Dallas Express
Saturday, December 6, 1919
Dallas, Texas
Page text (machine-generated)
Pay Your Poll Tax Now. January 31st, 1920, Is The
"MOST DISTINCTIVE WEEKLY IN AMERICA."
U. S. SENATOR
Charged With Fraud In Obtaining Seat In Over Henry Ford Men Implicated.
U. S. SENATOR INDICTED
U. S. SENATOR INDICTED
Charged With Fraudulent Dealing In Obtaining Seat In U. S. Senate Over Henry Ford. Prominent Men Implicated.
Pay Your
VOL. 27, NO. 9.
Grand Rapids, Mich., Dec. 8—Truman H. Newberry, United States Senate, sent to the United States grand jury today for corruption and conspiraion in connection with the election by which he defeated Fehring Henry Ford, his Democratic opponent. Newberry, 133 other persons were indicted by the grand jury on the same charge. The names of all but two of the most prominent candidates in the Senate Judge Clarence W. Sessions, presiding, until warrants could have been obtained. Newberry, together of the Senator, Detroit, and Paul H. King of Detroit, King was manager of the South Detroit, and Allan K. Templeston of Detroit, president of the South Detroit, nummer of the Newberry estate. Charles A. Floyd, Detroit, Mart. K. McKee, Detroit, Addison Oakman, Detroit, formerly County Clerk of Wayne County, and Harry B. Rapid, James B. Bradley, Eaton Rapid, Mich., and Glindstone Bode, Detroit, J. Session indicated that the evidence before the grand jury disclosed the fraudulent expenditure of the Grand Rapids, Mich., and Detroit counties indicated that the evidence before the grand jury disclosed the fraudulent expenditure of the Grand Rapids, Mich., and Detroit counties indicated that both federal and state laws were violated in that sums far in excess of legitimate expenses, we used in the investigation of Henry Ford was Senator Newberry's chief opponent. The defendant charged that both federal and state laws were violated in that sums far in excess of legitimate expenses, we used in the investigation of Henry Ford was Senator Newberry made while serving at the United States grand jury. We were aware that no campaign money has been spent by him or with his knowledge. This affidavit, the indictment against Newberry, has been made by his democratic opponent.
NEGRO PROTECTS HONOR OF HIS DAUGHTER
KILLS PROMINENT WHITE
WHO SEDUCED NER
Madison, Wis. Dec. 6.—Jack Green, 88 years old Lancaster, has avenged the blight upon his 14 year old daughter's honor. Now he is ready to pay the penalty if his plea for lenency fails.
Green was sentenced by Circuit Judge Clementon in Lancaster for the murder of George Duncan, 38 years old, Lancaster automobile man, whose body was found in his car on the lonely road leading to the town of Lancaster. Duncan had been shot through the back. Green was arraigned before Justice C. W. Burrows and bound over to court court, his attorney.
He was confessed while at work in the fields, confessed the shooting, according to Sheriff Frank Hell. Green offered no resistance when taken to the police. Green is with prisoner. Duncan leaves a widow and an eight year old daughter. There has been no attempt at violence by the citizenry of Lancaster. Duncan is with prisoner. Duncan leaves a widow and an eight year old daughter.
The name of Duncan has been linked with that of 14 year old Dena Green, the Green county city. When the murder was discovered. Sheriff Hell went straight to the Green home to begin his investigation. According to the story told by May Green, 15 years old, and sister of Dena and a date with the murder, with Duncan on previous occasions. Monday night. May told the sheerer Dena and a date with the murder, with Duncan on previous occasions. Green home early in the evening returned to
Jack Green was waiting for them when they drove up the road. May the road be safe for them. Words with Duncan, the father fired from the rear of the car as Duncan was driving. From the position of the cur Duncan is believed to have gone on until the car crashed.
The Dallas Express
conspiracy to aid him also in conspiracy violations of election status. There were six counts in the first indictment, two in the second to charge of excess campaign expenditures. The fifth alleged conspiracy to charge of practices act October, 1918, which penalized payment of money to voters. The sixth count to which Frank C. Kernel was allotted the vote, the nine General attached especial allegation that the mails were framed to have honest campaign contributors were also victims in that they were mislaid into believing they were the campaign managers had not been exceeded. It also charged that more than $100,000 of the campaign use of some of the campaign managers. Hired Ford's Opponent. This sixth count also contained a clause charging that not the Newberry organization funds "for his compensation and expenses of the Senator" at the primary, the alleged purpose being to aid the Newberry organization from lining up with Ford in the Republican primary, the alleged act that Helm's "compensation" for his candidacy was $50 a week. These thirty-eight alleged overt acts were charged against fourteen candidates in the second given rewards ranging from promises of "a good job" to payments of $2750 for support to $2760 for the Newberry campaign. One country editor is alleged to have received a fine of $10,000 and two years' imprisonment. The extreme penalty, which may be imposed under the indictments is a fine of $10,000 and two years' imprisonment.
TO FIGHT LILY
WHITE PARTY
IN MARYLAND
TO FIGHT LILY
WHITE PARTY
IN MARYLAND
Baltimore, Md., Dec. 6. -With the announcement by Ovington E. Weller that he will be a candidate for the Republican nomination for the United States Senate, he will fight it in prosecet. Former Governor Phillips Lee Goldsborough, who opposed to the Weller candidate.
Colored voters in Maryland will stand on at least three delegates to the Republican convention. They are tired of being treated in the party. The fact that white Republicans ignored the race in the recent campaign caused Harry Weller to lose the governorship by 165 votes.
PITTSBURG HONORS NEGRO SOLDIERS.
(By Associated Negro Press)
A monument, dedicated to a scene activity of Pittsburg Negroes in the war, was built in which the Negroes in which more than 2,000 Negroes took part through the downtown streets of the city and out to Oakland.
PROTEST LYNCHING OF
November 18. 1919.
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People today telegraphed Governor Gardner of Missouri saying that members of a group of black people be called to justice. The telegraph is as follows:
Hon Frederick D. Gardner, Gov.
Jefferson City, Missouri
Missouri is scheduled to apprise Moberly, Missouri to the Sunday, Nov. 16th of one and the contemplated lynching and burial of three other Nocroes alleged to have heaten and murdered a black man in Moberly.
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, organized branches and eighty-four thousand and members of both races, in the name of law and order and that betrayed the people, results from justice initially administered, appeals to you for energetic efforts on part of Missouri local and state authorities to wind-
The Republican Party Is The Ship, All Else Is The Sea."—Fred Douglas.
ILLINOIS NEGROES
HAVE MODEL
MUNICIPALITY
CONTAINS ALL MODERN CONVEN
IENCIES AND IS FREE FROM
TOLERANCE AND LOAFING
(Associated Negro Press.)
"There should be less charity and more responsibility for the Colored man. He should not to his house he have to set the land him have the transportation and housing and he is going where his house is." It would surprise you to see how they lift up their heads when they are taking part in their government activities. They are criminate, you understand. Anybody can come in. We are learning what it is to have community responsibility of our citizens don't want to undertake the cost. Eventually, they will Charles C. Banks, Canks laborer; is village clerk. Trustees are a worker Bryant, laborer. Winbruh grocer; Jerry Taylor, junior; Roe P. Thomas, Real estate dealer; Keklar is a clerk for the board of Assessors. The village was built on subdivisions laid out by Enusehe S. Robbins, who has a large tract in this district.
Stay of Execution Issued In Case of Caldwell Soldier
Judge Grabbie Dennis Habeas Corpus Writ, but Gives证书 of Probable Course.
The writ of habeas corpus instituted by the attorney of Edgar Caldwell, Chelsea Linden, a street car conductor at Aniston, last December, was deferred to the United States court for the northern district of Alabama. Wednesday, the writ was issued and a certificate of probable cause giving the defendant the authority to the United States circuit court of appeals was granted.
The writ was sent to Camp McClellan, is allied to have had an argument with the conductor which resulted in the killing on December 16, 1971, of a man tried and convicted in the state court at Aniston. The attorneys for the man were the United States court, it being held that the man was a soldier at the time of the shootings and in sovereign authority in the case, which should have been left to the general court. J. Q. Smith, attorney general of the Court and Neil Stearn of Aniston, represent the state that the state had authority in the mattes and Mr. Stearn read the writ. The court case citing the various opinions of United States judges and judges of the current court of justice. Judge Habeas corpus state had authority in the case and denied the writ. However, the certificate of probable cause was granted.
(Continued on page 5.)
NEW ORLEANS "WIDE OPEN"
Bars and Bartenders are Keep Busy as in the "Good Old Days." Whisky is 50 cents a drink.
New Orleans, La., Dec. 6.—Every day during the old days in a well-armed war was filled over the counter in New Orleans tonight, after federal Judge Foster declares war-time prohibition uncontested. Less than an hour after Judge Foster hand enforced federal authorities of bonded whisky in compliance with the petition of the Herman Leiser Liquor Company, whom were acquitted recently without rejecting I liquor in steadily varied assortment. Mixed drinks were unobtainable during the day because of the injunction, in granting the injunction, rule that the world war was ended and the bonded whisky adjourned recently without rejecting the peace treaty with Germany. He maintained the Volunteer war-times prohibition enforcement hull in October 28 the President declared the army and navy formed unwieldy Judge Foster formerly held that 2.75 per cent beer was non-infotoxicating.
Warning Issued.
Above the enthusiasm of Hour dealers, however, loomed the war-times prohibition attorney and the Internal Revenue Courtier that a strict record das being kept of liquor selling that should be prosecuted. States declare the war-time probabil-
(Continued on page 5)
Cincinnati To Have Model School
(By Associated Negro Press)
Cincinnati, Ohio, Dec. 8. Approximately 1750 students to be held by the Board of Education in constructing a school for Negroes at the Southwest corner of Seventh and Cutter streets, extending to and facing Sinton Park.
Little time will be lost in getting the improvement under way for the board has ordered that estimates be obtained, the money having been authorized at the election. The school will be named in honor of Harret Beecher Stowe, who wrote "Uncle Tom's Cabin," while a resident of Cincinnati.
Property for the improvement was procured several years ago, the lot having a frontage of 300 feet on Seventh street as well as on Barr
The 1359 feet on Culver.
The school is one of the modified Spanish Renaissance style of architecture. The school will contain 30 regular class rooms such as the offices of the principal and teachers and doctors' rooms. Much attention will be paid to the manual training departments as well as to the teachers and doctors' connection with the gymnasium will contain a total of 1,000 seats. Adjoining it will be committee rooms. The branch library, which, as in the case of the auditorium, is outside the working the school proper, will be provided for the school and will contain reading rooms stack-rooms and work rooms. The building will be provided for gymnasium use. The location of the pool, beneath the auditorium, gives an arrangement for the public during the summer vacation periods and on evenings when the public rate locker and shower rooms will be provided for the public. The public rate locker and shower rooms will be provided for the public. with terra cotta trimming and tile roof. The plan in general is H shaped, with the balance in mass, height, and size, and housing and household arts, department on one side and opposite the auditorium.
COLORED RAILROAD FIREMEN RECEIVE CONTRACT WITH RAILROADS.
Memphis, Tenn. Dec. 6.—The Colored firemen are very jubilant in the receipt of their awards, the International Brotherhood of Firemen and Ollers with the railroads that have contracts with the white firemen of the International Brotherhood of Firemen and Ollers. This will put the Colored firemen on the same basis and working conditions, classified as firemen. With a scale of wages with their various committees, representation, delegates.
Bro. M. I. Chick of Local No. 511 Natchez, Miss., was in the city recently on committee, relative to the indictment of the firemen. While the city he was the guest of Rev. W. M Nelson on Florida street.
January 3
BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION REPORTS ON CONDITIONS
SAYS NEGROES TAKE PRIDE IN
THEIR RACE AND CONTINUE
TO DEMAND RIGHTS
(By Associated Negro Press)
Washington, D. C., Dec. 6. - The Bureau of Investigation heretofore has been called upon to into the recent race riots throughout the country. In fact, it has been detailed on radicalism among the Bureau of Justice was giving any particular attention to the race riots. The detailed on radicalism among the Bureau of Justice has been shown, shows that the Bureau of Investigation, has been making a most exhaustive landy of all radical actions. The report of the Bureau of Investigation to the Attorney General has been made by the bureau. It reads: "Since the first report was prepared there have occurred several race riots in the city of Omaha and Arkansas, and the more radical Negro publications have been quick to avail themselves of the sting of inflammatory sentiments, utterances in which some cases have reached the limit of open defiance."
"Every infidication given in previous expressions of insubordination has been published, until at this time, there can no longer be any question of a well concerted movement among a class of Negro leaders of thought and action, to constitute themselves a deterrent source of radical opposition to the Government, and to the established rule of law and order.
"Among the more salient points to continue (on page 2)."
Miami Stops Citizens From Meddling Negro Chauffeurs
(By Associated Negro Press)
Miami, Fla., Dec. 6. — Interference in the law-adding person commission by one of the law-adding person commission was unanimously condemned by the Chamber of Commerce member, Mr. Upchurch. Upon motion it was resolved that resolution shall be drafted and submitted to the chamber of commerce to be heard by the city and county constabulary to "go the limit" in prosecuting any person who intimidate or interfere with any other persons coming to Miami with lawful intent and obeying the laws. Statements were made to the meeting that in a number of instances recently tourists have arrived in Miami and have been employed, and that intimidation has been used both toward the white tourists and the drivers. These tourists have been confronted with the best intentions, and no objection to their servants driving their cars until they reached Miami.
Bruce Given Vacation By
Board
(By Associated Negro Press)
Washington, D. C., Dec. 6.—The board of education gave further expression in President Obama's confidence in Presidents John F. Kennedy's schools, by voting him a two-week vacation to recuperate from the strain of the recent investigation into his role. The board suggested that he spend period visiting schools in other cities to learn about the executive session of the board preceding the open meeting. That he attend the meeting of the board to make recommendations of the majority of the Colored schools was one of the recommendations of the majority of the board and found him competent for the position. Through the board has disposed of the Bruce case, members of the Parents' League, continued to pick the Franklin School where Bruce has
NEGROES TO TAKE CENSUS
(By Associated Necro Press)
The Necro Press will be engaged as Federal census takers in sections where Necroza from the largest element of the population is being surveyed. Arthur G. Dore, United States Supervisor of Census, announced today, who were in the military service, that representatives of Necroza that represent Necroza had information that had never been an accurate counting of the Necroza of this country. This information that the white enumerators classified as "white" those Necroza men and women.
TEACHERS OF TEXAS MEET
In Interesting Session At Corsicana Conference of Teachers, Ministers and Business Men, Held With Supervisor of Negro Schools.
By N. W. Harille.
Negro Papers in Baltimore
Announce Policy To Combat
Charges of Radicalism
(By Associated Negro Press)
Baltimore, Md., the newspaper replying to a news paper filed with Attorney General Palmer in Washington alleging that radical Negro papers—which are now public news papers—were opposing the Government, concerted action is planned by the four Colored It is expected that announcement will be issued stating that in the county of Baltimore, Negro newspapers and other Red agitators, not a single Colored person has been convicted or sentenced to jail in Maryland. The Negro press of this city right resents blanket accusations that those journals it would "damn" newspapers and calls upon the Department of Justice to call the names of those journals it would "damn" newspapers in Baltimore stand for:
1. The right of Negroes to vote and be represented in the county.
2. Equal school facilities.
3. Abolishment of the Jim Crow Cases.
6. The right to purchase property and live anywhere without molestation.
7. The right of Nerro Labor to organize.
8. The right of accused persons to "due process of law" and punish them. Far from opposing the government, Colored newspapers here are but advocating the rights guaranteed to them under the constitution of the United States.
JUDGE FORT SPEAKS TO NEGRO ELKS.
(By Associated Negro Press)
Birmingham, Ala., Dec. 2 -- E. C. Brown, of Birmingham, presented distinction in the world," declared Judge W. E. Fort in an address to a harte rathen of Elmo Elks at the University of Alabama. The address included wholesome advice and encouragement. Judge Fort said the Negro race had reason to be proud of its progress, and must possess the aptitude to lead lives of ease and comfort. "The Negro must not allow himself to be a slave to the oppressor and must possess the manhood to practice what he preaches." said Judge Fort. The Negro has an opus of art, which he has lesson if he will only see it. He admonished the men to have self-respect and build up the right kind of character. "If is left with you and your character," concluded the judge, "you will rise from your present situation." Judge Fort was introduced by P. D. Davis and responses were made by A. L. Flournau and O. W. Adams.
TEXAS MEET
vision At Corsicana. teachers, Ministers Men, Held With egro Schools.
H. Harlie, motion, its progress, its rise that touched every phase of the problem of American democracy. He asked the question, if it were possible to educate children in a disqualified school house with improper surroundings, and with a lack of identity. He dwelled at length upon the reward of the Negro soldier who had been at all times loyal to the government, and who had been a white man and is the white man's best and most trusted friend. He could not believed that a Christian could be so untrue, as not to both recognize and generously reward the efforts of Negro loyalty and egro desist, and heroic deeds in which the pages of history of all times would be a blank without this one page of Negro loyalty and egro courage that stands out like stars and span the sky, the rising sun and the moon. We are peaceful, we are patient, standing with our faces to the rising sun of egro trust in the past and future.
Principal G. W. Jackson welcomed the teachers and visitors on behalf of the elderly, parents and children, and white he did this the saluted teachers stole out and trickled down the furrows of his face, furrows made there in the service of the children of the state, and especially of his city. These were the tears of graduate coming out as he looked over the walls of the schools of his city while in front of him sat many of the teachers and businessmen he and taught. Principal R. D. Ryan of the Houston Colored high school responded, and spoke at length on the proper equipments of the schools
(Continued on page 6).
NEGRO BUSINESS
IN BALTIMORE
BOOMING
(By Associated Negro Press,
Baltimore, Md. Dec. 6.—With four newspapers, a city directory, three private banks, several local insurance companies, and a recently incorporated $50,000 broom factory, business is booming in the monumental city as never before.)
dementary Method of Hair Culture is the Most important in the Course of Impairment, Wearen Hair and their Fungus. Treatment now compuls in your own home, in its to eight weeks. Good health for children.
TT COMPANY
J. U. S. A.
PRICE FIVE CENT
MEMBER
NATIONAL NEGRO PRESS
ASSOCIATION.
Published every Saturday morning
as the Fear at 2005 Brook Avenue
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(Incorporated)
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New York, New York
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Frost & Frost, Boy-
ley Building
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Independent Life Building
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THE DALLAS EXPRESS has
never hoisted the white feather, neither has it been disgraced by the yellow streak. It is not affiliated with the fannel mouth. It is a plain, every day, sensible, conservative newspaper, which trims no sail to catch the passing breeze; flicks no doubtful flag. It grows a patriotic banner as our country. Its love of even handed justice covers all the territory occupied by the human race. This is pretty high ground, but we live on it and are propering. Boys of the past are with us. This ground is holy. W. E. KING.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1919.
RED LITERATURE FOUND IN DALLAS; AUTHORITIES HOLD ONE MAN IN BOND OF $5,000.
Evidence that Bohlevaheg agents are open in an effort to implant marshmilch sentiment in the minds of the foreign-born population of Dallas' came to light Monday morning when David Krause, alleged Bohlevaheg, was released on bond in the sum of $5,000 following a hearing before United States Commission on Immigration and National Security, here several days ago under Section 3 of the Expiation Act. His bond was made by George Clinton who is also acting as his attorney.
The section of the espionage act under which the man was arrested is the one that was calculated to inspire bitter bitter against the government. It is claimed that Krause had been arrested in Yiddish, urging a revolution on the part exerting form of government in Yiddish, urging a revolution on the part exerting form of government in Yiddish, and have expressed themselves as opposed to any movement directed against the government.
Krause, it is said came to America when a youth of nineteen, and several years ago he made his home in New York, and he talked about seven years. He denied that he is in any way connected with the foreign party, which is said be be bound a nation-wide boom plot planned for Christmas. Authorities here say that the foreign born population Dallas is under attack, and they take root here to any extent. It is said that alleged "Rede" and "Bolon" are being used in Dallas, through every effort will be made to check the spread of dangerous propaganda and all offenders will be dealt with within the same area are in the larger Eastern cities.
RED PRINCIPLES AND MINDS OF BLACK MEN
For several weeks the country has been stirred by revolutionists of the left who have called for a nationality who by ooct act against the American government on behalf of the United States in unrest to the country generally and have come together to our own accord to that their activism has faced courted some concern as to our stand as a race toward their activism.
Negroes never have been and never will b. Revolutionaries in America. Our real American principles and our spirit of progress is too great to allow us ever to wish to change it for any other form of government of the United States. With us it always has been and always will be "America First" all else follows. Our striving to improve ourselves will so have we done, so we will continue to follow out our program of progress but our ultimate aim is better production, more thrift, bigger business enterprise, better homes, more education which results in greater career prospects, less labor, better school facilities, clean and beautiful living to furnish proof of the same principles which guide us.
How many of your friends do you know who have had "money in the bank" for years and years who as yet have no income? And during that time others who have started small but who have been willing to give their small earnings a chance to grow are now counting their income in hundreds and their rating in thousands of dollars.
There is no need for hesitation, neither is there any reason to think that a sound legitimate proposition will make one rich over night. The accumulation of property and the growth of incomes is just as slow but just as sure as the growth of a normal physical body which receives the proper amount of income. The real value of investment lies in the fact that the interest which accrues may be allowed to draw interest if let alone and thus the principal grows.
It seems to us that these facts are worthy of careful consideration by all of us. We need more millionaires. We need more families whose means of subsistence is fundamentally secure and not entirely dependent upon the earning capacity of its members. Investment in sound projects will bring it to pass.
Now-since it is hardly ever possible for Negroes in the South to purchase stock in concerns promoted by members of the other race, it stands to reason that they must invest among them such investment upon the earning capacity of its members. Investment in sound projects will bring it to pass.
This company is growing and spreading and many times during the year, furnishes employment for each of the above named men beside a substantial dividend to those others who own stock in it.
In like manner there is a large newspaper concern in Texas which beside furnishing a nominal dividend furnishes steady employment for lotnopers, presmen, bookbinders, stonographers, proofreaders and bookkeepers. It is needless to say that these people would not be able to follow such special lines in other than New Orleans.
Now the whole of this article is calculated to show you what your dollars can do. There is not need to hesitate. Invest. Let your money work for you. Think in terms of income as well as salary and your material prosperity will be stabilized and secured upon a foundation which will grow firmer and with age.
THE DAY NURSERY
During the past few weeks a committee of our Dallas women have been busy in a campaign quietly carried on for the raising of funds for a movement among us which if furthered and supported will mean much in the civile life of Negroes in Dallas. Last week these same ladies opened to the public the Day Nursery for Negro babies in an auspicious manner. Of the many forward steps which our people have recently taken in this city no is so full of possibilities for development and concrete, every day help as this one is. Our mothers are called out by work who are compelled to leave their little ones may have taken care of here at small expense. Means are furnished and clean, sanitary recreation under the supervision of mothers and women of experience. In this large city especially, there has been a crying need for just such an institution and its beginning should mark the starting in Dallas among Negroes a well organized and complete program of Welfare Work for babies which would grow to such an extent that the thousands of our babies whose mothers are forced by financial conditions to leave them for long hours during the day, would be guaranteed a sanitary surrounding and healthful environment.
Such a movement means many things in its final analysis. Mothers will benefit from it by learning how to care for their babies best. There are now too many sick lads whose physical condition may be traced to unhealthy surroundings and care during infancy and in many cases this same condition will persist. The health of the mothers of the mothers surrounding and healthful environment.
It will result in an unconscious development in the cleanliness of many of our homes, for many mothers are not neater and cleaner in their homes because they have not been taught better. Gening in direct contact with a clean, bright, highly sanitary home where their children are kept will mean to many of them a desire to imitate that which is best in that home, and their own homes will benefit by it.
But the greatest benefit to be derived from such a movement in the community at large which, if these children are properly cared for and safe guarded and taught even at that tender are the things that tend toward civic interest and moral responsibility, will have less care for them as juvenile problems. It is common knowledge that most of our youthful lawbreakers are those who have had little, if any, care while young. They are most receptive to such influences and the result is that when they have gotten to adolescence the community is forced to suffer from their ignorance and make of them examples of plity.
This movement must grow. As the committee is able, and our people in Dallas will see to it that it is able, this work must be pushed and spread with systematic persistence till our Day Nurseries each day contain babies in every section in Dallas. They must cover Dallas even as our unfortunate bables do and act a safeguard to the masses against ignorance and haste. We must be able to teach them the importance in charge of this work must be willing to study. Get in touch with systems of this sort in the big cities of America. Study their methods and apply them here where possible. Study their method of funding and try as far as is possible to get this system upon a sound working basis.
We take this means of asking for this committee the hearty support of the Negro citizenry of Dallas. If they are willing and eager to help our children in a systematic way and give them the opportunity to learn, we would indeed be blind to our own best interest if we failed to give and help in every way possible for on the same dirty, poorly fed, unfortunate little ones hangs the hope of our cause in America.
When your boy asks you to allow him to work and make some honey don't refuse him. He can't start too soon in learning the lesson of thrift. He can't learn how to work and does not leave home to work he can earn by doing the extra things at home which will cause him to look upon himself as a weaker earner and prospective capitalist.
THE DALLAS EXPRESS. DALLAS TEXAS. SATURDAY. DECEMBER 6, 1919.
I saw the mountains stand,
Silent wonderful and grand,
Looking out across the air
falling on the dome and spire;
And I heard a low voice calling,
Come up higher, come up higher,
From the midst of Earth desire,
From the midst of Earth desire,
From the vain pain of self,
From the attitude of self,
From the attitude of self,
"Higher." (Author Unidentified.)
POLITICAL PATTER
There is Power in Politics. Political preferment is a human instinct that cannot be eliminated. The world has been divided for five years because certain groups of people are clamoring for the assent of the people in the name of humanity, justice democracy and freedom. It has been a conflict in which our group has been divided between the name of patriotism, and in the problems of reconstruction we are facing. The American nation has two dominant parties of political action, Republican and Democratic. With their deeds, platforms and principles, we are not necessary for us to describe them. In the certain sections of the country, we are not necessary for us; in other sections, the Democrat party not only scorns us, but openly and boastingly defies us, advancing a political theory that, a dark skin is an eternal bar to political recognition and trumped up piece of toml-folly; but up to this hour, in the last twenty or more years, we have been American that gave it the name of the Grand Old Party. Despite this well known fact, the majority of our people are white, viciously accepted its calling. The white Republic of Texas has announced that the time has come to drop us, and that in fact, we should be out of politics anyway. Certain non-violent organizations, and are making it an objective of their political wagon. In a number of communities there are effective organizations, and they are, no more
There Have Been Noted Gatherings at Dallas this Month.
During the McKinley administration white Republicans from the south imported it to get rid of the Negro factor to the growth of the party. It was a lie as old as its conception. The administration heeded it. All Negro office holders in the south, were cut out except a few
—VIDA
subordinates. A few by importing and compromising landed; most as "handy men," men of whom died, whether of grief of disappointment or warfare. The Negroes refused to go to the polls and support an obstructive entity, the Swampscott Indians dwindled down from 16,700 to 13,000. McDonald (Goose Neck) was the neck of the state who did not seek office. And yet the "Lillies" would gladly have embraced the opportunity of handling the state's debt to lie the price of his liberty—But not for gold or silver, nor kings' coins. The state had no constitution. Slaughter alone hated petal, his not repeated declaration that, "his only ambition was to see the success of the party so when others were not successful," to victors, he like the "stormy petrel" he skipped over the boisterous waves, heeding not the death that threaten
THAT'S THE IDEA—DO IT NOW.
The Savannah Tribune makes this suggestion: Negroes must be careful of organization and the most they must insist on equitable representation in every division and grade of authority, governing them. If not, they are lost.
The Negro laborer, earning big money, must save it. He must live as nearly as possible down at his old standard, until out of his income some cash, begun some purchase of something imperishable and lasting, for this saving or investment. He must do it now. Must commence systematically and methodically to take out a request for this saving or investment. Must learn not to desire and have every desire, because he is able to buy it. Must learn to take a pride in the ownership so taken in his own manhood, in his life, in numbered with those who have bank accounts.
"the day that knows him now," the day of high wages and wider opportunities, "may soon know that he will be able to mention all change up and present an entirely new complexion, before long. When that time arrives Negro must be ready to meet its demands.
We must operate businesses to supply needs. We must provide opportunities for our children.
We must build factories and market businesses.
We must build banks and exchanges, the hotels and hotels.
We must have money.
We must invest in money-making companies and enterprises, so as to create profits and income. Do it now.
SOME "DONTS" THAT WILL HELP EVERYBODY.
Don't use vile language in public places.
Don't act discourteous to other people in public places.
Don't allow yourself to be drawn into armed brutality.
Don't use liberty, as a license to do as you please.
Don't take the part of law makers, be they men, women or children.
Don't make yourself a public nuisance.
Don't encourage gamblers, disrepeatable women or men to pile their business.
Don't congregate in crowds on the streets to the disadvantage of others passing along.
Don't spend your time hanging around saunas or pool rooms.
Don't live in unsanitary houses, or sleep in rooms without proper ventilation.
Don't violate city ordances, relative to health conditions. Don't allow children to beg on the streets.
Don't allow boys to steal from or assault peddlers going their rounds during the day. Don't bussie or violate the confidence of those who give you employment. Leave your job when you have a few dollars in your pocket. Don't work for less wages than being paid people doing the same work. Don't be made a tool or strike breaker for any corporation or firm. Don't allow buffet or rooms rented in your neighborhood. Don't allow children under fifteen years of age to run the streets. Don't get intoxicated and go out on the street insulting women and children and make a beast of yourselves, likeWISE with your wife and children.
Don't undermine other people taking from them their work.
Don't appear on the street with old shoes, dirty aprons and ragged clothes.
Don't throw garbage in the back yard or alley or keep dirty front yards.
Don't attempt to make an express wagon of street cars.
Don't forget street car, conductors are bound by rules of the car company which the law compels them to. Don't oppose police officers in the discharge of their duty, you should be prepared to assist them in keeping the peace.
THE MIRROR OF
PUBLIC OPINION
In an interesting report to the bishop and members of the Atlantic conference of the African Methodist Episcopal church, which appears elsewhere upon this page, a conference committee deplores the nation-wide tendency of the times toward an appraisal of Negro character according to standards set by the commission of criminals among the colored people.
Unfortunately, the world is prone to measure the progress of the race and the status of its relationship toward the white race, not by the work of its better element, but by the criminal record of the bad. The work of the Negro people is to judge the Negro people as a whole by the bad things they do instead of by their efforts in behalf of better citizenship.
When a Negro commits a crime—resulting, it may be, in a riot—that crime is widely exploited and reports of it to the authorities. The better element of the race—vastly in the majority—may build churches, schools, establish thrifty, peaceful, law-abiding, decemcy-respecting farm communities and in many ways move upward on the ladder of good citizenship, as they are often doing. The little is said about it. But if one Negro brute commits a crime, even in those very communities where the race as a whole is making splendid progress, the world is put on notice, and the ninety-nine who are law-respecting citizens, and who are trying to maintain the status of the race, are made to suffer.
This form of injustice is being gradually renamed. Meanwhile, the advice of this conference committee to the race is well worth its careful consideration.
The sentiment expressed in this memoir merits the approval not only of the committee to whom it is specially addressed, but the spirit of the document deserves and will receive the commendation of the white race.
The report is very largely based upon the theory that the south is the natural home of the Negro, and that he prefers to stay here if given an opportunity to live in peace and security. It attributes the fact that so many thousands of Negroes have gone to the North to the discontent arising out of a relationship between the races that would not exist if there should be mutual co-operation based upon the observance of law and order, the punishment of any man, black or white, who offends against the race, and just treatment to all under the law.
That is a platform which should meet the approval of all.
—Atlanta Constitution.
Full Citizenship.
There are certain plain issues before us as an integral part of the American people, entitled to all the constitutional rights and privileges American citizens which must be clearly perceived, frankly discussed, and understood. We must also that will guarantee permanent and amicable adjustment. That ground is the full recognition of our constitutional rights as American citizens. Until our group in every community is accorded these constitutional rights there will be dissatisfaction, set forth criticism. It is folly to blank out the rights of American citizens by speaking the truth plainly. We will get no where in bringing in the true democracy which we should all desire if we permit ourselves to be deceived this point. Any group of American citizens that is satisfied with less than their full constitutional rights is not worthy of American citizenship. We must also fact that the new consciousness of our people must be interpreted.
This, then, is the sole issue: Are we American citizens? If this be answered in the affirmative, as it must be, it follows, naturally, that as intelligent, self-respecting, progressive citizens of this republic, we cannot maintain our self-respect and integrity, nor can we curtailment of any of our rights of citizenship unapplicable to all other citizens. There needs to be absolute clear-headedness upon this issue. This is the issue upon which there must be no surrender, no compromise. This is the issue against the "gimn corn" ordinance of every description in every section of the country, not because we are seeking "social intermingling" but civic and civil rights; and because such ordances are clearly, obviously, and designedly an invasion and curtailment of our constitutional rights as we are. That we should understand this and that we should understand this and it is important that we should strive to get the thoughtful and fair-minded people of the dominant group to understand it, not by losing our temper or by calling names or by threats and inflammatory names but by being so clever and convincing argument. The same those who are unwilling to be convinced, we admit, is a difficult one; but it is not an impossible one.
Let us see to it that we clearly understand the issue involved in contending for our constitutional rights. We must also see that we become parties to no
plan, no matter how plausible or advantageous it may appear, that means a surrender of such rights.
Be content with nothing less than being a 100 per cent American citizen, discharging cheerfully and gladly all the duties that such citizenship and proving your worthy of enjoying all the p. liases and rights of the man.
Full citizenship. Nothing less. let us be worthy of it and then stand uncompromisingly for it.
—Monit.
American Legion is Ameri-au.
If there was any doubt as to the course the American Legion would take respecting the discharged Negro soldiers that doubt was remoled last week at the First National Convention of the Legion held at Minneapolis. Ever since the organization of the Legion St. Louis, there have been efforts made, chiefly by southerners, to draw a color line in the organization. The Colored men of the South have been met with all kinds of excuses and evasions when they have attempted to become a part of the Legion. The Colored men thought they could control the color question in the southern states, notwithstanding the fact the Legion is a national body, and not sectional. The question had to rest until the First National Convention when the Negro soldiers there threw out to the satisfaction of the Colored delegates.
There was nothing strange about the effort made by the southern white men to keep Negroes out of the League. They acted upon the time-worn basis of prejudice, and evidently thought their ground tenable. But there was something strange about some of the remarks of the southern delegates, who, after admitting that they had actually refused the Colored brother, protested that "southern gentlemen" are willing to "play fair." It is very evident that the "hair play" was born in the Committee room, where the gentlemen in office were sitting. The question was satisfactorily settled there, it would be taken to the floor of the convention and forgeout in the open. The "southern gentlemen" did not care for the open fight for democracy, and they yielded to the contention in Committee.
Whether the southern delegates were sincere in their opposition to the Colored soldiers is questioned by the Committee. They yielded in Committee rather than appear on the floor on open convention indicates that they had no intentions of going further than making a fight in Committee. This is probably what their southern constituency expected of them, hoping to achieve their ends in secret, if possible, but willing to yield rather than be recorded publicly to a brother American. The Legion is entitled to its name. It is an American body evidently controlled by Americans.
British View of Our Group.
Writing from Washington under date of September 30, the correspondent of the London Times, considers the relation between white and blacks in the United States. His article presents another race riot, this time in Omaha, accentuates the fact that the United States is still from finding a solution of what is when all is said and done the most difficult, though not immediately the most important, of her social problems. A good deal has been said in previous articles, but the proper Americanization of citizens of all n blood. Things like the steel strike, which would not have come about had it not been for the inflammability of the foreign laborers in the mills, show that the movement is a much needed one. The real problem there is no such ultimate cure as yet visible. The descendants of the slaves of Colonial days and of the first era of independence, are already as much Americanized as they can be. One of the lessons of the present is that the farther upwards they move, the social scheme, the greater their interest and the greater the prejudice "the whites with whom they compete."
It is the custom of the Negro to live in well defined quarters of the cities. Even in Washington, one finds whole streets given up to Colored people, tucked away in the midst of the best residential quarter. As the Negro crowds North the old Colored district becomes unable to hold him; he slops out in adjoining streets. His presence in them is resented, and there is bad blood. This bad blood is aggravated by 'the white workman's jealousy of his competitor. A woman against a white woman, or something of that sort, and the fat is in the fire. The war has also hardened the feeling of the Negro against the white. He was sent in large numbers to France. He found in France no particular color line drawn against
(Continued on page 5.)
CORSICANA
Corsican, Texas, Des «~The
Sate ‘Teachers Antclation convened
here tne wen ihre were any Ws
tore bere fom ove the state, bt
vritataniag the” tad wear the
fesig ney
‘Houst aaa by ber two
iietiers Kix ne sito re
feat aie fue Slo eta! ake
fee's irs” Hourea oh Mates
pred Copigne and. apes
Pkt er dace nt Me
Pinnie atan ai ons
rota aad Moe Mate sunt 9 at
ere ie guetta
Bernt on Rnd Me aati
fem rasa tor inst we is
See Somer, Sir "Caries tame
fie, Poe marion sated “ons
eine cy ast week ie tuey
homis ‘wes tatiog in tis eet
Tee Weak” fraf'ant ats teaser
tae Sangh" of Tomaie ant ar
Soros af Waco’ sopned wih ie
Fa a ar
Bonde ce Hantnen Teas wi
feet iat week! Mata
laste itl tre. Marl
Keele, trie lof Pte
ean valine aber
Tsctill Mis Zot Borers and
Men, Geta OF aes ted
Ma. atin Sen intone "aad
ho Mist Pan acho Son. fe
fi piesa enna es ett
ff ja ray pag by in ra
Solon ae a Sill Is ok
Bee Fea Mae tnd Sie
Par key spat Monday Sh Se
Pirates Croan
Siecle doer ofr, ana
sate sed eee ane epee nee
Rome fete terme ior res
‘its, ‘its Lah, Son tae be
Bae bee fre ore a ate
ile She ary hatred
TerShaher tae Cena Pater
Peper abe it dine nen
"The renple teh Sel hand toy
wore hunt euettined Poy eres
Tete han att rntece
Si SB Resin ero
ae angied ‘wth he che
ini af hich very one ego
Met ube end Se Sues kas
Eitndeh tee cOnersce Arora
ees tant vee Soe. pane
Tecatrefeed nates Make
Sees ay: aes ary
ot: Mra. 0. M. Mayfield.
FARMERSVILLE,
Farmersville, ‘Texas, Dee. 4.—The
‘agent apprecaien the easerness_ with
Which "the people. are erecting th
Exprens and trate thi pire ma
Rev. N. Prince, pastor of the Mt
Moriah Maptist church of the Genera
Convention’ wan with his people her
Sunday tm spite of the bad "weather
three’ very" appréclante » aidienee
heard hin morning, evening an
‘Thankasiving day was a very dv
fatfaly on account of the cold. weath:
‘Me. and Mra. Walter Jackson have
réturmed: to the lty” after an xb:
‘tence of couple. nt ‘months. The
Kot P. ts comtomplntin= somethine
for the “amusement” of thelr friends
‘and adirere durine the holidays.
"The. pubile ‘eehool ts prosressins
nicely with attendance growins every
‘ay.
“Remember the eomputvory atten:
dance law becomes affective. Monday
Doe, 8." All requlred By the law mat
he there.
HED OAK,
Red Onk, ‘Terns. Dee. 4-—The Ce:
er Grove Tagtiat church is on ton
fie Goon, Our pesto fet eos!
here. "He preached the Missionary
ssersnon Sonay, text Ponte #2-8
* Aure.
Peed ogc ein
op Petia ot Bae
oe
2 Et ren
ial ee aa
et na
eS
lar te ea eel
oe ae
pl, Stes rn
Ses sere
Se esierystio
"aOR
eer FER Dt
Pee oe ete
Soh te eerie Mi
Sri ar a ge eats oh
cite? Bat rtd
‘rt at
‘ent
ieee ey en
re at yt
iets apeieaterae
ee ere abe arct
Bias eet en
Sree caters
SELey gee
er hia
SESTRhe Se Sree
el
Win@RA WOE.
Mineral Wells, Texas, Dec. 4,—The
‘ten tien by he nse pan
een hon wan Pale for Me Tes
fon Hine Mision Sey "The x
fertamment ‘ete by Mee So
Brown ertued $ta0” Tie rept
Bother andthe” mete, re
int wentere oe eay
"Toe Noriwen Texas iste Doar
pus Boot seein hnce "Hire
Bie
Sih, Pela Orage ding. ten
ne tisteartoo We Dats er
Gi smtth spent aw dave! yi Me
fy tnd et for Ba noe pot
font at van Alatine. Nr rs
Brown’ tnd ‘ie ‘Wash Sebncon were
filer “tarred “Toanitating ay
oe BW. Wiehe melon,
ule ete hte A. at
seit waved, Sines ostie pet
ae cet Seaee Sat Pr
NAVY LIBRARY WORTH VISIT
‘Apartment in Biaten, War and Navy
‘ullding at Washington should
‘Appeal to Touriet,
‘The nay lbeary, in the state, war
and navy tolling, is « lovely place to
oak tp atmosphere, Like the build
i eset, Hee ehirtythree yours old
‘When it! was lit Bogland, France
Span and Tialy presented the marbles
‘of porphyry, senna and malachite with
‘whlch the ‘walls are paneled. Mexico
sent the places of oapa which encrust
{he gallery. ‘The roand stone over the
door eame trom the relax of Pompe
‘The connotssear in marble who visits
‘Washington will enjoy « call here.
nthe center of the large tov, lined
swith shelves of welghty tomes oo aa-
val matters, there ls a large and Ime
Dormat reen-topped “table. Aroand
this ible sat the strategie board ot
the Spanish American war. Here alse
‘he naval advisory board forthe great
war made Welr accret plans and ex-
Periments, Hala, Maxtt, Mller and
many others conferred. overt, with
the windows carefully darkened and a
‘urd tore the door.
‘There ism qualat side tothe Ubrary,
foo, A little whitenaired lady etn be
Seen any. time. fitting about the
Shelven of dark, heavy books, oF cute
fing and pasting buslly In her corner
by the window, This te Alm Mason,
‘laughter of w former secretary of the
faney. She as been tn the Mbrary
5 years. If you happen In near noow
she tay give you a Cup of fea on one
former of her dea
‘Abd of all charming places to have
au unexpected cup of tou, with &
Sroet” tle lady,” this quiet nook
‘noo the books Ts recommended,
TWO TRAVELERS CAME BACK
‘According te Army Captain, Mules Re
‘urmed. From That. Din and
Uemnesearel Sharm,
ihe baphneetel sens seers OS
fearsom dorampent, On Te appear al
the changes io satus of men and al
tunis for each proceding 24 hours. Tt
happened Ia ah Odio regiment once
that two anales fell It ene ight. The
‘eterinarian gave his verdict of hope
fess, andthe captain of the ®Rply
‘company accordingly made the proper
‘entry nthe, morning report: “Ew
‘mules, from duty to dud”
Unt under {he care of the grizzled
‘old able sergeant the mules recor
fered nd textmoraing the captaln
fiona them alive and, Kicklog. Now,
entries made on abe snoruing. report
‘can never he erased, which made the
‘tustion embarrassing for the np
tain, However, Ne wax # man of te
fucce, au the mext day's report car
fd the starting entry? “Two mule
from deed to. duty.”
Shrub May Prove Valuable.
‘two yearn before the war, as the
story tol, to. German chemist
Ahsiled for permlsston to experiment
‘vith the plat life on a great semi-arid
uch to central Mexico. Thiele re
Quest was granted, with the under
Stang that they torn a complete
report o€ thelr Adings. The two
Chemists worked feverishly, and ehtedy
fon a squat odorous shrub called “eo
hhernadora,” ong reputed t0 possess
Imadicinalproperten, Suddenly they
Alisappeared; what they hud discover
fot was never known, Now, ater ©
Derinents with this sae. desert
hrub which they Dave found tn drier
free of New Mexico, cemiste of the
Cited Stites department of agricul
ture belleve thet they have discovered
thother alkslold to add” othe. tint
whieh already Includes morphine,
Quinine ant coeaine. Tx ehertead and
[nrminceutleal properties are now ute
ter Iivestgation—Poputar Mechanlca
Magnaine.
wuaaiark Wiens te Gabe
A hufible log cabin which stands ts
fa truckless forest near ‘Lake. Atha
bsen, in western (Canada, was ‘once
the hose of a tur rapper, Ite bullder
[Now ita tomb, sheltering the frozen
body af ies former acexpant, who dled
there alone and unaided, nearly cro
Years ago. ‘To investigate the cause of
the trappers death, # fearless met
bree of the oral northwest mounted
plee Joueneyed (0 the desolate weene
fn mldwinter, braving the terrors of
the wiklernest for months Detore
aching his objective, situated mies
from railtouds and eeliztion. "The
Compe wa In a perfec sine of pres
fervation, due 0 the cold, dry alr, ana
‘war not moved. from the bunk on
Iwhlch the trapper passed away.—Pop-
‘lar Mechanies Magazine,
Lact Revert,
"An enutnent engineer ld tn our
hearing yesterday that In Italy. the
workers tr giving two hours of their
time as a free ict to the state. They
teallee that Ineeaged production means
Uiately lereased wealth. Ta. Ger
tnany there re sls of the same mir
Among the collier, Bat tn old Eng
fund the following story admirably
BBsmraten tne easton:
Tolners were discussing the mint
sum wage “Say, BIL” sed the frxt,
‘hats this ‘ere alata wage?”
Bi spat, “The atonam wage! ‘That's
what we gets for gola' down; an’ tt
tre santa ter make any more brane, we
fossa does, sonne work for It?—Lon-
‘don Morning Post.
‘city Markets.
‘Of 227 cition in the United States
hing extimated populations of more
than Soo, more than obe-alf (128)
Tul mietpal markets tn 1918 necord-
Ing’ to. Dulletin om the subject re
\Geaiip tadels tr the onsen ernie.
auto, the newly assigned pastor of
the C. M. HE llod hin pogt Sunday
and gavo an Idea of the great year's
Work that is before bis mentbers
Mrs A! R. Alexander visited hin fam
tly” in “Weatherford,” Sunday.” er
Talley’ wan ott of town last week
Please have news ready for reporter
when ‘be comes and have your money
Feady ‘when the boy comet around
Te elgara and clsaretion continue
to advance in price it will, bo. a
casy to drink’ a8 to soko and’ fow
ee a ae So
‘THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS TEXAS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1910.
| HOME-MADE ROLL-UPPINCASE Livep UP TO HER MOTTO)
| Oeaee See Sas Se Sate and! indianapolis Woman Had Made a Rule
uel Comets ap Poe | "En intandea to Lat Weng | —
| ‘tn Gees Condition, ‘Stand in the Way. |e
,} ‘The ordinary pincushlon is not | she t« one of Indlannpote’ most| ahd
| rerystiatctory artic for ollOR| wprreadsh bosses women awa [te
| Seat oop eine‘eaded oF otbt| ton ype of te DeaEOUred one At Soy
dn of fuer ins. A" cise of th) her tree amg! aes ene et
| nature "tostrafed can be seis 880] ui ar np as de hor besess tos
| let ead, andi I al Hts ot) cut “On aftr she hal rae |S
| as cx {in a nice and bright] jee them a paRY oat In the country
| Eoin, “1 ts merely composed | yo 4 wlenor and arson oa
¢| a plece of strong sili, lined with al by the frepince of thelr olt country | 80
one” Bu fortwo days 1 rine and Ch
| 20 ta atteraoon an etatog. to aa
R ‘The tree younger led nto hero | 28
yy F fice. their faces all fall of disappotnt-
1 YZ ~ tne. Bot a ale athe, | oo
: = ar waterproiar ge commanded |
1 p) | vine nein ey tea |
' fl amen
“ity, of ‘céume" she mimicked
1 ‘mete tone -hty cr can ge “over| 28
ies ‘rome rons tha Cat” tr
1% OP) | her reshealawy arr ei cont] Pe
== an the woman text her esan wo pr |
|| A Ge == | fet seninst hee emai thie tin. “I's aga
= someching that Wart bees" the |p
jana for a
. Pe ‘But tt is something that ts neces-| is
i => sar the ater tatermapted. "ite th ay
= fereh my omit Yon tnow at |S
{ fm te tien’ Ken wa [
| | tom my wortpettver wi T het ie
| teen me away eben spiny. mel
| "a fie tte ve ented fr ies ane | ap
T) || tens'vers emetcyy ove, toor—tnalun- eo
| GD |= cn
||. glist: — tre
| peer | COWS KNEW THEIR MISTRESS e
oa rol
| ahaa | san ra Ne i a
washleather and bound at the edger
‘rth narrow ribbon, and at the top
‘bons are sewn on. Tecan be" mad
fn any size and it rollt-up frum th
ottom and tles together In the wn
‘chown In the sketch, When the env
{is open any particalar kind of pin en
be molected fa t moment, and kept I
this ease they wil not become dull an
fusty, as they do sometimes when ex
‘owed to the alr,
"This ease could be carried out wit
other maaterialn sf preterred, and
‘would be equally useful made of ar
ferge and bound with narrow tbbor
fd Lined: with dannel ‘of any othe
‘ott material,
CARE OF SKIN IS IMPORTANT
How te Remove. Sunburn—ButtermiI
‘Bath Keeps &kin Soft, Smooth,
\Free From’ Chaps,
| A cure for sunburn: Washing the
| face tn water in whlch a andl o
Dersley nd half a lemon cat Int
allcos have been steeped for som
Doure will remore sunburn. Thes
can be placed tn the water Jug ove
| leh and Teft to when fresh wate
| Is poured toto the Jug op the fellow
| Ing morning.
‘A Buttermilk Bath—Giving th
face and neck a buttermilk bath I
fone of the beat means of keeping th
fin ‘oft nod. smooth, nd nourishes
fs well as whitens, When vslog but
termite for tollet purposes, have about
‘quart, and bathe the face and hand
vith Te Jost as If using water. ‘Ther
Apply it to the neck anaarms with #
jsbonge and let {t dry on” ‘The treat
Fment should be given at night, ead I
[the morning” the skin should.
| wished with warm water and a Ute
mala soap. :
|The skin cam be opt soft and tre
| from chaps If this soap is used Shred
fone pound of best yellow soup Into
[Jnr, wet It ina sndcepan of boiling
‘water on the stove, edd two table
spoonfuls wf glycerine und two ounces
Gt honey, and the Juice of a medium
Slaed lemon. Lat the water coating
oing til the Soap ts melted and the
hole can be beaten up together, ad
8 few Wrops of off of lavender. Pou
from the StF Into a pe dish #0 thatthe
apn aie ‘eam nh eh
then stand aside to get cold; divide i
“Into cakes and et them harden In a
ary place.
‘After peeling onlots, the hands are
often yeltow ; rub well with sult, rinse
{in cold water, thea wash tn the tual
‘way and the stain will be gone,
GIRLS* FROCKS TO BE SHORT
Designer Insists That Up to Ten Years
‘No Chile Dress Should Be
Sr gee
| A great deal of satin and taffeta ts
| sl ted for huldren dre and
Bo Se ene
petecg mace aoe
| ly for the younger girls. Little giris’
ieee s eee
Sere caret
Sp esda meme ae
sivestgartoas.
Sane cea ano
mie aries at, Seer
Rely aiegelcodares
Peete an ae
eee
Nees lew ceee mace
oo anes
peace
a ees
poe a on oa
Sener ee
‘middion.
Secret rae cae
eae ee eres
eres eee
as
men Fa ra
fT pag
short, full tunie.,
JACKSONVILLE, |
Saami See the ie
atone we St oy
eer:
es poe eee ce
be caeeet a tas
Eason some cis, aay
ae ent
eee ae eens
rN co ae Be
eae ake rete al
se itera Sa
of an coe cee
by one lot the large audiences of
LIVED UP TO HER MOTTO
Indianapotie Woman Hag Made a Rule
‘na Intended te Lst Nothing,
‘Stand In he Way.
She te one af Indlanrpii? most
socreafel Hoslneag Wotnen naturals
{oboe of Its best Ontured goes And
ter three small nephews estan ht
tale elt tte
Slaten. One aftersoon she ha prom
ised them a par ont nthe contr
tnd wlener and merstnaon. tons
by the Mrepinge of thelr ol comnty
ome.” But for 0 Jays I anal
0 tha termoan Wen rang. ton
‘The threw gomngters pied ito her of
fe, their frees a Fl of appeta
foont ‘Hot ne amiled thee et
Sur waterprogfx" she. commanded
‘ivi. are we goibg?” they asked Is
Why. Of urna" abe mimics
thelr fone, My chr exD. get over
‘rors ron than that.”
they rushed away after their coat
athe woman next her bese pro
test acs he ming this rin.“
somerhing that Tat becensry.” she
hit It something that Ie meres
sar." the other ttermapted. "Is the
‘creation 1 planned tnd ny reeves
{lon ts t+ neceamry ax tay work. T
espe 'up my more” Yirw know tht
fain ike thie eoul't keup me asa
from my‘ work-—peter wil Tet It
Keep tne away EO) ts py. Th
the motto Tee adopted for ite. ahd
Ie very efile one, too”—tudlan
pals News
COWS KNEW THEIR MISTRESS
Woman Who Had Lost Pete Had No
“Trove at all in Proving Oumar
Gaeanahe
A happy reunign took place at the
union storkyardg Heres Island, Pit
Thrah, a exchange declaren late the
‘other evening. when Mrs. P- 3. Tey
‘of Fox Chase read, O'Hara toenshin
Fencued her four stolen cows avaiting
thelr doom we Whe hands of the exe
tener. .
Dur a wey rico he other
afigricon "the xulmals were stolen
from thet pastare and driven to the
Mockyanis and sold. County Wetec
tives traced the eows, but aunong the
hundreds of other “Dossier” were ti
able to fdengity them. Mrs. Riley was
sent for, “AB she stepped fnto the bi
ben a stampede aniong the animals fo
time Uirentened serious Conan
‘quences, When It ad subsided the
‘ltectives, who wero with rx. itey
‘were ataged to Ree four of the cows
rushing toward the woman, Brushing
Mier heads againet her shoulder, the
fnlrals 200ed and moon soft expres:
sions of rellet Overdoged, Mre. Tey
krasped each around the neck Ib (4%
string thelr glossy coats and poting
them
‘Wea thelr mistress teft tho bi
stock pen, the eows, followed. er as
obediently as Well-ralved does. and
then Tast seen were sending thet
tray to thelr home on Fox Chase road
‘th thelr mtstrean,
Pree 3 ape
: = Sew, SARS Ease Soneerene
siominan, which tesa to be crest
ing w_profound tmpeesston, ha. been
tnade hy De. George Gn. the most
famovs expert inthe ina tend
states Conval Philip ‘olan aoe
Switzerland tn 8 recent report. Th
new metal i produced by putting th
‘ordinary ‘lumina touch spec
tented irocess, by whieh It neque
{he same mechanical qualtes wi
caectton as bronae, copper sd bras
Stat changing itsmpeite weigh
{ssa that the price of the new fea
fan be kept within ery tow. tate,
that even at the presegr prices of
tir meta Iw he abe, Oy reason
St ty smaller pecitdiweish, som.
fete with copper nod brans very tor
thy." tact thatthe new metal fs
‘conductor wil rake espa
‘eran th electrical trades
\Valupbie Too! Ghewt
War created many Ingeaioas de
cen developed inthe tne of snes
{oval the Rettig wen on the Ute
front. but capanie of adapelo. to he
tes of. peneetal Toda armies
(eof these is k mobile tool ees,
‘eseeibed in Popa Mecha Magu
Sine Te rosemblen a Bald ater
‘lmon, In which are Packed. Inple
tment and sapien ta reas varity
‘quantity, and Ie recrfonded for
aiid contractor, Samberen rnd
twulders and ors who regu
cmgnet "esly moved. tol carrie,
‘Among the articles kel nthe ba
are novela. muttocks. mallets, sedge
ammers pier, wrenches, extra hat
Glen for’ axes and. plc ropes, pl
tepe and wire, bed many other
ea
David and Arthur shared @.bed to-
ether, but did pot Bet along well In
olng 0, for wearty every aight thera
tras some disturbance between them
“Well, what is die. mutter” now
‘aother ‘eled. from the foot of the
‘tulrs one evening on hearing loud
falking in thelr chamber.
|i" Iitte. volee floated down to her:
oT eat get foto bed, “ounse Arthor's
lcked around ia Tt he's all ua
finde 2"
‘Animated Conference,
what's golng on In the parlor?”
nied the old friend who had come I
the buck way,
“alceting of ouF own foreign rela:
toa coenmitte,” ammwere Mr. Cum.
fox. “Mother and the girls are taking
‘oer the family aftatey of my oldest
‘unshter, sto married one of ‘hove
overscan vobelmea.”
assembled in the city. It will be
long remembered by those. who hoard
it A collection of $107.00 was tak-
fn on Sunday alsht Dr. Copeland of
Kentucky "preached a” pendid. er
mon 10a packed hotest the clos
Ot tke services souvenir was pre:
tented tothe Bishop by. tho’ Confer:
ence of “one thousand dollars az. 3
token “of “appreciation of hi fat.
fal service of 25 Yeara as Bishop.
Many a wan is wondering how om
cart he can make Xinas on Devo
sae tiageine,
MIRROR OF PUBLIC OPINION
ee er eee ae ee
railway carriages and to the various
febemes, like the “Grandtather
Cause," whereby some states con:
fine the suffrage to those whose
rundparents were {eq In order to
deprive ‘him Of the vote that was
constitutionally given him after the
Civil War, 1 irks lm the more
Inasmuch as he Is told by Bin organs
tn the Presa that the Axteriean High
Command tried to, ket the Freach to
treat him as he was treated at home
Proud of his new found sense of dis
eipling, be in not deaf to propagande
ssainat allowing Mimself to be ex
plolted. by the white race in times
ot crisis and then, when the crisis
is over,’ to be. put buck Into a po-
silon of recognized inferiority.
Porsmany years past there hav
bees two theories about the ed
cation of the American Negro. One
dow an been to concentrate. upon
teetinieal education, “40. bring lm
up to manual trades, and. to. ea:
courage him to become a mnall fh.
mer. The other dea has” beet to
treat im as a white man, to give
him a higher education. The later
polley has had cotelderable success
There have been Negroes high In the
Foderal service, There are sood Col
Cred doctors and Inwyers; and there
ire many thousands of Negroes, pro
baby, Heh enough t0 own thelr own
wiotors and that sort of thing. In
New York, for instance, there is
hiost prosperous Colored community
living together in good stree's and
ood houses, with its own theatres
and all the other trapplags of lv
zation.
Tit there is a reverse alde to the
shield, The intellectual Negro seeme
(o take rawer” kindly. (0. Soctalan
sd organised agitation. Thus, one
Anda, Venides the National Aasocl.
ton’ for the. Advancement of Colored
People, witeh has many white mien
bers, number of purely Coldred
organizations lke the League for
Democracy, an organlzation of Color
ed soldiers aflame with grievances
against the white oficer they had
in France, the Universal Negro Ini
provement Assocation, whose pro
fram Is to awaken clagp conscious:
ness among the Negrogs here and in
Africa, and to knit together all the
Colored races of the world, the Na-
tional Associaton for the Oreanit
tion of Labor Union among. Negroes
the Hamitic League of the World
the League of the Darker People of
the World, and 10 on.
Nearly all sue association are ex
treme and fun by youns Colored so
clalists, often. aided and abetted by
Drofessional white extremists of the
type that causes #0 much trouble
mong the allen proletariat, Some
ot hem publish inflammatory or
fans like the Messenger of the New
York the Crisis of the same city of
the Wosion Guardian, whose editor,
W. M. Troiter, a Harvard araduate
itor a fruitless vialt to. the peace
conference, lately told the. senate
committee on forelgn» relations
Yook out for a race siaing the
whites id not mend their ways, ven
the ‘dustrial Workers of the World
have been getting reeruita among
the Negroes’ inthe South, x fac
which made’ the Ameriean Federation
Of Labor decide” this year’ tg. cous
tence Colored unions, much to, the
disgust of the southerners,
‘To this the white reply, as ha
been ecen from the news of recent
tonths, has too often been mob
force. "Mob protection is the only
protection of the white man's home,”
cried the other day the payer of
former senator of the United Staten
published Ia Mlsssaippl in the course
of an article calling on the “best nd
braveet” In the state to organize
“ainee there ik no doubt that hel
will be to pay in ig country” tn
the near future.”
But, enough has been sald to show
how Aiseontent, merxine often into
lmpertinence and sometimes. crim
nal misbehavior on the one aide, and
gometimes rough Intolerance on the
other are exacerbating a problem al-
ready iMcult. The process. is do-
Plored by the vast majority of sober
whites and by many good, thought.
ful Negroes, Jt is quite probable that
the better sense of the nation will
prevent ita going #0 far as some pro-
fons to feat but for the moment 1
it not the least troublesome feature
nf a general situation teeming with
nther problems of race amalgamation
Nor is it one the existence of which
we. can afford to overlook. There can
pe ttle doubt that the extremists
would ke to extend thelr propa-
yanda to our possesons
‘Several of the most active agitators
mm New York, and elsewhere are, In-
feed, reported to be West Indians.
‘tay of Frecution Issued In.
‘(Continued trom page 1),
and. stay of execution was insued
Tending an tavestieation,
‘Caldwell wan sentenced to hang on
December 6. 183, and aM appeal was
taken to the supreme court, which af
firmed the deelaton of the lower cod,
and the cage. was then brought ito
the United States court. ‘The defend
ant was represented by Charles Cline
of Anniston, i. Al. Allon and Ttalph
Quinn, sasetani United States attor
ney. who was instructed *» appear in
the ease by Attorney General sitehell
aoa
(Continued from page).
cn te toby ee a
pactagyge
<a una ie. aod ot
oa Seal Caan tad
fou rit nage tte
at late Sears ae
Peat Pe atee sol Bows
Uta ot ot ri
ae ete
Sifu ABBBeEhiox ron
TALON times os EO
Gee pea
SU TRRELADY, seray,
stexanon c4Pri F9 Jon posny
a OR Gata Be dae non
Shik
‘Tie Nba Ate te
Adrecona gt Soe
ae metas
Pee oh eal eat
Bed nh al
seine bee tes
yaa amen oa
2 oes
Se ea eee
ielindin of nase
Male Siineask Feces Sreene
™ of Arkansas,
noe Comite Saas ale
w+ Commutation of ‘Death Pen
Ureiang as 8 service to the nation,
the commutation to life imprisonment
of death senteneea kmwed upon
Sloven Negroa in Arkanaaa, Majo
J. E Spingarn, Tato of the A. BF
in, France, han’ tolexrapied Govern
Chartes 11, Brough of Arkansne, Maj.
or ‘Spingarn ‘urges the commutation
in order that further" ight on. the
Feeent race Hote Arkansas" mag
be obtained "before "rreparabl
rons” ie done.
"The telogram reads:
Hon. Chases H, Brough.
overnor_o¢ Arkantan,
Uitte "Hock, An
‘As one who has always had high
faith in your” courage. and ‘sense ol
Satice aad who has edmnred the Uib
eral atitude ‘whieh "you have ex
Dressed. in. regard. to "the Negro,
Sm appealing to you to commie t
life “imprisonment the” sentence ol
ta eloven Negroes recently condemned
to “death. Prom. testimany obtained
Dy two persons actually tn the groun!
Tam ‘convinced. that ‘the Interest. ol
Juatice would best be serviced by th
commuation inorder hat,
Feparable “wrong, ‘may’ not be. done
Cefee further isan the wi
unject Is obtained. Awa patriot
AmePcan 1 should hate 10 have th
fair name of Arkansas’ subject even
to ‘the suspicion of having “dane
Brave injustice, at a time when mor
than ‘ever the relations of white and
black ‘mien ‘should be on a" basis ol
fair play and: mutual understanding
You have it in your power to perfor
national service at thi rise, and
1 feel stro that you will ot shetnh
from doin tt
J.B Spingarn,
OPEN LETTER TO. NEGROES OF
‘SOCIETY O8 PRIRNOR
re Sores ery uaa: Oe
tec
pas aa
ee
i eae eae
face eee eee
Scare
B vetoes eae
Se haere Ot
oe eee
ince eee aa
Se ee
Sot caret
ee ae
are
eee eee
ae eae see
Se eae ces
ee ee ae
oe eee
ee cae eee
oe oe ee
oo ares
ee ee
ee
Se eer nt
i cr eer
aoe
Ser ee ee
an rege
Soe
Sc aeeean ieee
ne
a oe
oe ere
ee eee
oe ee eee
coe te oes
Toe
aS
Fe nee oa
pean ee
por oe ae
oe ey
eed
eres
Soe ens
aoe ee ae
io eae
ee ee
eee ea
See cee cee
einen ee
peter anes
See aes
want our beloved country to realize
Sg eg a
eg
een
mae
ds en oe
aera arene
to
eter
Soe
ree el ee
oe
a
ae
Seed cama
a oe cua
Saree oe
ot a eee
Soc
Se eae he
(Contiued from page.
err oy
SoReal areata ee
neciel wacten wooed
(or nd tne at
sar _copetln, wt
ine ira. he see openly xoenaed
iat oc eee,
screed ‘oe eat etieen ee
“seen ee fara me
ration! organiations a8 tke Wc
Ct teas Ss ee
inden" capa sbvesey
Botnet et Bevel decries Ae
elie aime
ae Set Real Aetna
is atin wanea, A tao
tran ne Sia italy ane
tate hatin
“Seated ee re lat
voce sera
sist ang ieee
ots it ca cotton,
ave anna tae wh a
Matcha naan
er Rg gh FY
a ene tl a
i a al ai are
psn i te page at ae So
re ea cae is an oo
ta "ist tae at nonce al
Ling deen coded op ae
red Gece any he eee oak
Ts a a a so des
Oe tr ea artes tae
ane ate Ra te td
tno lhe Noe ise Je eel 90
So ecanea id Heb
Tuas Siena of Ube oe
cal'rdt, t i soins
cee trae St a" Siprohat
re ate tet Sahat aon
it? car eat eal
re pales ieee ge
"i ‘oa ‘of spreason tse
crialy oust Soren Peas
sca meters aa
on a eh
iene Boe oy el
“New Orleans Wide Open”
scoditabak saat BEIGE
La pee aye gaa
nu nin
Tigers ear
a
ener ete
aoa eae ee
ees
ae ae
a coe aes 5 pote
ee
foarte ee
cha toeet ay
ae
Foresite ee
a
Rage
ee ee
See ae
eae
it Bk ot wine
Sie eee Ne
log ‘of reports fat aloo hespers
Sie ees
a reams
Soe eee er
eee aera
Saad nea cate
wae oes cere
wie eee
et te eee as
era
Ee eco
Se eee
= eae
aera
ieee ease
eer
a Sr oe tea
sii al er
oe corer
aoe ee
ee
po
a eee
ere a
oe
ees et ete eae
aioe eens
me oeeer eae
Soares ote conse
sant eee
COLARED SAILORS AND SOLDIERS
‘MAY JOIN AMERICAN LEGION.
Newport News, Va,, Dee. 6.—Bvery
eave nite me, sarin
owper Neal werps ae se
i te Wot War bomen oa
Jo Aoen tm tat cd Newent
Sih A, Now tes oogaea
to dust nee acne c pos
chk not meget ae oe
Sarit, Whaaremet, Bet tet
‘th tte a arcane
i eee anes S's
ocansuaton "an etn + ia
Word etn aa
an gta nt ult
fate Kean tt a
tc og waohetet enti Same
ficincdgce ota cae, ae
oe ate ofa hc nae
whet not Seehas rinet
Peseta ent fea oe
Ce brome ot ger hae
Preautie or thc asi age
ee eee
oe
se cual ogee Se
fo aa" a as
eo area
fol arte het
ceqncaaie set cat Sata
a ies se
tales Sta cnet ea
ret ees Se a
tod nein ol
i ew nce
ted Glasto ae
sunt a et ae
Sa anche iat ass
te tte eae nt he eae
of mieht; to promote peace ge
wil cae ate
mit peng wince
setae mata Sheena
fig gr rag
ft anal ee
ship is now on and it ls -
ca tolls, sais
Sees es ee
identified with this organization. The
headquarters of the local teat
in lech str oe
your local post wa
caren wi tt ma
artic acts onl agree
<n
tional traluing and all
reac, “nef a
fcea In any ‘branch of vie
OUR NEW HOME
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THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS TEXAS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1919.
St. Louis, Mo.
PROPOSE BANK FOR HARLEM
PROPOSE BANK FOR HARLEM
(By Associated Negro Press)
New York, N. Y., Dec. 6—Plans for the groves in New York were discussed at a meeting of business men of the race in Lafayette Hall, Harlem, N.Y., where the idea, presented, and preliminary funds to the amount of $10,000 were subscribed as was proposed to be capitalized for $1,000,000 and to be situated in Harlem. A committee of twenty-five headed by Junius, M. Greene was chosen to proceed. It was also decided to form a business corporation to stimulate trade by Nexos between the United States and Canada. Those in charge of two projects stated that they are acting independently of any existing Nexo organi-
NEGRO BANKS BUYS VALUABLE
HALF BLOCK.
Will Erect Bank Building On Newly Acquired Site.
Institution Has Increased Resources
$27,000,000 Last Three Months.
Waycross, Ga., Dec. 6. —Through the purchase of one half of the entire property known as the old Eden Savings and Loan Company of this city becomes the owners of one of the most valuable pieces of real estate in the city. The property is within two minutes walk of the Union Station and one block of the Post Office. It is 55320 feet to the Tebau, Theban and Living street. The property is understood that the bank contemplated the purchase at $25,000 and enk bank and office building on the improved part. The property valued at $25,000 and the bank are being congratulated from every side on the transaction. Within the past three months the resources of the bank were from $79,272.4 to nearly $75,000.00.
SEALED VERDICT GIVEN IN NE-
GRO OPIUM CASE.
St. Louis, Mo., Dec. 6—A jury in the United States District Court will return today a sealed证人证言 regarding the groves of 1611 Chestnut street, where are charged with possession and purchase of opium and morphine. They were tried yesterday under the Uniform Code of Criminal Justice. Nettle Hendrece was charged with burying morphine, selling opium and having drugs in her possession. Her possession was charged with purchase and storing the opium contrary to the law.
WOMEN CONVICTED OF PER- JURY.
(By Associated, Secro Press)
Milla, a Colored woman who swore that Isaac Jersey, a Brooklyn contractor, was the father of her daughter, Kira Kinsgae, a Kinsgae county court. The jury turned the verdict after the woman had admitted on the stand that she was "confused" and acted on the advice of her two nieces, and against Rufus Perry, a lawyer, and United States Commissioner Felix Schneider, who had acted as
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GRAP GAME CAUSES KILLING
(Associated Negro Press).
A result of a riot over a game here four men, two of them policemen are suffering from the bullet wounds, a man is shot in the head, some one fired a revolver. John Smith, 18 years old, an innocent bystander was shot in the leg. The police were charged with Mench and John Cowl gave chase to five Negroes who took refuge in the second floor and patrolman Hill led the way. Stewart was on the top of the stairs, accorded a bullet wound in the time and Stewart dropped with a bullet wound in the abdomen. Patrolman Meshy may die. Negroes as prisoners. Charles W. Moore, a Negro, defeated candidate for City Council the last election he was arrested.
SOCIAL CENTER PLANNED FOR PEORIA.
(By Associated Negro Press)
Peoria, IL, Dec. 6, great impetus for the movement of the Negroes to social and recreational center for the Negroes of Peoria because of the official endorsement of the movement of the Negroes to the merce at its meeting, Rev. F. W. Penick, pastor of the church, the organization of the movement, believes that under this encouragement the Colored people may even xcee the quota set
MISS BEARD SAYS "NEGROES
SHOULD BE GIVEN RIGHTS."
(By Associated Neuro Press)
Miss Margaret Beard of the Montgomery County Courthouse and Vanessa's Association of the Second Congregational church was addressed by Miss Margaret Beard of the Montgomery County Courthouse for girls. About 350 pupils attend the school which has classes ranging from the kindergarten grade to high school. Miss Beard stated that the Negroes in the South are not treated as well as the whites. She said that they should be given many of the opportunities that she described the Negroes under which the Negroes live and the picture was anything but a pleasant ride in separate street cars which are anything but clean, they get half justice in the courts and citizenship in the community.
PRESIDENT HOPE LECTURES
IN RHODE ISLAND.
(By Associated Negro Press)
Providence, R. I. Dec. 6.—F. College, Atlanta, Ga., who had charge to a large audience in Trinity Andorrianium to hear the speech of Hope is a Brown graduate, class of 1894, and William W. Mosa, a classmate, introduced him. W. Hope declared that "The Colored people in America will never again be the same as the other people in America, the other people in America look upon them as they did before the war. The seas have seen a country where the Race question has been set permanently, a country where all men are equal." W. Hope saying a tribute to the work and worth of Nerf gods, in the combat blitz, President Hope said of those among the pioneers: "Here we are fighting the battle battle during the 15 or 18 months they were in France. Day in and day out they worked, sparred and were doing their bit." He defended the Nerf gods of Hope keeping the fire of natriism burning, and his fellow Colored citizens to make the best possible use of what they learned during
ITALIAN AND NEGRO WOMEN
GRANTED MARRIAGE LICENSE.
(By Associated Neuro Press)
Detroit, Mich. Dec. 6. — Rose White, Cornel and Chrispion Liberato, Italian, and Michael Liberato, with A colored bridesmaid, the couple searched through the floors of the county building for a justice to be found. The judge all of the justices left the building in search of a clergyman. Liberato is a returned soldier. He and each gave each their ages as 25 years.
LYNCH NEGRO IN ARKANSAS
(By Associated Negro Press)
Life in the City
Jameson, Negro who shot and killed Sheriff Groe of Columbia County, South Carolina, and officers at Maconville and burned in a fire.
# 1930年
1930年
GEORGIA TO FIGHT ILLITERACY AMONG WHITES.
(Associated Negro Press)
Mortimer, Ga. Dec. 6.—A campaign will be held on Saturday which will have for its object the freeing of Colquitty county of illiteracy among white adults by the proposed to establish schools in every school district of the country where adults can be taught to read and write. A survey has already been taken and it shows that there are some eight or ten white adults in every county where illiteracy are illiterate. The meeting which will be held here Saturday will have the purpose of mentoring the development of adult schools, teachers of the county school system have agreed to do the teaching and the financial support they have already been considered worthy of being done among the Negroes of the county and much of the illiteracy Saturday wiped out before the end of the year.
CENSURE BISHOP FOR USING
WHITE-LAWYER.
(By Associated Negro Press) *
Baltimore, Dec. 6.—An evidence of the African Methodist church with men who employ white lawyers, their legal battles was manifested here recently when the Afri-American Baptist Church in Bremen such action of Bishop Johnson. Bishop Johnson was called upon to answer to an injunction in the Superior Court of the city filed by Rev. John Offer Custis, who claimed that the church him from his charge without cause. Curtis procured three lawyers to represent him who was represented by a white attorney. The resolution states that the "African Methodist church is setting a lawrence of the African-American tendency to follow in passing over the heads of so many able Colored attorneys in the hands of a white man.
Y. W. C. C. A. HAS FORTE-NINE CENTERS FOR HOME.
PASTORS EXCHANGE PULPITS IN
RACE BETTERMENT EFFORT.
(By Associated Negro Press)
Whitmore, Dec. 6. Local Coached and organized an organization for bettering the relations between the races. One of the means proposed is that the member of the organization may be formed by ministers may take their plea for justice, equal schools and "no Jim Crow cars" straight to the cars of the white congregations.
MISSUURIAN KILLS, OFFICER.
(Associated Negro Press.)
New York, N. Y., Dec. 6. John J. McCormick, 31, a policeman for two twenty days, was shot and killed by a man who was a groc musician, in Harlem. McCormick attempted to arrest Sanford after he had shot his wife, Etta Sanford was shot and locked up, charged with murder.
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Excelsior Mutual Benefit Association
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DR. AND MME. W. A. JOHNSON, PRES. AND VICE.
RAGE RELATION IN VIRGINIA
Hampton, Va., Dec. 6-What do the Colored educational and community service leaders of Virginia think about the value of co-operation, the improvement of the schools, the development of their ability of improving rural life, and the importance of racial good will? What do the Colored people want the Colored to do in their community this critical period of National and World-wide un-rest? How can we serve to the Colored people Virginia—and also to the white people—From the Nero Organization Society and Negro Teachers' Association of Virginia, delivered in January 2000, to 2,000 representative citizens by John M. Gandy, president of the Petersburg Normal School and the Negro Organization Society, gave a clear-cut answer to many questions which white and Colored people are facing.
Spirit of Co-operation.
"The merit of the Neo to adversary in the face of new problems has not yet been conclusively proven to be true in the great crisis. Never before in its history has it been confronted with so many and intricate problems that the mental, moral, and relational powerfulness of the race has not been tested.
"There has been a resettable waste in money and effort, due to the lack of successful co-operation. The method of advances today under the spell of group action. We learn to co-operate, we learn to overcome the inertia of the difference in problems that require the action of all men, and we learn to avoid attacking questions, principles, problems, and difficulties that stand in the way of our success. We learn to mass our power and strength we are doomed to an utter failure in these days' combination of skills, and we make our answer that we should mass our strength for the advancement of the kingdom and adding the kingdom of darkness.
School Attendance.
"According to the report of the Vienna Education Center, two-thirds of the Colored children of school age are enrolled in the rate of enrollment to the total Colored population, or to the total Colored school population, the enrollment in was in 1890. Of the total Colored pupils, only 6 percent attended the average daily attendance at the cent. On every day that the schools are open more than one out of every day, 60 percent are in school in absent. The Colored children that lose more than one out of school are in absent.
Pcorly-Trained Teachers.
Poorly-trained teachers.
"At present there are about three thousand Colored teachers in the State. It is stimulated by the Vir-
ginai Survey Commission that four thousand are needed to provide adequate teaching advantages to the teachers, and that a shortage of at least a thousand teachers. The report says: "Colored teachers as a body have received more training, in non-city schools more than one-third have received only an education of two grades of high-school work and more than three-fourths have never received an education of more than 3 grades of high-school work; and more than three-fourths have never received an education of more than 3 grades of a four-year high school course. Only one-fifth have ever received an education in training equivalent to one or more years of college or normal school."
Inadequate School Terms.
"The majority of the rural schools are still housed in one-room buildings with little arrangements for ventilation. Children are crowded into these shacks far beyond their ceilings and health and making effective school work impossible. In some of the cities the buildings are old, inadequate, lighted, and are veritable culture media of disease germs. The length of the term of non-city schools, the Virginia Survey Commission says: 'In 1917-18 non-city schools for Colored schools was six months or less, in sixteen six months. In fifty-five counties the average length of the term for Colored schools was six months or less, in wide averages were five months and in one country 32 months. So in non-city schools (Colored) individually examined, the school term was five months or less. For explanation for the small percentage of the Colored school population enrolled in school, the poor school district can be found, for the more part, in poor housing conditions, poor teaching advantages, and in the
Educational Campaigns.
Farming Demand Attention.
**Training Definitions** *Attention.*
"For race development in the States, training must be assumed towards the farm. We must prove equal to the problems on the farm, and we must be discarded and new methods applied to the cultivation of the land. Intelligence and thought must begin to be developed on the farm. The race on the farm should more readily receive the instructions of the farm demonstration agents and seek training."
PRICE
$2
PER
YEAR
JAN
1,
1920
What Negroes Want.
"What do the Colored people in Virginia want? We want to make it clear in the outset that we do not want, as is generally thought by many, that the Colored people are perfectly pleased and satisfied with our own society; with Colored boys marrying Colored girls; with Colored girls marrying African girls in our houses; with the building up of our own social institutions, such as churches, schools, and the like, and the sense of inappropriate social situations as are white people and are just as averse to forcing ourselves upon people who do not desire our
"First: We want equal accommodations in public carriers. We now have to accept third class accommodations on the railroad and street cars the quarters assigned to us are in danger. We have to keep them kept. No provision is made, on cars for sleeping-car and dhishee-car, for few of the railroad stations are provisions made for feeding the Colored traveling public. The stations at most stations are really kept and on some of the trains there is only on toilet for both men and women."
NEGRO "Y" WORKERS CITED FOR
BRAVERY.
New York, Dec. 6.—The record of the Colored men and women who were sent overseas by the Young Men's Christian Association as secretaries during the world war is dotted with brilliant bits of courage, and self-abnacnce. Like the Colored soldiers, they went forth to do battle against the enemy until they were laid down his weapon of warfare.
the total number sent was eighty-four, sixty-one men and twenty-three women. In this country, Frederick D. C. H. of the City, Frederick D. Rev. R. A. Pritchfield of Philadelphia, who served with the forces in Africa were drowned at Dar-es-Salam, in the home service were the Rev. H. E. Levi, of Talladega, Mia, who served with the forces in the home service were the Wheeler, of Urbana, Ill., who died while on furough. The M. Y. C. A., and the Colored race have many successes in the faction for the loyalty and efficient work done by the Colored secretaries, Warrell Ternell Banks, of Dayton, Ohio, Rugh Oliver Clark, of Kansas City, Mo., and M. W. Bullock, former Larkin.
Mr. Banks won his citation for bravery while serving the 368th Infantry during the Dukhan receivee word that seout had been wounded and was lying helpless between the lines. Banks wounded him but in the attempt was caught by a terrific barrage and wounded man but in the attempt was saved by a sacrifice nation to save his man Secretary Banks stayed with him through the war and was wounded morning the firing was less severe and carried him to safety. For this he was recommended for a citation by the pany K. of the 368th Infantry. For gallant conduct in the Changpu battle, he served September 26 to October 6, much Hugh Cook. Oil of Kansas City, attached to the 371st Infantry, was wounded near Hail 188. He worked tirelessly until he himself was gassed by Col. Haward of the old 118. New York Regiment for gallant service with regiment throughout its service.
UP FROM SLAVERY PLACED IN THE ELEMENTARY_SCHOOLS.
It is gratifying to us to announce that the recent public school edition of *The Slave* by Slave published by Houghton Mifflin and Boston is being placed very rapidly in the elementary schools of the textbook and for classical reading.
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The Savings Division of the Treasury Department Urges Upon Everyone
In the Eleventh Federal Reserve District to Observe Savage—Clean Up Conservation Week, November 23rd to 29th, Inclusive.
The word "junk" as applied to a stable, merchantable community, is by no means a household word in the South, and there are millions of people in this section who have been taught the serious thought of the opportunity that is their collecting and self-serving financial return simply sufficient to merit their real attention. What attention has been given this, has been given to the people who are even accidental. And, even today, with no less than Fifty Million Dollar worth of Junk going to waste in the United States, people are unmindful of the real obligation that is theirs to gather up and dispose of it. You see that it is sold; and the money invested—the Treasury Department hopes—in War Savings and Thrift
The Treasury Department has isis-
sistant a booklet for tree and general
district leaders and glad to send to this anyone wishing it. It contains a list of the Junk
trees in the district, a list of the triet, besides other valuable information relative to junk. The Treasury
Department has however, neither a mother
tree nor a father tree, nor savers
sors this very practical movement, a movement quite in line with its general plan of Saving and of Conser-
sor.
The Waste Material Dealers Association of Texas is co-operating fully with the Waste Management Conservation measure; while the Fire Marshals Association of Texas, at its recent meeting in Dallas, by resolution of the government's plan, as outlined in the present campaign. The Government is leading their pupils in this work; is depending upon the civic organizations in each town to give it active support; is helping them to assist their pupils in this work; is depending upon the civic organizations in each town to give it active support; is helping them to assist by their sympathy and co-operation; in fact, is looking to the general support from every organization in Conservation, in Saving and in Cleaning up town. This is of importance to the youngest child in a community and of the most representative business man in that same community.
At a time like this when one half of the world is hungry, one half of the world is unhealthy, one half unbecoming in any of us to waste or to refuse to assist the Government in any measure of Conservation. Everyone is urged to give this Campaign a chance to succeed. Don't think you are too big to do this. Don't think you have too much money, and that you should call. It deserves your support, and the Treasury Department certainly expects everyone to give it a liberal and generous call. Gather up your Junk; in your closets, your harness, your sheds, your old trunks, your garages. Gather it up from the old hiding places. Sell it in the market. WAR SAVINGS AND THRIFT STAMPS, and some may even be able to invest in a $100.00 REGISTERED TREASURY SAVINGS CERTIFICATE
Manila, R. L., Dec. 6. - The Ninth Marine Corps command of L. Col. Benjamin B. Lawson is set ranking Negro officer in active service, and Col. Davin is also the most important military post of the Philippine Islands. The Philippine Islands, war, the Ninth Cavalry was commanded by a major of the regiment, temporarily raised to the rank of Colonel, but orders to his regular rank, and this left L. Col. Davin as the highest ranking officer of the troops sated at Camp Staenmars comprise, in addition to the Ninth Marine Corps command, now serving as a major under the Colored lieutenant colonel, there is no friction or dissatisfaction report.
RULES ANNOUNCED FOR $100
San Francisco, Dec. 6. - Rules for the award of one thousand dollars to the person first suggesting the best name for Britannia have just been announced by the World Trade Club of San Francisco. Britannia have just all humankind. Words to be considered must be received before 1 September 1980. Words to be deposited with the Wells Fargo-Nevada National Bank of San Francisco in the currency of the nation from which the best word is suggested, to the person first suggesting the best name.
It is interesting to note* that names have come from all quarters of the Globe,* particularly from U. S. Ammonia,* British Isles,* Canada,* the Phillipines,* Eurasia,* Africa,* Chile, Japan, Oceania. Names are pouring in from all parts of the world, including countries,* the "Unitians" is the best word received thus far. The question now is, will someone devise a name for the United States before 1 May, 1520, and thus carry the Trade Club's award of $1000.00?
TURKISH SULTAN CUTS SIZE OF HIS HAREM.
Constantinople, Dec. 6. - The high cost of living is hampering the Turkish households—especially with the reduced size of their homes—who formerly were rich also are. The size of their homes has withstanding the Koran's authorization of four wives to a man, the proportion of unmarried women is said to be more than one wife too expensive to maintain. Only a few in population is not beginning to be made up by polyamory. It is estimated there are more than 100 women in the interior maidens are so numerous that women meaning natives have offered them to gifts to American and foreign dignitaries. One angle of the situation is the creation of a race of bachelor maids who are followers of nationalism. The women are anxious for peace, hoping it may make marriage less
"WE ARE ALL ALIKE."
In the midst of the base, unjust, un-American talk about race secrecy started in Chicago, the statements of a member of an oppressed race, sounds like voice of fairness in the world. A great h叭叭aballo was raised on the sale by Rabbit Hirsch of his former ward, to a Colored man. It was conceived as a portrait to wait the sending of a reporter of the Chicago Tribune to interview the seller. Rabbit Hirsch, the famous Jewish leader, was asked by the reporter: "Are your views on race secrecy?" Rabbit Hirsch replied: "From my heart, we are all Jewish. The people are just as good as whites. I would rather have a good black neighbor than a white."
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"HOBO" KEEPS RECORD OF THEFTS FOR YEAR
Redwood City, Cal., Dec. 6. "Borrowing" the necessities of life as did Huckleberry Finn in his cruise down the Mississippi, with the intention of making good his pifering when he was able, Bert Brock, living his occupation as a "hobo" when arrested, and a "man" when arrested, list of articles that he had stolen, some of the countries were: Six chickens from the roost of Loren Coburn. Two pumpkins from the Moore rains.
A milking from three goats belonging to C. H. Wildermann. One corn-fed turkey from the back vard of C. B. Thompson.
The entries covered a period of seven days and Broccoli had an police notice over a year and had hidden them in a San Jose hotel because the records in a San Jose hotel were
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#
PAGE SEVEN
Dr. Kidd
SPECIALIST
On All Long Standing and Chronic Diseases.
I treat successfully all blood and skin diseases, rheumatism, uric acid poisoning, diseases of the stomach, intestines, skin and blood, diseases of women, nervous diseases, malaria, urinary, uterus, oedes, sore lips, fintula, rupture, sepsis, wounds, appendicitis, ovarian, neurological, inability to sleep), epilepsy, fatigue, insomnia, many diseases not mentioned here.
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Box 614, Greenville, Texas.
Office 515 West Erwin Street.
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SOME TOWS IN TEXAS
PAGE EIGHT
CALVERT
Calvert, Texas, Dec. 4, *Rev. H. C. Brisby and wife are in the city arranging to move their new home to Calvert.*
*Rev. G. W. White of East Calvert County* was sent to Carrigan, Folsom county, and then to the city once. *Rev. Thomas and Miss L. A. Lindsell* were married Thanksgiving and left for their home in Macon, Calvert. The Calvert Independent District teachers (Colored) met in extra session. *Miss Gertrude Brannon, Miss Points and Miss White worked up a nice entertainment Thursday night. O. K. Thomas much improved at this writing.*
*Rewa reached Calvert of the death of Mr. Ben Harrison at Koses, Texas. Mr. R. B. Winkley left Thursday that evening. He will enter into pulman service. Prof. B. F. Aycko passed through the city Thursday on route to Carrigan. He is a committee of the G. U. Q. of O. F. Rev. G. W. White is back from an
Mrs. L. J. Juddle of Bailieville, Texas, spent the week-end in the city, the guest of Mr. Juddle's father, the late Robert Juddle, left Thursday night to attend executive committee of the Odd Fellows on Icorcana, on the 28 ult. Mrs. Elector Ayers left Wednesday night for Dawson and Hubbard City, where she will visit her son, aunt and Sam Ayers. Miss Mamie Gillard, daughter of Mrs. Gillard is quite sick at her hospital, we pray for her speed recovery. The mother of mrs. Jesse Mansell of Gillard isMitchell street, between Post and Magnolia streets. Miss Sue Salter and Miss A. B. Pruitt list this week. Rev. Robbins of Houston, preached Sunday night, text Matt. 16:24, "The Hechoil" of West Windsor. W. Hechoil of Houston, was hindered Tuesday night because of unclement weather but Wednesday night we were intertwined with a
Mrs. J. M. Miles of Highbank is visiting her sister, Mar. M. B. Turner of Merkel, Texas to visit his mother and other relatives. Mrs. Meara Turner left Sunday evening for Keenin, where she goes to teach school. Mrs. Maggie McColough in a conference of the Express. She spent few days start, with her sister, Mrs. Woodward. Mrs. Parre spent Paris旨 with home sister.
Mrs. Julia Crawford of Groebke spent the week-end in the city visiting her mother, Mrs. Mimie Reid and living there. Miss Pearl Points left Sunday evenness and Washahache to visit蒸nis and Washahache to visit蒸nis. Mrs. Mary Mays of Bryan and Washahache to visit蒸nis in the city visiting their cousin, Mr. and Mrs. R. Ordegan and daughter, Mimie Hummons. Mrs. Ordegan should be left at Prof. Mimia's shop not later than Sunday noon. As I must get the news Mrs. Mimia should be left at Prof. Calvert to the Dallas Express must go through the reporter's hand. I am doing the same for the top, to let the news from Calvert go through the right channel. Mimia is working up a K. of P. Lodge at Bailville and Jones Prairie community. Mr. Jim Smith is asked to assist to get up mimes. Mrs. Mimia passed through the prairie and Bailville to Brennand. Mrs. Mary Maxwell will begin teaching Monday at Hammond. Mrs. Harby Barton left last week for Brennand. Mrs. Anna Woodley returned home from Marlin last week.
The trustees of St. Paul M. E. church have big contest on that will close on the 21st of Dec. We have 20 in the contest and they are asking their many friends to vote for them. Rev. S. N. Harvey has returned from conference at Yokum and he was eager to join for another many friends are proud to have him back with us.
ATHENS
Athena, Texas, Dec. 4. - Sunday was
Rv. Sanders last Sunday. Rev. Kweli
was with him Sunday evening. He
was in the church on Sunday night.
Mday night - Mr. Earl Chamberba
and Mise Celtia Woods were married
Wednesday as the residence of the
mother. Mise Maurine - Waldon of Ennai
spent the holiday with her cousin.
Gilmer, Texas, Dec. 4.—Owing to the heavy rain that fell here Friday, Nov. 28, the District Board was postponed until December. The denoted white boy that shot and killed one Mr. Anderson, Colored, as mentioned above, has been sentenced to the asylum. The asylum not sentenced before he committed this awful crime, beft for the Annual Conference of the A. M. E. Association, Miss L. M. H. Mager, Mrs. Walker and Rev. Thompson. The C. M. E. Baptist churches here observed serving meals. Rev. Howard preached the Thanksgiving sermon to his people at 3.20 p.m. The Mayor of the city, Mr. James C. Clamation said, "Any poor or aged person unable to obtain a good meal, should sit on the floor and listen to that they may be by his individual efforts. I do not know that any one applied but a very Christian act of our Mayor.
We who are up and active too often forget those who are unfortunate. We often forget that it a business to serve its old and worn out members on Thanksgiving and others who are not members of the church. Mr. Steed of our town passed his last mile stone Friday night.
Gilbert Baptist Home Mission Society pulled off a large rally Sunday night. Sister Amanda Jones was buried by U. B. P. and S. M. T.
**BUSK.**
Rusk, Tex. Dec. 4.—In spite of the bad weather, the Baptist Board and Fred Brown is making good with this district, raised $163.85. Mr. M. McKinnon and many other from the ground have returned from Jacksonville from the conference. Reporters from Harrison completed her course in dressing Saturday under Mrs. J. M. Plankton.
**Conference** has sent to us again Rev. S. Garner.
We, members of M. Pleasant C. M., church are pleased to have back
TAYLOR.
Taylor, Texas, Dec. 4. — Thanksgiving dinners were served at Mr. Arta and M. Calvary Baptist church, where the liberal patronage of those who were eager to enjoy the dainty menu was provided by G. W. Anderson of Allen Chapel A. M. E. church will preach his farewell sermon Sunday, Dec. 7, and will attend for the annual conference at Waco. Cards are out announcing the marriages of the most popular Greenville and Miss Irishh堡 of this city. Mise Hendricks is the daughter of one of our most popular guests of Mrs. Mary Stanley of Bastrop and Mrs. J. Thomas of Sayers are guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Hurst. Mise R. O. Alexander of Waelter arrived Sunday to begin school work in Mrs. J. A. Reynolds and Mrs. B. E. Westhooks have begun work in the city school. The right left Sunday for Compound, where she will begin her school work for the ensuing term guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Miles, Mrs. and Mrs. Allie Williams, Mrs. Jane Gibbs and daunder returned
Dr. J. R. Moore made a brief bustup, Dr. J. R. Corseman last week, Rev. P. R. Corseman a visitor to the city Sunday and preached two able sermons at M. Carrman, A. Arca Baptist church, Rev. P. H. Carrman, Rev. P. H. Campion tunday and received. He left tunday andParis to attend the Design Mission Sunday. McAuliffe, A. Harris and Mette McCallough arrived from Bartlett, Sunday. Quite a number of cans of sugar corn are being collected for the Bryan Orphanage by the Home Mission
WHITEWRIGHT
OKMULGEE
Ognungee, Okla., Dec. 4. -Rev. J. Flemmon of North Chesterville and Mr. Robert Little of Little Rock and other points in Arkansas to visit friends and relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Fionas of Kahana, were guests of Mr. and Mira King. The 9th Street Social Scl Set donated a contribution to the A. M. E. C. M E. and First Baptist church, which highly appreciated by sale companies. Thantzgiving was pleasantly spent in our city. Many palatable dishes.
THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1919.
The Annual Conference of C. M. E. church closed a grand session Sunday night. The Conference opened Wednesday notwithstanding the inclementity of the weather each season. Oklimigege regrets to lose the service of Rev. H. Edmund, who so successfully directed the affair of the past three years. He has gained the respect of all classes. Prof. A. B. Willems, also received a reacult at Dunbar high school also at St. Paul C. M. E. church night, and also received a reacult at Dunbar high school also at St. Paul C. M. E. church. Wednesday night, Editor Duncan of Oklahoma City was in the city Sunday.
WAUO.
Waco, Texas, Dec. 4.—In spite of the inclement weather last Sunday, services all of our churches were attended. Quite a number of city teachers attended the State Teachers Association, all of our churches were attended. The Friday following included the Paul Quinn Choral Club, Waco's delegation numbered 28 which was visited by Rev. and Mrs. J. F. Williams of St. Paul were dinner guests of Mr. Williams. Oklimigege regrets to lose the service of Rev. H. Edmund, who so successfully directed the affair of the past three years. He has gained the respect of all classes. Prof. A. B. Willems, also received a reacult at Dunbar high school also at St. Paul C. M. E. church. Wednesday night, Editor Duncan of Oklahoma City was in the city Sunday.
WAUO.
Waco, Texas, Dec. 4.—In spite of the inclement weather last Sunday, services all of our churches were attended. Quite a number of city teachers attended the State Teachers Association, all of our churches were attended. The Friday following included the Paul Quinn Choral Club, Waco's delegation numbered 28 which was visited by Rev. and Mrs. J. F. Williams of St. Paul were dinner guests of Mr. Williams. Oklimigege regrets to lose the service of Rev. H. Edmund, who so successfully directed the affair of the past three years. He has gained the respect of all classes. Prof. A. B. Willems, also received a reacult at Dunbar high school also at St. Paul C. M. E. church. Wednesday night, Editor Duncan of Oklahoma City was in the city Sunday.
Services at St. Paul last Sunday and Roy Williams, a lecturer present at Roy Williams, a lecturer present at Bahia movement lectured at the morning service. His address was given in a dinner to the poor by the Missionary Society was highly appreciated. Mr. A. T. Smith, our popup pastor, was invited to dinner, Bryan, Texas, and took unto himself a bird. The fortunate lady was invited to spend their honey moon in Terrell. The lecture by Hon. Roscoe Conklin Simmons is looked for with great interest in Texas. A number of years and in Texas, a leading churches, decided to place her membership with St. Paul A. M. e. Church. S. Willis, A. S. Jackson and J. Ha Hines were called to Dallas last Friday to attend the Board meeting. Be a loyal citizen and pay your
Be a loyal citizen and pay your poll tax.
Be a Baker, the little matron of Prairie View stopped with Proof. T. B. Wilson, Sunday. Mrs. J. E. Emma spent Thanksgiving with Mr. R. Emma, Mrs. T. Thordale, Texas, while the doctor went to Terrell to the conference, then to Terrell to the conference, then to extensive preparations to entertain the conference here next week. Mrs. Annie Lenley of Thornton, Texas, went to Terrell to week. Rev. Washington of the C. M. E. church was quietly married. The newlywed left for Chicago, where the doctor has been appointed to the pastorate of Park avenue. The newlywed left for Dr. Clemmons, Harvey Dixon, R. C. Smith and Dr. Thompson of Temple went down to Honolulu for Prairie View game. That the Majestic Theatre will open for Colored patrons only in the near future. The East Waco Colored school garden received first premium which was check $6 for its potatoes. Mrs. Amanda Brown, mother of mother of Johnson $6 for its potatoes. Mrs. Amanda Brown, mother of mother of Johnson $6, the family has our sympathy.
New Hope Notes.
Thanksgiving day was pleasantly and profitably spent at New Hope Baptist church. An appreciative conversation with the pastor in a most striking manner, in making personal, sentence expressions. The choir with Dr. G. S. Jones delivered a beautiful, appropriate music and the pastor, Dr. J. N. Jenkins delivered a beautiful, appropriate music by a splendid offerer for the aged and the unfortunate in the community. The church service the church orchestra led by Dr. J. M. Vandaveh rendered an excellent program which was interpelled with several pleasurable moments. On the program was highly enjoyed by a large ethnological audience. . . Sunday was a day of great interest. Prof. B. T. Willett and his live course of teachers were on the job and the students were presented a very thoughtful and helpful manner. The attendance was good and the interest was up to the
Pineland, Texas. Dec. 4. - Sunday School was fine Sunday. Evergreen School was fine Tuesday. Sionary at Evergreen Bandit church raised $220 in the rally. Total for the day $33.00. Gine Grove Mission School raised $200. Rev. F. D. O. Bryant preached the Missionary sermon. M. G. C. B. Bvrd returned from church rally, reports a grand time. Rev. N. P. J. Johnson stopped by on his way to Central Texas Conference. Rev. N. P. J. Johnson night, night, night was raided out
Pittsburgh, Texas, 4. - Last Friday was a rainy day, several feet of R. R. track was washed away, causing the south bound Cotton Belt to lay over at Pittsburgh for hours until the road could be repaired.
Church News.
Sunday was missionary day at Pine Bluff. Quite an interesting mass meeting of the Mission Sisters. The Star Light band, the Young Women's "Missionary School," held in the evening. At 11 a.m. the pastor preached an excellent sermon, $1200 had been raised up to pay for the school. Rev. A. H. Daniels preached two excellent sermons, there being his first sermon, which will set at Texarkana, Texas, the guest of the C. M. E. church. He and the good congregation over which he is shepherd did much to make this year's pastorate a success. The church churchship has been canvassed, papered and beautified, during Rev. A. H. Daniels. The hundred dollars have been raised during the year, and the work in general has been supervised quite at. At this writing the amount collected last Sunday is not known, but it appears to be issued. Sunday school was well attended at the Colored citizens' club to date. The M. T. church just Sunday, but there was no preaching, the members of Morris Chapel and the Colored citizens' club to date. The appointed to serve the public with his wonderful store of knowledge
pre treyBGKYQGYBGP
Personals up from Spring, Jackson
up came from Spring, night, and
night, and spent Saturday and
Saturday night with her husband, Mr. Saul
Mr. G. W. Miller came up from
Troy to sit his mother, Mrs. George
Amarillo.
Club Notes.
The Mystic Weavers were entertained last week with a musical recital and a dance performance completed. The happy hour club is composed of a bunch of live whimsical musicians who thinkings please for any visitor who enters the city. The musicians filled an engagement with the Idlewild Club (white) on Thanksgiving night. he made a video.
WILLS POINT.
Wills Point, Texas. Dec. 4. -Miss Beasle Wright left Sunday to open a new school in Vanda County, having young lady to start teaching in Vanda County, having been a pupil of Prof. Blatz, in the high school of Vanda County. She has been a pupil of Mrs. Mattie Dunn and baby are reported to be in good health. Mrs. Willies塘 is making good in good Texas College, and it is a good record for a young man in Texas College. We will have more young men like him. We have a large number newly graduated from Texas College. Next, Pleasant Mill Sunday school has bought some Kendergarten chairs for that department. In the city from Fort Worth on the account of sickness. Let every one read the Dallas Express.
EASTLAND.
Eastland, Texas. Dec. 4. -Owing to the fact and on account of the decease of the pastor. The late Rev. C. McDowell of the College. The second Baptist church, San Anastasia, Texas. Eastland news and advertising the Christian Sunday school. B. Y. P. Y. was急. The resident is sparing no pain towards advertising the Christian Sunday school. White Baptist of the city. You will find the Express at E.C. Christian grocery store.
ROSEBUD.
Roehud, Texas. Dec. 4. - The Home Mission Society of Independent Baptist church pulled a run in the race when a priest was preached by Dr. J. H. Wormley, $10.50 was raised for mission love. I. O. M. E. church was a success. $140.00 was raised for Jesse Robertson, a well known citizen of this place was visited by death while shocking hay last Wednesday. He was cared for by his brother Robertson leaves a wife and 5 children to warn him. E. Allen II. who is enriched in school work at Burlington was in the city on business. Robertson of Cameron, Texas, was in the city last week. Rev. T. L. Lee made flying trip to Waco on business.
SMITHLEY.
Smithville, Texas. Dec. 4. - Dr. C. A. Adams, one of our city physicians has been confined to hospitalism. Miss Pepe Cenphus and Mr. Charley Balwin were married Saturday night last at the home of the bridge. Mr. Balwin has returned from the State Teachers Association vh Houston to hear Col. Rocose C.
HOYLE RARICK
AND CLOTHING COMPANY
1810 Elm Street
Men, Women and Children's
Clothing on Credit
OPEN SATURDAYS 'TILL 10 P. M.
Pay
As
You
Get
Paid
You
Wear
The
Goods
While
Paying
PILOT POINT.
WICHITA FALLS.
Wichita Falls, Texas, Dec. 4. -- Increment weather and muddy streets did not prohibit the public from turning out. All chirchies and Sunday schools were well attended. Rev. James C. McGee, in short to meet his conference and up a new floor, Corinth Ministers found home on 11th and Harrison streets, Sunday noon cause of death unknown. Press, please pay for your paper in advance and you will always have a good paper to read on Sunday.
Come early for the Dallas Express at Park street Drug store.
BONHAM
Bohann, Texas, Dec. 4--D. A. H. M McRuffin reports a fine boy stopping with Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bowmen since last week.
Rev. T. E. Higgs was out at the city last week on business.
Gainesville was here last week to attend the funeral of their father, George Kennedy also Mr. Allen Kennedy and his wife, Lydia Lodoha. Mrs. M. S. DeJournette and others were in Honey Grove Sunday attendee Rev. J. A. Swann, Mrs. Swan and Mrs. Elliot, Mrs. Kittle Carraway have returned from the annual conference F. S. Stephens, Rev. J. A. Swan, Mrs. Elva Craver, Rev. Melton left Worth to attend annual conference. Mr. Will Cowen and wife left Sanremonte. Quite a lot of Bohemians were in Paris and Honey Grove, Thanksgiving. Otto Fields have returned from Hot Springs. Rev. James Carr and others left Tuesday for the annual conference
MILFORD.
Milford, Texas, Dec. 4. -Misses Erma Beaty and Jimmie Jordan went to Italy. Misses Ginny Glynday, Roosetta Carter went to Italy. Mrs. Julia McDaniel and son, Albert are visiting in Hillebrook, W. Va. Misses went to Italy. Mrs. Emmia Hunt of Mrs. Classia the guest of her mother Burnett is sisk listed. The wedding bells rang on the 22nd of November. Our best wishes for a happy Birthday Albera on Mr. Jesse Robin, son. We extend these young students our best wishes for a happy Birthday. Lucile Ghram, Georgia Mae Daniels Susie and Master Willie Proof, and Mrs. L. G. McDonald, Miss Lucile Ghram went to Corcissane Mae Daniels departed this life Mon. Will Malone departed this life Mon. Saint James A. M. E. McDonald, Rev. W. M. Harris conducted the funeral buried in honor of the Qdll Fews. Read the Express and become a catholic.
TEXAS COLLEGE CULLINGS.
Tyler, Texas, Dec. 4.—On Wednesday night, Nov. 26th, occured the best prayer service of the year. Every student was asked to be prepared to have gotten something out of the meeting. Thanksgiving was a "obvious day for the students and others. There were more parents and visiting friends at the school than any previous Thanksgiving. There was a school football game, the Department's foot ball squad and the high school department's squad. It was a closely contested game with the English boys were vicious, playing the Combination Three's squad. The English boys were vicious, the English boys were vicious, were turn defeated by the Combination Three's squad by a score of 19 to 4. At 7:00 p. m., the social media page was empty. After the program there was
You
Wear
The
Goods
While
Paying
a grand social for the students, faculty and visitors. President Banks was away on Thanksgiving day attending the Annual Conference at Mrs. G. V. Banks, Messrs. Bodie Sims and Charles Raines were also visitors at the Annual Conference at Jacksonville.
Prof. B. Ellison, Prof. D. C. Pfeiffer, Misses J. B. Mitchell and M. G. Wilson attended the State Teachers' association at Corsicana.
The Cabinet member of the Y. M. and M. Wilson program the Chapel Saturday taught her force, "On a Slow Train Thru Arkansas," received a deal of laughter and the Chapel Saturday taught her regular session Sunday morning and many interesting topics were applied at 30 p.m. Sunday a remarkable program was rendered under the supervision of the remarkable talents who appeared on the program were: Miss Cheopatra Calhoun of Dallas; Miss Susan Foster of Dallas; Miss Susie Foster, "Dallas, Texas"; Mrs. E. G. Brooks, Nigts州; Mrs. George Cutter, Texas; and others.
MR. A. BLANK RICE, Ren.
SOUR LAKE.
Sour Lake, Texas, Dec. 4. The Sunday school was well attended Sunday and quite an interest in the building. Mrs. C. Reed and Mrs. H. D. Lance attended an extra session of General Bowen Association in Beaumont last week. The revivalist preacher is associated with Rev. C. L. Lee of Tree's A. M. E. church in a ten days meeting and they report a successful campaign. Mr. and Mrs. Pratt of Sibsue are the guest of his son-in-law, Mr. E. B. Y. P. U. met in regular session Sunday evening and a large group of students played their part well and made it quite interesting. Monosona who was very badly tired of the daya days are doing fine to the delight of her many friends. Charlie Fleming is reported to be on the mend. Mr. Fleming returned from the army in ill health. Mrs. L. B. Irving is a Beaumont view
M. Otevia Taylor TAYLOR of Beaumont is the guest parents, Mr. and Mrs. Whitson, who attended her spent Sunday with her brother and spent Monday with her brother and C. Lawson, who has been in ill health for a few days disappeared last week and her husband and two children do not know her whereabouts. Prof. A. K. Watkins attended the State Teachers' Association in Coriell.
PARIS.
**Globus:** The high school club that has been organized to install Domestic Science in our high school program. "An Evening on an Indian woman," the play proved to be a success. The amount realized was $54.48. The rate of return was $12.99. The school house was well *a* tended. Prof. B. H. Graham, J. A. Bills, Mr. Bowell added much to the program and encouraged remarks. The amount raised was $103.82. The total amount now on hand is $12.99 for their uniring support. The chair of Mr. Zion M. E. church will present to the music loving public a cantata during the Christmas week. Mrs. Dolla Boldwin, Miss Rube Blow and Mrs. Jesse Strowman. They returned Sunday to Oklahoma to thank Thanksgiving for the Nero dolls will be used by all Paris children this Christmas. They have ordered them through Prof. Browell.
Rev, J. W. Gilder, who will serve a congregation in Houston this year
was in the city Sunday and preached at M. Zion M. E. church. He left Monday for Houston. Rev. Lewis of the C. M. E. church is attaining conference in Texarkana this week. Rev. Belcher, the retiring District Supt. of the Beaumont District is the pastor for M. Zion M. E. church
ROCKWALL
Rockwall, Texas, Dec. 4 - Miss Emma Walker opened her school on the campus of the University, enrolled. Rev. P, G. Gambles filled the rostrum at stu Patrick A. M. K. for him. Ella Nell for night.ight.聘 Mr. Henry Ellis and Ms. Seppard.
GRANBURY.
Granbury, Texas, Dec. 4. S-Uniday was a cold Cay but church was good all the time. He had a trip to her friend. Rev. M. A. C. P. Tower. Houser. Mrs. Louis Hedward died Sunday as laid to rest Tuesday evening in the Granbury cemetery.
ATLANTA.
Atlanta, Texas, Dec. 4—Sunday school at First Baptist church Sunday was well attended, Spt. Muller and Sunday School worth while. We are sorry to report Miss A. O. Alen on Sunday School. Miss A. O. Alen is teaching in Miss Alen's place while she is confined to the room. We hope for her a speedy recovery. Deacon James is in the house the week is able to be out among his friends again. Susan F. W. Watson, Mrs. Minnie Young, Rev. E. A. Hopkins, Mrs. Wanming and alss Lyndie Kline attended the week. E. T. Association which was held with the Arkansaspina Baptist church, Laster, Texas. The men meeting at the St. John's, J. cunner are making great preparation to meet their annual conference to be held at Texaspina Baptist church.urging each member to pay all that is due. Read the Express and you can always hear from us. See Mrs.
CLEBURNE
Cleurburg, Texas, Dec. 4–Rec. Wyatt of Wichita Falls has been sent here to pastor the C. M. E. church. First Baptist church passed off nicely $1.25 were raised. Mrs. Beaulaud Kibbler, who is also my sister, was married to her mother, Mrs. Dela Kirk, who is my sister, and Mrs. William Wilkerson, the Missionary's sermon "a the Shiloh Baptist church Sunday," Mr. Jeroy "Thomas" Browne, the pastor of the marriage recently at the home of the bride's sister, Rev. P. Yorkum of Wichita Falls. A man was in the city Sunday visiting relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Cochrane, the father of the woman, their father Sunday, Mr. Cochine, Mr. Frank Swikens of Denton was the guest of Miss Eliza Reynolds, Sunday's guest, and little daughter, who have been visiting relatives have returned to Wichita Falls. Mr. and Grand daughter of Austin are visiting their daughter and mother
Mr. A. L. Davis has returned from Denver, Colo. Mr. Sparks of Dallas has returned from Fort Worth. Mattie Petty, Rev. Turner preached Sunday night in night school. Baptist Miss Beaulaire Pinkie Lester, Miss Beaulaire Hobbard spent Thanksgiving in Fort Worth while sitting rela-tor, Miss Beaulaire Hobbard, who have been visiting her mother has returned to Farmville, Ohio. Miss Beaulaire will be fond to her room for the last four weeks with blood poison is improving. Miss Beaulaire was the guest of his mother at Fort Worth. Mr. General McCraery of Ross县 was the guest of his mother at Fort Worth.
TERRELL
Terrell, Texas. Dec. 4. —Thanksgiving day was well spent seemingly in the church, church bazaars, and the A. M. E. Conference which convened with the A. M. E. Conference delegation was present at the annual conference. Bishop Jones was given by A. A. S. Jackson, senior pastor, the recent attack of the influenza. Interesting educational lectures were given by A. A. S. Jackson, senior pastor, the recent attack of the influenza. E. Church and Prof. Kinchon, principal of the Colored high school, Bolton. The college which have prevailed over the country a number of the presiding elders of the college, the quota. Thanksgiving evening, the greater Inviable Concert Company rendered the excellent concert the city hall been approved a audience. A number of whites were present. The people of Terrell were come again. Mrs. Mary Else who was one of the highest number of tickets and the highest a prize of $2.50. Prof. Foster of Kemp, Texas, was here Thanksgiving day and bought a home at Terrell. We are glad of such men as Prof. Foster coming
District board No. 1, with the New Hope Baptist church Friday through Sunday, the amount of $85 was raised.
1. Vice Press, Dr. P. K. White, New Convention.
Convention.
2. Vice-President, Dr. W. M. Taylor, Primitive Baptist.
3. Dr. W. M. Shaw. Treasurer
Freewill. Bandit.
Frewen, B.M.
4. Rev. M. P. Purdy, Secretary and City Manager, New Convention,
5. Rev. R. W. Shaw, Chairman
6. Rev. W. Purdy, New Convention.
Executive Board, New Convention.
Council of the Baptist Church or that the Association was the Old Convention? Why not tell the truth, and say that the Minister's church is the hold of all the Baptist preachers! If brothers who have gone out from us, were displaced at us, and are now more so than the love for the brotherhood, and unity of the Baptist forces in Dalton, and Texas, it would be more so than the love for the ministerially, to have met in our regular meetings, and there decide to separate, and we could as we would remain two separate bodies, as from all likelihood we will, and have no ill will towards any brother and the Baptist, and with the change Ministerial greetings, as it would be best for all concerned the Baptist and vicinity will still do business for the King at the same old place every Monday in the year, the Baptist and vicinity will still well arranged program, and Bible Instruction for the help of the Ministera, a cordial welcome to all, with the Baptist and vicinity will still be of the Missionary and Educational Convention, or whether he be of the General Baptist Convention. or whether he be of the Missionary and Education its members, neither do we exercise authority to dictate to Baptist churches, and members, to put them in matters to the individual local churches to choose who shall be their servant as pastor, so far as concerned in good and regular standing.
Done by order of the B. M. Association.
DR. A. ARLINGTON WILSON,
President, Pastor of, Macedonia Baptist church.
DR. M. PORD,
Secretary and City Missionary,
Signed Committee:
Dr. R. BURGESS, Pastor Friendship Baptist church,
REV. CADLEELE Pastor of Shadgy Baptist church,
REV. BURGESS Pastor New Year Baptist Church.
DR. B. MOORE, Pastor El Beltah Baptist church.
DR. J. W. FAGANS, Pastor M1018 Baptist church.
REV. M. MOORE, Pastor Ast, Pastor of Macedonia Baptist church.
COLORED TEACHERS ELECT OFFICERS AT CORSICANA.
Corsicana, Texas, Dec. 4.—The Colored Teachers Association adjourned Friday after a three days' session
The following officers were elected: President A. E. Holland, Palese president, John C. Miller, Houston; second vice president, Dorset Waco; third vice president, Marian Waco; fourth vice president, J. W. Sanford Hilborow; fifth vice president, Lucille Palmer; sixth vice president, Palmer; Palentine; assistant secretary A. L. Turner, Timpson, treasurer, Mrs.
Houston was chosen for the next place of meetings.
A lively session was held and a full attendance be present from every part of the state.
Mrs. Canada Boyd of Cuney, Texas, is visiting her cousin, Mrs. Emma Smith of 2802 Cochran Street, Texas, here visiting her family, Mrs. Caroline Branges and little daughter at 2801 Juliette street.
Mrs. Emma Smith of 2800 Cochran Street Thursday night for Fort Worth to attend the local Union No. 123, American Federation of Labor of that city.
We urge upon our readers not to fall when in need of first-class beef, pork, mutton, sausage and in fact all kinds of market products to ring Lafayette, Texas. They will also supply you to eat during the holidays. Quick deliveries are made. Buy here and
ANNOUNCEMENT
TO THE PUBLIC
THE CITIZENS MORTUARY AND UNDER-
TAKING COMPANY will continue to do business at
2554 Elm Street. The management of same is entire-
ly in my control. I wish to see all parties holding
claims against said company.
Thanking you for past patronage and a continuance of
those pleasant relations that has always existed.
Yours,
E. M. MYMBS.
BAGGAGE BARGAINS
Reduced Prices on Suit Cases,
Hand Bags, Trunks
Suit Cases $1.50 to $15.00
Hand Bags $2.50 to $25.00
Trunks $10.00 to $25.00
Wardrobe Trunks $25.00 to $65.00
Excellent Values
KLAR & WINTERMAN
2512 Elm Street
WE LOAN MONEY
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Morning Chapel C. M. E. Church,
3rd and Crump Street.
Emory C. Smith, Sr., Reporter.
Rev, J. H. Winn, D. D., Pastor.
Phil R. Register, Reporter.
THE DALLAS EXPRESS. DALLAS. TEXAS.
All members of the Execsorial Mutual Association are hereby notified that P. V. Paughn any mones as due to this association. The association may be received given by them. NILAS KLAND, Fres., NILAS FOILD, Fres., NILAS
EXCELSIOR MUTUAL BENEFIT
ASSOCIATION PRAISED.
The, parents of little Velma Denmon, Mr. and Mra. C. A. Denmon, take this method of thanking the Excelor Mutual for the manner in which he helped the mother Denmon, our little son being unfortunate had both of his legs cut off by street car. This company paid for the benefit and death benefits as per contract.
Hoping this company much success and hoping too that all of our people will take insurance with this company who is doing so much for the race.
Signed,
MR. AND MRS. C. A. DENMON.
COLORED MEN WANT TO OPERATE THEIR OWN GROCERY STORES.
Our Grocery Company is the name of a Corporation recently formed to operate a chain of grocery stores in the city of Crawford. The men and its members meet every Monday night at Crawford's Chapel on the market at $10 per place, placed on the market at $10 per place, from the public library, approximately. As each meeting members are rapidly paying in their pledges, Everybody is cordially invited to attend and take part. J. H. JONES, President. J. H. COSTON, Secretary. J. H. COSTON, President. B. H. BISCH, $156.
WILL CARE FOR COLORED POOR
OF CITY.
Little slimy nickels and dollars in your till will satisfy your creditors and pay your monthly bills.
Since "hind sight" is always surer than "fore sight" its a pity we can't change ends with all our undertakings.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1919.
2223
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RHEUMATISM
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BLOOD DISORDERS
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Prescription C-2223 is for internal use only. It is absorbed and circulated readily in the blood, and acts almost directly upon the disease. Contains no aspirin, morphine, alcohol, strychnine or mercury.
GUARANTEE
The manufacturers will refund your money if you are not benefited. Ask, or read circular enclosed.
Directions on every Bottle
Price $1.50
THE C-2223 Laboratory
MEMPHIS, TENN.
This is the original C-2223
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Recommended for the Treatment Skin Diseases, Chronic Catarrh, Rh Gout, Lumbago and All Conc Caused by Impure Bloo
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SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1919.
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Plough's Prescription C-2223 can be supplied you ready prepared by druggists at $1.50 a bottle; the Pills at 25c, or if you are unable to get the treatment from your home dealer, send $1.75 to the 2223 Laboratory, Memphis, and the package will be mailed you postpaid. You can get a free sample of the Pills and literature by writing.
THE DALLAS EXPRESS. DALLAS. TEXAS.
C2223
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Memphis, Tenn.
Gentlemen:
Please send me information regarding Prescription C-2223, sample of
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The C-2223 LABORATORY Memphis
LABORATORY Memphis, Tenn.
I. S. & E. U. NO. 51-C.A.
THE MEMBERS OF NEW HOPE
BAPTIST CHURCH HONOR
A. S. JACKSON IN HIS TWENTY-
FIRST MINISTERIAL SERVICES,
EIGHT HUNDRED DOLLARS
RAISED.
By N. W. Harllee
The twenty-first anniversary of the ministerial services of Dr. S. Baptist Church, the Baptist church of Dallas, was observed, Sunday, Nov. 30th. The opening service was a scripture reading and songs of praise conducted by Rev. Green. The church, representing the church, D. Edwards, presented the official council, Beck, presided over with Worsham Missionary Union; Mrs. M. H. Leak, unfolded the progress of the Sunday service, advancement of the B. Y. P. U. and J. Q. Starks directed a review of the
Afternoon Services
Alterment Services.
Scripps Institute of Science by Rev. E. L. Green, presiding. The principal address was delivered by Dr. Truett, the principal of the useful career of the venerable pastor of New Hope as a worker, scholar and a Christian gentleman doctor's travels in the Holy Lands, and what Dr. Truett was to his people which he had the distinguished honor to belong, and as a comrade in his life. Dr. Truett inquired of Dr. Truett some time ago and he frankly informed me that our pastor was the highest type of a Christian and a minister of repute for God and humility.
Night. Program.
Mrs. J. C. Frazier was the principal speaker on the program at night, and in the course of remarks set the tone for the labor of Dr. Jackson, and the work he accomplished during the past two years.
**Finances.**
The announcement on the anniversary occasion, is reported to be about $800.00 eight hundred dollars. Dr. A. S. Jackson as a Man. Dr. A. Jackson is a man of the high school; a model husband; a page leader; a conservative leader; he is a peacemaker between the races, and stands for the Christian ideals; Dr. Jackson has an intelligent congregation, among which are various, normal schools, high schools and other schools of retreat. While among the profession may be found representatives of other calling groups.
*The membership of the New Hope Baptist church is said to be nearing the 2,000 mark, the army for Christ.
Churches
SALEM BAPTIST CHURCH.
Rev. L. B. Skinner, Pastor,
sunday school was sublime and at-
tractive.
Eleven o'clock services were conducted by the pastor as it was the 5th Sunday, his return date it seems to be the 5th and last day in November to the 5th and last day on the calendar looking for an eye on the calendar looking for it. At the 1st down to the 10th verse for his subject, 'Jeen', Preaching in the room, 'B. Y. P. U. is gradually rising, just a little more peep and we will be on the top round of the ladder—Slightly above the door, the house. The pastor using for his text was 'Take My Yoke Upon You and I will walk on the road to Our Lord and Master.' All was made to feel glad. There were three who were brothers from Front, Texas, were with us all day. Collection for the day.
**Notice.**
Mrs. L. B. Skinner has been elected to take charge of a school at Ronokon to investigate the call.
Mrs. B. Y. P. U. Miss Willie Mim Sims has been very ill for the past week, but is able to be out again.
Mrs. Wren had an operation and is 'setting along nicely.'
Opening son "-America" ..... Pantor
*Reading* ... B. Roe, R. B.
Prayer ..... Holy, Holy, Holy
*Origin of Thanksgiving*
Mrs. G. B. Killen
Recital ..... Mrs. Rita Ellis
Paper ..... Mrs. C. E. Jones
Song-"Sincerize Praise Into the Prince of
Pace" ..... Mrs. Mistie Mattie
Recital ..... Miss Mistie Mattie
Solo ..... Mrs. E. S. Wilson
*Reading* ... Mrs. C. S. Smith
Song-"LIHF" ..... Mrs. C. Smith
Song-"All Hall to The Immunized"
*Reading* ..... Mr. J. B. Lewin
Song ..... G. W. Lee
*Powered by an oration from the pastor.*
MT. HEBRON BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday school was well attended. B. Y. P. U. was very good. Morning Genesis 22, chapter, theme, "A Call Made." It was a masterpiece, delivered by him. The Home Mission conducted by the missioner conducted by the pastor, text L9-10, theme, "Mission." He prescheduled a good stirring aermon in the church, alluring all of our brethren to be with us on the third day in our rally.
CHURCH OF GOD.
We had very good services Sunday. Sunday school on time as usual. Bro. G. T. Thornton, acting Superintendent, attended the day through the afternoon. Although attendance was small, all enjoyed a great spiritual meeting all day after three o'clock. A portion of the delegates have returned from St. Louis, Mo., where they report a grand time. Sutten Mamie Calhoun on New Street, is on the sick list, total receipts of the day, MRS. T. G. LOCKETT, Reporter.
Bacon, sliced, pound **50€** Brisket Roast **15€** Ham, sliced, pound **50€** Beef Stew **15€** Bacon, sliced, pound **50€** Boiling Beef **15€** Olemargerine **35€** Veal Brisket **12€** Whole Cured Ham **36€** Veal Stew **15€** Brains, lice, two set **30€** Veal Chop **20€** York Roast **30€** Veal Loast Stew **25€** Pork Steak **30€** Veal Leg Roast **22€** Pork Steak Sauce **30€** Veal Rib Roast **22€** Lard Compound **30€** Lamb or Mutton Stew **12€** Pig Liver **10€** Leg Mutton or Lamb Sauce **12€** Pig Stews **10€** Lamb Shoulder **25€** Beef Rolled Roast **17€** Lamb Shoulder **25€** Beef Rump Roast **17€** Mixed Sauage **25€** Beef Rib Roast **22€** Burger Meat **25€** Prime Rib Roast **22€** Meat Burger **25€** Seven Steak **15€** Weiner Sauage **25€** Chuck Steak **15€** Veal Roast **15€** Veal Round Steak **35€** Ground Bones for Vegetables **5€**
Delivery Made in Any part of the City Phone Us Your Orders
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PROFESSIONALS.
Dr. P. M. Sunday—Physician and Surgeon. Room 210. Office hours: 9 to 11 a.m. 3 to 5 p.m.; 1 to 5 p.m. Office phone: Main 4923. Residence 2993 State St. phone Main 3081.
Dr. R. T. Hamilton, Physician and Surgeon. Room 215 Pythian Temple; residence 3303 Thomas Ave. Phones: Office Main 1145; residence H. 4697; Office hours: 10 a.m. to 12 m.; 3 to 5 p.m.; 7 to 8:30 p.m. Dallas.
Office Hours
10 to 12 a.m.
Residence H 2837
2 to 4 p.m.
Office H 2875
DR. RUSSELL H TROTTER
Medicine and Surgery
In Connection With
Morgan-Busch Santummen
1072's Holle St. at Central Dallas
COL. W. H. HOLLOWAY GOES
OVER THE TOP.
Colonel Roscoe Conklin Simmons' visit to Dallas was under the auspices of the House. Colonel W. H. Holloway, the very active and progressive manager, was on the alert during the affair and the manifold matters. Colonel Dixon, B. Mayfield and R. Lee Jones. These gentlemen were the dynamic in the machinery which flooded the office and the matter of every kind and class and contributed proactively to a strong and balanced proactivity.
Colonel Simmons and his manager J. B. Grigris of Houston, were royally involved by the smarter set of the city. Those who were connected with the affair deserves to be highly commended for their efforts.
ELOCUTIONIST PRAISES OKLA-
HOMAN'S PROGRESS.
Prof. J. C. Phillips, A. B., the celebrated locutionist was in glowing praise at the wonderful thrift and dedication of many students, dugged and operated by race men and women in Oklahoma, also Kanawha and Tennessee, the race. Tulsa, Oklahoma City, Ardmore, Okmulgee and Muskegee and Kansas City especially.
Prof. J. C. Phillips, A. B., the talented locutionist announced these days: Neylandville, Texas, Dec. 12th. Muskegee, Okla., Dec. 8th and 10th. Elecclionist at Jefferson, Texas, Nov. 17th.
Prof. J. C. Phillips, the talented locutionist and dramatist of Dallas, Texas, appeared here at Central high school on the 17th ut. with an recital, the performance of the vice and his impersonations and interpretations were great. Prof. J. C. Pitt deserves credit for bringing to life the many operations, etc., the crowd was good.
Clem A. Butler is very sick at the hospital street, Wheeler Place, 3601 Meyers street, Wheeler Place.
JOINED IN HOLY MATRIMONY.
Dr. P. M. Sunday and Mrs. Margaret Goodby, were joined in matrimony November 26, 1819, at 230 Allen street, at the home of the bride.
A week previous, Mrs. Daisy Griggs was married to Mr. Anderson Leonard and Rev. F. Thomas, officited at both marriages.
With New Orleans "wide open" some of the population may begin to consider Louisiana a pretty good state after all.
CLASSIFIED "ADS."
Singer Swing Machines - New and second hand. We buy, sell, rent and sell. We buy, sell, rent and sell. 216 North St. Paul Street, one block north of Majestic Theatre. 12-6-41
Lost Sister - Zilla Anderson. Last heard from when she left Simpson's farm in Bowie City. Was last heard of in Oklahoma City. Any Inventory - Mima Turner, Indiana. 12-6-41
Dr. F. S. Rodgers, B. O. - Refractive analysis and diagnosis of the glasse fitted to all defects. Results guaranteed. Office, phone E. 2915 A. 216 North St. Paul Street, Wood & Edwards - Sidney nails, labs hats cleaned and reblocked. * Wood & Edwards Hat Factory, 421 South Johnson's CAFE.
Moved from 817 N. Central to 1835 Hall street, corner Munzer Avenue, offices, short ice cream, ice cream given.
ROBERT JOHNSON Prep.
11-15-49
Educent Registered Pharmacedoition. can give reference. Write drugist, care of W. S. Dosier, 241 Puytheatre, Beaumont Texas.
For Sale or Trade - Subdivision of about three thousand acres, fine creek bottom east Texas soil and cotton farm, east Texas soil and cotton farm, twelve years' time for payments. Write for particulariy. George K. Seest, Jackson, Texas. 11-23-8
Miss Nona J. Vaultz - Mus. Basin Lechsetik machinery. Available on Artist, Pianist and accompaniment. Hours: 9:30 a. m. to 6:30 p. m. 1721 Hall street, phone H. 1162. 11-23-94
Wanted - First-class classifier for a colored shop, a man that wants to work, plenty of trade, 15c and 25c, can tender, can deliver the goods don't answer. Fax 201 500 street, Marlin, Texas.
When in the Market - For a good farm in Oklahoma's great cotton, corn, small grain and oil, belt, cotton, cotton, cotton, cotton. Land Man," Twine Building, Muskege, OK.
Madam J. H. Hodos - Egyptian Hair Grower, guaranteed cure of cotton, promoted the growth of hair, 2416
100$ Elm Street
In the place to buy furniture and
and our furnishings are the best. General
house furnishing. Highest cash prices
for Second Hand Furniture.
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Now serving choice meals prepared by professional cooks and served by lady waitresses. For a good meal try us. Try a bowl of our famous chili. A. J. Johnson, Mgr.
Loans on Farms
and
City Property
Interest 6½ per cent.
See or Write G. F. Porter
1717 Hall St., Dallas, Texas
J. C. PHILLIPS. A. B. WITH ELASTIONAL REPUTE.
Elecutionist, dramatist, poet, social upfit, welfare and religious worker and lecturer. Open for engagements in California, Nevada, Oklahoma, Minnesota, New Mexico, Texas, Arizona and Oregon, write for particular.
Reserved in colleges, churches especial programs, associations and organized literary societies.
Haskel 6367, Dallas, Texas.
9-8-22
Mammoth Thay, Dec. 6th, Special At
The Mammoth Theatre
Saturday, Dec. 6th, Special Attraction
A Half-Million Dollar Serial Production
Sunday, December 7th--1st Episode of a Big Smashing Serial
THE MAMMOTH THEA JOE TRAMMEL, MANAGER
WEIL DRY GOODS STORE ENDS FIGHT FOR CONTROL OF "DALLAS" SHOPPING CENTER
Exclusive Styles in Women's Apparel at Burgundy Price; "A Pleasure to Please" Attitude of the Cherks; Concentrated Efforts of the Management Resulting in Complete Satisfaction to Women Shopers Have Attracted the Style Seeking Public to Elm and Murphy.
thing worn by the feminine sex in cent is attracted positively, kept in this mammoth north Knox where the clothing apparels—each buy a ban-bain.
Dear Readers:
This announcement is subscribed to convey facts worth knowing the details which deals exclusively with business.
In our rounds about town and city, we admire the attention we attracted to the big store at the corner of the street, which stretch the first floor of this building and sent a scene of a real busy shopping center hundred women of white skin and a gain counter taking advantage of the daily offerings found only at
Christmas time is here and a time when every, woman and child have to come together to present gifts for the holiday, problem solving has made up their mind just where they will shop, before making the final decision on what to buy. The formation of the WEIL STOCK before going elsewhere. They sell for cash. Another distinctive feature of WEIL'S system comprehensively speaking is the working force, a well trained and skilled team of people whose plausible personality will much praise and consideration for the team they are kindly toward their customers. Their patronage assuring that a cordial invitation awaits them here, their gentle and courteous as are in other WEIL STORES of the Country no embarrassment as to treat them.
The second floor is occupied by Ladies, Misses and Children Ready-to-wear. The second floor's styles reel simplicity of character are embodied in each garment as well as quality and durability. Other counteres of particular savings were the addition of a new kind of being of much interest to women shoppers. This store being a branch house of a chain of Well Store brands, it is the country although new in Dallas, has forged its way and ranking (crescent as a form for stylish women).
Through the columns of the Dallas Express, we have been authorized to announce by the honored lady-shoppers visiting the store.
The WEIL IDEA became popular in Dallas by being particular about what it was about and pricing everything, so reasonably apparel was in reach of all. This alone has done more in strengthening the reputation of this firm than any other.
Everything in india. Misses and
stuffs. The latest in stylish
stuffs and modern hinduism, from
which to make a selection. The
store bethei located corner Elm and
street No. 11.
An exclusive women's store every-
and Deacon Andrews are a little indopeased this week. Dr. P. K. White has another Book of the Life of the Book of the Life and Career as a Minister, from childhood, its a gem, can be had for a fee. The Sermon and Career office, at the, Friendship Baptist church. The Sermon and Life is a valuable asset to the pro-professor, they workers. They go like hot cakes, while they last. The Bristol Minister will be with us 2nd Sunday 14th inst. at 3 p.m. P. T. H. Henderson will be with us 2nd Sunday 14th inst. at Macdonald will be quarter of ceremonies at that hour. The other pastors will make timely remarks also at Macdonald. The White, our pastor and Nationall Evangelist in revival sermons the last week, our pastor and Nationall services now going on every night
Mr. and Mrs. James John, 2711 Jalette street, entertained him, Mr. and Mrs. John, 2712 Tuesday evening, the 2nd inst. The reception was complete with seven courses, embracing the delicacies of the three courses, and decorated with tropical flowers. The following persons were the guests: Mr. and Mrs. Hubbard Riddle, Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Pool, Mr. and Mrs. Payne, Mr. and Mrs. Q. McIlhamn, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Lay, Mr. and Mrs. Bengi Payne, Mr. and Mrs. Bengi Payne, Mr. and Mrs. Q. McIlhamn, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Lay, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Tubley, Mr. S. W. Jones, Mrs. Nona Waltz Wyman, Mr. L. M. Jones, reporter found himself mixed up with New York Society and a berry of southern belles and to sell an emerald of these beautiful boys whose upper lip begins to have a few stray mustache as the pres-
SHILOH BAPTIST CHURCH.
City B, Y. P, U. Conquest met at Dallas, Texas, Nov. 16, 1919, 3:00 p. m. and the following program was short talk by pastor S. G. Guster, Pastor Shailen Baptist church; Song, No. 94, City Chorus; Scripture Readings, No. 94, City Chorus; "24, Breaching the Land Will Soon be Over With" (Jubilee Melody, City Chorus; Prayer, Bye McKinsey; Praying, Bye McKinsey; Praying, City Chorus; the President instructed the Union according to rules and laws of the city B. Y. P.
A. Dallas Lady Honored.
Mrs. Cora Tinstyne was chosen planat at the conference hold at Galvesville. Bishop Cotrel preached for the conference and the conference rendered several selections at the white Methodist church in evidence in evidence with her sweet voice.
Roll of officers called, Installation of officers. The following were in charge: W. Cornelia, president; M. Rose Baptist church; V. vice-president; Shiloh Baptist church; J. S. Shearas, vice president; M. Baptist church, Smith, Secretary;
QUEEN CITY CHURCH NOTES.
Sisters: O. S. B. Barnes, Asec. Sest
Bethodia: T. L. Brown, Correspondent
secretary, Mt. Rose, J. C. Ro-
wes, Mt. Olive; J. L. Hawk-
ing, Orgazble.
Group teachers: Rev. W, R. Shaw
M. Helton; Slater Clerk, M. Gilead
Moore, L. Glenfield; Bro. Bucken,
M. Elam.
Sister M. A. Hawkins, chairman
Monitor, Truevine Baptist, Slater
E. Hunt, City Editor of City B. Y.
U. C. U. Conquest, next meeting
be hold. Conquest will attend.
L. R. CORNELAOUS President.
WEST.
West, Tecna. Dec. 4. Bold Spring
Baptist church, well attended.
B. Y. C. U. P. sermon at
3:30 p. m. Rev. Jackson officiat-
ment. South, Smith, H. North
street. Waege, mason at
saturday to see Mrs. Lizzie
Rivers. Sick listed Miss Amie May
25 CENT DINERS
Are the things that broke the space limit. Get one and go over Chapman. Don't forget our alert order department is complete.
245 RISE DINERS Dallas, Texas
245 RISE DINERS Dallas, Texas
BROOKS GROUP, PRIVATE
THE DALLAS EXPRESS. DALLAS. TEXAS.
"SHARK MONROE" IS FINE PICTURE FOR WILLIAM
S. HART.
Artercraft Star Has Splendid Role As Savage Skipper Who
Is Purified by Love.
There is little doubt that the popular verdict on William S. Hart's splendid new photoplay, "Shark Monroe," which is to be displayed at the Mammoth Theatre next Saturday, will acclaim it one of the finest pictures in which he has as yet been seen. In this production Mr. Hart discards the chaps of the frontiersman and is seen as a typical skipper of a sealing schooner on the Alaskan coast. Monroe is a savage man whose reputation for cruelty extends. He meets a beautiful young woman in an strange circus performance and her dissipated brother to Alaska. He learns to love her with passionate fervor and when she goes to Balsam City and falls into the hands of a notorious trafficker in Monroe follows and saves her in one of the most impressive situations ever disclosed in any motion picture. Monroe is the centre of many highly interesting scenes of this powerful story. How he wins the girl's love by her bravery, after he had slain the man who sought to dishonor her, is told in scenes that are vibrant with thrills and heart appeal. Mr. Hart directed this photoplay under the guidance of his friend, a painter and a pable. His leading woman is Katherine MacDonald one of the most charming of screen actresses, Joe Singleton, Berthold Sprotte, George McDaniel and others.
More than a year was spent in producing "The Liberator." The actual cash outlay involved in the picture would cover the total cost of the average serials on the market today. Sciamengo & Pastrone, who produced "The Liberator" for Mr. Harry Raver, have never spared time or expense to outdo other producers. They made the first film spectacle, "The Fall of Troy," nine years ago, and are famous for the invention of the new effects and illusions which other producers have so eagerly adopted in subsequent films. "The Liberator" is not a war picture, although "Maciste" is always in conflict of one kind or another. It bristles with action, satisfies with its thrills, stunts and startling situations, supplies many a laugh when best needed; there is romance and mystery a-plenty, and "Maciste" is at his best from main title to trailer.
Massive interior settings erected at a cost staggering to the average producer lend dignity and beauty to the atmosphere of the story. In short, "The Liberator" is the biggest boat of a star, whose creator, Gabrielle d'Amour, poet-voet, and saviour of Italy's morale, unite in happy combination to form the Year's Greatest Motion Picture.
- "THE LIBERATOR" and continued on Sunday for 10 weeks. Also "CHAS. RAY" in a Western Drama—"TENNESSEE HILLS" and least but not last "LITTLE SAMBO" in one of his best comedies, Sunday, we open at 1 p. m.
THE STORY IN BRIEF.
Young Lieutenant Harrison is deep in an affair with the wife of his major, Blanche Marston. His mother, grieving because of it, persuades Jim Craig, one of the most popular men at the Kansas army post where they are stationed, to attempt to break up the liaison.
At the Marston home Craig tries to reason with Blanche, and Harrison, entering at this moment, flies into a jealous eye to captain there. A fight ensues in which Craig knocks Harrison and threatens him with a revolver, and leaves when Blanche orders him out of the house. The major, who has become suspicious of his wife and the young officer, enters as she is trying to revive him and shoots him dead.
Desperately the woman asserts her innocence of any wrongdoing, and does it so cleverly that her husband believes her. Then she seeks Craig and pretending to him that Harrison was killed in the fight with Craig, prevails upon the latter to run away in order to save a dead man's memory and a life. After Craig's flight, Blanche persuades her husband to declare Craig guilty of Harrison's murder; he yields only when she threatens suicide if he refuses.
The war department, seeking Craig, loses his trail in New York and the case is placed in the hands of Madge Summers, a clever young woman who specializes in getting deserts back to the army through moral sassion, but who accepts a criminal case. By providing what he service she is told that Craig is wanted only for desertion.
Madge locates Craig in an opium den and despite the fact that he is only a derlift Madge sees in him the man he used to be and loves him. Determined, however, to do her duty, she notifies the authorities of his whereabouts; then, she accepts the arrival of the murderer, she beks him to escape before the arrival of the convict. Madge, refuses, thinking he has been betrayed by her, and on a desperate chance she goes to the army post hoping to find evidence that will clear him.
Major Marston, weary of his dishonor, and finally convinced of the guilt of his wife, confesses the murder of Harrison and kills the woman and himself, while Madge and Craig, re-untied, face the happiness of a life together.
Monday and Tuesday, Dec. 8th and 9th—Special attraction—"SACRED SILENCE" featuring "WILLIAM RUSSELL" a wonderful out-door film, lots of fighting, action and everything. A beautiful story told in a different manner, no advance in prices. Matinee, Monday 2 p. m.
Wednesday, Dec. 10th—13th episode—our wonder serial—"TRAIL OF THE OCTOPUS" also a two-reel western drama and a screaming funny comedy.
HARRY SAYER from
MACISTE
THE LIBERATUR
POCKET AT
AT DEATHS ROOM
Theatre
Special Attraction
in a Five Reel Master Production
RK MONROE" One of Hart's Best
Wm. S. Hart, in a Five Reel Master Production
"SHARK MONROE" One of Hart's Best
One Day Only
Saturday,
Dec. 6th
MATINEE
BESSIE LOVE AND WILLIAM 4 M S HART IN
al Production
The first episode of the new "Maciste" production,
"The Liberates" which will be released in twelve install-
ments, at the rate of one each week, will be shown at the
Mammoth Theatre beginning Sunday and continually each
Sunday thereafter.
In the first episode wealthy Count Morosini is introduced just after the death of his son, Albert, who married a poor girl to whom a child was born. Disowned by the old Count Bianca and her child are found starving in the street by "Maciste", who after much persuasion, forces Bianca to leave the village. Stevani, the black sheep nephew of the Count, fearing the loss of an inheritance, kills the old count before he has an opportunity to make a new will. "Maciste" is suspected of the murder by an amateur detective named Seymour Knott, who charges him with the arrestee in a crowded cafe. "Maciste" arrests and creeks the wreck. Stevani takes possession of the Maciste estate and orders Bianca to leave the house. "Maciste" proves his innocence, and suspicion of the murder is driven to Bianca, who is thrown into prison. Her baby being taken to the palace, "Maciste" learns of Bianca's persecution and starts out to solve the hidden mystery.
of a Big Smashing Serial
All were gone.
But-he.was a fighting man and his fight was not yet ended.
SEE
WILLIAM
RUSSELL
in
FRED SILENCE
A William Fox production
story of a woman's sin and what it cost.
Home-Honor-
Happiness
All were gone.
But-he was a fighting man and his fight was not yet ended.
SEE
WILLIAM
RUSSELL
in
SACRED SILENCE
A William Fox production
A powerful story of a woman's sin and what it cost.
See it at
Coming—Sunday, Dec. 14th—PEARL WHITE in
continuation of the last series "THE BLACK SECRET" in
continued series.
Thursday, Dec. 11th—"MIDNIGHT MAN" serial featuring Jas. Corbett, the fighting gentleman, also a two reel western drama and comedy—"MIDNIGHT MAN" serial continued every Thursday—Matinee Thursday, 2 p. m. Friday, Dec. 12th—"BOUND AND GAGGED" serial the serial of a thousand thrills, also a two-reel Kay Bee Western and a funny comedy.
THEATRE
ANAGER
COMING
Sunday, Dec. 28th,
Helen Holmes
FATAL FORTUNE SERIAL
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1910.