The Gazette

Saturday, September 2, 1933

Cleveland, Ohio

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ADMITS OUR ORPHANS ARE SEGREGATED UNITED STATES OF AMERICA FIFTY-FIRST YEAR. No.3. MITS FOR RENT Several Suites of Nice Rooms THOROLY RENOVATED! All Modern. Very Reasonable Re Call CHerry 1259. Modern. Very Reasonable Rent Call CHerry 1259. All Modern. Very Reasonable Rentals. Call CHerry 1259. DR. A. M. GIBSON Dental Surge OFFICE HOURS: 9 to 12 A. M., 1 t Sundays: 10 A. M.-2 Dental Surgeon E HOURS: 9 to 12 A. M., 1 to 5 and 6 to 9 Sundays: 10 A. M.-2 P. M. 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: GAr, 373 TWO INTERESTING BOOKS By JOSEPH C. MANNING FADEOUT OF POPULISM Tells how and why our people of the Their Constitutional Rights. Broug discussion of the Klan and Anti-Saloon $1.60. From Five to Twe This is Mr. Manning's life story embr 1870 to 1895. Price, and why our people of the South are de- Constitutional Rights. Brought down to de- n of the Klan and Anti-Saloon League Politic From Five to Twenty-Five Mr. Manning's life story embracing the peri- 1870 to 1895. Price, $1.00. Tells how and why our people of the South are deprived of Their Constitutional Rights. Brought down to date by discussion of the Klan and Anti-Saloon League Politics. Price, $1.06. 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 City. Why Should An Read This Adver BECAUSE . . . It Tell Can Relieve and Preven by Taking Lydia E. Pin Any Should Any Worid This Advertisement AUSE . . . It Tells Her He Relieve and Prevent Periods taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Why Should Any Woman Read This Advertisement? BECAUSE . . . It Tells Her How She Can Relieve and Prevent Periodic Pain by Taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Tablets These tablets are a scientifically prepared, clinically tested uterine sedative. In plain English that means a modern medicine, made from the purest and most effective ingredients, which will bring welcome relief to women who suffer from monthly ailments. These tablets do not simply dull the pain for a little while. Any opiate will do that. They reach the cause of the pain and so prevent its return. Why do you endure needless agony? Begin taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Tablets a week before hand and notice the difference. In stubborn cases you may need to take the tablets regularly for several months, but if yours is not a surgical case, you should suffer less and less. PERSISTENT USE BRINGS PERMANENT RELIEF. These tablets contain no harmful drugs. They will not cause dizziness nor any ill effects whatsoever. They are chocolate coated, pleasant to take, convenient to carry. For sale at all drug stores. Small box 50¢. LYDIA E. PINKHAM Mystifying Dummy of Telephone Exl NIA E. PINKHAM'S TABIFYING Dummy Is Pa Telephone Exhibit at LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S TABLETS Mystifying Dummy Is Part of Telephone Exhibit at Fair OSCAR, the dummy with the most sensitive ears in the world, is the stellar performer of the Bell System exhibit at the Century of Progress Exposition in Chicago. Although Oscar's papiermache skull is absolutely devoid of brain cells, he makes the spectator feel like a dual personality through use of his super-sensitive ears. The visitor holds a telephone receiver to each ear and watches Oscar. When one of Oscar's human aides addresses the dummy, the onlooker has the uncanny sensation of being in two places at the same time. He is conscious of still observing Oscar from a distance and yet he feels as though he were in Oscar's place listening to the conversation. Ears Are Transmitters The secret of Oscar's mystifying power is the ability of telephone engineers to give sound "auditory perspective." Oscar's cars are extreme- conversa These tatures are Bell Sys --- Reasonable Rentals. Jerry 1259. GIBSON Surgeon A. M., 1 to 5 and 6 to 9 P. M. A. M.-2 P. M. CLEVELAND, OHIO. Phone: GAr, 3731 of the South are deprived of Brought down to date by -Saloon League Politics. Price, to Twenty-Five very embracing the period from Price, $1.00. Any Woman vertisement? It Tells Her How She revent Periodic Pain E. Pinkham's Tablets hand and notice the difference. In stubborn cases you may need to take the tablets regularly for several months, but if yours is not a surgical case, you should suffer less and less. PERSISTENT USE BRINGS PERMANENT RELIEF. These tablets contain no harmful drugs. They will not cause dizziness nor any ill effects whatsoever. They are chocolate coated, pleasant to take, convenient to carry. For sale at all drug stores. Small box 50¢. THAM'S TABLETS Jimmy Is Part the Exhibit at Fair ly sensitive telephone transmitters. From the transmitter which corresponds to the dummy's right ear runs a telephone line to the receiver which the spectator holds to his right ear. Similarly, Oscar's left ear is connected to the spectator's left ear receiver. The sounds Oscar hears are transmitted with such fidelity that the spectator is acoustically in Oscar's place and has the illusion of actually being addressed by the speaker. Second only to Oscar in popularity at the Bell exhibit is the demonstration of long distance telephony, where visitors are invited to make souvenir calls to any one of 55 cities shown on a large map of the United States. A path of light on the map traces the progress of the call from Chicago to its destination and a battery of head receivers permits other visitors to listen in on the conversation. These and other interesting features are attracting thousands to the Bell System exhibit. --- THE GAZETTE ESTABLISHED, AUGUST 25, 1883 And Issued Every Week on Time Since CLEVELAND, OHIO, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1933. FRESH OHIO NEWS FRESH OHIO NEWS SENT IN BY "THE OLD RELIABLE" GAZETTE'S CORRESPONDENTS. SPRINGFIELD. —Enlois M. Loney and Wallace Stanley were among the boys who won trips to the World's Fair. George Anderson died there, last week. —Mrs. Gertrude Bell of Milwaukee is visiting her sister, Mrs. Madie Daniels. —Lucietia Calman is visiting in Cleveland. —John D. Connelly is visiting his sister, Mrs. Sara Booker. —Sarah Ann merely of Wilberforce in Richmond, Ky., where she is attending school. —Brutus Smith of Chicago is visiting his mother and sisters. Likewise Mrs. Sara Booker. —Mrs. Sarah Green, who was recently operated on at City Hospital, is convalescing in Cincinnati. ZANESVILLE.—About 2,000 persons attended the entertainment given, Wednesday night, by members of the Citizens Conservation Camp, located on the county infirmary grounds, sixty-one of the 187 years American in the camp are from this city. Another entertainment is being arranged.—The recent Stephens' reunion, held at Waterford, elected the following officers for the ensuing year: Pres., E. E. Stephens of Lowell; sec., W. E. Stephens; treas, Petro Stephens; J. E. Barnett of Vincent.—Thornton N. Tate attended the K. P. grand session and World's Fair in Chicago. DAYTON.—John Rudd of Piqua, who underwent an operation at Miami Valley Hospital, is convalescing.—Estelle Grayson, librarian of St. Augustine College, Raleigh, N. C., is visiting her mother, Mrs. Susie Brown. She is a graduate of Hampton, Va. Library School.—Miss Ethel Stewart, who has returned from summer school at Cincinnati, will visit in Chicago soon.—Dr. J. L. Johnson and daughter, Mrs. A. Jackson, were in the city, T. W. week, enlisted in the city, T. E. Jones, WD. D. C., and Miss Velma Blair, a graduate of Freedman Hospital Nursing School, were tendered a very successful reception, last week by Mrs. Jennie M. Blair. CADIZ—Dr. Jean Jones, Mr. and Mrs. J. Wright and Miss Viola Lucas, of Richmond, Va., were guests of Prof. W. H. Lucas, last week—Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Hill of Werton were Cadiz visitors, last week. Miss Ida Harris, Mrs. Vera Harris of Cleveland and Mr. and Mrs. John Harris of Louisville, Ky., visited here, last week.—Mr. and Mrs. Carter Wright of Wheeling were guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Lucas, recently.—Mr. Amos Galaway of Pittsburgh visited Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Johnson, Sunday.—Mrs. Susie B. Hogans and daughter have returned to Dayton.—Rev. and Mrs. John W. Arnold visited at the parsonage, Sunday. He conducted the last quarterly meeting of this year. Services morning and evening. XENIA.—Art Minson and Clarence Lewis were in Cincinnati and Cleveland, last week.—David Dawthard and Adris Drallo of Glenwood were married, Aug. 21.—A former resident of Akron, Clinton Bronner, now of Atlanta, visited here, last week, while en route to Chicago. He was a professor by John Brown and Lawrence Willecox, also students of Clark University.—Mr Soloman Hutchins and Miss M. Wright of Philadelphia and Mrs. Viola Hutchins of Buffalo visited their sister, Mrs. Marie Matthews, recently.—Dr. and Mrs. John W. Dunbar had as guests, last week, Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Debate, and Mrs. J. R. Debate of homa City who were on a motor trip which included parts of Mexico, California, Oregon and the state of Washington. YOUNGSTOWN. — Among those who called to see Dr. W. P. Burton, Sunday, at his mother, Mrs. B. Ragland's, were Mr. and Mrs. Louis S. Jones, leading residents of Cleveland. —Rev. J. T. Payne, pastor of Second Baptist church, Alliance, visited the pastor of Tabernacle Baptist church, the pastor of Tabernacle Baptist church, the principal speaker at a U. N. I. A. mass meeting, Sunday afternoon, in Campbell. —Thos. Ash, Sr., who has been ill for months, is better. —Mesdames Chester Williams, Inez Andrews and Estelle Murray motored to Indianapolis to represent Naomi Temple at the 34th annual convention of the order. They will meet in New York. —Several of our people who "play the numbers" have been lucky enough, recently, to find the "money" numbers in The Gazette's cartoons on pages 2 and 3. It is said. The ROUNDER ON WHAT'S DOING Atty. Jos. H. Silbert, former member of the Ohio legislature, a candidate for a municipal judgeship, fled with the Board of Elections, last week, petitions containing 20,000 signatures. Fince. He has opened headquarters at the office he will be pleased to see you at any time between 9 a. m. and 5 p. m. While in the legislature, Mr. Silbert was always active in all matters of interest to our people. He is one friend we can absolutely depend upon all the time. Do not fall to do all you can to promote his candidacy. Walter R. McCornack, local architect, head of the "slum clearance" rehousing project known as Cleveland Homes, Inc., has announced that the land in the area bounded by Cedar and Central Aves., 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 the area also that the law requires the right to the law to force, thrue 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 the property of the district (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 the fatal value of too low a land the value of the land it wishes to practically confiscate, in Ward 11 and the district for its "modern housing" project, "with parks," etc. MEAN AND CONTEMPTIBLE Atlanta, Ga.—Efforts to write into the code of the NRA a lower wage scale for "Negroes" constitute a threat to the President's program of economic recovery and also to the wage and living standard of all working people, according to a statement the president last Saturday, by W. W. Alexander of this city, executive director of the Commission on Interracial Co-operation. This proposal, which is being urged by certain southern employers of labor, is not only unjust to all working people, but also to all working people sound, according to Dr. Alexander, who predicts that the wiser economic leaders of the South will reject it. Rev. J. T. Payne, pasto rof Second most valuable and interesting exchanges, commenced the fifty-first year of its publication, last week, and we extend our most sincere congratulations, for during all these years it has been a welcome visitor to this office. No race journal has been more earnest and ardent in defending the law against the nature good friend, the Hon. Harry C. Smith, deserves the support and encouragement of our people. The Gazette has been regular, reliable and readable and merits all the praise which it has received. Louisville (Ky.) American Baptist. Miss Muriel Taylor of Dallas, Texas, a graduate of the University of California, won first place in a recent service examination there, as noponderous hostess in Alameda County, Calif. There were 450 persons of all races who took the examination. AN INNOVATION! Will Be The Arrangements for Refreshments in Public Hall While Grand Opera Is Being Given. The local fall festival of the San Carlo Grand Opera Company of New York, which will be presented by the Garden Club of Cleveland in big pub- LEON ROTHIER ic hall the week of Sept. 11 thru 17, with matinees on Wednesday and Saturday, will see opera in a setting that recalls Berlin and Paris. The big corridors of the hall will be converted into comfortable gardens with seating. Equally new is the scale of prices for the nine opera performances, with seats at 25 cents to one dollar. The Wednesday matinee, expressly for school-children who will be excused to attend the opera, is even lower—all seats on the main floor being fifty seats and all balcony seats twenty-five. The repertoire is as follows: Monday, Sept. 11, Carmen; Tuesday, Sept. 12, Faust; Wednesday, Sept. 13, Matinee, Hansel and Gretel, (in English); Wednesday evening, Rigolotte; Thursday, Sept. 14, Cavalleria rusticana and Pagliacci; Friday, Sept. 15, La Boheme; Saturday, Sept. 16, matinee, Romeo and Juliet (in French); Saturday evening, Il Trovatore, and Sunday, Sept. 17, Madame Butterfly. Among the stars, many of whom are from the Metropolitan and Chicago operas, are such artists as Ina Bourskaya, Russian mezo-sao Zanabiee, the mahla Sabaianieve, Drea Aves, zezo-sao who sang with the company for five seasons; Blanco Srayo, Dimitri Onoref, Harold Kravitt, Natale Cervi and Margaret Codd. Ticket offices are at Lyon & Healy's, 1226 Huron Rd., and Public Auditorium. OUR CATHOLICS MEET. The ninth annual convention of the National Catholic Interracial Federation opens, today, at 1115 Superior Ave. Wm. R. Conners speaks on our people in American industrial society. A number of other persons speak on the NRA. Tomorrow morning, congregational singing will be lead by Our Lady of the Blessed Sacrament, Ms. Elizabeth Sacramento, Thos. E. McKenney, pastor of the church. Sunday afternoon there will be an open air mass meeting at the Villa Angela, 17061 Lake Shore Blvd. Address of welcome, Rt. Rev. Jas. A. McFadden. The above named choir will furnish music. In the evening there will be an entertainment and "smoker" for men at the church, Ms. Elizabeth Sacrament church, E. 79th St. and for ladies at the P. W. A. Monday afternoon, Miss Jane Hunter speaks in the Cathedral Auditorium on "Cleveland's Experience in the Betterment of Race Relations." Mrs. Ernestine Coxington-Dent Oberlin, O.—Brilliant pianist, who received her Mus.B, here in '24, then did four years of special work in New York City at the Juilliard Musical School, returned, yesterday, under a Rosenwald grant for another year of special work on the piano. Mrs. Dent was married two years ago to Albert W. Dent, now superintendent of the Flint-Goodridge Hospital of Orleans. Accompanying her are her young son and Mr. Dent' mother. They motored him, Mr. Dent continuing his trip to a meeting of the American Hospital Association at Milwaukee. 'Twas Ever Thus! News reports of the wreck of the famous Crescent Limited just outside Washington, D. C., recently tell how The 'Negro' porters, cut and bruised cars rocked from the bridge, went to the bridge, their passengers and brot them safely out of the overturned cars and up the embankment." Can You Beat This? Laurel, Miss. — When Shipman Vaughn awakened, Thursday morning, he found rats had nibbled skin from the palms of both hands, while Mrs. Marie Brown, who occupied another room in the same house, was awakened by a rat which she caught nibbling skin from her heel. SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS EGATED XENIA HOME TREATMENT OF CHILDREN OF RELEASED OHIO SOLDIERS AND SAILORS Prevails in About All Ohio State While "Negroes" Sleep On. AT THE XENIA HOME INSULTING MISTREATMENT OF CHILDREN OF OUR DECEASED OHIO SOLDIERS AND SAILORS The Rule That Now Prevails in About All Ohio State Institutions While "Negroes" Sleep On. That Lynching in Arkansas. Pine Bluff, Ark.—Henry Jackson, chain gang victim, was shot down by a sheriff's posse here on the excuse that he "trifed to run" as the gang closed in on him. Jenkins was "suspected of an attack" on a guard at Cummins' prison farm, who insulted and struck him as he passed the camp gate. Bloodhounds were used to guard him. When they first caught up with him, he made friends with them and tied up three of them. The fourth followed along with him, and as he paused to tie him up also, the gangsters caught up with and killed him. 100 Cleveland, O., Aug. 19, '33. State Board of Trustees, The Soldiers and Sailors Home, Xenia O. Gentlemen:—I have received the following information with respect to your home: 1. Any application that are made to center colored boys or girls in the Home are received on the excuse that there is no room. At present there are only fifteen boys in one cottage and eight girls in the other, and by October you are planning to take out four or five more. 2. Always before this there has been one or two Negro boys in the band, but for one year now there has been none of our boys permitted to play in the band or have any opportunity to cultivate and exercise their talent. 3. The Colored boys have not been permitted to live in any discharge buildings, although they have met every requirement in every way. If these charges are true, it is a very serious matter and I trust you will immediately rectify this situation. Please be good enough to let me hear from you at your earliest convenience. Yours very truly, Chester K. Gillespie. (Member of Ohio House of Representatives from Cuyahoga County.) OLD SOLDIERS' AND SAILORS' ORPHANS' HOME. Dear Mr. Gillespie:—In answer to your letter of Aug. 19, statement No. I is entirely false, as colored paper was used in the case that there is no more room. DE PRIEST AND SON And Other Stockholders of the Defunct Binga State Bank Facing Lawsuits. Chicago, Ill.—Congressman Oscar De Priest and son, Stanton, each over 430 years old, took the defunct Binga State Bank, Hon Edward H. Morris, former member of OSCAR OE PRIEST the Illinois state legislature, receiver, is to sue them and other stockholders for a sum equal to the amount of stock they owned, it is announced, Robert S. Abbott is listed as owning stock to the amount of $5,000; Chas. I. Clark, $4,000; Loc. $4,000; $4,000; G. Dailey, $6,500; G. H. Cuestion, $1,000; Mrs Eva Jenifer, $7,000; Adelbert H. Roberts, $1,000; Carl G. Roberts, $1,000; Dr. Troy Smith, $1,500, and Dr. R. A. Williams, $2,000. 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 compares with any will immediately available in the NEWSEST AND BEST published in this section of the country in the interest of Afro-Americans. Applications for colored children, the same as those for white children, are judged by the Board of Trustees entirely on the merits of the case. In answer to your statement No. 2, colored boys are not discriminated against in the band, but the colored boys must compete along with the white boys to make the band. Several years ago there were some excellent musicians in the band, but the colored boys but none of the band expected to live on the reputation of the former boys and not make their own way: In regard to statement No. 3, colored children are in separate cottages, that is, the boys have a cottage to themselves and the girls have a cottage to themselves. Like all other families in the dining room, children in the same families eat toddlers, and children in the colored children eat at different tables than the white children. In all other cases the white children and colored children are treated alike, in fact, in a great many instances the colored children are given more attention and more consideration than the white children. It is the idea of the Board of Trustees and the administration of the Home that a child in trained teachers competes successfully in life when they leave here and all our training is based on that. I do not know where you got your information, but I assure you that we will be glad to have you or anybody else make an impartial investigation of this matter at any time and we rest assured that you will find that the colored children are receiving every consideration that is given to the white children. Yours very truly, Harold L. Hays, Supt. THE GAZETTE'S GLORIOUS CAREER! On Aug. 19, 1933, The Cleveland Gazette entered upon its "51st Year of Continuous Publication, Every Week On Time." A most remarkable achievement in itself and yet, when we pause to realize that it has always been opposed to "jim crowism," always fought most strenuous in price right, editor, and backed the efforts of its righter, Harry C. Smith, in securing the enactment of Ohio's famous Civil Rights Law, and Mob Violence Act or Anti-Lynching Law, its progress is little short of marvelous. The Colored people of this country should feel more than proud to perpetuate its existence by giving it their financial support. Let us pray that God may give us the editor the strength against the flood of segregation and "jim crowism" that threatens to destroy the spirit and ambition of our people.—Editor W. P. Dabney, Cincinnati (O.) Union AS TO THE TERM, "NEGRO!" Africa had no "Negro" race or tribe. The word was improperly employed, within the United States—there was no "Negro" here, is none now nor at any time in the past. The word "Negro" is perpetrated by racial prejudice, and ignorance on the part of many whites, and by a group of professors in Negro men and women, who make a profession of being "Negroes" and by another group of hypnotized Colored men and women, who believe that the "Negro" has some high and mighty mission to perform in this country. It is further perpetrated by an un-sophisticated class of schooled Colored men, who do perceptively willing to be known as "Negroes," but wilt under the racial designation of "Negroed" applied to one of their women.—Thos. H. R. Clarke, Washington, D. C. Military and Naval Cadets Congressman-at-Large Stephen M. Young has announced that he would hold competitive examinations for Ohio appointments to the U. S. naval and military academies, Saturday, Oct. 21. "Political pull will not count," Young said. "Appointments will be made entirely on merit, and all applicants will be given the same consideration." Died in His "Sweetie's" Los Angeles, Calif.—Morris Becker (white), a local business man, died of heart failure in Roberta Wright's room, 1133 E. 12th St. His physician had warned him to avoid excitement. Yes, Roberta is a memorial. The GAZETTE 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. Address all communications to HARRY C. SMITH Editor and Proprietor THE GAZETTE 226 W. Superior Ave., Cleveland, O. (Bell 'Phone: Cherry 1259) Member Ohio Legislature: 1894 to 1896; 1896 to 1898; 1900 to 1902. IN-UNION IS STRENGTH 10,000,000 Afro-Americans. 325,000 in Ohio. 75,000 in Cleveland. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1933 The Virgin Islands have our heartfelt sympathy. T. Weber Wilson, a member of Congress from Mississippi for two terms, has been appointed U. S. district judge for the Islands. Dr. B. B. Mitchell of Tuscaloosa, Ala., is named by the I. L. D. as the person who turned Elmore Clark, also a member of the race, and accidental survivor of the lynching in that county, recently, over to the sheriff "a second time." Comment unnecessary. Lord, have mercy! --- The editor of The Gazette is certainly greatly indebted to his long-time friend and confere, Editor Wendell Phillips Dabney, of "The Cincinnati Union," for the very kind things he has said, in the article republished elsewhere in this paper, relative to "The Gazette's glorious career!" Many thanks, good friend. It is encouraging to say the least. There was an unusually large number of lynchings in the South in the last few weeks. The U. S. attorney general is quoted as saying he cannot "very well interfere" with the lynch "law" of the South. Of course not, because southern Democracy is in control of the present national administration of which he is an important part, being a leading member of the President's cabinet. --- President Roosevelt ought to take a decided stand in opposition to the discrimination against our workers shown in the NRA codes being adopted for basic and other industries, particularly in the South. If they are permitted to stand, it will saddle that unfairness on our people for many years to come. And this would be so manifestly unfair and unjust that it would ever be a disgraceful reflection upon the Roosevelt administration, to say the least. Newton D. Baker of this city, years ago a member of President Thomas Woodrow Wilson's cabinet, in a recent address to a number of eminent Japanese statesmen, while visiting in Toklo, said that "our western civilization has been a failure." Judging the civilization of the rest of the world by the economic depression of the last few years, one would have to admit that the civilization of the world has hardly been a success. One thing sure, there is plenty of room for improvement everywhere. Last week Monday, armed gangs of "crackers" lynched one and three times attempted to lynch a second member of the race at Decatur, Ala. This is the town in which Heywood Patterson, Scottsboro boy-victim, was retried, last April, and to which Judge James E. Horton, his trial judge, and Attorney General Thomas E. Knight, Jr., insist that the nine innocent Scottsboro boy-victims be taken for a third trial, next month. Greater than fairness, justice and all else, as far as that section of the country is concerned, is southern racial prejudice. DESERVES A MEDAL According to the New York Amsterdam News, "h'te Kingfish," U. S. Senator "Huey" Long, of Louisiana received his notorious "lambasting" of a few days ago, "down East," from a musician of color employed in the socially prominent club house where he was a guest. This is sure good news, if true. "Huey," like nearly all the rest of the "crackers" from that section of the country who come North, make the mistake of imagining they are "down home" oftimes when mistreating waiters and others of color in this section of the country with whom they come in contact. Some one ought to start a fund to purchase a medal or a gift of some kind for that musician who so beautifully decorated "The King- fish's" forehead above one of his eyes, the other day. More power to his kind. --- BISHOP HEARD CHARGES. In an open letter, Bishop Wm. H. Heard, age 83, of the A. M. E. Church denies the charges of embezzlement and misappropriation of $18,000 of funds belonging to Wilberforce University, recently made by trustees of the university in session at Wilberforce, O., and asks that judgment be withheld until there is a trial. The bishop says he will prove that his 53 years in the service of the Church are still unblemished. In the letter he charges The Citizens and Southern Bank and Trust Company of Philadelphia with certain irregularities, and says that the Rev. R. R. Wright, president of Wilberforce and vice-president of the bank, "knows better than any one else that a good part of my alleged shortage rests securely in the vaults of his bank." Bishop Heard also says that the trustee board of Wilberforce University at its last annual meeting voted down the adverse charges which apparently its committee, to which the charges were referred, has sustained. Another interesting paragraph of the bishop's open letter is the following: "Bishop Jones and I were obliged to pay a ten per cent bonus every time we made or renewed a loan for Wilberforce University, in addition to the regular interest charges, plus costs of recording, etc. This bonus charge over a period of years was in the neighborhood of $5,000, yet I am given no credit for it." We imagine that his reference to Bishop Joshua H. Jones will hardly help, for obvious reasons. Serious charges of a like nature were made against Bishop Jones about a year before his death, some months ago, and at that time he was practically placed upon the retired list (as a result of the charges) by the general conference of the A. M. E. Church. The Heard trial, if it ever takes place, certainly ought to prove not only interesting but very illuminating to all. By all means let us have the trial. DOINGS OF THE RACE. The Mills brothers returned to the radio, Tuesday, after the long illness of John Mills. According to The Crisis 2,548 of our students graduated from American colleges and universities, this year. Mrs. Maud R. George of Chicago, was elected president of our National Association of Musicians, in Indianapolis, recently. S. W. Green of New Orleans was re-elected Supreme Chancellor at our K. P. biennial session in Chicago, week before last. J. Finley Wilson was again re-elected (unanimously) to head our Elks at their national convention in Indianapolis, last week. Dr. Lucy E. Moton, for 37 years principal of Miner Normal Teachers' College, Washington, D. C., died, last week Thursday, as the result of auto injuries sustained, Aug. 19. L. H. Lightner, supreme clerk of the American Woodmen, was selected to succeed Dr. E. W. Abner, supreme commander, at the eighth quadrennial session of the order, last week, at Denver, Colo. A letter written by President Abraham Lincoln, dated Feb. 25, 1865, has been stolen from the wigwam exhibit at the World's Fair. The letter read "Will the Secretary of the Navy please see and hear this Connecticut gentleman?" Stokes Judd, age 105, of Jonesboro, N. C., died last week after a long illness. He is survived by a young wife and 21 children. Mr. Judd received considerable publicity when his young wife presented him with triplets a few years ago. Miss Annie Page of St. Louis has been awarded the Elks annual scholarship for winning first prize in their nationwide oratorical contest. Leonard Farmer, Jr., of Atlanta won second prize. The first prize winner received $250 and the other $100. Ralph Metcalfe en route to the U. S. from Paris, last week, found he had left his passport in a Paris hotel. Arriving at Cherbourg, France, he was informed that the American consulate at Paris had telephoned attesting his citizenship, thus enabling him to go on to New York. Recently, Howard University gave 197 degrees. Tennessee State College, second, gave 104 degrees. Ohio State University and the University of Illinois, which lead the white colleges, each gave 26; the University of Cincinnati, second, 20. Dr. Godfrey Nurse of New York City, has been appointed U. S. Collector of Internal Revenue for the third district of N. Y. City to succeed the Hon. Chas. W. Anderson who has held the post for many years. Anderson is an Ohio boy and lived in Cleveland when a youth. The decision in the $6,000 suit, N. Y. City, against the estate of the late A. A'Lelia Walker was given, Aug. 17, in favor of Miss Mary A. White, plaintiff, who claims she served Miss Walker as secretary, housekeeper, chauffeur and companion for four years and for which she was not paid. George R. Arthur of Chicago is our only member of the advisory council of the U. S. Employment Service, composed of fifty men and women prominent in industrial, labor and city circles, appointed by the U. S. Secretary of labor, Miss Perkins. Robert N. Hutchins, president of the University of Chicago, heads the council. It has no connection with the NRA program. CHE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1933 OHIO'S MOB VIOLENCE ACT OR ANTI-LYNCHING LAW LEADS THE COUNTRY IN EFFECTIVE LEGISLATION Our mob-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 York have been successful in securing violence or anti-lynching laws which are copies of our Ohio law. Several more northern states and at least one border state (Kentucky) have also enacted anti-lynching laws, in recent years. 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. Limitations of action. 6285. Order to include recovery and costs in tax levy. 6286. Guardian's custody, etc., fees. 6287. County's right of action against member of mob. 6288. County's right of action against another county. 6289. Non-relief from prosecution. MOBS. Section 6278. A collection of people assembled for an unlawful purpose and intending to do damage or injury to any one, or pretending to exercise correctional power over other persons by violence and without authority of law, shall be deemed a "mob" for the purpose of this chapter. An act of violence by a mob upon the body of any person shall constitute a "lynching" within the meaning of this chapter. (93 v. 161 2.) Section 6279. The term "serious injury," for the purpose of this chapter, shall include such injury as permanently or temporarily disables the person receiving it from earning a livelihood by manual labor. (93 v. 161 2.) 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; or, if such injury result in permanent disability, to earn a livelihood by manual labor, a sum not to exceed five thousand dollars. (93 v. 162 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 allike, the widow receiving an amount equal to a child's share, there be no further children surviving such decedents, such sum shall be distributed among the next of kin according to the laws of the distribution of the personality of an intestate. Such sum so recovered shall not be a part of the estate of such person so lynched, nor be subject to any of his liabilities. (93 v. 162 6.) Section 6283. A person suffering death or injury from a mob attempting to lynch another person shall come within the provisions of this chapter. He or his legal representatives shall have a like right of action as one purposely injured or killed by such a mob. (93 v. 162 6.) Section 6284. Action for the recoveries provided for in this chapter must be commenced within two years from the date of such lynching, in any court having original jurisdiction of an action for damages for malicious assault. (93 v. 162 7.) Section 6285. An order to the commissioners of a county, against which such recovery is had, to include it with the costs of action, in which shall be provided tax levy for such county, shall be a part of the judgment in every such case. (93 v. 162 8.) Section 6286. If the decedent so 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 seriously injured by a mob from any SOUP AND FISH LIKE GIRLS,MUSIC AND LIGHTS, BUT THEY NEVER SEEM TO CONNECT-YOU KNOW HOW IT IS-ANYWAY, THEY GET A LETTER FROM AN OLD FRIEND SAYING HIS Daughter IS ARRIVING ON THE 5:10 AND ASKING THEM TO SHOW HER THE TOWN-SHE WILL WEAR A GREEN HAT-AH, THE GREEN HAT! THAT SPELLS JAZZ,JOY AND LATE HOURS- THE BOYS ARE ALL EXCITED FISH, WE'LL BOTH MEET HER AT THE STATION- BUT WE'LL DEAL FINE COLD HANDS TO SEE WHICH ONE OF US GRABS HER FOR THE REST OF THE EVENING ALL RIGHT, SOUP- BUT SHE WON'T LIKE YOU, ANYWAY ARE YOU THE TWO GENTLEMEN WHO ARE TO MEET THE LITTLE GIRL IN THE GREEN HAT? SHE WAS NO BOTHER TO ME AT ALL WHY- ER HERE'S A NICE LOLLYPOP FOR YOU TO KEEP BUSY WITH TILL YOUR DADDY ARRIVES HELLO, JOE- GET THE POOL TABLE READY- WE'LL BE DOWN RIGHT AWAY WE WERE JUST HAVING A FUN AFTER THE FOOT-BALL GAME DOLONEY DANA GE IS IN HOME NO HATTER WHO DOES IT of the persons composing such mob. A person present, with hostile intent, at such lynching shall be deemed a member of the mob and be liable to such action. (93 v. 162 10.) Section 6288. If a mob carries a prisoner into another county, or comes from another county to commit on a prisoner brought from such county to another, taking 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 negligence on the part of officials of such county in failing to protect such prisoner or dispurse such mob. (93 v. 161 10.) 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 his employee, keeper or manager of an inn, restaurant, eating house, barber-shop, public conveyance by land or water, theater or other place of public accommodation and amusement, denies to a citizen, except for reasons applicable alike to all citizens and regardless of race or color, the full enjoyment of the accommodations, advantages, facilities 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 prior preceding section shall also pay not less than fifty dollars nor more than five hundred dollars to the person aggrieved thereby to be recovered in any court of competent jurisdiction in the county where such offense was committed. This law has repeatedly been held constitutional and good law by the Ohio Supreme court. The trouble is our people will not use it as often as they should, but expect it to do for them what they should and must do for themselves, under it, in the courts. "HUMAN NATURE'S FOULEST BLOT." Learning To Roller Skate Again New York Raises Bumper Bruise Crop Central Park Police Kept Busy Giving First Aid Treatment To Venturesome By DOC SCHNURMACHER NEW YORK—Society dowagers being snubbed by youngsters in their 'teens, Park Avenue debutantes taking lessons from kiddies who come to the Mall in Central Park from the lower East Side, sepia colored lads and lastes who sweep down from Harlem on winged roller skates to conquer the Smug Sixties—they all make a topsy-turvy world these days, especially if seen through the eyes of a novice learning how to skate. The roller skating craze has taken New York by storm and the city's resulting quota of bumps, bruises and minor abrasions has been filled to overflowing. This can be determined by personal Policeman Gleason is ever ready to render first aid. observation at the Mail in Central Park any day where the novices among the thousands of skaters may be picked out by their char OUR FIFTY-FIRST YEAR. o Busy Giving First Aid o Venturesome NURMACHER Above—Roller skating on the Mall. Above—Roller skating on the Mall, who snatched him right out of the patch or "snap the whip" party on Harlem acteristic sitting position, legs extended at an oblique angle, and head slightly thrown back, as if in solemn contemplation of the distant horizon. Or you can take Policeman Frederic Gleason's word for it. And Policeman Gleason ought to know for he patches up more bruised knees on his daily tour than do any three other policemen. And when the new skaters and the more venturesome ones don their feeting rollers on a Saturday or Sunday afternoon first aid supplies such as speed bandages, "Zo," Red Cross cotton and gauze, and band-aids are at a premium. So discovered Mr. Ellsworth t yle, manager of the Red Grosa Division of Johnson and Johnson. Mr. Gale, who hails from New Brunswick, N. J., where the roller skating craze has not yet been taken up with the zest and zip which has followed its New York f ebur, was rescued by a policeman d we have only expressions of sincerest appreciation. There is, however, one thing we would ask of all our readers, especially at this time, and that is that they urge their friends and acquaintances to become subscribers of "The Old Reliable" Gazette and in this way assist it to materially in- crease its circulation and power for good. For all you have done in the past, we thank you, and again as- sure you of our sincerest appreciation. Harry C. Smith, SEE US FIRST FOR ALL JOHN S PRICES REASONABLE JEWELER AND Eyes Carefully Examined an 7709 CEDAR AVE., Cleveland, Ohio 2 LIFE OPPORT 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. 7709 CEDAR AVE. Cleveland, Ohio. HENDERSON 6028 A Starting from Buffalo or Cleveland these special all-expense cruises on the SEEANDBEE, the largest and finest passenger ship on the great lakes, give you happy, carefree, restful days, with music, dancing, entertainment, games and sports. The scenic beauties of the Detroit River, the St. Clair Flats, and a four hour stop at Historic Mackinac Island will help make the trip memorable. EW 2 THE CLEVER East Gentlemen: information on the great Name Address Everything in rooms, meals the ship is a mission to the CB LINE 407. B TWO HO THE U AT? WHY- ER HERE'S A NICE LOLLYPOP FOR YOU TO KEEP BUSY WITH TILL YOUR DADDY ARRIVES FOR ALL GOODS IN OUR LINE JOHN S. HALL LE SATISFACTION GUARANTEED TELER AND OPTOMETRIST Examined and Glasses Properly Fitted. Cleveland, Ohio. HEnderson 6028 LIFETIME OPPORTUNITIES IN The GREAT WORLD'S FAIR A CENTURY or PROGRESS THE CLEVELAND AND BUFFALO TRANSIT COMPANY East 9th Street Pier East 9th Street Pier Gentlemen: ~Send me folder giving rates, schedules and full information about your ALL-EXPENSE World's Fair Cruises on the great ship SEANANDBEE - Name Address Everything included = transportation, state- rooms, meals, entertainment, trip sides, use of the ship as a hotel while in Chicago and ad- mission to the Fair - from Cleveland as low as $59 50 407 By RUBE GOLDBERG HELLO, JOE-GET THE POOL TABLE READY-WE'LL BE DOWN RIGHT AWAY HERE'S A E LOLLYPOP R YOU TO UP BUSY WITH TILL OUR DADDY ARRIVES And if you've ever observed the terrorizing effect of a "snap the whip" party of twenty or more shrieking youngsters skating at terrific speed in tandem formation, you can understand why Mr. Gale was so grateful to his rescuers that he donated enough Red Cross Division Products to take care of several thousand bruises. In spite of the list of minor accidents faithfully administered to by the police and public spirited citizens, the skating fad continues to grow and a special asphalt road near the Mall has been reserved for the increasing number of skaters. Bicycling, too, is just beginning to become popular and from the number of girls riding around the Park on their two-wheeled steeds, bicycling threats to become as popular as skating. All in all, as Policeman Gleason and Mr. Gale will tell you in chorus, it looks as if the sale of first aid equipment this season is due for a great increase. 1 Do the Very Best I Can. I do the very best I know how; the very best I can; and I mean to keep ding so until the end. If the end brings me out all right, what is said against me won't amount to anything. If the end brings me out wrong, ten angels swearing I was right would make no difference. — Abraham Lincoln. This magnificent exposition —surpassing all previous world's fairs in originality of conception, and in the many unique and marvelous features of interest, is an event no one can afford to miss. Go to Chicago this year by all means, but best of all visit the great fair on the great ship SEEANDBEE, which will be your floating hotel during two full days in Chicago. A 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 7313 PROTECT them from Tuberculosis Keep them away from sick people.. Insist on plenty of rest .. Train them in health habits .. Consult the doctor regularly .. ALL-SILK Stout Dress 3.98 Postage PAID JUST send your name no money — and I will send the dress to you. You are dressed to it. It’s unseasoned to be worn for any occasion. Because the price is so low, This is an amm- ing and complimented bargain. SILK Foulard The dress pictured in the ad is a silk tob foulard which is guaranteed to wash perfectly and keep lent wear. Made with long, sleeved shirts, sleeveless tees of plain silk and jacket long puff sleeves. Shirt is placed in front. Back of dress is laid flat. Dress with mash. An exception- ally given long, slender lices for the neckline. COLORS: Tan, rose, pike, white, cream, green, blue, ground with contrasting extra size, 34 to 38 to bust. DON’T SEND 1 PENNY DON’T send a letter and be sure your dress is in good condition. The price is $3.98 for it. We are not a reasonable whitener. Dress is not a reasonable whitener. It is not reasonable whitener. We will count it in our expense and we will return it. Order by No. 96. WALTER FIELD CO. Dept. 5 107 CHICAGO "The Supreme Authority" WEBSTER'S NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY Here's the EVIDENCE Hundreds of Supreme Court judges count in highest prize of the work as their authority. The President and Department Heads of all leading Universities and Colleges give their endorsement. The Government Prisoners' Association uses the New International as the standard authority. High Officials in all major Churches Government indorse it. The Colleges voted overwhelmingly in favor of Women's advance in pronunciation in answer to questions submitted by the Chicago Woman's Club. A Library in one Volume Equivalent in type matter to a 15-volume encyclopedia, 2,700 pages; 452,000 entries, including thousands of NEW WORDS; 12,000 biographical entries; 423,000 vocabulary subjects; over 6,000 illustrations. America's Great Question Answerer. Get The Best As Your Bookseller, or send for free illustrated booklet. G. & C. MERRIAM COMPANY Springfield, Moa. Where To Purchase The Gazette BROWN'S PHARMACY, 8201 Quincy Ave. O. K. PRINTING CO. 3113 Central Ave. NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS Subscribers not receiving The Gazette regularly should notify us at once. We desire every copy delivered promptly. 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 advertise before making a advertise in this paper should h The fact that they advertise in they want it. All reading matter for pub Gazette must be in the office week, at the latest. Display adve WEDNESDAYS! HARRY Y. 226 West Superior Ave (Opposite, Hotel C Notary Public. Classified Advert 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 WANTED—To rent one vacant room by an elderly man who has his own bed, etc. Call, immediately, CHerry 1259. 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 Miss Annella Robinson and Collins Harris, Jr., are to wed, this month. Mrs. Russell Brown was called to Wilberforce by her mother's illness. Mr. and Mrs. John Carmack and sisters, Misses Evelyn and Wyolene, had an enjoyable time in Chicago, last week. Miss Verna Leonard and Sidney R. Johnson were married, last week Sunday, at Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Beads, E. 81st St. Mr. and Mrs. Henry N. Rahming, E. 103d St., have returned from a 1500-mile trip thru Kentucky, Indiana, and Chicago. Mrs. Mattle S. Allen and daughter, Willa Mae Brown, were royally entertained at a joint birthday party, last week Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Louis S. Jones, of Drexel Ave., motored to Youngstown, Sunday, to visit Dr. W. P. Burton and other friends. Mrs. Arabella Pryor gave a whist tournament, last evening, for the benefit of her son who is a contestant in a baby contest. Quite a number of young folk attended the surprise birthday party, Thursday evening, given Miss Doris Jackson, E. 130th St. The Secret Keys gave a very successful barn dance and hay ride, Saturday night. The dance was at Mr. and Mrs. John Harris' in Peninsula, O. Dr. H. W. Evans, pastor, preached an interesting sermon on "True Friends" at Lane Metropolitan church, Sunday, after his return from Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Finney, E. 74th St., returned from a motor trip to Florence, Ala., and Chicago. They brot with them Miss Edith M. White of Florence. St. Mark's Presby, ushers board sponsored a successful twilight festival, last week Friday. There were a number of speakers. King Tut drum corps furnished music. Mrs. Myrtle Gray Maxfield of Penn Yan, N. Y., a former resident of this city who has been quite ill since the death of her father, some weeks ago, is convalescing. Rev. Wm. McCutcheon, pastor of Revelation Baptist church, will preach to King Tut lodge, Elks, Sunday. Response will be made by Richard H. McKee. The Mt. Pleasant M. E. senior choir had wonderful success at the dinner given at Mrs. Emma Lee's, E. 126th S., Saturday evening. Over 50 persons were served. The National Recovery Act will be the subject of Tom Ireland's address, Tuesday evening, at 10:30 over station WGAR, under the auspices of the authorities of the NRA. Mr. and Mrs. B. M. Armstead, E. 80th St., announce the engagement of their daughter, Rebecca, to J. Herbert Kerr, E. 73d St. The wedding is to take place the latter part of February. Mrs. Mary B. Martin, E. 40th St., our member of the board of education, was one of four nominated by the emergency campaign committee honored at a luncheon held in the Cleveland Athletic club, recently. Edgar S. Fox and Mrs. Mabel Lunford of New Haven, Conn., were married, recently, at Atty, and Mrs. Earl T. Fox's, E. 93d St. Rev. H. C. Bailey, chaplain at the Warrensville correction home, performed the ceremony. Among the callers at The Gazette sanctum, the first of the week, was former State Senator John P. Green, the 88-year-old dean of the local bar. The Senator was looking fine and is as active as most of our young attorneys. Mt. Pleasant boasts of a girls' baseball team that "can't be beat." To date, this season, they haven't HALE SMITH'S, 8806 Quincy Ave. CHE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1933 YOU KNOW ME. AL 993 He Outbrags A Bragger I GOTTA FINE ON THAT HOLE YEAH-- I GOTTA FOUR WELL, I GOTTA FOUR ON THAT-- WHAT'D YOU GET? I GOTTA THREE GOSH, WHATA GUY-- EVERY HOLE HE IS ALWAYS ONE BETTER THAN ME. HE'S STARTIN' TO GET MY GOAT, ILL FIX THE LIAR THAT TIME, I GOTTA ONE-- BEAT THAT ROSENBERG'S DRUG STORE, N. W. Cor. Central Ave., and E. 55th St. J. S. HALL'S, 7700 Cedar Ave. BROWN'S PHARMACY, 5902 Quincy Ave. FOR SALE.—Bedroom set, a Way Sagless spring and a medium size "charter oak" refrigerator cheap! Address Box B, The Gazette office, 226 W. Superior Ave., City. Mrs. Luella Crowler, E. 79th St., writes that she and her daughter are having a fine time at the World's Fair which is proving very interesting and instructive. lost a game. They play, Saturday, in the vacant lot across from Mrs. Edna Lee's home in E. 1424 st. Mrs. Maggie Smith, manager. Mrs. E. W. Mitchell, of 6109 Olive Ct., returned last week, from Detroit. She visited her daughters, Mrs. C. S. Syphax and Miss Maude ("Babe") Mitchell, for a month. Mrs. Syphax was formerly Miss Marjorie Mitchell of this city. Col. and Mrs. Jacob E. Reed, E. 130th S., entertained at an elaborate dinner, last week Friday, Mr. and Mrs. Augustus Clark, of Utica Ave., and their guests, Bishop and Mrs. E. Thomas Demby of Little Lock, Ark. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Walters, of Cedar Ave., have visiting them her sister, Miss Elizabeth Cobbs, a nurse from Tuskegee, Ala.; three cousins, Mrs. Lizzie Roberson of Springfield, Mass. Miss Dorothy Wilson of Atlanta, Ga. and Miss Gladys Connelly of Newark, N. J. The Charles S. Smith-for-Council open-air meeting in Precinct P of the 18th Ward at 2168 E. 87th St., Monday evening, was a distinct success. The speakers were Mr. Smith, Mrs. Mary B. Martin, Reese Davis, Attys J. R. Baylor, Harold T. Gassaway, Theo. Williams, Rev. J. L. Smith and a number of others. Abell Ave. between 125th and 126th Sts. was packed with persons who witnessed the closing program of Lafayette Community Center, last week Thursday evening. Many useful prizes were given away which were donated by stores in that neighborhood. Dancing followed a vaudeville show. A number of our veterans of the World War met in the old P. W. A. auditorium in Central Ave., last week Wednesday night, to form a permanent political organization. Of the public, Cissie, J. P. Bell, vice-pres.; S. V. Perry, sec., and J. F. Bridge, treas. Trustees and other officers were to be elected at a later meeting. The Charles S. Smith-For-Council committee announce a big mass meeting for this week Friday evening at Temple Baptist church, E. 84th St. and Cedar Ave. This will formally open Mr. Smith's campaign for the Council in the 18th Ward. A number of speakers have been selected by Atty. Harold T. Gassaway, campaign manager, and Frank C. Lyons, chairman, the speakers' committee. The Hon. Harry C. Smith, editor of The Gazette, has consented to be one of the "spellbinders" for the occasion. Bishop and Mrs. E. Thos. Demby of Little Rock, Ark., Mr. and Mrs. Augustus Clark and Mrs. Hattie McCrary were guests at the Lafayette Center Playground day exercises, last week Thursday, and later were guests of Mrs. Harry J. Walker at a delightful system used on the playground was furnished by the Publicid Co. of which Mr. Walker is an agent. The program was heard for several blocks, it is said. Johnny White Jesse Peyton, Frank Lee and Sylvester Williams constituted a special committee that greatly assisted Chairman Walker to put over the program. Lafayette Community Center play ground, last week Thursday, was well attended, Merchants of the Mt. Pleasant district gave many valuable prizes. Miss Anna Bluestein and Mr. Samuel Vinci, playground officials, directed children's events in the afternoon. The Imperials, champion baseball team, won a case of pop and baseball bats. On the stage (erected outside) 19 acts were given including the Sam Tedesi players, the Street Singer of the recent Italian Street Fair, the Four Step Sisters, Josephine Latoneir, Virgil McMorries, basso; Bobby Owens of WGAR and others. E. J. Brock and Boy Scoots were police for the occa- G. I. Kern of the Board of Education, Mrs. Elsner, president of the P. T. A., and Harry J. Walker, pres, spoke. Dr. Q. F. Montgomery was musical director. A large number registered for the center which will open about the middle of October. The May Co. gives employment to a goodly number of our girls and men. That is one reason why we should patronize the May Co. in preference to other large stores in the city. And our readers will please have Gazette greatly by doing so whenever they are possible. Be sure to read their advertisement elsewhere in this paper. $700 are in a Pittsburgh bank awaiting the children of George Kirk, Jr., killed in an automobile crash in this city about ten years ago. If you know of them, notify the editor of The Gazette or Capt. Chas. E. Frye of the Cedar "Y" at once. DO YOU KNOW KIRK'S CHILDREN? A Boy and Girl About 10 and 12 Years of Age, Respectively—$700 to Be Distributed. Capt. Chas. E. Frye, executive secretary of the Cedar "Y," 7615 Cedar Ave., has received a communication from Herbert T. Miller of Pittsburgh, who holds a similar position in the Centre Ave. branch "Y" there, in which the latter makes inquiry of the children of George Kirk, Jr., killed in an auto accident about ten years ago, who left a widow and two children, presumably residing in this city, Cleveland. If located, the children will be awarded $700. Persons having any knowledge of them should be in touch with THE GAZETTE or Captain Frye, at once. Ask your friends if they know anything of the Kirk children. Ady. Prime Sport News Metcalfe Brings Home Most! New York City—When Ralph Metcalfe and the other members of the American track and field team which has been competing in European countries, reached here, last week Wednesday, aboard the liner Europa. Metcalfe led all the rest in the number of prizes he carried. Metcalfe won 23 first prizes and competed on 12 victorious relay teams for a total of 35 awards. He also made the best record of any of the American athletes, equalling the world record in the 100-meter run five times. The "Keed" Will Be In It. New York City.—Only two fighters are mentioned in the plans for the Madison Square Garden Corporation for bouts of any consequence during the coming season. At a recent dinner, the president of the corporation said he would like to see the following bouts: John Henry Lewis vs. Macey Rosenblum (title match); Tony Canzonerl vs. Kid Chocolate, and Barney Ross, present lightweight champ, vs. Kid Chocolate. Owens at Toronto. Jesse Owens, who will attend O. S. U. in spite of the protests of his people at home and the country over, left for Toronto, yesterday morning, to compete, today, in an international meet sponsored by the Canadian National Exposition. He will make the trip by auto along with his coach, Charles Riley of Fairmont Junior High. Jesse will run in two dashes, the handicap 100-yard and 220-yard. Because of his record times in both of those distances, Owens will have to give the field a head start. France Suspends Al Brown Paris, France.—The suspension of Al Brown for one year by the French Boxing Federation for having refused the arbitration of M. Schieman at Manchester, England, has created to say the least, much astonishment in boxing circles. To suspend a champion for one year when it is not uncommon for a boxer to object to this or that referee, has seemed to box. Brown has left for North Africa, where he is to pick up some fights, above his weight. M. Paul Rousseau, head of the French Boxing Federation, said: "Al Brown has several times already objected to the referee, named by us, at the last moment, threatening he would not fight. I repeat that this is intolerable. We have been patient and conciliatory up to now, but even patience has its limits." Dr. Aaron B. Hunter, deceased Episcopal minister, willed his $34,000 estate to St. Augustine college and St. Agnes hospital, Raleigh, N.C., at the death of his wife. The May Co. LAST TWO DAYS OF THE AUGUST SALES. 69.75 and up will be the prices of these coats after this sale. Sizes for misses, women, larger women and half sizes. The cream of the new styles. *Third Floor* AUGUST SALE OF FUR COATS During this sale we offer fur coats from 69.75 to $795—all outstanding values not to be duplicated after this sale. Easy terms are available. *Third Floor* AUGUST SALE OF FURNITURE Easy terms on $25 and up. Free storage for 90 days. Freight prepaid within 150 miles. And prices you'll probably never see again during your lifetime. Sixth Floor Floor coverings of all types—rugs, carpets and linoleums—are specially priced during this sale. Better invest now. Six days and you'll pay more. Sixth Floor Twelve large 4 1/4-ounce bars for 47c. And it lathers in hard or soft water. In colors to match your bath. Telephone your order to CHerry 3000. All Floors 6 DRAP We can't begin 6.95 pair. And DRAPES, CURTAINS & LAMPS We can't begin to list the values! New lamps, special at 6.95, Damask drapes at 6.95, pair. And dozens of others. Lamps, 6tth Floor - Curtains and Drapes, 4tth Floor 1930 Soft, Glossy and Beautiful PORO Does It! PO FOR HAIR Sold by PORO PORO COL PORO BLOCK 4415 South Parkway PORO FOR HAIR AND SKIN Sold by PORO Dealers Everywhere. PORO COLLEGE, Inc. PORO BLOCK, 44th to 45th St. 4415 South Parkway Chicago, Illinois CONGRATULATIONS From White Friends On "The Old Reliable" Gazette's Entrance Upon Its 51st Year of Continuous Publication, Every Week on Time. MISKELL AND SUTTON Organization-Management-Publicity Cleveland, Aug. 18, '33. Hon. Harry C. Smith. Editor, Gazette, City. My dear Editor:—May I not take this opportunity to congratulate you upon 51 years of continuous publication. It is a record of which no paper in America would be other than most proud, and as far as my memory she has never been a week when your edition did not reach our office on time. Thru all these years, and particularly during the years in which you He Outbrags A Bragger I GOTTA THREE GOSH, EVERY ALWAYS THAN TO GET FIX NRA MEMBER U.5. WE DO OUR PART 1 2 3 4 5 6 RO AND SKIN O Dealers Everywhere. LEGE, Inc. , 44th to 45th St. Chicago, Illinois have personally directed the policies of The Gazette, it has well merited its slogan, "The Old Reliable." Madison, N. J., Aug. 20, '33. Hon. Harry C. Smith. Maryland. Editor, Gazette, Cleveland, O. Dear Sir:—Greetings in the name of Him who loves us! I am getting old and absent-minded. Two weeks ago I nachd "The Old Reliable" would reach her fifty-first milestone of progress, of racial enlightenment and literary success; and that she was "still going strong!" In a dim way, I that I ought to congratulate you on "attaining your majority, the age of discretion and distinction." but not until your donation of "Liberty" appeared did I "sit up and take notice." I am late; however, "better late than never!" I am sorry I cannot be more substantial in expression WHAT A GUY HOLE HE IS IS ONE BETTER Such Beautiful Hair! Yours, too, can be long thick and silken. The most stubborn hair through PORO Treatments, is made beautiful. Why put it off another day? PORO Hair Grower 50c "PORO" HAIR GROWER of appreciation. I wish for The Gazette and editor a long life of useful goodness, financial success in proportion to its work, and "a paid up subscription list" equal to your most sanguine expectations! Sincerely yours, Rev. Geo. Wilson Brent. OUR LESSON We must learn to govern our selves and work together for our own advancement. If we do not learn to govern our selves 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. By RING LARDNER THAT TIME, IGOTTA ONE-BEAT THAT 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 THE HAT FROM Paris to New York to Chicago to Hollywood, it's velvet that outstands on the fashion circuit for fall. Because of the decided emphasis placed upon this ever-beloved material in the advance style program those planning new clothes will do well to get into a velvet frame of mind from the very start. It is not at all necessary to wait until later to wear velvet. The psychological moment is right now. You will think so yourself when you see the cunning beret, glove and capetel sets made all of velvet which are already on display in the better shops. You will not want to lose a minute in acquiring one of these intriguing ensembles for they are perfectly stunning worn with the now-so-voguish midseason frocks and suits of dark linen or sheer woolen. Buy them in the color you like best, black coming first in favor, with rich autumn tones in close rivalry. If the plans of our style creators carry through, and of course they will, velvet treated in a tailored way for wear during the daytime hours will surpass any previous record in matter of rich color and ultra chic. Just to give you a hint of things to be in a tailored way, we picture to the left of our group illustration, a really handsome specimen of a fall street coat which is finished to a nicety with quilted cording on the sleeves in groups and about the neckline where darts radiate in somewhat of a yoke effect. This is a Maggle Rouff model and this eminent courier sees to it that the dress of handwoven silk is STRIPED WOOLEN By CHERIE NICHOLAS The new autumn woolens are most intriguing. Striped versions are particularly stressed in the early showings, also diagonal tweeds in woven and knit versions. For the model picture, the designer plays up the stripes of a mustard and dark brown tweedy woolen to perfection. The high neckline is here considered and the capetyle-kine gives the sprightly shoulder effect which has been interpreted in so many novel ways throughout recent styling. The unique plastron effect is of brown velvet. The little draped toque is of self-material, following up a mode which has been in evidence and is so well thought of, it continues on into fall. as "classy" as the coat which tops it. You will notice that the collar and cape sleeves of the afternoon model, centered in the picture, are also quilted in a ribbed effect. This form of decorative treatment is going over big in newly arriving fashions. For this extraordinarily beautiful daytime wrap, which bears a Lavin label, the designer employs lynv velvet of super quality. The little feather toque is the crowning glory of this costume. Being of red transparent velvet the coat posed to the right tunes its color to the motif of the dress. Make a mental note of the wide rhinestone bracelet which this lady of fashion is wearing; also the imposing bar pin which enhances this effective ensemble, for they go to show the increasing importance attached to costume jewelry. The swagger casual daytime coat of brown and beige plaid velvet of which only an above-the-waistline view is here given has its shoulders modishly squared. It fastens with a big bow tie of self-velvet. The hat shown is one of the vogush stitched velvents. The alluring thing about the new velvents is their versatility. You can get any any sort of velvet your fancy may picture. Even uncrushable and waterproof velvents are now on the market. An outstanding novelty is a ribbed velvet with a luster-lack finish. You can imagine how stunning evening jackets and blouses and accessories such as bags, belts and collar-and-cuff sets look made of this velvet. GLOVES TO MATCH COSTUME FOR FALL Your gloves will match your costume this fall in fabric as well as color. If you are stepping out in a new black satin afternoon gown, you'll want black satin gloves to go with it. And you'll be able to find them, in a satin jersey fabric that fits like the good old chamoisette, and has a surface as sleek and shiny as your gown. Or, if you have a brown wool knitted suit, you may wear brown knit gloves, in a smooth ribbed knit fabric, not bulky, but smooth fitting and neat. And so on. The good old silk jersey glove is back again with a bang, and you'll find it in all the newest shades of fall—gray, eel-brown, navy, and black. Then chamoisette, the grand old standby, is presented in new colors and perforated styles, for wear with fall clothes. Shirtmaker Brocks Are Startlingly Picturesque Now that the hinterlands also have made the poignant discovery that a wardrobe not filled with shirt-maker frocks is a menace, the New York makers are running riot with ideas on the subject. During the Palm Beach season, one bought a tony little tub silk in shirt-maker style and called it a day, but now folks are riding high, wide and fancy in this ideal type made of crazy Tattersall checks, gaudy jockey stripes and tie silks that would startle an Indian. The "shirtmaker" is the greatest chapter in the book. Tops of Shoes for Fall Are Reminisher of Spats There are rumors that manufacturers with loving care are designing kid shoes for fall that will remind ladies of spats. It might be even reasonable to think that some day spats will come back. Day clothes are long enough now that one needn't fear the "comic strip" between skirt hem and top of spat, but be that as was, today oxfords and pumps are being stitched up in kid combinations whereby the light upper fits over the rest of the shoe like a spat. CHE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1933 Bulqaria Speedslip Pig for Sale in a Sofia Street. Prepared by National Geographic Society, Washington, D.C.-WNU Service. BETWEEN THE Danube and the Macedonian mountains the traveler sees hardly a single farmhouse; yet "Bulgar" means a man with a plow, and four of every five Bulgarians are farmers. Sofia, founded by Trajan, just missed becoming Constantinople, since Constantinople seriously considered it as his capital. Still a small town in 1880, it is now a flourishing city of a quarter of a million inhabitants, the progressive capital of a land of villages. Although, since hoary antiquity, tidal waves of humanity have swept south through the Balkan passes or east and west along the route to Byzantium, this cross-roads country is still far from the beaten path. failed, little grains of sand splendid sea houses and t and summer all over center and sun. For a time reserve the c offices; but to bring the mixed bathhouses lished. On locations where lated and cared in the hot sea health into it. Deprived of decided to ce in increasing Yet the Orient express passes through Sofia every day, and on the Orient Arrow it is a day's flight from Paris, whose styles it has begun to copy. Before daylight you don the seventy-league boots awaiting you at Le Bourget, airport of Paris; touch earth at Strasbourg, Nurnberg, Prague, Vienna, Budapest and Belgrade, and end the day in your sixth European capital. Despite the increase in numbers of city dwellers, seeking to buy amusement in the open market, scanning movie posters and photographs of sleek cabaret girls, Bulgaria is an agricultural land, with peasant conservatism and thrift. Among the more or less formal Thanksgiving proclamations of recent times, surely one of the most arresting was Bulgaria's "our poverty is our riches." A land of homespun may be proof against not only spiritual but also economic depression. Were one to seek a symbol for economics and spiritual stability, the Bulgarian woman, plying her distaff as she leads meek-eyed oxen through bucolic scenes worthy of a Rose Bonheur, might well serve as a model. But even the Bulgarian Maud Miller has "glanced to the far-off town." Going Ahead Rapidly. The rural Bulgarians, whose riches are poverty, are awaking to new desires. Bulgarians have long fostered schools, literature, music, and the drama. But "progress" now means something different—not a lifting up, but a speeding up. City styles and pleasures are stealing the spotlight. An old Bulgarian proverb says, "Easier to start the piper than to stop him," and Bulgaria has begun to tread a faster measure than ox-team or buffalo have set or can follow. One finds in Bulgaria many graduates of Constantinople Woman's college, and of Robert college in Istanbul. There are also several excellent American schools in Bulgaria itself. American educators have approached the problems of Bulgaria with sympathetic understanding. The boys' and girls' schools of Samokov have been united to form a co-educational American college; but, in deference to Bulgarian conservatism, an imaginary line, cutting the campus in two, still separates the sexes. In Pordim there is a more unusual school with a one-year course designed for dirt farmers, who there learn to do by doing. Future mothers practice on real babies before having babies of their own. Even in a land where veterinary schools and hospitals rival those for human beings, there is no other institution quite like the American farm school, which gains prestige from its American patronage. Tirnovo, former capital at a time when defense was more than trade routes, straddles a neck of land tunneled by the railway and rises above wild mid-city gorges as does Luxembourg. On the Mount of Eagles stands the city of today, linked by a narrow isthmus with the Hill of the Tsars, walled region of the former royal palaces. A colony of monasteries occupies another hilltop and the aristocrats a fourth. Varna Becomes a Summer Resort. Varna, on the Black sea, used to be a grain port, but when the boundary makers gave the rich granary of the Dobruja to Rumania the city lost its commercial importance. When wheat failed, little drops of water and little grains of sand did their bit. On the splendid sea front, commodious bathhouses and seaside villas were built, and summer visitors now dock in from all over central Europe to revel in sea and sun. For a time the authorities tried to reserve the central section for married folks; but they persisted in forgetting to bring their marriage licenses, and mixed bathing is now firmly established. On the wings are screened sections where men and women are isolated and can dispense with suits, lie in the hot sand and let Old Sol shoot health into them through every pore. Deprived of Dobruja's bread, Varna decided to eat cake; and vacationers in increasing numbers share and provide the fun. Hotels claim to offer Bulgarian, Hungarian, Bohemian, and German cooking, but French habits are not yet understood. In Bulgaria one eats chocolate but drinks cocoa. South of Varna is Mesenvriya, where Byzantine emperors used to disport themselves in the Euxine. From the sands many antique treasures have been rescued, and there still exist imposing ruins of Byzantine churches. Military service is not obligatory in Bulgaria, though it is expedient; but, in addition to the few days of temporary labor which male subjects are supposed to render to their country, every eighteen-year-old does eight months of obligatory labor under what resembles military discipline. Lands are reclaimed, roads and bridges built, railways repaired, eroding mountain sides reforested, rampant rivers tamed, relief shelters constructed, and good citizenship learned by these organized laborers, or trudovaks. Their badge reads, "Work for Bulgaria." This labor corps is one of the most distinctive features of modern Bulgarian life. Protective tariff walls always look lower from the inside, and in Bulgaria, as elsewhere, a heightened nationalism jealously guards its infant industries. To its fine woolens the country has already added sugar, cotton cloth, silks, flour, baby carriages, bicycles, hides, paper, cigarettes, rubber shoes, and even automobile tires. Although cereals, tobacco, eggs, and chickens are among the principal exports, Bulgaria's most distinctive product is attar of roses, of which it produces three-fourths of the world's supply. Rose Industry Important. Jahangir, the Mogul emperor, amused Nur Jahan by piping rose water through her garden at Delhi, and upon its surface she first discovered the bright pearls of attar. Later an old Turk, seeing the wild roses of Bulgaria, induced his compatriots to start the industry which won for the plain between the Balkans and the Middle Mountain the name of "The Rose Valley." The rose, as symbol of beauty, innocence and modesty, has inspired countless legends and songs ever since it was born with Aphrodite from the sea foam or sprang from Rosalie's wound, inflicted by the chaste but intolerant Diana. But one doesn't use perfume to prove innocence, and a rose smells even sweeter under many strange names. Attar of roses is used as a base and fixative rather than for its scent alone, and the skilled perfumer determines whether this product of peasants shall suggest floppy-brimmed hats and flowered chiffon or sleek silks and exotic earrings. These unspoiled Bulgarian peasants, who never knew luxury, depend on it for their daily bread, and although they know no political economy, it affects both their economies and their politics. Because of the competition between private and co-operative distillers, rose oil has come to involve bankers and politicians as well as gardeners. The old firms are not only finding a decreased sale, but are also facing the competition of co-operative distilleries opened under government protection and boom conditions. The attar of roses produced by the co-operatives is deposited as collateral in the Agricultural bank, which, although already holding a thousand pounds or so of attar, must still advance funds on the new crop. AND THE COW JUMPED OVER!—Really it's not a cow, but a steer going over the hurdles, represented by a parked automobile, at the Fourth Annual Rodeo which was recently held fam-acts on snowboat, the nam swiches NEW WAY TO PLAY FOOT —They call it "feetball" a combination of push and juggling, the idea being to bounce the ball in the air and catch it again without it rolling its animated pedestal. NEW WAY TO PLAY FOOTBALL They call it "feetball" a combination of push ball and juggling, the idea being to bounce the ball into the air and catch it again without it rolling off its animated pedestal. NO PIPE DREAM—Right: Flavill R. Jordan, 89-year-old Civil War veteran of Auburn, Me., who claims to have smoked a pipe war simulator since he piped shown in the picture has been used by him for more than thirty years. only man permitted to puff a h, but Grace Viall Gray, the Pabstett radio program, does as the Old Maestro invades its redoilent cheroot. These tiny mites from their warm how not these incro refrigeration plays babies. Preserving sential in their fe an Electrolux gas r alter Irumbull, Ben Bernle may be the only man permitting cigar in the NBC studios, but Grace V. culinary authority of the Pabstett radio a bit of good old recoiling as the Old M her model kitchen with his redolent che Ben Bernie may be the only man permitted to puff a cigar in the NBC studios, but Grace Viall Gray, the culinary authority of the Pabstett radio program, does a bit of good old recoiling as the Old Maestro invades her model kitchen with his redolent cheroot. J. M. KOCH, Quaker State oil expert, who says that it women motorists paid more attention to lubrication of their cars, it would be possible in numerous cases to save money enough on repair bills in one season to buy a INTERROGATOR, Walter Trumbull, noted journalist who as a representative of the Average American Citizen quenches Col. Louis McHenry Howe, the President's Secretary, on national problems affecting the people's welfare, every Sunday night over a nationwide radio network. lio network. GENERAL HUGH S. JOHNSON, Administrator of the N.R.A. with members of his staff at headquarters in Washington, D. C. GENERAL HUGH S. JOHN staff WILL F. CATON, leading money winner on harness track. In 1932 and winner of the famous Hambletonian three-year-old trotting classic with The Marchioness hopes to win $50,000 purse again this year at Goshen, N. Y., August 16, with Calumet Donald. ACCUSED OF accepting bribe "I'll run this city from a police cell if necessary," said Mayor Swoboda of Racine, Wis., who has been arrested. TOMORROW'S HOUSE—Crowds visiting one of the most popular World's Fair exhibits, the Good Housekeeping Stran Steel Model House, with exterior walls of vitreous enameled on Toncan enameling iron and edged with Enduro stainless steel. It's full of new gadgets. AZETTE might Subs KATHERINE PARSONS, famous radio star, between acts on her Hudson River showboat, lunching on one of those names and mayonnaise sandwiches which have had such a vogue this summer. F. D.'S DOUBLE — George Cody, of Providence, R. L., whose resemblance to the Preadent aroused wide comment at Washington. AND THE COW JUMPED OVER!—Really it's not a cow, but a steer going over the hurdles, represented by a parked automobile, at the Fourth Annual Rodeo which was recently held at Santa Monica, California. TO PLAY FOOTBALL combination of push ball bounce the ball into without it rolling off Vil R. Jor- ran of Au- smoked a s old. The been used sears. Part of the Baby Incubator exhibit at the Century of Progress Expo- sition at Chicago. These tiny mites have been temporarily removed from their warm "nests" to be fed. Considering how hot these incubators must be kept, automatic refrigeration plays a big part in the life of the mites. Preserving food at even temperatures is es- sential in their feeding. To keep up with science, Electrolux gas refrigerator is used at the exhibit. Part of the Baby Incubator exhibit at the Century of Progress Exposition at Chicago. These tiny mites have been temporarily removed from their warm "nests" to be fed. Considering how hot these incubators must be kept, automatic refrigeration plays a big part in the life of the babies. Preserving food at even temperatures is essential in their feeding. To keep up with science an Electrolux gas refrigerator is used at the exhibit. FENN FLASH—Mary Heely, one of the six English tennis teams that won the Wimbledon Whightman Cup matches and is now playing in leading tourneys. M. H. H. TOMORROW'S HOUSE—Crowds visiting one of the most popular World's Fair exhibits, the Good Housekeeping Stran Steel Model House, with exterior walls of vitreous enameled on Toncan enameling iron and edged with Enduro stainless steel. It's full of new gadgets. TOMORROW'S HOUSE—Crowds visiting one of the most popular World's Fair exhibits, the Good Housekeeping Stran Steel Model House, with exterior walls of vitreous enameled on Toncan enameling iron and edged with Enduro stainless steel. It's full of new gadgets. 100 J. M. KOCH, Quaker State oil expert, who says that it women motorists paid more attention to lubrication of their cars, it would be possible in numerous cases to save money enough on repair bills in one season to buy a new fall wardrobe. Use of good oils he declared, also increases gasoline mileage because a well lubricated motor requires less power to overcome friction.