardless of their tint, as was the case at Palm Beach this winter. Next to the brown-trimmed shoes comes that trimmed with black, and next in order the white shoe touched with navy blue. There will, however, be an equal number of all-white shoes worn for naturally the white frock calls for the white shoe. The sweet girl graduate will doubtless require the all-white shoes, and there will be about 250,000 of them graduating from high schools and such shortly. Best of all most of the kid of which modern shoes are made comes in wash qualities that can be easily kept clean with soap and water. y Your Copy or an Acqu The importance of white gloves, white footwear, white headwear cannot be overrated. This trend to white is also obvious in the coat realm, the latest being to top one's colorful frock with an all-white coat of unusual weave, adding hat, gloves, shoes and pocketbook in immaculate white. Very often the kid shoes and the pocketbook are trimmed with a wee bit of color, repeating an outstanding tone in the print or pastel of the frock. As worn with the now-so-popular crepe sports dresses in monotone pastels, white footwear and headwear vie with self-colored accessories. It is well worth while keeping in mind a vogue is now far on its way, highlighting white accessories with navy or black cloth suits—not forgetting the white gardenia on the lapel of the smart tailored jacket. Referring again to the dress in the picture, its little cap sleeves also indicate its last-moment styling. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. (© 1930 Western Newspaper Union.) TE SEASON" WITH WHITE FOOTWEAR For the most part where trimming in color are used, there is very little of the color. Narrow bands, appliques, small motifs and pipings usually do the trick, except in the spectator sports types which often have toes and heels of brown, black or blue. Perforations are also much used as a trim. In the representative group herewith the white kid shoes shown at the top to the left are in a one-strap buckle model, the vamp and strap of white lizard. A pair of white kid T-strap shoes (below to left) fashion the unusual strap and trim of white lizard. In the circle white kid shoes for spectator sports wear are trimmed with black kid heels and tips, also perforations. White kid pumps with a touch of pastel trim are worn with the cunning suit of pastel pink jacquard khaki kool, pictured at the top. The bolero worn with the one-piece frock is scalloped all around as is the hemline of the dress. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. (©, 1930, Western Newspaper Union.) copy of The aint ance w TURNED DOWN FLAT BY REPUBLICANS, NORTH AND SOUTH, IN PATRONAGE AND LEGISLATION. The Federal Service Endorsing What Judge Parker Said-Tammany Hall—U. S. Senators and Governors Warned—Very Interesting. (Special to The Gazette) Jersey City, N. J.—The N. A. A. C. P. led in the fight to prevent the confirmation, as an associate justice of the U. S. Supreme Court, of Judge John J. Parker of North Carolina because he had expressed himself as opposed to the NEGROES of North Carolina in doing to do with politics. The association has but its work has just begun if it would eliminate from responsible judicial and governmental positions white men who feel as did Judge Parker but are too cowardly to express it. There seems to be a nationwide attitude expressing itself by preventing our people from holding any appetitive positions of trust and honor. The federal service has all but put into practice what Judge Parker said. Governors of states, Republican and Democratic, have refrained from appointing colored persons to state positions. The Negro vote that was disfranchised in the South, by keeping them from the ballot-box through intimidation and slander, has been the North and East but this same vote is disfranchised from holding office even though it votes regularly. This situation is up to our voters in states where they vote. Tammany Hall is an exception to this rule of preventing Negroes from holding lucrative offices. It has taken the Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi vote that has migrated to New York and has in local and state matters made Democrats of them. The Republican party is at present the white man's party of the North. The white man's party of the North Democratic vote of white men can make the North Democratic. Will the Negro do it? By political birth, Negroes are Republicans and it is with difficulty that he is pried loose from the party of his birth. The process of prying him loose has be- OHIO'S PIONEER MOB VIOLENCE ACT. To the Editor of The News, The Press and The Phileader, Dear Sirs:—I notice in your paper June 27, '30, that our County Prosecutor's office has "broken out" again in criticism of the most effective anti-mob violence legislation in this country and in a very weak effort to "play to the gallery" with its work against suits filed against the mob. In the injury sustained by persons at the hands of members of local mobs. Just how "antiquated" the Ohio Mob Violence Act or Anti-Lynching Law is can best be understood when it is recalled that nearly every governor of a state in this union, who has recommended legislation against the police, has corporated in his recommendation the principle upon which the Ohio Law is built. Illinois, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Kentucky and several other northern states have laws that are duplicates of the Ohio Mob Violence Act. This same thing is true of every anti-lynching bill introduced in the U.S. Congress in the last fifteen years, includes the Dyer law now pending. If Christ Lexa will carry his case against this county to the Ohio Supreme court, the County Prosecutor's office will get a rude shock when it learns that the Common Pleas court judgment of $750 in his case is upheld. Nearly all of the anti-mob or anti-lynching legislation in this country enacted by the various state assemblies, is based on the pioneer Ohio Mob Violence Act or Anti-Lynching Law DE PRIEST WRONG! Congressman Oscar DePriest of Chicago, our only member of the U. S. House of Representatives, spoke in Youngstown, last week Friday night, and made his first major mistake that we have noticed in all the many speeches he has delivered since being elected a congressman. The foregoing, of course, providing he is correctly quoted in The Youngstown Daily Vindicator of June 28, '30. In opening his speech, which was delivered in our Centenary M. E. church, that city, Mr. DePriest is quoted as saying: "The most important social equality, the Negro desires only that he be given the full rights of a citizen of the United States." Our Congressman is wrong! We want and need, just as much as any other race, group or class of citizens in this country, social and every other kind of equality enjoyed by them. Indeed, if we are to compete successfully with them, we must enjoy all kinds of equality, too. And it is the merest nonessence of our President, and also endeavor to create an impression to the contrary. Then, too, it is a pitiful reflection upon him or any other member of the race who attempts to make so harmful a concession to the prejudice against our people in this country. He does not voice the sentiment of the intelligent of our people when he makes such unfortunate statements as the two quoted above. And, too, they are harmful, very harmful, indeed! Stop it, brother. Mr. DePriest is also quoted as having "begged the audience not to re-elect the two U. S. Senators from Ohio who voted against the Negro by supporting Parker." Mr. DePriest may or may not be right in the foregoing. Ten years ago, Judge John gun. Republican U. S. senators should watch well their step, for they can keep the Negro Republican or make him Democratic. Every Republican senator should consider the numerical strength of his colored constituency. In the division of patronage, among his constituency, he should give the colored portion what belongs to it. His willingness to do this will force him to join the party to act upon his recommendation when this is a policy of the party. Republican governors of states, like Ohio, Illinois, Indiana, New Jersey, Delaware, West Virginia, Missouri and Massachusetts, should ponder well their attitude toward our vote in dispensing patronage. Back of the unwillingness, to give the colored man a position, trust, lies the smobish racial policy that a colored man should hold no position which places a white person where he is to serve under him. This doctrine is as damnable as the Parker position. This position grows stronger in proportion as our vote becomes more intelligent. It is folly to expect many colored people to accuse the colored voter as a bait betwixt two. Southern Democrats control the Democratic party and they are the arch enemies of the colored voter. On the other hand, the Democratic Negro policy and sentiment have invaded the Republican party and has practically become its policy. Shall the Negro go into the camp of his enemies and strive to be friends or shall he fight it out inside of his party and force recognition? This congressional election will feel the Negro's reaction in one way or the other. At any rate colored brother, deliver yourself by using your head, and vote! (Rev.) Wm. A. Byrd. J. Parker of North Carolina, when the Republican candidate for governor of his state, said he did not believe in Afro-Americans of his state participating in politics, or something to that effect. Less than ten months ago, the Judge handed down a decision in the Richmond (Va.) segregation case which helps our people of the entire country far more than his unfortunate statement of ten years ago hurt us. Therefore, we fail to feel that U. S. Senator Roscoe C. McCulloch of Wisconsin candidate for reelection, this fall committed "such a crime" against us when he voted for Judge John J. Parker, as Congressman DePriest, the socialistic leadership of the N. A. A. C. P. and others would have us believe. That erratic "Blossom Triplet," Councilman Roy Bundy, said in speaking of the 17th ward club's endorsement of the candidacy of Atty. Arthur H. Day, for county prosecutor: "I am endorsing him with all my body and soul." Rather a queer statement from an individual whose endorsement of anybody or anything it might endorse, it does not exhibition, however. Bundy's endorsement of the Day candidacy, as a matter of fact, will hurt it a great deal more than it will help it. This same is true of his and Councilman George's "messing in" the Payne-Fleming fight in ward 11. It has hurt Payne's side of the controversy. His effort to become ward leader in the council has shown a disposition to grab too much, in this day and time of new ideas and different alignments. Someone other than Payne should and will be leader of ward 11. The Rounder was reminded the other day of the fact that about the only appointment that Payne has secured, he gave to a man, (Harvey Atkins), who does not live in ward 11 and does not work in the council district, but is a resident of Councilman Clayborne George's bailwick, the fourth district; and that Bundy has been unable to date to place either Dr. O. A. Childress or Clarence Shaw, managers of his campaign, but did get a little job in a county office for his brother. What's become of that clerkship in the office of the councilman, Clarence Shaw Triplets' claim they were promised, many weeks ago, when they "waved" their opposition to the reappointment of Color-Line Welfare Director Dudley S. Blossom? JOHN P. GREEN Attorney-at-Law Room 510, Blackstone Bldg. 1426 West 3rd Street CLEVELAND, OHIO Notary Public Office Phone: Main 2912 Rec.: 614 East 107th St. 'Phone, Glen. 8458. Get started at once selling this wonderful dessert. You can make it yourself. A delicious home made tasty pie ever—just i much better than the store bought. Everything in the Filling. Just add water, and the pie is ready. It is always ready and never fails to delight. Work Spare Time or Full Time Sell to housewives, restaurants, bakeries, ketchup stores, etc. Everybody buys stainless steel furniture. Putupin for vases, lem- mons, staircase. Putupin for vases, lem- mons, staircase. Each package makes from 5 to 6 pies. Not sold in the U.S. or Canada. American product. Prime Sport News Serret Sammy Recovers. Sergel Sammy. Sammy Bleier. The game New York welterweight that he was taken from Taylor Bowl to St. Alexis Hospital in what was feared to be a dangerous condition after he had been technically knocked out by Baby Joe Gans, last week Wednesday night, was discharged from the hospital, the next day. Sammy collapsed in the twelfth and fourth bout and after rallying in his dressing room, became unconscious again when he reached the hospital. But he recuperated speedily before morning and complained of nothing more than a heavy head on awakening from a sound sleep. At Taylar Bowl, Tuesday evening, Big George Godfrey, champion heavyweight pugilist, technically kayoed Frankie Simms (white), local heavyweight, in the second round of what was to have been a ten-round bout. He floored Simms three times. Godfrey weighed 248 pounds and Simms 205. Seven thousand persons saw Big George toy with Simms for one and one-half rounds. Bob Moody knocked young Peter Johnson for mat eleven times, three rounds, and put out and was another technique kayoed winner. Long Leroy Bryant was outpointed in his bout with Cato Colabaaba. Next week Monday night, Bob Moody and the venerable deacon fighter, Tut Jackson, of Washington C. H., O., will perform at the Bowl. Night Game. July 16. A great novelty attraction is carded for Cleveland, next Wednesday night, July 16, when the Kansas City Monarchs, pennant winners of our National League, meet the Houston Grays, famous fans of Pittsburgh, and the Houston game (at 8:45 P.M. at Hooper Field. This game is sponsored by Lem R. Williams and local associates who "made good" here in 1928 and "29. The Monarchs are led by the clever "Bullet" Rogan and the Grays have the great Oscar Charleston. The Monarchs are led by the right match which cost $62,000. Twenty thousand fans saw two games in Detroit, last week. PROTECT them from Tuberculosis Keep them away from sick people.. Insist on plenty of rest . . Train them in health habits . . Consult the doctor regularly . . A Baby in Your Home The Remarkable Influence of a Doctor's Prescription After Years of Cruel Disappointment 1900 Hundreds of married women, childless for years, suddenly find them, after a long period of unfulfillment, anticipation due to the influence of a doctor's most wonderful prescription, Mrs. Anne M. Middleton, Glenview, caurie who really wants what Dr. Elders' prescription can do as I had longed for a baby and two years ago I took a six weeks treatment. He is eighteen months old. I haven't words to express how much this medicine has done for me" Every man should be able to children should at once write to the doctor and get a free trial of this prescription on book for his unfulfillment of instruction. For your convenience fill the coupon and mail it today. PRESCRIPTION COUPON Dr. H. Will Elders 8711 Ballinger Bldg, St. Joseph, Mo. Please send me a free trial of your treatment for Stirility and Instruction on how to use it. I enclose 10c for postage and payment. Name: St. Address or R. F. D. City: State: Reading It