The Gazette

Saturday, June 10, 1933

Cleveland, Ohio

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OWENS AND ALBRITTON ON TO CHICAGO! E PLURIBUS UNUM FIFTIETH YEAR. No. 43. OWENS A WENSA Cleveland's Greatest Food Market Open Daily Until 6 P. M. Saturdays 10 P. M. The Woodland- Market At WOODLAND and EAST FOOD SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY Low Prices and Quality Merchandise SUGAR, Pure cane, cloth sacks, 25 pounds Milk, tall cans, Lion Brand, per can Rice, fancy blue rose, 3 pounds Peas, large can, per can SANDWICH SPREAD, large size, per jar CLARK'S COFFEE, sealed packages, per Star soap, new size bar, 3 bar SOAP IVORY, small bar 5c, large Sar-a-Lee salad dressing, packed in quail KROOSHKOV GROCERY—Uni BREAST OF VEAL (cut from native n per pound BEEF POT ROAST (cut from prime nat MARES & PRESTI— EGGS, fresh eggs, packed in cartons, 2 dozen BUTTER, fresh Ohio Creamery, per pot CHEESE, Mild York State, yellow, per BUTTERMILK, bulk, per gallon EDWARDS CREAMERY SUGAR, pure cane, cloth sacks, 10 pounds GOLD CROSS MILK, large cans, 3 can PINK SALMON, tall cans, per can COFFEE, Maxwell House, sealed package VEGETABLE SOUP, per can KRAUT, large No. 2½ can, 2 cans PALM OLIVE SOAP, per bar WOODLAND MARKET GROCERY A complete assortment of fresh greens. Fresh and smoked meats, bake supplies. Live and dressed POULTRY WATER FISH. At point of transfer FC eye, Woodland, Kinsman, and East 550 Woodland-E.55th Market At WOODLAND and EAST 55th STREET SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY, JUNE 11 New Prices and Quality Merchandise at All Times Pure cane, cloth sacks, pounds $ All cans, Lion Brand, per can Coney blue rose, 3 pounds Large can, per can MICH SPREAD, large size, per jar COFFEE, sealed packages, per pound Star soap, new size bar, 3 bars IVORY, small bar 5c, large The salad dressing, packed in quart glass jars, per unit BOSHKOV GROCERY—Units 53, 54, 55 OT OF VEAL (cut from native milk-fed veal) pound OT ROAST (cut from prime native beef) per pound MARES & PRESTI—Unit 19 fresh eggs, packed in cartons, frozen R, fresh Ohio Creamery, per pound S, Mild York State, yellow, per pound MILK, bulk, per gallon EDWARDS CREAMERY—Unit 36 pure cane, cloth sacks, pounds CROSS MILK, large cans, 3 cans ALMON, tall cans, per can MAXwell House, sealed packages, per pound ABLE SOUP, per can large No. 2½ can, 2 cans DLIVE SOAP, per bar MARKET GROCERY—Units 65, 66 complete assortment of fresh fruits, vegetables Fresh and smoked meats, baked goods and deli Live and dressed POULTRY and FRESH and FISH. At point of transfer FOUR (4) car line Woodland, Kinsman, and East 55th Street. Woodland-E.55th Market At WOODLAND and EAST 55th STREET BREAST OF VEAL (cut from native milk-fed veal) 10c per pound BEEF POT ROAST (cut from prime native beef) per pound 12c MARES & PRESTI—Unit 19 SUGAR, pure cane, cloth sacks, 10 pounds 48c GOLD CROSS MILK, large cans, 3 cans 17c PINK SALMON, tall cans, per can 10c COFFEE, Maxwell House, sealed packages, per pound 28c VEGETABLE SOUR, per can 5c KRAUT, large No. 2½ can, 2 cans 15c PALM OLIVE SOAP, per bar 5c WOODLAND MARKET GROCERY--Units 65, 66, 67, 68 A complete assortment of fresh fruits, vegetables and greens. Fresh and smoked meats, baked goods and delicatessen supplies. Live and dressed POULTRY and FRESH and SALT WATER FISH. At point of transfer FOUR (4) car lines, Buckeye, Woodland, Kinsman, and East 55th Street. SHOP ON YOUR TRANSFER. TWO INTERESTING By JOSEPH C. MAH FADEOUT OF PO Tells how and why our people of the Their Constitutional Rights. Brought discussion of the Klan and Anti-Saloon $1.00. From Five to Twelve This is Mr. Manning's life story embra- 1870 to 1895. Price, BOTH BOOKS FOR T. A. HEBBONS, PU 184 W. 185th St., Dept. B, N. DR. A. M. GI TWO INTERESTING BOOKS By JOSEPH C. MANNING FADEOUT OF POPULISM How and why our people of the South are de- Constitutional Rights. Brought down to de- ton of the Klan and Anti-Saloon League Politics From Five to Twenty-Five Mr. Manning's life story embracing the perio- 1870 to 1895. Price, $1.00. BOTH BOOKS FOR $1.50. T. A. HEBBONS, PUBLISHER, 184 W. 185th St., Dept. B, New York City. DR. A. M. GIBSON 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. 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 St., Dept. B, New York City. Dental Surgeon OFFICE HOURS: 9 to 12 A. M., 1 to 5 and 6 to 9 P. M. Sundays: 10 A. M.-2 P. M. 8231 CEDAR AVENUE (Cedar at E. 83rd) CLEVELAND, OHIO Phone: CEdar 230 AN EXCEPTIONAL OPEN FOR SALE Ten-room big house at 105 Cheap for cash. EXCEPTIONAL OPPORTUNITY FOR SALE Ten-room big house at 10525 Earle Ave. for cash. 'Phone LIber AN EXCEPTIONAL OPPORTUNITY! F O R S A L E Ten-room big house at 10525 Earle Ave. Cheap for cash. 'Phone Liberty 7167. Open Daily Until 6 P.M. Saturdays 10 P.M. Free Parking for market-shoppers, at 2618 opposite 53 Street. Offer- pable Market. Attendance in charge. E.55th street 55th STREET SUNDAY, JUNE 10TH Handise at All Times $1.20 5c 10c 7c 15c 25c 10c 8c art glass jars, per qt. 19c units 53, 54, 55, 56 10c (milk-fed veal) active beef) per pound 12c Unit 19 25c pound. 29c pound. 17c 10c Y—Unit 36 48c us. 17c 10c ages, per pound. 28c 5c 15c 5c Y—Units 65, 66, 67, 68 fruits, vegetables and ed goods and delicatessen and FRESH and SALT OUR (4) car lines, Buck- th Street. BIG BOOKS ANNING POPULISM The South are deprived of night down to date by League Politics. Price, Twenty-Five enracing the period from $1.00. R $1.50. BUBLISHER, New York City. IBSON geon to 5 and 6 to 9 P. M. P. M. CLEVELAND, OHIO. Phone: CEdar 2368 PORTUNITY! LE 525 Earle Ave. 'Phone Liberty 7167. THE GAZETTE ESTABLISHED, AUGUST 25, 1883 And Issued Every Week on Time Since CLEVELAND, OHIO, SATURDAY, JUNE 10, 1933. FRESH OHIO NEWS SENT IN BY "THE OLD RELIABLE" GAZETTE'S CORRESPONDENTS. What Our People Are Doing, Each Week—Church Personal, Social, Lodge, Literary and Musical—Marriages, Deaths, Etc. ALLIANCE.—Miss Ruth Sanders was our only graduate from the high school out of a class of 188.—Mrs. Ella Sanders entertained the Charity and Good Will club, last week Thursday, Mrs. M. Williams, president.—Mrs. A. Johnson, who has been ill for some time, was able to attend service Sunday, at Second Baptist church. The Morning Dove quartette rendered a program, last week Thursday, at the church. DOINGS OF THE RACE. Policeman Wm. Smith of Pittsburgh, has been appointed a city detective. The Detroit Tribune, a new race weekly, is edited by J. Edward McCall who is blind. WILBERFORCE. — Wilberforce's 127 graduates, Thursday were as follows: School of education, 76; college of liberal arts, 29; Payne Theological seminary, 10; the high school, 12. The University quartette has been engaged to furnish music for the Y. M. C. A. Student Conference at Camp Nelson Dodd from June 11 to June 14. The sang group will be on 8th, 18th, the 9th and will sing again in Cincinnati on the 15th; then start on a tour of the East, in the interest of the school. SPRINGFIELD.—Mrs. C. M. Patterson has returned from Fort Wayne, Ind., after a short stay with her sister.—A miscellaneous shower was given Naomi Huffman who became the bride of Esmond Bronston.—Miss Virginia Goings of Lima will spend the summer with her cousin, Miss Mary Portman.—Herbert C. Logan is improving after injuries sustained while at work on a scaffold.—Mary Ellen Thompson is impatient.—Mary Ellen wounds received from Maggie Rollins.—Jesse Thrasher and Anna Frances Clark were married, recently.—Rev. Shelton of Cincinnati recently closed a very successful revival at St. Paul Baptist church. 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 outset of the correspondence, 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 entertainments to be held in the near future, must be paid for in advance at the rate of 15 cents a line, six words to a line. Our rates for display advertisements will be sent on application. YOUNGSTOWN.—Secretary J. M. Dickerson was elected exalted ruler of Buckeye Lodge, Elks, at its annual election, last week. Mr. Dickerson has served as an assistant city prosecutor and president of the N. A. A. C. P. local branch. He is expected to make a splendid local leader.—Mrs. Sada J. Anderson of Cleveland president of the N. A. C. P. local address at Oakhill Ave. A. M. E. church, Sunday afternoon, making an exceptionally fine impression on the large audience. Mrs. Anderson, wife of Major W. T. Anderson (U. S. A., retired), has for years been a leader in church work. The "missionary" program was wonderfully enhanced by Mrs. Richard D. Lynch who furnished a section of it. Our local organizations ought to offender invoke the assistance of Mrs. Lynch's splendid ability as a vocalist and musician. Rev. Geoff pastor presided, his first sermon morning, since his recent illness of some weeks.—Masonic Lodge, No. 59, A. F. A. M. will have a dancing party at Idora Park, June 20, from 1 to 4 a. m. Noble Sisle and his N. Y. orchestra will furnish the music. JOHN H. LOWRY DEAD. Massillon, O.—John H. Lowry, age 66, a pioneer resident of this city and one of our most successful business men in this section of the state for more than 30 years, died at Cleveland Clinic, last week Tuesday, following an operation. He was president of an insurance company, treasurer of the Quick Service Ice and Coal Co., and vice-president of Lowry Garbage Co. At one time he was rated this county's largest individual tax-payer. City and county officials, bankers and other business men as well as many others attended the funeral services. Mrs. Lowry died, last October. DOINGS OF THE RACE. Policeman Wm. Smith of Pittsburgh, has been appointed a city detective. The Detroit Tribune, a new race weekly, is edited by J. Edward McCall who is blind. Miss Ruth Ella, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. E. Moore, of Columbus, O., will graduate from Ohio State University, Monday. Jesse Binga, former head of the Binga state bank in Chicago, is on trial there on a charge of embezzlement. The case was in its closing stages, this week. Dr. Clarence A. Wright of Washington, D. C., was sentenced to the penitentiary for two years and his license as a physician revoked, last week, for malpractice. St. George's P. E. church (white) of New York City celebrated the 39th anniversary of Harry T. Burleigh as its choir-barritone soloist. Mr. Burleigh is a native of Erie, Pa. The two youngest Scottsboro boy victims, Roy Wright and Eugene Williams, age 15, are to face trial in the juvenile court at Decatur, Ala., June 22, where their cases were placed by Judge J. E. Horton. Wm. E. Carrington, senior at Oberlin Graduate School of Theology shares equally with two white classmates the "Monroe Scholarship," the highest annual award of the university, possibly other year of advance work in theology. Tuesday he received M.A. and B.D. degrees, having qualified for them in three years Prime Sport News Jesse Owens and Dave Albrighton the two "Carpenter" aces, were among those given letters for track work by E. Tech. Monday. Metcalfe's 9.5 and 21.2 Milwaukee, Wisc.—Ralph Metcalfe of Marquette University raced the 100-yard dash in 9.5 seconds under floodlights, last week Friday night, for a new Central Intercollegiate meet record. Racing around a curve, he equaled the old record for a straight-away in winning the 220-yard dash in 21.2. During 38 points, the Pittsburgh, Kan., State Teachers College won the meet. Marquette University was second. Graves Resigns Wilberforce, O.—Harry C. Graves has resigned as head football coach and supervisor of the department of health and physical education of Wilberforce University and has asked to retire from those positions on June 30. In his nine years here he has done some notable things. His intersectional record will stand a long time. In 1932, intersectional connects he lost only five. In 1931 Graves' plays by decisively defeating the outstanding teams of the country. In 1932 the Wilberforce team was undefeated but a clean slate was marred by three tie games. The Misses Anna O'H. Williams and Lucinda Cook, heads of the Normal Bureau of the State Department at Wilberforce, Mrs. Ada Young, window of Col. Charles Young, will be guests of Rev. and Mrs. Russell S. Brown, 10308 South Blvd., for the week-end, beginning next Wednesday. They will accompany Prof. and Mrs. Charles Smith of Wilberforce, the former, head of the Commercial Bureau of the State Department at Wilberforce, who come to witness graduation of their daughter of Rev. Alice Elaine, daughter of Rev. and who finishes in the June class at Glennville High School. Rev. and Mrs. Brown cordially invite the friends of their daughter and the visiting parties to call, Friday afternoon and evening, June 16. Kenneth Banks was one of the members of the Glenville band which won first place in competitive contest at John Marshall High School. Miss Boyd, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Boyd, was a member of East High Chora club in place in the regional contest. Ruth is a member of the first Honor Society of Glenville High school; our first to receive the honor. The ROUNDER ON WHAT'S DOING The Associated Charities board of trustees have approved Mayor Ray T. Miller's work-relief project and the Jewish Social Service Bureau's board of trustees are expected to do likewise. Just what position the "Afro-American Social Service Bureau's board of trustees" will take will determine how much assistance our people of this community will receive from the project. Of course local "Negroes" have no such organization they need something of the kind far more than the Jewish people. For nearly four years we have had representation in the City Council—"The Blossom Triplets." Councilman Clayborne George served two years additional prior to the advent of Payne and Bundy. What have we learned from the ship in the council? Has prejudice in the various departments of the city been decreased even a little? It has not. Even under the Morgan Republican administration our representation among the employees of the city was very meager, and there were three "Negro" members of the city. So the Triplets is going to happen to "The Triplets" at this fall's election. Current rumor has it that Rev. David O. Walker, pastor of St. James A. M. E. church, receives a salary of approximately $3600 a year, a house to live in with lights paid for. If the foregoing is true. The Rounder is wondering how many members of St. James church receive a salary of $3600 a year, a house to say nothing of the house and lights? I wonder if the members of that church have heard of the economic depression? All of them must at least have felt its effect. Many pastors of local churches (white) have had their salaries reduced and are not getting near what the Rev. David O. Walker is said to receive. In our judgment he is far too erratic to make a good decision to the local church. With him as a member there would be far more turmoil in that body than has been the case in recent years, it is said. Walter R. McCornack, local architect, head of a "slum clearance" rehousing project known as Cleveland Homes, Inc., has announced that the land in the area bounded by Cedar and Central Avenues, extending from E. 22d to E. 36th St., is what they have their eyes on now; that it is only one of several areas they have in mind; also that his company has the right to own the courts, the sale of any land in these areas they desire. This will practically be confiscation of privately owned property which the people who own land in the so-called slum areas should begin to pay attention to at once. McCornack's company, recently "chartered for slum clearance in the city," intends to bring about "a new effort to improve the strict (Ward 11) improved" with modern housing for lower (poorer) income groups of people. It freely and publically admits that the lowest (poorest) income groups can only be provided such housing with the aid of philanthropy. This would necessarily remove our people as residents of that ward and elsewhere in the third district. The fatal mistake of the company is figuring on too low a basis for its housing and wishes to practically confiscate, in Ward 11 and the district, for its "modern housing" project, "with parks," etc. A BISHOP ALMOST MOBBED. New York City.—(C. N. A.) The failure of Bishop W. H. Heard to reappoint Rev. Edward A. Clarke of Ohio pastor of Bethel A. M. E. church which he had served four years as pastor, caused a most unfortunate demonstration against the Bishop in the church, Sunday evening, May 28, '33. The transfer of Dr. Clarke to New England conference by the Bishop which "made him matters worse." Rev. C. P. Colo of Jamaica has been selected as his successor. Attention, World's Fair Visitors. Chicago, Ill.—Poro College, 4415 S. Parkway, is offering at reasonable rates dining and living accommodations complete to World's Fair visitors. Also facilities for recitals, receptions, meetings and autos. In St Louis, the Poro Building at 4300 St. Ferdinand Ave., is similarly equipped. SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS MADE BY OUR WONDERFUL SCHOOL - BOY ATHLETE—MAKES TWO OTHER RECORDS. His "Buddy," Dave Albritton, Second Only to Jesse, Would Have Been the Hero of the Day, Last Saturday, With Owens Absent. Owens went to W. Tech field, last week Thursday, directly from a Kiwanis club luncheon, relying on his teammates to bring his track suit from the school. They failed to do so, however, so Owens said he would enter the qualifier without benefit of the team's participation. He vented this by staging a sixteen-mile auto trip to and from East Tech, returning just in time for Owens to dress for the last qualifying heat in the 100-yard dash, his specialty. Jesse again led East Tech by winning his 100-yard dash heat in 9.9 seconds, the 220 in 25.5 seconds, broad jumping in 26.5 seconds, and the 880-yard relay team that turned in the best time of 1 minute 32.8 seconds. Dave Albritton also placed three times—in the two hurdle races and the broad jump. John Adams Field—Jesse Owens, sensational local high school track star, made his final Cleveland appearance in the colors of East Tech, last Saturday, by smashing his own world's interscholastic record for the broad jump, as well as meet records in the 100 and 220-yard dashes. He broke the broad jump mark with a leap of 24 feet $11\frac{1}{4}$ inches. He had set the old record, only May 27, in the state meet at Columbia. He set the new record for $13\frac{1}{4}$ inches. Twenty-four feet $11\frac{1}{4}$ inches! Good enough to win the Olympics, better than any distance reported in this event in the world this season. Owens' new record will be recognized by the Amatur Athletic Union. Earlier in the day he had set the new 100-yard dash record at 9.7 seconds. He held the old record of 9.9 made last year, and the new record came in the 220, when he negotiated the distance in 21.7 seconds. Jesse then anchored the East Tech 880-yard relay team, took the baton a yard behind the East High anchman, off his 220-yard lap in 20.8 seconds and won by five yards going away. It was Owens Day rather than the day of the Senate meet, and the incredible youth responded with four of the greatest performances of his unbelievable career in Cleveland scholastic ranks and ended the most brilliant high school track career in Cleveland history. Dave Albritton of East Tech nosed out Ken Seitz in the 220-yard low hurdles for a new record of 25.8 seconds. Seitz held the former mark at 26 flat. Against any kind of opposition but that presented by Owens, Dave Albritton, like Owens, a member of the race, would have been the hero. Also racing for the last time, after a brilliant high school career in track, football and basketball, Albritton figured in two of the other A NEW WEEKLY Makes Its Bow—Carries Articles Covering a Wide Range—Editor Charles T. Henderson. The first issue of Cleveland's Weekly News, 34-page publication done in magazine style and carrying stories running a wide gamut from art to business, and around the last June 3 and with a cover symbolizing the quickening of the industrial pulse. The new weekly, published by Weekly News, Inc., is very fortunate in having Charles T. Henderson, an exceptionally capable journalist of many years' experience, as its editor; Paul Packard and F. F. Bruner as associate editors, and W. R. Ferrell as business manager. Its table of contents lists articles on Cleveland, state, national and world news, art, news, books, bridge clubs, fashions and down than subjects of radio, science, sports and theaters. It is profusely illustrated. Its sponsors seek to offer a medium for condensed news. Cleveland's Weekly, in its first issue, invited criticism from readers as a means of supplying public demand in its topics. Be sure to get a copy of the Weekly. The new periodical has no connection with The Cleveland Daily News. VICTORY LIFE RESTORED. Chicago, Ill. —The Victory Life Insurance Company has finally been taken out of the hands of receivers by a local federal court and placed in the hands of its officers: Dr. L. K. Williams, pres.; J. John Holloman, exec. vice-pres.; J. E. Mitchem, sec. and J. I. Morehead, treas. Among its directors are J. H. Branham, and J. E. Hubbard of Cleveland. The company's new name is the Victory Mutual Life Ins. Co. 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 become the NEWEST AND BEST published in this section of the country in the interest of Afro-Americans. E COPY FIVE CENTS CHICAGO! WORLD RECORD WONDERFUL SCHOOL - BOY TWO OTHER RECORDS. Writton, Second Only to Jesse, in the Hero of the Day, With Owens Absent. three records and would have had another but for a bad break. He first appeared in the 120-yard high hurdles, and he seemed to have the race clinched when, cutting too low, he barely ticked the second-last hurdle and lost his strike. **Owens Wins 70 Firsts.** When Owens won the broad jump, he finished his high school days with A. Jesse Owens. the unprecedented distinction of having won approximately 70 first places against only three defeats. These defeats came when he was a sophomore. He never lost a Senate race, winning the 100, 220 and broad jump three straight years and figuring in two relay victories the last two years. In all the major meets he has competed in including the Cleveland inductees in scholastic, Mansfield Belays, district, state, Senate and A. A. U. events, he has established some kind of record in six different events—the high jump, broad jump, high hurdles and three dashes. Owens' next appearance will be in the national interscholastic championships at Chicago, June 16 and 17. It is almost impossible to understand how any high school boy in the United States even can extend him in his three special events. Jesse has not yet decided where he will attend college. He is considering "invitations" from high school boys, and ever he decides to matriculate keep your eyes on him. He will be the ace of the 1936 American Olympic team. ELKS STATE MEET Several Clevelanders Elected Officers —What the Convention Accomplished—Its Next Meeting Place. Akron, O.—The Elks' twelfth annual state convention, held here this week, selected Columbus as the next meeting place, following officers: Hon. Perry B. Jackson of Cleveland, pres.; Fletcher Sledge of Steubenville, first vice-pres.; Rev. Wallace M. Wright of Mt. Vernon, second; Walter Carlie of Columbus, third; Leonard Fairfax of Cleveland, sec.; Dr. Robert Pulley of Toledo, treas.; Geo. W. Thompson of Akron, C. E.; W. B. Wilburne of Springfield, G. E.; Chas. Brown of Youngstown, I. G.; Leonard H. Forman of Akron, Steubenville, B. and C. Cleveland trustees; J. B. Bell of Newark, chap. The Ohio association of Elks has forty lodges and temples, all in principal cities. The Daughter Elks' election resulted as follows: Mary T. Gates of Cleveland, pres.; Eugenice V. Baker of Steubenville, first vice-pres.; Inez Andrews of Youngstown, second; Effie Moss of Chillicothe, chap.; Anna Randolph of Cincinnati; E. Houlte of Akron, fin. sec.; Ethel Kelley of Columbus, rec. sec.; Daisy White of Portmouth, treas.; Anna H. Williams of Toledo, d-k.; Rose Coleman of Lorain, g-k.; Damerlini of Cincinnati, C. F. Finning of Cleveland, C. E.; M. D. Young of Youngstown, Cora Curl of Springfield, Anna B. Jones of Columbus, trustees. The principal work of the convention was the expansion of its educational program, granting scholarships and establishing an industrial commission to improve our Ohio Elks' economic conditions. --- The GAZETTE PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY SUBSCRIPTION RATES (in Advance) Ome Year ne cencenereneenreneeenene $2.00 Bix Months 2 1.00 Subscribers are requested to remit by postoffice money order or registered letter. Entered at the postoffice in Cleve- land, Ohio, as second-class mail matter. ‘Adéress all communications to HARRY ©. SMITH Editor and Proprietor ‘THE GAZETTE 226 W. Superior Ave., Cleveland, 0. (Bell "Phone: CHerry 1259) Member Ohio Legislature: 1894 to 1896; 1896 to 1898; 1900 to 1902. oye , Nba as oe. — Ae FSET Ree TS ‘i Saas! : WR? Se y 10,000,000 Afro-Americans. 825,000 in Ohio. 75,000 in Cleveland. SATURDAY, JUNE 10, 1933. ‘The editor of The Gazette acknow!- edges the receipt of an invitation to attend the installation of officers, Monday, of the 12th Ward Women’s Republican club, 4727 Woodland Ave. Anna Rosen, pres., and Alma E Right, exe, ‘The Gazette has tried from the very beginning to give the Commun- ists full credit for all the good work they have done for the Scottsboro boy-victims and other members of the race in trouble of one kind and other. That does not mean, how- ever, that it has made or is making the mistake that the Rev. A. Clayton Powell, Jr., of New York City, and President Mordecai W. Johnson of Howard University, Washington, D. C., are making. —ii— zi Former Chief Police Prosecutor Malvern E. Schultz is well-grounded in the belief that judges should be elected by the people and not ap- pointed. We fully agree with him. ‘The appointment of judges is too often influenced by the big corpora- tions and the wealthy. Just in pro- portion as this obtains so the mass of the people lose. The popular elec- tion of judges is decidedly the better and should be adhered to by the peo- ple regardless of the claims and pleas ee anaveras Representative Chester K. Gilles- pic's Ohio State University bill was reported, last week, to the lower house of the State Assembly with recommendation for passage. This is good news and very encouraging. ‘The bill as a law will stop the board of trustees of that institution from adopting any rule or regulation for the government of the university that is based upon race, color or ereed and guarantees to every stu- dent of the school all of the oppor- tunities afforded by it. We sincerely trust that both branches of the Ohio Assembly will pass the bill promptly. Good work, Chester; keep it up. All persons interested in the “Housing” scheme Councilman Ern- est Bohn and others have so earnest- ly been advocating for many weeks should read carefully the articles on that subject, published weekly, in ‘The Gazette and tell your friends and acquaintances to do likewise. Then think! While our owners of proper- ty and others, in Ward 11 “sleep on" the schemers, with their helpers, are hard at work and if successful in bor- rowing or rather getting the million and more dollars they are seeking from the Government's Reconstruc- tion Finance Corporation they will practically configcate the property they want in that section of the city and get it on a ridiculously low val- uation. WAKE UP! aoa, NOT FOUNDER OF THE P. W. A. Former Safety Director Edwin D. Barry was the principal speaker at the testimonial dinner given Miss Jane Hunter, secretary of the Phillis Wheatley Association, last week, at ‘Mt. Zion Cong. church, and there was a number of other speakers. Rev. ©. Lee Jefferson of St. Marks Pres- byterian church pronounced the in- voeation and Mrs, Lethia C. Fleming, chairman of the sponsoring commit- tee, presided. Mr. Maurice Maschke ‘accompanied his old friend, Barry, to the dinner and received much mer- ited praise from severai of the speakers, and Mr. Barry made an ex- ceptionally interesting talk, too. ‘The statement of the local daily press that Miss Hunter was the “founder of the P. W. A., twenty years age” is NOT TRUE because that is what Mrs. W. C. Schofield and asso- clates (white) did, and the latter have maintained it ever since. Mrs. Schofield was the wife of Col. W. C. Schofield who designed and built Soldiers’ Monument in the Public Square and placed on it the figure ‘of an Afro-American of which Dan Fields, an employee of the Colonel, was the model. Miss Hunter was used by Mrs. Schofield and her white associates to help “put over” the P. W. A. for the purpose of keeping our eligible girls and women out of the ¥. W. ©. A. of which she was the head. A number of our local min- Isters and the editor of The Gazette were endeavoring to open the “Y" to them. Whites founded and have con- trolled the P. W. A. ever since, keep- ing Miss Hunter in their employ as secretary of the P. W. A. This is the truth and there are still a number of old residents in Cleveland thoroly fa- miliar with these facts—and others. Sle Ohio Man Retires After 45 Years of Service C. Collins, second telephone man- ager at Marietta, O., retires on pension June 1, concluding nearly the telephone business, Mr. Collins’ telephone record is one of the longest in the state: He began his career in 1888, about 12 years after Alexander Graham Bell Geodnced the frst telephone to Peete asec phe vend worked in the construction depart- lous CE, >: 9 A See cee ment, helping build some of the first telephone lines in this section. He became the second manager of the Marietta exchange in May, 1896, when he succeeded John E. Mayhew, one of the builders of the city’s telephone system. During the early days of his managership, his job was largely devoted to developing a system ex- tensive enough to accommodate the demands of a public just beginning to realize the possibilities of com- munication by telephone. When he became manager there were only about 100 telephones in Marietta and very few lines to sur- rounding cities. In 1897, one year Tater, the first trunk’ line was erected between Marietta and Wheeling, W. Va., and similar con- nections to other cities followed rapidly. For the past three years, Mr. Collins has been commercial repre- sentative for The Ohio Bell Tele~ phone Company. ‘The mileage of wire in cables of - the Bell System, of which The Ohio Bell Telephone Company is a part, has increased from 11,500,000 miles in 1912 to 76,100,000 miles at the end of 1932. During 1932, over 28 billion tele- phone calls were completed in the United States, or an average of 235 calls for every man, woman and child in the country. THE VICTOR MFG. CO. Be Sure to Remember This Business "Organization Whenever You Want Anything in Their Line. Another race enterprise has enter- ed the commercial field in Cleveland. ‘The Victor Manufacturing Co., with offices and salesrooms at 8313 Cedar Ave., is engaged in the manufacture of insecticides, disinfectants, polish- es and cleaners. Starting, May 1, with an insect spray which has found favor with the public, the company has announced other additions to its line of high grade products. These include furniture polish, household cleaner, automobile polish (powder and liquid), laundry blue, household ammonia and a bleach and stain re- moving solution. The products are being sold under the trade-name “Vietor.”” - Mr. V. L, MePherson is proprietor and Miss Mildred Ridley, for three years prior to February, secretary to County Commissioner Jack Harris, is fecretary of the enterprise. She in- forms The Gazette that the company is employing, on a Mberal commis- sion basis, many sales-people, men and women, and that the company needs a few more to complete its sales organization. Here is a splen- did opportunity. au OPPORTUNITY! “The Old Reliable” Gazette de sires an active agent and correspon- dent in every city and town in Ohio and neighboriug states having a number of Afro-American residents. Only a little time on Fridays or Saturdays is required to make some money. ‘We are espectally desirous of hear- ing from persons in the following named cities: Springfeld, Colum- bus Toledo, Steubenville, Zanes. ville, Wilmington, Xenia, Washing- ton C. H., Lancaster, Piqua, Lima, O., and other places, particularly in Ohio, where we have none. ‘Write to the editor of The Gazette, 226 West Superior Ave., Cleveland. ©., and terms will be sent promptly Our readers will oblige us greatly by sending us the addresses of per- sons in the cities named, and othere in the state, to whom we can write relative to the matter. Editor. (HE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, 0. SATURDAY, JUNE 10, 193 Work Relief Was Illegal, Says Marshall Even Mayor Miller's, visionary work relief scheme, to hire 38,- 750 heads of families recommend- ed by the charities organizations for direct labor on city projects, was a blunder—illegal, Council President Marshall concludes. ‘The Committee on Public Utili- ties, Chairman Ernest J. Bohn, met, March 27, to consider work on Parma reservoir. Director Brueggeman had proposed that the Job be done by contract. Councilmen wished to have needy persons given jobs and had proposed that some of the work be done by hand. Councilman Walter F. Hagemeister had amended the original ordinance to provide that excavation, grading and back filling be done by direct labor and that men recommended by the Associated Charities and the Jewish Social Service Bureau be hired ‘A legal opinion on this amend- ment was submitted to the com- mittee by Law Direetor W. George Kerr. He held that Hagemeister’s amendment was illegal, as the Council could not transfer to out- siders the power to appoint city laborers. Same as Mayor's Scheme “Then Mayor Miller's whole work relief plan was illegal,” an- nounced Councilman Marshall. “No, no,” eried several Demo- rats, “Yes, it was,” said Marshall. “He proposed exactly what this amendment proposes, to hire di- rect labor on the recommendation of the charity organizations.” The Democrats subsided. Brueggeman told the council men that if he had to do the job by direct labor he would rent ma- chinery and use no more men than a contractor would use, about 25 in all, He would not agree to take men recommended by the charities. Tt being hopeless to try to get the Democratic administration to have the work done by hand and employ a larger number of labor- ers, and the job being urgent, as the water supply is not plentiful, councilmen concluded to let Brueggeman have it done by con- tract. Committees Work For the Suburbs aces ek pein cite an Villegie cate working — trsouet Hee Orececes, ts Gaston Coe ee tees, dette pechlusas’ of loeyeral inss. Mayor, Douglas ‘Oviatt, Republi ae enlnoal asa cess The Cilewiug comuitions ao the work of the association: Bolt Comalites: Chairman, Mica 00 abl meron elder flela Helghte; J. H. Serosete, mayor of Oumsiead Falls; D. Bain, mayor of Fairview; Frank Sossoon, cnyos of Paras, Chane Mesehe aera ok Ney ate Heights; David Ott, mayor of ey Tietative Costmitice: hate man, BW. Harris, mayor of Brecksville; Clifford Zinz, mayor of Beschwood; Jeaslo 1, eaddier, mare et Gey Vilage. Culities Committee: Chairman, Wins oT evan aves, caavee Ot Shaker Heights; Frank Wisniesk, mayor of Independence; Lester Siren, maven of ort Hoon toe Abbey at the Head Donald Abbey is the newly | jurisdiction ¢ elected president of the East |ages for mali Cleveland Republican Club. The | 162 7.) club consists of approximately 500 | Section 628 members and is known as one of | commissioner: the most aggressive in the city. which such 'r ‘The executive committee has clude ft with been increased from six to ten. the next ances - |eounty, shall ‘The following have been added: | tent In every James Alberta, Harry Nixon, Tho- | §') mas L. Picklesimer and C. F. Section 628 Snear, lynched. has 1 Mr. Abbey was elected president |ing him, the following the recent death of Pres- | Over to a reg ident Bert Sloan. dian. Such #1 Sena, the protate fu the probai By-Laws Changed than ave hua een sel fees in the ‘The executive committee of the |@'¥: (93 v. League of Republican Clubs met Section 628 at Hotel Carter, March 18, to re- | which a lynch ceive a report from the special | ° " committee on revision of by-laws. [Coss aseinat | John A. Elden, chairman, re- | roe acy anja ported several proposed changes. |or the person: The committee's report was | 4 person presi adopted. at such lynchi YOU] KNOW ME, AL , = en eneetenetasaaaEE =o ue —— VLU SHOW THEM GoYS | IKNOW ALL IF You HEARD TH RD OF MORE COLO? THAN THERE }/ | AgouT THAT Dol THE UMPS CAL GOERLO OF THE Agour 1S INA RAGA BUT 00 YOU KNOL WHAT Faparetiionterd GoLF GLUG ASKED ME ME, THERE AINT NO LU) | KNOW ENOUGH FOUR Ag I HAVE YOUD YO LOO ARGUND = GOTTA REPUTATION AGOur GOLF ? MEARS KNOW fT TOO. / FoR A FELLA WITH ? LiKE 1, EFTHES DO YOU KNow 2 “a> A LOTTA CoLoe Aun) | a SHAT FORE Eo] / ] R REPUTATION To HA \|| Dy Stl HEARD: BA fH] b GE THE GOLF PROS 45% I// <9 N45 SNL) Se 5 Pe Fy & >) U//, /¢ & > \ ‘ie \ pas ou Son ¥ J) ¥ 4 bY icp ff R\S-@ G ye fe ‘ : Si) (Se es h TIS Se f- NBs ry vB& ; Ss. SE | Gs Se ee , SB JIT Pe nf ‘i = Ry |p I heen A ——— Ss) 1 SN cae Eat \v sr. pee baer 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 mob-violence or anti-lynching bill was introduced in the Oblo (esislature in 1894 and re-introduced in 1896. It took the Hon, Harry C. Smith, editor cf The Gazette, Just threo years to secure its enaciment Into law. “The Ohio Supreme Court has several times upheld tho constitu- Uonality of the law and it has been very effective. 1Winols, Pennsylvania ind Now Jersey have followed Ohio's lead and enacted mob violence or sntl-lynching laws which are copies of our Ohio law. Several other north- orn states and at least one border state (Kentucky) have also enacted antt-lynching laws, in recent years. ‘The Ohlo Iaw follows: Mons. Section 6278. “Mob” and “lynching” defined. 6279. “Serious injury” defined 6280. Damages in case of assault |6281. Damages in case of lynching. 5282. Damages recoverable by legal representative of victim of lynching. 6283. Person suffering death or injury by mob trying to lynch another: 6284. Limitations of action. 6285. Order to include recovery and costs in tax lovy. 6286. Guardian's custody, ete, fees, 6287. County's right of action axainst member of mob. 6288. County's right of action against another county, Section 6278. A collection of peo- plo assembled for an unlawful pur- Pose and intending to do damage or Tajury to any one, or pretending to exercise correctional power over oth- cr persons by. violence and. without suthority of law, shall be doomed “mob” for the purpose of this chap- ter. An act of violence by a mob upon the body of auy person shall consti- tate a “lynching? within the mean ing of this chaptor. (23 ¥. 161 2.) Section 6279. ‘The term “serious injury.” for the purpose of this chap. ter, shail include such injury as per- manently or temporarily disables the Person receiving it from earning @ livelihood by manual labor. (93. ¥ rel 3) Section 6280, A person taken from officers of justice by a mob, dnd assauited with whips, clubs, mis: Siles ‘or in anyother ‘manner, may Fecover, as hereafter provided, @ sum hot to exeeed one thousand ‘dollars as damages from the county in whieh the assault is made. (93'¥. 161-4.) Section 6281. A person assaulted and lynched by a mob may recover, from the county’ in which sich aw: Sault, is made, @ stim not to exceed five hundred dollars; or, if the In- jury received therefrom fs serious, a Sum not exceeding one thousand dol- [iar or, if such injury result in per- manent’ disability, to earn livell- hood by manual labor, a sum not to exceed five thousand dollars, (93 ¥. 162 5.) Section 6282. The legal represen- tative, of a person dying trom injur- fen received from lynching by a mob, may recover of the county in whlch Such injury _ogeurred, a sum not to exceed five “tHousand ‘dollars “dam- ages for such unlawful killing. Such Sum shail be applied to the mainten- ance of the family and education of the minor children of such person 80 lynched, if any. survive him, until such children are of legal axe, and then be distributed to the survivors, share and share alike, the widow re: ceiving an amount equal to a ehild’s share. If there be no widow or min: or children surviving such decedent, Such sum shall be distritmted among the next of kin according to the laws of the distribution of the personality of an intestate, Such sum so recov ered shail not be a part of the estate fof such person so lynched, nor de 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 a mob, (93 ¥. 162 6.) Section 6284. “Action for the re- coveries provided for in this chap- ter must be commenced, within two years. from the date of such Iynch- ing, in any court. having original Surisdiction of an action for dam- ages for malicious assault, (93 ¥. 162 7.) Section 6285. An order to the commissioners of @ county, against which such recovery 1s had, to in- clude it with the costs of action, in the next succeeding tax levy for such county, shall be a part of the Judg- sient tn overy such case. (99 ¥. 162 Section 6286. If the decedent so lynched has minor children surviv- ing 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 huadred dollars for coun- Sel fees in the action for such recov ery. (93 ¥. 162 8.) Section 6287. The county, in which a lynching occurs, may reco¥- tr the amount of a Judgment and costs against it im favor of the legal representatives of a person killed or Seriously injured by mob from any of the persons composing such mob. \ person present, with hostile intent, at'sueh lynching’ shall be deemed a Ws member of the mob and be Hable to such action. (93 v. 162 10.) Section 6288, If a mob carries prisoner into another county, oF 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 amount of the judgment and costs from the county from which the mob came, unless there was contributory neglt gence on the part of officials of such county in failing to protect such pris- oner or dispurse such mob. (93 ¥. 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 wo print below the text of the Hon, Harry C. Smith's Ohio Civil Rights law which the edi- tor had enacted while a member of the 71st General Assembly, in 1894. The General Code of Ohio: Sec. 12840. Whoever, being the proprietor or his employee, keeper Gr manager of an. inn, restaurant, eating house, barber-shop, public conveyance by land or water, theater or other place of public accommoda- tion and amusement, denies to a citi- zen, except for reasons applicable Alike to all eitizens and regardless of race or color, the full enjoyment of the accommodations, advantages, facilities or privileges thereof, shall be fined not less than fitty dollars nor more than five hundred dollars, ‘or imprisoned not less than thirty days nor more than ninety days, or both. See, 12941. Whoever violates the next preceding section shall also pay not less than fifty dollars nor more than five hundred dollars to the per- son aggrieved thereby to be recov- ered in any court of competent juris- diction in’ the county where such offense was committed. ‘This law has repeatediy veen 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 tor them what they should and must do for themselves, under it, in the eaueta: 1S IT ANY USE TO OON- TEND FOR RIGHTS? Colored Americans are the only race, responsible mem- bers of which are in favor of submitting to discrimination on the claim that their race “always will be discriminated against.” The Jews are still contending, after over 1900 years of universal discrimina- ton, and are winning even social rights today. The Irish at home have contended for 700 years and are winning because they will die rather than eubmit. The race that says it's of no use to resist, downs itself and the world then will say, “Negroes are not worthy of equal rights; they are by nature without self-respect and have no ‘guts’.” ‘The world respects only those who resent and re- sist proscriptions for race. Let us be worthy of the abolitionists, worthy of our own fathers who have died in every war to vindicate the title of their race to equal Uberty, and forever resist de- nial of rights in our native land, however long race dis- crimination may continue, To submit 4s to deserve ‘con- tempt.—Boston (Mass.) Guar- dian. I He Knew It Too Well Fina out why millions switched THOS oVVItUree to the genuine Ever-Ready Blade. It Jasts so long that it cuts blade bills in half. 50% thicker, vastly keener, it shaves you better and it saves you plenty. You'll keep sold on Ever-Ready if you keep track of your shaves. —— a s< acs <n Oe ot, ie’ 2 CESSES |< Se | = “\==3e GREAT WORLDS FAIR NE / = _|ACENTURY~ PROGRESS bah Z A *| ‘This magnificent exposition Y Hal surpassing all previous y world’s fairs in originality of NY conception, and in the many | N unique and marvelous fea- nee — US but best of all visie the great fair Se cco + which will be your floating hotel Cr i Be Te PROMO during two full days in Chicago. 6% ALL EXPENSE [iam NS ( LAKE CRUISE NI Starting fromBuffaloorCleveland these special all-expense cruises 9 on the N , the largest r mites DRA eat lakes, give you happy, care PY Seay Ne een ong ae gilt dancing, entertainment, games |f » eidy ore! diastogenwrioncoc ene Te Ea ete the Bervi River me sec MA ERCeae ATS Hina, and » fou hows sop ot EOC ANGSSIM ad Historic Mackinac Island will 7X” BES es A t fips ole icee ap snesnccette ets Ae ' Them fA we czmano ano surraie teanstr Company tee Gsiaspar peal os eecaision cares cieogerenaill X DMO Sienise ated ee Net RR SS cada Ea gs Saran iA Ze || Mamewee se eet I BEE Je (4) ceeaeoeen 992 eee Oe Cn a a a a eT a a eee SEE US FIRST FOR ALL GOODS IN OUR LINE JOHN S. HALL PRICES REASONABLE SATISFACTION GUARANTEED JEWELER AND OPTOMETRIST Eyes Carefully Examined and Glasses Properly Fitted. _7708 CEDAR AVE., Cleveland, Ohio. HEnderson 6028 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS a _____ 293 Bv RING LARDNER We feature the HAWAIIAN and SPANISH music for all occasions. Popular and Classic. Jimmy Jones Maurice Landers 1823 Central 'Phone, PR, 6999. CEDAR BRANCH Y. M. C. A. Cor. Codar Ave. and E. 77th St. A HOME FOR YOUNG MEN! RESTAURANT - HOME COOKING Individual Beds $2.50-$3.00 EN迪科 9094 JOHN P. GREEN Attorney-at-Law Notary Public OFFICE NOW At 614 East 107th St. Cleveland, O. 'Phone, GLen. 3453 Take St. Clair Car to E. 106th St. O. K. Printing Co. W. J. Foster - John M. Smith Commercial and Job PRINTING PROMPT SERVICE 3113 Central Ave. Cor. E. 31st St. PRoSpect 7818 PROTECT them from Tuberculosis Keep them away from sick people.. Insist on plenty of rest . . Train them in health habits . . Consult the doctor regularly . . "The Supreme Authority" WEBSTER'S NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY Here's the EXPENSE Library in one Volume Hundreds of Supreme Court judges concur the work as their authority. The President and Deputy President lead Universities and Colleges give their in- Equivalent in type matter to a 15-volume encyclopedia, 2,700 pages; 452,000 entries. The Government Printing Office in Washington, D.C., the New International as the standard authority, high officials in all branches of the Government indorse it. The Colleges voted overwhelmingly in favor of the standard of pronunciation in answer to questions submitted by the Chicago Woman's Club. --- Where To Purchase The Gazette O. K. PRINTING CO., 3113 Central Ave. NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS Subscribers not receiving T fy us at once. We desire every Send or bring locals and all office, Suite 302, Johnson Block site the Hotel Cleveland entrance call there, please. We advise our readers to a advertisements before making advertise in this paper should ha The fact that they advertise in they want it. All reading matter for publ Gazette must be in the office b week, at the latest. Display adver WEDNESDAYS! HARRY C 226 West Superior Ave (Opposite, Hotel C Notary Public. Classified Advert try 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 entrance. 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 in The Gazette 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, Ohio. (Opposite, Hotel Cleveland entrance) Notary Public. Bell 'Phone: CHerry 1259. Classified Advertising Department FOR RENT. — Five nice rooms (up) at 2417 E. $2d St. Front and back entrance, electric lights, gas, etc. Rent, $20 per month. Call Cherry 1259, before 6 p. m. WANTED—Young man, honest, energetic and intelligent who has had experience as a solicitor and collector. Must be neat in appearance and affable. Address The Gazette, Box A, No. 226 W. Superior Ave., Cleveland, O. CLEVELAND Social and Personal Mrs. Lula Jackson, E. 95th St., claims to have found oil on her lots in Idlewild, Mich. Miss Mary Wells, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elbert F. Jones, E. 97th St., graduated, Thursday, from Wilberforce University. Samuel J. Franklin and Viola R. Vinson, who were married, last month, at her sister, Mrs. R. W. Morton's, E. 90th St., have located in E. 100th St. The 19th-Z Welfare club in response to several very urgent requests announces an entertainment at E. Mt. Zion church the evening of June 16. Alex. O. Taylor, press. While in the city, recently, Mrs. Edna Anderson Gregory and son, Francis A. Gregory, and Lot Frank Bracteis of A. Gregory, and D. C., are entertained at breakfast, by Mr. and Mrs. Alex. O. Taylor, E. 103d St. Albon L. Holsey, secretary of our National Business League, will speak at Mt. Zion Cong. church, Monday evening, under the auspices of our local Board of Trade and Housewives' League. Gladys R. Williams will address the Young People's Society at St. Marks Presby, church, tomorrow (Sunday), at 7 p. m. She is an interesting speaker. Don't fail to hear her. Everybody welcome. The "Love Pirates of Hawaii," a light operetta in two acts, was well given, has a Sunday evening, by the old Boys' Glee clubs of Woodland Center Music School. It was under the direction of Mrs. Lylah Jones, director of the Music School. Robert W. Bagnall, until recently an assistant secretary of the N. A. A. C. P., and a former rector of St. Andrews P. E. church, this city, has accepted charge of St. Thomas P. H. church, Philadelphia, for a six months period. Mrs. Cornelia F. Nickens, E. 83d St. read a very interesting paper on the life of Paul Lawrence Dunbar at a recent meeting of the Lincoln Embroidery club. She was followed by Mrs. Sophia Bailey in a reading of one of Dunbar's poems. Rev. W. B. Suthern of St. Andrews P. E. church has accepted the rectorship of St. Thomas P. E. church, Chicago, and will leave for that city, the last of the month. He was given the degree, D. D., Thursday, by Wilberforce University at its commencement. Municipal Judge Westrop will be the principal speaker, June 22, at a meeting of the West Denison Social club at Obmenhauser's restaurant, 6410 Denison Ave., James B. Norris, president of the club, has announced. The club will include Mulepal Judge Frank S. Day, Sheriff Suzumann, Common Pleas Judges Walther and Corlett; Burt Griffin, chief justice of the municipal court, and Municipal Judge Frank Lausche. The club is a nonpartisan organization. Rev. H. C. Bailey, Mrs. Ruth Hayes and the Hon. Harry C. Smith, editor of The Gazette, were the speakers at the Profit Sharing Coal and Provision club's meeting in Mt. Olive Baptist church, E. 126th St., Monday evening. L. P. Smith, president of the organization, presided and in a very interesting talk gave a account of its splendid work during the past three or four years. This club is one of the most successful in practical results of the many organizations we have in this city. Rev. A. H. Lealtad, of St. Paul, also a former rector of St. Andrews P. E. church, this city, has a daughter, Catherine Deaver, who in 1927 went to Europe, going first to study French, then to the University of Lyons for three years and from there for three years. She served during one summer in Czerny's Polycholin for children in the Charity Hospital in Berlin. She spent six summer vacations in England, Denmark, Germany, Austria-Hungary, Italy, Spain, Norway and Sweden. --- HALE SMITH'S, 8806 Quincy Ave. FRANK L. HANDY'S, 8603 Cedar Ave. THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O. SATURDAY, JUNE 10, 1933. ROSENBERG'S DRUG STORE. N. W. Cor. Central Ave., and E. 55th St. FOR RENT.-Five nice rooms (down) and a large yard at 2417 E. 82d St. $25 a month. Call Cherry 1259, or call at suite 302, No. 226 W. Superior Ave., opposite Hotel Cleveland entrance, before 6 p. m. There is no place in the city of Cleveland better than the Woodland-E. 55th market to go for the best fresh and salt water fish, fresh fruits, vegetables, greens, baked goods, delicatessen supplies, groceries, meals, meals, etc., and all at the most reasonable prices. There you get the best treatment always. Clean, neat and salted, the market has an superior in the city, Supt. N. Curtice is always on the job looking after the interests of all patrons. Spend your money at the Woodland-E. 55th market. For 20 years Wm. E. Bowman has been in the jewelry business at 3725 Central Ave. Years ago he added the optical business—all in his own building, too. This is one of a few local enterprises real credits to our people of Cleveland. Last week, Mr. Bowman celebrated the 20th anniversary of his business with a sale which reduced prices on his large and varied stock of jewelry, etc., that attracted widespread attention and very materially increased his trade. Congratulations and best wishes for 20 years more of success, at least, Friend Bowman. Kitchen-Cuplets by Della Taylor To start your meal with proper zest You'll find a pleasing tidbit best; To end it in the self same mood A demi-tasse should follow food. It is smart to serve the beginning and the end of your meal in the living room, if your home is one in which you serve a liquid appetizer. When you happen to be the "chief cook and bottle washer" of your family, it means also that you may leave your guests temporarily in the care of your husband while you do those always-waiting, last-minute things. If you do have a liquid appetizer before you be sure to serve a tray of canapes with it. You will find that hot ones are almost as easy to prepare as and ease, and you may make quite a pleasant social ritual of it by serving it yourself from a little coffee table. The popularity of the demi-tasse, while comparatively recent in this country, is increasing rapidly. In Europe however, and especially in France where the name demi-tasse originated, the small cup of clear coffee has been enjoyed for years. And in Colombia, South America, where the finest-flavored coffees in the world are grown, the demi-tasse, or "tinto", is even an inherent part of the business man's daily life; and count- less times a day, business is discussed and completed over coffee "tintos" and cigarettes. The ART of being SMART cold ones. All the tedious work can be done in the morning, and all you have to do at the last minute is to place them under the broiler for a minute or so. You may use either bread or tiny crackers for your foundation. There are on the market several different kinds of bread or anchovy paste. If you use bread, cut it in fancy shapes and either toast or sautée on one side only. Little cutters may be found in the household department of any store. I have also found that an old baking-powder can works very well for cutting out rounds of toasted bread. The mixture is always spread on the untouched side and then the whole canape is placed under the broiler for a minute or two. You will find that your broiler rack is the best thing to place these on, as a number of small dibbits will be used. Serve your demi-tasse in the living room, too. It is conducive to comfort VERY HIGH IN THE AIR WORKED BRAVE AUGUST M. BETH- HE TOOK ALL KINDS OF CHANCES AND FLIRTED WITH DEATH, J. S. HALL'S, 7709 Cedar Ave. Mrs. Janie Patterson, mother of Haywood Patterson, one of the Scottsboro boy-victims; Lester Carter, companion of Ruby Bates when hoboing on that Alabama freight train, in another car of which the Scottsboro boy-victims; and Richard B. Moore, member of the executive committee of the I. L. D., will all be present at the mass meeting to be held, Monday evening, at Woodland Center. They are touring Ohio and adjacent states and will attend several open air meetings in this city immediately after the Woodland Center meeting which are being arranged by the I. L. D. The local Scottsboro Action committee is assisting to promote all of these meetings. The Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. maintains separate or "jim-crow" offices for its "Negro" policy-holders in Chicago, St. Louis, Philadelphia, Cleveland and Jersey City, it is announced. Our people should get out of that company pronto and stay out of it, until it discontinues the insulting practice. Friday night is "jim-crow" night at Luna Park roller-skating rink this city. Tell your friends and acquaintances of color to have too much self and race respect to be so "jim-crowed" and to stay away from Luna park roller-skating rink until they are treated there just like members of ALL other races or classes in this community. Our readers will please The Gatezette greatly if they will patronize The May Co., in preference to any other store of the kind in the city, when it comes to making purchases that can be secured in that store. If large business is the target, it is enforced our trade, it sure, The May Co. Tell your friends and acquaintances. Our people of this city with proper self and race respect should continue to protest the "Rev. Leatherfoot and His Choir" programs given, Saturday evenings, over WGAR. The entertainment is coarse and insulting, and should be discontinued by that radio station. Our local ministers ought to stop it, because it is an insulting reflection upon them and their congregations. It now develops that the company, just "chartered for slum clearance in the city," intends to bring about "a change in the occupancy of the district (Ward 11) improved" with modern housing for lower income groups of people. The lowest income groups can only be provided such housing with the aid of philanthropy. This would necessarily remove our people as residents of the district and allow others in the third district. The fatal mistake of the company is its figuring on too low a rental basis the value of the land it wishes to practically confiscate, in Ward 11 and the district for its "modern housing" project, "with parks," etc. and ease, and you may make quite a pleasant social ritual of it by serving it yourself from a little coffee table. The popularity of the demi-tasse, when we work together in this country, is increasing rapidly. In Europe, however, and especially in France where the name demi-tasse originated, the small cup of clear coffee has been enjoyed for years. And in Colombia, in South America, when the first coffee in the world are grown, the demi-tasse, or "tinto," is an even inherent part of the business man's daily life; and countless times a day, his business is discussed and completed over coffee "tintos" and cigarettes. Any one of the following recipes will make a canape which will tickle the palate of even the most fastidious epicure. Hot·Mushroom Canape Peal fresh mushrooms and then chop them in very fine pieces. Add finely chopped onion and stuffed olives, mixing them well with the mushrooms. The mushrooms are cooked as the onions are merely for flavoring and the olives are to add a touch of color. Sautee the whole mixture in butter until well cooked. Spread on your toasted round of bread and of course, place under the cheese in a few minutes just before serving. Melted Cheese Canape To a package of nippy cheese, add a small amount of cream. Mix into a paste. Spread either on your toasted round of bread or on small wafers. Sprinkle with paprika and place under the broiler just before serving. **Sardine Canape** Mash a can of sardines in the oil in which they are packed. Add a few cups of lemon juice, a little lemon juice, to give it a spicy flavor. Spread on rounds of bread or on crackers and garnish with strings of pimienta. Serve cold. OFFICER TAKE ME ACROSS THE STREET WHILE A GUY BY THE NAME OF VAN JELLYCAKE GRANGER WOULD QUIVER WITH FRIGHT AT THE LEAST BIT OF DANGER: Sheer Printed Lawns! Cotton Sports M Chiffon Voile Prints! Printed Organdi Even New Printed Shalamar Sport Ray THE MAY COMPANY, COTTO "I OWE IT A --- Hi-Ja Chemical C ATLANTA, GEORG MADAM HERMAN! Gifted spiritualist and horoscope writer. Gives advice on affairs of life. After a few moments of trance, she reveals the secrets of your past and present conditions. From childhood, her prophecy has helped many in all walks of life. Madam Herman is known from coast to coast. Guaranteed facts or no fee. 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New matelase organdie! And there's no need to tell you what a fashion and value thrill this is! For you know how important organdies are . . . and what values they are at this low price. For those crisp dance frocks and evening jackets you'll love their Summery pastel shades. White, too. In 36 and 39-inch widths. Sheer Printed Lawns! Cotton Sports Mesh! ..... } Chiffon Voile Prints! Printed Organdies! ..... } Even New Printed Shalamar Sport Rayons ..... } THE MAY COMPANY, COTTON FABRICS—FOURTH FLOOR "I OWE IT ALL TO HI-JA" How wonderful it is to be beautiful. To have hair that is long, soft and silky—hair that, when bobbed, falls in graceful curls, charmingly framing the face—hair that scents the air with a dainty, mysterious perfume. Is it any wonder that such women are beloved? Gladys Robinson, famous leading lady of "The Smart Set", has such hair and says of it, "I owe it's beauty to Hi-Ja Quinine Hair Dressing. Without this wonderful product I would be lost. 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Very Reasonable Rentals. Call CHerry 1259. organdie! and value organdies price. For you'll love In 36 and 78¢ Printed Pique Lawns Sheer, smartly ribbed cottonts— in Smart colors for Summer. Silhouette Chiffons Cool cotton fabrics—attractive- ly printed in new designs. White Cotton Pique That classic sport fabric—that launders so easily. 00-inch. Mesh! ... } 18c Yd. es! ... } vons ... } N FABRICS—FOURTH FLOOR LL TO HI-JA" Miss Gladys Robinson, Stage Star Special Introductory Offer Beautiful Art Calendar Free So every lady and gentleman may see just what HI-Ja Quinlan can do to brighten up a blonde and beautify hair, we make the following remarkable offers: 1. Buy 4 boxes of HI-Ja Quinlan hair Dressing and 1 eagle of hair Ward 2. (Value of this assortment, $1.85) In addition we will send you our beautiful New Art Calendar. SEND $1.00 TODAY FOR RENT Several Suites of Five Nice Rooms. One Suite of Four Nice Rooms. A Cosy Five-Room Cottage. Modern. Very Reasonable Rental Call CHerry 1259. 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 Seeing It ACCESSORIES GET NEW DISTINCTION Hats, Gloves and Bags Give Character to Costume. Gloves of this season bear but little resemblance to their cousins of the past. To be sure, they are still accessories, but this year that word is almost a misnomer. The tables are suddenly turned. This spring's dress is much more apt to be the "accessory" to an endless assortment of matching hats, gloves, belts, and bags which give character to the costume. Granted one well-cut dress of solid color as a foundation, there is no limit to the kaleidoscopic changes to be achieved. As an example, use for a background a sheer wool dress in brown. It has the essential qualities of excellent line and fabric. On Monday is worn with it a hat, scarf, belt and gloves all made of brown and white dotted foulard. On Tuesday in more flippant mood, a jaunty "fez" of white pique, and with it pique gloves and ascot tie, gaily ruffled. On Wednesday, more romantically inclined, the urge is toward a rather broad-brimmed sailor hat of natural linen. Tortoise-shell buckles the brown grosgrain hatband, broad linen belt and forms amusing lozenge-like links at the cuffs of the huge gaudet gloves. There are limitless possibilities to this game of presto-change which carries over through cocktail time in the evening. RUFFLES RETURN By CHERIE NICHOLAS Not since the days of long, long ago have such pronouncedly feminine clothes made their appearance in the fashionable world. The very materials themselves invite fuffy-ruffle treatments since they are so sheer and airy-fairy, such as the new organza, which is like organdie, only thinner and silkier. Mousseline de sole is another favorite, especially in pastel colorings. The very lovely gown pictured is done in pale blue mousseline with a sash of pale blue taffeta. A garniture of pastel velvet flowers encircles the crown of the pale blue peau d' ange taffeta hat, the brim of which is tilted low over the right eye. Milliners are very enthusiastic in regard to velvet flowers as a trimming, and are using them in unique ways for crowns and inset effects, and particularly for all-flower toques. FLASHES FROM PARIS Eel gray is a featured color. A stiffened quality is given to lace. Feather toques vie with those of flowers. Back fullness is accented in the newer costumes. Pierrot frills of organdie, net or velvet find favor. Woolens woven as if tucked are new in the fabric realm. Dotted net, profusely ruffled, is sponsored for evening year. Lace blouse with chiffon skirt is scheduled for the more frivolous hours. "Whispering" Hose Woven Like Magic Spider's Web If your leg ever finds itself in a "whisper stocking," there will be no getting out of it—not if it is an intelligent leg, and of course it would be. What kinds of threads these magic hose are made of is the cause of all the whispers, for, when woven together, they are still as webby as a spider could make himself, and they are non-spot, which is the same as saying waterproof, rainproof, splash proof and just plain proof that they are pretty hot stuff. The newer tones in this "whisper stocking" are hazel and deep gray-brown. Gibson Effect A dress of white Swiss eyelet embroidery with ruffles, rather in the Gibson effect, has a sash of wide ribbon, in three tones from beige to warm brown, the lightest shade taffeta, the other two velvet, tied in a prim bow at the waist with ends that almost reach the hem. Don't Thi But Give it WHAT CHICAGO HAS TO EXHIBIT Prepared by National Geographic Society, Washington, D. C.-WNU Service. CHICAGO will be host this summer 46 hundreds of thousands of Americans who will go to witness the city's spectacle of 1933—the gigantic fair depicting a century of progress. Chicago is vibrant, an intense giant among cities, dynamic with the spirit of growing youth. Its residents are confident of its destiny. The forces of nature and the paths of man, which mold the state of Illinois, center in Chicago. There national roads of earth, water, and air converge. In a century it has grown from a frontier stockade in a swamp to fourth place among world cities. The traveler away from Chicago is always told about his city. Chance acquaintances, from Kamchatka to Tierra del Fuego, exclaim: "So you have lived in Chicago without being shot!" and dubiously feel his vest to see if it is bullet-proof. Chicago is pictured as a wicked, turbulent city, a wilder West than the movies ever staged; yet the percentage of crime is lower than that of many cities with a more righteous reputation. Its crime and gunmen, while not to be smiled at as playful diversions, are no more representative of the city, or of any other city, than the ejecting of a stray disturber is the story of a convention's deliberations. They are surface growing pains of a lusty young city. Whatever happens in Chicago has, in newspaper parlance, "news value," and the sensational and bizarre are remembered after the serious and prosocial are forgotten. Chicago lacks the glamour of age; it has no ancient ruins nor even time-stained buildings. A cross stands where Marquette landed, the first white man to cross the portage between lake and river; but that was only 260 years ago. Of those buildings that stood on downtown LaSalle street 37 years ago, only one now remains. Growth of a Cer The white population Dearborn was massacre 15, 1812. In 1833 Chicago covering two and one-half miles. The first steamboat and the first Sunday school had arrived the previous year. On March 4, 1837, it had 4,000 inhabitants and was incorporated as a city with ten and one-half square miles. It was swept by fire on October 9, 1871. Today it spreads over 210 square miles, with more than 3,350,000 inhabitants. Chicago's yesterday are the boyhood of its men today. Standing on the portico of the Field Museum of Natural History, one gazes on a pinnacle city stretching into the distance. It rises higher with the weeks. In front is a green park—only a few years ago a debris-strewn beach with a railroad on wooden trestles—cut by broad driveways, lagoons, and islands and spotted with the ornate structure of the Art Institute, Shedd aquarium, Adler planetarium, Buckingham fountain and the peristyles and pylons of boulevard entrances. On the other side of the museum is a stadium rivaling those of ancient Greece. Boulevards, over land recalimed from Lake Michigan to give the city a front yard, stretch to the north and to the south. The Museum of Science and Industry, founded by Julius Rosenwald, occupies the rebuilt Fine Arts building of the World's Fair held in 1893, admittedly one of the world's finest pieces of architecture. Miles of broad roads and promenades skirt the water, with its superb beaches backed by green parks, which afford facilities for rest and recreation enjoyed by few cities. With more than a hundred parks and playgrounds, more than two hundred public and private golf courses, and miles of forest preserve, all Chicago can enjoy fresh air; while the lake, with its unlimited bathing beaches, boating and yacht clubs, provides unusual aquatic diversion. Some years ago Chicago began to outgrow itself, and the Chicago plan for a City Beautiful was adopted. New streets have been cut and old ones widened, at stupendous cost. The Chicago river was uninked as part of the developing waterway to the golf. A distinctive style of architecture, to which has been given the name "Twentieth Century American," has developed here. The city restricts the primary height of buildings to 264 feet, but towers comprising not more than one-sixth the bulk of the building may soar to the clouds. Bigness Due to Location. On a part of the near North side, where only a generation ago Captain Streeter's schooner, stranded on a sand bar, was the only habitation, a Gold Coast district has risen on land which then was lake—towering hotels and apartments, factories and warehouses, and, until three years ago one of the largest commercial buildings in the world, the American Furniture Mart. Another, the Merchandise Mart, now is larger. A pride in bigness, or even the home needs of Chicago, do not produce these. The city's central location creates them. Chicago has a hotel with 3,000 rooms, and one of the largest indoor sports stadiums. Convenient location brings a million visitors to national conventions each year. The booster who delights in CHE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O "bigger" also adds that it has a plebble gas tank which could be dropped like a candle sucker over the 28-story Times building in New York. It is a city of contrast. Its people reflect it, make the throbbing city theirs. Scholars mix in politics and business men are artists. The city is the same structural panorama. In the corridor between Chicago and the Indiana line more industry and high-pressure recreation are mixed than in any similar area in the world—steel mills, oil refineries, railroad shops, foundries and factories, with country clubs, two race tracks, and a dozen golf clubs, wooing devotees to fresh air and sunshine. Under its pall of smoke, smell of stock yards, and hum of aggressive materialism, Chicago has art, science, music, education, and other factors which add to the comfort and contentment of humanity. It is Illinois intensified. Chicago is a musical city. One of its music schools is among the largest in America. With more students than any other school of its kind, the Art institute gives Chicago an assured place in art circles, but the fact that it has more sustaining members than most similar institutions shows a city's appreciation of art. Great City for Reading. Chicago reads as it hustles. The American Library association classifies it among the great reading cities of the world. Its public library, revived by a donation from England after the fire, circulates 14,000,000 books a year, though the number on its shelves is smaller than that in the New York city public library or in the Library of Congress. For completeness in their special lines and for patronage, students coming far to consult them, Newberry library of humanities; the Creerar Technical and Scientific library; the Fine Arts library; the A Chicago Beach in Summer. Library of Architecture and the Post-graduate library of the University of Chicago are among the noted reference libraries of the world. Libraries and schools and, more than all, the harmony of environment have made Chicago an educational center of North America. Attendance figures and faculty rolls of colleges, or even a world-famed name, do not determine eminence in educational facilities; but, in studies made by the Association of American Universities, 28 universities were given the highest rating, and three are in Illinois—Northwestern, Chicago, and Illinois—while no other state has more than two. The unendowed university of the streets, where orators always have an audience and ideas are more often bizarre than sound, flourishes in Chicago. Washington square, fronting the Newberry library, and the artesian spring in Washington park have the largest attendance of these open-air night schools. Some Fine Museums. "Is there a museum or art gallery?" Is a sightseer's first question in a new city, Illinois has such institutions to show the passing ages, several of them outstanding in their lines. All of the flowers and birds that once graced the sand and marshes which now are Chicago survive in the glass cases of the Academy of Science in Lincoln park. The State Natural History museum in Springfield goes back even farther. A wall in one of its halls is faced with stones starting with the Archean age, which the curator says was more than a billion years ago, and rising in strata to the Pleistocene age, less than 1,000,000 years ago. At the side of each stratum are paintings of the contemporary animals which roamed the earth. Two of the finest Egyptian collections in the world are in Chicago. Field Museum of Natural History, on the lake front, annihilates both time and space. Its frozen Arctic, with polar bears and seals and a path of chilly blue stretching to the midnight sun, is only a step from an Indian jungle, with rhinoceroses emerging from the marsh or a group of startled Queen of Sheba antelope on a rocky mountain side of Ethiopia. They are so real that the visitor, the roar of the city streets still echoing in his ears, is whisked into the distant, lonesome wastes, thousands of miles from Chicago, glimpsing life from a forgotten past and in unknown lands. Madagascar, Philippine, North American Indian, Chinese, Tibetan, Melanesian, and Malayan exhibits are among the most complete in the world. The collections of meteorites, of jewels, and the model of the moon are equally noteworthy among a million and a quarter objects in the museum. Many of them are priceless, but those that can be appraised are valued at $45,000,000, housed in a $7,000,000 marble model of the Erechtheum temple of ancient Athens. SATURDAY, JUNE 10, 1933. PLEATS AGAIN ARE MUCH IN EVIDENCE Sports Dresses Will Flaunt Them This Season. If you are looking ahead toward summer you will be in sympathy with the sunshine. You may have already donned a very attractive warm weather frock. It may be the skirt is pleated. Everywhere one turns there are pleated skirts, some of them accordion pleated. There may be a nice little detail of the embroidered bouquet on the bodice. It's one way of wearing flowers, isn't it? Flowers are to be worn, natural and otherwise. Those that are embroidered on one's dress have the obvious advantage of not wilting. When the silhouette is straight, as daytime silhouettes are apt to be, plants are introduced to give the necessary fulness and, strange though it may seem, they are usually introduced either directly front or directly back. Sports clothes and those that are akin to them gravitate toward simplicity and get around the perplexing sleeve problem by eliminating them altogether. There is usually a jacket to fall back on for the occasion for which one wants sleeves. By CHEERIE NICHOLAS Throats are all togged up in fancy fixings this season, and necklines were never more dramatically treated. Since it is very fashionable to trim monotone frocks with print silk at the present mement, your simplest dresses will take on an air of distinction if they be scarfed or collared with ingenious little fantasies like the ones sketched herewith. A collection of these pretty trifles would not come at all amiss in any summer wardrobe. Any one of these designs would be smart to wear with the suits and frocks of navy, brown or black linen, or triple sheer which are scheduled for the summer. We would particularly like to call your attention to the striped bow and drape, to the left in the group, for we think the way the one streamer is drawn through the round slot, buttonholed at both back and front of the bodice, is very clever. STYLE NOTES Never such a blouse season as this! Always a scarf or a jabot is the slogan. Spring finery is never more attractive. Prints in gray and white or beige and white prevail. Gingham gloves with a gingham frock, that's news! Jacket-and skirt suits entirely of silk print are smart. You must have a white pique waistcoat to wear with dark frocks. Widened shoulders and high fez hats give desired military silhouette. New Brocks Have Flippant Looking Bows Under Chim Spring comes in as a season of youth and gayety. All the newest frocks have been developing large flippant looking bows under the chin. Then there are Pierrot ruches, starchy and fresh, standing up almost to the ear lobes. Organdie and voile are the favorite materials for this sort of performance and look extremely cheerful. There are even lels made of organdie petals. And great billowing boas of the finest mousselline. Young things have declared for velveteleen wraps with puffy sleeves and an aura of Lily Langtry. They like quilting, too, on their scarfs, and wood and chromium belt buckles so shiny they reflect all the world. They like mammoth floating fichus for evening. There are jabots, neatly plaited, some of them cascading in two tiers to below the beltline. Sleeves Are Simple Countless numbers of sleeves are simple and fitted, with merely a concession of width in the minimum of fullness. If there is actual fullness it is controlled by sewed-down pleats that once again assure us that the shoulder must be kept in a clear profile; otherwise width is interpreted in cape effects. Sleeves are elaborated, but not exaggerated. Cyclone Hits Dayton; Wrecks Many Houses Y101 CAPE Camirror 28 STUDEBAKER TEAM READY FOR RACE CLASSIC—Five 85 per cent stock Studebaker Presidents, all veterans of last year’s race, are ready for the annual Memorial Day 500-mile auto race to be staged at the Indianapolis Speedway. This team is entered by The Studebaker factory and Studebaker is the only car manufacturer to enter care officially. Last year these same Studebakers won third, sixth, thirteenth, fifteenth and sixteenth prizes; one car averaged 102.66 miles an hour. This year’s quintette of pilots is composed of (L to r.) Luther Johnson, L. L. “Slim” Corum, Tony Gullotta, Zeke Meyers and Cliff Bergere, the latter being last year’s “third money” winner. STUDEBAKER TEAM READY FOR RACE CLASSIC—Five 85 per cent stock Studebaker Presidents, all veterans of last year’s race, are ready for the annual Memorial Day 500-mile auto race to be staged at the Indianapolis Speedway. This team is entered by The Studebaker factory and Studebaker is the only car manufacturer to enter cars officially. Last year’s race same as this year’s, with 102.6 miles an hour. This year’s quintette of pilots is composed of (L to r) Luther Johnson, L. L. “Slim” Corum, Tony Guilletta, Zeke Meyers and Cliff Bergere, the latter being last year’s “third money” winner. 2 General views of Dayton storm damage: (1) a paper stock company; (2) residential district; (3) repurring telephone lines. OUT of a murky, yellowish sky of mid-May, three cyclonic storms descended upon Dayton, O., during many one day, leaving a wide swath of destruction in their wake. house the snapp totale The first gale, with wind howling at a velocity of 60 miles an hour, hit the city shortly after 6:30 the morning of May 9, ripping down buildings, uprooting trees and tangling telephone and electric wires. The wind was accompanied by rain, thunder, lightning and hail. Later in the day the storm twice again vented its fury upon the terrorized city, adding to its previous toll of property damage. More than 200 structures, mostly residences, were badly damaged by the storms, which were the worst in Dayton's history. Houses were blown from their foundations, roofs ripped off, and walls of large ware- THE CA IN TRAINING for fight—Endeavoring to get his life, muscles in proper shape for his forthcoming fight with Max Schmeling, at the Yankee Stadium, June 8th, Max Baer is shown taking his daily jaunt on a bicycle near his training quarters at Atlantic City, N J. BANKER ATTEMPTS SUICIDE as Trial Looms—J W Harriman being carried into an ambulance, after he had stabbed himself in his unsuccessful suicide attempt. 10 houses pushed in by the power of the gale. Telephone and electric lines were twisted and broken in many places and numerous poles snapped off. The property damage totaled about $1,000,000. Damage to The Ohio Bell Telephone Company's plant alone was about $75,000. When the first gale broke over the city two cables furnishing service for 300 telephones were thrown out of service. Repair work was started immediately with a force of 75 men in the field. Reconstruction work was hampered by the reoccurring blasts of the storm. After the first damage four more cables and about 200 additional telephones were put out of service, multiplying the difficulties under which the repairmen labored. Normal telephone service, however, was restored for a large part of the stricken area within a few days. RACE PREJUDICE! RACE PREJUDICE "I am convinced myself that there is no more evil thing in this present world than race prejudice; none at all! "I write deliberately—it is the worst single thing in life now. It justifies and holds together more baseness, cruelty and abomination than any other sort of error in the world." —H. G. Wells. OUR LESSON We must learn to govern ourselves and work together for our own advancement. If we do not learn to govern ourselves and work together for our own advancement, we may be very sure that we will be governed by others in their own interest as well as worked by others for their own advancement and not ours. George W. Blount. PROTEST! PROTEST!! To submit in silence when we should protest makes cowards out of men. The human race has climbed on protest. Had no voice been raised against injustice, ignorance and last, the inquisition yet would serve the law, and guillotines decide our least disputes. The few who dare, must speak up, appease to right the wrongs of many. Ella Wheeler Wilcox. "NOT THE LARGEST BUT THE BEST!" Province of The Southwest, Little Rock, Ark., Aug. 15, 28. Hon. Harry C. Smith, Editor, Gazette, Cleveland, O. Dear Friend: Continue to live in life, The Gazette! It has been a welcome friend in the Ricks-Demby family from its first issue until now within its fifteenth birthday. We boast of being among the oldest continuous subscribers of The Gazette, not the largest but the best in ideas and ideals, and the able and valuable dependable of race journals. As long as you live, will live The Gazette, and may you continue in good health with our good wishes. Very sincerely yours, (Bishop) E. Thomas and Mrs. Nettie M. Demby. ERROR 28 LEARNING feeds the flames - Young Nazi students as they carried arms to throw into the blaze. Over 20,000 volumes were destroyed AXTELL J. BYLES, new president of American Petroleum Institute, which has asked the federal government to finance $3,300,000,000 public works program with general manufacturers' tax instead of making motorists pay 42% of cost through additional gas tax Mirror A CHIP OFF THE OLD BLOCK—Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., captain and stroke of the Groton School crew, after its victory at Groton, Mass. 85 per cent stock Studebaker Presidents, Memorial Day 500-mile auto race to be