The Gazette
Saturday, August 24, 1935
Cleveland, Ohio
Page text (machine-generated)
REPUBLICANS CAN ELECT PRESIDENT!
IN GOD WE TRUST
FIFTY-SECOND YEAR. NO. 2
REPUBLIC
THE LELAND D. FRENCH FUNERAL
EPUBLIC
ELAND D. FRENCH FUNERAL
THE LELAND D. FRENCH FUNERAL HOME
```markdown
```
DR. A. M. GIBSON
Dental Surge
OFFICE HOURS: 9 to 12 A. M., 1 to
Sundays: 10 A. M.-2 P
Dental Surgeon
E HOURS: 9 to 12 A. M., 1 to 5 and 6 to
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, 372
The PERSONAL BRUSH of the
OF DEN
Certified
TAKAMINE
TOOTH BRUSH
2 for 25¢
Now available
drugs
▶ Compact bristle
▶ Sturdy bristle
▶ Rigid Natural
The ideal tooth
modern brush
Make This
Personal To
Once a Hero, Always
Is Phone Linem
e a Hero, Always a H
Phone Lineman's
Once a Hero, Always a Hero Is Phone Lineman's Motto
Once a Hero, Always a Hero Is Phone Lineman's Motto
HEROISM is getting to be a habit with Arthur W. Brewer, New Hampshire telephone lineman, and when he assumes the role he does a thorough job.
Already possessor of one medal for bravery, Brewer gave a repeat performance in a most spectacular manner recently when he chanced upon a burning farm house.
only started his valorous service with this act. Again he braved the dense smoke, emerging with a young mother and her baby.
And to top off his rescue work, the lineman nimbly climbed a nearby telephone pole, tapped a wire and telephoned the fire department through his test instrument. Meanwhile he found time to free five cows
True to form, he dashed intrepidly into the flaming building and rescued an elderly crippled lady. But he had 10 heifer keys and ing quart
Whiten teeth
quickly and safely with
CALOX
the penetrating powder
that cleans and
Whiten teeth
xily and safely with
CALOX
penetrating powder
that cleans and
Whiten teeth
quickly and safely with
CALOX
the penetrating powder
that cleans and
polishes.
CALOX
The Power Denture
A premium grade
TOOTH POWDER
FOR
CLEANING - BEAUTIFYING
TEETH
Pleasant, refreshing taste. Sweet-
ens the breath. Protects the gums.
Economical—saves you half.
ARREST DECAY AND GUARD
"The Forgotten 60"
With CALOX
FOR SALE AT ALL DRUG STORES
An Institution of Distinctive Service. Finest Equipment.
HEnderson 3257-3258
2118 East 46th St.
Surgeon
M., 1 to 5 and 6 to 9 P. M.
L. M.-2 P. M.
CLEVELAND, OHIO.
Phone: GAr, 3731
OF DENTISTS
Now available at your
druggist
▶ Compact brushing head.
▶ Sturdy bristles.
▶ Rigid Natural handle.
The ideal tooth brush for
modern brushing methods.
Make This YOUR
Personal Tooth Brush
Always a Hero
man's Motto
only started his valorous service with this act. Again he braved the dense smoke, emerging with a young mother and her baby.
And to top off his rescue work, the lineman nimply climbed a nearby telephone pole, tapped a wire and telephoned the fire department through his test instrument. Meanwhile he found time to free five cows, 10 heifers, sheep, goats, hens, turkeys and three pigs from their burning quarters.
THE GAZETTE
ESTABLISHED, AUGUST 25, 1883 And Issued Every Week on Time Since
CLEVELAND, OHIO, SATURDAY, AUGUST 24. 1935
FRESH OHIO NEWS
SENT IN BY "THE OLD RELIABLE" GAZETTE'S CORRESPONDENTS.
CORRESPONDENTS must mail all letters for publication at their main postoffice sufficiently early on Sunday or Monday of each week to have them reach The Gazette office on Tuesday morning, and always have them sent to the city or town on the outside of the wrapper about returned copies, if proper credit for them is desired. Lists of names, wedding presents, programs, obituary notices, inquiries for relatives and advertisements of all kinds, including items announcing entertainments to be held in the near future, must be paid for in advance. Mail six words to a line. Our rates for display advertisements will be sent on application.
YOUNGSTOWN.—The union meeting, Sunday evening, at Centenary M. E. church was addressed by Rev. Harris, assistant pastor of Third Baptist church. His sermon was very good. Mrs. Victor Herring and three other students planted Cascade park and spent the week-end with her sister and husband, Mr. and Mrs. R. Owens, in New Castle, Pa.— Chas, Hogue, age 8, was drowned, last week Friday, in Mahoning river. The body had not been recovered, late Monday evening. — Mrs. Ellen Harding of Bellaire and Mr. and Mrs. James Harding of Bellaire. — A.M. E. church Sunday. Tell your friends to order The Gazette from its local representative and keep up-to-date with the race news.
CINCINNATI.—The local NAACP branches and the UNIA have enabled a union which will enable them to do more and better work for our people in this community. The mistreatment received from the Cincinnati police, in recent months, convinced all of the necessity of united action upon our part if that sort of things to be stopped. Do not deny the Cloud palmer meeting, last week Monday evening, to organize a Roosevelt-Davey club. They are starting early.—DeWitt Palmer left, last week, to visit his sister, Margaret, who is attending Oberlin Federal Training school summer session, with Miss Wilda Gunn.—Carlyle Hughes visited his mother in Danville, Ky., recently. Miss Cortine Cloud resumes her training, and she hurried, Wednesday evening. Miss Iva M. Neugen, who gave the twilight song recital for Calvary church choir Sunday evening, left for N. Y. City to attend the Cloud-Turpeau wedding.
XENIA.—Miss Margaret Marr of Pittsburgh and nephew who spent their vacation with a sister, Mrs. Clarence Bayle, have returned home.—Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Sullinger of N. Y. City stopped here, a few days recently, to visit relatives while enroute South. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Dade of Brooklyn, N. Y., accompanied them.—Mrs. M. Goodin is still quite ill.—Mrs. J. D. Dade, Miss Ida Hawkins of Dayton, who has been very ill, was removed to her sister, Mrs. Hattie Corbin's, is much improved. — Mrs. Laura Ross was called to Canton, recently, by the illness of her son, Walter.—Rev. P. H. Hill speaks very highly of Prof. C. C. Walker, originally of Jackson, this state, who graduated in 1905 from West Virginia.—Mr. Walter has taught at several places in the South and is now principal of the Industrial High school at W. Palm Beach, Fla., which has an enrollment of nearly 1600 pupils. Prof. Walker will speak in Dayton, tomorrow evening, at Zion Baptist church.
DAYTON.—Moreland Forte, an instructor in Dunbar and Wallar, will wed Miss Rita Gould of Bridgton, N. J. there, Aug. 28. The newlyweds will probably arrive in Dayton, about Sep. 1.—Mrs. Georgia E. Keene, who attended Poro College, Chicago, this summer since June 20, has returned and re-opened her beauty salon in W. I. Chicago.—Mrs. Elizabeth chestra were in the city, last week. “Doc” Wright, who started for California, recently, via Texas, and went into a ditch somewhere near Indianapolis, has returned. The his car was badly wrecked he escaped serious injury.—Mrs. Marion Anderson had as guests, recently, her nephew, Dr. Forte, his fancee, Miss Alice Curtis of Institute of Technology, and Mr. Edgar Nickerson and son have returned from a visit with relatives in Greenville and Columbus, Miss Edith Johnson of Greenville spent a week with Mrs. Nickerson, several weeks ago.—Mrs. Oma Worthy of Detroit visited her cousin, G. W. Long, recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayborne George are on a two-week motor trip to his old home in Virginia, and to intermediate points.
HEAR! HEAR!!
The
ROUNDER
ON WHAT'S DOING
Police Chief Matowitz, Tuesday, promised Selmo Glenn, candidate for council in Ward 17, full police protection at his campaign meetings after Glenn complained that threats were being made against those who attended his meetings. The political "rats" are starting early, it seems.
Dr. L. K. Rogers' 12th ward Democratic candidate, Herman P. McAllister, has a running-made in the person of Arthur C. Clark, independent Republican candidate for the council, who has opened a Arthur C. Clark-Harold H. Burton-mayor headquarters in Scovill Ave, near E. 40th St. Clark opposed Councilman Herman Finkle, two years ago. Both McAllister and Clark are members of the race and promise to make it hot for Finkle, this time. That ward's vote is eighty-five per cent "AfoR". The remaining fifteen per cent is made up of Italian and Jewish voters.
A member of the race bearing the celebrated name Mark Anthony was active in the politics of Miles Heights Village, some years ago, when the Mayor was Arthur Johnston. Both Anthony and Johnston were given minor jobs in the street department of the city, a little over a year ago. Various stories are being told of the cause of Mark's sudden disappearance, some months ago, and failure to return to his job. Other more or less interesting stories are being told in explaining the transfer of Holly Cooley from his job down at city hall. Just how much truth there is in them The Rounder would like to know.
Miss Gladys Williams and mother live in their own home at 3349 E 125th St. which the latter owns. Nexx door is a Jewish family (tenant) which moved in less than a year ago a woman who has been very insulting and disagreeable, according to Miss Gladys. In an effort to get relief from alleged persecution, Miss Williams and her mother appealed to Assistant Police Prosecutor Perry B Jackson, who after hearing their story told them they needed a lawyer for Perry to settle. A minister for Perry to settle, Mrs. Williams employed Atty, Chester K. Gillespie and since June of this year has paid him, they claim, $100 without getting the desired relief. If Mayor Harry L. Davis is re-nominated and re-elected, Perry expects to be appointed an assistant police prosecutor. Gillespie is a candidate for a Republican nomination for Municipal Judge. It seems to the Roundtable that Perry is better "step on the gas" because Miss Gladys, a first class campaign speaker, threatens to become active against both Davis and Gillespie in case she and her mother are not afforded the relief pronto from the persecution they allege. Now comes word that Perry is urging R. F. Edwards to "settle" his case against Tom Jaidy, an employee of the Queen's Lunch Room, 1710 E. Ninth St., where Edwards was refused service, about two weeks ago. In a letter to the town council over the head, several times, by employees of the lunch room. As a result of this, he caused the arrest of Jaidy. A damage suit under Hon. Harry C. Smith's Ohio Civil Rights law should follow the Edwards-Jaidy court.
Speaking of Mrs. Mabel Lewis Imes, a member of the original Fisk Jubilee Singers who died in this city, recently, an exchange says: "She was born Marie Bauhmie in New Orleans. She changed her name to Mabel Lewis when, as a little girl, she went to New York City and later to Massachusetts." She married Martin Imes in this city.
MUSSOLINI
Selfishness of Allies Paves the Way for War on Ethiopia, Says Spencer D. Irwin in The Cleveland Daily Press.
"Mussolini, as far as present methods of empire-building go, is in a position to scout at the protests of the former territory for Italy for joining the allies against Germany were quickly forgotten. The allies stripped Germany of her colonies and divided
Premier Benito Mussolini. them among themselves. Italy, at that time in a precarious economic and social condition, could only protest.
"It is true that England eventually did grant a small part of her African holdings to Italy and last January, Premier Pierre Laval, then foreign minister, on his visit to Rome, ceded other territories from French possessions (and an interest in the only railroad in Ethiopia). Together these grants were not enough to constitute a colonial empire. What Italy needs is sources of raw material and areas suitable for white colonization. She obtained neither from the "generous" action of her former companions in arms.
"That is why today, with growing economic distress at home, Mussolini has no alternative but to strike out for an empire no matter what treaties were violated or whose sense of moral justice is outraged. Had the allies been fair, the question of conquering Ethiopia never would have arisen!"
"Another point which reinforces If Duce's position is the manner in which Great Britain created her own vast colonial empire—one-fourth of the earth's surface. Territory was added thru the years not by observing treaties or considering the rights of native peoples. It is very well to have one built up, and one has built up all the empire desired. Then it is easy to assume the holier-than-thou position and grow righteously indignant.
"The world has advanced, some say in answer to that criticism, and there is now a League of Nations. It is doubtful how much the world has gone along the road to reconciliation and peace when a question of economic necessity is at stake. There is a League of Nations, managed by British and French, when the Japanese marched into Manchuria and Shanghai."
Mr. Irwin would have been perfectly consistent if, in addition to calling attention to Great Britain and France's acquisition of territory in northern Africa, he had called attention to St. Louis and St. "acquired" Hawaii, years ago. Forever a blot on the escutcheon of this country.
Sin of the Italians:
Editor, The News—Sir: An article by a Mussolini admirer appears in your Aug. 14 issue. The writer says Mussolini has found places for the working people. Yes, he has found jobs for about a million men to wage an atrocious war. Mussolini is one of the chiefs who have been opposing birth control and urging people to have large families. Now war and conquest are desired to provide room for the millions living and to come.
It is contended Ethiopians are not becoming civilized fast enough. Yet millions of us think they and their ruler are acting more civilized regarding birth control than Mussolini. Another sin is the Ethiopians want to continue an independent nation—a very significant principle, as all Americans will agree. Then, too, the reluctance of the lamb to be devoured is very foolish, for it is to be devoured just the same, whatever the arguments — unless England, France, the United States, and other peace-loving nations can make arbitration prevail.
CYRUS H. ESHLEMAN.
Lakewood.
SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS
PRESID
SENATOR F
WHEN HE SAYS IT CAN'T
AND MENTIONS H
Former U. S. Senator Rosco
Kind of Candidate the Pa
Uphold U. S.
SIDENT!
FOR FESS WRONG
T CAN'T BE DONE, NEXT YEAR,
IONS HOOVER FOR 1940.
istor Roscoe C. McCulloch Tells What
ate the Party Must Have to Win—
old U. S. Constitution.
SENATOR FESS WRONG
SENATOR FESS WRONG
WHEN HE SAYS IT CAN'T BE DONE, NEXT YEAR, AND MENTIONS HOOVER FOR 1940.
Former U. S. Senator Roscoe C. McCulloch Tells What Kind of Candidate the Party Must Have to Win— Uphold U. S. Constitution.
(Special to The Gazette.)
Columbus, O.—Senator Fess is wrong when he says, as quoted in a statement from Moody, N. Y., that the Republican party has no chance of winning the election. The trend of sentiment is distinctly verse to President Roosevelt and the "New Deal" policies. This trend is growing stronger every day and forecasts the defeat of the President in 1936 by the Republican candidate. The result of the congressional election in Rhode Island, recently, is indicative of the rapid and substantial reversal of public opinion Senator Fess's reference to former President Hoover and 1936 is unfortunate. The greatest service former President Hoover could render the Republican party and the country would be to announce at once that he would under no circumstances accept the Republican nomination for President, and that he will not seek to control the next National Republican Convention. Senator Hoover's advice, counsel and assistance could be used but he should neither be the Republican candidate nor dictate the nominee.
The Republican candidate will be above the suspicion of being controlled by the moneyed interests and yet he will be sound on financial questions. He must be well-grounded in the fundamental principles of the Republican party, on which the industry depends. He must be right on the International questions and be courageous enough to stand for a strict American policy and against all foreign entanglements, including the League of Nations. Above all he must stand for the Constitution and the power of the Supreme Court to uphold it unimpaired by proposed amendments to transfer the power to the Supreme Court to Congress or delegating legislative authority to the Executive. Our candidate must be recognized as being in sympathy with
Chicago's Negro Democratic Congressman "a Pain and a Headache" as a "W. F. N."
Washington, D. C.—The irrepressible Congressman Arthur Mitchell is at it again. This time he turned up in Alabama where he praised that state for not having had a lynching this year. His real business there was to praise the President and the Democrats, and in the process he is reported to have asked his hearers whether or not they were not happier under Roosevelt than they had been under Hoover. Of course, he called both presidents "Mr."; they're "white" after all. The papers have it that the crowd applauded, Southern "Negroes" have long since learned that it is wise to be polite in compartmentalizing a number of "whites" were present and altho they do not indicate whether "the good white folks" present had ropes and guns, you can be pretty sure that they were ready to spot anybody who dared to disagree with Mr. Mitchell. "Arthur is a good boy, you know," southern Democrats say.
For Comfort, Health and Economy in the Home—Houses Open to Inspection.
Definite indications of the growing popularity of air conditioning in the moderate priced home is quite evident in the attendance during the past week at the winter air-conditioned homes which have been open for public inspection thru the co-operation of the Electrical League. "Home made weather" for comfort, health and economy includes positive air movement throut a home to eliminate cold floors and rooms "hard to heat." Forced circulation and ventilation keep the home air pure and fresh as outside air comes into the house filtered free from dirt, soot and dust. Curtains, drapes, walls and woodwork remain bright and airy in the house, open to inspection from 2 to 9 p. h. details are located in Cleveland Heights at 3497 Berkeley Rd., 3434 Edison Rd. and 3812 Montevista Drive; University Heights, 2576 Traymore Rd. and 2603 Traymore Rd.; Shaker Heights, 18912 Lomond Blvd., 17402 Hollbrook Rd. and 2686 Ashley Rd.; Beach Cliff, 21725 Aberdeen and 20843 Endsley Ave.; Euclid, 156 E. 199th St., and in Cleveland at 3397 W. 157th St.
---
---
ARTHUR "LOOSE AGAIN"!
"HOME-MADE WEATHER"
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 compartment with any will immediatelylish its news. NIB BEST published in this section of the country in the interest of Afro-Americans.
the great middle classes of the country on whom the burdens of taxation, the inevitable result of the wild spending orgy which we have been going through for three years, must fail. The penalizing of thrift will have to stop in this country unless we are prepared to accept Communism. The
PETER H.
Republican party is the only instrument available to those who would change existing conditions, reduce the burdens of taxation, balance the budget and protect this country from the impending dangers of Fascism, Communism and all other socialistic ideas now menacing Europe and in many instances adopted by the present administration at Washington. The Republican leadership will be unselfish, forward-looking and sound, and I predict an overwhelming Republican victory in 1936.
ROSCOE C. McCULLOCH.
BORN IN SCOTLAND!
Educated in Ireland and the United States—Rather Unusual Experience of Atty, David Coplain.
His host of friends among our folk will be glad to learn that Atty. Davis will be named his dacily for municipal judge, 6-year
357 10831
term. There are five to be elected for that term. Mr. Copland is regarded as a real friend. A member of a minority group, he understands the problems of other minority groups, and has always given unselfishly and sincerely of his time, efforts and energy to our welfare. A capable and outstanding lawyer, he will bring to the bench a sound knowledge of the law with a humane understanding of the problems of all those less fortunate. He has always received the whole-hearted support of our people in past campaigns and will receive the same generous support in this one. Mr. Copland was born in Glasgow, Scotland, and attended Marlborough College, Dublin, Ireland, and Columbia University, New York City.
Among the recent social affairs of note were a breakfast by Mrs. Oliver A. Taylor of Grantwood Ave.; a bridge party by Mrs. Olgn Gunn of Pasadena Ave., and a breakfast by Mrs. Grandison Forbes of Drexel Ave.
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY
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
2322 E. 30th St., Cleveland, O.
(Bell 'Phone: CHerry 1259)
Member Ohio Legislature: 1894 to
1896; 1896 to 1898; 1900 to 1902.
INFUNION
INSTITUTE
10,000,000 Afro-Americana.
825,000 in Ohio.
75,000 in Cleveland.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 24, 1935.
Kansas City, Missouri, is erecting a $750,000 "jim-crow" high school. The cost does not seem to mean a thing, at least in some large border cities and even some northern cities, providing of course "Negroes" will accept SEGREGATION and thus recognize a color-line that has been growing steadily ever since the day, about twenty-five years ago, Booker T. Washington delivered his notorious "separate-as-the-fingers-of-the-hand" speech in Atlanta, Ga.
---
The recent election in Rhode Island astonished the country and showed, beyond all question, the trend of thought against the re-election of President Roosevelt. Former U. S. Senator Roscoe C. McCulloch's letter, alsewhere in this paper, is most illuminating and worthy a careful reading and much thought. In our judgment, he shows the way to the leading Republicans of the country who really have the best interests of the country and the Republican party under consideration.
---
If memory serves us correctly, it was a Republican editor by the name of Harvey who some fifteen or twenty years ago referred to the League of Nations as the "League of Nations" or "The Plague of Nations." Just how correct he was the people of the world are at last being forced to recognize. Another month's time is all that is needed to convince everybody. If the League fails to save Ethiopia, it is thru! This is the consensus of opinion abroad as well as in this country.
---
Great Britain, France and Italy signed a "pact" some forty years ago, guaranteeing the independence of Ethiopia. The same countries signed the American promoted Briand-Kelogg treaty to prevent war and promote peace, all of which apparently does not mean a thing to Benito Mussolini, Italy's premier, these days. Therefore, his conquest of Ethiopia seems certain. England's support of the League of Nations now seems the only slight hope of averting the war scheduled to start, next month, at the close of the rainy season in that section of northern Africa.
Of all the haphazard handling of relief funds by Washington, perhaps none is more thoughtless than the recent PWA announcement that all borrowers of funds for public works must purchase their products in foreign countries if the price is 15 per cent less. In other words, if Japan, Czechoslovakia, or Russia, with labor often earning less for a day's work than American workers get in an hour, can produce materials cheaply enough, the Government will use taxpayers' money to purchase these foreign imports. There are but two results that can come from such a policy: either wage scales in this country must be broken down in order to meet this competition, or else public works money taken from the taxpayer will be sent abroad to keep foreign factories operating while American plants remain idle. No one can believe that the Administration is seeking to lower American wages. The average wage in the steel industry here, for instance, is 225 per cent above the average abroad, and last year 316,661 tons were imported with an estimated loss of seven and a half million man hours to American workers. Neither can it be believed that there is a deliberate policy of taking money appropriated by Congress to relieve distress in this country and sending it abroad, while industry seeks to increase employment. The only answer is that there was some more muddle-headed, but costly, thinking
by a youthful bureaucrat who didn't bother to look beyond the end of his nose to see the effect on American workers.
A STIRRING ADDRESS
Delivered at Commencement Exercises, Recently, by Rev. Harry V. Richardson, a Former
Tuskegee, Ala.-At the annual graduating exercises of the summer school) session in Logan hall, Friday evening, Aug. 9, '35, there was a large attendance. The Rev. Harry V. Richardson, Institute chaplain
[Name]
REV. HARRY V. RICHARDSON
and a former resident of Cleveland O., delivered a stirring commencement address. He said: "There are two attitudes or outlooks toward the world and toward our work which we must have if we hope for success in either. One is the general or large outlook—the ability to see things in their large relations; the other is the particular or immediate outlook—the ability to see and understand things and conditions immediately about us, to recognize needs and to use, to find the needs. Surely as educators need both outlooks. We need to be thorny conversant with the great movement of education in its national and international scope; we need to understand our part in this great process. We need to be abreast of the progress of the educational movement, informed of recent developments, keeping in touch with progressive sources. We must remember that education is of the greatest value when it helps a man to master the immediate world in which he lives. For it is only as a man masters his immediate world that he is an asset and can help to better the worlds of larger relationships. We can build the worlds of tomorrow only as we master the worlds of today. We work here in the South, as most of us do, among our people, we must be awake to the demands of these situations in which we find ourselves. We work in the South as many as in the South are education is one of the fundamental sources of our time. There are some places in America where education is largely a matter of cultural option. If a man decided not to be educated, he himself is the primary sufferer. But here in the South with us, education is and has been a matter of racial salvation. With us the ignorant man is the main agency thru which most of the destructive forces that hurt us so deeply operate. When a Negro decides or is permitted to remain ignorant and unprogressive, he himself is to be sure to learn and to stand as a barrier directly across the progress of his people. It is essential therefore that as teachers we shall see ourselves not merely as professional practitioners, but rather as workers and apostles charged with the vital responsibility of taking a great gospel of salvation to a people who need it badly. Surely it will be an evil day for us when most of us engage in teaching simply because we happen to need a job. Seeing ourselves as more than professional workers we shall then be able to give to those we teach the kind of instruction we need. We are the "technique" of reading and writing, but rather the essentials of clean character, the desire for progress, the willingness to work, and the courage to see ourselves as men and women in a world of men and women, willing to share the responsibilities and play the parts that go with full-fledged participation in the life of our world."
Prime Sport News
Prime Sport News
Sunday Game.
The Pittsburgh Crawfords and Homestead Grays, arch rivals in our National League, played a doubleheader, Sunday at the Stadium, Some of the players on both teams were with the western team that defeated the Eastern Stars, 11 to 8, in the eleven-inning battle of the third annual East-East all-star game at Comiskey Park, Chicago, Sunday, week
Jess "Made the Goat."
Columbus, O.—Recent disclosures of the stacking of legislative pay rolls with dozens of useless and superfluous employees by the Davey controlled state house and senate properly raises the question of the motive for making Jess Owens, Cleveland's ace athlete, the object of criticism and censure for accepting three dollars per day for the state house and senate, undermined, and with working at a filling station in Cleveland. Startling revelations of the control and mismanagement of legislative pay rolls by Davey house and senate lieutenants make Owens a "piker" in comparison to other beneficiaries of the peculiar and questionable system.
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, O. SATURDAY. AUGUST 24. 1935.
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 supreme Court has several times upheld the constitutionality of the law and it has been appealed. 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. 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.
YOU KNOW ME, AL
No Inside Information
By RING LARDNER
JACK TOLD ME NOT TO TAKE THE CAR OUT BUT I GOT TO LEARN TO DRIVE IT SO I CAN USE IT WHEN HES ON THE ROAD
ALL WOMEN DRIVE NOW DAYS-ILL TEACH YOU
WHAT MAKES IT SEEK SO?
YOUVE GOT YOUR FOOT ON THE SELF STARTER INSTEAD OF THE GAS
NOW ITS STOPPED- WHAT WILL WE DO?
WELL SMILE AT SOME CHAUFFEUR AND HELL HELP US
IT AINT THE IGNITION- THE CARGURETOR'S O.K.
SORRY LADIES- CAN'T FIND THE TROUBLE
WHAT WILL SACK SAY?
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 injury, shall include injury as perently temporarily disables the person receiving it from earning a livelihood by manual labor. (93 v. 161 3.) Section 6280. A person taken from officers of justice by a mob, and assaulted with whips, clubs, missiles or in any other manner, may recover, as hereafter provided, a sum not to exceed one thousand dollars as damages from the county in which the assault is made. (93 v. 161 4.)
Section 6281. A person assaulted and lynched by a mob may recover, from the county in which such assault is made, a sum not to exceed five hundred dollars; or, if the injury received therefrom is serious, a sum not exceeding one thousand dollars; 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 6232. The legal representative, of a person dying from injuries received from lynching by a mob may recover of the county in which such injury occurred, a sum not to exceed five thousand dollars damages for such unlawful killing. Such sum shall be applied to the maintenance of the family and education of the minor children of such person so lynched, if any survive him, until such children are of legal age, and then be distributed to the survivors, share and share alike, the widow receiving an amount equal to a child's share. If there be no widow or minor children surviving such decedent, such sum shall be distributed among the distribution according to the laws of the distribution according to the personality of an intestate. Such sum, evered shall not be a part of the estate of such person so lynched, nor be subject to any of his liabilities. (83 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 a mob. (93 v. 162 6.) Section 6283. A 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 succeeding tax levy for such county, be the sole requirement 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, the amount for such recovery 93 y 162 91. 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 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 the police 93 y 162 91. Section 6288. If a mob carries a prisoner into another county, or comes from another county to com-
mit violence on a prisoner brought from such county for safekeeping, the county in which the lynching is committed may recover the 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. 163 11.)
Section 6289. This chapter shall not relieve a person concerned in such lynching from prosecution for homicide or assault for engaging therein. (93 v. 163 12.)
OUR OHIO CIVIL RIGHTS LAW
Upon the request of many readers of The Gazette we print below the text of the Hon. Harry C. Smith's Ohio Civil Rights law which the editor had enacted while a member of the 71st General Assembly, in 1894. The General Code of Ohio: Sec. 12940. Whoever, being the proprietor or his employee, keeper manager of an inn, restaurant, ester house, barbershop, conveyance by land or water, theatre 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 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. It provable in our people will not use it as offence they should, but expect it to do for them what they should and must do for themselves, under 14, 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 age.
Many women have reported that by taking Cardul during the change of life their strength has been renewed. By building up their strength, women have overcome ordinary nervousness and painful conditions due to poor nourishment. They need a vegetable, harmless medicine. When you need Cardul, buy a bottle and take it regularly. Several bottles may be needed. Cardul may be used to see if it will help you as it has helped so many women. Of course, if Cardul does not benefit you, coagul a pill clam. $BCCC Sold at drug stores.
DETROIT AUTO PLANTS MAGNET FOR COLORFUL VACATIONING THRONGS
Retail Buyers From All Walks of Life Attracted by Driveways
DETROIT (Special)—As though drawn by some invisible magnet, tall Texans in boots, Southampton society misses and sun-scorched plainsmen from Kansas and the Dakotas meet and mingle at the automobile factories here during the vacation months.
The magnet that attracts this complete cross-section of 20th Century American life is the retail customer driveaway. Trade authorities estimate conservatively that at least 5,000 motorists from all walks of life come here every month during the Summer to take personal delivery of their new cars, purchased through their home dealers.
Customer driveaways have increased materially this Summer with generally improved business conditions throughout the country. The driveaway waiting room at one large factory, the Plymouth plant, resembles the transfer station of a transcontinental railway with hundreds of travelers arriving and departing on time-table schedules.
Driveaways Popular
Officials in charge assert that 4,000 motorists drove new Plymouth home from the factory during the first six months this year. They declare that the retail customer driveaways have climbed to an average of 1,500 units monthly this Summer as more and more tourists and vacationists take advantage of the opportunity to pick up their own cars at the factory.
With this increased business, the Plymouth factory has enlarged the department set-up to take care of
WORLD WAR SOON TROTZKY PREDICTS.
Hostilities in Africa Will Do What the Balkans Did in 1912, Russian Exile Says.
Oslo, Norway, — Leon Trotzky, former Soviet leader who later was exiled, broke his long silence, recently, to predict another world war would follow hostilities between Italy and Ethiopia. War in Africa, the old revolutionist, and years ago a resident of N. Y. City in America, said, would do just what the Balkan War of 1912 did—marshell the world's powers in opposing coalitions and prepare the ground for history to repeat itself.
"It is very difficult to prophesy," he told the Norwegian labor newspaper Arbeider Bladet, "but I believe an eventual Ethiopian war is in the same relation to a new world war as the Balkan War of war as to World War of 1924. Before we now grew, would have to be classified and here an African war will point out the positions and mark the coalitions. It is impossible to say whether a world war will break out in three or five years, but we ought to focus rather on a short than a long time." The well-known exile, who came to Norway in 1924, also predicted war between Japan and Soviet Russia within the year, "Soviet Russia has its own danger in the Far East," he remarked. "The Japanese will, of militaristic expansion, is very large at present and Tokio's policy is quite incalculable. War may break out in a year for peace, or it may begin of such a war Japan may have success, but it will necessarily be losing finally on
Upper left—A view of the driveaway from which several thousand cars are driven during each summer month. Upper right—Many bring their pets along. Lower—A Plymouth purchaser who has traveled many miles.
the retail buyers. The new car service department, where every car is given special servicing before it is turned over to the customer, has been increased in size.
roads back to their homes, what to do with their pets while they are going through the factory, whether they have any mail. Officials supervising the driveaway answer all of
Arrangements for the driveways are made in advance through the dealers, so that the customers can obtain delivery within a short time after they call at the factory. As most of the travelers want to see how their cars are made, the department provides special trips through the factory to accommodate them.
The driveway customers come here from every state in the Union. They arrive, bag and baggage, from Hollywood studios, Washington lumber mills, Florida cane brakes and New England hamlets, all seeking the same thing—a new car already ordered and paid for. The passing panorama presents a colorful, movable scene. Some of the customers bring their dogs—cats and even canaries.
The travelers ask every conceivable kind of question. They want to know all about their cars, how to get out of the city, the condition of the
account of the interior position of Japan." Trotzky, "the Napoleon of Bolshevism" who built up the powerful Red army only to be exiled shortly after Nikolai Lenin's death, apparently was in much better health than when he came to Norway. He is busy writing a three-volume work of Lenin.
BLASTS JEWS AND THE U. S.
Also Catholics and Bumps the American "Negro"—A Violent German Nazi.
Berlin, Germany—In one of the most violent attacks on Jews and Catholics since the Nazi regime came to power, Julius Streicher, apostle of the Nazi anti-Jewish drive, last week Thursday evening haranged a frantically-cheering overflow audience at Berlin's Sports Palace. He took numerous shots at the United States. Once he said:
"It is not America's business what laws we make in our own country."
And then he added ironically:
"Once a week Americans lynch a Negro for racial disgrace and we cheer. It is none of America's business if the placard Jews for racial disgrace."
Another time he said "if we lead a woman who has forgotten her racial obligations thru the city . . . the wife of the American ambassador gets excited about it."
"THE WAGES OF SIN";
Chicago, Ill.—Homer Smith, age 31, a married man, was beheaded early, Sunday morning, Aug. 11, '35, by Miss Viola Washington, age 19, who was sleeping in the cage at 3151 Indiana Avenue in this city. The girl is to give birth to a child in
roads back to their homes, what to do with their pets while they are going through the factory, whether they have any mail. Officials supervising the driveway answer all of these inquiries and countless others as part of their day's work. They have established a postal service to mass of mail arriving daily to be held for the driveway motorists.
Adventure Abounds
The driveaway waiting room teems with romance and adventure. Strangers meet, form hurried friendships and part for distant destinations. Others strike up acquaintances and discover they are from neighboring cities. Quite naturally, they plan their driveaways home together. Famous and prominent motorists call for their cars at the plant along with average American families. The driveaway workers meet political dignitaries, business leaders and occasionally a Hollywood movie star. Sometimes they are called upon to help honeymooners starting their life together in a new car.
two weeks. They had lived together nearly two years. He had promised to marry her during their early courtship but recently declined to do so and had beaten her severely, knocking out a tooth the night before his death. They lived with his mother.
AN OPPORTUNITY
"The Old Reliable Gazette desires an active agent and correspondent in every city and town in Ohio and neighboring states having a number of Afro-American residents. Only a little time on Fridays or saturdays is required to make some money.
We are especially desired of hearing from persons in the following named cities: Springfield, Columbus, Toledo, Steubenville, Zanesville, Wilmington, Xenia, Washington C. H. Lancaster, Piqua, Lima, O., and other places, particularly in Ohio, where we have no representative.
Write to the editor of The Gazette, 2322 East 30th Street, Cleveland, O., and terms will be sent promptly.
Our readers will oblige us greatly to use the addresses of persons in the cities named, and others in the state, to whom we can write relative to the matter.
Editor.
Attention! Readers!
Our advertisers want your trade. Those who do not ask for it in the columns of "The Old Reliable" Gazette certainly care little, if at all, for it. Therefore, we urge our readers and all of our friends to patronize those who ask in this paper for your patronage. Editor.
peepee eee *
CEDAR BRANCH
Y.M.C. A.
Gee. Cedar Ave. and E. 7th st.
A HOME FOR YOUNG MEN!
SEETAURANT - HOME COOKING
Individaal Beds £2.50-83.00
ENdicott 9094 and HEnderson 8720.
ANNOUNCES
REGULAR $1.10 POWDER
NOW
5 = 15¢
(lag Bi!
ies ie eG ome
Sa Ss
‘The same exquisite Cory Powder,
tid Sarl wih the a mow
EGtigin Eeetade, Patis"each ic
its own distinctive box. Twelve skin-
true shades to choose from.
ee ote
fer samples of 3 of the mew Coty
“WN 4 By *
EN ATS
Ets Wey s
LES IN o
Ors a
"7 hed acs)
Ad : fe
JMET AA /
Al Drinker of Hashish!
In eleventh-century Persia, a secret
order was founded by Hassan ben
Sabbah, indulging in the useof the
Oriental drug hashish, and, whea
under its influence, in the practice
of secret murder. The murderous
drinker of hashish came to be
called bashash in the Arabic and
fromthat origin comes our English
word ascasm!
‘Write for Free Booklet, which supgests
Bacluh through cecknowicdge 3woed
brian ocuded in
‘WEBSTER’S NEW
INTERNATIONAL
DICTIONARY
AGE “The Supreme Aucthorey*
N Be\o C.MERRIAM
Ba COMPANY
h Deda) SPRINGHELD
or MASS.
LTA
Doings of the Race
The Wiltertorce-Tuskegee football
“elassic"’, this year, will be played on
Soldier Field, Chicago, Oct. 19.
R. 8, Abbott, owner of The Chica-
go Defender, has been appointed by
Mayor Kelly, a member of the Chica-
go Exposition Commission.
Clarence Cammeron white, violin
soloist, a graduate of Oberlin Con-
servatory of Music, will start his con-
wert tour of the country in October
Cab Calloway and his band of 15
musicians, and 56 instruments, fur-
nished music, Sunday, in Detroit
Baptist tabernacle during its revival
services,
Forty-five thousand persons saw
Joe Louis whip King Levinsky in
‘Comiskey Park, Chicago, recently,
and netted Joe and his managers
$47,061.80.
Ethiopia has already armed a
quarter of a million troops and has
laid plans to put seven armies total-
ing 600,000 men in the field in the
event that Mussolini declares war.
Felix Merlin, a native of Martin-
ique, W. Indies, was recently elected
to the Municipal Council of Epinay-
our-Seine, on a Communist party
ticket. He was also appointed sec-
ond assistant to the mayor.
‘The forthcoming issue of the In-
terracial Review, published by the
Catholic Interracial Council, will
carry a study by Thomas F. Meehan,
KSG., LL.D. of the life and re-
‘markable influence of Pierre Tous-
saint, a pioneer Catholic layman of
old N. Y. City.
THE “BUBBLE BURST,”
Congressman Treadway Says of “The
‘New Deal”.
Washington, D. C.—Representative
‘Treadway (Repud.) of Massachusetts,
in a radio talk on “A Republican's
Viewpoint on the State of the Union,”
declared that “the New Deal bubbie
has burst.”
“In spite of all the laws that have
been passed,” he said, “and all the
borrowed money that has been spent.
there are still more than 10,000,000
men out of work; some 20,000.00 of
our people are on relief; industry
is in the doldrums, and agriculture,
sadder but wiser, is reaping the
whirlwind of the administration's
program of scarcity,” ‘Treadway as-
Serted that instead of promoting re-
covery, “most of the policies and leg-
islative enactments of the present
administhation have placed stumbl-
ing blocks in its way.” He especially
assailed President Roosevelt's fiscal
policies, the tax bill, and the recip-
socal SSfiH, a6 well Sa charging that
the “has shown an utter
disregard for constitutional lmite-
‘thons.”
Where to Purchase THE GAZETTE
ROSENBERGS WEAVER'S
DRUG APOTHECARY
STORE, SHOP,
X. W. Cor. Central 8004 Quincy
Ave., & E. 55th St. Ave,
PERSKY’S DRUG STORE,
0. K. PRINTING ©O., Cor, E. 105th St. and
$113 Central Ave. Gooding Ave.
NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS
Subscribers not receiving The Gazette regularly should noti-
ty us at once. We desire every copy delivered promptly.
Send or bring locals and ail business matters to The Gazetee
office, 2822 F. 30th St., near Central Ave. If you wish to see the
editor call there, picase.
We advise our readers to carefally examine The Gazette's
advertisements before making purchases. Business men who
advertise in this paver should have the patronage of our people.
The fact that they advertise in The Gazette is assurance that
they want it.
AU) reading matter for publication in current iasues 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 ©. SMITH, :
2322 E. 80th Street, Cleveland, Ohio.
(Near Central Ave.)
Notary Public. Bell "Phone: CHerry 1250.
Classified Advertising Department
FOR GALE. —Bodroom set, a Way-|_ FOR SALE-—in Choice ren
Pe tesa or nares oon disiiee: pect Bek trek os
Beer es Gericcaiee cheeoll|foom mons cates aa tae’ os
Address Box B, The Gazette office,|Hoffman, 521 Guarantee Tit!
Address Box B, ‘The Mention "the. Gaseties PR
Geaipoes ied econ
CLEVELAND [Commanaer “Sonn” Chottey.
Boling Post champion drar
‘ youngatown, was one of th
Greet fet creacaie
Social and Personal | °#ce's-*1ect are: Commande
‘The Tuxedo Club will picnic at Vil-
la Serena in Chagrin Falls, Sunday.
Mrs, Doris Joiner Wilkinson has
joined her husband in New York
City.
Dr, Jessie W. Hines and a nephew,
J, P. Bell of Springfield, were in the
city, recently.
Mrs, Linwood Hogan, of Cedar
Ave., is visiting a brother in Santa
‘Monica, Cal., whom she has not seen
for many years.
‘The 17th Ward Republican Club
will pienic at Willow Beach park,
next Saturday. It is on the lake
shore; route 283.
‘The remains of Mrs. Wm. Payne,
whose death was noted in last week's
Gazette, were interred in Highland
Park cemetery,
Miss Dorothy Otey who is visiting
her aunt, Mrs. E. Blackburn, will
visit relatives in New York City be-
fore returning to Springfield.
Mr. and Mrs. Edw. Mordell and
daughter, Joyce, E, 86th St., return-
ed Saturday last from a ten-day visit
with relatives in New York City.
The Kinsman Heights Tennis and
Racket Club, organized in recent
weeks, is officered by Dr. Wm. F.
Richie, pres.; Geo. C. Williams, sec.,
jand Frank Brown, treas,
About 25 of our young folk en-
Joyed the facilities of the annual
Presbyterian camp near Willoughby,
this year. Most of them returned to
the city, Saturday week.
Walter B. Wright, age 84, W. 25th
St., one of our oldest residents and
for years secretary to several presi-
dents of the Nickel Plate railroad,
was greatly pleased, last week, by
‘calls from two old friends, Ike Ross
of Columbus and Mrs. Anna Green of
Buffalo.
Our Fraternal Council of Churches
held interesting sessions Wednesday,
Thursday and Friday, of this week,
in St. Paul Zion A.M. E. church,
Bishop R. C. Ransom presiding. Con-
siderable time was devoted to a dis-
cussion of the Italo-Ethiopian con-
troversy.
Funeral services for Mrs, Bliza-
beth Daugherty Lucas, age 88, of E.
87th St., one of Cleveland's ‘oldest
residents, were held, last week Mon-
day. Mrs. Lucas, the mother of Mrs.
Geneva Minter, Messrs. Elmer and
“Abe” Daugherty, suffered injuries
from a recent fall from which she
failed to recover.
Mrs, Roddy K, Moon, 10818 Bry-
ant Ave., has again been awarded
first prize in the Greater Cleveland
Garden Contest. ‘This is the second
consecutive year Mrs. Moon's garden
has been awarded the first prize
which places it on the roll of The
Press Honor Gardens, deing the first
among our group to attain this dis-
tinction. Good!
Unless Secretary of State George
Myers hands down a special ruling,
there will be no registration in Cleve-
land between Aug. 31 and the Nov.
5 election. -That means that all
Yoters not registered, must qualify
before Aug. 31, if they want to vote
in the primary and in the election. A
new law is responsible for this situa-
tion. ‘There can be no registration
within 28 days before an election.
However, another law provides that
there can be no registration within
10 days after an election. This wipes
out registration between the Oct..1
primary and the Nov. § election. So
“step om fet
Major John Fulton Post, No. 3362,
V. F. W., the youngest post in the
state and the first in this, Cuyahoga
‘County, among our veterans, installed
officers, Aug. 13, at the 372d Inf. O.
N. G. Armory after a street parade
consisting of four drum and bugle
‘corps, and members and officers of
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, 0. SATURDAY, AUGUST 24, 1935.
ain ty SALE —In Choice residential
district, near East blvd., a fine six-
room home, only $3,750. Call L. L.
Hoffman, 521 Guarantee Title bidg.
Mention "The Gazette. PR. 5530.
other posts lead by County Council
Commander John Choffey. Chas.
Boling Post champion drug corps of
Youngstown, was one of the four.
Officers-elect are: Commander, Har-
ry W. Irvin; senior V. C., R. N. Ty-
ler; junior’ V. C., Eddie Johnson;
quartermaster, Wm. Billips; adj., J.
H, Johnson; officer of the day, Clar-
ence L, Peters; quartermaster ‘sst.,
Chas. “Gardner; chaplain, Alfred
Jackson; service officer, Louis M.
Hoyle; guard, John P. Kane; senti-
nel, Kenny Johnson; trustee, Jesse
‘Walton,
Because The May Company gives
employment to a number of our men
and women, and asks for your trade
in the columns of “The Old Relia-
ble” Gazette, we should patronize it
‘in preference to other large stores
‘in the city that do not care enough
for your trade to ask for it in these
columns. Our readers will greatly
please The Gazette by complying with
this reasonable request whenever
possible. Be sure to read The May
Co, advertisement, elsewhere in this
maner.
SEE US FIRST FOR ALL GOODS IN OUR LINE
JOHN S. HALL
PRICES REASONABLE SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
JEWELER AND OPTOMETRIST
Byes Carefully Examined and Glasses Properly Fitted.
7709 CEDAR AVE., Cleveland, Ohio. HEnderson 6028
ie er t
} Fae you.
| REFRIGERATOR is
ade ad N
v 3 o W
nee, bow tneed c++ end wit be ote
srust fp. TOBE vane
Please give me THE MODERN ona hoppy”
AIR PURIFIER
Does your butter teste of onion? Does ciples of the ges mash worm by soldiers at
ech ca tcl peli acaba aay olay
ee esceeisd Kee ee aa
Miiiccachagtmdee eos “ase cee tec aloneians
édors and textos of other foods? their true tastes, works almost like magic.
How often have you thrown away perectly Put one in your ie or avtomatic raiigerator
good food becouse it tested like something and do away with the nuisance of wrapping
cer Seen eee ee
Yom prio in tye sched byte Wy | cthaton) Aa pnt ep Sc od
EOE COIRUAM Aes tos toh puveloneonetoaienenbes
the mentors of “TRUTASTE™, ‘che. den or apeled fend, Sere Sm
(oe pruritic i pepe = ea 3 ,
THREEDLONE USES. You con we “TRUTASTE” then way Ist ratigerators to
ies a eck late los pede a gripes
ere ee lee fete cate by cokes tedey ececsiaay
ed—tn clothes clvets nd lechers fe edie” par
EA mitts ee ae ders
Kaa» ‘Mail Coupon if your Desler does not sell
[WALTER 1. wiLLs, Pre
| (GoZee || | SARS
|) 2b ain PUREE | send me ponege poid Camere of
I) aaa | Tautam': Her’ $.co-for perment
ects | @ 25c each plus 10e to cover mailing cont,
i os i NADER vnoweseneenstencoletnaenntsnnecersmeesiomenenes
|| fonts
N s€ UE gn ace
SPECIAL OFFER: 5 for $1. POSTAGE PAID
= es eee
(a a
In wwter Miss FRAIL
GUARDS HERSELF VERY
“AIH FURS THaT ARE
wi
HEAVY, EXPENSIVE ANS
SWELL, tea bins Pea
‘The sudden illness of Charles Sum-
ner Smith, age 66, of E. 86th St., was
noted at length in the last issue of
The Gazette, He was taken to Lake-
side hospital, last week Tuesday, eri-
tically ill ¢rom a stroke of paralysi
and died, last week Friday morning.
Funeral services were held, Monday
afternoon, at Mt. Zion Cong. church,
ee
nee | ) G ~ x
= ‘
4
a
i f
Charles Samner Smith.
the pastor officiating. About 20
members of Spirit of Ohio Lodge,
Elks, and a detail of about 30 police-
men ‘participated, ‘The church audi-
torlum was about half-filled. Mrs.
Kathleen Forbes presided at the or-
gan and the choir furnished the mu-
sic, Mrs. Ruth Taylor singing a very
appropriate selection, “My Task.”
Short addresses were’ made by for-
mer Director of Safety Edwin D.
Barry, Rev. H. C. Bailey, Rev. D. 0.
Walker and Sidney Thompson, In-
terrment in Lakeview cemetery. The
floral tributes were numerous and
beautiful. After 35 years in the po-
lice department, Mr. Smith was re-
tired on pension, June 1, 1932, He
served as secretary to Chiefs’ Cor-
ner, Rowe, Kohler, Smith and Graul,
During this period, he also served as
private secretary ‘to Directors of
Safety Martinec and Barry. It was
under Barry that he was made secre-
tary of police. His first increase in
pay was secured for him by Chiet
Frank W. Smith, He was given the
rank and pay of a captain of police.
He also served Director of Safety
Frank E. Merrick who held office,
several months. “Charlie,” ashe
was familiarly addressed, was born
in Oberlin, attended public schools
there and graduated from the Ober-
lin Business school, later locating in
this city. He is survived by the wi-
dow, Mrs, Kate H. Smith. Their son,
Harrison, a very promising youth,
died 23 years eae:
OBITUARY.
eS =
——=
me =
im We
ras Belt
WHILE THE ICEMAN, WHEN
SOMMER ANS AUTUMN,
AANE CLOSED,
WALKS AROUAID WITH
HIS ARMS AND HIS:
NECK ALL EXPoseD:
ence
The May Company’s August
Back to School Sale
Wash Fabrics
Just When It's Time to Think About >
Getting Them Ready to Go Back to School t 4 >
call
r,
ed
YARDS eee ¢ A ee?
so
36-Inch Dunkirk Tweed Pe eon
Suitings in Checks, Plaids............yard I9¢ Ps Z oY x
36-Inch Printed Chick- +
Checks—neat, small checks ..........yard 19¢ farae! (=
&
é “Z
WARDS oe Cc Ze Z
Wy ga >a)
aeTnch Printed Dan-Dee oe “ONG Vag y
‘ords, smart for ensembles............yard 29¢ yy
Everfast Enchanted Castel Ae .
Prints; “Doll-House” Designs ........yard 29 a Sy °)
Printed Wully-Crepe, a eS ¥
cotton that looks like wool............yard 29 a ®)
» > <
Sa
YARD Py
———————— RY) a)
‘ Fee
36-Inch Printed Cord-Elyte, Oe") Pd
plaids, checks, stripes ................yard 39¢ Wat 7
36-Inch Wulsted Suitings, x Or Khe,
Cotton woven Like Wool.......++...yard 39 JA re VED
36-Inch Powder-puff Muslin, = ° ee
in Fall patterns and colors............yard 39 4 x: ;
New Kindergarten Prints e
in amusing variety for tots............yard 39 wo
WASH FABRICS .. . FOURTH FLOOR
We Give Eagle Stamps. &
FIOW EMvdarrassing:
Aa 4 ‘i «+» to think that you
ees a look attractive and
| aes —. = suddenly discover that
sae ee a iF) your nose is all shiny!
a. > be cael a comfort to
eS ; know that the shine
c : dan won't come through. PORO
} nan VANISHING CREAM
/ \ a Oo) will enable you to keep
4 ~ /? * | that “powdered” look.
eS a And there is a shade of
Na Y ; PORO FACE POWDER
= * for every complexion— five
F ‘ » shades of Brown, a Brunette,
= 1 a Flesh and a White... . .
E Posie my GO se a — a shade or
F oe Sef two lighter than your own.
<= «-FOR HAIR AND SKIN
r Se ge Sold By PORO AGENTS Everywhere
“NO MORE SHINE | hecuee Ed Te For Complete List Write 4
eee UIT S000) 09 PoROCOLLESE
Face Powoer Hh Tk 4415 SOUTH PARKWAY
age PORO BLOCK, 44th to 45th St.
ao eng CHICAGO, ILL.
he
By RUBE GOLDBERG
SS % e
a=
=D
WHILE THE ICEMAAS CAGAIAL
NATORE’S LoGic is
Loose),
HAS HIS FEET BUNDLED uP
LIKE A BULKY PAPCOsE !
DAR I= 2 7
Seely Berd
Sree A Se
Don’t Throw Away Your Copyof The GAZETTE After Reading I;
But Give it to a Friend or an Acquaintance who might Subscribe After Seeing It
Fintanp'’s 9 0
le /seanps §
wy @ ene
cel
“- ae
a 9 EAR i
| Bt tts
Re ee i
Sie ator rae Seek as
Washington, D. C.—WNU Service
N THE north of the Baltic sea,
where the breast of Finland swetis
towards the Swedish coast, there
are 6,000 Islands, to which belong
all the surviving big salling ships in
the world; oF, to be more exact, there
are 6,554 islands, rock Islets, tree-
spattered specks of sea-encircled terrl-
tory whose name 1s Aland and in
Whose small ports are registered 26
of the surviving square-rizged ships
in commission in the world. Altozeth-
er there may be 31 now, counting a
German, two Swedes, an American,
and a Dane.
Aland is Finnish; but its people are
Swedes, speaking Swedish, Their col
‘ors are the blue and gold of Sweden,
though the white and blue flag of Fin-
Jand floats officially from Government
House. The strange cadences of the
Finnish tongue are little heard bere,
though by law Finnish Is taught In the
Schools and in the nautleal academy.
‘The Finns have thelr own name for
the islands, in thelr own language:
to them they are Ahvenanmaa, and
thelr capital of Mariehamn (which ts
Maryport in English) becomes Maari-
anhamina.
Salling into Mariehamn one sees first
# low island, and on it a lighthouse—
nothing else, It is so low It looks as
4f an angry sea might sweep right
over it and obliterate it from. sizht.
‘Were the lighthouse not there, by nlzbt
At would be invisible. It bears no trees.
no habitation. Beyond are more ts-
lands, low and rocky; then pine-clad
‘ones ahead, astern, abeam, all around.
Still one can see ‘no houses. The Is-
Jands are low, the highest not a hun-
red feet above the sea. The pines
come down to the water's edge. This
is Aland.
What Mariehamn Is Like.
Around a point between two islands
fs Mariehamn quay. On the slope
above it are houses and a wood; then
Some more houses and a great wood,
down each side of which a road has
been made. This parklike forest with
lanes 1s the Esplanade, main street of
Mariehamn. There one may walk in
tthe cool shade of ths trees, past rows
of clean spacious houses. It Is all
ships, this street, with shipowners liv-
ing there and sailors walking up and
down, and at the bottom the harbor,
‘on both sides (for Mariehamn crosses
@ narrow peninsula), with the masts
and yards of the barks growing there
atove the pines, as If they, like the
pines, had begun there and grown
there and always belonged there.
‘At one end of the Esplanade is the
town’s hotel, Societetshuset, where the
visitors live when they come from
‘Sweden. The summer business Is good,
‘and at week-ends a special excursion
steamer from Stockholm brings bun-
reds more visitors to the little town.
‘The tourists dance, eat, swim, and
athe, and the Alanders, bent over
‘thelr tasks In the fields, pay them
no attention at all.
‘hese Alanders might be the orig:
nal sailors, descendants of Vikings—
there are Viking graves at Godby, on
‘the main tsland, and elsewhere—who
stayed there on’ raiding trips to Fin-
and because they lked the place,
with Its peace and Its woods, its good
earth and {ts good fish that teemed
in the waters. Viking blood still. pre-
‘dominates here.
Ina of 6,000 Islands even a
ema ‘gem eens from the principal
large ‘would ordinarily include
several “islets. The plowman, if he
would not swim, must boat to his
fields; the farmer's wife going to mar-
ket must go by sea. Tt was natural in
these surroundings that a race of mar-
iners should arise. Taking so much
‘of their food from the sea, finding
the materials for shipbuilding so close
fat hand, they early built fine vessels.
Built Up a Merchant Marine,
‘There were always timber and fish
fm Aland, and these, with the sur-
plus products of the farms, were the
first cargoes. After a while, when the
restrictions imposed by Tival ports had
been broken down, the Alanders were
allowed to send their vessels out Into
the Baltic. Now they bullt larger ships,
schooners, and brigs. They carried
thelr own goods so successfully that
soon they began to carry other peo-
ple’s; and s0 the beginnings of thelr
merchant service grew. For a long
time It was only in the Baltic and
the Gulf of Bothnia. Politics still kept
world trade the monopoly of a few na-
tions, and no Aland ship was seen be-
yond the Danish sound.
In 1854 the Btitish sacked Bomar-
sund; for Aland, lke Finland, was
Russian then, and the British were at
war with Russia. That was s sad blow.
But the Alanders, many of thelr ves-
sels burned and thelr port destroyed,
soon began again, They founded the
town of Mariehamn where there had
been two fields, stretched across a nar-
row peninsula, with harbors at both
ends. With their new port, the Alan-
ders began to build thelr feet again.
They built better vessels and found
more trade. Gradually the hated steam-
ship was rising. Suez was opened in
1869, and the clippers passed. Steam
grew and grew.
In the great discard of sail the Alan-
ders, unworried by steam, bought up
such vessels as appeared to be good
bargains. They acquired Nova Scotian
barks, Bluenose barkentines, Down
East full-riggers, They bought ships
cheaply and they bovght good ships.
One of thelr principles was that a
ship should return her cost th three
years. If frelghts did not pay, they
Jaid their ships up and waited for bet-
ter times. Wherever sailing ships went,
the Aland ships were seen; but still
no one dreamed that here sail would
Ist when it had died in all other
waters.
‘Through the World war Aland ships
suffered heavily. Eight were lost in
one month. After the war some of
the older shipowners had had enough
‘and bought no more ships. But new
ones arose; and one of these was
Gustaf Erikson. In 1920 he began
bullding up what now has become the
last great fleet of sall in the world.
Erikson’s Fine Ships.
Erikson bought up the beautiful
German training ship Herzogin Cecille,
paying some $20,000 for her as she
lay in a French port. He sent her to
‘Australla for grain and to Chile for
nitrates, and in two years she had
returned her purchase price and more
besides. He bought the big Lawhill,
and with one lucky freight from
Buenos Aires cleared $200,000. Now
he has a corner on all the commis-
sloned sailing shipe of the world, and
those Cape Horners which do not fly
his house flag may be counted upon
the fingers of one hand.
His ships carry crews of boys, even
the officers are very young, and many
of the masters are younger than 30
years. Some of the ships are school
ships, carrying premlum-paying ap-
prentices as crew. So many people
wrote from all over the world asking
‘to sail in his vessels that he equipped
two of them especially to take pas-
sengers—the Viking and Herzogin
Cecilie; and, not content with that,
Dought’ L'Avenir from the Belgians.
He fitted her to take 80 passengers,
of three classes, and in the summer
now she makes Baitie cruises with the
Erikson tug fussing along behind in
case of need.
Ordinarily a small Aland boy can
pull a boat almost as soon as he can
‘walk, and sail one not long afterwards,
At the age of ten or so he makes a
Baltle yoyage, helping in a “sump” tak-
ing firewood and fish to Stockholm or
to Turku. From these he graduates to
the Baltic schooners, and so to the
North sea barks; thereafter it Is an
easy step to deep water, Cape Horn,
‘and the grain trade from’ Australia.
‘A Flonish Inw restricts berths be-
fore the mast to Finnish nationals,
‘and the forecasties of the ships are
ordinarily filled with Alanders. But
the half-decks, where the apprentices
live, contain all the nationalities of the
world. He who wishes to become a
sail-trained sailor now must sail in
Aland ships—and pay $250 to the
owner for that privilege.
‘To the Alanders deserved promotion
1s comparatively easy. A nautical
academy 1 provided free through the
winters In Mariehamn; here, after two
years of service, candidates may sit
for thelr second mate's papers. first
spending six months at school, Taltion
and books cost nothing; the boy must
provide only his board, and in Aland
that costs ttle.
Quiet, Careful People.
‘They are quiet, these Alanders. It
takes a long time to know thom. They
fare not given to the utterance of lonz
Aissertations upon ihe burning prob
Jems of the day. They are a quiet and
careful race, hardbitten, hard raised.
‘To them waste is shameful and a loud
mouth an abomination. They have lit:
tle time for progress that means only
change
‘The crews of the ships are steady
boys, blue-eyed and competent. When
thelr Australian voyage is over and
the grain discharged into some Enz-
ish mill, they bring the ships home
to Mariehamo, to le there while the
new grain ripens in Australian fields,
13,000 miles away. and there they re
ppalr thelr vessels and make ready for
another voyage.
THE GAZETTE, CLEVELAND, 0. SATU RDAY, AUGUST 24, 1935.
Se eee a SE AUS
‘Glamorous Midsummer Silk el
By CHERIE NICHOLAS
oe
ay oe | * | Ge
eee iS <=
phe 1 a ae
Meee yg |
3h cc an aS
Z 7 Bia), Pa) = ch
A! Way
_ ee ad S
| eek Phe)
eat) Le oe. oe i)
rg eh
ile
Mert See Ad
Bw) eee i re
fee hed X : yer, noe e
4 ere Sars y ct :
o aed be 3
figers.! rea 3 YS —
Jp DS UME priate are stmnly. gor:
geous. Adjectives, no matter
how extravagant, how eloquent or ple-
turesque, fall short of describing them.
It Is Impossible to capture their beauty
of color and design and release it via
mere words. Like the full blown rose
that reaches perfection of bloom In
midsummer, the lovely prints now
worn, especially the sumptuous eve-
ning prints, have reached to such
heights of glamorous beauty one's very
deing thrills at the sight of them.
‘The enchanting gowns here ple-
tured are self-explanatory as to why
‘women continue to adore prints. ‘The
superlative loveliness of the stately
model to the left in the group carries
the message that no happier choice can
be made in the way of a summery eve-
ning gown than a films, vaporous
printed chiffon which silhouettes huge
white waterlilles touched with pink
‘and green shadows against a misty
black background. The scarflike ar-
rangement which falls across the shoul-
ders, floating In summer airiness at
every move, is typical of current styl-
ing.
‘Then there 1s a frock of perfectly
beautiful flower-printed silk fantasy
erepe which the lady seated is wearing.
‘To mar the perfection of this glorified
print with a superfluous trimming
touch would be an unforgivable ges-
ture. Which Is why the designer fash-
foned this superb print along absolute.
ly simple Tines. ‘This print Is vivid
with splashes and dashes of warm
tropleal colors—as gay, as gorgeous as
a bird of brilliant exotic plumage,
‘The lovely dress with a cape cen-
tered In the pleture has a story of
fascinating Interest to tell. It is of
violet-gray mousseline de sole. Huge
flower appliques, cutouts from a silk
FLOWERS CURRENT
THEME OF STYLISTS
“Blowers for Madame” is the current
theme song of the stylists.
Fresh flowers are being used as a
definite part of current costume en-
sembles, used In new and unusual ways.
‘There 1s, in case you didn't know
it, a “tallored corsige” of orchids,
for wear with tajlored daytime cos-
tumes. ‘The stems are wound with
velbet ribbon, in a color to harmonize
with the ensemble, and are pinned
against the collar of the frock or
Jacket.
For evening gay young things are
wearing @ spray of small pink orchids
across the back of the hend, tiara
fashion.
Flowers in the hair are all the rage
Just now, Reminiscent of Carmen are
the sprays of red camellias worn by
dashing brunets these nights on thelr
dark curls, Just behind the right ear.
Another new idea is that of attach
ing a single orchid to your jeweled
bracelet.
New Silk Patent Leather
Belts for Daytime Wear
Like soft, crushed girdles are the
new silk patent leather beits for day-
time dresses. ‘They fit snugly around
the wajst, and are just a bit wider
than the belts you've been wearing.
‘The colors match or contrast with all
your new summer dresses—bright red,
@ark red, pink, lilac, yellow and black.
They give a smart touch that adds so
much to your costume and proves that
it pays to be up-to-date even In de-
talls!
or lace. The silver and gilt bead va-
Jabot.
or an Acqi
Gilt Bead Jabots
poppy print, are festooned on the cape
forming a garland about the shoulders,
also spiraling around the skirt in
double file. ‘The soft sash 1s of ehar-
treuse green silk taffeta,
‘This gown is especially significant
fn that It demonstrates the use of cut-
out florals from printed fabrie as a
trimming feature. Designers are doing
very clever things along this line of
thought, One striking effect is the lel or
garland which Is worn about the shoul-
ders like a oa oF necklace, or is used
to finish low-cut necklines, that 1s
made entirely of cutout flowers taken
from gay printed ehiffons or crepes
or whatever the silken material may
be. Boutonnieres made of the same
print as the frocks with which they
are worn are also smartly In vogue.
Perhaps one of the most unique and
charming adapations of cutout print
florals 1s seen in sleeves which are
formed of the flower motifs which are
caught in the center only, the petals
fluttering out as If they’ were real
flowers. ‘These flower sleeves contrast
a monotone frock. By the way, ad-
vance news in regard to fall fashions
places special emphasis on the ap-
proaching vogue of contrasting sleeves,
such as lace or sill print or embroid:
ered sleeves used with monotone silk
or velvet or wool for the frock.
Azaln, speaking of the use of cut-
out print motifs, cunning collar and
cuff sets are formed in the manner
described above. ‘The theme Is one
that may be handsomely worked out
for bridesmalds’ hiat and muff sets.
‘The flair for beautiful prints also ex-
presses itself in that several dress-
makers are making up plain chiffon
over printed satin slips. ‘The effect 1s
entrancing. A timely hint for your
next party dress.
ie iomsan iolencess tiki:
FALL FORECAST
y. FEIN
) Veo
if ma '
Welle en)
ae
straight, curled, Jaunty or flowing are
afternoon hat in the {!lustration is in
over the neck. The other hat is a type
with dinner dresses, The body of the
dation for the luxuriant feather which
tain oth ci ae
tainta Ww
nce W
ci tn i ti
ee rT ee ee
MANUFACTURERS ARE eee ay li LS
neering ideas revealed when Gi Ex , ce
Mee ee cence ae as
nounced first use of plastics// jee ee rs .
instead of metals for machine) (ig \ m if Dyce a8
housings. First product thus] (iJ y bg ae
produced is a Toledo scale | Aj ye ol
with plaskon case, molded in |g f —. ia
‘one piece 3,000,000 pounds Fa] ea eed ry
pressure. It cute weight of || a. . w a
Seale from 165 to 65 pounds. ; eal Se
ceived the Idea. We y
— 2 : |e eOTHrUE
} 4 . PREECE 's the key-
: >, yy . 7 fepeeemmecerg note of the
x U i fs LEG no Piece suit
3 a 8 iesgeegoceng wornby Anne
. SS Hees iriey
fan sietesigs Esa young picture
(iL > AER Sree star. The tab.
} ae ee edge tts 2H ric is brown
. \ Me — Se GieEriidand wnive
‘ = f 3) Gagegiirccg checks in a
: : BEERS A ccely wv.
o oe tiem ct
; : : aie: jen woot. Vt is
% a to f worn with a
{ 7 a oe j stitched felt
P , ; (e hat witha
ye} 4 G | “s A \ ——— brown moire
ee 2 ine fe ribbon.
SONG Te oz
SN ‘ “alia RT ON ROMANCE — wil
SAT Oo " “3 liam Rose Benet is editing the newly
es a discovered love-letters of Robert
FOR SCIENCE SAKE—Stephen Simkho- . Browning and Elizabeth Barrett
Viteh of Hollywood, Cal, dedicates his EMED) Srocning for putitcation tn the
Iife to science when he offered himeclt op Wie eee
as an experiment to Dr. Ralph Willard, ot rated as one o” the important mod-
who will perform an operation on him £ ee cere cre ncn mee
known as “Freezing Death,” and “Death as the Brownings since his student
with Revivication” to. learn. whether dua at Velen Tieinitae Gaon
germs can be destroyed. -_ ve ceded to be the most important lit-
rary discovery of this generation.
Fa FF ce | ik
i. eee ee a =
iy 7 eo a oa . :
” a ee ar aa ae | e
ar WPA WORKERS ee SP eS (Gil bi
= STRIKE — Work yd ee
on the Astor| | (eggs j ee:
MD AE Becusncorseeie| | Og x eS
A STRIKE [xew vere ciey a ee ae
. : W was temporarily| | | lee” SRE eM
py victim Peace || ~ aa |
wens | workers demand: 2 Sy Vlee
ig i yeuoro |! ing present union © ee |
measoracme WT scale of wages.| | a so Rg
: They were re-|| MUSIC MASTERS—The famed Lombardos, Guy
e placed by others| | and Carmen, stop for a moment's refreshment with
; from the National] | Golden Wedding and Old Schenley, after thrilling
we P| Fe-cmptoyment| | the gay throngs on the Starlight Roof of the Waldort
Po Pog PeEmploy Ne eceka te akiee oa
. GBA erie conpitio
eae if BP E-hena mance he
fs in Sitnding “copenent_ tor
ci '
|
= ponent et ee, | ae) Lo be
i — ne 4 e
we —————e
nnn sata
ees
Pee orr ro BATTLE Carbon Monexiae. , .
aa 4
RE) Demonstration Cars leaves New York -
ae Ee se pan in theaters! oes] aa
. “3 cDrive being. tponseres thie, moe ‘
a GE MMM Andrew J. Foster, Jr., will accompany| - ) “
be Andrew 4. Foster, Jr., will accompany 4
nice ee
ot
i ee
is set
BY; ae LEN
a oy ee ee
|s Poa a oe
aang airing on, ee tr
eee
_o. 4 she om
. ey rea)
ae eg ae
Ch fete. |
: yee” on i
PREPARATION: Italian troops are shown load-
ing one of the small quns, that are particularly
tfective’in mountain warfare, on_&. transport
Grain, “Every day more troops and equipment
‘are mobilized in Italy. —
7 GF e
Le y
‘age
Y usa ene
a LE : ee
“+ : eee
: ; aoe
1a a dines
2 N -faseni
£35 é ra 5 ¥ ie
lh «8 Rene 8
_ — Oe 2
DOWN TO THE SEA WITH SIPS—And it’s sips of Golden’
A ToS
% 7 of
\ Xo.
7
FORTUNE SMILED: But now
Feports nave it that Abeaman
Stier's inhetitance at ssooe00
irom 3 Secessad uncle in Afric
wail not materialize becaues et
JEcnmeitng creskes "him the “outs
Pinlacurrn.
oe
SR
cae |
<I