The Gazette

Saturday, August 8, 1931

Cleveland, Ohio

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THE NEED OF REAL RACE LEADERSHIP IN UNION IS STRONGER FORTY-EIGHTH YEAR THE The s of our YOU ARE RESPONSIBLE YOU ARE RESPONSIBLE YOU and W LET'S PU The Empire S CERTIFICAT GHTH YEAR No. 51. E NEE The Strength of our Union RESPONSIBLE—for your Financi RESPONSIBLE—for our Financi YOU and WE grow together LET'S PULL TOGETHER Empire Savings & Lo CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE FORTY-EIGHTH YEAR No.51. STATE OF OHIO DIVISION OF INSURANCE The undersigned, CHAIR of Insurance of the State DOMESTIC LIFE & ACCIDENT principal office is located at has complied with the laws authorized during the current appropriate business of insu Its financial condition it have been as follows on Doc Aggregate amount of avail Aggregate amount of liab including re-insurance Net assets ...... Amount of actual paid-up o Surplus ...... Income for the year ...... Expenditures for the year ...... WITNESS my name and the day and year first above Superb Note—This Certificate is general circulation in Cuyah of the Recorder of said Cou Columbus, April 1 Undersigned, CHARLES T. WARNER, Sussex of the State of Ohio, hereby certify LIFE & ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMMERCE is located at LOUISVILLE, State of KY with the laws of this State applicable during the current year to transact in the business of insurance. follows on December 31, 1930: amount of available assets amount of liabilities (except capital), mg re-insurance reserve sets actual paid-up capital the year is for the year ISS my name and the Official Seal of the year first above written. CHARLES T. WARNER Superintendent of Insurance of This Certificate must be published in a publication in Cuyahoga County and filed in order of said County. New Low Prices The Woodland - E. 55th Street Market at Woodland and E. 55th Street SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY, June Granulated, Sacks, 10 pound Vernon, tall 16-oz, cans, 4 for by Santos, per pound and Dressing, quart jars Tomato Soup, 4 cans Age Ivory, ONIK GROCERY—Units 53 ARE RIBS, pound T, Rib, per pound CARENCE E. FOX—Unit 18 KS, pound coast, per pound EISTER & SCHMIEDL—Un Columbus, April 1, 1931. The undersigned, CHARLES L. WARNER, Superintendent of Insurance of the State of Ohio, hereby certify that the DOMESTIC LIFE & ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY whose principal office is located at LOUISVILLE, State of KENTUCKY, has complied with the laws of this State applicable to it and is authorized during the current year to transact in this State its appropriate business of insurance. Its financial condition is shown by its annual statement to have been as follows on December 31, 1930: Aggregate amount of available assets $370,404.34 Superintendent of Insurance of Ohio. Note—This Certificate must be published in a newspaper of general circulation in Cuyahoga County and filed in the office of the Recorder of said County. Woodland Street Woodland a FOOD SPECIALS F SUGAR, Fine Granulated Cloth Sacks, 10 po Milk, Belle Vernon, tall 16- Coffee, Fancy Santos, per p Widlar's Salad Dressing, qu Campbell's Tomato Soup, 4 SOAP, Large Ivory, bar DUDNIK GROC FRESH SPARE RIBS, per pound Boiling Beef, Rib, per pou CLARENCE ALL STEAKS, per pound Beef Pot Roast, per pound BAUMEISTER & Fresh Salt Water Mullets, pound ..... 1 Pike or Perch, 2 pounds ..... 1 PETE DALEY— Units 1-2 BUTTER, Ohio Creamer pound ..... 1 Eggs, Fresh Eggs, dozen Cheese, Brick or Longhorn EDWARDS CR Cottage Butts, Hickory Sm Smoked Country Sausage, Bologna, Sliced or Piece, po WALTER H POTATOES, Fancy No. 1 10 pounds Peaches, Large Georgia Free CHAS. SPITA Ohio Creamery, 1 Eggs, dozen bak or Longhorn, pound WARDS CREAMERY—Unit Uses, Hickory Smoked, Lean, per pound Entry Sausage, pound ced or Piece, pound WALTER HAHN—Unit 37 Us, Fancy No. 1 New Spuds, pounds age Georgia Free Stones, 7 pounds HAS. SPITALIERI—Unit 30 MALT AND HOPS Red Top or American Beauty, Hop Flavored or Plain, 2 for 85c Cappers, (Reg. 85c) each.....59c B. BESUNER—Units 3-4 Red Top or American Beauty Cappers, (Reg. 85c) each ... B. BESUN Navy Beans, per pound ... Blue Rose Rice, per pound... FLOUR, (Household) 2 1½ bbl. ... Uni BREAD { Wrapped, 16-oz } Wrapped, 24-oz Cheese Kuchens, Regular 2 Supreme Cream Crackers, R WOLF BAK At Point of Transfer 4 C Kinsman and East 55th St American Beauty, Hop Flavored or Plain eg. 85c) each B. BESUNER—Units 3-4 per pound price, per pound Household) 24½ or l. Units 5-6-7 Wrapped, 16 oz. size Wrapped, 24 oz. size Lens, Regular 25c, for ram Crackers, Regular 12½c each, 2 ft WOLF BAKERY—Unit 41 Transfer 4 Car Lines—Woodland, and East 55th Street.—Shop on Your BREAD { Wrapped, 16-oz. size .....5c { Wrapped, 24-oz. size .....7c Cheese Kuchens, Regular 25c, for .....18c Supreme Cream Crackers, Regular 12\} \frac{1}{4} c each, 2 for .....15c WOLF BAKERY—Unit 41 At Point of Transfer 4 Car Lines—Woodland, Buckeye, Kinsman and East 55th Street.—Shop on Your Transfer. ```markdown ``` Open Saturday Until 10 P.M. I - E. 55th Market E. 55th Street SATURDAY, AUG. 8 49c ans, 4 for.....254 jars.....174 28c 25c 10c RY—Units 53-57 8c 8c FOX—Unit 18 25c 15c HMIEDL—Unit 32 FISH 25c l.....20c d.....19c MERY—Unit 31 Lean, per pound.....23c d.....19c IN—Unit 37 w Spuds,.....19c ies, 7 pounds.....25c ERI—Unit 30 Top Flavored or Plain, 2 for 85c .....59c ## —Units 3-4 ce .....5c or .....5c .....59c ## 5-6-7 ce .....5c ce .....7c or .....18c or 12½ c each, 2 for .....15c THE GAZETTE Open Daily Until 6 P. M. ESTABLISHED, AUGUST 25, 1883 And Issued Every Week on Time Since CLEVELAND, OHIO, SATURDAY, AUGUST 8, 1931. FRESH OHIO NEWS FRESH OHIO NEWS WRITTEN BY "THE OLD RELIABLE" GAZETTE'S CORRESPONDENTS. What Our People Are Doing Each Week—Church, Personal, Social, Lodge, Literary and Musical—Marriages, Deaths, Etc. YOUNGSTOWN.—The annual harvest home-coming is planned for early in September before the annual conference at Oakhill Ave. A. M. E. church.—Charles Boiling post's drum and bugle band, V. F. W., held a largely attended meeting, Wednesday evening, on Haymen St., the features of which were dancing and a barbeque luncheon. Thos. B. Ash, chair.—The Mystic club gave its fourth annual ball, last evening, at the "Embassy." J. Frank Terry and orchestra of Chicago, furnished music.—Young Miss Robinson is visiting Mrs. Nona Berry Price in Cleveland.—Tell your friends to read "The Reliable" Gazette. ture, must be paid for in advance at the rate of 20 cents a line, six words to a line. Our rates for display advertisements will be sent on application. HILLSBORO. — Mr. and Mrs. C. Dixon, Mr. Chas, Nelson and Miss Nannie Williams spent Wednesday in Cincinnati. — Mrs. C. M. Gragston entertained The Get-to-Gether club, Thursday after noon. — Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jones of Batavia were here, Sunday evening.—Rev. Parker, Mr. and Mrs. D. Highwarden, Mrs. Burr and daughter attended the basket-meeting, Sunday afternoon, at George CORRESPONDENTS 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 wrapper about returned copies, if proper credited, for them is desired. Lists of names, addresses, obliquary notices, inquiries for relatives and advertisements of all kinds, including items announcing entertainment to be held in the near fur- IN ALABAMA. One Negro killed, five wounded and some 50 arrested on various charges are the results to date of the efforts of a sheriff, armed officers and posses to break up meetings in the neighborhood of Camp Hill, Ala. The ever-ready cry of Communism is promptly raised. Communist agitators are charged with seeking to ordain a sheriff. This effort does its usual work of scaring the public into forgetfulness of wrongs and injustices that may be involved. Immediately back of these Alabama troubles are, of course, the recent death sentences imposed upon eight young Negroes "convicted" of assaulting two white girls (tramps). The "trial" took place in a community where prejudice admittedly was strong. Protests against the sentencing of two Negroes (world-wide). An appeal to the Alabama Supreme Court is pending. But the circumstances under which these eight Negroes (one aged 14 years) were condemned to death are not the only thing behind Negro unrest in Alabama. There appear to be deep-seated economic grievances. It is charged that planters hold in a state of practical peonage the Negro tenant farmer to whom they advance credit and supplies. Interest rates as high as 72 per cent, fake bookkeeping and false grading of crops are said to keep these Negro "share croppers" in never-ending bondage to the same masters. And there is little redress for the black man in the courts. Here is a rich soil for Communism. Denouncing Communist agents does not change conditions that fairly beckon Communist propagandists to come in and take action of course. was the aim of the Communist agitators with trouble. And they are likely to meet with some success wherever human beings are conscious of wrongs that the government persistently ignores. It would be too much to expect these Alabama Negroes, one and all, to turn a deaf ear to the blindishments of Communism. Study these Alabama troubles. Find out what the Negro meetings are for before turning sheriffs and possess loose on them. If grounds for protest are legitimate, those grounds become no less legitimate—the obligation of government to find a remedy becomes no less imperative—merely because protest becomes disorderly. Above all, break away from the theory that in these United States even wrong becomes right when Communism points a finger at it and speaks to those who suffer by it.—Editorial from The Cleveland Daily Press. As we go to press, Thursday, Clarence Darrow of Chicago, nationally known criminal lawyer, and Judge James A. Cobb of Washington, D. C. were announced to address the delegates to our annual National Bar Association convention, that evening, in St. John's A. M. E. church. The sessions of the convention were on Thursday and Friday, this week, were sponsored by the local Harlan club. Mrs. Louise Pridgeon, pres. ture, must be paid for in advance at the rate of 20 cents a line, six words a line. Our rates for display advertisements will be sent on application. HILLSBORO. — Mr. and Mrs. C. Dixon, Mr. Chas, Nelson and Miss Nannie Williams spent Wednesday in Cincinnati. — Mrs. C. M. Gragston entertained The Geto-Gether club, Thursday afternoon. — Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jones of Batavia were here, Sunday evening. — Rev. Parker, Mr. and Mrs. D. Highwarden, Mrs. Burr andighter attends the basket-meeting at Georgetown. — Mr. and Mrs. A. Willingham were dinner-guests of Mr. and Mrs. D. Minor in Wilmington, Sunday. — Rev. Jas. L. Smith of Cleveland preached, Sunday night, at New Hope Baptist church. — Mrs. Faith Goodson of Dayton is still ill at her grand-mother's. Appendicitis. Ralph Wood of Dayton visited his parents, Sunday and Monday. — Mrs. John Kilgore of Chicago is here visitations at Winchester. — New Hope Baptist Sr. chap and pastor furnished the services, Monday evening, at the Ripley Baptist church. PATRICIA MARY MOTHER THEODORE Her Death the Result of Over-work —Ladied Soup for the Idle- —Lady of the House New York City.—The above is a good portrait of Mother Mary Theodore whose death, about July 15, is believed to have resulted from strenuous labors in conducting a soup-kitchen for the poor all last winter. She was foundress and supporter of the mads of the Most Pure Heart of Mary, the gregation of our religious. All thru last winter, Mother Theodore insisted upon ladling soup in the kitchen, despite the fact that the burden of the undertaking grew far beyond the proportions first anticipated. She declined to leave it to any of the other sisters. At its conclusion, confined to her bed and dangerously ill a week before her death. Before entering religious life, Mother Theodore's name was Elizabeth Barbara Williams and she was born in Baton Rouge, La. It was in 1922 that she moved her community to this city, coming from Louisiana by way of Philadelphia. Mother Theodore has left behind a community of twenty—fourteen professed sisters and six novices and postulants. Besides a girls' home and the day nursery, with provision for the children, she conduct a Christ Child club, a girls' sadality, two small schools and a variety of other enterprises for Catholics and non-Catholics alike. She and her sisters helped to make possible the work of laymen's retreats begun in 1928 at St. Anthony's Mission house, Tenady, N. J. Pt. Au Prince, Haiti. "The resolution, declaring the Haitien-U. S. treat null and void has passed both Houses of the Legislature and been placed before President Stenio Vincent who will undoubtedly sign it. Good! The treat provides for supervision of Haitien government departments by U. S. experts, and expires in 1936. Rah! For Haiti. BOYDSTON POST Preparing for the State Convention of the American Region—Its Program DID THEY "SIDESTEP"? The Police Chief and One of His Men—The Alexander Case Before Grand Jury. Akron, O.—Prosecutor Don Isham sought, Wednesday, to learn why Police Chief Fred Werntz and Patrolman Byron Eubanks of Barberton, failed to respond to subpenas to appear, Tuesday, before the grand jury. They were to have testified concerning the police abuse of C. Louis Alexander, Afro-American ex-Communist. Isham said he had been told that Eubanks was out of the city on a vacation, and that that man had been sent to general. The jury heard the testimony of Patrolmen James Head, James Robertson, Dean Shannon and four other witnesses but decided not to report on the case until it had heard Werntz and Eubanks. Alexander had already testified that he was driven out of Barberton by policemen who used clubs, whips and their fists on him. He identified Eubanks and Head as two of his assailants. The jury's report will include its decision also on the two riots at Barberton beaten by police and Communists which occurred when Alexander's mistreatment, after his disappearance in February. He returned to this city, last week, to appear before the grand jury. SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS THE THREE ESSENTIALS OF HONEST LEADERSHIP WOULD HELP US MOST, SAYS H. A. CLARKE. Discriminations, Injustices and Inequalities—Incompetent, Untrustworthy and Non-Courageous "Leadership"—Failures. Washington, D. C., Aug. 3, '11. Hon. Harry C. Smith, Editor Gazette, Cleveland, O. Dear Sir: The race needs a leadership that is competent, trustworthy and courageous, and not a leadership that is the possessor of a patriotic tongue, a disloyal heart and a traitorous mind. The great man has been able to discover those who are afraid of with the three essentials of leadership. Political, educational and economic equality will advance the race more than any other trinity, except, the trinity of the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost, whether or not their is an incapable difference between the white and our race, as declared by the late President Warren G. Harding in his Birmingham, Ala., deliverance. If our leadership had not signally failed the race's condition it would be only better than it is, but our "leaders" in personal gain has been a set-back to collective, instead of individual, racial progress. The discriminations, injustices and inequalities complained of by the race in a large measure are properly attributable to incompetent, untrustworthy and non-con courageous leadership, which had the ears of the legislative, executive and judicial heads of the government, but did not request or demand relief. Most of our leaders had the golden rule that they should request if not to demand that they should would have benefitted the race as a whole, but they auctioned off the opportunity and pocketed the gold. A corrupt, putrid and venal leadership of old, with a very few exceptions, bartered, sold and betrayed the race whenever the opportunity presented itself for filthy lucre, "a mess of pottage and thirty pieces of silver." We should not blame any one, for many of the discriminations, injustices and inequalities persecuted upon the race, but blame the leaders of the race, Arnolds, yea, blame the apologists, scyphants and trimmers, who were recognized as the leaders of the race and supposed to champion its cause. Religiously, fraternally and educationally the race has made phenomenal progress, by being segregated from the white race along those lines, but politically and economically in which the race has not been segregated, comparatively it has been segregated. "The Truth is Mighty and It Will Prevail." Politically and economically an advancement equal to the race's religious, fraternal and educational progress is highly improbable, as the nature of the undertakings will not permit substantial progress to be made through segregation, except, in a few economic or business fields. It is undeniable, that the failure of our leaders, to be more constrictive in behavior of the race, has been destabilizing mass advancement and encouraged individual instead of collective progress. As "God works in a mysterious way. His wonders to perform," undoubtedly, it was predestined that the black, or the "Negro" race should not reach the pinnacle of civilization. But it does, and that it is rapidly becoming admixed with the world's leading races, that Eubanks was named as a fourth ab- ALEXANDER NOT DEAD. Grand Jury Investigates Beating of Communities Barberston Fugitive Accusation Akron, O.—C. Louis Alexander, Barberton Afro-American Communist, went before the Summit county grand jury, last week Thursday, leading a parade of nearly a score of witnesses in the investigation of strong charges that he was beaten by Barberton policemen, last February, and driven into exile for more than six months. One phase of the investigation, according to County Prosecutor Don D. Isham, will bring in Mayor Seney Decker, of Barberton, to whom Alexander claims to have complained of mistreatment at the hands of police and others and from whom he received an unfulfilled promise of a searching quiz. Alexander claims the original attack, six months ago, last Thursday picked Patrolman James M. Head and, as his assailants, Head is one of three policemen "acquitted" several weeks ago, on a charge of abducting Alexander. At the time Alexander was absent from the city. 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 comparison with any will immediately establish its rank as one of the NEWSIEST AND BEST published in the interest of Afro-Americans. THE COPY FIVE CENTS RSHIP ENLY FELT. ALS OF HONEST LEADER- HELP US MOST, A. CLARKE. ces and Inequalities—Incom- hy and Non-Courageous hip”—Failures. ductor by friends of Alexander, during the hearing of the other three, is it is fast becoming a composite race, and it is fruitful, multiplying and replenishing the earth, preparatory to subduing it as commanded in Gen. 2:28. If it is God's plan to destroy the racial identity of the earth, it will succeed in the process of amalgamation or otherwise, it will succeed, just as His plan has succeeded in the destruction of the world's peoples, through [Name] Judge Robert Terrell. man's inventive genius, as evidenced by the disastrous bible war that began in 1914, or 2300 days and 70 weeks, which biblically means 2370 years from 456 B. C., when Artaxerxes, emperor of Persia, decreed that Ezra should rebuild and restore Jerusalem, as visionized in the Book of Daniel. Beyond peradventure, the World War, the most destructive occurrence since the deluge, and greetest, conflict between nations and nations, and man and man, was the beginning of the cleansing of the sanctuary preparatory to the coming of the Kingdom, and the second advent of the Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God, as declared in Holy Writ. Lamentable Failures It is incomprehensible how both our National Bar Association and National Association of Teachers, respectively, could hold their sixth and twenty-eighth annual conventions, respectively, in June and August, 1931, in this city, and neglect to place floral tributes on the Lincoln and Grant memorials, and appropriately commemorate Gen. O. O. Howard, John M. Langston, George F. T. Cook, and others, of national fame. It was proper to honor the tomb of the unknown soldier, and the graves of the late Municipal Judge Robert H. Terrell, Col. Charles Young and MaJ. James E. Walker, but our lawyers and teachers should have commemorated Lincoln, the emancipator; Grant the Civil War commander; Howard, the founder of Howard University; Langston, our first and only dean of Howard's Law Department; Cook our first and only superintendent of schools in the District of Columbia, the sure to honor the above-named, and should not occur again, or national race conventions should be held elsewhere than in the capital city of the nation which not only set nearly five million of our people free, but made it possible for them to enjoy the constitutional rights, privileges and immunities of citizens, and to be something more than "hewers of wood and drawers of water." The fact is, there is a certain class of our people who are, figuratively speaking, moving heaven and earth to perpetuate the memory of their relatives and friends by crowning them with royal diadems, to the exclusion of others whom they are enumbling to obliterate from the memory of mankind for their noble efforts in behalf of God and country. But the rank and file should not permit this to be done without a vehement protest. Give honor where honor is due as there is glory enough for all. H. A. Clarke. One Year ..... $2.00 Six Months ..... 1.00 Subscribers are requested to remit by postoffice money order or registered letter. Entered at the postoffice in Cleveland, Ohio, as second-class mail matter 226 W. Superior Ave., Cleveland, O. (Bell 'Phone: CHerry 1259) Member Ohio Legislature: 1894 to 1896; 1896 to 1898; 1900 to 1902. 10,000,000 Afro-Americans. 325,000 in Ohio. 75,000 in Cleveland. SATURDAY, AUGUST 8, 1931. Afro-Americans number 11,891,134, according to the latest census figures. This is an increase (from Jan. 1, 1920 to Apr. 1, 1930) of 1,428,012. As a matter of fact, we now number, in this country, more than twelve million people. --- M. E. Bishop Robert E. Jones of New Orleans was one of the five vice-presidents elected by the international convention of the twentieth World's Conference Y. M. C. A.s which met in Public Hall, this city, this week. Judge Frederick A. Henry (white), a resident of Cleveland, was another. HER "DEEP HORROR"! Lady Astor, the Virginia wife of a well-known "Englishman" who arrived in this country, recently, from a visit to Russia in company with the great English author, George Bernard Shaw, expressed "deep horror" at the proposed electrocution, of the eight or nine young victims of southern race prejudice, at Scottsboro, Ala., one of them only fourteen years of age, and all "convicted" on a trumped up charge of assaulting two white prostitutes who with two white male vagrants were stealing a ride on a freight train in that state. Lady Astor couldn't and wouldn't have so expressed herself but for her long residence and close contact with the best English people. Had she remained in Virginia, or in any other section of the south, and probably in the north, too, for that matter, never would she have so expressed herself in the columns of New York's leading dailies and those of many other leading newspapers of the country. What the whites of the south and about all of those in the north need most is the refining influence Lady Astor's case is such a fine example of. AN OUTSTANDING VICTORY! Dr. Wm. A. Byrd, in our last issue, gave a very interesting account of the long drawn-out battle he fought with high officials of the Presbyterian church over the possession of his old charge, Lafayette church of Jersey City, N. J. For three years the Jersey City Presbytery, aided and abetted by the best brains of the Presbyterian church, not only in New Jersey but of the entire country, fought desperately and failed utterly to sustain the four false charges brot against Dr. Byrd. We know all of our readers join us in rejoicing with him as a result of his great victory, one he thoroly merited. For years Dr. Byrd, one of the most loyal, thoughtful and aggressive members of the race, has been a leading and one of the best contributors to the columns of "The Old Reliable" and, therefore, is a highly respected member of The Gazette "family" all of whom felicitate him. The one of the two "National Baptist Conventions," of which Rev. L. K. Williams of Chicago is the leader, is soon to convene in Atlanta, Ga. The greatest concern of this organization, it seems, is the publishing house it built, seven years ago in Nashville, Tenn., at a cost of nearly a half million dollars. In a release to newspapers, sent out from that city, Aug. 3, '31, apparently by Secretary A. M. Townsend, we find the following sentence: "With the heavy debt, caused by the building, on its shoulders the church has its back to the wall." The old, old story, made notorious by our southern brethren in that section of the country and in this section, too. How they do love to "do big things," or at least attempt them before they are able to do well, little things. The same release informs us that "the issue at Atlanta is to be. Save the publish- A BY EMMA LOU FETTA "HOW the children grow out of their clothes!" exclaimed one mother. "How they wear out their clothes!" sighed the second mother. And right then and there we thought that while the first speaker was undoubtedly stating an undeniable and inescapable fact, the second one was just a bit lame in making a sound knowledge about the clothing of children. Children's clothes, no more than any one's else, should not "wear out" to the degree that this mother's tone expressed. The difficulty probably is that Mother No. II buys blindly. She doesn't say as she should: "I want pure wool or a mixture with a strong attractive toweling cotton"; or, "I want pure silk—not weighted," or, "I want good cotton for plain clothes and soft, strong dureen cotton for better clothes." however, is become matter of for her or know no to look down more than pearl sophistrate ments as that will illuminate about the clothing of children. "Underful, comfult without choice of mothers. knit made of pure wool or a mixture with a strong attractive toweling cotton"; or, "I want pure silk—not weighted," or, "I want good cotton for plain clothes and soft, strong dureen cotton for better clothes." The buyer of children's underwear in one of the biggest and most famous department stores in New York told us the other day, ing house'', and quotes Secretary Townsend of the convention as saying: "I cannot carry the publishing house any longer, than the convention in Atlanta, under the present policy which requires us to use our funds to pay for the publishing of 'The Voice', minutes, finance drives and other things which do not help the publishing house in any way." As a matter of common sense and fact, so expensive "a publishing home," even that it might be named, "Morris Memorial Building", ought never to have been built. In this section of the country alone, there have been so many sad experiences of this kind, including many resulting from the purchase of entirely too expensive churches and other buildings by the "brothers and sisters from down home" since the inflow of 1917, that it is high time for us to stress the doing of little things well instead of continuing to strive to do "big things." The Nashville "white elephant" is only the latest to appear upon the scene. HEAR! HEAR!! WHAT'S DOING! A number of our local ministers and many church people in the East End are considerably wrought up over the carnival at the corner of E. 79th St. and Cedar Ave. They claim that there are gambling devices, etc., on the grounds. Persons who have been told by concessionaires at the stands that it is being conducted for the financial benefit of Councilman George's East End Political club. This is not apt to promote the councilman's candidacy for re-election, this fall, even if his club does get some "mazumia" from the carnival. The following paragraph is taken bodily from the article on our first page, signed by H. A. Clarke, and published in this department because it fits "The Blossom Triplets". Councilman George, Payne and Bundy, better than anything the hamster has seen in print, any where, for a "long, long time". Here it is. "The discriminations, injustices, and inequalities complained of by (members of) the race (in this community) in a large measure are probably attributable to incompetent, untrustworthy and non-courageous individuals of the legislative, executive and judicial heads of the (city) government, but did not request or demand relief." There you have it "in a nut shell." More than a SCORE of our young men and women have been denied city positions and jobs, as well as some under the board of education, they won in civil service elections only to be demanded down because of their color or race, and lack of assistance which would M --- however, that the average mother is becoming much wiser in this matter of quality and good taste for her children. Mothers-in-the-know no longer want their children to look drab or "second-season" any more and want them to appear sophisticated and they appear illustrate this in buying undergarments as well as outer garments that will wear, keep their shape and charm. She said: "Undergarments that are healthful, comfortable and fine in quality without being 'showy' are the choice of the vast majority of the women of the country to knit underwear, and especially that made of durene mesh is particularly favored. The style preferred is the union suit with French cut legs, the garment buttoning all the way down the front. It is popular with both boys and girls." How good to know that your children are dressed, economically dressed, and "growing out" of, not "wearing out" their carefully purchased clothing. have been afforded, if our people had the right kind of representatives in the City Council. From this viewpoint, Councilman George Payne and Bundy, "The Blossom Triplets," as members of the local City Council, are notorious jokes, and about everybody knows this, too. This fall, Undertaker Rogers' candidacy will "uncover" all of Councilman Payne's many mistakes, and former councilman, Dr. E. J. Gregg's candidacy will do the same thing for Councilman Bundy. These two third district political "birds," and Councilman George of the third district, have made political ax in November, Hundreds, yea thousands of Republicans, in the third district they pledged to do. DUDLEY S. BLOSSOM all in their power to help out Director of Welfare Dudley S. Blossom, are waiting patiently for election day to get even with them for breaking their pledge. It was Hopkins and Blossom, all will recall, who for more than four years kept our internes from training in the City Hospital and our girls from at boy's school. His school is "The boy, what will happen to "The Blossom Triplets" early in November! 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 by others in their own interest as well as worked by others for their own advancement and not ours. George W. Blount. THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O., SATURDAY, AUGUST 8, 1931. SEE THAT GUY THERE HES JR. MORGAN IF I COULD STICK MY GOOD EAR IN THERE, ILL GET WE COULD GET SOME DOPE ON WHICH WE COULD CLEAN UP THOSE FELLOWS TALK LESS THAN CALVIN COOLIDGE YEAH, GOY, BUT WHEN THEY OPEN THEIR PANS THEY SAY SOME-THING YOU ACT LIKE YOU WAS DEAF AND DUMG AND TALK ON YOUR FINGERS YOU LOOK DUMG ANYWAY DO ANY ONE EVER MAKE A STATUE OF YOU AND CALL IT INTELLIGENCE THAT'S ROCKEFELLER TALKING TO MORGAN NOW. GO UP AND LISTEN WHAT DID THEY SAY TO GUY? HE TOLD MORGAN THERE IS A SWELL LITTLE QUIET JOINT WHICH IS THE BEST PLACE TO EAT IN PARIS American News Features, Inc. OUR LESSON OHIO'S MOB VIOLENCE ACT OR ANTI-LYNCHING LAW LEADS THE COUNTRY IN EFFECTIVE LEGISLATION Against the Mob and Lynch-Murder—Three Years' Work of a Member of the Race—Also His Ohio Civil Rights Law. Our mo.-violence or anti-lynching bill was introduced in the Ohio legislature in 1894 and re-introduced in 1896. It took the Hon. Harry C. Smith, editor of The Gazette, just three years to secure its enactment into law. The Ohio Supreme Court has several times upheld the constitutionality of the law and it has been very effective. Illinois, Pennsylvania and New Jersey have followed Ohio's lead and enacted mob violence or anti-lynching laws which are copies of our Ohio law. Several other northern 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: Section 6278. "Mob" and "lynching" defined. 6279. "Serious injury" defined. 6280. Damages in case of assault. 6281. Damages in case of lynching. 6282. Damages recoverable by legal representative of victim of lynching. 6283. Person suffering death or injury by mob trying to lynch another. 6284. Penalties of action. 6285. Order to include recovery and costs in tax levy. 6286. Guardian custody, etc., fees. 6287. County's right of action against member of mob. 6288. County's right of action against another county. 6289. Non-relief from prosecution. Section 6278. A collection of people assembled for an unlawful purpose and intending to do damage or injury to one, or pretending to exercise correct power over other persons by violence and without authority of law, shall be deemed a "mob" for the purpose of this chapter. An act of violence by a mob upon the body of any person shall constitute a "lynching" within the meaning of this chapter. (93 v. 162 2.) Section 6283. A person suffering death or injury from a mob attempting to lynch another person shall come within the provisions of this chapter. He or his legal representative as a purposeful injured or killed by such a mob. (93 v. 162 6). Section 6284. Action for the recoveries provided for in this chapter must be commenced, within two years from the date of such lynch Section 6279. The term "serious injury," for the purpose of this chapter, shall include such inquiry as permanently or temporarily disables the person receiving it from earning a livelihood by manual labor. (93 v. 161 3.) Section 6280. A person taken from officers of justice by a mob and assaulted with whips, clubs, missiles or in any other manner, may recover, as hereafter provided, a sum not to exceed one thousand dollars as damages from the county in which the assault is made. (93 v. 161 4.) Section 6281. A person assaulted and lynched by a mob may recover, from the county in which such assault is made a sum not to exceed five hundred dollars; or, if the injury received therefrom is serious, a sum not exceeding one thousand dollars as damages if such injury is permanent disability, to earn a livelihood by manual labor, a sum not to exceed five thousand dollars. (93 v. 12 5.) Section 6282. The legal representative of a person dying from injuries received from lynching by a mob, may recover of the county in which such injury occurred, a sum not to exceed five thousand dollars damages for such unlawful killing. Such sum shall be applied to the 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 distributed to the survivors, share and share alike, the widow receiving an amount equal to a child's share, or the child 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 so recovered shall not be a part of the estate of such person so lynched, nor be subject to any of his liabilities. (93 v. 162 6.) AN OPPORTUNITY! "The Old Reliable" Gazette deifies an active agent and correspondent in every city and town in Ohio and neighboring states having a number of Afro-American residents. Only a little time on Fridays or Saturdays is required to make some money. We are especially desirous of hearing from persons in the following named cities: Springfield, Columbus, Toledo, Steubenville, Zanesville, Wilmington, Xenia, Washington C. H., Lancia, Pica, Lima, O., and other places, particularly in Ohio, where we have none. Write to the editor of The Gazette 226 West Superior Ave., Cleveland, O. and terms will be given promptly. Our readers will oblige by sending us the addresses of persons in the cities named, and others in the state, to whom we can write relative to the matter. Editor. Attention! Readers! Our advertisers want your trade. Those who do not ask for it in the columns of "The Old Reliable" Gazette certainly cars 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. Editor. Section 6283. A person suffering death or injury from a mob attempting to lynch another person shall come within the provisions of this chapter. He or his legal representation, as one have a like right of action as one have a like right of action or killed by such a mob. (93 v. 162.) Section 6284. Action for the recoveries provided for in this chapter must be commenced, within two years from the date of such lynching, in any court having original jurisdiction of an action for damages for malicious assault. (93 v. 162 7.) Section 6285. An order to the commissioners of a county, against which such recovery is had, to include in such recovery of action, in the next succeeding tax year, county, shall be a part of the judgment in every such case. (93 v. 162 8.) Section 6286. If the decedent so lynched has minor children surviving him, the fund shall be turned over to a regularly appointed guardian. Such guardian shall administer such fund under the direction of the probate judge, allowing not more than five hundred dollars for counsel fees in the action for such recovery. (93 v. 162 9.) Section 6287. The county, in which a lynching occurs, may recover the amount of a judgment and costs against it in favor of the legal representatives of a person killed or murdered by a mob from any of the persons composing such A person present, with hostile intent, at such lynching shall be deemed a member of the mob and be liable to such action. (93 v. 162 10.) Section 6288. If a mob carries a prisoner into another county, or comes from another county to commit violence on a prisoner brought from such county for safekeeping, the county in which the lynching is committed may recover the amount of the judgment and costs from the counts from which the mob came, unless the court controls on the engagement on the part of officials of such county in failing to protect such prisoner or dispurse such mob. (93 v. 163 11.) Section 6289. This chapter shall 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 Rights law which the editor had enacted while a member of the 71st General Assembly, in 1894; The General Code of Ohio: *Sec. 12940. Whoever, being the proprietor or employee keeper or manager of a salon, restaurant, eating house, barber-shop, public conveyance by land or water, theater or other place of public accommodation and amusement, denies to a citizen, except for reasons applicable alike to all citizens and regardless of race or color, the full enjoyment of the amenities and privileges they impose 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 fifty dollars nor more than fifty dollars, and the person aggrieved thereby to be recovered in any court of competent jurisdiction in the county where such offense was committed. This law has repeatedly been held constitutional and good law by the Ohio Supreme court. The trouble is our people will not use it as often as they should, but expect it to do for them what they should and must do for themselves, under it, in the courts. THE MAY COMPANY Clearance of Fine Summer Wash Goods 19 c yd. Formerly 29c, 39c, 49c and 59c Yard Check these fabrics if you want to get in on a big value. Check these fabrics if you're vacation bound and need a few more Summer frocks to tide you over. Every one a sensational value. 29c Printed Batiste 39c Printed Voile 39c Printed Dimity 49c Printed Handkerchief Lawns 49c William Anderson's Wash Fabrics 39c Printed Lace Weaves 59c Printed Chiffon Voiles 59c Marvlo Wash Fabrics 49c Hesslein Wash Fabrics 39c Noveltex Wash Fabrics 29c Peter Pan Wash Fabrics The May Company—Second Floor 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. 3133 Central Ave. New York, N.Y. 1978 Division Offices in All Principal Cities Representatives Everywhere THE CONTINENTAL Ohio Direc EXPERT DETECT Charles F. Soendlin, P. O. Box 8, Sta. 1, Cincinnati, O., Agent in Charge THE CONTINENTAL SEC AUTOMOBILE PROTECT Protects Your Car for L One Year for $3.00—R Gentlemen: Please register my car I enclose $3.00 to cover the Name City Make of Car Style of Body Serial No. Reward will be paid for informati and sentence of any person who Fill out and mail today to W. R. Youngsto THE CONTINENTAL SECRET SERVICE SYSTEM AUTOMOBILE PROTECTION DEPARTMENT Protects Your Car for Less Than a Penny a Day One Year for $3.00—Renewal $1.00 Per Year Gentlemen—Please register my car in your Protection Department. I enclose $3.00 to cover the cost of my radiator emblem. Name..... Address. City..... State. Make of Car..... Color. Style of Body..... Motor No. Serial No..... License No. Reward will be paid for information leading to the arrest, conviction and sentence of any person who steals a car protected by us. Fill out and mail today to W. Elton Gordon, 408 Belmont Ave., Youngstown, Ohio. AN APPRECIATION Philadelphia, Pa., July 31, '31. Hon. Harry C. Smith, Editor Gazette, Cleveland, O. Dear Mr. Smith:—As the seventh annual convention of the National Bar Association draws near, I take this means of notifying you officially of the coming convention and herewith extend to you, or to a representative of your paper whom you may select, a most cordial invitation on behalf of the officers and the members of the association, to be present at the convention. I also wish to thank you at this time for the invaluable service that The Gazette has extended to the National Bar Association by the generous use of its columns in the By RI W. Elton Gordon, 408 Belmont Ave., Youngstown, O., Ass't. Agent in Charge. SECRET SERVICE SYSTEM CATION DEPARTMENT Less Than a Penny a Day Renewal $1.00 Per Year car in your Protection Department. cost of my radiator emblem. Address. State. Color. Motor No. License No. on leading to the arrest, conviction to steals a car protected by us. Elton Gordon, 408 Belmont Ave., town, Ohio. printing of our press releases. Such a spirit of co-operation is a healthy sign in the progress of the race, and in rendering such service to our lawyers of America, The Gazette lives up to its reputation as a champion of the race it so faithfully serves. Not only do I thank you on behalf of the National Bar Association, but I extend herewith my deep folk personal gratitude. As my administration as president of the association draws near its close, I want to take this opportunity to acknowledge that a large part of the success of my administration has been due to the courtesies extended to me by our press. Very truly yours, Raymond Pace Alexander, President, The National Bar Association. NG LARDNER 4 is ae Sie Kong te OG be. : ‘ in Your bowels! Béieons sheoshed into the ryatem from souring waste in the bowels cause that headachy, sluggish, bilious condition; coat your tongue and foul the breath; Sap energy, strength and _nerve-force. A little of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin will clear up trouble like that, gently, harmlessly, in a hurry. The difference it will make in your feelings overnight will prove its merit to you. Dr. Caldwell studied constipation for over forty-seven years. This experience enabled him to make his prescription just what men, women, old people and thildren need to make their bowels help themselves. Its perfectly natural, mild, thorough action and its pleasant taste commend it to everyone. That’s why “Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin” is the most popular laxative drugstores sell. PAINS! When you take Bayer Aspirin you are ‘sure of two things. It's sure relief, and it's harmless. Those tablets with the Bayer cross do not hurt the heart. Take them whenever you suffer from: Headaches Neuritis t Colds Neuralgia Sore Throat Lumbago Rheumatism Toothache When your head aches—from any ‘cause—when a cold has settled in your joints, or you feel those deep-down pains of rheumatism, sciatica, or lumbago, take Bayer Aspirin and get real relief. If the package says Bayer, it's genuine. And genuine Bayer Aspirin is safe. Aspirin is the trade-mark of Bayer manufacture of monoaceticacidester of salicylicacid. alia, CYS ; \ SS se) - DEMAND 3 gh CHILDREN CRY FOR IT— Ce ren hate to take medicine ‘as a rule, but every child loves the taste of Castoria. This pure vegetable Just as bland and just as harmless as the recipe reads. 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 Ets Ge isent Uicetain sind wesuiat 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. Drier tee PS ane ea ee en) ae ‘0. K. Printing Co. | WJ, Roster = Johm a Smleh | Commercial and Job — : | Printing © : PROMPT SERVICE t } 3100 Central Ave, | : Cor. E. 31st St. ; hep Tis JOHN P. GREEN § Attorney-at-Law oo 3 CLEVELAND, OHIO 3 Notary Public S Office Phone: MAin 2012 Subscribe Now le Where To Purchase The Gazette n, sMurn's ROSENBERG'S DRUG STORE so07 Boctin Ava. Naw: ice, Ommeal Aves and Babin St 4. 8. HALL's PRANK L. HANDY'S, Biss Central Ave. Ma0t Gcutral’ Ave. NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS Subscribers not receiving The Gazette reguiarly should notify us at once. We desire every copy delivered promptly. Send or bring locals and all business matters to The Gazette office, Suite 802, Johnson Block, 226 Superior Ave., West, oppo- site the Hotel Cleveland. If you wish to see the editor call there, please. Die ide Gu Ceauas) (o car ately canning (ohn cancion, savertissments before taking purcuices, Busines wen abe Rare ak te pegs snilotnore (ae carcenate etione tees Bee Gr eat tay Sucertiveits serene Oar tage Sea ‘AI tending matter tor publication ia current lasves of he Gazette must bo in the oflice by eon, WEDNESDAY, of et et arsine eines ce Uuniny cavcrtioomsnin aecayiod | antl Torn WwEDNesDays! HARRY ©. SMITH 226 Weat Supertor Aveane, Cleveland, 0, (Oneselea Hossl Ompaen’ Notary Public Bell ‘Phone: Cherry 1280 Classified Advertising Department FOR RENT.—A four-room suite (ap) at 2847 H, 86th St in good Pendicds trout Mon beck mara tces Sees at aero one Sree Sarat tor sete cea aly. Noy Sullisen: Key owottaire Gan aae. “asic ‘baeween 6220 GAaENE bi uic or Oley 1800 ts FOR SALE—A good-ize and ox delbeat trigieliog’ “Chatter Gat nego (ecnaition’ “Call Okey Task FOR RENT Five rooms (down), at 2117 33d St modera and ts tied Galion Gey dovuniaice Gall CHlorsy. 12690"or gall at Suite S02 No. 226 W. Superior Ave., opposite Hotel Cleveland Social and Personal Rey, Saul Lucas is slowly improv- ing at the City Hospital. Mrs, Francis Young, H. 834 St., visited relatives in ‘Detroit, last week. Young Miss Robinson of Youngs- town is visiting Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Price and daughter, E. 86th St. Cornelius Holmes, E. 46th St., died, last week Tuesday, after sev- eral’ months’ illness. A widow sur- vives him. Miss Mabel Early-and Mrs. Mar- garet G. Reynolds, local _public- School teachers, are'on an extensive tour of Canada. Dwight R. Williams, of this city, ig the new Democratic member of the trustee board of the State De- partment at Wilberforce. Miss Cora Fields, one of our teachers in the local ‘public schools, who underwent a serious operation at Cleveland Clinic recently, is con- valescent. Samuel Wate at Dyke school, Wm. Porter and Eugene Murrell at John Borough school are our super- visors of playgrounds under the lo- cal board of education. Under the new Ackerman state law, former Councilman Thos. W. Fleming will be eligible for a par- don or parole, Aug. 25, '31, with time off for good behavior. Miss Lucy Manson of Chicago visited in this city, recently, and Miss Osceola Manson, of Quincy ‘Ave., visited her brother, Mr. David Manon in that city, last week. Mrs. Elizabeth B. Owens, E. 40th St., director of religious education at Lane Metropolitan C: M. B. chureh, attended the Church's dis- trict conference, recently, in Youngs- town. Dr. L, N. Bundy was called to the bedside of his brother, Supt. Rich- ard C. Bundy of the State Depart- ment at Wilberforce, last week Thursday. His brother is a very sick man. J. B. Simmons and Mrs. Louise Pridgeon, both of the 18th ward, are candidates for the City Council ‘This is the ward in which that “Blossom Triplet”, Councilman Clay- borne George resides. Among the callers at The Gazette sanctum sanctorium, Thursday, was Prof. J, Francis Gregory of Washing- ton, D. C., who has been in the city somie weeks taking a special post- graduate course at W. R. U. Louis A. Williams, secretary of the Citizens’ Rights League, an- nounced, Wednesday, that 500 of our people, in this city, have joined in a nation-wide protest against “Amos ’n Andy,” radio entertainers. At the recent meeting in Seattle, Wash. of the National Council of Congregational and Christian churches, Rev. Russel S. Brown, pastor of Mt. Zion Cong. churgh, was elected a member of the coft- ‘mission on missions. Councilmen Charles Sacks and Al- fred Jones, second district organiza- ton candidates, will speak at the regular meeting of the S. S. Repub- lean Civic club at Quinn A. M. E. chapel, 3241 E. 130th St., Monday evening, Aug. i0th. Mrs, Estella Williams, sister of Mrs. Breckenridge and Mr. Wm. Cra- ver, one of the outstanding citizens of Mt. Pleasant, was buried from the M. E. Church in that section of the city, July 31, Rev. MeMorries officiating. _ Mrs. Mabel Payne, wife of Atty. L. O. Payne, was robbed, one night last week, of a pocketbook contain- ing $53 by three boys who jumped on the running board of her car as she THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, 0., SATURDAY, AUGUST 8, 1931 WANTED. —- Honest, intelligent, active and neat young man with ex- perience in the grocery and meat business. Must have references. Write, Box 5, The Gazette, 226 W. Superior Ave., City. WANTED.—A needy mother of tour children wants work, washing, cleaning or house work, if she can bring her baby with her. Will also work in exchange for clothes for herself and four children. Address Mrs. Margaret Clark, 2181 W. 61 St. For rent, five nice rooms (down) at 2417 EB, 82d St, modern and in good condition. Key upstairs. Call, Clery 1259, or call at suite 302, No. 226 W. Superior Ave., opposite Wotal Gloveland entrance. was driving eastward in the 1300 block on Central Ave, She had it on the seat beside her. Rey. Ernest Hall, pastor of E. Mt Zion Baptist church for five years, was awarded the honorary degree of doctor of divinity by Wilberfore Uni- versity, Sunday night, at a ceremony at his church. Rev. D. 0. Walker, Pastor of St. James’ A. M. EB. chureh, was delegated by the university to confer the degree. ‘The editor of The Gazette grateful- ly acknowledges receipt of compli- mentary tickets to the second an- nual basket-pienic of the Forest City Beneficial Association (members of the garbage plant) at Orchard park, Thursday. The features of the so- cial function were baseball and other athletic events, dancing and boxing. Prizes awarded in contests, L. C. Lubin, E. 934 St., alleged to have operated a downtown em- ployment bureau without a license, committed the offense a second time while out on bond awaiting a hear- ing on the first charge, police charged. Wednesday. Brought be- fore Police Judge Thomas C. Green, the second case was continued until Aug. 12 to come up with the first. Cuyahoga and King Tut lodges, and their auxiliary organizations, picniced at Myers’ Lake Park, Can- ton, Monday. Other Elk organiza- tions from Pittsburgh and other cities in western Pennsylvania and eastern Ohio were also represented at the pienic. J. Finley Wilson, G. E. R., of Washington, D. C., Gov. Geo. White, the Hon. Clarence J. Brown, secre- tary of state, U.S. Senator Robert J. Buckley, Atty. Gen. Gilbert Bettman, and Hon. Perry B. Jackson were an- nounced as speakers for the occa- sion, the additional features of which were races, baseball, dancing and the crowning of “Miss Ohio.” ‘The editor of The Gazette is in- debted to Mr. Elbert H. Baker for a press ticket to the twentieth World’s Conference and Forty-third Inter-national convention of the Y M.C. As at Public Auditorium, Aug. 4-9; ‘also for an invitation extended representatives of the local press to meet him at a luncheon at the Hol- lenden hotel, Tuesday noon, when Dr. John R.' Mott, president’ of the World’s Conference, was the special guest and principal speaker. An in- Vitation was also received the first of the week, from the staff of the Quincy Ave. Public Library branch to attend the informal tea, Thursday, 4 P. M., to meet Judge James A. Cobb of the Municipal Court of Washing- ton, D. C. Atty. Raymond P. Alex- ander, president of our National Bar Association, wrote The Gazette un- der date of July 31, ’31, extending him or a representative of “The Old Reliable” Gazette whom he might designate, an invitation to attend its seventh annual convention held in this city Aug. 6-7. Mr, Alexander also thanked The Gazette and its edi- tor for courtesies extended him and our National Bar Association. LIFE’S LITTLE JOKES—NUMBER 399,841 EF: % || Ee a Dy ie? a ' = iG & =—— “ee, _ ee aS i EAN = 7 Gane — ~ WHIL OW THe eve oF THe New rer NEAR DOREMUS MSFIFE BLue Boe oy ae eee au | PARED FOR THE TIME OF AND Meu, ast A four-room suite (up) at 2347 E, 86th St. (near Quincy Ave.) for rent. Key downstairs. Nice rooms, with front and back entrances, a large porch, all modern conveni- ences; aerial for radio. Small fam- fly with no children. Call, Gar. S511-W between 6:30 and’ 7:30 D. m., or CHerry 1259 in the after- noon. ‘This is the season of the year ‘when you want most the best fruits, vegetables and all green stuff; gro- ceries, fish and meats, to be found only in a first-class, up-to-date mar- ket like the Woodland-E. 55th mar ket. It is a world of ‘satisfaction to know that you can get these things there at the most reasonable prices and be welcomed —accorded | the best treatment, ‘There, your trade is appreciated! There is no neater, cleaner or better-conducted market in the city, Supt. Curtice assures all patrons proper treat- ment at all times. Therefore, spend your money where you can get the best at the most reasonable prices, amd where it is appreciated. The Big Brother and Big Sister conference was one of the organiza- tions which promoted the passage of the new five-day marriage license bill which went into effect July 23, "31. Its constituent groups, Big Sister Council, Jewish Big Brothers, Jewish Big Sisters, Catholic Big Brothers and Catholié Big Sisters, are financed through the Community. Fund and are actively engaged in welfare work. Where are the “Negro” Big Brothers and “Negto” Big Sister groups “actively engaged in welfare work?" ‘The Lord knows we sorely need, these days, such organizations, “financed thru’ the Community Wana.” Prime Sport News Charley Hansen had to "“come- back” to win his third wrestling bout fin Cleveland, last Thesday night, at the Bquestrium. Reginald Siki was able to get the jump on Hansen in their match by winning the first fall in 21:45, but Hansen made quick work of the remaining two falls by winning them in 39 seconds and in 1:02. Siki, owner of one of the best physiques of all the wrestlers, re- cently held John Pesek, considere by many as one of the greatest mat artists in the business, to a two-hour draw. Also, Siki scored a victors over Wladek Zbyszko at Montreal Canada, a few weeks ago. If the reason put forward for Max Schmeling’s cancellation of his bout with Primo Carnera, i, ¢, an in- Jured eye, is on the up-and-up, one can only ‘commend the German on his wisdom. Too many boxers have retired from the ring to enter life in total or semi-darkness. To men- tion only a few: Pete Herman, Jack Kid Wolfe, Black Bill, Sam ‘Lang- ford and Joe Shugrue—one of the two men ever to kayo Benny Leon- ard—all left the ring engulfed by at least partial blindness. Then, too, both Harry Greb and ‘Tiger Flowers went to early graves during operations on infected eyes. Black Bill’s case ix the most recent, as an- nounced in this department, last ake Clara Long, 2205 Central Ave., is the best gin athlete among the champions of thirty-seven Cleveland playgrounds. ‘Representing Marion ca a a arte) te | es See |e te ay ee || ie / : BS “4 6h toa F yee 4 aa3.. \) | Ae 4 aoe or 4 he F — OW oe a | = ee Le = ibe N Subscribe Now The Abyssinian Loses. Max’s Alibi Timely. ies tse tee RS Qu & 3 Cap IG iy —— & SI Sh. C29 eR > fh LY Pati ‘ YL, — GL WHILE ANGUS VAA) PLUNK Pout BOTH LONELY ANS Suve, FoR He HABN'T A Date AND HAD NOTHING SBS ima! How Embarrassing! és a es » «+ to think that you ges Fi look attractive and ee e — ) suddenly discover that ee 5 sa... le your nose is all shiny! ; Om. j . . am Wet a comfort to - AO i a know that the shine eRe rN. won't come through. PORO a age A —Y -VANISHING CREAM a a) ~ will enable you to keep fe a . that “powdered” look. Ce aN < a cma’ And there is a shade of a \ a 4 —PORO FACE POWDER . . ee for every complexion— five ee. + & shades of Brown, a Brunette, o 4 ey { <8 Flesh and a White... .. Dept 2 | Ly. Choose a color a shade or | a ai Sef 7 wo lighter than your own. feet aot, ep PO emmy Ko . ees fend I ] ime f q ite we e ds gi oo sea, oe oe =m SS: FOR HAIR AND SKIN ¢ in SI Se gi Sold By PORO AGENTS Everywhere “NO MORE SHINE | i F he i {| ForConplete Lit Wite cecamanoporo, PRE RE BM ME GB FORO COLLEGE Face powpeR = Se ee ee 4415 SOUTH PARKWAY i. Eee PORO BLOCK, 44th to 45th St. We “CHICAGO, ILL. Now Comes RING LARDNER! The man whose brilliance of wit and compelling charm ‘of anecdote, woven into stories on every current topia, turned baseball slang into classic Americancse. Lardner's genius was never better expressed than in the adventures of baseball's most celebrated “bonehead,” Jack Keefe, in The Funniest of all Slang Comics = »xcuwone “You Know Me, Al” 3 ‘This famous feature has appeared in leading newspapers in all the large cities of the United States. Sharing the genius of Ring Lardner with leading metro- ; \\ mM politan dailies and national magazines, this newspaper i‘ will hereafter present regularly to its readers the comic ) sD strip “YOU KNOW ME, AL”. » If You Miss Laughing With Lardner i You'll Be One In A Hundred Millions. JACK KEEFE Agents: $10 a Day potion Tie Filiue States Toe erect ‘orl re Time or! ime Ny 8 ‘pou eyaneenatenes x Wy BRE prie ste im ANEMEN RODE)” da Bon Cedar Branch Y. M. C. A. Cor. Cedar Ave, and E. 77th 8 A HOME FOR YOUNG MEN! RESTAURANT - HOME OOOKING Individual Beds $2.50-$8.00 ENdicott 9004 ~ AS ee oe SEES KC 2A Ms et NS N Yi VL NSE) Wee Nn po Ae Bek nl) play = ZG ane / P ee venies Erica ere DOPE ANB DRANK ALL HIS Seoee! THEN Her UST SAT ARCUNE AND “THEY GAVE HIN THe rues: BSS RSPR RRR Eee eee eee oe 2 TWO INTERESTING BOOKS - By JOSEPH C. MANNING a = FADEOUT OF POPULISM = Tells how and why our people of the South are deprived of mMhelr Constieutigual Highs, ‘Eronght dows to, cete By — discussion of the Klan and Anti-Saloon League Politics. Price, me sL00 From Five to Twenty-Five This is Mr. Manning's life story embracing the period from 1870 to 1895, Price, $1.00. BOTH BOOKS FOR $1.50. T. A. HEBBONS, PUBLISHER, 184 W. 185th 6t,, Dept. B, New York ity” na ee ee ee eee ee By RUBE GOLDBERG SOEX ee, SE 5 ea cS = SS SN (lL Ss a. FEW ; Lite Wuirinue wise si TELA Gooh SANG MCN Be ALC NIGHT THEY Just Danced AND THEY [ o FROLICKEDS| TCO.) erect ne Sates “To Wve [TO BELIEVE: ANG T |TA peop [THAT Botoner | Ncnes ~ ; eve Bo 5S thane | ae i 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 ONE OF FIRST BUILT AUTOMOBILE MODELS 187 BNAST ONAL This truck-like vehicle, now carefully preserved in the Vienna Technical museum, was one of the earliest models built by Siegfried Marcus, first to use a gasoline-driven motor in an automobile. It was constructed in 1875. Note the rear wheel brakes and the de laux shock absorbers. This truck-like vehicle, now carefully preserved in the Vienna Technical museum, was one of the earliest models built by Siegfried Marcus, first to use a gasoline-driven motor in an automobile. It was constructed in 1875. Note the rear wheel brakes and the de laux shock absorbers. PROVISIONS FOR WEEK-END TRIP PROVISIONS FOR WEEK-END TRIP Everybody Enjoys Outings Which Are Inexpensive. (Prepared by the United State Department of Agriculture.) There is now one motor vehicle for every five persons in the United States, according to the United States bureau of public roads, or one for every family. There is no doubt but that a great number of families of moderate means who would not have dreamed of taking frequent week-end outings a few years ago are now able to enjoy the possession of a car and the opportunity to use it for recreation in the open air. Considerable distance may be covered in a Saturday-noon to Sunday-night trip, or more leisurely driving to favorite nearby picnic or camping grounds may be preferred. From the mother's point of view such outings are a blessed release from the former drudgery of Sunday spent cooking and clearing up the biggest dinner of the whole week. Everybody enjoys them, and with a little planning they may be both easy and inexpensive. In planning what food must be carried, as three or four meals will probably be eaten on the road, the prime consideration is the keeping quality. Unless some sort of traveling refrigerator is taken along, it is best to select for the second day's meals foods that do not require leaping to be palatable or safe to eat. A small camp 316-4 An electric icebox hooked on the back of a car to preserve foods while on outing trips. cooking kit is a very satisfactory part of the week-end equipment. It should include a frying pan and a saucepan, a coffee or tea pot, and some plates and cups suitable for serving hot foods and beverages. For the first plenic supper one may choose among the entire range of fresh cooked meats or chicken, or if the weather is cool, bring hamburg patties or chops to broil over the camp fire. Salad ingredients like tomatoes, lettuce, celery and cucumbers may be carried, to be put together when wanted, or potato salad made at home and brought in a glass jar or cardboard carton. Except for tomatoes and cucumbers, which keep well because of their skins, none of these foods should be planned for the second day. The more perishable fruits, such as berries, cherries, fresh pineapple cut up and put in a glass jar, or fresh apple sauce, are the best the first day. Hot coffee and ice cold milk may be brought from home in thermos bottles. If lemon juice is squeezed and sweetened ready for mixing into lemonade it will be a refreshing beverage to serve. If sandwiches are wanted, have them the first day. Loaf cake, cup cakes and cookies all travel well, especially if put in a tight tin box. Camp Fire Dinner: For a camp fire dinner the second day, the bureau of home economics suggests frizzled dried beef and scrambled eggs. Both the "makin's" for this dish can be safely transported without ice. Let the boys of the family help to cook this dish. With it have tomatoes or cucumbers, and buns, either plain or toasted, as they will not dry out as much as loaf bread. Fruit for dessert on the second day may be oranges or whole pineapple, cut up in sections when wanted. Some of the cake from the day before may be left. A good hot dish for supper the second day will appeal to everybody. A vegetable chowder may be made of potatoes, bacon, or salt pork, canned or dried milk, onion, and celery if possible. Or one of the excellent canned chowders, reheated on the spot, may be depended on, with crackers as the breadstuff. Cheese may be served at this meal, with the crackers, and marmalade or jam. Bottled grape juice will be good for a fruit drink the second day. In the picnic kit, in addition to whatever cooking utensils are liked, one might can keep permanently a bottle opener, can opener, bread knife, table knives, forks, spoons; plates and cups of metal, or paper; paper napkins and waxed lunch paper; salt, pepper, loaf sugar, a small can of evaporated milk—and a box of matches for the camp fire. THE MOTOR QUIZ How Many Can You Answer? Q. Why is it customary in the Philippines to hire chauffeurs? Ans. The operator of a motor vehicle which injures a pedestrian is subject to arrest and imprisonment until he can prove that he is blameless. For this reason most of the car owners employ a chauffeur. Q. What is the motor vehicle registration of the Philippines? Ans. Approximately 29,000. Q. How many cars are registered in Canada? Ans. 1,076,819 or one car to every nine persons. Q. What effect is produced by "choking" the carburetor? Ans. Pulling out the "choke" causes a raw mixture of gasoline to be drawn into the engine, which fires readily in cold engines. Excessive use of the "choke" causes fuel waste, sooting, oil dilution, fouled spark plugs and irregular running of the engine. When the "choke" is used properly, according to the instruction book, and the spark plugs are in good condition, starting should not be difficult even in the coldest weather. Belgium to Start Eight Production This Year Production of new eight-cylinder cars in Belgium is expected to start, in quantity, during the current year, according to a report received and issued by the automotive division of the Department of Commerce. This shows that production in Belgium during the past year was 6,000 passenger cars and 1,000 trucks. There was a considerable increase in the number of six-cylinder cars at the expense of four-cylinder cars. The new models of Minerva eight-cylinder cars are expected to reach quantity production during the current year. AUTOMOBILE NOTES A young hitch-hiker in the neighborhood reported a lame shoulder, after the week-end, from swinging a thumb over it. "Let me see something that's gone 187,000 miles," said a college boy to the man on a used car lot. "I haven't the time to break one in." With these automobiles that get up to 240 miles an hour, we assume you jog along at a nominal 190-mile gait, the first 500, to get them properly broken in. A Wisconsin lad completed a high school course in a year by doing everything four times as fast as usual. This would require driving the coupe 280 miles an hour. Another rather jolly impasse is when a local driver, accustomed to making inside left turns, meets a visiting motorist who is equally accustomed to the outside type. THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O. SATURDAY, AUGUST 8, 1931 Brown Smart for Town or Travel 1930 HERE'S a sure-win tip on fashions new running—tones of brown for travel wear as well as for accessories. The shopping list might begin in this way—brown coat or jacket suit, brown suede and calf pumps, matching calf bag, also a brown straw hat, either the new rough braid or one of the exotic linenlike straws and gloves, either brown or white. For afternoons note down a brown and-white print frock, to which by way of a postscript add a white taffeta silk jacket, also one of brown transparent velvet just for a change. A turban of straw and white pleated silk bespests that which is swankiest in millinery if you do not prefer a white panama with a brown velvet or grosgrain band. It goes without saying that gloves with this outfit should be white and long loose-fitting, while shoes may be either white or white with brown. For travel or about town wear or to serve as a spectator sports costume, the costume illustrated is patrician in BLACK AND WHITE REMAINS IN FAVOR Black and white continues to be a combination greatly in favor wherever smart women dine. The degree of taste and perfection which is used in this combination has a direct bearing on the effect of the costume. The all-white hat, the white glove and chalk-white jewelry has much to do with its success, says a fashion correspondent in the Kansas City Star. White linen has a crispness which no one can deny, especially when it is combined with a black hat, either of coarse straw with a glazed surface or one of the crocheted straws. No one has ever known the exact percentage of white to advise in combination with black. Fashion is favoring the black satin skirt and the cream lace blouse for informal dining. This may be worn with a white or an egg-shell jacket. Contrast is the watchword for the linen suit. The white skirt with the navy jacket has by far and away given the brown and white combinations a race for popularity, while red and white, or a cherry red linen skirt and a french blue handkerchief linen surplice blouse are in the height of fashion. Or listen to this combination which was worn at the horse show in Tuxedo park by New York debutantes: White dresses accompanied by very short white wool capes, and a red and green sush at the belt and with these small white visca caps. Longer Evening Coats The longer evening coats show signs of returning next winter, advises a Paris fashion writer in the New York Times. Lucile Paray favors slightly trailing evening coats, in velvet of the same color as frocks—which just escape the floor. Germaine Lecomte makes three-quarter evening coats of Lyons velvet or velvetteen that contrast with the frock. A tiger-colored velvetteen coat with a black frock is a striking example. Irene Dana has an attractive floor-length evening coat of pale pink velvetteen. Short jackets are by no means abandoned. Worth and Irene Dana both show white cross-barred velvet jackets barely below waistlength, and Worth's new summer and winter jackets of flat fur with fabric sleeves are among the most attractive evening wraps yet invented. They are cut with a dropped shoulder line and draped in around the waist, stopping just above the hip bones. One is of black broadtail with puffed sleeves of white satin; another of pale gray broadtail with huge sleeves in silver lame. its every detail. It excels in fine tailoring. The jacket is of brown silk grosgrain with a waistcoat and skirt of brown checked beige wool. A note of red is carried out in the clever side fastening on the waistcoat and in the flat crepe ascot die. As the days go on it is apparent that the vogue for touches of brown is more pronounced than ever. Instead of the usual black ribbon or patent leather band on the now-popular panamas the latest wrinkle is trim it with brown. The same is true in regard to footwear, the newest summer sports shoes are white buck with swatches of brown leather or pipings in brown instead of black. And have you seen the latest in the "double-date" dresses which are terribly smart and as practical as smart? They are called double-date because in the twinkling of an eye they can be changed from a sports frock to a tailored ensemble. It is simply a matter of doming or dofing the long dark silk coat which complements the white frock under it. A perfectly stunning double-date costume tops a white sleeveless flat crepe dress with a long sort of redingote coat made of eyeleted brown silk. CHERIE NICHOLAS. (© 1931, Western Newspaper Union.) Cotton Dress Favored for the Six-Year-Old Peggy Throughout fashion's realm the style prestige of cotton weaves is a matter of comment. This pretty little dress is fashioned of maize-color "pineapple mesh" durum (perfectly mercerized) cotton. Inverted pleats starting at the yoke and a novel white collar are important styling features. Color Combinations Now Brown and yellow, green and crimson, gray and sapphire—these are the tints which now brighten a mode devoted to unusual color combinations instead of striking silhouettes. Brown coats are worn with brick-red or leaf-green frocks, brown hats, gloves and belts. Brown suits are finished with lemon yellow, leaf green, or beige and copper striped blouses and chocolate hued accessories. The woman whose suit is navy blue may choose white accessories, or a blouse of lemon yellow, while the debutante with a dark blue wool coat may wear a pastel blue or maise yellow frock with hat and shoes of dark blue. Geranium red combined with pearl gray is another favorite combination for navy. Light green ensembles are worn with dark green chapeaux and accessories, while leaf-green frocks may be worn with black or wood brown coats, hats and bags. COLOR-LINE SEGREGATION IN HOSPITALS AND Y. M. C. A.'s HERE IN THE NORTH. DENOUNCED! (Special to The Gazette) Jersey City, N. J.-Mr. Rosenwald has done much good for our people in the South where it is impossible for them to get a square deal. His hospitals and schools are of much value. We believe Mr. Rosenwald's heart is right in his benefactions, but some one is leading him wrong in attempting to get him to build separate hospitals in cities like New York City. There is no place for race discrimination) hospitals in New York, especially in cities built to cover the crime, race discrimination. Many of our physicians coming North from southern sections are active in trying to establish these separate hospitals. There is no need for them here and these physicians should know that they are just as unacceptable as their "race hospital ideas" are. In Jersey City, with more than 300,000 inhabitants, may be found some of the finest and best equipped hospitals in this country. In these hospitals no discrimination is shown, and the well-known physician, Dr. Peter F. Guehring has been appointed on the staffs of Christ hospital and also General hospital. Young Dr. Guehring is a graduate of Harvard Medical school as well as the Harvard University College department. By his ability, students have worked himself up to the leading places in these hospitals. It is claimed that our physicians, with bad equipment and poor education, are leaders in trying to have established "jim-crow" hospitals. Physicians who no longer practice and operate in first-class hospitals. Our people have been made the stalking way for our unprepared physicians to do their butchering. It may be concluded that, when one hears a loud noise about establishing some particular place for some colored professional trade, there is in the back-background incompetence, selfishness and graft. Our physicians can be as well equipped as any other physician, if they would only take time and money and prepare themselves. There are many hospitals, and some hospitals," Jim-crow Ys", etc., because they are not prepared to ploy their trade or enter "Ys" among men of standing and first-class qualifications. The day of "race accommodations," to cover over race unnumerable men, HAS PASSED! Then, too, a great number of persons, trying to skim along on their "race love," is nothing more than buncomb. With the open-door for equipment and qualification our men in every walk of life must take their places along with the armed men and not only colored men. Perhaps the "Negro" ministry is a great sinner in this particular. Too many ignorant, flamboyant and loud-mouthed colored men are preaching, today, having only a stentorian voice as their principal asset. Too many colored ministers, who have been educated, are following the same path of the white-collar clerics of the whims of ignorance and ancient habits of our people, simply to get money out of them. A very little conscientious effort is being made by our ministry to uplift and refine our churches. Men are preaching who cannot use correct English and many of them are not third grade pupils in grammar schools. These race-churches, like what physicians call "race hospitals," are doing "race injury" clinics. The "Negro" ministers and physicians should be the equals in every way of the ministers and physicians of all other races. (Rev.) Wm. A. Byrd. ROSENWALD SCORED! For Building a "Chinese Wall" of "Separation, Discrimination and Segregation" Nationally—Plain Unvarnished Truth. Madison, New Jersey. Hon. Harry C. Smith, Editor, The Gazette, Cleveland, O. Dear Kind Sir:—I know you are a busy man; therefore, my remarks will be brief: (1) For many years I have concluded that the Julius Rosenwald system of "Christian Philanthropy" (I think that is the operating name) in erecting and maintaining schools (C.E.A. buildings, etc.) "Negro," was imminent to the best interests of every community where recognized. (a) It creates, perpetuates and accentuates a class and caste spirit, un-American and directly opposed to principles of Christianity. Matt. 7:12; John 13:34; Matt. 14:17. (b) All buildings, stone of American democracy is "an equal opportunity for all men in all fields of endeavor, without partiality, prejudice or hypocrisy!"—2 Cor. 8:14, 15. (c) The platform of the Christian religion—"God is our father; Christ our Redeemer; the Holy Ghost our comforter; and our friend."—2 Cor. 8:14, 28. It is absolutely denied in toto by Julius Rosenwald's method of charity as announced, "exclusively for Negroes." (2) Why should he endeavor to foist "exclusively Negro hospitals" in the North? Did the colored people "en masse" ask for this blot Mr. THE "NAT TURNER" OF TODAY. The above is a good portrait of Ralph Gray, one of the leaders in the Share-Croppers' Union in Alabama who was murdered in bed by the plantation owners' police when he was lying crippled and helpless from a deputy's bullet. Fifty-five of his fellow-workers in jail are being defended by the International Labor Defense at the request of the Share-Croppers' Union. upon their American citizenship? Did the white population protest against their "colored brother" having the same disease, the same accidents and maladies they have, that "hospitals exclusively Negro" are statewide necessities? (3) Does he not see ultimately (if his system becomes a success) the created national, racial, religious and social "Chinese wall" or separation, discrimination and segregation that will be erected and enforced (in a spiteful spirit) by both peoples American civilization? Gal. 6.7. Respectfully submitted, Rev. Geo. Wilson Brent. Madison, N. J. USE THE POOLS AND THE BEACHES! Use the city bathing and swimming pools and beaches. They are OURS, too. We pay taxes, all of us do—have to whether we want to or not. They are all open and in the best of condition and under the care of competent guards who have been provided with every possible means of safety for children. There is the same policy concerning free admission to the youngsters under fifteen years of age, from ten to twelve Monday, Wednesday and Friday mornings. Learned instructors will supervise the special classes for beginners and advanced swimmers which will be in full force thrust the summer. The beginning class for boys will be held between ten and eleven and the one for the girls between eleven and eleven swimmers will be taken care of in the afternoon. The pools will be open from ten in the morning to ten at night, weather permitting, during which time events such as free style, backstroke, and novelty races will be run off in preparation for the grand meet on the fourth of July. The directors and guards are willingly waiting to aid the children in every way possible. Some "Negroes" never know when they are kicked enough. They are the kind that make harder the lot of our people generally. A case in point is that anniversary celebration, one night last week, of a local pastor's "forty-five years in the ministry." Among the speakers for the occasion was former city manager, Wm. R. Hopkins. This is the man who for more than five years, while at the head of Cleveland's city government, kept our boys and girls in touch with many groups or races in this community, from training in the City Hospital. He wouldn't permit our girls to enter the school for nursing at that public institution, nor our internes to train there. In the face of this, he was one of the principal speakers at Second Mt. Olive Baptist church's celebration, referred to, the dinner for which was served in the Christian community center, Scovill Ave. near E. 28th St. LORD, HAVE MERCY: For the benefit of all of our contemporaries we desire to say that the Cleveland City hospital was opened to our internes and its nurse-training school opened to our girls to train, by the Walz resolution which passed the City council of Cleveland the first of last year. The year waged by the year waged by The Gazette, ably assisted by the late Geo. A. Myers. Up-to-the-Minute Modes Prepared Especially for This Newspaper EXCELEA E-3324 E-3324 N-43 A FROCK COSTING ABOUT $3.01 USES CHALLIS For a little girl's winter frock, nothing is better than challis. It is warm and lightweight, the patterns are dainty, and the colors soft. Here the design is accented by a light blue band applied in an unusual surplice line, the color being repeated in a fuzzy little beret. Of course the skirt is pleated—with box-plats front and back. Size 6 requires: 2½ yards 32-inch challis at $1.00. $2.13 at $1.00. $2.13 3/4 yard 32-inch contrasting at $1.00. .38 Findings .30 Excella Pattern. .20 Totaling about. $3.01