The Gazette
Saturday, May 4, 1935
Cleveland, Ohio
Page text (machine-generated)
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THE GAZETTE
ESTABLISHED, AUGUST 25, 1883 And Issued Every Week on Time Since
CLEVELAND, OHIO, SATURDAY, MAY 4, 1935
FRESH OHIO NEWS
SENT IN BY "THE OLD RELIABLE" GAZETTE'S CORRESPONDENTS.
Marriages, Deaths, Etc.
YOUNGSTOWN. —J. J. Harvey and son, B. J., are visiting in Columbus, over Sunday. —The Centenary M. E. church was filled, last Tuesday evening, to hear Mrs. Mary McC. Been referred very interestingly to the "Underground Railroad" days of Ohio when many of our people were being assisted to escape to Canada. —Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Moore's son, Charlie, was married to Miss Strabel VanStory at the latter's home Thursday. —Mr. and Mrs. Clifton, Douglas and son spent Sunday in Detroit.
TOLEDO.—Fully a dozen local Elks attended the recent session of the P. E. R. and P. D. R. council held in Cleveland, recently.—Mrs. Ella P. Stewart's recent address on the "Afro-American and Some of His Achievements" is still being favorably discussed.—The Second Youth Conference held here, last week, was largely attended and very interesting.—Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Brown and daughter of Detroit visited Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Stewart.—Mrs. Marjorie C. Johnson was given a party, last week Monday evening, by the cast of the Female Minstrel Co.
CINCINNATI. — Maxie A. Cunningham has returned to Union City, Tenn., after spending several weeks here with his wife—Mr. and Mrs. Andrew H. Frye have just celebrated their 47th marriage anniversary. — Mrs. C. Lightfoot is attending a celebration of his phis. — Mrs. Gussie Brown and daughter went to Chicago, last week. — Duke Ellington was presented at the Paradise ball-room on a recent Thursday night. — Melvin Greer died, last week. — Rev B. F. Reid gave his illustrated lecture, "Palestine," last week Friday evening. — The remains of his last week Tuesday—Mrs. Edna Adams and daughter visited her father in Springfield, recently.
WILBERFORCE. — A. M. E. churches of Pennsylvania, Ohio, W. Virginia, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan and Kentucky will give their Mother's Day collections to the University. An effort is to be made to raise $35.000. At the head of the movement are Bishop R. C. Ransom of the third Episcopal district, Bishop W. H. Heard of the first, Bishop H. B. Orwell of the second, Bishop H. Y. Tookes of the 14th District. Wilberforce University makes no distinction in its faculty, student-body or trustees so far as religion and denomination are concerned, and members of nearly every denomination are to be found among its faculty and students. — Russell Brown, Jr., won second place, recently, with his opponent, Cole, in a 100-yard dash. Time 10.5 seconds. He represented E. High school, and Cole, last year's champion, represented Manual High school. Russell is the son of Rev. Russell S. Brown, former member of the C. S. J. I. Department member of the C. S. J. I. Department member of the Mt. Zion Cong. church, Cleveland. He is also the grandson of Prof. Chas. S. Smith, director of the Placement of Wilberforce University. — President R. Wright on May 21 will deliver the commencement address at Montgomery Alabama State Teachers' college; on May 28, at Normal A. A. & M. college, and on June 2, the baccalaureate sermon at Morris Brown college, Atlanta, Ga. — Mrs. Harvey Jackson, after a week's visit with the Misses Lucinda Cook and Anna O. H. Williamson, nursed and married Mrs. C. J. Cenkins, Mrs. Julia W. Thomas and Miss Jessie H. Smith spent Easter in Cleveland; Miss Moll Dunlun motored to Kalamazoo, Mich., to visit her mother, and Miss Anne Weaver and Mrs. Melvin Johnson motored to Kansas City, Mo. — The committee on teachers of the C. N. I. (State Department) trustee board: Dr. J. A. Owen (chair), and Rev. D. O. Walker, both of Cleveland, and President R. R. Wright, met, Monday.
SACRIFICE SALE!
Beautiful lot (clear) next to the corner of E. 146th St. and Bartlett St., six minutes walk from Kinsman Rd. Near school and shopping district. Terms, if wanted. 'Phone evening, 8 to 11 o'clock, Library 2663. Splendid opportunity! A. J. Mandel.-Adv.
HEAR! HEAR!!
JACKSON
ON WHAT'S DOING
A regular meeting of the 18th Ward Republican club was held, last week Friday evening, at Temple Baptist church with a Townsend club which used the first half hour. There was a full house. Councilman John E. Hubbard opened the 18th Ward club meeting by asking if there were any newspaper reporters in the townsend club to question the question, of course. No reply, he started a rambling talk (as usual) by saying the Gazette had been printing some untrue things about him but failed to mention any of them. Of course, his statement is NOT true. He undoubtedly had reference to the Bryant gasoline station matter which bids fair to defeat him, this fall, he did not "quap" the issue to the Bryant family's making a living for itself. He said he had been asked by many people why he did not take the lead in an effort to open that driveway at the station so the Bryant can do some business, and said, "Mrs. Bryant is here in the town to say?" Whereupon, the lady stood and said to Hubbard: "I'd rather let you talk first and then will continue to correct that." Maybe I will not stand for any corrections." Wouldn't that jar you? He then continued his rambling talk, saying he was in sympathy with the Bryants and that he bought gasoline from them. Also that the church (St. James A. M. E.) was legally right (in its opposition to the Bryant gasoline station) but morally wrong." As a matter of fact it is the church pastor, Bryant who is leading the fight against the Bryants, with Hubbard's passive assistance. The Councilman then asked Mrs. Bryant if she had anything to say. She replied by saying, so everyone in the church could hear her plainly: "If you introduce a resolution in City Council to amend the ordinance the driveway will be opened!" That was a KNOCKOUT that Hubbard did not even try to answer. And that of the Bryant gasoline station fight. Hubbard has it in his power to help that family with two children make a living for itself and REFUSES to do so, Shame, O, SHAME!
VICE CRUSADE!
While OUR City Federation of Women's clubs and NAACP local branch sleep on soundly, a crusade by Cleveland club women (white) against vice conditions in the vicinity of E. 55th St. and Central Ave. is under way following a warning by Juvenile Court Judge Harry L. Eastman that young school girls are being introduced to vice in that neighborhood which IS rotten to the core. Judge Eastman's revelations were made following sentencing of five women and two men, last Saturday, on charges of contributing to the delinquency of a 16-year-old white girl. All but the girl were "Negroes." the girl, the judge said, had been quenting night clubs near E. 55th Central Ave, and had been kept by men for several days at Hotel Majestic. Later, he said, she was introduced to owners of two vice-resorts, where she remained for a week.
"This is but one instance of the deplorable conditions in that district," said Judge Eastman. "Schoolgirls go to cheap night clubs and fly-by-night hotels, where vice is per se and perhaps even encourage aged."
And he is RIGHT; too!
Duke Ellington and his band will be at the Public Auditorium, soon it is announced.
NEW HOUSING PROJECT
At Newark Named for Richard B. Harrison of "Green Pastures"—Roscoe Conkling Bruce Jr., Resident Manager.
NEWARK, N. J.—The Prudential Insurance Company is completing the second block of its low-cost housing project here for Afro-Americans. In the center, is a city-owned park. The buildings have been named in honor of the late Richard B. Harrison of Green Pastures. The manager, Roscoe Conkling Bruce Jr., is just opened his office at 59 Someterset St. Mr. Bruce is a graduate of the College of New York. He also studied at Harvard University and at the Sorbone in Paris, France. He got
Roscoe Conkling Bruce, Jr.
his experience in housing under his father and mother, managers of the Paul Laurence Dunbar Apartments in New York City. Mr. Bruce's grandfather was U. S. Senator Blanche K. Bruce of Mississippi, and his great grandfather was Dr. Joseph Willson, of Cleveland, Ohio, who published the book "Sketches of the Higher Classes of Colored Society in the South," in "The Other," in 1841. Roscoe's grandmother, Mr. Josephine Wilson Bruce was Cleveland's first "colored" public-school teacher, all her pupils being "whites" (or "greys" as Clarence Darrow calls them). The first block of the Prudential's housing project for this community, which has been in operation for a year or more, was named in honor of the Hon. Frederick Dougherty, a fire-proof and modern in every respect. The Douglass and the Harrison Apartments comprise the largest housing project for Afro-Americans.
IONES AND DETT
"Captivated and Charmed," Respectively, Large Audiences at the Nation's Capital. The Former Solitary of Washington, the Symphony, Orchestra.
(Special to The Gazette.)
Washington, D. C.—The National Symphony orchestra (25 members), Dr. Hans Kindler, director, recently gave its annual concert at Howard University, with Louis Vaughn Jones of Cleveland, Ohio, director of the violin department of the conservatory of the university, as violin soloist, accompanied by the orchestra, of course. His number was the Lalo "Symphony Espagnole." The music critic of the Washington Daily Herald had the following to say of this number:
"Mr. Jones gave the Spanish music with a depth of feeling for its pathos and an appreciation for its special idiom. In the slow movement his varied tone- qualities brot significance to the music, while the trills of the melody were pure, facile and well articulated. He rose to a surer climax in the finale, with solidity of tone in rich depth that matched the ruggedness and accent the orchestra put into the folk element in the music."
Prof. Jones was given four recalls to his solo (in three parts), which required fully 50 minutes to play. At its conclusion Dr. Kindler congratulated and presented him with a large portrait of himself, the first festival of music, at the Washington Auditorium, recently, was one of the outstanding musical affairs of the season. Among the participants was Prof. Jones, whose "Ramah" and Dr. Dett's "Listen to the Lambs," a fantasia, "proved a rare compliment to Howard University School of Music which he represented," said the Washington Post. The Herald also said, "Louia Vaughn Jones captivated with faultless technique, full and rounded tone, and with profound emotion." The same paper said, "Dr. Nathaniel Dett charmed the audience with his own works."
Daub Shops of Jews.
Wuerzburg, Germany.—Shops and houses owned by Jews were daubed with painted anti-Jewish slogans and caricatures, Wednesday night. The asks asked the population to boycott Jewish businesses. More "Hilterism."
SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS
WILLIS WARD AND BEN JOHNSON'S SENSA TIONAL WORK IN THE SPORTS CARNIVALS MENTIONED.
Owens Breaks American Broad-Jump Record—Peacock Equals the Best Efforts Recorded at Drake in the Last 26 Years.
Des Moines, Ia.—Jess Owens drove his body thru space, here, last week Friday to miss breaking the world's broad-record record. He hit three eighths of an inch. The 21-year-old Cleveland lad achieved this amazing leap on his first jump opening the preliminaries of the 26th annual Drake relay carnival. Almost before the crowd of 8,000 knew what had happened Owens had bounded off the take-off board to establish a new American record of 26 feet 1% inches. Only one other individual in the world, Chuhei Nambu, a Japanese, has bettered it. Four years ago Nambu leaped 2 feet 2% inches in
Drake track and field carnival has been run. The 21-year-old Cleveland lad, bouncing off his starting blocks, bobble his intently shot into the lead and maintained it to the finish winning at least two yards ahead of Milton Holt of Fresno, Calif. State College, to tie the Drake record made by Roland Locke of Nebraska in 1926 and tied by Ralph Metcalfe, Marquette's famed flyer, in 1932. Running in perfect stride, Jes saled down the chalk-landed cinder-path like a machine. Holt is rated one of the outstanding sprinters of the Pacific Coast. Owens was not even extended. He won as he pleased, the
A.
Jess Owens.
Japan to establish the present world mark, which will be broken by Jess before the 1935 outdoor season is over. By his victory he wrote his name at the top of the list of the famous jumpers, Dehart Hubbard of Michigan; Edw. Gordon, Iowa's Olympic champion of 1922, and Edw. Hamm of Georgia Tech, who, until last Friday, held the American record of 25 feet $11\frac{1}{2}$ inches. Entitled to five attempts, Owens used only three jumps. On his second jump, he cleared 25 feet, $11\frac{1}{2}$ inches. On his third, 25 feet, $3\frac{1}{2}$ inches. The Drake relays attracted a colorful field of 3,000 athletes from coast to coast of all the engenies and the Pacific coast in all the cities easily qualified for the finals of the 100-yard dash, the next day (Saturday), winning his trial heat by three feet in 0:10.1
Owens' 9.5 Ties Record.
Last Saturday, in the 100-yard dash, Owens was away with the gun and crossed the finish line winner from a fast field in 9.5 seconds. His performance equalled the best efforts recorded in the 26 years that the
Doings of the Race
Hampton, Va. Institute celebrated its 67th anniversary, April 24.
Sissle & Miller, of the old "Shuffle Along" quartette of comedians, Sissle, Blake, Miller and Lyles, have a new musical comedy, "Trucking On Down," which includes Lavada Carter, Billy Banks and other well-known "high-steppers."
Order to proceed with the construction of the Atlanta, Ga. University housing project was issued, last week, by the Federal Director of Housing to the N. P. Severin Company of Chicago, which was awarded the contract for the erection of the 42 apartment and service buildings.
Arthur Garfield Hays, one of the oldest practicing attorneys in N. Y. City, said in a courtroom there, recently, that he had never seen a "Negro" on the grand jury in that city. This is also true of the nation's capital which is located in the District of Columbia.
Jews Excluded in "Hitlerville."
Berlin, Germany. — Austro-German "Anschluss" already has come to pass, in so far as their movie industries are concerned. With one exception, delegates to an international film congress here learned, Viennese film companies have agreed to apply the "Aryan paragraph" to productions, harring Jewish actors, scenario writers and camera men.
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 compari- with any will immediately estab- lish the best AND BEST published in this section of the country in the interest of Afro-Americans.
ALE COPY FIVE CENTS
PENN
D PEACOCK
BEN JOHNSON'S SENSA-
IN THE SPORTS
MENTIONED.
an Broad-Jump Record—
Best Efforts Recorded at
Last 26 Years.
Drake track and field carnival has been run. The 21-year-old Cleveland lad, bounding off his starting blocks like a rabbit, instantly shot into the lead and maintained it to the finish, winning at least two yards ahead of Milton Holt of Fresno, Calif. State College, to tie the Drake record made by Roland Locke of Nebraska in 1926 and tied by Ralph Metcalfe, Marquette's famed flyer, in 1932. Running in perfect stride, Jes sailed down the chalk-landed cinder-path like a machine. Holt is rated one of the outstanding players on the Pacific Coast. Owens was not even extended. He won as he pleased, the crowd of 18,000, the largest ever to see a Drake carnival, gave him a rousing ovation as he trotted back to receive the handclasps of his competitors in the race. Owens' double victory was easily the outstanding individual performance of the meet.
Peacock Stars in the Penn Meet.
Peacock Stars in the Penn Meet.
PHILADELPHIA. — Over 30,000 witnessed the 41st Pennsylvania relay carnival dives at historic Franklin Field, last Saturday. One of our guests, Todd Johnson, the university's most versatile athlete, furnished the day's most spectacular double by capturing the broad jump with a leap of 25 feet ¼ inch and then upsetting Herman Neugault, Tulane sensation, in the record-breaking final to the 100-meter dash. Peacock, who had tied the carnival of 10.7 seconds in the semi-finals, left away from Neugault in the final drive to win by two yards in the new record time of 10.6 seconds. The former record-holder and 1934 winner, Earl Widyer of Maryland, finished fourth.
Columbia's sprinters added the 880-yard relay championship to the quarter-mile crown, dethroning Cornell in each race, thanks to the brilliance of Johnson, another one of our boys, holder of the national indoor dash title.
Ward's Sensational Victory.
PHILADELPHIA, PA. — At the opening, last week Friday, of the 41st Pennsylvania relay carnival, Willis Ward, Michigan's all-around performer, scored a sensational victory over Phil Good of Bodwin, eastern intercollegiate champion, in the record time of 14.5 seconds for the 110-meter high hurdles. Ward pulled away to beat Good by three yards with Virginia's Grover Everett, who set the former record of 15.1 last year, third. Forced to withdraw from the sprint. Saturday, by a 10-yard loss, coached in the high jump and tied for third place at 6 feet 2 inches. Charles Scott of Cornell sprang a surprise in the high jump by tying Al Threadgill, another Temple Afro-American star, at 6 feet 4 inches.
Prime Sport News
Jack Kearns' Prediction.
Jack Kearns comes forward with the prediction that Joe Louis will have no trouble in kayoing Primo Cannon. Kearns was champion Jack Dempsey's ought to be worth something. We hope he is right, but can't help feeling that Joe ought to have more experience before tackling that "manmountain," Carnara.
Canada Seeks Ward.
Windsor, Ont.—Willis Ward, our brilliant track star of the University of Michigan, has been invited to participate in an exhibition hurdle race in an international track meet to be staged by the Lions club, June 29.
NATION WIDE CONFERENCE.
Washington, D. C.—Final plans for a conference on our economic status was announced here, Wednesday, by Dr. Ralph Bunche of the Social Science Division of Howard University and Atty. John P. Davis of the Joint Committee on National Recovery. It is to be held at Howard University, May 18, 19 and 20. High government officials and other nationally known speakers will give, in papers to be read at this conference, the results of months of research on the Afro-American and the New Deal.
Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Bryant, of Cedar Ave., spent the week-end with a relative in Canonsburg, Pa.
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IN UNION
SERVICE
10,000,000 Afro-Americans.
825,000 in Ohio.
75,000 in Cleveland.
SATURDAY. MAY 4. 1935.
POLITICAL SERVANTS.
Alfred Hall, son of Councilman Frank Hall (deceased) of Cincinnati, had the following political classic in the Cincinnati Union of last week: Are the present colored politicians leaders or merely servants of politicians? That is the question which must be solved before we, as voters, can ever hope to participate in the government of which we are a part. Everyone really realizes that OUR VOTE IS USED MERELY TO PUT THE OTHER FELLOW IS OFFICE AIDER. AND THEY ARE CERNED, AND HE IS CERNED, THAT IS THE END UNTIL NEXT ELECTION.
The foregoing applies perfectly to the situation here in Cleveland and with greater force than it does in our sister city down on the Ohio river. Our Councilmen, for the city jobs they get for constituents, are political SERVANTS, pure and simple, while city color-lines of all kinds continue to multiply. They apparently are not concerned.
WHAT THE MAYOR MEANT.
Mayor Harry L. Davis said, among other things, Sunday evening, in his talk at St. John's A. M. E. church: "The thing you people are entitled to in Cleveland is a paper that you can rely on to tell nothing but the truth."
When he said "you people," the Mayor meant ALL the people of this city and not simply our people. Then, too, he knew and knows, as he has said in the past, that in "The Old Reliable" Gazette, the only one of our local publications to do yeoman service for him in his last campaign, our people of this community, and the entire country for that matter, "have a paper that they can rely on to tell them nothing but the truth." Also, that The Gazette has been doing this for them for more than a half century. Mayor Davis had reference to the daily newspapers and all of the people of this city when he said what he did and we have republished above. And he was NOT in error in making that statement, either. Cleveland needs a morning Republican paper that will be fair to all and "tell nothing but the truth." However, so long as our people have "The Old Reliable" Gazette they only, of all the residents of this city, can struggle along without such a publication.
HOW LONG CAN WE "TAKE IT?"
There is at least one calling that hasn't been depressed during the past few years. Not only has it held its own, but it has managed to go forward and put more and more good round dollars in the till. That calling is Tax Gathering. According to a recent editorial in the Los Angeles Examiner, officeholders of the country now receive about $5,000,000,000 a year in tax-paid salaries—and the amount is steadily rising. Public payrolls list over 3,250,000 people—and that list is constantly lengthening. Last year over 90,000 new names were added to the Federal payroll alone—in addition to increased political employment in practically all of the 175,000 subordinate governments the country has to support.
Every citizen has to chip in to pay the bill the politicians create. The people pay it directly, thru income, property and security taxes. They pay a larger amount indirectly, thru taxes levied on everything they use—from a pack of cigarettes to the winter fuel. A recent estimate places the cost of government at over thirteen thousand million dollars a year—nearly one-third of the nation's income. In the words of The Examiner, "All the unnecessary governments and all the superfluous politicians are demanding and imposing more and more taxes on industry, more and more taxes on productive pursuits, more and more taxes on the public generally." The American people have shown they can "take it" when it comes to paying taxes—but serious observers are beginning to wonder how long the people will per-
A man working on a machine.
A
The committee of the Sight Saving Council which directs the activities of "Sight Saving Day." Friday, May 3, includes (standing) Judge Lee E. Skeel, Professor Henry B. Dates (seated, left to right) Mrs. E. B. Palmer, William Evans Bruner, M. D., and Miss Virginia Wing. Seven hospitals are co-operating in free eye examinations morning and afternoon of May 3 for adults and infants.
mit official waste and extravagance to absorb money that is needed for jobs, industrial expansion, home-building—in brief, for recovery.
SOCIAL SECURITY
HERE AND THERE.
One of the large newspaper chains, referring to the Social Security Bill now pending before the United States Senate, said, editorially:
"The United States is 50 years behind some European countries in establishing a social-security system. This reform should be passed quickly."
Which reminds us of the dialogue when the mother was trying to get her small daughter to eat spinach.
"There are thousands of little girls who would like to have your spinach," said the mother.
"Name just one," replied the daughter, ending the dialogue.
So, we request: Name just one European country that has social security that works better than the American system. True, the American system differs from the European system. Here, social security is not a mythical thing woven around a set of laws that fail to provide security, as it is there. Here, workmen for 150 years have enjoyed se-
The committee of the Sight Savin of "Sight Saving Day," Friday, May Skeel, Professor Henry B. Dates (s William Evans Bruner, M. D., and are co-operating in free eye exam May 3 for ad
The Sight Saving Council of Cleveland invites men, women and children below school age to have their eyes examined without charge at any one of seven hospitals on "Sight Saving Day." Friday, May 3. The examinations will be given by the hospitals' attending physicians and there will be no treatment or correction, but eye examination only. School children will not be examined as they are already well cared for thru the school clinics. At four of the hospitals the examinations, for which there will be no charge, will be held in the hospital May 3, starting at 8:30 a. m. These are St. Luke's, 11311 Shaker Bldd.; St. Alexis, Broadway and McBride Ave.; Mt. Sinai, 1800 E. 105th St., and City Hospital, 3395 Scranton Rd. At
CORRESPONDENTS must mail all letters for publication at their main post office sufficiently early on Sunday or Monday of each week to have them reach The Gazette office on Tuesday morning, and always write their names and that of their city or town on the outside of the wrapper about returned copies. 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.
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O. SATURDAY. MAY 4. 1935.
AT THE LAST MINUTE KID DUGAN HAD TO WITHDRAW FROM THE FIGHT FOR THE WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP BE CAUSE HE SPRAINED HIS ANKLE AND LEFTY LARDER SUBSTITUTED AND WON, THE OLD CHAMP BEING ONLY A 'HOLLOW SHELL'.
I'll GET YOU A FIGHT WITH THE NEW CHAMP, DON'T WORRY, KID!
YOU KNOW HE WONT FIGHT FOR AT LEAST A YEAR, UNTIL HE TAKES ALL THE GOODS AND GETS THE SUCE DOUGH.
ANYHOW, I'M GLAD I TOOK THAT ACCIDENT INSURANCE. I GOT FIFTY THOUSAND GUCKS ON ACCOUNT OF MY ANKLE.
YOU'D PROBABLY BE HAPPIER IF YOU GREW MULED IN A PUBLIC CONVEYANCE. THEN YOU WOULD HAVE GOT. DOUBLE THE AMOUNT.
I'VE GOT AN IDEA. WELL TAKE THE CHAMPION OUT TO A BALL GAME, AND HE CAN WATCH YOU PITCH, JACK.
WHAT GOOD WILL THAT DO?
HELL LAUGH HIMSELF TO DEATH!
curity of wages and working conditions that enabled them to provide homes, education, insurance and other benefits for themselves and their families. There. the average wage has been so low that bare necessities had to suffice for the workers, with none of the American conveniences that would rate as luxuries in Europe—such as automobiles, radios, telephones, etc. Here, the employ of today often is the employer of tomorrow. There, men and women are born to "class" strata from which few are able to climb, so low is the wage and so insurmountable is the social barrier.
American industry has provided for its workers advantages superior to any that can be secured thru legislative edict. Why handicap this system with payroll taxes which would break down instead of build up security? The depression is not excuse enough to destroy a system that represents the progress of 150 years—progress that is unmatched by any other country in the world.
The third annual convention of our Nat'l Alliance of Postal Employees, district 6, comprising the states of Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois and Wisconsin, will be held in Cleveland, June 1 and 2.
TIONING UNIT
AIR CONDITIONING UNIT
The newly opened Electrified Home at 2881 Washington Blvd. Cleveland Heights, which shows what a little money can do to change over the interior of a tractive house into a most modern, convenient and economical home, is drawing many home-makers and their husbands for the public inspection hours at the house, daily from 2 to 9, each afternoon and evening. Great interest is manifested in the small and compact air conditioning unit which is suspended from the ceiling of the basement and which filters, humidifies and circulates the air by that also the air in the upper rooms. This unit, pictured here, has two steel wool air filters, two devices to add the necessary water to the air in the winter and a fan to draw the air from the intake duct and propel it out thru the openings which are located back of the radiators in the first floor rooms. This simple device is most economical and surprisingly low in cost. Convenience outlets permit a most generous use of the kitchen aids as well. The building has been papered and painted and the yard landscaped. You are invited to visit it, today or tonight.
ing Council which directs the activities May 3, includes (standing) Judge Lee E. (seated, left to right) Mrs. E. B. Palmer, and Miss Virginia Wing. Seven hospitals examinations morning and afternoon of adults and infants.
Charity, Central at E. 22d St.; Lakeside, 2065 Adelbert Rd., at Euclid Ave., and St. John's, 7911 Detroit Ave., examinations will start at 1:30 p. m. for those who find afternoon more convenient. The committee of the Sight Saving Council, which includes members of more than 200 cultural and therapeutic commercial and professional organizations of Greater Cleveland, was formed last fall, to spread the modern methods of eye-care and protection to all the citizens of Greater Cleveland and was named by Chairman Henry B. Dates.
YOU KNOW ME
AT THE LAST MINUTE KID DUGAN HAD TO WITHDRAW FROM THE FIGHT FOR THE WORLD'S CHAMPIONSHIP BE CAUSED HE SORRAINED HIS ANKLE AND LEFTY LARDER SUBSTITUTED AND WON, THE OLD CHAMP BEING
I'll GET A FIGHT THE NEW DON'T WIN KID
THE FASHION OF THE TWENTIES
It's Ready - it's FREE
this NEW STYLE BOOK
for STOUT WOMEN
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over 80 pages of pictures and descriptions of
everything you want in the way of clothes. All
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Dept. Lane Bryant
412
39th Street at Fifth Ave. NEW YORK
Name
Street
Town
State
Mall to Lane Bryant, Dept. 412, 39th St. & 5th Ave., N. Y.
Novelty of Overseas Phoning Often Causes Curious Speech
EACH year as Spring approaches, the hue and cry in fashion circles is for navy. Nationally, navy makes its seasonal debut from Maine to California. For those who wonder why, let it be said that navy owes its recurring popularity to the fact that it can be combined with any number of bright field flower shades, as a perfect complement to pink, yellow, red, and cornflower blue.
Large women, especially, find navy an excellent color for their needs. Its darkness serves to slenderize, and the bright little touches navy takes are always flattering. We illustrate with two dresses, one in silk, and the other in Normandy volle, to show navy's adaptability in different fabrics and styles.
On the left is a sprightly flower-
The STYLE BOOK of
Mendering
FASHIONS
Lane Bryant
NEW YORK
Name _____
Street _____
Town _____
Mail to Lane Bryant, Dept.
Novelty of Ove
Often Causes
STAGE-FRIGHT often produces humorous and touching conversations when persons talk for the first time across an ocean. The novice at overseas telephoning is so flabbergasted by the novelty and incredulity of the experience that his self-conscious speech sometimes resembles that of a nervous speaker who talks into a radio microphone for the first time.
No Charge for Tears
Typical of the emotional effect of overseas telephoning is the case of the young Swedish man, who called his mother in Sweden on her birthday.
The young man walked blithely into a telephone office one day with great joy in his heart and just enough money to pay for a three-minute call to Sweden in his pocket.
Twenty-two long years had passed since he had seen his mother. He couldn't remember the sound of her voice, but he had a great yearning to hear it now.
When her voice did come to him from over the Atlantic, it brought a flood of emotion that swept over
AL
YOU HAVE
NAME.
RY
YOU KNOW HE
WANT FIGHT
FOR AT LEAST
AYEAR, UNTIL
HE TAKES ALL
THE BOYS AND
SETS THE SURE
Dough
ANYHOW
GLAD IT TO
ACCIDENT
INSURANCE
FIFTY THE
BUCKS OF
ACCOUNT
MY ANKLE
ed print, with a background of navy, to be worn right through spring into the late summer. The bell sleeves will prove to be very cool. The two wide, graceful revers with tucked, surplice-shaped band made of silk that crepe makes a very fattering neckline. Note the slimming effect of the pleats in front of this dress.
The other dress pictured illustrates how smart one can be in simple Normandy volle. It can be worn anywhere, either at a taperary, at or church, and an added beauty is the fact that it is washable. The lines are very simple, but how they do slenderize! The fagging on the deep surplice revers and on the bell sleeves add a nice touch, and the white pleated organdie edging on the vestee is an inspiration.
Ready - it's FREE
a NEW STYLE BOOK
for STOUT WOMEN
All for your FREE copy of this beautiful
book of Spring and Summer Pashions. Has
100 pages of pictures and descriptions of
thing you want in the way of clothes. All
mainly low prices. The very newest New-
York styles, adapted for stout women
misses by the world's greatest specialist in
frizen apparel. Fill out coupon NOW!
Lane Bryant
39th Street of Fifth Ave. NEW YORK
State
112, 30th St. & 5th Ave., N. Y.
Perseas Phoning
Curious Speech
him like a deluge.
"Mother," he cried, and fell to weeping.
For the life of him he couldn't utter a word for two of his precious three minutes. When the call was over, he found to his dismay that it had consumed five minutes instead of three, and that the cost exceeded his carefully planned savings.
But when the telephone company heard his story, it marked his tearful two minutes off the books, saying it could find no charges in its schedules for crying time.
Getting the Laugh Out
IM THAT AT DEE, I GOT USAND OF E
YOUD PROBABLY BE HAPPIER IF YOUD BEEN KILLED IN A PUBLIC CONVEYANCE THEN YOUD HAVE DOUBLE THE AMOUNT
IVE GOELY WELL CHAMP A BALL HE CALL YOU P
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 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 Court has several times held the constitutionality of the law and it has been very effective. Illinois, Pennsylvania and New Jersey have followed Ohio's lead and enacted mob violence or anti-lynching laws which are copies of our Ohio law. Several other northern states and at least one border state (Kentucky) have also enacted anti-lynching laws, in recent years. 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. Pence 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," and 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, particularly if the person receiving it from earning a livelihood by manual labor. (93 v. 161 3.)
Section 6280. A person taken from officers of justice by a mob, and assaulted with justice by a mob, 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 alike, the widow receiving amounts equal to a chilis if they be widowed, or children surviving such decedent, such sum shall be distributed among the next of kin according to the laws of the distribution of the personality of an intestate. Such sum so recovered shall not be a part of the estate of such person so lynched, nor be subject to any of his liabilities. (93 v. 162 6.)
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 the next succeeding tax levy for such county, shall be a part of the judgment in every such case. (93 v. 162 8.)
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 costs of the jury or punish costs against it in favor of the legal representatives of a person killed or seriously injured by a mob from any of the persons composing such mob. A person present, with hostile intent, at such lynching shall be deemed a member of the mob and be liable to such action. (93 v. 162 10.)
Section 6286. If the decedent so Section 6288. If a mob carries a prisoner into another county, or
.
comes from another county to commit violence on a prisoner brought from such county for safekeeping, the county in which the lynching is committed may recover the amount of the judgment and costs from the 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. 13.) 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 not less than fifty dollars or more than five hundred dollars, or imprisoned not less than thirty days nor more than ninety days, or both.
Sec. 12941. Whoever violates the next preceding section shall also pay not less than fifty dollars nor more than 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.
THE CHANGE OF LIFE
No medicine can prevent the change of life, during middle-age, but CARDUI does help women to overcome much suffering during that time.
Many women have reported that by taking Cardui during the change of life their strength has been renewed and their strength improved. By building up their strength ene have overcome ordinary nervousness and painful conditions due to poor nourishment. Give them purely vegetable, harmless medicine. When you need Cardui, buy a bottle and take it regularly. Several bottles may be needed. Give it it as it is tried. See if it will help you as it has helped so many women. Of course, if Cardui does not benefit you, consult a physician. Sold at drug stores.
an a pie a= Guanine Ee ii
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ASSASSI)
A Drinker of Hashish!
In eleventh-century Persia, a secret
corder‘was founded by Hassan ben
Sabbah, indulging in the useof the
‘Oriental drug hashish, and, when
under its influence, in the practice
of secret murder. The murderous
drinker of hashish came to be
allied basbasb in the Arabic and
from that origin comes our English
word assassen!
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Seed cri tne sect nee all pete te RE neuen
office, 2322 E. 30th St., near Central Ave. If you wish to see the
editor call there, please.
ese cies sexs ras sere toicaratuly couse) xa Gentes
eayaeriaeieces buacrimaning purcamec cmicuan ame ene
advertise in this paper should have the patronage of our people.
The fact that they advertise in The Gazette is assurance that
oe
Arceeding mista toi pail ation ta co cise tees ction
Gazette must be in the office by noon, WEDNESDAY, of that
week, at the latest. Display advertisements accepted unti] 4 p. m.,
Wenwespare?
HARRY ©. SMITH,
2322 KE. 30th Street, Cleveland, Ohio.
(Near Central Ave.)
Notary Public. Bell "Phone: CHerry 1280.
Classified Advertising Department
WARTMEN -Youag Unany, dass] “WOR AAU Gadrosin act
enerestig and intaligent ‘wus’ has|oa'ana nowly veruisbea
Sag expariosce as a ssuittor and oot | Susieas opting anda mci
lector. Must be neat ta appearance| “charter oak’ tefrigerator
sed sitchin, Adieese Wee commie | Adieu Bex 8. ‘Fis geen
Box A, 2322 E. 30th St. 2322 E. 30th St., City.
CLEVELAND| EDITOR HAYES WRG
;_. Max Hayes, ee of the Cl
5. Citizen and a member of the
Social and Personal | “iti22 224.3, member of the
St. James A. M. B. choir is a vol-
untary organization. It is said the
regular choir, “walked out,” some
time ago.
Mrs, Maude 8. Goodman of B. Liv-
erpool motored to the city, recently,
to spend a week-end with her cousin,
Mrs, Wm, E, McIntire, E, 85th St.
It is said that few of our people
succeeded in Ketting into the dance
given by local post office employees
at Trianon ballroom, last week Tues-
day evening,
Mrs, Wm. Rosier Jackson and
@aughier, Miss Faith, a Glenville
High junior, of Everton Ave., re-
turned from’ a visit in Boston, re-
cently.
Counciiman Herman H. Finkle’s
resolution urging congress to pass
the Costigan-Wagner anti-lynching
bill Was passed in city council Mon.
day evening.
Dr. and Mrs. Edward A. Bailey's
little daughter, Gloria, who was s0
critically ill and was operated on at
Lakeside Hospital, recently, is at
home convalescing, The Gazette is
very pleased to announce,
Mrs, Peter Delgado, E. 82d St.
with the assistance of a few close
friends, gave her husband a very en-
Joyable birthday surprise party, last
Saturday evening. Music, games and
a very satisfactory lunch featured the
social] function,
Mrs. Mary McCloud Bethune was
given a collection amounting to
$31.86 at St. James Forum, Sunda;
week. Rey. John R. Hagan, superin.
tendent of Cleveland's " Catholic
schools, delivered an address at the
forum,’ Sunday, on “State Aid for
Parochial Schools.”
Mrs, Mayme Hawkins, E. 43d St.
for years active in chureh, social and
civic work, recently sponsored the
organization of “The Young Bon
seurs,”* a club that is doing some ex
cellent work along social lines. The
organization meets, every Friday eve.
ning, at the Cedar “Y.”
‘Miss Willetta Brown was giver
judgment for $250, under Hon. Har
ry C, Smith's Ohio’ Civil Rights law
against the Pennsylvania-Greyhound
Bus lines, last week Friday in Mu
nicipal Judge David Moylan’s court
for color-line discrimination and mis
treatment. Atty. Chester K. Gillespi
represented her.
Rey. J. Carlton McClendon of New
York Clty, evangelist, is preaching
to packed ‘houses at Shiloh Baptis
church. Miss Mary L. Johnson, gos
pel soloist; MeKinley Wiggins, or
ganist, and Leslie Prutitt, saxophon.
ist are assisting him, Real gospe
singing and preaching. An invitation
{fs extended to all to aitend.
Southern “cracker” members o
the U. 8. Senate are prepared to read
the bible continuously in their fight
on the Costigan-Wagner anti-lynch-
ing Dill which they will kill. Well
itis a good thing something wil
make them stop encouraging lynch-
murder long enough to read th
bible,
The CCRA is drawing about a halt
dozen color-lines among its workers
visitors, and others. Our local Fed:
eration of Women’s Clubs as welll ai
the locat NAACP branch ought tc
look Into this matter, immediately.
‘Then there are many of one kind an¢
another in the city departments, Tell
our councilmen, Hubbard, Payne
Bundy and Finkle, to get busy.
‘Workhouse for Tainted-Meat “Man.'
‘The first workhouse sentences in
this elty for the sale of tainted food
were imposed; last week, by Police
Judge Lausche. Pretty, near time!
Both sentences, of 15 days each, went
to Dave Duke, proprietor of a gro-
cery and meat market at 6104 Quin-
cy Ave. In addition he was fined
$50 and costs, Testimony showed
that he had been arrested several
times before but failed to change
conditions at his store. Badly spoiled
meat, cheese and canned goods were
sold there, officers said. Duke should
have been more severely senterced
and “the keys thrown away.”
108 GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, 0. SATURDAY, MAY 4, 1935.
BOZO BUTTS—THEY DRIVE HIM NUTS By RUBE GOLDBER
"1 me : His ib
(ase ratrtsen | |[/ eee css "=e II ( sexeeneseaes LL tie eer |e ae
IT BY ToNoRROW CAREFUL = 1 BURIED A cous wust Line yours |{( crdckise ) ey aan nears
THe BEST CURE IS COUSIN OF Nine Yes- AND J THREE DAYS Lo NY east
NOT Te THINK ABOUT TERBAY - Now, mY Fre Got PNEUMONIA Nee) Yann SS WIND !
'T kL DOCTOR KNoWws More | AND BDIED- THAD AN py \ BN
a~ B\ Saou Saige man UP AUNT in Wew ZeaLans | $32 ae — eX ee
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Ror girsny P as ° WALES & | fesse
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iW me, | LSS ABA ; 3) eI hy DAFF!
As aL | : tS apie a ie ar) a4 RH Wicker Ey
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BS es || P| | Os|| BSNS)! [er se
zt pe | eS | A ee ns BRS Se) tes
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2 E a ae A DIC Ih SN
ss LL Ap Brn news Fats oe | E BAA ley a <P
FOR SALE.—Bedroom set, clean:
ed and newly varnished; a Way.
Sagless spring and a medium siz
“charter oak” refrigerator cheap!
Address Box B, The Gazette office,
2822 E. 80th St, City.
EDITOR HAYES WRONG.
Max Hayes, editor of the Cleveland
Citizen and a member of the Metro-
politan Housing Authority, may not
know it, but he was certainly wrong
in his bitter attack upon Mayor Har-
ry L. Davis and Councilmen Finkle,
Payne, Bundy and Hubbard's atti-
tude toward the Cedar-Central hous-
‘ing project. ‘The Mayor was right
in his refusal to sign the ordinance
vacating the streets. in the Cedar-
Central area but did not go far
oe HE SHOULD HAVE VE-
TOED I! Finkle’s threat to intro-
‘duce a repealer for the ordinance,
which he carried out, was a perfect:
‘ly correct proceeding from our view-
point or standpoint, with Hayes to
the contrary, notwithstanding. ‘The
ordinance ought never to have been
passed until the federal government
gave assurance that there would be
no discrimination in renting the
buildings of its housing project when
completed, and it Finkle, Payne,
Bundy and Hubbard are as sincere
in their opposition, as we hope they
are, they will use their votes in the
City Council, in the future, to pun-
‘ish the members of the majority vote
that defeated their efforts to. make
the federal government give the as—
surance desired. Hayes said he was
“disgusted with the obstructionist
tactics of the Mayor “and our repre-
sentatives in City Council. He isn’t
half as disgusted as we are with that
Republican-Democratic majority vote
in that august body that passed the
ordinance, regardless of the civil
rights of over 80,000 Afro-American
residents of this city. In comment-
ing upon the matter, Mayor Davis
said, the first of the week, that he
“did feel that the government should
have taken a definite position with
regard to discrimination against
race, color and creed.” What we re-
gret’is that he did not feel it suf-
ficiently, deeply and keenly to not
only refuse to sign the ordinance,
but to veto it as well, KILL IT. Edi-
tor Hayes’ desire to help secure more
work for the unemployed, as soon as
possible, in the Cedar-Central area
is not to be commended, if the em-
ployment must be secured as a re-
sult of a denial of citizen-rights to
more than 80,000 law-abiding Amer-
ican citizen residents of this commu:
nity. ‘They have rights that he and
all others of his” kind should be
forced to respect, whenever neces.
eines
MOVE WILBERFORCE SOUTH.
Some of the members of the fac-
ulty of Wilberforce University, in the
last year or two, have stressed what
they term the institution’s “dual
management,” having reference, we
take it, to the fact that the A. M. E.
Church connection controls and man-
ages the university with the excep-
tion of its “Combined Normal and
Industrial (“State”) Department,”
which of course is controlled by ‘a
board of trustees, a majority of
whom are appointed by the Governor
of Ohio, and the minority by the A.
M. E, Church connection. They are
assisted by a “board of control” (sev-
eral state. officers). Recently, it
seems, Wilberforce University ‘was
denied admittance to the North Cen-
tral Association after having made
application to be placed upon its ac-
credited list of schools, In explana-
tion of this, a report sent out from
Wilberforce, last week, announced
that “it is believed that the lack of
an adequate library, complete and
modern laboratories and the DUAL
MANAGEMENT were the main rea-
sons for rejection.” We may de
wrong but we do not believe that the
alleged “dual management” had any-
thing to do with the refusal, As a
matter of fact, the so-called “dual
management” has been the making
and is the salvation of the institu-
tion as it stands today. If it were
not for the generous appropriations
given to the Combined Normal and
Industrial (“‘State") Department of
the university, finis for the institu-
tion (University) would have been
written, many years ago. Our advice
to the members of the faculty of the
University, who have brot forward,
in the last year or two, this “dual
management” talk, is to’ discontinue
it and abandon their desire to foist
Wilberforce University upon the
state of Ohio as @ ‘branch of the
State University “for Colored people
only.” Something that will never
be done! As a matter of fact, the
institution (Wilberforce University)
ought to be moved into the South-
land where it is needed, It is NOT
NEEDED in Ohio, as every one
knows. And those members of the
faculty who have been flirting with
the K. K. K. and prejudiced educa-
tors in and out of Ohio, nursing a
desire to see Wilberforce University
a segregated (‘‘jim-crow") institu-
tion and a part of Ohio State Univer-
sity, are wasting time and effort.
‘The’ Combined Normal and Industrial
('State") Department of Wilber-
force University igopen to all! It
cannot be otherwise under the laws
of this state. If members of the fac-
ulty of Wilberforce University and
others want it made a segregated in-
stitution—“for Colored people only”
—let them advocate moving it to the
southland where such an institution
belongs.
Before ELECTRICITY
|_#
Loe
ken SE
LGQS Ps
ra, it
Pe ee Nea e
11. Wheels and Winas
‘Throughout thousands of years,
the development of the art of com-
munication has been linked with that
of transportation.
In some cases, special methods of
transportation have been devised
particularly for communication pur-
poses, a conspicuous example being
the use of carrier pigeons. In most
instances, however, the facilities em-
ployed in carrying messages have
been those used in transporting pas-
sengers: the horse, camel or other
man-carrying animal; the wheeled
vehicle; the boat in its multitude of
forms.
First steam, and then electricity
and the internal combustion engine,
have given new speed to wheel, pad-
dle and propeller. Within but a rela-
tively few years, man has mastered
the art of air navigation and has
made space the pathless sea through
which he sails his ships.
All this has been done, not alone
that man himself might travel more
swiftly, but that his written words
might speed more quickly on their
way.
(To Be Concluded)
Before ELECTRICITY
take
Rohs
ae >
— Ss ia
[cia ae aa
6. The Clepsydra
Aeneas Tacticus wrote, about 350
B.C., describing an ingenious signal-
ing device called the clepsydra. Two
cylindrical vessels, of the same size
and shape, were provided with taps
from which water would run at ex-
actly the same rate. Into each vessel
there was loosely fitted a float to
which was attached an upright rod
marked off into equal sections. On
the corresponding sections of each
rod, identical messages were written.
When a message was to be sent, the
attendant at the sending station’dis-
played a torch. This signal was ac-
knowledged by displaying a torch at
the receiving station, whereupon the
attendants at both, stations started
the water running from their clepsy-
dras. When the rod at the sending
station had sunk so that the desired
message was level with the rim of
the vessel, the attendant there again
signaled with his torch. The rod at
the receiving station had, of course,
sunk to the corresponding message,
which was then read by the attendant
there.
(To Be Continued)
THE GLORY OF WOMAN‘
aia) IN HER HAIR LONG,SOFT AND FLUFFY
« «WITH SILKEN SHEEN
; » » and
a why nov?
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HOME
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with
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And 1001 Ideas
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MAY 4 through MAY 18
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ST ee ee ee ee ee ee ee
TWO INTERESTING BOOKS
By JOSEPH C. MANNING 5
FADEOUT OF POPULISM
Telle how and why our people of the South are deprived of
Their Constitutional Rights. Brought down to date by
araiaion of the Kian and AntL-Saloon League Politien. Prie
From Five to Twenty-Five
‘ate le Mr. Manning's life story embracing the peried trom
1870 to 1895. Price, $1.00.
BOTH BOOKS FOR $1.50.
T. A. HEBBONS, PUBLISHER,
184 W. 185th 6t., Dept. B, New York City.
THE LELAND D. FRENCH FUNERAL HOME
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2118 East 46th St.
By RUBE GOLDBERt
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
Fishing & Fossil Fish
ee PRY ET ET
ees ei Sas
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Sess a ee ee
epee ae an
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eee cy Mes .
Pasa sed im <5 a a
Fis race! a Sail >. haa a
oy See é Se &
Ss. Sec pe ee
ae ae ele Seas
Se el eg
pcs ey = Wii eee
pee / acca
oe A) Be
‘a “Se : = ye
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cee eee Ii NG
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‘These Fish Swam Over Wyoming Approximately 55,000,000 Years Ago.
Prepared by National Geographle Society. +. iene away all trace of rock in whic
ee eee tere ne
thritied by the pull of a live
denizen of the deep. Some.
howerer, enjoy fishing for
fossil fish, millions of years old, usinz
Dicks, shovels and chisels for “tackle.”
‘One feature of fossil fishing is tha:
the big ones can't get away, once they
are “caught.” This fact, and also the
minor one that fossil-fishing in this
country must be carried on in the re-
mote, not to say obscure, portions of
the United States, will probably keep
it from assuming the place which It
deserves as a major American outdoor
‘sport.
‘The proper fossil-fshing trip leads
you, for example, to Fossil, Wyoming.
where you may be the only person get-
ting off there that year!
Now the Priseacara pealel (poor fish
to you!) may look tame enough as you
pass him by in a museum on your way
to the stuffed owls; but that is because
these ancient relies of prehistoric days
have been carefully eaught for you, inr
prisoned in thelr stone frames, Inbeled.
and hung where they can excite only
the inflammable Interest of the paleon-
tologist.
But truly fishing some time for those
rovers which, only a few million years
ago, swam bilthely through that in-
land ocean where are now the Rocky
‘mountains.
One week-end fishing trip in Wyom-
Ing may net you a G-foot palm leaf,
three large pickerel, bass, or pike. a
prodigious mosquito (just the way
you'd like to see a mosquito, trans.
formed into solid rock,) sunfish, her-
ring, the thick-sealed gar pike.
‘Then, you never know when you may
come upon an ancient crocodile 13 feet
Yong. One was found near the fossil
bed, where you must look if you ex-
pect sour week's sport to be really ex-
citing.
Where Roads Meet.
Fossil, Wyoming, 1s formed by the
accidental meeting of two roads which
Slipped down from opposite sides of a
mountain. ‘There ts a pleasing legend
that the population of Fossil Is 50: but,
counting the peor’e sou can see and
the ones you can imagine, you cannot
arrive at a generous estimate of more
than 80,
‘They will have to stop the train es
pecially for you. ‘They don't like to
do {t—and, as you look out over the
wind-swept, cold, purple dawn on the
Rocky mountains at this particular
point, neither do you.
But it's worth it!
A few minutes after you have ar-
rived on a well-conducted fossil-tishing
trip, the sun will break over the farth-
fest ridge in a long crescent of fossil
‘mountain which sleeps content in a
past which even the most arduous fish-
erman will never know.
Around you is a shallow sweep of
‘mountain—red, gray, green, blue, and
purple—eolored with time and embrac
Ing earth and sky and air. ‘The sky is
fa curious translucent blue. You stand
as if on the basin of some huge broken
plece of pottery. All about you at the
broken brim are fossil beds which you
at ee a inl
depth you may never plumb.
Custodian of the fossil beds, amateur
sportsman extraordinary, Robert Lee
Craig will take you fishing if you have
fan honest Interest. He has been fish
ing in these hills for 37 years, and he
has no patience with people who will
not climb with him the 275 feet trom
his camp to the fossil hill; who wil
not wait while he lays hare o stratum
of fossil rock; who' will not, with his
own suppressed excitement, cleave
those strata again and again, peeling.
stripping the layers down as though
they were ears of corn. Often the fin-
fest specimens of fossilized fish will be
hidden just beneath the gray-like sur-
face and would pass notice of all ex
cept the most observing.
Heat of Day Best Time.
It Is best to walt until the heat of
the day to raise a ledge, for then the
bright rays of sun, striking each layer
as it is peeled off with wedge and bam-
mer, often show up the faint tracing
of a backbone, the dim outline of a fin.
When this outline is revealed. the
fossil fisherman takes the sharp biae
of a knife and gently scratches the pro-
tecting shale away to make sure of his
specimen. Then he hews out a square
of rock around the fish, and the spect
men 1s ready for cleaning. The clean-
Ing process is done with the fine biate
of a knife, great skill belng exercised
the fish is Imbedde without cestroy-
Ing the delicate outline of the fish.
Hills. Slip and Stide.
‘These fossil hills are contrary—Jeal-
‘ous as deep pools where bass lie hid-
den from the easter's fly. ‘They stip
and slide, they shift and fall, to con-
found the fisherman and make for him
unceasing labor. You must wait and
hope, you must listen to stories of oth-
er fish, other days; you must eat your
hoonday sandwich dry and brittle and
filled with some dust of shale; you
must know the sadness of cleaving a
whole sheaf of rock at last—good, firm
fossil rock In which whole schools of
prehistoric fishes should le buried—
only to find it barren as a desert trail.
No, these fish took one more dive be-
fore the cataclysm. They lie to wind-
ward or to leeward. And though you
fare some 25 or 20 feet below the top
layer of protecting shale, still you have
not fished deep enouzh.
If you are a proper fisherman, you
will, of course, spend many lingering
moments which might otherwise be te-
ious in contemplation of the ancient
story of how your “etch” came to be
cast up, in the very act of living, onto
the dry and dusty mountain tops. As a
theme for meditation, It far surpasses
the habits of the lively pike in his fa
vorite deep-lake retreat. For the how
and the why of the northern pike in
present-lay waters is mysterious
enough, but the how and the why of
the fossil gar pike ts the story of Time
Atsett.
Perhaps the best definition of the fos-
‘sil fish for the amateur stone fisherman
is the simple one given by the late
Frederic A. Lucas, formerly a curator
of the National museum, in his book,
“Animals of the Past.” i
“Fossils,” he says, “are the remains,
or even the indications, of animals and
plants that have, through natural agen-
cies, been buried in the earth and pre-
served for long periods of time.” ‘These
“indications,” which may be footprints.
tramped leaves, the almost formless
Jellyfish, the very ripple on the sands,
have been, In many instances, pre
served in stone, perfect patterns of the
ephemeral life of millions of sears azo.
‘And how did fossil fish come to be
Imprisoned in their strangely lifelike
stony form in The Itocky mountains of
Wyoming? Your mind must go. back
to lost ages, when an ocean rolled over
the wheat fields of Kansas, the prairies
of Nebraska, and the site of the Empire
State bullding alike. ‘These abundant
seas were ruled successively by vari
ous races of sea ceatures, which came.
ruled, were conquered by larger and
more powerful species, and at Inst lay
scattered at the bottom of the ancient
ocean he
ange Ocean Rulers.
Amon the strange ocean rulers were
the armor-clad fish; then, In turn, the
fierce, sharp-toothed sharks, the fish
Vizarda, the mysterious. ichthyosaurus,
the plesiosaurus, whose names are only
f little less terrifying than the havoc
they spread among the fish lizards craw!-
ing in the mud of ocean hed. ‘The
great marine reptiles called Mosasay
‘rus, geologists believe, ruled the sens
from New Zealand to North America
at one. time.
‘The Rocky mountains—so placid and
gray now by daytime—swarmed with
herole battle in the days when they
were still ocean bed. Huge turtles, sa
ber-toothed divers, the monstrous fish
of legend, all fought for supremacy.
and over the waters flew the ptero
aetyls, dark. menacing shadows, with
thelr powerful wingapread of 20 fevt
‘or more.
While the rival fish species spawned.
fought, and died, the surface of the
North American continent was graduia!
ly taking form. ‘The tand which mate
up the ocean bed was rising with anon
umental slowness—an inch, perhaps an
inch and a half, a century.
At Inst the “ocean” on the North
American continent was completely en
closed on the west and on the east by
elevations of sea bottom, so that it
connected with the Atlantic and Pacific
oceans as we now know them only at
the Gulf of Mexico and the Aretic cir-
cle. “Continued elevations of the east
erm and western edges contracted the
area of this vast inland ocean, ant
parts of the ancient sea bottom rose.
Teached the surface, forming hars anil
vast fingers of land. Parts of the wa
ter area were contracted tnt inian |
lakes until, at last, they lust all con
tact with salt water,
‘THR GAZETTE, CISVELAND, ©. SATURDAY, MAY 4. 1935.
WHITE COLLAR NOW REDINGOTE TURNS L
HAS COMPETITION FORMAL IN STYLE
Dash of Pink Has Been Added | Coat-Like Garment Now Made
to the Neckline. of Crisp Sheer Fabric. 4
No longer can we speak in terms of
white accents for spring costumes be-
cause a dash of pink has been added
to the neckline, The white collar
brigade is meeting with some real com-
Petition,
Since one successful accessory often
fs followed by another, there are pink
cuffs, vestees, blouses, hats and vari-
ous pieces of costume Jewelry to rival
the chaste appearance of the one-time
favorite, ale blue and tulip yellow
also have appeared in the accessory
field but their entry did not create
the furor of the detieate pink hues.
‘A. gilinpse of the neckwear coun-
ters Is convincing proof that pink is
sharing equal attention with white in
the decoration of spring costumes.
Frilly types of collars, cuffs and ves-
tees predominate among the most re-
cent arrivals but there are tailored
Hinen and pique sets of distinction.
‘The Introduction of the vestee or
gilet Is the most recent development.
Emphasis is pliced upon the adorn-
ment which may be worn either on
the outside of a dress front or with
the edges tucked underneath. Organ-
die and mousseline are the most fash-
lonable of the sheer fabrics and usu-
ally are featured in connection with
Valenciennes lace and insertion.
LOVELY NEGLIGEE
ecubeesnecmahes
Sl
OR
\ 25 : iN
¥4/
—a
—
: je
ae | 4
More and wore the trend is toward
the prettily feminine and luxurious in
fashion's realm. ‘The reaction to love-
ly and exquisite apparel ts especially
stressed in boudoir und home environ-
Ment in that neziigeex and hostess
gowns are playing a sumptuous and
beguiling role. A. luxurious fur fab
rie, ermine crush, is the material of
the negligee pictured. It is lined
throughout with peach satin which
shows In the revers.
Gay Prints to Be in Favor
for Spring Afternoon Wear
Gay prints, stamped with buttertties
flowers or figs ni) two-tone prints tn
basket weaves or star. effects are
shown for spring afternoon wear. ‘They
fare designed with soft ruffled oF knife
Bleated flounces at the fairly low necky
Hine and with munerous finely pleated
Inserts in the skirts, whose hems are
from 6 ta 7 inches from the ground
With them go wide-brimmed hats of
dark oF light straw recalling the “mer
Fy widow" designs of years ago, some
times cut with the abbreviated turned:
up back brim (so often seen this sen.
son) and trimmed with a cluster of
flowers o a tuft of ostrich feathars.
Lace in All Colors and
A AP SEE
Dainty tulle and lace gowns with
trimmings of the sune materials are
the latest dictum laid down by the
Paris feminine fashion czars
‘These materials wifl be used in pro:
fusion either ax the principal item of
milady’s tollet or as trimmings destined
to lend 9 lighter note to the present
heavy, sumptuous dresses.
Lace needs to be pressed but rarely
and hence Is a convenient material for
holiday excursions or week-end visits
FLASHES FROM PARIS
Fans, flowers and furbelows now
abound.
New silhouette trends to. more
@rapery and less blas cut.
Jewels are worn in the hair at
aight.
Heel-less sandats for evening are
the new sensation
Seductive saris, sauzy draperies
reflect new Hindu inituence.
Couturiers ell express enthust
asm for nets, laces and ehiffons,
Flowers enter lavishly into. the
fashion picture,
REDINGOTE TURNS
FORMAL IN STYLE
Coat-Like Garment Now Made
of Crisp Sheer Fabric.
The good old redingote, daytime
standby of the fashion world, has
gone formal on us,
The coat-and-dress ensemble which
has become a spring elassie for well-
dressed women is appearing now in
advance showings of the summer-eve-
ning mode.
At first glance you wouldn't recog-
nize the frothy concoctions as mem-
hers of the reliable redingote family.
But examine them carefully and there
can he no mistake.
‘There Is a strong tendeney on the
part of designers to make a coat-like
garment of crisp sheer fabric, stich as
organdie or organza, and pose it over
a slim sheath of taffeta, The organdie
coat fastens loosely at the waistline,
and ts open the rest of the way down,
revealing the slip beneath.
Sometimes the redingote is of
starched lace, and sometimes of or-
ganza or stiffened chiffon,
Usnaliy it has short puffed sleeves,
but sometimes it has long, loose ones.
‘The trick is that it must be sheer,
revealing the sheath beneath.
RUFFLE NECKLINE
‘By CHERIE NICHOLAS
ae.
ee
ye/
ON
L Wa.
A. AN
Uh
Frame the face, the throat with tril
ly rufflings, pleatings and shirrings,
Such is one of fashion’s latest edicts.
In the neckwear department they are
showing huge ruches a la Plerrot and
high Medici collars of stiffened lace
and tall Elizabethan pleatings of sheer
fabrics. ‘The necklines of coats and
frocks are also frequently trimmed
with voluminous rofflings and ruch.
ings. The huge ruffled sik collar on
the dress pictured is very flattering.
Matching ruffles on the sleeves add to
the attractiveness of this gown, Note
the teks which hold in the fullness of
the bodice above the waistline. De
signers are using great quantities of
tucks as well as fancy shirrings, in
fashioning spring and summer ap-
parel.
Hindu Sari Is Taken Over
for Spring Evening Wear
The evening innovation ts the intro-
duetion of the Hindu sari which ts
both draped over the head as the east-
erners wear it, of it can also be draped
about the shoulders as a scarf. ‘Turk-
Ish trousers appear in glazed chintz
for beach weary and a wedding vell
made like a sunbonnet in white tulle
Is edged around with orange blossoms,
Among 125 Schiaparelii colors are
carbon blue, whieh is darker than ma-
rine, to vishnu blue, a pale shade for
evening which corresponds with a new
pink called desert rose. Browns are
prominent and off-shades of terra cot-
ta are called Pilgrim, while a bright-
er or orange shade Is called noon day
sun, There are some delightful grays
for evening {n ebiffon called centdres
(ashes), and the printed — glazed
chintzes are charming In the softness
of their tones and combinations of
flowers,
Fabric Flowers on Your
Hats. Right Over the Nose
Fabric flowers will sing such a gay
tune in the symphony of accessories
this spring that one Boston department
store has already opened a “Flower
Shop” on Its street floor, vending noth-
Ing but little bouquets of decorative
flowers and a few frult novelties.
Bouquets are expected to win more
favor than the single large rose of yes-
teryear. A novelts Is a single piece of
fruit, however, like a small apricot
with leaf attached. Bunches of white
grapes provide 4 smart accent to the
lapel of sober navy suit
Lapels won't be the only places for
the bouqnets.
Paris Insiruets you to pin them to
the front of your hats square above
your nose.
STYLE NOTES
New fashions stress lowered
necklines,
Ask for butterfly prints. ‘They're
newest.
Flowers! Wear them. Trim hats
with them, natural or artificial.
Boucle knits are swnarter than
ever,
Accent is on brims and shiny
coarse straws,
Puffed sleeves and full skirts of
pre-war days have returned.
Gay print silk Jackets top solid
color wool frocks.
In The WEEK'S NEWS
NEW BRIDGE CHAMPION — Oswald em
Jacoby of New York ls the new bridge oe 2
ee champion of America, ranking first In a
© RG [tre maiamerics™ stings Yuct on: e :
J _ nounced by Collier's Weekly. He is the a 1
Gee ef _ | etek brat The letre shows him ey
a Aree one ne we ~
= i THe AN a
4 : ICAN MOTHER" |; a)
a Cy j — Mrs. Fletcher s
M. Johnson, of Ir . ed
: | | vinaton on - Hud. |i
\ E | So. nae ee
Fe) |scclected by thee ile
4 .. Golden Rule |) Weed :
OD \nenst oye >
connie —
¥ “The ty plea! (Mle eee
: American, mother | WOM SMe
Si for 1935." Sa ll :
<< es ne —
ce : See ee oe = fy j .
eh fe —e.6hU,llCU
a Ce a «fie a
: —- r > b 4 22.
ae Fm oa ee | ae
Ff .™ Tn SOF
FT es KAYE DON (right)—] [i Cee
4 Noted British sports] | NN Awe
. : - ) man, and Stanley L.] | MSN
ee ‘ PG | Reed, of the American| | 42S LA
8 fh Dl Automovite associa] |
4 FAW) tion, test inside tem- . :
. | peratures of General| PUBLIC ENEMY
2 eee Motors cars protected| | CAUGHT—Raymond Ham-
i from tropleal Key West ilten, Public Enemy No. 1
areca eo Wee eae : sun by the solid steel] since Baby Face Nelson's
TAee cotee ae “turret top" Fisher| death, is shown just after
t aC body. Tests showed| he was captured by Fort
news this month with his arti: Mm ai a
al that the “turret top”| Worth, Texas, police with-
ote a ee nen ae . gy Chevrolet, Pontiac,| outa single shot being fired.
advocating » “Federal World | * :
State" to replace the League of BE | Ciésmotiie, and Le
Nations. He maintains that all Ja | lem <i Pe
talk of disarmament without [© @ affected by atmos-lay
establishing an International fh pherlc conditions than m=
police army to enforce it is Mm | ae —hUhUlCU
“rubbish.” _ ym. \
simpLe Format Frock— [i | _ -« « ke
Charming simplicity ts the [a of oct eS
motif of the formal frock of [mE ; caee ©
eect | ) .
Virginia Reld in “Roberta.” The [ie =
bodice Is a triangular piece, cut HE | | ‘ALBINO FROG—Rarer than quintuplets is this
straight across the front neck- Ty fll albino frog being carefully raised at the American
ies aad lo Ghee © to ks ea oe ticketed bistaey imi Wee York:
With Byrd At The South Pole
oN py oan | " : la ~
: AY. a 24 oy | a lee. if oe.
a o a) hy A) « :
. , . ye
sy dmirel Byrd G. A. Abele, J, Pat Yao
ee Abele ar PRT Spe Se ee
are Ofer ~
© Som by ¢. A, ABELE, JA. a
Ensign, U. 8. Naval Reverve
Assistant Fuel Engineer, Byrd Antarctic Expedition 1
ON BOARD THE BYRD FLAG
SHIP, JACOB RUPPERT (via
Mackay Radio) — We are cruising
across the vast Pacific, in tropical
weather free from ice, snow, cre-
vasses, blizzards and the other
Antarctic devilments we have put
up with for nearly two years. What
a relief! We are moving slowly in
order to conserve our supply of
fuel olf
We had sadness in New Zealand.
Our pleasure at seeing new faces,
trees and grass and getting clean
again, was offset by the death,
from natural causes, of our clever
carpenter, Capt. Ivor A. Tingloft,
of Boston. This is the first man of
either of Admiral Byrd's Antare-
tic Expeditions to die before the
final home coming. The Admiral
has never lost a man on the {ce,
despite the terrific dangers and
tasks they have encountered—a re
markable achievement and a won:
derful testimonial to Admirat
Byrd's care of his men, in equip-
ment and in watching over their
health and welfare, often at the ex
pense of bis own well-being.
‘The past year has been a year of
intensive training for me. I didn’t
think that in the short space of 22
months a person could cram 80
much information into bis head. In
a talk this morning with EB. J.
“Pete” Demas, of Washington, D.
C.,, chief of the tractor division, we
summarized the operation of the
tractors during the past season and
some points were brought to light
which may be of interest to motor
ists and others interested in auto
motive matters.
‘This has been the first time in
the history of Arctic or Antarctic
exploration that surface automo-
tive units have ever been used suc-
leessfully. This success, however,
lwas entirely the result of unflag
{A Series of Three Articles)
"Admiral Byrd G. A, Abele ort
By C. A. ABELE, JR.
Ensign, U, 8, Naval Reserve
Fuel Engineer, Byrd Antarctic: Exp
No. 2
Picea Sen 5 nace
ging attention to details. Our Dig
tractor, the three little French
tractors and the two Ford snowmo-
biles were not constructed to meet
conditions such as we encountered
In that tey nightmare south of the
sun.
Demas and Vernon Boyd, of Tur
tle Creek, Pa., Joseph Hill, Jr., ot
Canyon, Tex., Bernard Skinner, of
Winthrop, Me. and J. H. Vander
Wall, of South’ Ozone, N. ¥., labor
ed under almost impossible con-
ditions through the long winter
night preparing the units for their
season of activity.
_ Demas had been on Admiral
‘Byrd's previous expedition and was
able to anticipate numerous nec-
essary changes in the machines in-
cluding the installation of a 15-gal-
lon oil tank over each engine. By
this means hot and fluid Veedol oll
was always available for use in the
engines even at the lowest tem-
peratures. Airplane tanks holding
145 gallons of precious Tydol gaso-
line were installed in the little Cit-
roen tractors and a 50-gallon tank
on the big tractor. Demas was
greatly concerned over two prob-
lems which faced him, namely ofl
dilution and vaporization of fuel.
Much to our surprise these items
never became an issue. The fuel
and lubricants functioned perfectly
and later when the engines were
overhauled no excessive deposits of
carbon were found.
‘The greatest trouble we had on
these awful tractor trips was the
breaking of fan belts. At the ex-
tremely low temperatures encoun-
‘tered, 50 to 70 degrees below zero,
the rubber and leather belts be-
‘came brittle and snapped like sps-
ghetti. We attempted to make belts
ot rope. These would work for
short time and then start to alip.
‘On one trip of 250 miles Comman-
‘der Noville used 15 tan belts. This
is still a problem for other Arctic
explorers to meet.
‘The next difficulty was ice in the
carburetors resulting from fine
particles of snow being drawn into
the air intake. These penetratet
the finest screen. This obstacl»
‘could only be overcome by remov:
ing the carburetor and chipping out
‘the ice. In order to facilitate re
‘equipped with butterfly nuts tn
stead of the usual hex head. We
made another peculiar discovery,
that lowering the draw bar con
necting each machine to the sied
ges it was pulling increased the
efficiency of the vehicle. If the
draw-bar was at or above the cen-
ter of gravity most of the weight
of the machine was thrown back
on the heel of the tread when tow
ing heavy loads instead of being
evenly distributed over the entire
tread. This caused the tractors to
dig into the soft snow.
‘We had a lot more battery trou
ble than the average mowurist «
in winter. So long as the batteries
were kept fully charged no difficul
ty was encountered but once they
were allowed to drop below the full
charge the output decreased rapid.
ly. For this reason spare charged
Datteries were carried in all the
cars. Each unit also carried a com-
plete set of spare parts so that any
type of repair could be accom-
plished out on the blizzard swept
trails.
Even now, as we are plugging
across the Pacific with our amazing
experiences only a few weeks be
bind us, they are beginning to rex.
feter in our minds as events of the
Jong-distant past. Some of the
things we went through are hard to
realize now. In my article next
‘week I will try to give you a men-
tal summary of the entire Byrd Ex-
edition from the standpoint of
‘2P-year old boy just out of college.