Dallas Express
Saturday, July 26, 1919
Dallas, Texas
Page text (machine-generated)
WHICH IS THE BETTER MAN IN A PHYSICAL SENSE, THE WHITE MAN OR COLORED MAN?
ONE BOARD HAD 9000 COLORED REGISTRANTS; CITY BOASTS OF FIVE MEGRO BANKS, FIVE WEEKLY PAPERS, SEVEN DRUG STORES, TWO MONTHLY MAGAZINES AND LARGEST SINGLE PROTESTANT CHURCH MEMBERSHIP IN NORTH AMERICA. IN THE OLIVE BAPTIST CHURCH.
Most Distinctive Weekly In America Circulation this issue 17,220
Founded by W. E. King.
VOL. 26, NO. 41.
WHICH IS
FACTS WORTH
CHICAGO HAS 3RD L
POPULATION T
ONE BOARD HAD 9000 COLORED
OF FIVE NEGRO BANKS, FI
DRUG STORES. TWO MONTH
SINGLE PROTESTANT CHUR
AMERICA, IN THE OLIVE BAPT
The large and rapidly growing population of Chicago, with its attendant housing, employment and other sociological and economic problems some of the issues of the city are of searching study by Mr. Sandburg of the Chicago Daily News. The following is one of the issues that shows the results of his inquiry:
BY CARL SANDBURG.
The city is called Chicago, today holds at least 125,000 persons. This is double the number that district hold five years ago, when the Chicago is probably the third city in the United States in number of residents. Today ranks as fifth in this regard, according to estimates of Frederick Rex, mourning referent of Chicago, who may possibly exceed Chicago in this population group are New York, New Jersey, and Boston, with 84,749; Philadelphia, with 84,468, and Washington, with 94,466. The Colts have increased since the last incident. New Orleans, which had 89,262, has increased since the last incident. The same will apply to three other large southern cities where the population at the beginning of the war was about equal to that of Chicago. These are Birmingham, Ala., Atlanta, and Memphis. The population of the proper Chicago population of Chicago was 125,000. The figure most commonly agreed on was 125,000. The population of Chicago was 125,000. The figure most commonly agreed on was 125,000. The population of Chicago was 125,000. The number that have departed for other cities. Under the pressure of the biggest overcrowding problem any race or nation has faced in Chicago metropolitan areas is spilling over, or rather is being irresistibly squeezed out, into other
Such is the immediately large and notable face touching what is generally called the Other Facts in Situation. Other Facts in Situation. One of the most important, each one indicating a situation.
NEGROES IN SOUTH THRIFTY
Evidence of Prosperity Reflected in Home Surroundings.
(By the Associated Negro Press.)
Grund Raphael, Mich., July 24—"I is the Negro who has made the furniture man of the south rich from his business. The whites have helped, but the tremendous business we have been enjoying recently has come in larger degree from the colored man."
It was a furniture man from Atlanta, Ga., who was doing the talking, and his talk was most interesting and white. "I think I may say that the Negro of the south has made more rapid development than any man has. The reason is manifest. He had a longer distance to go and he is covering that distance very rapidly. He is taking advantage of the institutional system and he is getting ahead in an economic way very rapidly. Who knew it? I am aware of the Negro that when he has money he likes to spend it and when he does spend it he usually wants something mighty good for it. As a result you
The Dallas Express
of importance, are the following: Local draft booth, State board in a district, 510th street, containing 30,000 persons, of whom 50 per cent are Colored, of whom 1,850 Colored men to cantonments. Of these 1,850 there were only 400 district had 7,323 passed by the examination. The armies was declared, this district had 7,323 passed by the examination. So it is clear that in one neighborhood are thousands of strong young men who have been talking to each other intimately related to the questions; "What are we ready to die for?" Why? What is the meaning of freedom; of self-determination; of windows and in cisar stores and hawdasheries are helmets, fifes, catridges, cannets and hawdasheries that were sent to France. We are around the district and talk with the black folks and leaders of the black folks. Ask them, "What about the future of the colored people." What is the meaning of freedom; of glory, the far we love because it stands for our freedom, hasn't got to do anything, we want to see our country live up to the constitution and the decoration of independence." With All, Soldiers, ministers, lawyers, doctors politicians machinists, teachers, day care workers standing thought they offer what is consulted about to-morrow, next week, to the consideration of race and color of America. There is no approaching the matters of house jobs or political relations of the colored people in consideration of their own vivid conception of what they consider then
They had no bank three years ago. Now they have five. Three co-operative societies to run stores are formed. They have a new monthly magazine, seven drug stores, one hospital—all of these have come since Junius B. Wood's encyclopedic recital. The magazine appeared in The Times in December 1915. Also since News in December 1915.
may go in to the homes of Negroes in Athlanta and find the very bestchic furniture in them and usually a lot of it, perhaps it is more than white.
It is very interesting to go into some of these homes. I have been in many of them and many of the homes are very small and so far as the house it houses is small, many of the presentations I have been in of more than three rooms and found in one a $90 range and a bed room suite in another a $100 range and the room would be a mighty fine living room suite along with a $500 and a bedroom suite and a old fellow who the homes of single men living in one room and found it beautiful furnished and looked good old fellow will all the furniture, since he was there only long enough to sleep, and his reply was that he would call and call his home to look nice. The "Negroes are making more money than ever did before. Some of the dreaded crop on the last few years of crop in the last few years and any kind of crop in the last few years they are putting into their homes very largely and since the advent of prohibition the money has gone into homes more than
The Republican Party Is The Ship. All Else Is The Sea."—Fred Douglas;
PRESIDENT TO REVIEW NEGRO SOLDIERS' CASE
(By the Associated Negro Press.)
Camp Grant
Camp Grant, a group of fourteen colored soldiers accused of attacking a white woman in May, 1918, now rests in the hands of President Woodrow Wilson. There have been two trials. Eight more are now on trial and there remains another soldier, brought back from the war. Major James P. Hall, one of the three judge advocates in the case, has been returned to his duties as professor of law at the University of Chicago.
very regularly and paid something on their account. Sometimes they could be returned to his duties as professor of law at the University of Chicago.
weekly, for the Negro will promise almost anything but they would come in with something and keep it up in the office. Now that is a pretty good record.
"JIM GROW" ON GUARD IN MASSACHUSETTS
Colored Girls Denied Admission To Public Swimming Pool
COLORED MAYOR FORGED TO LEAVE CITY
(By the Associated Negro Press.) Amstrom, Amish, July 24, 1842. Blaise and a crowd, with a bald and cross bones, usually used to spell death in all of its horrors, followed by an alleged assault against his person, who was killed. The reason for the departure for the north of Newman O'Neal, mayor of Hobson City, the exclusive Negro town near Newman City, a few weeks ago, the Hobson City mayor is said to have received a warning that he would be killed unless he was sent to the town time after the receipt of the letter, the mayor claimed that he had been assaulted near his home. He was then to be intended to obey the warning in the letter. Accordingly, he gave his position to the government at Hobson City, and went north. Since his departure from this section no other of the officers of the town have witnessed a warning or block hand letters.
BURNING AT STAKE IN
THE UNITED STATES
Read the Third installment of this series of astounding facts about the horrific atrocities crimes committed, in direct contempt of the law, in an authentic account of the whole affair on page 11 of this book.
ALABAMA WHITES RESENT
PRESENCE OF NEGROES
IN SLEEPING CARS
TWO HOME GUARDS KILLED IN
CREASING TOTAL DEATHS TO
SEVEN
RIOT BREWING THREE YEARS
ALABAMA WHITE PRESENCE IN SLEE
ATTACK GOVERNMENT EQUALITY POLICY
(By the Associated Negro Press, Birmingham, Ala., July 24—The white south is slipping in its propaganda of race hatred and injustices. For the past few months, but peaceful, as may be attested from the very descriptive statement, one by W. C. Fellows, who is very much "ted up" over the railroad Administration permitting colored people to occupy the manhole. The ASSOCIATED NEGRO PRESS investigated the persons referred to by Mr. Fellows and learns that they were people of the highest intelligence, college education and every way, demonstrating refinement and culture. But, hear what Fellows has said—"There is another new record which the railroads are making under United States control, which we call police warfare, which we feel save that you have not been informed of. It will not be necessary to go into any
COLORED SOLDIER TO HANG AFTER EIGHT MONTHS
(By the Associated Negro Press.)
Annibon, Anilia - Sergt. Edgar Caldwell, the mayor of Caldwell, the special specifc of the circuit court of Caldwell County for the murder of Condeen McCormick in December 1985, will be hanged in the Caldwell County jail on Friday, August 18, exactly eight months after the murder. The supreme court of Alabama on Monday handed a decision down suing Caldwell County court and jury which inflicted the death penalty on the slayer of the murderer. The county court and jury can save the Negro from the hangman's moose is the commuting power of the Negro. The court foreseen and unexpected situation, and the chances are that the Negro solder will pay the penalty for his crime. The case of Caldwell has become one of the few celebrated criminal cases in the United States. As a passenger on the street car of the main conductor in December, the Negro involved in a difficulty. After being ejected from the car by Conductor Morrison, Caldwell drew a small calibre pistol from his brouse, a small bullet Linton squared thru the head killing the smoker pistol on the motorman, the Negro striking the motorman, the neck and inflicting a serious wound.
special details except to tell you the actual act, which, when it thinks when the attention of the Alabama legislature is called to it, it will take measures to provide against such occurrences.
On May 25, I lost Baltimore on a train carrying a through Pullman car from New York to New Orleans. A car with two and children is preserved in the same Pullman car that I and mine. The children were born in the city they met the mother. The train left Baltimore about 8 or 8:30 P. M. at Washington, where they were born the birth with the mother. The train left Baltimore about 8 or 8:30 P. M. at Washington, where they were born the birth with the mother. This indy and retired with her two children, occupying the lower berth. At Washington, a Negro man can carry the upper berth over this indy with her two children, occupied by Washington, of the Virginia, Tennessee and little corner of Georgia, thru the state of
RECORDS IN UNITED STATES ARMY DECIDE IN FAVOR OF THE NEGRO
WRITER IN JOURNAL OF AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION REVEALS STARTLING FACTS BASED ON UNPREJUDICED STATISTICS
(By the Associated Negro Press.)
Chicago, July 24 — An article on the American Negro in the Journal of American Medical Association is reminiscent of some of the “white hope” discussions that preceded the Willard case. Which is the better man in a physical sense, the white man or the colored man?
After comparing the records of the whites and blacks in the United States army, where they lived under exactly the same conditions, the studies that the Negro is a better physiological machine. It appears that the Negro is less subject to disease than the white man. He has less power of resistance to certain diseases, for example tuberculosis and Alabama down into or Mississippi. That he is train known as N41, leaving Washington on the night of May 23.
“Returning” from Birmingham of June 5, after great difficulty, I managed to get to Van Raalte. Van Raalte was refused. The knowledge were refused preservation in this car; somewhere between Kokko and City, Ten. Two two Negro man came into this car and were assigned to section 1, the lower berth of section 2 of the car. Two two young lady. Section 2, next to section 1, was occupied by two young ladies. It is a well recognized fact that the newspapers mold public opinion. After giving your news item, I am surrounded by a group of railroads are starting a propaganda to continue the operation of the transports.
These facts which I have given you in regard to the passenger accommodation are not exaggerated. It is a fact that
"If this is the policy of the government control of railroads, personally, you should be the white men of Alabama with me, to hell with United States government control of railroads. At all necessary to call your attention to the annoyance of having to meet these Noreen men in the toilet and wash room. You can
Negro Fete to be Held in Paris
(By the Associated Negro Press.)
Paris, France, July 24-24. France has a reputation for being a democracy and justice, has created a new sensation for the world. It may be a faid, or it may be the beinning of an empire. It has been the war. The war gave to France a clear idea of what the colored peoples of the world have accomplished. The war has made France is anxious to learn more. This, stated on very good authority, that, while the American whites are now the majority of France, French crise, there is no disposition on their part to be out of step with the times and consequently they are
An exhibition of Nerro are statues, busta and masks in sculptured wood, and a few not only with the critics, but also with purchasers. Some of these sculptures are in the museum, in this framed and if artists unite in finding in these works all the seeds of the grotesk art there is. Next week a Nerro fete will be held in the museum, the last remission of unseen civilization. It is also the country where we go for art. We are interested in Which Paris is interesting our English and American friends be deceived when they romance soon to be married to a girl named 'gay Paris' in a tone at the same time regrettful and reproachful. Do we have a premade mistake of supposing because they came to have a good time over the Nerro exhibition and super-ficial. We mean business.
Mrs. Mary Talbert Goes to Europe
(By the Associated Negro Press)
Paris, July 24—Mrs. Mary Talbert
That we enjoy the confidence of the Sending Public is evidenced by our Tanzibian assets—more than the combined Resources of all Race Papers in in Southwest.
$1.60 Per Aumum
PRICE FIVE CENTS
D MAN?
D STATES ARMY
VOR OF THE NEGRO
AFRICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION
S BASED ON UNPREJUDICED
small pox, but in general he resists disease across butter.
The Negro has a healthier skin. This is particularly true of the "infolded skin" which forms the lining of the mouth, nose and throat. White skin in comparison are characterized as furthermore, Negro nerves are found to be stronger, "less unstable." Negro skin is naturally not better digested. They have better eyes and better digestion. Naturally, is not calculated to minister to the racial pride of the Caucasians who like to feel that their skin is better. In particular, Thinking man, however, recognize that there is a law of compensation which pays the price for
LABOR COMPETITION CAUSES RACE RIOT Returned Soldiers Find Jobs Occupied by Negroes.
London, July 24—Rice rieps in the northern part of England and Wales have created a stir throughout the country, principally because of the novelty of such occurrences in these regions. Normally there are few Negroes of aliens with Colored skins to be seen in Great Britain, but the exigencies or caused the importation of a large number of seaport docks and to recruit the gangs of manual laborers depleting the seaport. Many of these were brought from various parts of the world, South Africa and the West Indies, but many also were imported. Repatriation of these Colored men to the United States was that many, unimagined British soldiers have had what to them seemed the bitter experience of seeing a stranger in their own country and deployment while they themselves looked in vain for them. Over this state of affairs quickly developed into hatred when the soldiers observed that the strangers were trying to cultivate a new country, and the number of Negroes who white wives, the officer in the district, met disheartened as very serious both from a health and economic point of view, and asserts that they still without employment, while Negroes are employed. If this not a major injustice, in that it does not thaniquestim that the men who have fought for their country should find the jobs they need.
Granted Patent on Novel Device
Fort Worth, Texas, July 22, 1919.
Roll Chuster.
Fort Worth, Texas.
The Grand Arch Mason Hall Chapter,
the Grand Prince Hall Chapter
of Royal Arch Masons of Texas,
and Juriedation opened its annual
session on Monday, July 14th and the
official's reports showed about 50
members. The chapter benefited
beneathies of deceased companies
made to feel glad as their alliances
were much larger than in the
early years. Bright faces attended each day's
session. Several Master Masons journaled
over the rugged road and
The Grand Commandery, the same good spirit and signa of a victorious battle, and the same grandeur of the Grand Commandery of Knight Templars an did that of the Masonic Grand Lodge whose very commendation and devotion to the state heroes rolls and achievements for the year just ending. Here as in the other departmenta. The Grand Commandery to the Grand Commandery's roll, the greatest in the history of Knight Templars in the Templars, July 17th, the Shrine pulled off a swag banquet at Herman Park and were honored with a feast, and an officera guests who added grace to the affairy, Nineteen voices, marching from the Masonic hall to the hall, and trained, but they were eager to return to the hall to start across the Hot Stands of the Desert. They made memorable successors, and joy, oh joy! On Friday, July 18th, 21 commemorated the Dallas and were inducted into the mysteries of the Order of the 32nd Degree of the A. A. S. R. of Fee
All in all, the various reports of the Grand Lodge, Grand Prince Hall of the Lodge, and Grand Prince Hall of every branch represented showed that the Mascaron year, 1918-1919 was a banner year.
The Janitors, Jantrills and Porters effected a permanent organization Monday, July 1st at the Giltwood building of the Lodge were elected for the ensuing year. W. A. Hickett, president; Henry O. the president; D. L. Mackey, recording secretary; T. H. the financial secretary and Z. Davis, guard.
In a new organization working under the American Federation of Labor. All persons of the above line are invited to participate. The members of the organization curried from a three week stay with her brother in Franklin, Texas. The guest of her cousin, George, was last week.
C. Creek is visitor her brother, Mr. Arch Cruder in Beatrice. Neb. on her return trip, she will spend a few days with her sister, Sam Alexander, Ranqueo, Colo.
Mrs. M. C. Hall, 407. W. Bluff Mrs. M. C. Hall, 360. in bed for six days. Mrs. Victory Johnson, left last Thursday to spend two weeks with Mrs. Victory Johnson.
Missilia Redd, 1801 Calvertown Avenue, gave party last Wednesday. Mrs. Redd, 1801 Bunster J. L. Rodd and corp. Malwon Lewis, who has last returned to Lewis, has hosted for Houston its home. Tuesday, Mr. George James, 1801 in company with wife is visiting relatives in Rev. and Mrs. C. Williams of Farris, Texas, were in the city last Sunday visitor Mrs. Johnson, 1809 Burgess, visiting Mrs. Theok for home Sunday night. Mr. M. Hill, 1808 Illinois avail-
Office Hours
7:30 a. m. to 6:30
Sunday by Appointment
DR. R. N. T. WALLIS
Dental Surgeon
411% West 9th street
Office Hours:
10 a. m. to 12 m.
8 p. m. to 8 p. m.
W. S. CROSBY, M. D.,
Physician & Surgeon
Office: 411% II. 9th street.
Phone No. 4073
FRED EARL
THE TAILOR
Cloning, Presensing and Repairing
First Glance Shine Parlor
807 A East North Rd
PAGE TWO
A.
Enclose check coverin, 10 per word for reading notes, ecu., when you DROP your MESSAGE in the BOX.
days or more. Improvement is easy. Halle Mille McCloud, 1237 S. Charles Street, for Houston, Galveston and Beaumont for a two month stay. Houston, Galveston and Beaumont Tablesmeles No. 433, H. P. Berdas Ward, Sir Kight Stowell and others forming the bide delegation to Grand Jury. Tabor left for Waco, Sunday night. Rhodes and Mrs. Mollic (Johnson) Barnes, 707 Bergman were quietly married last Saturday night at the home of the bride. Rev. Bakewell Miss Samilee Harris of Taylor is visiting her grandmother, Mrs. McGregor. for the Masonic Band of Fort Worth, 23 pieces, instruments secured and in hand, teacher emeritus for first lesson of instruction given.
Morning Chapel C. M. E.
Rev. M. H. Spencer, Factor.
Rev. M. H. Spencer, Factor.
2:30 with Sept. 1, J. T. Lackland on the scene with all officers on time. The Superintendent is using all his efforts to ensure children are ready in a few days. Sunday school at 9:30 a.m. The pastor was at his best at 11 o'clock and the teacher of music at Texas College was the greatest great saving revival will open Wednesday night. Prof. Ellison, teacher of music at Texas College will be the greatest great saving revival in a recital Monday night. The Prof. hold the house spell bound and will return in September. Mr. Ellison over sea will be in the morning service.
The Ewpentw League is leaving no stones unturned in getting ready to play. The team's last night carnival was a success. $7.92 was railed for. *Emory C. Smith, Reporter.*
St. James Baptist Church.
Sunday school was opened at 9:30 a.m. m. W. M. Taylor, Superintendent, comments on the total present. Total present. 24. Sunday school reviewed by our Mr. Nathan Johnson, comments by pastor. H. o'clock in back is at his post after some wetsuit away. The members welcome Innis back at his post and a glad hand shaking. At 3 o'clock the pastor made a visit to the southside of the campus, a first form. B. Y. P. at 5:40 p.m. Night service at 7:20 p.m. total collection for the day above $100.00. The students are the officers of the south will appear at St. James soon, the date will be given later. Rev. J. H. Winn, D. D. Pastor. Phil R. Register. Reporter.
CALYERT.
Calvert, Texas, July 24.—The Ladies of St. Paul M. E. church through their Rev. S. H. Harvey are arsing for the District Conference. Through Calvert, students are through Calvert for Dallas, Sunday in his car, but on account of mud and rain had to ship his mum. Mrs. J. Josephine Applewhite left to the city of Galveston, Saturday.
Mr. Jack Frasier is back from oversea and the whole Frasier team. I n'Ton Gason, Jr., came in Saturday from the over big pond also Mr. Will Scott's son of M. Morlath he are glad to meet our brave boys. Mrs. Carrie Nelson of Galveaton we are while White are subscribed for the months to seent to Calvert, Route 4, Box 41. Erb is just back from Toronto, Texas, where he is pastoring. He reports a fine meeting. Rev. C. 'L. Humber left Monday in Grand Temple and Tabernacle.
DR. R. E. GILTON.
All modern equipment - Best good
used, all work guaranteed. Best hall
in city to rent for lod, a meetings and
entertainment. Office in Gilton Ice
Building, 215% Calibourn St.
Phones:
Office—L. 3801 Res. R.—3979
Ft. Worth.
Phones—
Residence Resodale 287
Office Lamar 4082
L. WALLIS
Surgeon
Fort Worth, Texas
Phones—
Office L. 2074
Residence R. 1290
SBY, M. D.,
& Surgeon
Fort Worth, Texas
Nathan Smith
Manager
Fort Worth
CALVERT.
A. B. C.
The subject of the above sketch is the House Surgeon of Memorial Hospital, in his home town. He is still in the middle of life, under twenty-eight years of age. His skill as a surgeon and his fitness as a practitioner have been thoroughly developed, and he has not been found wanting. He is a family man and Christine Eighth Street Baptist in the famous holds local connection with both the Knights of Pythias and Odd Fellows of the Medical director for both orders. Dr. T. T. McKinney would not again be candidate for the position of Medical Director for both orders. Fellows many friends are urging him to allow the use of his name for that post. He will be at Sheraton, where he will be in the time there will be a "stirring up time among the annuals."
Calvert and vicinity had a big rain Saturday night.
Mr. R. Orderson was over to the Capital Franklin, Friday.
Mr. Henry Adams is up after two weeks' sickness.
Miss Berta Curtis of Hammond made Calvert Saturday, Mrs. Clara Hammond was in the city Saturday and Sunday attending church.
Fran. H. Anderson was in Mexico,
Houston, returned Saturday
morning. Mrs. H. Emerson took
home after spending a few days in
Caldwell, the guest of her sister, Mrs.
Grant.
Bethle church is nearing completion.
Rachel. Mrs. Walton and children
left for Houston, Tuesday. Mr. Watson,
Mrs. Walton. Miss Fleshie Mae Parker left for
Pt. Worth to visit her aunt.
Mrs. C. J. Rayner has improved her home adding a new fence around her house. Mrs. Q. J. Rayner is arranging a beautiful summer lawn. The son of Mr. and Mrs. U. S. Hammond has been quite sick but is much improved at this writing. Mrs. E. D. Smith of Kaufman in the city, the guest of Prof. and Mrs. W. R. Parne. Mrs. Fannie Tubbs of Palestine in the city, the guest of Prof. W. R. Parne. Prof. H. G. Gorez, G. M. of Texas Old Fellows had his annual visit to the city, led by the guest of Prof. J. and let, for Sherman where he was called by phone. Prof. A. H. Hums left Thursday for Prof. A. H. Hums at Sherman Gln where he found the order in fine shape. Mrs. France. Jones of Navarra is in the city the guest of Miss Lea Reynolds. Rev. H. C. Brizy has returned from Worthy, Texas, where he was in attendance at Massasau Grand Lodge. Mrs. Grace Moton received a check for the payment of policy on the death of Mrs. Moton, who earned a $300.00 policy.
PARIS.
CHICKASHA.
Chickazza, Okle, July 14. -Sunday was a blah day at the First Baptist church. Sunday school was at its preached wormery. We preached a wonderful wormery at 1:20 p.m. We had a Sunday School rally with all the various churches present both spiritually and financially. We had a speaker of the horn. We preached
THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS, SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1919.
High School Theatre
Special Attraction
TEXAS
Positively do not miss
HARRY CAREY
In his latest greatest western drama
"RIDERS OF VENGEANCE"
He wasn't a shooting man, but seven men robbed him of his family and his girl so he started out to get them all—one man against seven men. Harry get them? Or did a woman, half he, know when you see him in "Riders of Vengeance," even faster and bigger than "Hell Bent" and miss this great Carey picture.
Now playing
The High School Theatre
The House With A Punch
H. BATTS, PROPRIETOR
ADMISSION 11 Cents and 17 Cents
And continued every Sunday
Special
Mon.,
Positive
HARRY
In his latest
"RIDERS ON
He wasn't a shooting man
his family and his girl
one man against seven.
woman halt hind. For
"Riders of Veregeance"
faster and bigger than "Bent" or "Bare Fists."
Miss this great Carey pic
Now playing
The High S
The House
H. BATTS,
ADMISSION 11
a wonderful season. Rev. A. C. Reaves passed through the city Saturday evening en route to Lawton. He spent a few hours with his family. Mrs. F. D. Hancock arrived in the city of Chickasha. Sunday night. She will spend a few days with friends and relatives. Hiding Con-
ner is here holding his conference with the presiding elders of the district at the A. M. E. church. Lorene
The Ministerial Alliance held their service at the First Baptist church in New York, which is trained by the Mission, Mrs. King and Mrs. Crowell have returned from the Grand Session of K. of Pts. and the State of Maine. They report a grand session.
DEKALR.
DeKalb, Texas, July 24 - Slicked-in
Monroe Folds and wife are both
really Martha Washington went to
Columbia will be treated and madu
happily.
BOSWELL
Hoswell, Okik, July 24—Sunday
morning at 2:30 o'clock. Rev. M. A.
Garner the president of Sunday school
Convention of the Hope Well District. Rev. J. H. Yarbrough and Deson J. H. Farrow of Bowwell went out unseen three miles of Bowell and named it Sharp Chapel, Bro. J. Sharp, Inst. Miss Eula Sharp, second re-assembled at 4 o'clock in the evening and had a soul stirring prayer service conducted by the re-assembled Rev. J. G. Garner preached a noble sermon. Rev. A. J. Yarbrough is acting as the pastor of the C. M. E. Garner is also a new reader of the Express. Rev. H. C. Collins of Oak Hill, P. C. of the C. M. E. church filled his sermon. Rev. J. S. West, P. C. of the A. M. E. church has just arrived from Texas. Rev. J. Miss Inez C., Claudie and Master Z. M. Granga from Vernon, texas, to visit bau, an instructor from Vernon and sister Miss Mendella Granga.
RUESEL
Kiesel, Texas, July 24—Service will attend at the old Zion Baptist church and the Riding Sun, M. E. church Sunday each pastor was at.
Thursday
Night
JULY 31st
Marie Walcamp in
"Red
Glove"
Continued
every
Thursday
Friday Night, August 1st
And Continued Every Friday
This is the Great
This is the Great
EDDIE
POLO
Star of
the thrilling
Universal Serial.
"The LURE OF THE CIRCUS"
Now Playing
in the Famous
CYCLONE SMITH STORIES
HE'S wonderful good news!
We've secured the spine
series of "CYCLONE
SMITH" stories featuring the
great EDDIE POLO writer and
national work is the talk of the
country. No floor stories have
ever been written or directed. We
want you to see them all. They
are quite extraordinary. New
playing.
Saturday August 2nd "ELMO the
The man who star-
tled the world in
Tarzan of Apea will
star in this great
serial. Continued
every Saturday.
his post and seemed to be busy engaged in preparing for their annual meeting as much as for the local work of the church. The college, the Narcissus Baptist church, Perry, Sunday. The good people of Perry seem to very anxious to have the Express agent to visit them and put them in possession of reading the best Negro paper in the State. The Colleague of the Hills school building canned the Hills school and vegetables Saturday. The womens club expect to continue this good work until they have supplied every good food to keep them out of the store for the next year to come. Mr. I. Wright, the Mascone Grand Lodge, Ft. Wright and invited him to visit fixed date. Date of his coming will be fixed late. Date the Express for exact date. Mrs. Odera Scott is in Marlin, Mrs. Odera Scott is in Marlin, Long made a business trip to Marlin, Saturday. The Express agent will be looking for you every Saturday.
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STRENGTH?
THATS MY
MIDDLE NAME
PARIS.
Paris, Texas, July 24—Bt. Troupe of Medical Corpse of U. S. army in Paris. Dr. M. S. Army Hospital, the 1st since that his sister, Sister, M. C. Houston received a telegram that he arrived in New York. Dr. M. C. Houston received a telegram that he arrived in New York. Miss Ophelia B. Ward of 364 S. 22nd street, entertained Wednesday 9th little Miss Collette, Roar and Beech, in honor of Little Roar's pity evening. All the little girls and boys in attendance expressed themselves little Miss pity evening. The little Miss was recipient of many nice presents. Dr. and Mrs. C. B. Martin and Mrs. C. B. Martin last week for Chicago, New York and other places of interest. Miss Aliva Taba is back from Ohio to conference of the Methodist church. The normal examination is going on. Miss Janie Kasine was in Paris. The plastic which was to have been Saturday at the Fair Grounds was rained out. The plastic which will hold their convention here this week.
& | DALLAS, “LONDON,” LOCAL HAPPENINGS |
(ALL THE NEWS THAT'S FITTO PRINT) = y.tm anim, ony mon » Sa Gas
GI WES 0 2 RPC, Ve ar eR a, EE SR 9 Ir ra nr cor aR RR adie be cot mr eam Ra
, as %j pg ” Rui ree - ill er ah SE al
REDUCED RATES TO SHERMAN,
Amaunet hie wurebann one Wer ticket
August 12th purchase one way ticket
‘{o"Sherman ‘and obtain frum Ucket
‘Bgent, 2 certifents or receipt.
Ror, J. Ts Jobason, one of the
strong. sven of the AL MG church
‘Sod wife of Wichita Falls, were. in
fhe city last week enroute home
From the conference.
‘ins. alah Wilson, one of, the
‘tty teachers left recently for Chica
e
irs, Frank Wauls of Sen Antonio
tala guest of Mrs. BW, Shaw, 908
Thien treet
Mina’ Peters, secretary to M. M.
origers ia ponding her vacation
‘with relives In Louiatana,
hr. and’ Mek. W. ©. Clark, 2008
‘Gan Jacinto, entertained “at thelr
Thome, ‘Toeeday “night, July 15 Mrs
Boul Williams of Wichiin, Kans, and
Hincedonia. choir, Cream and. ”cake
‘ero. served.
‘Grand Chancellor W, 8, Wills and
President Goldwalthe of the Endow.
faent. Denartmeat ot "tie" Colored
Kalgnte of Pyiblan of Texas were
{a town on oficial business last Wed-
‘meaday,
"Dr, Vernon Orvis, dentist bas re-
cofmod from. «fo. Wonks? init to
Darents in Oklahoma "Cly.
ire G. B.Rovinson, 1922 Hall
catroct, loft Tast Sunday for ax
rook ‘stay, visiting Telatlve and
Hinde 9 hi ol howe ari.
Mire, Pearl Underwood, 1712 Mar-
riila ett Wednoaday for a. (wo-weeks
ay with her husbands relatives. at
‘Shreveport, Ta,
‘Subseribo for the South's greatest
‘weekly, Tho Dallas Express,
Sten’ Mary ‘Borders, a7i1 State
atroot “eft. Friday of thle week
for Denver, Gol, where. abe will ro
fide: permanently with Wer” son. Mr.
Boracrs. will ro late,
ila Ollie Bryant, the daughter of
Mrs. Dovie' Wileon, 2604 Bast Corby
is: very il
Mr vand) Mra “J. W. Ashley of
Grecawood street, "were ‘called | t
Howland, ‘Texas, on account of the
‘enth of EL Ashley, father of J
Wa asbley,
Mr. U.S Adams, Jr of Kansas
‘City Mo, in visitng his parents ere
fey, and Mim. Us 8 Adams, 1806
Burford
Hire, Rota Ambrose of Fort Worth
ten big Dallas, the guest of her
Brother and sister-in-law, ME and
Mirah. M. ‘Shannon, S426 Fuqua
strect.
Drs, Luetle Dighton, 2611 Juttet
and Mira E. Meliveen: motored tc
Eengman, siarday‘aftersoon fa
ME Harry Rose of Tyler is tn th
city vlating, hin" Drother,,Suttun a
sie Aiten street,
Mire Susle Cues of Houston
ere visting her aunt and. unele
Yiry and Mra.” Nelson Jones, 280
Cochran street, and other af het
Eleeds nore Sue nried iat oe
ny.
Mire. Lottie Thompson of 2612 Bry
fan tirect will leave Sunday to attend
Bt Soin Baptiat Assocation athe
‘1a home, Austin, Pexas
‘Mise Virginia Moore, the ver
ponular Waitress nt the Pride Cat
ar just returned from a. recreatty
aunt with the old foike at Marahall
ier former home.
“lien Te Re Redmon, wife of Rev
4K Redmond eft last week for 3
tree weeks stay with frends at he
old home, Ardmore, Okla,
‘as oale Maclin of 213. Dawao
streets San Antonio isin “Dalla
Yonton” and in the quest. of Mrs
Gartis Ray, 2910 Commerce,
‘Mra, Faonie Grayson Wiliams
sues State stroct left Sunday, to, at
fend tho funeral of her aunt, Mrs
Sonn P."crittn, whose death oocurre
a Corsican .
‘A peach of an investment, a month
ty of yearly subscription to ‘The Ex
Drew,
Mr, HB, Sayles of Upsher Count
eft for Morris, Viola, St. Louls an
Chinco, Hino
Mire, Maria Lewis ot | Navasots
‘nexus, ttn the ely vating her mothe
ire family Pariah ‘and sisters, Mrs
Mary sanders and Mira, Rosa ‘Lewis
3421 Floyd
Mrs ows Lewis of 2821, Flor
treet, teft Tuesday for Austin.
Dies J.-W, Wile, $908 Ash Lan
will Yeave™ Yor ‘Galveston to atten
the Grand Lodge of ‘Mosaics.
irr A, 1. Coleman ater bei
ck for several weeks if able t0 by
p-agata’ and fa" ow at 2829 Mal
street
Mek, Te F. Coleman, $08 Good 8
tas returned home tenin after attend
Ing the Grand Lodge of the RP. 0
Ht, of P, when met tm Coralcann
erne. "After whlch abo went t
‘Waco, thes t6 Fort Wortth to. via
ae *
‘MR. AND MRS, GILMORE ENTER-
‘TAIN
Mr. W, Te, Martin of St. Augustin,
Pin, and: ir. E.Viuebn of, Lake
City} Pia, Who are visiting’ Mr.
§.itooper, “were “entertained hon
Gay evening "at. 6:30. with. spring
hleken Tinehom by Me J. AL” Gl
ore at his howe, 2412 Thomas’ Ave.
thers present were A. 8 Wells, J
W. Ashley, W. Ewing, Chas. 7
Bradking, "W. Stiney Piltman, HE
Siriekland. wid D. V. Hooper, Mrs
W.M, Terrell, assated, Mra. L. V.
Gtimore acted ‘xa hostess. They pu
forth every effort to make it pleasant
for ait ‘present.
end us the names and addressee
cof'ten of your lady friends and ve
‘will vend abeototely tree to you one
Taree ‘oan ‘LaDora Hair Pomads.
‘Be an arent. Write
TADQRA CHEMICAL, C4
suieeine
WESTERY NEGRO DAPTIOT MEX
HOLD. CONVENTION
Tivo bundred delegates wore pres
cent yesterday for the opening of th
convention of the men's Aepartment
fof the Western ‘DaptietAnsoctation
At the Calvary Baptist. Chureh, 202
Morgan neve, The convention
‘he man’s department fotlown a three
airy acting of ibe Women’ de
Dartment af the amocfation.
naeashen wis beabeiuneh
today by Rev. ©. B, Morris, D. D..
TY, president of the national ae
sociation. Attending the convention
ie'Dr, Le X. Williams, pastor of &
Chicago chureh having a terabershiD
‘of 10,00, sald to be the laryest Negro
‘Church ta" the world,
RESOLUTIONS IN BEHALF OF
‘BRO. WM. GEORGE.
Dallas, ‘Texas, July 30, 2919.
‘today we’ pause with hearin touch:
eat deepen sympathy while. our
‘ery ule are filed wit love, to
ay tribute of honor and. expect to
{Eng of the greatest men of tho Tate
{hat ‘has hoped to make history for
Pethogh Mt tsb ecauso
inane,
of our weaker of feat tnd man
Shroom, nbd wo realize that we hae
tomlin Gur ome, ehureh and’ fratr=
al circle, a precious Jewel, Yet we
Xe elad io know that we have. the
fonolation” dat the. Heavenly Plots
{nt has “added. anotuer ™ beatal
ower of" beautifalCorietian Man-
food to" bla mortal vineyaré. And
‘We are still more rood of the, fact
That"one 0 Great as Sor. Willem
‘George has Tet wa such noble exam:
Die emulate,
‘To the devoted wife and children
and other ‘elatives"we wish to ai
that oar hearts go out Yo You filed
to the utmost with Tore and deepen
sympathy. net “eniy. in "words "we
and wiling and ready to'prove ot
flevoton by deeds and’ by estonding
"betping” hand, jut fhie we Aa
(ot you, take un indo your confidence
Shai what thow wit have tn do
"Woereas, ot “Almighty. Universal
King. ‘bas acon ft to. remove from
{tour honored Sovereign Deacon
Seorwe, our, fraternal brother and
Wrother to eur Universal Quen, and
‘Whereag, Mt, Pilgrim Kingdom No
{2"tan tone of ber most worthy
(pe it Resolved that we, the subor
inate Kingdom of Haroon sae
fines of Peendahip aw well aa Mt
Pilgrim Tinxdom Nov 48. bow in hum
‘Ma'subatsion to Hie Almighty Pow:
Pei
"Phat we while aympathising wit
“tne bereft funy snd” frlend_ com
|mrnd"them tothe God’ of ere
[ration am lever present, help ts
[Time ot true: sorrow and stent
("Rosoteed fariber that 8. nyo
[tome renttion be sent tothe De
Teaved fay. m copy’ he aent 0 te
Universal Aerie of Heroes an He
foines ot ‘Priendahin nut of "hone
{ind respect for ont Universal Queen
Mevey he sread won the inte
eh Phetim ‘Ktstom No.4 an
St com hn tent to the, Nesro. Pew
or utteation
( PeRomettily_aubmited,
| committee an "Reson:
nF MoRAw
WP ewer,
| Ty ceria Plateain:
Pang nrg Mmay ~ ry hein
St her that ee
‘her alster, Mra. ila Benen.” She
$5 A ci bet
crate char cane
erie et os oe
eis sae
ovo an ar non vo
Thenkiog nae Wats: Fa
Fon HNSTELANs GooDe
seit via alee
aoa bales be rl
Baers pagan eee oeret
Se rome
Ser Sec
Pepe Reps
ea
cits bee eee
Soh eemari care
Patt cnet
gee
peas ee
ieee
eaters ieee
Re a
hon “dpi” ier ta
ns in de mae bot meg
eo
ie los ae
ea ee eet ce
Sawer aren boas
eate tee cee
eet eee
SS eat eee cee
eee nearer
Roa py
Pea Gu Pats
eco er oe eee
Sah ee a et ae
aguas nen re
eee ete
ena an
soot eatatan aan
re oe
esteem ae
ta ee
pee eee ee
cee gas ae
ans arg oe fy
COMMUNITY HOUSE, CULLENS,
‘The Community Gervice Singing
Clase met tn its fret. soasion. Tues
day night, July 22nd and Mr. Prancl
Carrer, the Musical Director gave an
outline and the scope of the work,
that he hopes to earry on here.
‘Mr, Carrler is eapeciay. interested
tn 'Nearine our people sing Fotk tons
‘A‘large meeting’ was arranged fo
next "week,
"Thane who are lover of miusle and
would ike to Join this lane, please
fail the Managar, Wm. ®. Vaughn. oF
Mra ME 3. Me Barle. pirat oreaiser
At'the Community House, phone. ¥
tod or Mra. Portia W. Plitman, 2918
Liberty Street, Hh. 3078 oF Prot. J
W. ‘Wilson, phone 1H. 1072.
HOUSE WIVES MEET TO COMBAT
‘NIGH COST CONDITIONS.
Representative of the various or
anttations among, while” women
Of the city ‘met at 2417 Mckinney
fyenue Thursday afternoon to. com
Dat Gie high ort of ving and ‘con.
Hider ‘means to secure food ‘wtf tn
far Toad Tots, “The women lat that
the house wite te” responsible for
fhe buying nd must took ott for
the protection ot ‘homes in. the ety.
‘Mayor Wosenerait pole at ‘the
‘ssn:
‘THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS, SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1910
Te
pris aes ae
(siete eee
[oe mer
22) ene ae 3h
de pom
jae A
ere a.
Ee!
er a
;. ee xa
Arsenics tatty ten road crap th a
tae a
eae an_Fue for the O04
Pita eat iat
MASONS MEET
r ee Last year, 1018 ‘The year, 1919
| Number of RGRAre Lodge en me 358
|Number ot Now Latgesse *
[Number of Square Mesoas= ms sn
[Nester of Deaths wee Te at
‘Amount collected for Helot-----—--—-————— ogg seaarase
‘Aouatsallcted for Temple -———v———— 834s inase
‘Amount collected for ‘Charity. ‘Banta sours
Gaiected on Anton! Tax? ana Een
‘Collected om Manone Quariaiy "mm TARR sas038
ellected on Degrees Conte’ ha ‘stan
Collected on Diapensaion New Lodges m0 one
(Soucetd cu wera Tee Sa Seon
‘Tout said beneiaten to G3 ton 3500
Aw previouny’peld" Denefclary—-——— TRO ae
‘oun ot, Sesoad Payment tags
|Aimrunt ld ath benedary=—— 3 Ea
|i dele sdihebnan’ tia eh RUROIINL SOROS "joao
MOST WORSHIPFUL GRAND LODGE
P AND A. My OF TEXAS OLDS
‘RECORD SMASHING MERTING AT
FORT WORTH, TEXAS, JULY 15,
My 17, 15, "10,
Statt Correspondence
Port Worth, Texas, July 15, 1818
lected Oficery
Most Worshipful HD. Winn, Grand
Master; RUW. dA. Kine, ‘Deputy
Grand Senlor Warden; RW. 8. J.
Johnson, Grand. Senior Warden; Rt
W. 0. Shelby, Grand Junlor Warden
RL Ws, Wm, MeDonald, ‘Grand. Boc-
eiary! RU W., W. D. Cain, Recording
Grand: Becretary;” Re W.’ De A. Ol
Wer, Orand Treasurer; Rt. W. RL.
Williams, Grand Chaplin; “wit W
Wat, Ceioman, Grand Lecturer; RE
W, J. W. Campbell, Grand Tile,
"in obedtence to’ the call of Most
‘worst. Grand Master HD. Witty
‘and mccording to a time honored cus
fom the ith Anmual Session ot the
Grand Lodge of Freo and Accepted
Masons ia ample form in te Grand
Masoate Temple at bleh ‘noon, "use
day. July 15, 1919,
“Shue forty-for’h’ angual evrsmunt-
ation Just” closed will x0 down tn
Iatory as the bigcest and best ‘see
fon. ‘Every available ‘neat in tho
‘Audivoriom wan occupied”
Peace, harmony and food cheer
iarked the proceeding. The election
‘wan spleed. with enthusiasm and’ Wan
‘alte Tuterestng.
"All Grand Officers re-clectod,
‘Aspect dispensation allowing 1o-
al lodges to rolnstate members for
‘$6.00 and make men for ‘$1000, ‘This
oneness Oo ee
First Day
Th frat day an voted to and
shaking and greetings. It was more
{ike a, family. reunion. “The Grand
Ofheers made thelr reports and” the
Grand” Secretary's records ‘showed
Gat thers were 1088 votes Inthe
Grand Lotge.
SRS Se Maes Sree he Se
reat of Vital Staite following
deat and birth have ben reported
Sam ‘Dookman led Monday, ly
frat Toi Meyer atrat.
‘Tay Daxter dled Tueeday Joly §
st County Par
en Andornn died Test Wedoonday
July’ at aie Pavone
‘Weary. Wiliam ied Priday- ly
«ACS Caaiy wet
rw Aunte May "Turner died Fri
any Tuy 3 nt Ale tee.
“han Refeted | Wednesday” Sly
9 ae 34 Tnalan etree
Rewben arbrourh det Weduer:
aap ily oon im rect
TKotert Buse od nt 2698 Atlanta
tree int Monday Sy 1.
Sila Brown dled at $814 Taylor
Sa sia
Second Day ]
‘The second day was devoted to the
orniiana ge runes ere
ee eenet eet
fate an" thera ai
THe tt he” Sa
eet eee tet eee
iron Rey ae
teeraeetn Sa WT Emer
Seale in sine cle a
ee Bie ies ant oe
ears oe ed ee
Fame
Takes of force.
pater oaies cnt ese tsa
Ieee seal te Ses as
Seas eel ee neta asia
seta the tot eae
rl
em. th ‘Willams ot ous
an Tada Caape ans cone eb
ses actions a ost aoien
mriatie te: bast tee
Brae lend ete ty
etapa sea corm ae
Serdar cnet ay ores
Sigeen casinos
| ‘id Dey
‘re ui day pened nih, mach
ein tt, Satta sate
TES shel wih pus nolan
Fae ets oe eel
eons Sh 2 Reems oe
aE err
Sitter vee Soomed ad roe
pty it Stee aes “a
Shona mers ative, iin
Piero oe Over
The Women's Department will
sen: Sai Reet as
Boats iene ae’ Poet
| mee
‘ae fotuving gems 3h
plated and rendered reports which
Sa cee reaps
a Eh ee
poe
pe 5a
PBs lings me fron Bh oy
rag at a pac uh an
focus Se Eran Me
ie ae mae
soe Tal, roan
int eh, ha ett
Se a tel
Sires Sara Galore aeaae
aha eater
Sig Eth Matte a cate
ely ate et
5 pei,
32s Sire teat
SG URE Sine" a
inetd Skee atm
Seu att ba am oe
Sager anchar b
Feta atl
ca, HOUR penne
iy TENGEN ean
a.
Pure lard 36% per pounds, hams
heat ati
i oa
‘Freeh Vegetables,
cout, curt Te ser pound
i Seon a tow a
BEiProscting Sean
BoM Peace as ae
EL ai Dd ae
oh er dun Ta ue pos
et
a. rac
| iain ae erm
Peseta
re Eke” atta
ng a, ee
emt Md
Shoethetet spa
Ea pia te
Hig Tot Lom, ae cal
We ie
fie wd Xe,
| yo a a er
cdc "HN al
Sg" at hth ha
pone Be
Stig nd Cte
sel AE a
Sema kOe
2, Site a Su
: i
inmjnnd 488°H 820 oe
Grants
‘THE 87TH SESSION OF THE DAL-
“TAS DISTRICT CONFERENCE OF
THE C. M. B, CHURCH. REV. J.
W, MeKINXEY, D. Dy Ll. Dy
PRESIDING ELDER.
on BY, Rav. W. Jaeis Saath: Bes.
‘70 the Dallas” Express:
satan aie tee ie Maar
‘the Dallas District C, M. H, church
ee err ee taal Cotas
3.24 Nea You gaaliy te er
saToatioe "4 Seat eset Woe
Sasa atte tsa hate Foe
Prefer ie erg
Mee ee ae eee cee ah
Suaste Rant fey eoetiog
eee OE eam a bare oe
a ntheel S ey eet
seat aan mle ‘Feme
Pat elec “coat rhs
ak ule eee ak tee ee
eh ant Dire lng wit
“delivered one of his masterly addres
satrecs Sao’ Reaeees le W
{Seal vie pain
lea eal Satna te ee
re ett h Sona BB,
rte ae tate stot
Seiae ‘eta Sees
te eects iat ast ee
ee Seine aurea erty ee
‘tort possible was afforded the dele-
[iit i. ene na pent
eT sie ue nese ak
PR Cie va at
a e"Saearcs ed fat
«ete, oem eons
Int “duet aise Ta
[tate ante oe tere.
[Reece nega Same
‘Se, vi Sandy
Base DD Dalat i, auras
Pe Seo, oss, stem
Sin Net ‘aa feee. ean
Pace ors bids rea mb
eee ence eek Caco
teat ch heh, The Cos
ee
\ot Prot, N. W. Harllee, whose ad-
|dreas Hitted the moral status of the
(Sl te rg win
caer ree” Ree eer
[Fria neste: Ceaga sea wi
(Free, Sete cea en
Jconference’ a muccess. Miss Wilson
[stent 104 iat
an aac ee Wi
ee as ve St ae
‘i ann tee bs a
Sn Eee chee of fi,
Ue auld Mes, “hd page
MOP sev, her etn wan ect
[art cleat the woman
|ihaat Sst? Catron
[Sess ater? cannes
[suet Se ere ae
[atin tires taste Dat
i Bieta tense tome
| fae ouereed fore ihe teting
tees a maine
|tiecaeltene fer tha ste
| scoters ea” Sree
eazine Sim Sena eas rate
| saat sts te ane
fe eaeen eat ie Fer
| District. also’ reached a great ser
[Bon hoa ae,
[ate Bah of ae'oat ee Di
Cee oe eateet ke
ete haa teat Sr
|nitrena el et Se Ser cay
| to." osha. comers
Binds bets ater
[tee a CMe ance
| See eats he tte
| Saeco persed tune suc
ass ce taal Then eof re
eae tate a arate oe
|b esha caaaet nan eh
Ease strat besa Wan aie
18th, to mee
| BAND _ConcaRr.
Tuly 27th Colored City Park, Corner
sata ea eater
Tse
‘What Are You Going to do to Help
sont San ule aa
owt ea
eka eee
cee
Petia Sci eee,
ines so ioente
err
sec ees
Sa Ta
mee
re arte
seat Aes
Ree ranean,
Tas
ch rover on. Decor
oo
ee a
Sunday school was well attended
with our faithtat "Superintendent.
The person of Bro, J. W. Satterwhite
STATEMENT OF ee
Ancient Order of Pilgrims —
JUNE 30, 1919 a
BALANCE SHEET, JUNE 90, 1919 3 3
‘Dobltes * a aaa
EA tae BO
ie ne! So
Heat fered Odin
tis toleatac eee
Sonne ort tad a
pW dotcesna en
‘res i
Site nated weed oe eee
Pry Ree temo mrsaiacnecreramene a.
Son coe ee ee eee
Boe Reade
Tea a
Rewrereet
Beanie Bony
tt bee ae
ee en conus ee
ecole at
etalon National 4
BORD erent BOOS
Titel isthe a
‘ett Anes
ashes:
Se tts a
pee See
ee ee
Se
tea a
TNVESTAGNT DIvERDTRION
Bes ees Be ee a
ee a ee ee
Houta Roving Gorilsios = 5a a
et ee ee
at ee ee
‘vat Home Odes and Invite
Per Cert of Assets, Actual and Contingent, to Liabilities, Actual
sna Srulneent, eer Yltatton at Seeaan Dae al Sas
‘Stuer ca eb toe ayo Paterna
‘eana Mute!-Shnared Bgtahars, Cos :
respectfully submited,
oes DAN,
suvteme mori heer,
Having ania the roe and essed ot tha Serene Wont
oro et hry ory tn te pes tate ee
% :
WW. 6 Conwat:
. PN SHuPuEN,
rae
JOHNSON CAFE
HAS MOVED FROM 837 N, CENTRAL 1)
1826 HALL, CORNER MUNGER
Where we will be glad to meet old and
"new friends. Everything kept in first
class shape. Served in connection with
meals, Ice Cream and Cold Drinks
ROBT. JOHNSON, - + - Proprietor |
| BASE BALL
SAN ANTONIO BLACK AGES ¥s DALLAS BLAGK: GIANTS
: DOUBLE HEADER :
- Sunday and Monday ;
July 27-28, At Gardner Park :
; Game Calledat 3:30;
our loyal Supertubentent, Oetvered)
to wt culite bey nabs tad
1 report Sona forthe bane. Wo
thee san fe baer
Siig. stulte ae
Sar Sunernsoent alert
Ses ethno wi or copra
ocate'end casa We Soo
ix era shrsng onde waa
tind yh te ‘Ma tn
Witee of os dene bared pe
tte, EEA heh i
UE et repre se a
os seesese te Ck oa eae
tip Soc ntl ‘rca bs
ay teihe Sauer Se Sea
ice lt int Sia hin bt
wants otal Wek
Beidath ate Spoke io By
ce AI ot Merete.
PS soed ac ahi ee.
ibe" Seta oa
ba
TN. PK. HLTH, D, Dy Paso,
ins Hern MICHEL, en
XT. munox.
te. W, Sham, Pastor,
aay aeal” vee wall aida
rte? Ua atuntanc fa, orang
teroon by Tere Gree Bue, te
‘hn :8, theme rat Berg”
ish stile eas rk as
finn chute Bene ae
tin sn, ‘naar Tt
Eafe ts ot Tend ant Ba
So ia acre a eee
Se we nin pee ri. ne
Eiaigamas: Bet tint ant 8
ing sermon, by tie pastor, text 1th
Ibe ina ty ie psa xt
Posted te Plwy‘at Cy
ace E57 Cou
one!
Sao tar 4000 rally om th
nha
{third Bandar. sep, Reporte:
‘PAGE THREE
SARE CRANES De ae
ner Mio, Pt
scneoaeeaema
nee
rotted ok
rican eae
ah ere ae
ee eee
eee eee
Soc ee
i eons
Le George, baptised. two. children
ane em
Se eee
ee ee
caren eee
eras ee
Se, Gaara «ae
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PAGE FOUR
THE DALLAS EXPRESS
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SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1919.
ENLIGHTENED HIS HOPES.
As a rule the colored man thinks too much about death and the hereafter. For this we blame the religious system of which he is the victim. Most of the songs are of the grave. Most of the sermons are about hell and damnation. More time is spent at a grave or a cemetery. The most awful descriptive language known to the human tongue is marshaled together and is accompanied with the things above mentioned with other practices equally worthy of censure, the "why", as it concerns the colored grave view is important of time. There are reasons why the time has been spent to make the grave a paramount issue with the colored man. One of these reasons is the absence of time, and as a natural consequence, those things which belong to time, would to him be less important. The absence of time, and as a natural consequence of the masses, has served as a guarantee that these same masses could be made the victims of the clues and limbs of those who sorrow
A like course is parured respecting movements born among colored folks, because we care to inform themselves. Instead of the meeting, or getting in touch with the moving spirit, some wise white man, the nigger, comes to the importance of the servants, what the "niggers are doing with or about such and such a thing." Being told, the nigger asks, "What is the chary that his servant knows the will and with of every one of the 3,000 colored folks in the city, and with of colored man and the world that know the best friends of the Southern black man are southern white man. These niggers know "knowing the darky better than he knows himself," and asks the outside world to leave it to them to map out the man which should be accorded him. Gentlemen, you are wrong and know it. Keep in mind that we live in a world where the consent must be given with the consent of the government, and that consent should be accepted. This done, the race must grow to a great scale, the race must grow to a great scale. In this the situation will be heard. A condition and a set of conditions can be and must be
A BOOK WHICH WILL LIVE.
U. B. F. AND S. M. T.
35th Grand Lodge Session Meets Monday July 28, 1919, Victoria, Tex. W. F. Bloedo, Grand Master. M. McGaudie, Grand Secretary. After July 28, the General Master $50,000 in force, 10,000 men and women members besides children. Pald $100,000 to beneficiaries last year. After July 28, the General Master $100,000 above liabilities. Organized 85 years ago by Negroes for Negroes, the grand master calls the General Master session Rev. B. F. Parks will deliver the welcome address. Attorney Allan McGaudie will deliver the General Mass Meeting the 31st of July, Dr. T. R. Bryant will deliver the principal address. Many prominent members will be in attendance and will speak.
KICK MORE'
The trains—when the conduct of the crew is reprehenible, the equipment bad or inadequate or the station unsavanty or lacking in comfort, rehearsal, or training. M. W. Dogan, Marshall, Texas. Say nothing to the crew or station agent. For God's sake quit quarrelling with the train nor rate the train nor make up the equipment. Don't talk to anybody. Write Dogan. He will do the rest. Your Paneer—When you go to post office Express, don't have a row with the postmaster and ruin the reputation of the publishing company. Write Dallas Express. 2600 Swiss Ave., Dallas, Texas. Don't write the paper. We will do the rest.
STUDIED CONTEMPT
"John Williams, the black," the nigger joke Thomas. "Bell, the negro," the white. "Common phrases to be seen in Southern newspapers, where anything is written concerning the Afro-Americans, the power to put an end to much of their power to put an end to much of the pressure of studied concern. The pressure of studied concern from the newspaper which contains such phrases. When money talks, all the nigger men understand and often obey.
UNION OF THE ROYAL FAMILY
H. & H. OF FRIENDSHIP, TO
BUY RESAL ESTATE.
At the late grand lodge session held at Corsicanus, the above named organizer appointed the following committee to loaf after the location and other thineers. C公会员: H. E. Herron, W. E. Herron, J. P. Gunter and S. R. Newcome.
GET THE DIFFERENCE.
While going from "big gate" to "big gate" curtsing the white race, remember that all white men are not enemies. There are good white men, and good black men and bad colored men. Before you begin to "cause", get the difference.
A SOLDIERS RECOMPENSE.
A corporal in the United States army receives per year $389 in England, $150 in Germany, $5 in Russia, $5 in Italy, $77 in Turkey, $10.
Lost we forget, "the world has made a democracy safe" in Texas, which is not worth "d——" for the colored man.
Go to church tomorrow. You may teach your boy, you, but you can not make it hurt you.
LITTLENESS OF A GREAT NEWS
PAPER-TILE WORK OF RACE
PREJUDICE.
We are indebted to the Houston Informer, a live, wide-awake weekly for the information that in a population of eight or nine cars, by the Houston Post, in which $20,000 worth of prices are to be given away, consisting of eight motor cars, ten pianos ten diamond rings ten phone cases, ten watches, but white subcriber cards can participate. The announcement in the Houston Daily Post reads as follows: "The Houston Post will cover 16 years of age, either married or single, of good character and of the GAUCHASAN RACE." Covered people in Houston and different parts of Texas who have for years and do now take the Houston Post, many prefer to remain to be seen if they have the common sense to write the Post to stop their copy. If a colored newspaper should discriminate against people who would not only stop subscribing or otherwise supporting it, but they would go into the courts and attack the Post for its admission as a public service enterprise.
THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS, SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1919.
CALL OF THE REPUBLICAN COUNCIL
Less than a year away from the next Republican National Convention which will name the standard bearers in the coming presidential campaign, Mr. Trump will announce his nomination in Texas or elsewhere about the Republican party, will be food for thought.
On the morning of July 9, the Democrat newspaper printed the following. We print heading and all. It says:
Statement Says Democrate in Large Numbera Flocking to Republi can Party.
Fort Worth, Texas, July 8.—A call for a meeting of the committee of the Texas republican council was issued today for next Saturday, July 10. The chairman. The meeting will be for the purpose of planning a systematic canvass of the state for membership in the council, and to arrange for a thorough organization of the party throughout the state. The materials received at headquarters of the council indicate a general and pronounced desire for two parties in Texas," Mr. Littleton stated today. He said that demonstrators in large numbers are flocking into the republican party. The council is going to be a democrats and proglodal republicans into the republican party and we are going to put up a fight in 1920 that will put Texas into the republican members of the committee are C. C. Littleton, chairman, Fort Worth, Lee, Houston, Eugen Holey, Sequim, Fort Worth and Paul Gage, Dallas.
The Texas Republican Council is a new side attraction to the State Republican main show, we take it. Like the Republican main show, we also have a at late com, advice, will turn out to be one of the things it can use to win. We are flocking to all of any story intended to make you believe that "Texas Democrats in large numbers, are flocking to the Republican side." So far as the Dallas Express can find out the "Council" is "Lilly White," we are flocking to the white Democrats will be attracted to the Republican party by p-ing it of the negro, at least so far as an concern is raised. We are flocking to the bury away back in 1892, when Jim Newcomb, H. F. M. MacGregor, N. B. Moore, W. H. A. Hawen and other Republican leaders will be flocking to all white in management) and stormed the National Republican convention, no personage was present, all of Ohio man of the Committee on Credentials and told the Texas Lilies that the National Convention was a party of princel
The cause is known. There are perhaps today 100,000 qualified candidates, whose Republicanism, revolves at the un-Republican methods now in vogue in this state. This leaves some un-Republican candidates for Revenue only and Iudernal Republicans who vote the National Republican ticket in order to be in line with the true white Republicans and the negro Republicans will never vote the ticket and obey the party mandates. The Republican Party will be lifted above the low level of race considerations. The Chairman Phil E. Beer and National Committee H. T. Macegrew, should call off the Texas Republican Council. It is an unnecessary effort to do cannot be done except by to do cannot be done except by the State Executive Committee. If that committee was re-organized, red-blooded working Republicans, whatever is needed to make the party grow in Texas they would have
An effort under the direction of the State Executive Committee should be made to arouse the Republican masses, to encourage the formation of the party in prefect, county, district, and state, should go forth to the end that the certain clamour of the party is fulfilled out the dress and moth which today, in eating away the vitals of the party, Nobody knows better than the State Chairman and National Committee, but bend and unhelt, the good work will begin, and when it ends at the polls in November,1920, the party will be in the 2000 votes in Texas. It can be done.
SPECIAL TO AGENTS OF THE THE DALLAS EXPRESS
We are mailing your papers in plenty time for them to be received by the Post Office. Many should receive them Friday afternoon. We intend to make a thorough effort to minimize delay in handling the papers by the Post Office. We can without your co-operation write to Mrs Well. Let her send a personal letter to the Dalian Express telling us the exact hour on day on which you receive this issue July 25, of The Dalian Express. MANAGEMENT.
THE MIRROR OF PUBLIC OPINION
WHAT THEY THINK OF IT.
One of the most interesting studies during these reconstruction days is that of the returning and the first fight of the war: "typical a statement, and as tenure, as we have seen in the message sent a chum by an aviator officer, leaving France for this side: 'Dear Pelot: Deluded, demobilized, delighted.' That nearly tells it, though not fully. A returning man was asked what he would take to France, and wouldn't take $10,000 for my experience; and I wouldn't give a dime to him. Most of them awave that it was an experience worth much more than it cost, and awave, with equal distinctions. Those who feared that universal militarism nation, with our young men eager for war, for war's sake, were needlessly alarmed. Indeed the men seem to have become the nation's best assurance that it need not fear, for another generation at least, any
The prize fight has considerably more of glamor to the ringside spectacle than the strenuous desperately to last out the ten rounds and collect his little purse. We never knew a professional fighter who would have been able to return the soldier will remain returned if he has his say about it. The American army today offers a number of candidates, than it ever did before. And this is true, to a greater degree. If the Kaiser had full control of Germany he would have slight chance of stirring his people into another war, but they were back in all his old-time power it would be enough to push ten million peasants into the hell of war. Otherwise they would
THE NEGRO FARMER
There are millions of acres of fertile land available to negroes in the south, but the challenge of a small farm practical for any well paid wage earner upon the easy payment plan, but there is no need to pay a wage. The prices of farm land in many sections the period and the relatively low will increase greatly the number of people who can become a farmer, is like the white man of other classes than the well to do who makes farming a fad in the country and followed the plow in his youth. Jocker Washington gave his race good advice when he declared that he would place for the Southern negro, but admonition sends to the soil from cities, to remain there as broadwave color. -Louisville Courier-Journal.
COST OF LIVING AND PRODUCING.
The people of the country endured high food prices during the war good-natured, but confident, expected to be relieved from the turn to normal condition—by which is meant price levels approximating the budget before the outbreak of the war.
That they are grievously disappointed that there has been, on man-made grounds, a significant cost of living is apparent enough. Scarcely a newspaper comes from the press but what reflects in some war newspapers is that those who pack and distribute pointment/indication and resentment generally prevailing in the exections of those who pack and distribute food. As a rule, prices are well up to the highest point reached during the war and even now the prices have been slight reductions, in others advances have occurred. And in the general discussion caused by existing problems, the high prices heard that high prices may be looked for as a regular thing.
It is not easy to complain to fail to take many things into consideration in criticising profiters. The high cost of one thing affects the cost of another. All prices are interrelated. The cost of medicine, clothing, plows, government, cigarettes, lumber and everything upon food prices, and vice versa.
Certainly rent does. If somebody were to ascertain just what proportion chants went into rent, it would be found probably that volume of business was paying as high rentals as any merchantss of the world. And yet if you inquired of the high rent-collecting company, you would find other and other offsets that leave him but a moderate profit from his invested money. There is probably a disposition to exert too high a profit along the chants and other rented inflation, with all great high
and ascending, and all costs trending upward, one can not safely depend upon the more moderate rate of profit arising from the more moderate rate of condition generally are stable. The public must remember that everything is manifest in the cost of food, of clothing, of part of it, the public schools, the churches, the luxuries of life, travel, light, water, pleasures, the剧院, repairs, illnesses, extravagance, waste, food, and the body could trace a loaf of bread back to the grain of wheat in the field and ascertain just how many individuals would eat it to him, directly and indirectly, it would astonish one to know just how many thousands had done something toward making that loaf of bread. The Post is not attempting to locate the responsibility of the high prices, the prices, would reveal that it is practically a universal responsibility. But that the fact presents a problem of far-reaching importance. Our cost of living is responsible for our wage levels and other conditions which make the cost of all forms of production in the United States ex-
A food problem confronts nearly all the great nations of the world. At the end of the century, Italy, England and even portions of the former Russian empire are dealing sturdy with the food problem. The problem is that prices do not force down prices not only because it is a measure of safety to prevent the spread of disease, but also because in the ability of the people to obtain enough for sustenance, but because in the great war the nation that can produce at the lowest cost will be the nation to regain its prosperity quicker, cheaper and food prices continue, with all other price levels following the course of the war. It is not likely to be grounded upon a foundation of economic stability and substantivity that will enable us to produce many lines, and even such advantages they are not fraught with trouble and difficulty. This comes by the competition in countries which have been able to return to normal conditions of production and
There are many proposals pending in Washington looking to a forcible capitol to come of them. The great controllers of staple products seem to have the situation well in hand. The government has been summers to have the vast stores of food and shoes the government accumulated for the now demobilized army has been built. But that these supplies must not be marked in such a way as to affect existing out of town food and cost of production problems are serious, and if they are not fraught with trouble and are not signs are misleading. Houston Post.
BRAINS, NOT BOMBS MUST
SOLVE THE RACE
PROBLEM IN CHICAGO
When a Negro family moves into a block in which the rest of the residents white, while one sets one base, the other sets the door, what is the result? A nasty job for the police, bitter feeling accumbent among both races, and a lack of respect for the rights implanted, but NOTHING in the way of curing the situation. Chicago, as everywhere, prohibits the police, you CANNOT REMOVE A SOCIAL SITUATION WITH DYNAMITE.
The anger of the white residents of the block is natural because the presence of the negro resident causes a dispute on the patio and a slump in home values.
No one likes to lose the accumulations in his home.
No one feels ever, is within his legal rights and from his viewpoint he is doing the meritorious thing of taking his family into a better house, giving his children "a better chance than he had." That is race progress. In the bombs, beating, baiting and killing of children, either side. "The course of human events" is not changed in that way.
There are about 100,000 Negroes in Chicago, leaders of the race estimate. The labor opportunities made for the Negro community have varied, and a war has caused a rush of negroes from the South. These are skilled, some of them have plantation ideas. They have earned wages, men and women and children, far in excess of what they earn. They have learned the ways of living. They cannot go back, they protect. That is not human nature. Negro leaders of education and business have learned the ways of living that the negro is here to hear. The $3,000,000 whites of Chicago have have a problem and a swerer in Chicago has as much "war" races made this problem and gave it to the world to solve. The 100,000 Negroes in Chicago have as much "war" races made this problem and gave it to the world to solve. The 100,000 Negroes in Chicago have as much "war" races made this problem and gave it to the world to solve. Through the Almighty made the races different and distinct, and interceded them to remain so. He put them all on the same earth. There must be a plan by which they can live on this earth.
It must be that there is in the minds of the thinkers and planners of both the United States and China white and colored men in Chicago enough judgment, and foresight, SOUND SENSE from which the plan was made. The race problem is a Chicago problem. It calls for solution, not violence for brains, not bombs; for the THINKI RS of both races GET TOGETHER, and solve this problem to the best interests of both white and colored men in human progress—Chicago American.
OLD REGULAR
Discoverers a Big Southern White Man Engaged in Doing Much Little Talk - Attacks the Colored Man - Birdseye View of Masonry - Observations at Waco, Itasca and Terrell - Don't Laugh
(Staff Correspondence.)
(Small Correspondence)
Dallas, Tex., July 21, 1919.
A Note of Discard.
I chanced to see in a leading white daily newspaper printed in a North Texas city, what purported to be a report of a speech made several days before the Battle of Lexington, at Lexington, Texas, before a picnic crowd of several thousand people, among whom were a number of soldiers. The wounded were intended as a rebuke to the recent special session of the Texas Legislature for its part in the recent suffrage battle, the members of the legislature of having trampled and spat upon that for which Southern soldiers fought and died. The soldiers were war veterans that "if some of the things that happened in Texas and in this country while you were fighting, your fight for liberty and democracy will have been in vain." He declared that a campaign should be inaugurated.
Mr. Henry read from the Texas Constitution the declaration that "all people, regardless of race, people, etc." "and yet," he said, "on the face of this Texas Constitution a Legislature that that the answer is, "You are not voters on the woman suffrage question defied those instructions, scorned the women suffrage question and the aid of New Jersey, New York and other States they would give Texas women suffrage anyhow." "No more discreditable a thing was ever done by a legislature. We represent the people of Texas who themselves up to act in a manner superior to the people what has become themselves." What has become of life-government and State's rights if a Legislature chooses and flout the will of the people? Every one of these men should be retired to private life and never have to work, for the people such a
Mr. Henry said that during the revolution and during the Civil War Women made sacrifices, but they did not because they helped the war end, but the war ended. But today we are told women should be allowed to vote because they helped the war end, and are going to elect Legislatures like the one we have at Austin now, I say God pity the State that has full women rights. He said that during the woman's suffrage debate at Austin he heard a woman say, "We have a gallery say, 'State's rights.' I am tired of State's rights. To hell with State's rights, it has got nothing to do with State's rights." Calls Colored Man "Nigger." "Then," said Mr. Henry, "I walked down the capitol grounds past that building, and I saw that today that says destroy State's rights, that says you shall not be allowed to vote on the question or if you want to be allowed to die or obeyed. I still believe in State rights. I still believe the Con. will not be allowed to not only what they believed we right but for what was absolutely and unqualified right. I still believe a white man is not harder a nigger and I am going to be
He appealed to the people to "have a clean up in Texas," to elect to the Legislature men who are genuinely interested in legal and constitutional bill allowing soldiers to vote, and then "fearing the result, the Governor called a special session, and there wasn't one of them who would vote." He also said it was important although it was different when they thought there would be an ocean between them and the soldiers. "Risks of the Legislature in attending to "bring woman suffrage in by the back door with the help of New Jersey and other States after the people of Texas went away" to it enter by the front door." If I had not read this speech in a reliable newspaper, I should have known that the people of Texas will have to say against white women voting, I leave it untouched. He delivered himself of orthodox republican doctrine, when he dealt realistically with the will of the people.
As for his reference to the "white man" being a little better than a black man, he was voicing the Henry of the worlds of the New York World, during the war, to a southern white man who was voicing the Henry of the World. The World said: "Whoever thinks that he is better than a colored man, he is on the Western front in France." It is late in the day of civilization to order or any American to give utterance to a person attributed to Mr. Henry. We are now a world power, having been born alive and baptized in blood, we are now a common place as the common citizen of a common country. As we, a year ago, were standing on the north side of no North, no south no white, no black in the effort to make the world safe for Democracy, let us not forget that we are necessary to preserve that Democracy. Of course, I know that there are men like Mr. Henry, who were born in the past and who always have and will provide us with all we will provide us seen fit to out the brittle threads of their unprofitable lives, they will move in the future, still live in the past.
But I also know that we are break
ing with the past, however, dear its memories, and we must measure to the end of the requirements. The world is standing on tip-toe, and we must stay at home, for upon internal justice will largely rest the value of her character and in
Mr. Henry, you have sounded a note of discord in which there is no suggestion of the tune: "Americans," the panned banter. "Let have peace!"
WACO. TEXAS.
Leaving Corsica I went to Waco, and spent three hours last Saturday, the 12th, looking in on the women of the Women of the A. M. E. Church. I saw a woman's meeting, but the men were not in attendance of motives. Beginning with President Bishop Jones, there were two others—Bishop Chapel and another where we were meeting. We were men containing the timber out of which bishops are made; I refer to the priest in the Church and Rev. Dr. J. John M. Vorick of Missions, Mississippi. And maybe there were others, but we were not. Preschers and many laymen were in evidence. There was Dr. J. W. R. Hanley of York. There was Dr. Arthur Stanley Jackson, whose journeys are country-wide, but who still manages to get to the women of the York. There was Lulu B. Kinchion, by the Phython Rev. Abingdon, Br. McDade, Pastor Fasson, Bowl and a member of others still in attendance all there lending light to the elements.
The names of many mighty women, the names of mortal were there and busy with their mouths, saying things which will make them immortal, singing songs which will make them all, I will not fret them by naming any. They are an asset, without which the great A. M. E. Church parable struggles to lift mankind.
ITASCA, TEXAS.
I arrived in Iscaa about an hour before sunset Saturday evening, July 12. I was invited there by Rev. F. D. Leal, the president of the Business League, S. L. Shaw and F. M. Grimes and secretaries. At night the meeting was held at the A. M. E. Church and a small audience came to support business enterprises now in tact and the establishing of others in order that the youth might be empowered to make a difference by their accomplishments. The colored people of Iscaa are realizing the importance of this step, as is attested to the places of business which they operate.
TERRELL. TEXAS.
IN FORT WORTH WITH THE MASONS
I arrived in Pantherville, Tuesday, July 24. I left the week with the Free and Accepted Bible, the Most Worshipful Grand Lodge of New York, and the condensed report of the history and session which records a membership of over 10,000 souls. Masonry is marching.
DON'T LAUGH
If Economy is the road to Wealth,
more persons should walk therein.
A modest girl is Mabel Hunt,
She is a bachful lass;
They tell me she won't dress in front
of any look-elas.
OH!
"I have called for the rent," said the Landlord, when the Little Girl opened the door. "Mamma went out and forgot to leave the landlord. The little girl. "So you know, little girl not to leave it?" asked the Landlord. "Because she told me before she became a mother."
FACT
There'd be no coin left, I'm afraid.
Of cash there'd be a death.
If all of us were being paid
What we think we are worth.
SHE SAID THAT SHE WAS GONE
SHE SAID THAT SHE WAS GONE
A poor woman who had bought houses, the installment houses, found herself annoyed by the collecting agents, who came frequently to her door in pairs.
To outwit them and get a little reward, she said to Mary, a little tat: "Tell me what happened at not home." The much annoyed one then proceeded to another room in the house, just in time to escape the graze and approaching unwilling collector. The collector seeing the child only, began:
"Mary, where's mama?"
"Mary, mama gon!"
"Collector, then did you go?"
"Child—hen she shed you comine!"
"Collector—'How do you know?'
(Continued on page 6).
ATHENS.
Athens, Texas, July 17, 1919.
To M. Miller and readers of The
Daily News,
the revival meeting was eager
attended, but we were not able
to meet the people.
Many were turned away, but the
interest ran bigh from beginning to
end. We were asked to write
lifted up Christ, several accessions
and more than $10,000 was
received. Texas, is courteous and liberal. I
was entertained in the following
party: Bidle Lee, Mrs. Granger, Mrs. Miler,
Mr. and Mrs. Williams and Mr.
Bidle Lee, Mrs. Granger, Mrs. Miler,
Mr. and Mrs. Williams and Mr.
Bidle Lee, Mrs. Granger, Mrs. Miler,
pleasant, Rev. E. W. Booker played a
complexion part in making the
praise cannot be said of the pastor,
Rev. S. Stephens. He is a Christian,
praise cannot be said of the pastor,
elevate the church and community.
And should have the esteem of all
people, but duty and urgent services
claimed our attention at our own
leave, but duty and urgent services
claimed our attention at our own
the best of feelings and were com-
pared $85.00 above expenses, after
other expenses $17.00.
You in services.
REV. F. K. WHITE
ROCKWALL
Rockwall, Texas, July 24 - Sunday, school as usual Sunday morning. Attendance fair, Rev. R. H. Randle, Miss Mose Washington of Dallas Miss Mose Washington of Dallas accepted the position as pianist for the church. Sick list: Mrs. E. Morrison. Mrs. Ellis and Mrs. Carwell have returned from Sunday School. Convocation
GAINESVILLE
Gainesville, Texas, July 24. This city witnessed the one of the heaviest crimes Friday in years. Bridges had washed away, fences torn down, shocked grain in the fields damaged, washed away, fences washed away. Thousands of dollars worth of damage was done in wholesale and other business houses by the Northwestern District Sunday School and B. Y. P. Convention met in a church with a large and intelligent delegation. They went over the top both spiritually and financially. Everyone went away feeling good. Mrs. T. E. Y. Pollard of Wofle City is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Moore. Mrs. Hattie Harris of Pilot Point is visiting her sister, Mrs. Browell.
WILLS POINT.
Wills Point, Texas, July 24–Sept. Thomas of cerell spent a few days in Miami, where both have just returned from over sea. Misses *Arizona* and Ruby *Cantata*. Misses *Arizona* and Ruby *Cantata* visit with relatives in Dallas, Saturday. Mr. Payno of Edgewood spent a few days in Miami, where many friends revert to learn of his misfortune of losing his sight.
Mrs. Cliff Williams of Hallsville is here visiting relatives.
Rev. Mallard was at his post Sunday. All services were well attended. Private C. O. C. T. Corneilus is visiting his alma. Private M. A. Mr. B. Alma. Mist Katherine Faulk and Mr. Foster Mathis motored to Dallas last Wednesday.
CLEBURNE.
Clareburn, Texas, July 24. The barbecue and picnic in honor of honor of the late Mrs. John L. August 28th. Every citizen is requested to fall in line and do their duty for the boys. The baby, Lois, and Mrs. John L.肥胖, a light baby, Mrs. Hattie Brown, and Mrs. John L. hundred dollars recently from her deceased aunt, Mrs. Sue Smith has purchased a house and lot in East Dublin, Ireland, where she is visiting in Wichita Falls, KS. Nat Prince is conducting a revival at Roma, Texas. Mrs. F. Wright and C. D. Hunt attended the board meeting at the Mansion, visiting relatives in Oklahoma, Mrs. M. A. Taylor of Sherman is the guest of M. Righther. Mrs. LulFor is visiting relatives in South Texas. Clemene Jackson, Lizzie Fleming, Mary Akina, Mr. Jackson, and Mrs. LulFor attended the Convocation meeting at Dallas. Charles Alexander of Waxahachie was in the city visiting his family. Joe Conner of Pt. Worth was the guest of his aunt Sunday. Mrs. Matilda Sample, Mrs. Mary Jane are visiting their daughter at
THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS, SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1919.
SOMETOWNS IN TEXAS
Richard Gee, Jr., spent Sunday in Okihoma City to play ball. Mrs. Ola Wilkins entertained the
Mrs. Ola Williams entertained the
Ladies City club last Saturday.
JACKSONVILLE.
Jacksonville, Texas, July 24-The city has been blessed with good rales. Miss Mooseley is visiting the city this week. Miss Lewin, Mineral Wells; Miss Ada Hemba is attending the normal in Dallas; Miss Hugh Shulton. Miss Cora and Mrs Roy Hemba have purchased a Voeckler home in the place were sorry to hear of the death of Mrs Jan Porter an old resident of Jacksonville. Miss Artz, was buried in Mineral Wells.
CLARKSVILLE.
Zon Traveler's Junior Mission Circle met with Mora. Rena Parish Seminary, where she received censure "was Joy in Christian service" all speak briefly on the subject. Plans and donation to assist students in the school. B. Y. P. U. Convention at Cooper's A dainty repast was visited. Visitors: Mr. Moore, brother of Zon.
PITTSBURG.
Pittsburgh, Texas, July 21. The pulpit at Pine Beach was vacant Sunny Ridge in Cast County, Sunday school was well attended, but was late due to the rain.
A. H. Daniels was at his post at St. Beauland.
R. H. Durden and Scott were all at their places. Every pastor in his best to have a model Mrs. Spira Richmond went to the school, July 11. She will take a special treatment. She was accompanied by her husband, Mr. Richmond and his physician. The Rt. Rev. E. H. Moore, general superintendent, who lives in Holly Springs. Miss. preached at St. Beauland on the 10th mat, his sermon is not only a great success, it is only regretted that the entire Nero population of our city preached to Mr. G. W. Perry stopped over a few days with his sister, Mrs. Sarah White, who in France wrote a route for Boley, Okla., his former home before he was drafted into the army. While in France he wrote a book published in the Oklahoma Black Dispacade, which before paper he was
Prof. Terry carries with him a handkerchief in cash to the amount $100. Soldiers returned: Private Jerry Adams, Maurice Harrah, Jr. H. Moore and J. B. Adams has returned from overseeing his battalion, hitting his mother, Catherine Harrah.
WHITEWRIGHT.
Whitehight, Texas, July 24—Jay G. E. Patterson was at his post, the Mountaineer, on account of on account of Mr. B. H. Henderson, Mr. M. Malisle C. H. Henderson, Mr. M. Malisle the delegates for the Sunday school. Mr. A. L. Baker and Della school. Mr. A. L. Baker and Della were attending the Grand Lodge. Mr. B. Galet Gallowell and broke the knee. Mr. B. Galet Gallowell and broke the knee, is doing nicely. Mr. and C. Murks were in the
Jim Gatewood is home again. He
dim Gatewood is home again. He
for some time in the training camp.
He is back in Newport. News, Va.
at 10 a.m. on Monday. Campers
at 1 o'clock on Newport. Pavement.
Rev. W. B. Bolden and wife moved
him, W. B. Bolden from Hague, Prof. E.
H. Baker was hired to work for a nice
want him to come back, they love
him. Miss Alice also gave a nice
Yatsa from over sea.
Mr. Cook an others from Sherman,
Mr. Cook an others from Dunson;
Willie Lee visited Mrs. Carline
Marshall.
B. H. H. Henderson, delegate for
the Sunday school made a fine
report.
Mrs. Salle Sawyer was called to
HEARNE.
Mr. R. M. Middleton and son, of Detroit, Mich. stopped, on his way with his mother, Mrs. Pruner, while on his way from Gonzales, where he
Mr. W. Williams of Rockdale, spent Sunday evening with Miss L. B. Butter.
Mr. J. A. Forward returned from Ft. Worth, Grand Lodge.
MINERAL WELLS
LUFKIN
Lukfin, Texas, July 24—Owing to condition of the weather Sunday, C. M. E. church Sunday, though class reports, were very good. C. M. E. church Sunday, class B by Miss Marks; class C by Miss R. A. Reagor. The lesson was reviewed with T. Reagor. T. Reagor sup. Supt. J. L. Engram, class B by Miss Marks; service was postponed for the day to co-operate with Good Will Baptist Church, Supt. J. L. Engram, Lecture by Rev. W. T. Reagor. Carrie Lindsey of Shepherd, traveling directress of the Gen. Bowen Baptist H. M. S. lecture to Quill W. Church, Sunday, $2.90 and at First Baptist Monday afternoon. She made many good and interesting service. guest of Mrs. Mitchell. Daniel Hicks and Wille Shelby are at home again after seeing several months' service over sea. Garett has returned from Dallas, where she has been attending the summer normal. She was accompanied home by her mother. Mr. W. S. Johnson's home was completely destroyed by fire at a
Lufkin has ten new readers of Dallas Express.
If you fail to see the agent Mr. S. W. Booker on the streets at call Mr. R. L. Long's cold drink stalker, you will not see Novella Hulcotb left Monday for San Antonio, her future home her husband, Mr. John Holt. She will follow her later, Slick listed; Mr. Willie Roberts, Mrs. Martha Johnson.
The whereabouts of my mother, Mrs. Josie Baker, in Tyer Texas, Texas. She will follow me, write Mrs. Climnie Mitchel, Lufkin, Texas.
Prof. J. M. Hurd ex-principal of Pineland school was the guest of Mr. Martha Baker, and she also appended Prof. Hulcotb as a colleague to our city after listening to an address delivered to our Sunday
FERRIS.
Ferris, Texas, July 34, Rev. Miles, with his high school Sunday, the Sunday School, died at his home in dued and was buried on the 16th by People Understandment. He was in town in town.
OLD REGULAR.
(Continued from page 4).
Child—"Cause, when she saw you comin', she went in the other room and told me to tell you that she was not here."
AN ANSWERED PRAYER.
Rev. D. George Lee, who, during his life time and pastorate in and around the known colored Baptist divines in the country, had many good stories to tell. One open a time the said Dr. Lee was pastoring a congregation in Maryland. In time the legislature had passed a law day morning soon after its passage, the familiar figure of the aged preacher was pastoring in the passenger car in his accustomed place, not noticing the passing of the law made necessary. The conductor came to take the ticket, he knowing Dr. Lee said, "What question the astonished minister asked the law, and then again, told him to leave the car. He admired abiding, the conductor retired, in a few minutes returned accompanied by two hanky white members of the crow. One take him from behind—soon they had Dr. Lee on the left, the conductor pulling from behind—soon they had Dr. Lee on the left, the conductor pulling from behind—soon they had Dr. Lee astonished by their gesture. He prayed the circumstances was so much out of the ordinary, until all the white
WEATHERFORD
HONEY GROVE.
Honey Grove, Texas, July 24--Rev. Freeman pastor, pastor Eighth St. M. E. church preached an excellent lecture, Pendleton, who has been in Glamourville for a few days to attend the Sunday school convention has returned. Mr. J. H. Taylor and Miss Sallie Nickens left Sunday for Waco, Texas to attend the Grand Lodge. Mr. R. Swancy preached to a crowded town.
Mrs. Edna, Araude was called to Parisa to meet her husband, Mr. Jim Pradee, who has returned from Florida. Mr. Edd Johnson is very ill also. Mr. Eugene Burke, who made a gym trip to Clarksville, Texas, Miss Hassie Harris, Mr. George Davis, Mrs. J. Foster, Mr. C. Heart were in Paris, Sunday. Miss Olivia Pollard of Wolfe City in in our town, Mrs. W. J. Taylor, Mrs. W. J. Taylor, a man died at his home, July 17, many mans died in window, Texas, July 19. Many friends grew close to Mr. W. W. Wells of D. Co. 331 Engineer came in Tuesday from Camp Bowie, after he was back to St. Justus Yokum and Mrs. Willie May Faller gave a party Tuesday night 15 of July in honor of Justus Yokum and Sam Well who was also present. Sam Well will Wednesday for
Miss Mable Haynes left Sunday, for Waco, Texas. Miss Holloway and Miss Mattle Maney were down Sunday from Bonham, Texas. The sermon at all of the churches attended Sunday and Sunday night. Mrs. Mable Wallace and sister left Saturday for Pittsburgh, Texas, to
LADONIA
Ladonia, Texas, July 24. -Mr. J. A. Henderson and wife attended the Sunday school convention at Bonham's Church. Mr. T. C. Common attended the Masonic Grand Lodge at Fort Worth. He reports a grand session.
Mr. Loney Clark left Monday for
FACTS WORTH KNOWING ABOUT
CHICAGO'S BLACK BELT
FACTS WORTH KNOWING ABOUT
CHICAGO'S BLACK BELT
(Continued from page 1).
then a life insurance company and a bounced loan association have been involved in the neighborhood where counted sixty-one neighborhood agencies of demobilization have been undergoing years under NGR auspices a cafe, a drug store, a laundry, a bakery, a shoe repair shop, a tailor shop, a school, a toy store, told, twenty-four constructive agencies entered the context against sixty-one neighborhood and the deepen. Many Big Organizations.
The Colored people of Chicago seem to have more big organizations than the publicity than any other group in the city. They have, for instance, membership in North America in the Olive Baptist church at South Park avenue and East 11th street. It has been called the "ciliacelle" local of the Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen's Union, at turnover upward of 9,000 Colored workmen are affiliated. The People's Movement club has 2,000 active and 0,000
There is apparent an active home buying, home owning movement, with the Colored people coming in with the new infux are making preparations for the boll weevil in the famous Negro song, "This'll Be My Home." In nearly all circles in Chicago is the most liberal all around town in the country, and the constitution of Illinois the most important in the country. And so if they can't make Chicago a good place for their people to live they can go. Business, jobs, politics, their hope and outlook in the "black belt" are topics to be considered in the series of articles.
Wichita Falls. Some hold his regular services Sunday.
Mrs. Lola Common and Mrs. Young visited their sick sister at Pecan, GBI. Mr. Monroe Jackson, of Fort Worth, is visiting friends here, Mr. King and family. Mr. Roy of Taylor is here visiting friends. Timothy Brown of Dallas and there are visiting relatives. Misses Lisa McKinney, Mary Carter and Mimie Stone,失宠 for Waco to Kneights and Daughters of Tabor. Reporter for Waco for its regular appearances. Mrs Vernon King of Dallas is in the interest of vocal and instrumental Mr. Jaffes Boyd and wife are the proud parents of twins **boy** and **girl**. Mr. Sam Dickerson, Branham Prout, Ray Morrison have returned from France. Mamie Venson (Dickerson) of South McAlister, the daughter of Olford Dickerson died and was an inspiration to Mr.
TEMPLE.
Temple, Texas, July 24—Mr. C. A Scott of Chicago, was in the city on July 24. He was overt Owenton Hyman's company of Chicago. Rev. Barber was successful in his rally Sunday, raising $215,885. Mr. Barber was the Wayman's Chapel A. M. E. church. The Famous orchestra played in Sergeant H. E. Rice from ocean has gone to Joplin, M. to accept a job as foreman of coal mine operations.
MME. LUELIA MCDANIELS, SCIEN-
TIFIC WORK OF SCALP MAS-
SAGE. A MODERN WONDER.
Will promote a full growth of beautiful hair. one treatment will start your hair to growing, if you have dandruff, tetter or any disease of the scalp, need for a full treatment. My Dandruff Remedy never fails to cure Dandruff or Tetter no matter how long standing.
If you have a tight stubborn scab a circular is sent with each treatment. You can just use your just how to make your scab loose and facilitate the hair will
Address:
MMe. Luella McDaniels.
2302 E. Morse SL.
Greenville, Texas.
PETER H.
Offices: Carne Ave. and Boll St.
DR. J. M. DODD, physician and Surgeon. Blood. Sputum. Urine. humined. 206 William. near Henry Phone 1623. North Belt, South Belt and Hickory caves. tours: 9 to 12 a.m. to 8 p.m. 7 to 9 p.m.
DR. GEORGE LYRTLE, Veterinarian. day and night. Office 124 Willow St. House. Office 124 Underlea's Underlea-Co. 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. guarantees cure in lockwet and other various diseases of Horses. Cattle and animal sensitity. Answers calls.
DR. R. J. HAMILTON, Physician and Surgeon. Room 215 Pythian Temple; residence 3253 Thomas Ave. Phones: Office, Main 1141; residence 3253 Thomas Ave. 3; to 11 a.m. 3; to 11 p.m. Dallas, Texas.
Mrs. Temple Weems.-Graduate of the Poro College of Hair Culture, will treat your hair scientifically, for dandruff, falling hair, itching scalp, which will give it beauty, color and abundant growth. Prices reasonable. or call at 2607 Flora Street, Dallas.
CLASSIFIED "ADB."
GRAND CENTRAL NEWS STAND.
We handle the following leading Race Periodicals: St. Louis Argus,
The Dallas Express Boston Guardian,
The Freeman, Houston Observer,
Houston Informer, Pittsburgh Courier,
New York Ag, Aro-American,
Detroit Leader,
The Pittsburgh American,
The Clarion, The Indianapolis Ledger,
San Antonio Inquirer,
New York News,
Maximus
The Crisis, GEO. BODRIONN. Prop.
718 N. Central Ave. Rowe H. 6234
Dallas, Texas
7-26-16
Barber Wanted—To work white trade, guarantee $16.00 per week, can make $25.00. Address or come once, 19 East Okmulgee Avenue, Bradley Brothers.
7-26-11 The Dallas Express' classified classed bring good results.
The Dallas Express' in-now started to hire a $100,000 for the Committee Corporation under the laws of the state of Texas in the various towns of the State for our people a woman. We are here to insert the missing link which has hindered the success of our race. We are here to women into the commercial world. Deputies wanted in every county. Womanize our community. Womanize the general at once and get particulars.
William A. Cochran, General Mr.
62 W. Congress Ave. Denton Mt.
7-12-48
Phones Room-207
M. 167 Pythian Temple
M. 6956
MRS. E. E. WILLIAMS,
Notary Public
Dallas Texas
6-12-48
Texas
C-28-tf
E. B. BLUITT & SONS
Dealers in Realestate, Residence and Rental Property, Room 208 35 K. Street, Houston, Texas 78214. Residence phone 512-358. Residence phone 512-358. 254 Elm street, Dallas, Texas. Mrs. E. E. Henderson, graduate of Poro College of St. Louis, Mo. She will treat your hair at any time. She is guaranteed. Phone or phone 735, Denton, Texas. 5-10-3M OWN A HOME IN MUSEUM, OKLAHOMA. City property a specialty. Beautiful home with large plan. Write Jake R. Blaine, on 065 reliable. Every deal a square deal. Box 1363, Muskegue, office 210 Love Street. J. C. PHILLIPS, A. B. WITH NATIONAL REPUTE. Eclairism, lecturer, poet, social uplift, welfare and religious worker and lecturer. Open for engagement. Muskegue, Missouri, New Mexico, Texas, Arizona and Oregon, write for particulators. colleges, churches, special programs, associations and organized society societies. colleges, streets, street phone Hankel 6367, Dallas, Texas.
The Dallas Express' classified ads bring good results.
NEW METHOD
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
I have just installed the latest machine made for painless operations.
Take Laughing Gas and your tooth to extracted absolutely without pain.
DR. A. H. DYSON.
Dental Specialist
Phone M. 3403
2nd Floor Pythian Temple
DR. & W. WHITE.
Crown and iriage Work a speciality.
Teeth extracted with care. Best material used, work guaranteed. Office location: 1800 W. 12th St. m. to: 6:00 p. m. Sunday by appointment. Phones: Office. M. 7881; residence M. 2453. Office location in the New Python Temple, suite 218, Dallas, Texas.
**MIED ADS."
**HAVE YOUR HAIR WORK DONE.**
By Mrs. Hattie Garrett, Porch Hair
Phone at M. 6545. 1721 Bald St.
NOTICE!
To the Dalprado agenita and customer, H. C. Burleson, he undergone a 10-week stay in up. You may expect to see her in your city. Looking after her work within the next few days, you may want to see her. The Dalprado Mt. Co. 2717 Gason Ave. Dallas, Tx 7-21-7
NOTICE
To whom it may concern: On and after June 15th, all licensed and registered car renters $7.50 per car. Rate $1.50 per head for making car rentals.
Aldamura Auto Rent Co.
Smith Auto Rent Co.
Andrew Lewis Auto Rent Co.
**WHEN YOU HAVE A DREAM** or neuralgia you want relief and you want it bad, so get a package of painkillers from your druggist. They are here, antedote to give you relief or your painkillers. They are here, antedote to try them? Have your druggist coder them if he is out.
No matter what kind of dressing you use on your hair! HER-TRU-LINE is a hair grower in your short, coarse, cool hair. It can grow on your own or two and watch the beautiful rea-
tion. If c hair is in cooling or turning GER-TRU-LINE will be a vali-
able hair grower. If GER-TRU-LINE will quickly remove it, GER-TRU-LINE will quickly grow alo-
nger. If you have dandruff, itching after GER-TRU-LINE will quickly remove it. GER-TRU-LINE will color make HER-TRU-LINE a great favorite among refined people. You will find a jog in its hair color. Other hair dressers can give it. It may be used with or without straightening combs or as a pres-
ning oil. It can also be used post pait. Agents Wanted:
SOUTHERN MEDICINE CO.
A REAL BEUTY PARLOR
is in town for ladies and guill-
men at 419 N. Central Ave-
men. Here you can get thicker
and most improved method in
loving and caring for luring
and hair treatment
specially. By our Poro Grad-
mates. Our course of treatmen-
tion will look ten years pores-
guer. MISS ADIE WILLIAMS, Pro-
DALLAS, TEXAS.
and honed ready for use; also Fable Clippers ground. Best grinding in Dallas. Ask any barber.
F. W. WOODS.
819 N. Akard.
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CENTRAL THEATRE
GRAND CENTRAL THEATRE
---
RNV. F. B. WILLIAMS,
McGregor, Texas.
He is in the honored pastor of Bethlehem Baptist church of Grandview, WI. He is also the pastor of Ehnsle church of Ehnsle, Texas. Rev. Williams and his good people of Grandview, WI. He is the pastor of church building which is easily worth $2,500 which keeps菩萨 volume for the church building. He is also the pastor and to say the least they owe less than $800.00 on the new house. He has maintained the church only at Galleau, Ehnsle, since January, this year, and in the past he members and his husbands costed $99.00. Pastored successful the following churches: Westfordhurst, First Baptist, Thurber, St. John, Stephenville, Elk 11th Street, Waco, Pleasant Hill, St. Mary's Church, St. Mary's Creek, Morgan; Shiloh, Cliffon; First Baptist, Stoneman; Lovely He has been having been called to others, whom he did not serve. He has been mod-
THE
MASKED
RIDER
He says he is indeed glad to let his many friends know that he is still on the firing line, and to try to progressive work to do Lord. 7-8-16
TAYLOR
Mastore James A. Founain and Richard Hill of Navasota are visiting the Taber Grand Lodge Lodge War; Rev. M. C. Miller, Corsair Chad, Miss M. E. Jones, C. H. Hendri, W. Sanity and Bracher returned from overseas and were received with a cordial welcome. Shadowen from Chicago, Rev. P. H. jackson, officiated, Mr. "Stieve Jones," one of Taylor's pioneer clients died Jul. 18th. The living morning at Mt. Arisa Baptist church. Rev. A. Nelson, officiated Mr. E. Lost returned from W. where she attended the summer normal. Mrs. Franklin-Williams was called to the office. Okla. on noctu of the death of a relative. Mrs. W. B. Barley was called to Sovereeria to the bedside of a stick sitter. Mr. Jas Doney returned from F. W. from Los Angeles, Cal. W. Balbar Datt. Standard Life Insurance Co. representative is have soliciting for
Mrs. D. N. S. N. R. Moore, Western
University, and Mr. B. Sundy to
Valley Junction to
Jan. Anthony and Richard III. Mrs.
J. Anthony and Mrs. J. H.
after a visit to Mrs. J. H.
and Mrs. J. H.
AL/TO.
Dr. C. L. Latimer left Surry to
yield treasures in Houston.
Mrs. McKnight died on the 17th
fourth.
Lori Jordan, who See bovy very
certain for the past two weeks is up
much to the delight of hb many
Jenkins. Call for the Express story
THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS, SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1918.
JOHN HARRIS, MGR
The Grand Opening of "The Great Gambler," The most thrilling and sensational episodes. It takes the place of the Red Glove, continued for 15 weeks. A double program Sunday opens with "THE GREAT GAMBLER" and closes with "THE RED GLOVE." The Great Gambler runs every Sunday with "THE CARTER CASE."
"The Carter Case,"
The greatest serial production ever shown in the screen. Herbert Rawlinson and Margaret Marsh are co-starring in this great Craig Kennedy serial. Other popular favorites in "THE CARTER CASE" are Craig Kennedy, Walter Jameson, Ethel Grey, Joseph Marbo, Donald Hall, Gene Baker. The greatest detective story every filmed. Continued every Sunday for 15 weeks. Running every Sunday with "THE GREAT GAMBLER."
MON., JULY 28TH "The Masked Rider"
Featuring Ruth Stonehouse, Harry Myers and Paul Panzer. A big new Western Serial, continued every Monday for 15 weeks.
BIG SPECIAL ATTRACTION
BENZAMIE SAMPE
"SHAHARA," a powerful emotional drama, featuring Louise Glaum, Mat Moore, Edwin Stevens, and Master Pat Moore. The drama of a woman who whipped the devil in herself. Louise Glaum plays the role of Mignon, the darling of Paris, on whom her American husband has wasted his fortune. He takes over an engineering job on the Sahara Desert and Mignon against her wishes, but lured by the promise of a visit to Cairo, accompanies him and dwells in a luxurious tent on the burning sands. After six months she becomes restless. Her shallow star swayed for fliattery and attention. Then into the desert comes the sly fox who holds within her reach that which she craves. One night she steals away from her husband and goes to Cairo with Baron Alexis. Years later she finds her husband demented and a victim of drugs and her child begging in Cairo. He has seven to kill the woman who wrecked his life. She with every desire filled except that of happiness is moved to her first deed of real living sacrifice—the return of her husband's mind though it means her death. She does all in her power to care him and the day comes when she is recognized.
Adults 17 Cents; Children 10 Years Old, 11 Cents
Friday and Saturday, July 25-26, THE HOMESTEADER" Matinee Each Day at 2:30
"THE HOMESTEADER" is one of the greatest Colored dramas ever shown. It is played by an all Negro cast, some of the leading performers of our race. Every Negro should see this picture as it is the first photo play featuring only Negroes, and the best talent in our race. "THE HOMESTEADER" is an emotional story which will excite you and hold your interest to the end.
Adults 25 Cents; Children Ten Years Old 11 Cents
JOHN HARRIS, MANAGER
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JOHN HARRIS
Thurs , July 31st
'PERILS OF THUNDER MOUNTAIN"
Featuring Antonio Moreno and Carol Holloway. Don't miss an Episode of "Perils of Thunder Mountain." It will thrill you through and through.
Adults 17 Cts; Children
Ten Years Old, 11 Cents
Just
in time!
Regret Will Pierce
You If You're Late,
at any showing of
THUNDER MOUNTAIN
Starring Antonio Moreno
and Carol Holloway
See Snow Scenes to Cool You!
See Stunts to Electrify You!
| Mammoth Theatre _
Thursday, July 3ist, Special Attraction
All Western FRANK KEENAN, Featured in
“THE SILVER GIRL”
MATINEE THURSDAY, 2:00 P. M.
F QL ExmeA SeLecrED Stan PHOTOPLAY | -
FRANK KEENAN
@. . 99
THE SILVER. GIRL
de, OES "AGT DRAACATIC. MASTERPIECE, :
Ge Prooucen ar Rosser Baunton Go,
/ A, eT Ss
: Te wee yi \
S] QE ae
y\ Wh \\| ae Dy eee
¥\y ag A) ea & 6) x
r Fy Ee \ Gf .
Bi Gay }
is TA f BS nN
B { | {| A aN a
me i \\g
. me a,
Frank Keenan, America’s greatect character actor comes to the screen at the Mammoth Theaive oa tiene
any Tek Acetate esate Dene Brouday ease, succen, “The Siar GlFL” "One of the Most Mid and
So naar Ce ems hole career” ihe. manner im Which everal reviewers bare chareer-
SeyPang, oweazes, h Seterson Hunter, the foaged. Nevada mine, Whowe ehivlrose and abiding Yove for
ES oan teats hin siuinty'Into the shadow ot Supreme acritea
Fee a a cyano de torino Tact that" Mr. Keavan, an adent through 70a of
con ramet Merten etn ereeoerate beaten paying te, prinelpal ‘role fm the ¥ory, persnally
gaan serie, Se refeiyhnrmouiousaéton aid 4 acage of completeness which dna crcl
See nr eertecile' of iw erat outdoor tof of he fe et the mon who deve i he earth
Fee mete teen eae Mary ok the aelion Basin of Nevadn’ of sirens til and the eve tomance
ater Sen fe Gi ode Sane cane (hr at iw in ostrsw dO eet er
Mee ne Keppte, Saally wealthy with her husband, should yeara for the life and plearars of the great
city Ta Anne Kevin, Sealy "stu ou young and beautify Youth was ia her blood—and_ abe was wom
A YaH tee ae ee ‘York was, developed. the real Erip of & drama whic Just mised & great Cragedy.
Sa earn ees che big lig stanton fees while Xe wae great mat cnx 1 ail Bad
Se re er automa, her oat anit, het’ fretuds, abd, foals, fo Der OWN salva
Yim, ber Hone sense of Heht and’ wro.
a ane Fe rie Catherine Adame, a Deaulful and talented runs woman, who bas
evens beter work herent acreen carer
Sn
WEDNESDAY, JULY 30. Special Production
Featured in a Wonderful Western Production,
tr 9: 29
“JIM CAMERON’S WIFE
Matinee Wednesday, 2:00 p.m
4 ij Ps)
7S
: : Af °
| Ty oe Ne
foe ed SEs Vi)
ge — «gC enne e
Rated 0 een a
eae oauans ge Aa wy
a oe eee
Jt es! ee ae emi Be
feed eG eh
% ‘KEENAN'S BIG LOVE EPIC,
‘Pronk Keenan, America's greatect character ctor comes to th
ay in an adapiation of Edward Peple's Broadway stage, success, “7
cupeliing ‘portrayals, of Keenan's’ whole career,” ts the mariner
xiviis hnpersonation of Jefferson Hunter, the rugged Nevada tls
ne wouay Tends ‘im iliogly Into the abadow of Supreme, seri
‘The conceded perfection of this picture ix due (othe fact tha
cntinuous service ia stage-craft and sereen-eraft, Desi tes playing
(reced tke "The result. perfeotiy.Inrmoaious aétlon aud A sete
ne Western scenes give the fecling of ie great outdoors and of
me canure., te is a clean-cut story of the Hell-in Basin of Nov
Rat grew between the irl and the Man who came to her at 8 1
eritance.
‘thst’ Anno Kepple, nally wealthy with her husband, shoul
ity was vet to be wondcted si, She wae’ young and beautiful; you
my ‘And, in ‘coming to New York, was’ developed the real urip of
Bt ARG, os Comeing, Oe ee ne big calling slmuation; for, walle
THE DALLAS EXYREOS, BALLAS TRXAS SATURDAY, JULY 96, 1908,
— eee
——————————
eet eee
a ee ee ee
Se a ee
a re
Monday and Tuesday, July 28th and 29th j
SPECIAL ATTRACTION: “When Fate! Decides,”
Featuring Madlaine Traverse, Matinee Monday‘at 2:00 p. m.
Mammothj Theatre* &
a ame | "Tm Theatres
SS] i. SNES or
Eales: aie b> |B \"When Fate Decides,”, *
a) ae Bee ||El| story ota wewen wto wes tds) te]
El DE] in toe te of temptation, tut =|
Eyre é BIBI) tacedincnorfaveve her love for
il * PE cerce man
Sy . AS was ‘ ao A Williom Fox Preéucticn, Starrieg
a A at a a i i Madlaine Traverse
4 AMR TE) An actress of peerless exoticnal
: all FE|| power in rule ef wile Tho ter de
eens 7 S| bands ile ctu ae
FBS] enter ortrementone
SSE RM Saeees ore MMM ry gary la
JESSE WILLARD
FEATURED IN
”
“CHALLANGE OF CHANCE
———— 7 Big Special Westera P
5 : Rac ae Seven Ree!
< = Pua gs a Two Days, Savi
te ee * by Sunday, July 2
i Admission, Ac
stg ar “ Children
Mee mean
bas if he Sey
‘ Te QUALLENGR
Wherela the tig Panel
JOR BATHS, ‘te bie
SF] toconan, ported. by
uae 40 endeared ay
Blake hi tows, and
i) that tho entire “outne |
‘8 turmotl when he ma
o>. Sout anown 10 dane
an where ho ts t0 samme
t son of manager ot
f cxchane,
; Proaing gifts on.
him a roudng seat
x a : Won eantyng aboot
5 ater" tne reeesi
furicvaly om orm
= | tsncns end ting 0
a tae wah Samar in’
Among the passengers ts Fay calvert, (Arline Pretty), © beautiful Kentucky gtr, who ts journeying to 1
Po. Joe meds the gil Informally and they eco warn friends ax tho JoufneyDrggreemt At; a> watt 5
‘station, he leaps from the train to punish a burly sap who, in a ft of rage, Is beating « horse. xinmareifully.
2A evarm of Maxian ranch hands Tush falo the fray add all are nt retin hy terri Bown from (hn eat
Jou. Menntine the train pulls out and he, after parcheeng the maltreated ores, proceade {9 RI Paso.
‘Upon ia aval Jena reports to hia firm, the tend of which proves iter toe Met, tn al seen.
the terrible punishment from him. In El Pas also be meets Pay Calvert and covers Cet Bary bot ealy
tn league with Vila aod ho niusderous Merican, but 1s also altompling te ewinale Way oul of the tole 7
ralna of Her fathers exit, conaating of etn et terouchbred Kewitehy rice Doren Zou heating at ha
wal All the’ man upon thelr ext meeting, eres the fee
ob Edmunds, traler of the Cavert stable, arrver at El Paso and reports 10 hy hatha eobemafl
dotrored the Serene tha Zuares ek 3oo pana’ 6 outwit Mare Bnd Ms pole ny ep Ua
‘and there 1s Just a litle strain ix thelr attitudes, occasioned ty Bob throngh hla observation of Pay's’ trast
ta the former rancoan.
Burr, imrrring the Sent ot hia bayer eveare venesase tad Joo in id ils 6 tas ty a ata Bice
ting den, where u terre ecoutleroceurn He im alacked by 4 rot fll of Wexians and tn th eng srg
tle which comes, Joe, after blag neatly overcome, wes is big panch and, with muerhman stra Nes
dows is foes, Belting Burr and iting bins Meh above his heed he hirin Min a0 muse ot battred Sewna.
aa: oteets topether th ouitt ot coher and siarts fr the Juare task whene fas soho aah AO pO
that day. On the way bo Ia mot by sroupe of natives Deceins hm to ura back and fee with tem before Wes
soprone
Siting, bo and hie itdo band prone on and rive st the track where the owner t tthe Yauable Roce:
fics are ts pale. With Pay fortane he purchases all the bores which he rams have given fp a9 fol
Sit Go approach of Vila
‘he Maicens aro held back and Joe and hi Dorsea succuefolly avin the Rip tande! tothe mario
aise where Yar ia walting for hin and’ Dob With the aslo tthe race hore reallacd the Bip Chance-hareome.
for ton end Pays forte Se rxared to her 7
Theos ‘a etal ey cubs tahnath Sinberiton wh dante 6A Sc valle
‘the two young people are deeply in lore with one another, says: “Anyone can ove hat yom. ate’ beth deat a
Jere, Gut Welw aev-Pil be. Bite, Oneal a8
Big Special Westera Production in
Seven Reels,
Two Days, Saturday and
Sunday, July 26 and 27
Admission, Adults 25¢
Children 15
—he Story ot
Tm CHALLENGE OF CHANCE
‘Whera the Big Ranch Phgere Di.
JOR BATHS, to Dig-hearto ranch
foreman, portryed by. Joon. Wiad,
a 80 chdeared Apel with Jim
Blake, bia ow, and dl eow' pala
that tho entre “out fa thrown tata
‘ turmod when ho makee his inten-
tions Anown 1 lee for 1 Pisa
‘here ho ts to aawume the now pe-
‘jlon of manager of the Barr here
dane
Prening if on. him, hey ste
ima rouaag seat-of at the ta
tion omstring weatooters fn tho al
ster” tho rooting tral,” galloping
Tarevaly' of orm akong he
teacka and filing tho paton with
{els war whoope aa tha tain, grad
ually disappear from alght
PAGE S©VEN
PAGE EIGHT
a.
: tears
bonne Geers A te 2
(ea
frac ADs ake so
chase
oS ae
coat eal a Aaa
Sesser sesso reg
ae
Sane sat ene
SoA Sowa iow
SP ashes oa
pues Bi soreness oes =
Sette cme
ie yaa, on
St Bat ine
= ae sins
a
SAGE beer bet hoyrsel
Owned t th nox
ce pemetl ghor
th rage
Seyi (oon vr
= Senaes cant
se.
Ba of anal vee
se ciy Erte ving Sete
Seas sa
Ma Darts. eemsia
aa teat te ee
a
Ma oY, sn tae
SEE se enrol Saenen i
Seen tess
Seater.
SE nem af Oita
a gs
Sahel see the Tene en
or
aiaeek:
Crandall, “Tetan, Ful 4 Sundey
setect ete Waly Alagoa
Bie, poo i, ort
sates
Fai Ae Rete ot tbe ater.
‘oon ht vad menting
eel
Sona Winn ano
erated ty", Vande Hoary
Tam. Prask. rasior 0 the sich
fone tur er ans en Jove
fate en
er fiat you can eat ‘The
pula Pieter dy sat
fa toe
romaee.
Tene, Ty 2-—Sonday
shies ta
‘aie Mer wea at
Binge and” preudee two ror
perma
ieee lerman Wek aia ot and
"anna bors
i rb Yomn ond i,
ere bare ai
eee tite Winn a tow weeks
Mae Bute fe rca
Sol ender Tor
Shere thes tent to ont
Binal aren ett Novtay for
She ah We Tabers ores tad
Mace ens San ate,
ise et awk
Eanatier® Sr, Mant Rta of Dat
gy Pridny
ade
pee nest tne
Sater 2%, of Dallas
. wee
ly Goa sn Ht i
ae Ge meen Bussey
2)
‘Hillsboro, Texas, July 24—Mra. L.
Hunmeon © ton, My, of Dal
fear tere inate or
ay
eStats Aes
reser Yoh ene. nd. mea
hal a is
es Abie n wa
anse’ou etched es
Sa" byee lite eat
"with: rustiven nod" Triends
Je nces, ta guatir conte
Aral ae Se, starch
He i et we sat De
Maar oe Bare hia
Gears BN sata
Basi" A eH
at Sic tee a
adit Josef me Worth
ceca, Bro
sat espe, Ai
Sing Kinin iver tae
Tis als
ome angie
metal tet we
fae rem tieon et oi
roe he amt ae pte
eit dares
Saat en toe tee 2
S90 2 ee hy.
‘tanoue.
aaah Fly 2-8.
Son dag tat we caren
Meus i ge oth
sae Ws ter
ies tesa” tor "osn
g The Grane Lode. oD
s ‘wan th the clly this
ner tnt
Fat eat eel Gas St
ea ats Be ut
SBE nino wae 0 ey vt
Pall ‘Str santone toi te
Mee aneat Gug "oe
feat ha he te 2
ther future home.
“Uy ‘MILFORD.
ee ae,
Petey sucoee
z ia ‘ofan: ae eat
Pa or
Beenie tee met,
Se te
x all ae one
ar bok er
SS Sate ss yt
Fe Me coped te stan tisk
ihe ar
i
We Borien’n mother of
| SOME TOWNS IN TEXAS
im fe the guest: of the Burton
ony occa ie eal sed
r. W. Duron, the pasor: filed
st itaea’ texan.
Me damon HB. Church,
er, W. Marcin, Pastor,
sunday ‘schoo was byl ttsnded
ft as otocks Rev. Harts preached
noble ermon:
onro.
iio, Texan, July 2k
schoo wan "Gullo dnteening at
A ltrge crowd of "young
ize rewn hey, Bale
or Yate ber non, Mr, tm
Son of Marlin Saturday and Sum
far. br. Jobo" Slauahter sad nf
st Dentod, ‘Texas, are ving thet
bere. "Mrs. ‘Douglas isc
he Dramnce of he sae fr
‘tin Mine Mia ‘Hay
fe other in Waco, Twew
pings Kat un learn’ t0' read chr" ows
vere and. ret the. Guth
MAY PEARL
ay, Pearl, Texan, July 24-—Sun-
anyon a el liad
hors. I deckaon ‘presthod the
feng nornone A ecto. to. the
now organisation of 03d Pulows was
ives "hne to the. tanday whoo
fechas wors,reviwed ty Denso
i. Rah and Brother Loey Bini
SiskanDGRaE.
Nacdedoches, Texas, July 24—We
tad plenty tain re’ Sunday eh
eauned the, bervices at tho erent
shorehos "tobe allghtly” auended
Supt Cr wiakey” waa at his port of
daty in Sunday echo st Senaet Gal
ine Satay. pronehiis wan onde
anor. Doethatter, wow in Marabal
BYP, went over the top at 630
Ray. Bollon ‘was "at ant” Branch
Terie, on the Becond Sanday, where
hen patoring te “Corinth ‘apts
ture ilo reported hat service Was
fran Colocion 433.0
ey, ik Durkhalter preached
1 erin of sermons at Osi. Tas
Mook Ho Teft on tho 190s” ines
for Mara, Texan, ev, W. M. Tin:
mip wan wiih ‘ila poopie at Tate
Hig Windy tn recs
Gerling ahd Gener
Disckmay asd Mra Wile be
air tre’ attending tne. Summer Nor.
tal at Jachaoovilfe, and Prarie Viw.
iter, he Amon isting tings
over the top at thes. 3k Re church
Bro, i Sanh hi, nny
fveniag end. preached for" hn
ten tn “olareom the table, Bro
Bolion preached (wo vez sermons
A the Pipe Church andthe pease
Mitel her paresis nt vtrpra
a
iy, aor, Ty
t San ‘etn
signa week on bosinna’ =
ue ministers of thn tty ave of
spied a infery ition
3 batierment ofthe Masters case
Nhe" W. Towle Denton forthe
pre alo yo wl find at
: J tatbersbop. erry Sat
ada.
z ~asaneeea.
Ear gatiay anetakae Hestey, ob
nen ay crs Huy on
ton sae
aaah a gwen
Qa St Bit en
wy ea or Fe
saat gags Sar i
SS Seach So
Sr aa ta a rd
= a na
TE Bee it ran
from Worth, Texas.
A. Te Reed has returned from Fort
wl al a
Me"Devine Monro. tas returned
from over san.
PB ha mance + onan
sad Me, A
tr
ae
Pawo
ov yh
He Si Ti, Mons
eae Sa ee
oe Sa ia
Me he al
aS etn ras
i ts
i ar Be,
Be nth yn
ot a Wee Bt
BRET es cary
Ree ea
SS tae, 8 Sea
pees cae
os
rath
a
samc chro on
Secrets
Serer ita
oe eS
eerie
oo ier aes es
eet ee oes
Spocecos
aes 0 eee
Seine ©
Sree
ae Sree
ee ee oc
re a
fe osare
eee mits
eerste
See ett ae
Sidiaet Sees
ee ee oe
wie teat
ee kaeart aa
5 me
Beas
a temas oe
aie aaa ead
ed
pe ees a
mre ca
en's
a
‘eet
THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS, SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1919.
a to the Grand
Toate. “in nai tae of Hearse
Parga Mrs. ‘cn ‘McKinney 1s
act tthe Mose Gran Lode
ei vat eres a ew ha
esa sg tas en
ate ab ocee “htt
Sultana, ae eet
ale eat a le
En A aaa a ae Se
2% tty, we. “Bertas
Tort We Mor nd Bene
ih, et un" tn tane
Sethe Sat Potente hr
coi 9. ge of Saar
ata St set a
Sa Akt te
Te nome or Sk sean
hatte wit wa war
ee alegre
ote us, oe
Sr are ater
ke angie, he, ia
oan ke‘ era tae
Mali of Sere net ee
Pia as ete Ky
Bi ates Sir seal
ha fe etal wo a
ase bed aaa oe
Soar ohh aaa
eave ada ‘pt Satay
{eae hapt" ar ou
BGehaa Anda ote
Mursobais Vasa sea
ae ee et her ad a
hadi Bee
Miki faethe mathe
ech a Ca, Sea
Sg ava, Spa ar we
ba Re Se anh StS
Sah friends be
aay tend se On
retest acl at
Teac Comoe bre ae we
SiS'e ere Cape Sack
Serio Sea cig a
Sey Safteren ab
Sites Shae hae
ag
aiot bed antes comet Bone Kelly
sctioot had as tte quent Hon. Kelly
ee
SE co os
oe eet se
be tear cree
ph ans orcs
heresies ace ae
ices Phe ea
saad Cerone
eee
NE com Pa
a
Som Aan ot) 8
Ree aan had
le
BT eet te ot _
pa Baler
re
ete ot, ie,
eee Seen
Sey cots i i
icra
ia ee
acer e ©
ire a
ee gees eet an So
oneal one
erat TE
Bis
FE 9 ao ri
Ae
wee
er nalipot Gaies et ten eae
weg eat the Tae
=a sone
Pe a lic
ee
SY cli
utr wr Sa sa
Ee
oe
Be same Pa at
mare
se wu te cn
ma
ac in, Rt
sands Hana re
ret ye al a
ao
Sea ow yore
os eas Sa
ose a a we
oe areas ee
ce cade ir ‘sae
ae ee bose
2
roa
Pink oe Hr
pmemrrarettt
ee ibe a a
Be OE tip me
omens et
ee a ny
si seas, ek Sa
saat mare ge at
Smee ee
ae oe eta oe
aS la, Sa en
iT es Su es
at ig aca
Soa ly Pe
Teoeaenierame at
a eee
Satsitahe read
fain
7A Fie anh eae
aes os
a :
ees
Soa ee
Soe ee ee
Sta aro
Bw State bos
cee
net King af impeow as. Sandsy
Beer
emer S
eh dee rate ©
Shee o
Progsanen
eres
coe se
Suara eee
Ge
erie
em ier or foment
=
Soren coe
etinghge i
le sh
See oer
Reactors
os oe
os aye
oe
:
a tg
TRAIN KILLS:
eas in
p hc APES UNH,
rhe Literary Prom Assoctation),
"Peaan duly 34 While
siding WS suet man onthe
Sfampert" of w frelght_ trait. some
dintaace ‘north of the city st Bune
day afternoon, Weiter Oxvorn, yous
Colored man, wanthrowa there from
fit insany "Kil, wile Rober
Walker eocaped ins ot “one foot
tira nan with who they were
Zaina, eacaped. unbare
‘THs ir one amons series of ac.
dente (hak bare occurred in” and
round Rockwall within, the last few
wont, ‘The mowt appalling = wes
That wile ‘occurred about two miles
fren, the “Katy. eras Special” tan
Wen the “Katy Teva, Special tan
into an automobile ling al of i
Occupants except one
COLORED ‘TRACHERS AT. rae
(CAPHTOE, ‘WAUK. OUR. AND. i
POE TO Take x AaiNAEIONS
TRou WHITES
Asstie, Texas, July 21—/The Hoa.
Annie Webb Danton, State. Superin-
tendent of, Publie instruction, was
tidvised today ‘toachers attending the
Colored ‘normale at, Austin and La
Grange had "atruck” and refused to
ake the examinations when. white
Inepestors “fromthe State depart.
‘nent presented. themselves to "con-
uct. the examinations.
‘Misa lanton sald the teachers
‘made « mistake, a sho acted in the
Interest of the honest. Newroes that
reports bad ‘come to lier that. whole-
fale cheating’ was eng planned. at
certain places, and to slop i he
Sent. 4 white inapector (0 each of
the sixteen ‘normals to conduct the
‘examinctions, as is oocesstonally done
swith white pormala
‘She visited the Austin normal, als
found ‘he students had gone.” She
tlso was ‘advised. that mesnares ad
come "from. the La Grange Normal
Ssugwesting’ that the Austin. students
‘walk out”
“It ‘has been only two weoks
fago;" sald Mint Blanton, "that Tap:
pointed an "At school. superintendent
Be ‘inspector tor Colored school. T
‘ways ‘vale, the Negro. schools on
my tripe and hve shown & personal
Taterest’ fa. having. them improved.”
TERERLL.
‘Terrell, Texas, July 24—Attend-
ance atthe. churches Sunday” was
fall oo socount of the rain
‘A. number ot farmers. wore in
Saturday” smiling "because "of the
food rain that felt Priday and. Sat-
‘day moraine
‘Mf Laehie Ayers reports that, he
han thin yar fae crop of. water
Tolons. Fits speaks well for Me
‘Ayers since no many have failed thi
Sear in the watermelon. crop.
‘er. Je Av Weaver. hrm Weaver,
ACT, Sparka, ‘Mise Hnma, Wisxins
ea he! Goa ea et onday more
ine over land for erna,"Texas, to at
ond the Priendahip. District Sunday
fehool and 'B. Y.-B. U.Conyention
‘er. Boiler, Prot. W. .Youns-
‘ood, Mrs. Bessie Jobson and. Miss
Marjorie, aban ‘will leave | Mone
‘day event for Ker, Texas, 10 re
‘present New “Hope, Terrell at” tho
Bintrict convention.
tr Cate eleot and there made
‘two plonrare tripe to. Kaufman te
‘cent.
"Pie Bob Nolaon OU and Retining
Company ‘enjoyed delightful ban-
‘auet at New Hope chureh ast ‘Thurs
‘day: night, Jaly 17 Quite « number
of the stockholdern were present.
‘lawyer Wells from Dallas rand
some very encouraging remarks. 1
faye Cine is a neceasary element tn
forking out" big. thngs. He "ox
pec ve the: charter eedy and
Trerything in "working order "by
Rug 1.
Mir Loe init rho was chet for
tie ocension certainly” knows he
asinees Brerything was well pre
‘pared and served,
"ihn ‘reporter, ¥. Joiner 1s push.
tng the paper bustness here, Te mate
{that "he" comid have ‘s0'd 20 copls
mar Harn ("he Hd haa
“who. Nave news fr the
express tre bindly,aaked. 10. wrt
‘evand hand tt tothe. reporter” who
Goilvers the paper.
; Pour ARTHUR.
Pa oe ad en bee
HE ring pan of he ah
ee ere ee
ete
PR oe
Be cere
FS a wg
fe
a ee
tear en
nk ee
Bs oh mee
eee te
Renee faunas
eee ee motes
ean acer
eet
Ge oe ag
nding ee
eins vr
eee tae
coo
age gags
ame
ae
es, Pe
pacino
[bee sourenad bore bestnning | the
oh Saas
en
Le ea
See Re eas Be
eae rears eee
ae see
2S. Ea
aoa ee
isobar tania seme br
Soman ara ee
cea ae
ei a
sar eee
— re
PS ere scone om
: .
ies cata het
a Wms,
eae ‘Teas, daly. RL, 3818.We
se hang Sto rin ad ergo tr
Bin "Wehr 4 te, Nr,
we et Gas land. a
Bo gg Bal. ong ogee
ip BE = Zi . a és = mS
o ee Ne ee ee
\\) . % 3
tug G
y : }
}
} It had !
t had to come:
ib ‘THE HAIR AND SCALP TREATMENT THAT CARRIES AN ABSOLUTE . \
A \\
GUARANTEE |
[REMEMBER THIS: Glory has to make good or we will )
\, %MOST Bese: ALL Recess ff
}) hry ot nly mae the lng, sft and ly, bt avs the lp in lone ly codon
] Six week's treatment $1.60, Money refunded at end of six weeks if you are not satisfied \
} The STORY of GLORY is.
oes mei camekee
Me ela tat i ‘rite te DEPT. . {
Siadit Gee tcfrcl nt Gite mt | The Glory Manufacturing Co. 1
Meee ae DENVER, COLO.
‘Fie Ghary Mig. Coa Cake | iccewe wash ho Cy Sree a Cire bid i
Giny far rove ows | Secumenenteon stamens I
b z RTT ET Rabe eee enon ee e y)
AN eS FY,
= & QZZ7~—~—Z
Joe Dewson before leave. I'l set you
Very good Buatay Shoo, Preaching
ser int an Bra Sumeay, pastor
HEN toe faber snd good age.
TOR DAWHON, Reporter.
Sot TAKE
oar Lake, Toxin, July 24h
gunay ‘thea wore aicadod Bur
dagen,
nM hi tater
tart hor. H, © Cash helping i hs
fevialmesing at Mt ose Bap
ok"chureh Up to date there Bar
teen Sade tothe: chorch an
Stay" obey cows ‘eth Bi
fang Berybody is "invited
Ailond i these service
itv, C, Ie Tat was on duty
sym A Se Sth “ec
Rt Ti gelock ne had only four
in meoiers resent, uk ‘Tepor
SMasteonf” service
Mr 'ilora ue arrived_with a
nomorabledlachange from France ts
Meck econ ta hinge abot th
Se sone ta! wil burt say mother
Tar
Pe Tae ek ot wring,
taste Johnaon of Jeanrtt
unis thse ot he so Sous
Yo and J Jobnaon,
at fod" Rabawon reports
Miprored aint cater the, bo
Improved alse “he, wp
isn eariia Stewart let Mond
tor Beatmost i rvsve | ede
{Srotment ow ah ear apecals
Wien Bertha Muoter retard Ia
freak” from. ontavite where *
Tad bea iting fonda,
ice Rorah Brown Toft Sunday
at ‘her seaien and Giende
Binueber, Pa
Side Mitek) Menara. skint, Tat
snr hrs. &, Simmons,
Tir. A: Be Thompeon take afl me
wo" ae iaeretod inh batne
Toto to gat nat en ela
{iine Sadi en
‘Keep © eke! for The Boreas
yn
Groesbeck, Taree, July 94——Gar-
se wen good nt Deaala Chapel so
(Rade Chapet Sunday.
hvats HOM. Alevinder, eivat
vacir Cinkard, Private Shed” Bane
Eo 'Giew als sid wo a0 ll on
{ES sokowt fer urs Sac srand. Mr.
BoeeSeckea. ick Jen have
Shekaos, ‘Deacon Berves Deacon Por
nudes’ dyin trip to Yrestane lan
eae
Sit, Roy “Adams hed busing tn
gation iat week.
hike ine balan Pipreas and Keep
up with the eave mown
iti se tod at Waa oe
tatrant
‘MKT.
Metmney, Texas, July 24-—Serviee
ras" good sanay’ atthe iterent
ieee the ly" Goat member
ere eck_ home ater 'sttending
tat"eonvestion in ‘Daiae, Rew. 3
B°Wniians Rev. Water dar
atl made Apo. Deliaa, Sunday
ies "305." Willison "has”seturaed
Boo after tring epent a week
Baliga with ber nttere'nod som:
Dolls, Tras, Joly 24-—Hand sre
naton fost ke, those, bared Ast
it Han’ tne by the American st
Mees ty the aye nd rs. es
‘waren of alla, hes re
avo etn mn nasa
fod ars bing orited
Srey Rann
Mon ahas Gent Han
iiea thet "baka, are” ‘expocted
“hehe care up,
states Sg
‘no’ furthior need of these “weapons
{f war" so. tured Unem over to. the
Seslngn Divison of the Treasury De-
irtimeue and, thy. aver eum ate
ormed nto. “weapon af” peace”
tik, ample atten obiatn
coe ot these grenade. banks The
‘oy Gr_ sin obtains one from the
Toca basi 9 hat” he or abe. can
save. "Wed ‘enough money tas beon
farmed and saved to buy’ a 46, War
‘Sevingx ‘Stab, and it it purchased
the remade, becomes" tho” property
[oe oy. or gi Ady may ale
benin thee grenhde hac by.
‘ng and investing’ Inst feast these
{46 War Saving’ Stamps. of the 1913
fave
cor» nl, oes, rant
oslo tala tor Dut Ta
. only opportunity to car
Creal" weapon of war hs a souvent
‘When Theoo grenades ane. ‘tomo, i
Wilt be iporsbie ® secare aay
Tore, “thoeo “interested” should ‘ar
ange today to get helt premade,
which ean” be" gbtained th Dalla
From the banks listed above and how
whiek may order ater
pie) ar Stier Stns rewar
coes RETALIATING
| 1 CAPITAL RIOT
‘Thomas Armstrong. ‘Thé_two latter
are Negroes, Dactoctive Sergeant B.
W. ‘Thompson and Private AVbert
Liiek ot the Marines wore believe In
8 dying condition. Of the other
Cagunition five. were policemen,
‘Major Pullman, chief of the West-
Ington poll, conferred with talltary
authorities today and it was expected
hat aa a. reauit of this conference
tonight would "ee the national capi-
Wal practislly an armed camp.
“There will be n0 parleying with
tho elements of alsorder,” nald Pul-
man, “All the power of the federal
government 1 Dehind the potice de-
artment and. these combined forces
friit neo to ft chat order in restored”
"Two hundred persons were tinder
‘arrest today, according to pollce ef
‘mates.
‘The Cause,
By L. Harper Leech.
7 nulla Dhinabeh.
Washington, July 22—The | race
Hota here which have shocked the
gpuntey he. been "brewing ove
ree Tears,
‘One source, of, tritation to. the
white popuation hax been the tae
Tice of” tascrupious real eatate mea,
any” goverament employes who hav
{averted thelr tvings Ia bomes be
bd their value: depreciate. trom 26
to 60 per cen" by real cata. ope
Mors moving Negro. taal, into
White neigtbornoods. to. “bear” the
Talus of property whlch they buy
Up Inter at w ucriten,
Insolence of the Negroes here has
ven increased during the ‘wat ee
riod by the erowélng of female war
workers {to ofees tnd mizing races
Ine departments.
ee ack of therm pene
panda is also seen fn x
feeerseeee ones
ewepapers
Wartington.
“over three monthe aro a Nerv
paper here rged all Nesroes to arm
Tidmuctves an world warn were Jom
eginniag, This infiamnatory ep
eal was based on the Japenese ree
unlliy reeotstion athe” Pati
Peare conference aud agitators tol
Reeroes to look to Japan ss thet
fio.
"The, tdlecritnate. ale of ple
tote ig "Nerroen ty ow
len shopkeepers was %
feany tncoent, Nerove are bee
ass vetinn of the mobs, bat Wan
"ibe" meoce, fv
eeiuse of contiiog
ft
‘by the federal government.
Pastorsed tides marines and
allots ed the ‘scarp inh ‘ate
GAR they were fated. ‘by_ he
joadiet of Nacto eons and labor
Sataloas a Fraoce
Bombing Fever Strikes K, 6,
(ly the Anocated Negro Pres)
| Renaat Cite, Mos daly 24th ex
slain o's nt thrown on tba front
eds vetinc tre 18
WsktatAvesse” belly etaged the
pias cat Tort worn of foe be,
Ritu in Re front of the hosse at
Boca i0 Brie andthe hease St
1707, Wabash Avelue, were shattered
ty tha free of the explain.
aa eh
te icra ‘Sojocted t0
Poms Nocwns tn the root
Festa ie wag onc By ‘tr,
[rect on the’ second itor. “The ex:
piocton tte he from her bed, Su
ey tae seek tl as ae
eee a
eee and Negroes Battle in
(Gy the Amocited. Negro Prem)
DatrolyMch, duly 24~ A race rat
weap masrowiy averted, Bday
Th arrest of "Angele Polina, 28
yore el wa Ulin aie ma We
Segoe ON tli) eae
Serbs was eala shave shot wire
Borigs magi Devs was tan o>
=
| DONT NEGLECT A”
I
' RHEUMATIC PAIN
(Go after it with Sloan's
Liniment before it gets
dangerous
‘Apply 2 litle, don't ru tet te Penoe
Sea ec py ang ie
pica eres Goes
| Aeneas! sissy 2
"Sa He yr yo Ee
Apt duet or Ses iniag
sSloan's
| Rais deetreese:
cctiewinetaem
LEST aetees nag cia
| ems HINTED,
| De You Notice Something
: Very Net About These
Glasses?
] ave Yoon wes e<AaED,
| laden and ome ound pe
| oases sage
| Sa ttl bs Coal wo ie
ace
| "te ie ear wri.
seen. 1.x. morro,
(aes :
209 eagle Dullings
Bae ne