Dallas Express

Saturday, January 10, 1920

Dallas, Texas

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Pay Your Poll Tax Now. January 31st, 1920, Is The Last Day "MOST DISTINCTIVE WEEKLY IN AMERICA." SECRETARY OF NAVY TO BRAVERY OF COLO SAYS AT ALL TIMES AMERICA HAS FO DESIRES TO SEE NATIONAL MONUMENT SECRETARY OF NAVY PAYS TRIBUTE TO BRAVERY OF COLORED SOLDIERS DESIRES TO SEE NATIONAL MONUMENT ERECTED IN WASHINGTON Pay Your Founded by W. E. King. VOL. 26, NO. 14. (Associated Negro Press). "The spirit of America with reference to brave Colored soldiers has been North and South," but perhaps it was welcome tendered, by the city of Albany, N. when Gov. S. Warren form, the Glover County other citizens staged a welcome to URGE NEWSPAPERS TO CUT DOWN FOR SIX WEEKS Washington, Jan. 8. — Every newspaper in the country was called on today by the House postoffice committee to reduce its consumption of news print paper by 10 per cent for the first time, in order to repreceive the serious shortage, which the committee has been told threatened the destruction of a number of small papers. The committee would obviate the necessity for repressive governmental action, said the commissioner, who prepared by Chairman Steenerson. Members of the committee and that of the commissioner unitary conservation plan further action on the Anthony bill to limit the size of newspapers and that unclassified privilages would be postponed for the present at least. The committee considered the shortage in the newsprint paper supply and believe that unclassified privilages would result in it will result in the destruction of a large number of newspapers in the communities served by them, and having in mind the great results accomplished in the improparable injury to the communities served by them; and having in mind the great results accomplished in the improparable co-operation of the people in saving food, fuel and other necessities. In part, we appeal to you to reduce consumption of news print by at least 10 per cent in six months, thereby averting the threatened injury and obviating the necessity for repressive measures in the newspaper industry. TWO INDICTMENTS RETURNER IN CAPITAL RIOT CASES. Washington, D. C., Jan. 8—The race riots of last July were recalled in two incidents returned by the governor, the first degree and other an assault with a dauverre weapon, and the charge and indictment against Wm. Lanny for the death of a "oumry white man, Kenneth Crall, in front of the promenade, given Gerald Gerrard." W. July 21, one of the early nights the riots, George Dewalt, alligator Gerrard and James Gerrard with shooting and浸镊 Gwenolvi the same night Detective Sergt. Servicer James Gerrard effecting his capture. Sixteen other indictments for use of deadly weapons were reported by the grand The Dallas Express Sergt. Henry Johnson, called by the Times-Union Albany's heroes, killed the warlord, then sent the war, Sergt Johnson went across among the first, was decoyed by the Germans, and America for having killed four Germans and wounded twenty-eight NEGRO TAKEN FROM TRAIN AND LYNCHED Columbus, Ga., Jan. 8. - A Negro known as Charles West, alias Johnny Webb, was taken from a train near Smithville, Ga., early today and shot to death by a mob of about 50 men bent on avenging the death of a black man. The account of the affair received here by telephone said the Negro was being back from Jacksonville, Fla., where he had been arraigned. Emmet L. Brightwell, a returned inmate, was not killed and December 12, by the Negro, he had迫不及待 to hunt on his farm. The mob entered the train when it stopped at Smithville before being arrested and quietly that the members of the train crew said they did not know who was in the train. Were Sheriff W. K. Johnson, Jr., had been forced to give up his prisoner, were inquest returned a verdict that the Negro came to his death at Smithville. The inquest returned a verdict that the Negro came to his death at Smithville. Feeling had been running high in Stewart county over the killing, the police probed and a subscription of $400 had been raised and offered for the Negro's arrest. This, it is was, said Florida authorities who caught him. NEGRO ADMITS KILLING MAID TO HIDE ROBBERY New York, Jan. 8.—Confession was made to District Attorney Harry E. Lawes of Brooklyn late this morning by Frank Kelly, N. Negro porter for the Brooklyn Rapid Transit, who was arrested in Newark, N. J., that he was the man who broke into the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence the master of the museum, twenty-first St. Flatbush, and killed Carolina Dunn, the mailed employment in the Clark home. Kelly broke down after being grilled and sentenced to four months until 4 o'clock this afternoon. District Attorney Lewis said that Kelly's statement had been taken down after the master told that he had told them that he killed the maid when she discovered him. Lewis said that Kelly was now such interpolators "regarding the murder of three and Emmie Donald, a Brooklyn Rapid Transit ticket seller, at the same elevated station where Kelly was porter. The Republican Party Is the Shift, All Else Is the Sea." — Fred Douglas. THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS SATURDAY, JANUARY 10, 1929 FOURTEENTH CENSUS IS OF GREATEST IMPORTANCE TO NEGROES WILL RECORD FACTS WHICH WILL BE VITAL IN SHAPING INCREASES AND DEVELOPMENTS OF RACES The Census Bureau embellishes the point that all information collected is confidential. It can not be used as a basis for taxation, for the enforcement of local law, or in any way whatsoever that will cause harm to the person. Therefore, should hesitate to give to the Census enumerators complete and accurate information, the actors can use in filling out the printed Census schedule carried by the Census Bureau. It can be made by any one to cover up the true facts that pertain to each man CHAPLAIN'S DISCHARGE NOT DUE TO COLOR NEGRO CONGREGATION MAY LEAVE CHURCH Philadelphia, Penn., Jan. 8—The Rev. Elliott White, rector of St. Mark's Church and president of the house of St. Michael and All Angels, yesterday told a committee representing St. Mark's Church. Chapel that the question of Race was missed of the Rev. J. da Coca Harwood as chaplain of St. Michael's Church. The committee, consisting of six members of the Colored congregation, asked Father White to reconsider his position. Chapel that the question of leave St. Michael's Chapel December 31. No charges, it is stated, have been laid, and they and they contend his sudden dismal is arbitrary and unjust. They also have an impression that Father White is as Father Harwood's successor. The committee, consisting of Benjamin Gale, chairman: Franklin C. Holder, Mt. Abbie Johnson, St. Mark's Church, interviewed and Miss C. Lewis, the clergy house of St. Mark's church. Seventeenth and Locus no. 1. No Question of Race Involved. Father White's statement to the committee emphasized three points: that there is not dispensed for the part of the house of trustees to Father Harwood any injustice; the case the hands of lawyers, in these cases he was not at liberty to discuss its merits. Those facts were not known, and St. Mark's Lewis, a member of the committee of St. Michael and All Angels and acting organ of the chapel, "Father White received our com- mission courteously, but he instilled his own sense of duty in Harewood, under the provisions of Mrs. Bernard Harewood, and the father could not object to the told us that he was the chaplain of St. Michael, and Father Harewood might dismiss from service as might dismiss from service as he would dismiss a lawyer or any other employer. Migle Plea of Sentiment. "We asked him if he would consider the personal feelings of the com- mission, our love for father Harewood, and his desire to him continue as our priest. We told him that if Father Harewood were not sent to the church, AMERICA'S LYNCHING RECORD FOR'19 AMERICA'S LYNCHING RECORD FOR'19 SHOWS THAT LYNGHERS MURDERED 82 IN 12 MONTHS Dear Sir: I send you the following information relative to lynchings for the past year. According to the record Department of Records and Research of the Tuskegee Institute, there were 82 lynchings in 1919, of which 77 were in the South and 5 in the North and West. This is 18 more than the number 64 for the year 1918 of those lynchings. Of those whites. One of those put death was a Negro woman, Nineteen, or less than one-fourth of those put to death, were charged with rape or attempted rape. Seven, of the victims were burned to death. Nine were put to death and then their bodies were burned to death. Those burned to death were: rape; 3; murder; 2; killing sheriff; 1; no charge given, 1. The charges against those involved and then their bodies were burned to death; 2; shooting officers of the law, 3; rape; 1; murder, 1; incendial talk. WILL SPEND $250,000 ON SCHOOL FOR NEGROES Chicago, Jan. 8. — Plans for one of the largest educational institutions for Nerroes in the country were announced on Friday, known as the Morton Curtz Haltz well Social Center, and the initial outlay is to be $200,000. Pounds have been provided from the cemetery of the Trinity Methodist Elderless Church. TUSKEGEE PROFESSOR PRODUCES MILK FROM PEANUTS AMERICA'S SCIENTISTS AWAIT THE PUBLICATION OF PROCESS Washington, D. C. Jan. 8.—The department of the experts of the Department of Agriculture await with interest the publication of the method whereby Prof. G. W. Carver, Colored, of Tuskegee Institute, claims to have produced from peanuts a milk that is a good substitute for cow's milk. This milk will be true, inasmuch as the peanut contains all the requisite elements, including "protein" of a superior and higher quality. Milk is a "perfect food"; one could live on it for a long time. The peanuts, already have peanut butter, the production of which nowadays is enormous. Why not peanut milk? It is merely a question of finding out how to make it. Prof. Carver claims to have it. Prof. Carver claims to have peanuts. He says that his peanut milk is exceedingly wholesome and can be used in cooking and cooking qualities of his product. At present he is continuing his experiments to determine the composition and cooking qualities of cow's milk, which it closely resembles. At present he is continuing his experiments to determine the composition and cooking qualities of cow's milk as 88 per cent water, 4 per cent fat, 4-1.2 per cent sugar, and 0.8 per cent protein. Carver's task has not been only to make a milk from peanuts, but to reproduce as nearly as possible the composition of the essential ingredients. Prof. Carver, as a graduate of the University of Michigan, was directed by the secretary of agriculture under the McKinley, Roosevelt and Taft administration as one of the agricultural chemists in the country. AMERICAN REALTY AND CONSTRUCTION CO. HAS CAPITAL OF $15,000 CROWDED YEGRO SCHOOLS DISC CUSSED AT MEETING OF COL ORED EDUCATORS. New Orleans, Jan. 8.—Overcrowding of schools for Neo children and the need for more schools was highlighted at the quarterly meeting of the Colored Educational Alliance in Central Congregational Church schools, where are being taught in three residence buildings on Bayou Rouge Approximately 10 miles from the Fisk Bran School School, and McDonnogh No. 32, in Algiers, where a poorly constructed church serves as the center of a capacity of 800 and an enrollment of 110. A new school is needed in the area. The children are out of school. The figures are from official reports. The Alliance is promoting the establishment of a new school. Rev. H. H. Dunn, president. President Albert Workman of the Colored Loussoumenhre's Association reported the progress of the organization. Dr. E. M. T. Power, reported the progress of the facilities and teachers of music and drawing to the board. A CONSERVATIVE, YET FEARLESS CHAMPION OF JUSTICE. $2.00 Per Annum PRICE FIVE CENTS DS DOWN DECISION IN OF NEGRO BAPTISTS AND CABINET LAWFUL AND REGU-CHARTERED BOARD. DIFFERENCE BETWEEN TWO FACTIONS IN NATIONAL BOARD. COURT HANDS DOWN DECISION IN THE CASE OF NEGRO BAPTISTS MAY END FIVE YEARS DIFERENCE BETWEEN TWO FACICTIONS IN NATIONAL BOARD. e Last Day Nashville, Tenn., Jan. 8. —(Reciprocal News Service) —Christmas was celebrated with a different feeling and under different conditions by the court. The case of D. Baptists' are known and been played by the past years to recent days of the Court of Civil Appeals in the State of Tennessee that has just been handed over to the court. The decree affirms a decision in Part II of the Chancery Court given out by Special Judge Cherry sometime ago, and others of the National Baptist Publishing and the rightful Board and the court. The Court assessed the costs of the court upon the followers of the Morris Church suit. They appealed and dent up, so it is, claiming that the lower Court is erred. When all the arguments were taken the case under consideration and when the Court of Civil Appeals had taken the case under consideration, briefs of both able councillors, their decision in simple terms was: The opinion rendered by the Court of Appeals is a lengthy one, more than twenty-five pages of typewritten, and more than two hundred pages, taking up two whole pages in the National Baptist Union-Review of the two enterprising newspapers published city. But the Decree itself, as an effort was very short, concise, comprehensive, and the decree is that the Morris followers who complained against Boyd and his Board members had no power to vote on the Board members. They refuse to discuss or decide on the denominational aquatic board, a separation and two conventions. They say that the National Baptist Publishing Board, chartered under the laws of Tennessee, is the lawful and right Board and that they shall have all the rights to vote on the State of Tennessee. The decree closes by saying that the Morris and Haynes followers who brought the decision to the Court of Appeals it is understood that when this decision was made and the Decree comes in the camp of the Morris PERSHING FOR PRESIDENT MOVEMENT STARTED BY POLITI CIANS OF NEBRASKA With all proper respect for the illuminated men of America, present and past, it can very properly be said that he is another man of any country or of any time who has gone so far and has done so, where, and has done everything as he has done. He has served his country at home and abroad, and has served as a leader of government in every state of the union, and in every hemisphere of the globe. He has been student of history, author of statesman, soldier, and always and everywhere has achieved distinction and glory for the flag of his country. followers, but the Boyd and Jones people declared that they are "calm in victory and sober in defeat," and that their erring brethren still have their first love. Thousands of letters and hundreds of telegrams congratulated them for being a first love been pouring in for a number of days. The history of the Baptist distribution data back to 1915, when many intimate that there were rumblings of wars and rumors of wars among the people. Reality in 1914 at Philadelphia, Chicago was the real scene of conflict, information, it was the famous characterized by seven men, unauthorized by Convention, which brought the attention of the man regarded as Baptist polity and policy to obtain. It was said that they were not interested, and regarded as Baptist polity and policy. Since that time, the fight has been hot all over the United States, but from all indications, the Morristown community, the initial, and accordi- to the Jones faction, they have lost five decisions in Chicago and two in Nashville. When Dr. Boyd was seen this week he declared that he held no ill-will to the National Baptist Publishing plant of the United States, was supplying literature, and thousands of Sunday School books, and thousands one million, five hundred thousand Sunday school workers. He was busy building a Panama, where he will visit Rev. and Mrs. Thorbourne, after which he will present for the Sunday School Conference, for the Sunday School Conference, to keep in virulent hope, although seventy-six years of age, so that he can hold down affairs in the Church, and to keep Henry A. Boyd, his assistant and the Secretary of the Sunday School Conference, is to be held following the National Baptist Japan, during the World's Sunday School Convention, which is to be DEATH OF NEGRO OFFICER COMES TO LIGHT AT DET- ZER'S TRIAL New York, Jan. 8.—Beating of prisoners began from the time the 308th military police company was organized for criminal investigation work in Le Mans, according to Victor Shippen, of New Haven, Conn., a police officer in the department of Captain Karl W. Detter, who is charged with cruelty to men who were in his custody while commanded by Robert E. Flora, who formerly served at Le Mans as assistant rovest marshal, caused a stir in the courtroom of the defense department. "Frank of the hardships that confronted military police, the killers," said Detter, of the department of criminal investigation in France. Lindsay's body was found with seven bullet holes in it. When last seen alive the officer, examining white soldiers for their wounds, discovered Brrest. Several soldiers, who escaped from a jail in Brrest were later and held for Lindsay's death. COLORED YANK WRECKS LONDON RESTAURANT London, Jan. 8.—In a restaurant known as the Piedicault Corner House, a colored man took a seat at a table on a table smiled at the folle. They thought he was going to order steak. Suddenly, the man, chairs, chairs, and china about him. Hundreds of diners fled (it is a large restaurant), many more being trained in the kitchen. The damage was done by the axe before the man was overpowered. American, that he had been discharged by the restaurant, and was, hungry. His hand was on the table by the London Daily Mail as follows: “This is a common incident in the United States. A man who is down on his knees can go into a restaurant and lay it on a table. An axe on a table is a well-known trophy, who promptly pay out $5, for they know that while they are fetching the axe, who can do infinitely more damage.” Madam C.J. Walker Preparations If you want Beauty of Complexion and loveliness of Hair, try Mine C.J. Walker's World Renowned Toilet Preparations. ( FULL DIRECTIONS ON EVERY BOTTLE ) BE SURE THIS SEAL IS UMBROOK Madam C.J. Walker COBRA CREAM Madam C.J. Walker WASHING CREAM Madam C.J. Walker DISHWASH CREAM Madam C.J. Walkers 3 ounces ice mold Mm. C.J. Walker Mfg. Co. INDIANAPOLIS, IND. DEPARTMENT 10. PAGE TWO Mad If you Con Han Ren Mm. WEST VIRGINIA GOVERNOR ASKS FOR SPECIAL GRAND JURY TO INVESTIGATE LYNCHING. Charlestown, W. Va., Jan. S.-Gov. Corvallie sent a telegram to C. Chap. phon, prosecuting attorney of Legan county, requesting him to obtain a pardon. He was sent to the Court, and a special Grand Jury to investigate the circumstances attending the lynching of E. D. Whitfield Whitney, at Chapmanville, W. Va. BLACK STAR LINER COMPLETES FIRST TRIP. (Associated Negro Press). Colon, Jan. 8—The Black Star Crew, a group of African-American crew with the exception of the first officer, and carriage six Colored passengers, arrived here from Kingston, N.J., to the property of the first steamship company to be owned by Negro was given an unilateral release from the crew. NEGRO OFFICER SAVED FROM EXECUTION BY PRESIDENT. (Associated Negro Press). Washington, D.C., on December 10, death of imposed by court-martial on Capt. Daniel Smith, a NeoRogers 18th infantry, on conviction of havoc that was disapproved and the officer ordered to restuff, according to the court-martial. The officer is signed by Secretary Baker *by direction of the Capt. Smith, who since has been demobilized was acused of "shameful conduct" from the enemy on September 28th, 1948, when his regiment was ordered to surrender. RIOTING IN WEST INDIES SUP POSED REVOLUTION (Associated Neuro Press) London, Jan. 8, offer disturbing in the British Islands of Trinidad and Tobago, in the West Indies, leading the rising during which the British government launched warship Calcutta, and resulting in several casualties, are reported in official dispatches to the Colonial authorities. Special dispatches picture the trouble in Trinidad as a rising of the Maracas there in which the government had been stormed and held for three hours; were stormed and held for three hours; Returned soldiers were implicated in the disturbances, it is stated. Today's advice announces that Port of London, a country districts are still disturbed. SOUTHERN GOVERNOR SAYS SOUTH INTENDS TO STOP MOB RULE WITH JUSTICE. (Associated Negro Press). Boston, Maine, Jan. 8. EG-Governor John K. McCain, Jr. signs a bill of the Bar Association of that State, in addressing the member of the Twentieth Century Club urged to abolish the orderly processes of law be followed. He discussed the race plots of the county. Who can say that the Negro race is not progressing and that economic freedom does not lie ahead of it? "Despite the fact that they have often been exploited and guided unintentionally by the viliary schemes, they have acquired a billion dollars' worth of money among themselves from 50 to 30 percent." To voice the spirit of the new South when I may that mob violence and disorder is ended, that when the problem is solved as we intend to do, the police will emmily eradicated, then will the hopes and dreams of the wile leaders be fulfilled. "Village and disorder in the North during the last decade show the point of finger of scarcity at any ```markdown ``` EUROPE BENEFIT CONCERT NOT A SUCCESS. New York, Jan. 8.—The CIC Club of New York gave a concert at Carnegie Hall, in aid of a memorial of the late Lieutenant of Lieutenant Europe who was murder by one of his men during a raid on the French embassy in his return to Europe. The audience was small. The invitation to the Neroz contribution to the music of America is more in search of more entertainment than have been fully repaid by the performance of the comedian singers of the organization. Those who were present, however, made up for the smallness of their numbers by the heart of their organization. The program included Europe's CIC Club March, Negro spirituals, and the members of the club. The conductor was William H. Tyra, and the leader of the club. VIRGINIA JOURNAL SAYS INTENSIVE EDUCATION IS NEEDED FOR NECROPS. (Associated, Negro, Press) Richmond, Virginia Journal: Probably the most promising of all the richmond, Virginia journal's racial problem in the United States is that looking toward the more extensive education of Colored school students, the teachers determine the character of education. It is, of course, the basis for all progress in civilization, and the teachers determine the character of education. It is, however, that more than half of the Colored teachers in southern public schools have an education of less than the equivalency of the majority of these are "aid $24.48 a month, or an average of $85.28 for a year." The intelligent and bishop-spired NORA girls convicted that their first grade was to raise the standards of education. CHILDREN BORN OUT OF WED LOCK. What rights do the laws of this country give to the child born on the state floor? What responsibility has the state floor given to placing a part of the burden of his support and education upon property from either his father or his mother? Has he a right to his parents' marriage of his parents make him legitimate of the laws of the eye of the law? What rights are answered in a bulletin entitled "Illustrations of the legal obligations of parents and of the State to children born in the United States" and Certain Pederden Countries," issued by the U. R. Department of Labor. The English common law in some countries, and in parts of the United States, regards the child born out of wedlock to bear no legal relationship even to his mother, and the subsequent unmarried child of the patient not legitimate, altered the common law by statutes more favorable to the child One of the laws to the child which weakens this broad provision by the failure to provide adequate property in 1937 passed a law THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 10. 1920. aims to secure for children born out of wedlock the nearest approximation to the care, support, and education that they would be enlisted in marriage. The State board of control is made the child's official guardian of this child, granting in marriage procedures and must see that the child's interests are safe-guarded. They were admitted in Virginia as early as 1785, whereby the issue of certain annuities marriages by subsequent marriage could legitimate issue, and the child could inure themselves to the care of subsequent marriage divisions are not even yet universal in this country. Four States have no provision for legitimation by subsequent marriage, and marriages are placed upon the right of children of annuled or void marriages. Attention is called in this report to the fact that our legal provisions require that the laws of wedlock are inadequate—the laws prescribed are often too low, and in most of the States the period of wedlock is reaching only to the child's 10th or 12th year. In one State only a 10-year requirement is required. The two most recent $200 million appropriations, one $290 distributed over three years, required. The two most recent total, in one case, $2,750 for the first 18 years of the child's life; and in the first eleven years of the child's life. The report suggests that illegitimacy legislation in the United States requires a legislative division for the establishment of legitimacy; the legitimation of children in the legal system; the possibility of adoption by the father; and declaration that the relation of mother and child is the same whether the child is legally admitted. In addition to a critical analysis of illegitimacy legislation in this country, there is a need to consider certain phases of the various State laws in tabular form, the common law, and the legal provisions of certain phases of the various State laws in tabular form, the common law, and the legal provisions of the Codes of France, Germany and Switzerland, and a reference index to the U. S. l. BUSINESS MEN START DRIVE FOR HARLEM BANK. Hon. John W. Lewis, Washington Banker; Prof. Kelly Miller and Other National Figures Will Speak at Big Palace Casino Meeting Next Sunday at 3, P. M. New York, N. Y., Jan. 8. —The movement to organize a Colored Bank in Harlem has reached such proportions that the board has sent a joint Day account churches have agreed to bring it to the attention of their congregations on Sunday, December 28, which has been scheduled for the gigantic citizens' meeting at 2:30 on Sunday next is planned. The Hon. John W. Lewis president of the Warren Industrial Savings Bank of Washington, will address the chief speaker. Ten years ago Mr. Lewis was an ordinary hod carrier. Grit and ability have brought Another speaker of national fame is Prof. Kelly Miller of Howard University, who will speak at Dr. A. Clayton Powell, pastor of Abysinia Baptist Church and Robert H. Harrison, president of the University, who will speak at new speakers, will help to put the matter before the citizens, business men, investors and working people, who are in New York and of New York have to get them business credits, financial accommodations or bank clemency. The chairman of the Executive Committee, will preside. Inspiring music will be furnished by Prof. H. Gladstone Mar TAUGHT HIM MUCH Homely Philosophy of Great Benefit to Worried Man. "Wrestle With Your Troubles as They Come Along, and Don't Worry." Is About as Good Advice as Can Be Given. "We all have our troubles," said Mr Goslington. "A very capable young friend of mine who has a some what responsible position was bothered by the old man's ordinates and co-workers and superiors. So he went to a friend of his, an older and higher-up man, for advice and comfort. "He opened over this request. The younger man had always imagined that the older man in his higher-up place was free from all worries; that he could be as he liked and that he would be heard the older man saying, smiling: "*Goo gracious! You think you are the only man that troubles you. How can you help? Why, if you should take your troubles and multiply them by about ten you would begin to understand about how the trouble way. We all have our troubles." "Which was of course the simple truth. The man doesn't live who is absolutely his own boss. Low or high, there is somebody above him or below him. He doesn't need to defer. My young friend had an idea that when he got higher up he would be free, unharmed; that he could do as he liked. But the minute he came to talk with older friend he realized that no man in the world is free to do as he likes. This older and higher-up friend has superior stills over him and men of the same rank and experience. This is the saying is, the saying is, troubles of his own. "But his talk with the older man was a great relief and comfort to my friend just the same. In fact, he was always right around him. He smiled as he then to himself now that he was not the only man in the world with troubles; he densed lighter as he thought of the loads that other people were carrying. And it helped him a whole lot to reheat, as he now did, how his older brother was a good front always. If he was worried or distressed he never showed it. He kept his nerve, he was never upset, and he would worry him, as far as you could see, and he was always considerate of other people and their feelings and how to look at things from other people instead of view as well from his own. As he dwell upon these things my young friend was helped enormously, and he was always considered these qualities and characteristics that had always attracted him to the older man, and he firmly resolved as he has ever done, after him, which he has ever done. "My young friend is now older by a few years than when he had this enlightening experience and he has also seen that he still is coming along strong. I "Ever have any troubles come your way nowadays? I said to him the word, 'Why, yes,' he said, right smiling, "we have do our little troubles now and then and we do our level work, but we positively refuse to worry over 'em." "And really I think my young friend is coming as near to that as anybody possibly can." **Believe in Physical Training.** Mauricepe L. Smith, elected to the Nineteenth New York district, is twenty-five years old and a specialist in physical training and her election is the work she has been doing in her community all through the war. She will not give up her work as physical training and her secondary school, where she is also supervisor of club clubs. Her several years Mimi Smith is been director of the physical training and dancing at Camp Hanou. her 'girl' hikes also superintended the 'girl' hikes When she was in a teachers' college Miss Smith was president of the athlete association for two years and relied on her own to score for athletes in her senior year. "I never had any legislative or political plans for myself," she says. "I haven't now. But I want to keep on and make a difference in a community in whatever way I can." No Wonder. BROADWAY MUSEUM Agents Wanted other day that the leaves of the National gallery fig trees might be intended for use inside—London Chronicle. Hardly a Model Husband A young woman told the Willemsen (England) magistrate that she had six points to complain of about her husband, who was supposed to any one. He would not allow anyone to visit the house. He would not allow her to take her little boy out. He would not allow her to buy money. He threatened her life. He would not let her have her own clothes to wear. After all that the court mistakenly was asked to set as arbitrary DO BUSINESS IN THE OPEN tinerant "Merchants" in City of Mexico Floribunda Exceedingly, especially on Sundays. Conditions in the republic which have crowded a million persons in Mexico City, or more than 300,000 people in other cities, have increased greatly the number of tinerant merchants who set up shop where their winnets will. It is impossible to handle such a large foot within a regular shop. Let the proprietor hint that he is in the market for something and he is besieged immediately by a crowd of energetic salesmen, who have come to Spanish on the worth of their wares. The busiest is the day for these merchants. They forge principally about them and patently wait for customers. Their numbers are augmented by men and women, boys and girls, children, children, children, fruits, shoe strings, bright-colored ribbons, shoes, hats, dogs, cats, poachers and the dozens of bright-colored pottery, shoes, hats, The plaza present an animated appearance. Bands are playing, whitestars are blowing, newborns call their elders, and the children bebeses the credulous to try their luck; a boy with a huge basket balancing at his head offers sweetmeats. A curious ass, and following him a frozen dandelion tucked away in a container which he jiggles perilously on his head but never loses a spoontail, which gives no hint of brooding problems of existence. It is a happy life the native leads Sunday, when with a few coworkers he takes a bath in the warm sunshine and listen to musculae furnished by a Mexican band. A man from the United States, who on a recent Sunday morning took his wife and his shoes shined, his nails manicured, his breakfast served, his morning newspapers delivered, his measure furnished an assortment of diamonds and opals at a bargain. He concluded that there may be more modern methods of conducting business, but more none than the outdoor merchant. HOW NATURE CLEANS HOUSE Fall Rains Wash Off the Dirt of Summer and Wind Sweeps It Up and Blows It Away. We humans have a dire way of talking about the cim before a storm as though it was a brief internation in a city. We have a dire way of truth a cim may last sunny and secreta for weeks at a time. It is the storm which merely clears the air for summer and writes in the Kansas City Times. If the weather is mild and tearful, suffiting to in little girds of drops the wind is strong and dry, still dry and stenely dry, it may remain unsettled for days. But when it lets itself out into a real tatriment it will hardly outlast the other morning trouble began to brew before sunrise. The first night wind steadied with the light as though it had been a storm. It had a good day's work ahead of it. For a time it howered, as though to survey the world. It poked into odd spots of stock all the fag the end summer leaves behind, like a householder inscribing his premises after its tenure It is really surprising, the amount of musk it found. The most careless housewife hardly dares to let her sashes hang in the corner, and she gives a certain point, but summer gears clutched up with all manner of unconsidered trifles. Even such tiny things as the hanks of sweets, the wings of gats, the pincushion, the combs, to surprize amounts. FREE! FREE!! FREE!! SAM WILLER, HUMAN HAIR GOODS CO. Box 298 Shreveport, LA. WOLF BROTHERS Hair Straightening Outfit Nonmore breaking of lamp chimneys. With one of our Patent Alcohol Stores you can heat your Straightening Comb or Curling Iron quickly and safely. Sanitary and just the thing for straightening GIANT 8 oz. Bich Comb 75 oz. Solid Brass, CONVEX TEETEES. ALCOHOL HEATER GIANT COMB, both for $1.50 Alcohol Heater 75 cents Postage Paid 10 cents Length 10 inch, Weight 8 oz. RF Pastege Paid Anywhere in U. S. Thousands are using these outlines and recommending them to friends. Agents Wanted WOLF BROS. 1214 N. Senate Ave., Indianapolis, Ind., U.S.A. Just send us your address and we will send you by mail FREE our large and beautiful Catalogue showing all the latest styles of Crowe Hair Goods, Hair Nets, Raw Hair, Electrical Oils and Hair Worker's Wools, etc. Our Hair goods have the reputation for being the best and we are the largest mail order Crowe Hair Goods House in the United States. Address: SAM WILLER, HUM Box 298 Smaller, but still more unify, are the molds and gears, elements of decay which have their place in the scheme of things, but must not be allowed to surprise of fluid better. All these things the wind found. It sighed and set to work sweeping the earth with angry, vigorous breath and filled it with stiff cloaked clouds. Like the Angolan states, here was a task less than ten years old, but for a lowering cloud which lunged far in the western sky and dumped its contents until every crack in our past was broken. It itoured and rubbed and scrubbed and rinsed until it suceeded that cloud would be the highest rack of heaven until it should be fit to use again. And then it went on polishing up the world until it was the voice of its own voice on a suithed contented sound. For this particular corner of the earth it had been in early spring. SPECIAL NOTICE Ambitious girls and ladies can earn from $20.00 to $40.00 weekly at home. Learn the best paying trade and earn while you learn. Learn the French and American system of Hair Dressing and beauty care. The old, original and unexcelled system that you can do perfect, up-to-date work on either race. This system is used and practiced by thousands of successful hair dressers. Mme. DeCarrall, an old, experienced graduate Hairdresser and Beauty Artist, who has taught many others than she will teach you this complete course by mail only. 400-333-3000 class work. Guaranteed diploma. Sealed a money order to THE IDEAL CO., Box 70, Station New York City, N.Y. Mail stamp and enrolment blank today. SANTAL CAPSULES MIDY CATARRH of the BLADDER 24 HOURS Each Capulee MIDY number 64 furniture of counterfeits Loans on Farms and City Property Interest 6½ per cent. See or Write G. F. Porter 1717 Hall St., Dallas, Texas THE VICTORY "V" For Ladies and Gentlemen. Pure Porti Rican Chile, Ice Cream, Cold Drinks, Cigars and Cigarettes J. M. TOLBERT, Prop. 207 N. Central Dallas, Tex WOLF BROTHERS H No more breaking of lamp chimneys. With one Straightening Cumb or Curling Iron quickly and AN HAIR GOODS CO. Shreveport, La. Penny We Use Laundry Sanitary Pressing Machines FRED BRUSS Tailor Pure Cleaned and Renovated Cleaning and Pressing Suits Made to Order 2221 Elm St DALLAS, Phone M. 5680 TEXAS Dr. Kidd Dr. Kidd On All Long Standing and Chronic Diseases. I treat successfully all blood and skin diseases, rheumatism, uric acid and thrombosis, infections, intestines, liver, kidneys and bladder, diseases of women. nervous diseases, malaria, diseases of men, ears, noses and throat, fractures, rupture, diabetics, fractures, appendicitis, overtitis, neuralgia, headache, mind wandering, fall (falling sickness), not mentioned here, not mentioned here. Medicines by mail $5.00 per month. Dr. W. E. Kidd Box 614, Greenville, Texas. Office 315 West Erwin Street. If you can't visit me, write me. MME. LUELLA MEDANIELS, SCIENTIFIC METHOD OF SCALP MASSAGE. A MODERN WONDER. Will promote a full growth of best hair on each client will start with the hair on your crown. We do dandruff, tetter or any disease of the hair on your crown. We treat your My Dandruff Remedy never fail to cure Dandruff or Tetter no matter how long standing. Uptight brown scalp a circular is sent with each growth with full information telling you how to care for your hair loose and flexible so the hair will grow Course taught through mail. Dyeing and Bleaching Hot Oil Treatment Beauty Clinic Mascuriding. Dandruff Oil $ 10 cents. Dandruff Remedy $ 10 cents. Temple Oil $ 10 cents. Soak $ 10 cents. Agents wanted: MME. LUELA McDANIELS. Browneville, Texas. Hair Straightening Outfit Bordeaux Alcohol Sloves you can beat your safety. Sanitize and just the thing for traveling Giant 8 oz. Balm Crown 75 % Balm Crown 75 %. FACTS ABOUT U. S. BANKS AND THRIFT STAMPS. Dallas, Texas, Jan. 8. -Following the receipt of an official communication from the Treasury Department, the savings certificates was made today by Dinmose W. Hume, Assistant Federal Director, savings stamps, stiff stamps and treasury savings certificates will be on sale January 11 at all postoffice locations. Since the beginning of the thrift savings movement, which was adopted as a national war measure but is not required by the guam if the government, savings stamps and certificates totaling $11,288,403,731 have been purchased by the federal reserve district. Within the last four months, especially, the amount of savings held by the guam has been growing by leaps and bounds and the increasing demand for these savings securities indicated a one of the largest investment months. The Government savings securities of 1929 will consist of the twenty-nine percent no interest and which is used in making small savings to apply in the next year. There is no change in the thrift stamp. There will be the $5 savings stamps which best match the cent value of $12 in January, and increasing one cent per month in cost until next December. The other securities are the $100 and $1,000 registered treasury savings certificates and increase twenty cents per month in cost; the $1,000 certificates cost $284 in January and increases twenty cents per month in cost. Ownership Limit $1,000 The limitation of $1,000 (maturity value) of ownership still obtains, which means that no person, firm, or organization in its own name more than $1,000 (maturity value) of savings stamps certificates. It was pointed out by Mr. Hume, however, that persons owning a thousand or more savings stamps or savings certificates may also own a like amount of 1520 stamps or savings certificates. The Saving Stamps is Red. The 1920 securities will be substantially the same in terms and the size of the stamps, but some alterations have been made in the forms. The 1920 Savings stamps, but some alterations have been made in color, will bear the head of George Washington, and the size will approximate the larger stamp used in the Treasury. The 1920 Savings stamps made in the terms of the 1920 Treasury Savings Certificates as compared with the 1919 Treasury Savings Certificates are redeemable at the Treasury, beginning with the second calendar month after the month of January, and mand required by the terms of the 1919 Treasury Savings Certificates to make payment of War Savings Certificates until ten days after receiving written demand for pay. Exchange Features. Two Treasury circulars are being distributed which offer, beginning with the Treasury Savings Certificates in the $100.00 denomination, and continuing after December 31, 1919, the issue of the $100.00 certificates in the denominations of the $100 and $1500 in both cases not for cash and for cash only. It is anticipated that the 1919 and 1919 War Savings Certificates respectively. It is anticipated that the 1919 War Savings Certificates will find it advantageous to change their holdings into Treasury Savings Certificates. The 1920 issue, except for their earlier 1920 issue, same as those of the 1920 issue, except for their earlier Other New Features. In addition to the advantages mentioned above the case of exchange certificates, the Treasury Savings Certificates, these circulations offer other inducements in the form of interest-bearing holdings, and also for changing holdings, and also for changing circulations the manner provides circularity. Holders of one or more War Savings Certificates of the 1918 or 1919 are required to have a total maturity value of $100 or some multiple of a hundred dollars, and may exchange the certificates of the corresponding issue. When two or more War Savings Certificates are held, the holder may not bear its full complement of twenty War Savings Stamps, prepaid or otherwise, nor aggregate $100 or some multiple of it. In the matter of ownership, the holder must have the different owners, if the owners of the War Savings Certificates so reside at first and second-class post offices or other, post offices specially designated for the Federal Reserve Banks, and at the Division of Loans and Currency of the Treasury, but not bank and post office. NEGRO WOUNDED BY NEW YORK POLICEMAN. New York, N. Y., Jan. 8—A young Nero who said he was Theodore Smith, of 2 W. 138th Street, was shot and seriously injured by Patrolman Winterhalter. He had been questioned by Winterhalter. U. S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR —BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS. Interview on Prices and Cost of Living, With Ringer Meeker, U. S. Commissioner of Labor Statistics. Everybody is anxiously watching the course of prices and even more anxiously inquiring when, if ever, prices are coming down. The wish is faithfully expressed by the housewife to accept any statement that prices are slated for a fall in the next quarter. To answer the query as to when, if ever, prices are to fall, it would be well to comment on the remarkable rise in prices since 1915. These causes may be 2. Decrease in the actual physical quantities of goods produced and exchanged. 3. Manufacture for and purchase by the governments of the world for war and other purposes; the demands for and the supply of goods and services. If prices are to be lowered, the cash advances to be attacked. The amount of money and checks in circulation must be increased in the amount of necessary goods must be increased in amount. The stocks of money and checks in account must, so far as possible, be salvaged and thrown upon the market. The extraordinary demand for these goods must either be curtailed or -production of these goods expanded to meet the The financing of the war has made two dollars grow where but one dollar does not grow with the fact that there has been an enormous destruction of economic goods and of the farms, mines, forests and goods explains the enormous and world-wide decrease in the purchasing power causes increased prices. As long as the people have twice as many dollars with which to buy a smaller amount of goods bound to remain high. It will take a long time to deflate the world's deflated supply of goods. The profiter is being blamed on all industries, the prices are undoubtedly, profitering it more reprehensible sort has existed and does exist today, but the profiter is not responsible rather than a cause thereof. His influence in boosting prices is negligible. He could not have be apprehended and thrown into pail or linked up and shot, it would have no appreciable influence It has been suggested that abnormality high prices are psycholo- tically important. It has been shown that fall just as soon as the people can be made to think falling prices. Of course, psychology is involved in the decision-making processes of currency and the smaller amounts of commodities are physical facts that no psychic legerdemain Some business men are apprehensive that the United States will be flotated with European made furniture and furniture tumbling. The price of foreign exchange at the present moment is such as to be difficult for business men to buy large quantities of goods in Europe, especially in Germany and Austria, because the goods to sell. Not until Europe has rehabilitation its industries may we expect to see a drop in the goods with European goods. That puts off the tumble in prices several years. The normal season drop in prices is usually accompanied by a normal drop comes much earlier than is generally supposed. In normal seasons the commodities combined comes in March, April or May. These seasonal drops and will have but little effect upon the housewives' expenditures. Great and sudden fall in prices seems inevitable. People generally are yearning so intently for lower prices that they are willing to sacrifice the results of falling prices. The prices we kicked about in 1913, have come to be called the *price of failure*. The stress has been caused by the rapid price increases of the past four years. The people through which prices will be multiplied tenfold if prices rise within the next seven years, the falling prices is always a time of business depression, failures, and unrest. Production should be speed up to the limit and debts should be reduced without delays in economic goods and services. These processes should be set in motion without delays in the readjust industry and trade on a firm basis again. In the meantime, the United States Government has THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 10, 1920. with the other leading governments of the world in the creation of an international commission to study ways and means of settling a tie and relatively constant standard of value to displace the present monetary units which are rory with both of weight and consequently variable in value, or purchasing power. The most important constructive work that can be done in any field is the establishment of a stable standard of value, so that all the people richer and richer, employer, $^{2}$ employee, bond holder and stock...lder, may be spared for all time the agonies of limited levels. 90,000 NEGROES TO BE REPRE SENTED IN MEETING HERE. NEW YORK. More than 90,000 Negroes of the United States will be represented in a mass meeting to be held in Cooper City, Georgia, on January 5, under the auspices of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, H. T. Neer and L. Labor. is the subject announced and the speakers will be from the University of the port of New York; Dr. W. E. B. DuBois, editor of the Drisla; John Hayes Holmes, and Professor of African American expulsion from Anderson, South Carolina. Music at the meeting will be in chapels of the Clerk Club. CHILD LABOR AND THE WAR. How the barriers against child labor were let down during the war is illustrated in the Seventh Annual Report of the Chief of the Children's Bureau of the U. S. Even before the entry of the United States into the war American children went to work in increasing numbers with American manufacturers by the belligerent nations. After we were forced to work in an abnormalism and the many opportunities for employment at an abnormally high wage company, we found that many opportunities for employment at an abnormally high wage company in industry large numbers of boys and many of whom under normal condition continued in school for several years. The Federal Child Labor law which has prohibited the employment of children under 16 in mines and quarries of children under 14 in factories; has prohibited the employment of children under 16, employed in factories, and prohibited work for children in factories. But this law was declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court on It was in recognition of the sereness of this increasing employment opportunity, the Labor Policies Board voted that compliance with the standards of the former Federal child labor law should be enforced on Government war contracts made after the date of the decision, and the complaints received by the Bureau regarding illegal employment of children in shipbuilding plants, a property made by the Bureau in cooperation with the Emergency Fleet Command, was made by the Bureau in cooperation with the Emergency Fleet Command in spring of 1919. Practically all the important shipbuilding plants on the Atlantic Coast, Gulf of Mexico, and the Caribbean were there were found to be numerous violations of state and Federal laws, and the employment of children in hardard occupations which in pre-war times had been confined to In order to counteract the effects of the wartime employment of children in the future, many communities undertook Back-to-School campaigns during 1918 and 1919 and 1920, and in 1919 the majority of Children's Year. Some work to keep children in school and out of school, and some work to increase the majority of the states. This work has included assistance for better education, more attendance officers; more school houses; better nursery schools; better school term; better child labor and advising children in choices of occupational assisting them in finding suitable employment. More and similar means many states hope to reduce the differency which is so alarmingly prevalent, and to protect children against the United States and which is so great a stumbling block to Americanization, and to protect children against DISASTROUS BLUNDER ATTRI BUTED TO WILSON. London Paper, in Wrath at League Failure. Lloyd George's Money en Wrong Horse. Washington, Jan. 8—The League of Nations covenant as submitted by President Wilson being a Bible documen- tation, the League of Nations gave a speech in the House of Commen- taken umbrella at its Americanization at the hands of the Republican Party, and the League of Nations "we have talked less about it," he says, "but every needful action to 'make the league a reality has been done.'" The League has fair to suggest inauthentic, but if REMEMBER THE NUMBER 2312 ELM LOOK FOR THE NAME KLAR & WINETRMAN DIAMONDS DIAMONDS America comes in on conditions which will not be applicable to all the states, but we have men sitting around the same board under different conditions, with one nation being untrained and one being behind their backs." In view of the fact that it was originally a league from President Wilson and that the terms were drawn up in such form, the United States would be compelled to uphold the constitution, the perpetuity, the attempt to throw the onions on America is not taken with the London Morning Post scored the Premier for "trying to throw the blame in the American nation," and the failure. It depends the Senate's action on the Leake of Nation and on the wrong horse when he supported President Wilson's disastrous Meanwhile Henry Wine Wood, in a letter to the forty-three members of the House of Representatives, moves the impeachment of President Wilson on the grounds that he thwart, contravene, fushrate and defeat the Constitution." As the former president of the League of Nations, he emphasizes his Independence, he gives us his reasons that by affixing his signature to the United States Constitution he deliberately attempting to subject the United States Congress and New York State to our Constitution and unknowledge by our laws. He has shown that the unconstrained to unclamor against the lawful use of the authority and by the authority of the authority of the coequal organ of the government, in order that he might become the master of our foreign PHILIPPINE-AMERICAN CHAMBER OF COMMERCE. ORGANIZED IN NEW YORK. New York, Jan. 8. - Imeusus is being added to the increasingly important list of new states, including the United States and the Philippines Islands through the medium of "The New York Times" and the Commission*, which was recently organized and to the membership of the new names are being added daily. The stated object of the new or First—To foster trade, business, financial and professional interests between the Philippines Islands and the United States. Second—To establish common ground where business and professional men of the two countries may discuss problems of mutual concern. The growth of trade between the United States and Philippines has been the last few years has been enormous. American investors are beginning to discover that there are almost unimaginable opportunities for investment in the Phillipines, especially in the following industries: Coconut, rubber, hemp, lumber, tapioca and palm oil. Offer an Enormous VARIETY OF DIAMONDS AT BARGAIN PRICES. PLATINUM TOP DIAMOND RINGS $50 and $60 Values, $40 FANCY SMALL DIAMOND RINGS $10 to $15 Values, Special, $8.75 $25 TO $35 DIAMOND RINGS, $18.75 $50 to $75 Values, $35 to $50 BRACELET WATCHES That Are Absolutely Guaranteed ELGIN AND WALTHAM MOVEMENTS $12.50 to $25 Others Up to $50 20 Per Cent Off on All White Ivory Toilet and Manicuring Sets Klar & Winterman DALLAS' LARGEST PAWNBROKERS Remember the Number, 2312 Elm St. Look for the Name Phillipine embroideries. It is stated that a Philippine American Chamber of Commerce had become necessary to merchants, investors and the banks of the two countries. The meeting at the Philippine National Bank in New York at which the chamber was organized was not the first meeting of the bank and even enthusiasm was in evidence. Prof. H. P. Parker Willis of the Federal Reserve Board, presided. Among those present were several well known inventors, bankers having representation in Manila and representatives of business concerns are stationed in New York. Hon. John C. de la Vega, Hon. Ecole Rousseau Residing Commissioner from the Philippines to the United States, who have shown much interest in bringing about the close relationship between the United States and the Philippines were also present. The occasion of the chamber was brought about by James J. Refery, director, Bureau of Commerce and Industry of the Philippines, Mr. Refery, director, Bureau of Commerce, several months, boosting Philippine-American steamship lines to handle the fast growing trade between the two countries. Another work that is of importance in the future American-Philippine trade agreement is Mr. Rafferty of Philippine commercial agencies in San Francisco and New York. It is proposed that these agencies will handle practically all government in touch with market conditions in the United States. The central office of the agencies will be: 1. To keep the central office of the Philippines in touch with market conditions in the United States. The central office of the agencies will be: 2. To seek out American investors for the development of resources of the Philippines. The central office of the agencies will be: 3. To conduct a public campaign for the Philippines, advertising the same way that Philippine cisaras and tobacco are advertised. 4. To assist Philippine business in forming trade connections in the United States. 5. To conduct such special investigations as our business interests require. Persons desiring to avail themselves of the agencies already in existence should address their communications to the Philippine Commercial Agency, other agencies, or the City, or Merchants' Exchange Building San Francisco. Giffin, Ga. Jan. 1—A large meeting of Negro farmers from Henry, Pike, Butta and Spalding counties was held under the auspices of the Negro Farm Demonstration agent to trade for the purpose of raising the Negro farm demonstration agent. Take no chances, get the best, this Hair Grower has no money to lose, and can scalp hair, stop it from falling out, keep it in place, give it off. It makes the hair grow natural, long, and healthy. It also gives satisfaction for fifteen years. Every box on a money back guarantee. No woman can afford it. Her hair and face, look good. Give big money to her hair and face. Regularly give a laboratory's line of goods. Reginald Cocoa Balm is scientifically prepared to suit all grades of hair. We make your suit in any description right here on our own premises for $20 and up. Pants $6.00 and up ORDER YOUR SUITS NOW FOR The Cold Weather Season We have what you want. Come in and look at our Patterns COR. PEARL AND ELM A. Harris & Co. Movie Tickets ACCEPTED HERE SAME AS CASH By doing your trading at A. Harris & Company. You get one certificate for every ticket you purchase and you certificates you purchase contain 8.50 tickets and two 100 tickets free of charge. We will accept these tickets same as cash. Grand Central Theatre State Street Styles State Street FREE No concert cost to you conditions. No extra charge for fancy styles, but tuxedo, golf or suit. We have a FREE dress before you buy a suit or dress. We have a FREE DEAL That WILL Open Your Eyes Agents of other tailoring businesses sell this, every two long suits, every suit, every two long suits, every suit, or what you do, in a letter, a card, or a table. We have a FREE KNICKERBOCKER TAILORING CO. Dep. 433. Illinois, IL. ```markdown ``` SUITS MADE TO YOUR ORDER IN 24 HOURS PAGE THREE OK FOR THE NAME AR NETRMAN Belmont Cafe Now serving choice meals prepared by professional cooks and served by lady waitresses. For a good meal try a TV. Try a bowl for your chill. A. J. Johnson, Mgr. Ford Service Express and Baggage H. B. WOODS Phone M. 7103 Any Time, Day or Night 27 07 Main St. Dallas, Texas 7-19-1 mg COCA Balm HOT HAIR GROWER Hair Long and Beautiful faces, get the hair, this Hair Grower looks, get the scalp of dandruff, stops hairling out, stops the hair from break- aking the hair grow naturally, long, makes the hair grow naturally, long, uses the Reginald Lab. of goods, Reginald Cocoa Balm is prepared to suit all grades of hair, a market equates it. Jelly $ .25 Hair and face, look good and make use of the Reginald Lab. of goods. Male's Hair. $ .25 Straightening Combs for Home Use. $ .25 Swatches. $ .25 and up as for sarting you need. Snaps wanted everywhere. Icery, 161 Bell St., Atlanta, Ga. THE SRIAL TAILORS TAILORING description right here on and up. Pants $6.00 and up QUITS NOW FOR Father Season be in and look at our Patterns AND ELM PANTS MADE IN 6 HOURS 11-23-47 Movie Tickets NAME AS CASH Harris & Company. You get one when you have 50 certificates in 50 tickets and two 10c tickets these tickets same as cash. Central Theatre PAGE FOUR MEMBER NATIONAL NEGRO PRESS ASSOCIATION. Published every Saturday morning in the year at 2000 Spring Avenue NO. 109 An anonymous reflection upon the character, standing or reputation of the author, which may appear in the columns of The Dallas Times, or in its being brought to the attention of the publisher. Entered at Post Office at Dallas, Texas, on March 1, 1878, under act of Congress, March, 1878. IMPORTANT. No subscriptions made to a less than three hundred dollars, Payments for less than 50 cents. J. R. JORDAN, Manager. THE DALLAS EXPRESS has never loisted the white feather, neither has it been disgraced by the yellow streak. It is not affilated with the fanned mouth. It is a plain, every day, sensible, conservative newspaper, which trims no sail to catch the passing breeze; files no doubtful flag. It professes a patriotism as broad 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 prospering. Boys of the press come up and stand with us. This ground is in KING. SATURDAY, JANUARY 10, 1920 PROHIBITION. As we read of the seizure of incontinent and come in contact with every day proofs that prohibition has come to stay with its reign of increased prosperity we are glad. Our special group profits much by this behavior. The distribution of Xmas presents among the poor were amused at the security of those who were actually incapable of helping and maintaining themselves. We feel that to a great extent the poor are in a good condition. The desire for alcoholic stimulant is hard to control among the well balanced and educated classes and when found among those whose wages are poor and whose training is meager it amounts to proper heath maintenance. There is no doubt but that many thousands of Negro wives and children find themselves better clothes, fed and housed this year than ever, and that the wives and children band no longer can divide his weekly wage between the bar-tender and grocer. The continuance for a few years of this condition among us will greatly increase our property holdings and the number of our children homes and colleges of higher training. The equipment of homes in greater comfort and the addition of those finer, more cultural surroundings which may be supplied by one's own means, will make a matter of course though gradually. As we forecast the future for our wage earners in terms of a "dry America, we are able to see a brighter chance for the raising of the wages of our children homes and the surrounding of our masses with the things which broaden our vision and elevate tastes and desires. We are glad that Prohibition will be abolished. THE BAPTIST DECISION. The decision of the Court last week which designated Hon. R. H. B. Boyd and his follower the reelection of the governor among the Baptist, settled a dispute which has hindered the progress of the South for the past four years. As we view the facts our opinion for members of that denomination themselves subservient to the rule of the majority. Strife hurts any cause. Strife hurts any cause. Vision of interests and forces, irrespective of which party is in power, vision of interests and forces, whatever benefits are to be derived from, hope that the future of this particular case may be free from such strife and disagreement and that now that the courts have given the governor the power to have waited so long, that all differences may be forgotten in the increased desire for the furtherance of the state's mission, the sumption of the united effort at cooperative planning for prosperity. We state to Charlie Love that the Dallas Express has no room in its editorial columns (or advertisement) to criticize the governor, it agrees absolutely with him when he says concerning his editorial of last week the Devil never told a ```markdown ``` THE DALLAS EXPRESS. DALLAS. TEXAS. SATURDAY. JANUARY 10. 19 20. THE LYNCHING MENACE. nothing record for the year of 1841 by citizens of their country for the year of 1841. The marks of the $2 personage is the number as compared to the national nomenclature is brought by necessary in this land which systems of law. Growing more lax in America those influences which, when an act of civil disobedience is now mobilizing themselves, of whole America has been at rest against authorized government. But when reviewed Lynch law is just as pernicious our government is as Bolshev that on one occasion during the Civil War, the government respecied no institution of the area. It is nothing more nor give nor chance to proclaim America has been built upon it and its maintenance of its present law and the courts of justice. And the desire of the mob he record is record one needs the legalized punishment and secure in its seas only by the speed with which it and they allow them to perish the peril of the most conservative malenment. The government, mentiment, which allows mobs continues to increase. Poleshevhe are a mance to Jo slowly imminent peril for its citizens who proudly bear theborn American are so lactic and must be determined according of a jail sentence then Lynch of punishment by the regular continue in its march of progress its citizen. Its government is conscious of such a dangerous ip is natural for women but The American lynching record for the year of 1919 shows that $2 persons were murdered by citizens of their country in twelve months. The alleged offenses ranged all this way from "the unspakeable crime" to the making of boastful remarks. Of the $2 persons 7 were white, 13 were black, and 10 were non-white. The greatness of lynching as a nationalism is brought home to us. There can be no defense of it as necessary in this land which prides itself upon its courts of justice and systems of law. Public opinion is growing more lax in America and in growing lax, it is giving free away to those influences which, when at their height of power, will mean destruction of authorized and regularly constituted government. The forces of the law are now mobilizing themselves against the menace of lynching. The menace of lynching is the "Reds" whose intents against authorized government have seemed to almost threaten its destruction. But when reviewed in the height of same reason the menace of Lynch law is just as perilous and just as harmful to the institutions of our government as is Bolshevism. When we realize that on one occasion during the last year the fury of a mob, lent upon murder, almost cost the life of the mayor of Omaha we have seen that the menace of Lynch law is just as perilous and just as harmful to their representatives. It is nothing more nor less than anarchy. Its victims never proven guilty nor given chance to prove their innocence, are murdered and every member of a mob is nothing other than a murder. The greatness of America has been built upon the love for her citizens for its government, and its maintenance of its present greatness will depend upon that same citizenry. But no citizenry which incurs its defense against the menace of Lynch law, has 25 per cent yearly can long maintain our ambulance of greatness. The officers of the law and the courts of justice no longer seem to have power to serve. And the desire of the mob have no respect for color or axe. When such a record is reviewed one needs no imagination to foresee the speedy and of legalized punishment and the substitution thereof of the will of the mob supreme and secure in its seat. Such a condition is limited in its coming only by the speed with which mob rule spread among the people, and they allow themselves to be swayed by it rather than by their respect for law and order procedure. There is no doubt that the most conservative thinker must now view Lynchings as a national menace. the government can not much longer exist as such if the sentiment, which allows mobs to murder their victims and go unpunished, continues to increase. If Anarchy and Bolshevism are a menace of America, then Lynching becomes an overwhelming imminent peril for its perpetrators are usually natural born American citizens who proudly boast of it as a "land of the free." The fact that born Americans are so lacking in their respect for the law and for the punishment of America and no less dangerous but infinitely more so and their punishment must be determined according to their crimes. Bolshevists are found they are deported, if aliens and jailed if Americans, Lynchers and no less dangerous but infinitely more so and their punishment must be determined according to their crimes. Bolshevism is worthy of a jail sentence then Lynching which is no less than murder is worthy of punishment by the regular penalty reserved for murderers. If America is to continue in its march of progress its law must be supervised by its citizens. Its government cannot longer ignore or refuse to take serious thought of such a dangerous menace within its own citizenry. To engage in吞服 of nature for women and dangerous for men. The Young Man's Duty to their labors" is the last cla Paul, the apostle, and in the past year, have gone from wrong, vigorous, with our lives force. begin to think more and reat in it upon them and step forw ity gives them entrance. begin to one forw "We have entered into their labors" is the last clause of one of the sentences written by St. Paul, the apostle, and, in thinking of the many of our leaders who, in the past year, have gone from among us, we feel that to us who are left, young, vigorous, with our lives before us, this saying comes with unnatural force. We need to think more and to a greater extent the responsibility which is upon them and step forward to take their places where there ability gives them entrance. Our past in America is glorious and our hope for the future is rosy with promise if only those upon whom the "manate of their fathers" falls are not slotful and lax. Business among upgrubs is calling for young men who are not content while among upgrubs. Our fathers did well wellly to keep a business while the majority of those upon whom they depended hung, if any, ideas of why they should support their own enterprises. In this day, the young man, going into business of any kind, finds a Negro public waiting, ready to patronize his enterprise, provided only that he deliver to them a commodity of good grade at current prices. In our own town, Dallas, there is an unusual lack of Negro business of reputable sort while the field for such ventures is waiting for more. There is a fact which has escaped the notice of many a young man who was hampered for lack of capital. The fact is, many men with little money by pooling these small sums are able to accomplish great things. Figures will prove the fact beyond the shadow of a doubt. There are of the writers acquaintance at least 200 young men in Dallas who save and have constantly on hand as much as they need to make the most of their mutual good and pool their $50. amounts. The result would be $5,000, a sum sufficient to completely finance the beginning of any undertaking without causing, one of them the slightest inconvenience, $5,000 would equip and open a modern movie house and as it is common knowledge that the Dallas Negro theatre going public could support another such house. A like amount could be made to cover a long lease upon any centrally located place with complete initial investment. The result would be that the Dallas Negro would support a bakery, and so on through the long list of things necessary to everyday living we could go on naming the things which, as business projects, offer large opportunity to the young Negro of Dallas. We view with much joy the establishment and subscription of the $15,000 stock of the Realty and Construction Company which has just been effected. We are proud of the development of the insurance interests among us in the city, and we are proud of the other ventures in our city, but we deplore the fact that as a class of our young men are slow to study business and money making. If the years which are to come do not find us financially firm and well entrenched in industry operated and maintained by our own brains and money, all of the protest of a million voices could not convince the world that we had measured up to what the spirit of constant progress demands. In this world of figures and figures tell of accomplishment of lack of progress. Ourathers have blazed the way and now it is for us who are young to make 'straight and smooth the financial path for those who come after us. Property must be bought and held from our generation to those which follow us. Business, big business must be established and maintained. Interests must be spread till millions of dollars and thousands of our people are involved in a gigantic scheme of production of things necessary for the consumption of the world. And when it is ours to pass, may it be found that we "studied to show ourselves approved; workmen who needed to be ashamed." This Xmas season was the first "dry" holiday season of America, and if we are to judge by the reports of charity workers it revealed a greater prosperity among the poor than ever before. America should be glad to do without its "evil spirits" if abstinence results in increased prosperity. We wonder why the beautiful man never realizes that the public is the into the White House the army exactness and love of order and system which now characterize them. America needs to feel the pressure of a Presidential opinion which will declare itself and stay whether it declared itself. Most of those who agitate equal divisions of property in the world fall to realize that two years after such division the control of the greater part of it would again be in the hands of a few who would out-think the others. "He kept us out of war" was the phrase which was largely responsible for Wilson's popularity in the last campaign. We wonder why "How he get out of war" has such an opposite effect upon the same population now? Young men may be wiser than their fathers but they will do well to invite the quality in them which caused them to buy property and educate their children. In the matter of nerve, the heroes of the Argonne Forest have nothing on the $20. a week man who marries during these high priced days. Some men are the "head of the house" but the wives furnish the brain power which directs the said "leads." We wonder why the beautiful man never realizes that the public is the best judge of what his powers are. THE MIRROR OF PUBLIC OPINION SOME ILLUMINATIVE FACTS. The Negro question is one of the most important issues in this country, both North and South. For that reason I cannot understand why we do not make a rational effort to get at the facts. Several recent cases of unlawful conduct on the part of Negroes have been made much of, not only in the South but in some sections in the North—as if white men never violated the laws. One of the chief spokesmen for the Negro race in this country—now that my friend Booker Washington is gone—is Dr. John M. Grandy, president of the Colored State Normal School at Bremen. From him I have obtained direct and specific answers to the question, "What do the Negroes want at this critical hour of matrial and worldwide unrest?" The vital part of his reply follows: There must be continuous and sincere efforts to cultivate and maintain mutual respect between the races," answers Dr. Grandy. "We especially, desire to make it clear at the outset we do NOT want, as is far too generally assumed by white people, social equality? We are entirely satisfied with our social conditions. We desire only that Colored men shall married Colored women. We are contented with the companionship of our race in our own homes and with the building up of our social and educational institutions, such as churches and schools. We are as sensitive in the presence of inappropriate social situations as are white people and quite as averse as they to forcing ourselves upon people who do not desire our presence. But we do insist upon the injustice of the manner in which we are treated them we trawl. Although we pay first-class faces on the railways, we must accept third-class accommodations. No provision is made for sleeping-car or dining-car accommodations. At only a few railway made for sleeping-car or dining-car accommodations. At only a few railway stations are restaurants for feeling Colored travelers. "Colored people want fair treatment and equal justice in the distribution of advantages for. living in healthy, sanitary quarters, in city and country. Sections in which Colored people live are overlooked by most municipal governments—they are ill-litched, inadequately policed and often unpaved. Sanitation receives no official attention. Equality of wages for similar work should exist. Discrimination exists. A Colored bricklayer who can do and does work just as satisfactory as a white laborer should receive the same pay. There is also glaring discrimination against Colored teachers holding the same certificates of capacity as white ones. Especially do we desire more and better educational opportunities; we want the compulsory school law made binding upon Colored as upon white children, and more accommodations for advanced education for Colored youths of both sexes. "The merit of the Negro to advance against great difficulties and in the Race is now in its greatest crisis. Never before in its history has it The Race is now in its greatest crisis. Never before in its history has it been confronted with so many new and intricate problems and with such grave difficulties as t is today. The mental, moral and religious resourcefulness of the race is challenged." Not Pardon—But Justice In Sunday's papers there appeared an Associated Press dispatch announcing that President Wilson had pardoned the officers of the 388th Infantry, who were charged with "cowardice in the face of the enemy." The Advocate desires to label the article as a "half-truth—which is usually considered more dangerous than a real lie. The president has acted in the case of the officers of the 388th Infantry, it is true, but there was no need for pardon them. They were not guilty. Here are the facts. Oral Court Martial First Lieutenant Horace Robert Crawford, Robert W. Cheers and Second Lieutenant Robert E. Johnson of the Third Battalion Company I, 388th Infantry, were charged with "cowardice in the face of the enemy" during the engagement at Vienne le Chateau on September 26. It was the function of the battalion to establish a liaison between the Americans on the right and the French on the left. It was sent into the engagement without artillery or machine gun support, maps, hand grenades on the top and running into a nest of German artillery in touch with Major Max Elser, who was in command of the battalion, to ask for aid, but he could not be found, having retired immediately the engagement got hot. Unsupported, with nothing left to do but retreat, the officers carried out, being unable to get in touch with the major for orders. After the failure of the engagement, the said major instituted charges against the Colored officers for cowardice. Court-martial was held, and the officers were sent to the court for not unanimous, however, and the sentence was afterward commuted to ten and five years' imprisonment. ... W. Tyler, war correspondent, on his overseeance, started publicity on the case of the officers and produced evidence gleaned by him overseas that pointed to the failure of someone higher up than the condemned officers. Assistant Secretary of War Emmet J. Scott immediately with the result that the secretary of war ordered a review of the case. An investigation was made by the inspector general's staff, resulting in the complete exoneration of the condemned men. The board summed up that their withdrawal was due to "mysterious, unauthorized order to withdraw," and they were therefore guilty of "cowardiness." The charge and verdict was ordered set aside. The other facts, how could the Associated Press state that these maligned, perceived offenders were pardoned? In there pardon in justice. The president used his execution power as commander-in-chief of the army to sanction the finding of the inspector general's investigating committee, and this action is what the Associated Press terms "pardon." We retest the word "pardon," when the act it describes is the giving of the sentence, so long delayed, to the four unofficial officers of the 36th infantry. Counting The Cost. Making certain, in working out the entry, the sensible good will of the teacher. That we have the good will number is increasing rapidly, is frank and fair, fair with each of the continental group of white American dictates their course, must be careful not to do care to be labeled "a problem, argue as we may it is" we are living a happy, peaceful, and friends, and you have no grudge you any special love for them, merely with or without them There is one thing certain, in working out the plans of Race Relationships in our country, the sensible good will of the clear thinking white people is necessary. That we have the good will of thousands, is unquestioned; that the number is increasing rapidly, is very evident. We must all be sensible, frank and fair, fail with each other, if we expect to get anywhere. If the sentimental group of white Americans who give us a square deal because their conscience dictates their course, must be considered that practical, and large number of whites, who believe in justice, but who for one reason or another, do not care to be labeled a "friend of the Negro." In working out the problems, argue as we may it to see the other point of view. You are living a happy, peaceful, successful life with your business, family and friends, and you have no grudge against the people of Australia, nor have you any special love for them except as human beings. You can get along merrily with or without them. Suppose you owned a piece of property in Melbourne, and sold it to a citizen there, and the next thing you know, your home has been bombed, you receive threatening letters on your life, you are framed before the public as a "seawaker," and you have the club for "conduct unbecoming a gentleness," what would you think? An exact case in mind is that of William B. Austin, of Chicago, who has actually experienced in mind the foregoing, because he sold and rented two pieces of property owned by him on Grand Boulevard. Mr. Austin is and extrordinarily high minded, wealthy, white citizen, and he has branched" because he had Colored patients, which was neither here nor there with him, it was simply a matter of business. Mr. Austin does not care to pose as "the Colored people's friend," but his sense of square dealing has been so high, that the matter of color was not a subject for consideration. In fact, he has always been a person of great enough at heart, who do not care to assume our burgers, or be misunderstood in the things they do? If you were in their place would you do otherwise? Most all of us have "troubles enough of our own," without looking elsewhere to find them. WOMEN WELFARE URGED BY REPUBLICAN PARTY. Eighteen Out of Twenty- Two States, Ratifying Suffrage of that Potlatch Washington, D. C. Jan. 8- That the Republican leaders are determined to accomplish everything possible because of the threat of the cause of women is indicated by events of the day, the declaration of the suffrage amendment by eighteen Republican States out of the twenty-two which have ratified it. So pleased with this is the Republican National Committee that it has approved the amendment as follows: "The National Republican Committee recommends the Republican legislatures to ratify the amendment. It congratulates the eighteen Republican States that have ratified twenty-two which has already agreed suggest that special sessions in the other States be called by February Speaking for the women voters, Mrs. Medill McCormick, of Illinois, said that she believed that in this hour the party is the sole instrument for the preservation of our national interests, carrying out of the plans necessary for our orderly social progress under the leader's direction. The months before he died the Republican party recovered the political majority that had been lost in space it had lost. Hundreds of thousands of women have added to the ranks of the party, which calls for a frank acknowledgment that women are to be summoned to places of responsibility in party politics. Representative Simone D. Fess, chairman of the Republican Congress, said his measure increasing the Civil Service Commission to five and adding two women to its membership. "The measure is only to recognize the proper claims of women in the Civil Service but to increase the number of women. Women are more and more entering the service of the Government Commission stated that since the war the proportion of women in the service here in Washington has greatly increased. The third of the entire service. We have a federal law requiring for her the right to act as a worker. Both in the federal and State service sex should not be a discriminative requirement because requiring the representation of women on the Commission, while many arguments have first start in the federal government. Landslide Like 1804 Predicted For 1989 Gathering of Political Leaders Protends Great Victory Over Administration Candidates for the nomination were discussed, as are they always are six years old. The public expression was confined to the issue. Foremost of these will be the need to remain silent in the termination to remain aloof from the effort to control europe affairs to assert aggressively our spirit on this continent and our institution and institutions, to maintain law and order and to assist the national authorities in the inspiration all of the nationalities of the 'melting pot.' Secondary issues are the need to waste carapace of power, vascularization of policy, and failure to conserve American interests in Mexico. PROSPEROUS NEGRO FARMER By S. C. Hoyle. Very few people think of the Negras as a prosperous farmer. The general idea seems to be that he is only useful when properly managed and is not a farmer who are willing to concede that he may may become a manager of a farm and secure its management in the case, for prosperous Negro farmers are springing into existence in many sections of the country. The general "depo" in Brazos County by not only managing a farm is to promote the development of he can be a successful demonstration agent and lead other Colored farmers to adopt improved methods of farming. A record in canning farm products which should fill the heart of any Home Demonstration Work. It would not be fair for the reader to form the impression that Lou Nash is altogether responsible for his children, but he is entitled to even half the credit, since Mrs. Nash played an important part. She has not only encouraged her children, she has put into practice improved methods in the home, and under the direction of the Home Demonstrator, she has taught the fall of this year, has canned seven or eight varieties of fruits and vegetables, beans, and makes cookies, jelly for winter consumption. She conserves peaches, plums, beans, beawheres, beans, and makes cookies, jelly for winter consumption. The home has all the modern conveniences, while an automobile enables them to enjoy the pleasures of the outdoors, and the advantages of a country home. Others may accomplish all that the children have accomplished by following the instructions many are being influenced to do so under their instruction is demonstrative. We are glad to note the refusal of Senator John Sharpe Williams of Michigan to attend the funeral in the U. S. Senate. His ludicrous attempts to boost himself to popular support have led to advocacy lynching have always reminded us of the "dog baying at the dog" feeling of the past of a fast vanishing tribe, the gown, whose only claim upon his life was his appeal to racial prejudice. We have the retirement of all such demagogues and cannifomaged "Reds" to the oblivion BETTER HOUSING CONDITIONS FOR PHILADELPHIA-NEIGERG Philadelphia, Pa. Jan. 8- Plans for providing better housing conditions for the Negro population of Philadelphia, the city of the Whittier Housing Company in the Library of the Phihope Institute, the Library of the Phihope Institute, the president of the Sanitary Improvement Company, builder of 809 buildings in that city, city president, prepared materials for the institutions of the Colored people, Dr. Koerber said, would do much to dispel the prejudices among them today. He advised members of the company to sell the buildings and rent them. Addresses were also made by Charles J. Hattfield, president of the company and H. R. R. president of the Whittier Centre. departments in their personal affairs. They want a return to the city, given to the executive in time of war. The Republican party is ready to take the task. With Republicans on our side in effect in effect we may look forward to a period of progress unexamined suena, aoe tow dae. iy Sot oan few ar Fae aie oro Sherman, Texas, dao, —atingos)AtBens ‘Tn this wee ‘Lois Jordan and Clara Bord of Hills-{% Alsy Richardson is, ‘boro, who spent Xmas holdays with|e® the 6th frém_ Oki ‘thelr uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Lem Davis/the New Year right, b iuraed 12 ther home morning fetta and on Sturdy nine Wlle bere they were rye |4 ene fe change iy ‘emarnned, at anne riven ty |HiRN Bank Vitored ‘Mise Amandy Southern, Mra. L. ¢.|R- C. Fisher. atu epantaiven ay is La ie Higdon, Maen Ton Southern canvas St tebeca” soni ‘at alm Her —— ieee Sioattios mornin German ail Calvert ‘Texas, Jan HSstiome’ Andrew’ auorium ven | La Covington apa" tyinie, Maser “ttt Coraetu |i here; Coin Sa Fulo Joooa rand" sepat| ot ttc aasiaance. I Sivim New Year” evoning mht at| Sunday Fsdence "ot tice uci Me and| Sire. N, Harney m ia‘tam Die tis North Rank at hoine abd Te fr Bi, and hr Is Crowe are dm | Koen sed Teidence of Arn Hobinon's| Rev, Jon Reagan {even Jon tet now een of te ue ann Bre Mock, Co. who] “ara. ovie Senders piayea t's wees rlurned etgage-| aul comtniey wae In Bent yore, Ta wh nga thy | np Diet to's Geet Wh mo for| ne. Wn, Henderson Eich enearoneat In Sam Anton aight Noth eau fon ‘Bruce, the manager "and wfe|" Alen Made. Wil fre rlelng vera fine bby, torn |Community wath the ert. i, Agr Orca | Di toinson sherman, wil have a lord per pamed thro the tn Northeant sherman, tn that "nec | enroute Pulrild thom of the ity tag” st Jame | father SCout Sod mew Clore acho! | Pri, A.M, Aina in, Bond "Work "wilson Neti on| Mr anda, Andrew 1 fen trick ST. sch cornet HearaeTaeeday a ovdese"and Cologe see" |fenoea far Ba Prot, anda 00, Sane to Calvert Tera, a eineaiine Ain the ‘Baptist mink Marshall, ‘Texas, Jan. 8—Jan. 31 last day. for eetting Your poll” tax yrecelt and exemption paper pa Me word along. in. the. injunction ‘ease Tor the building of xed. road. fo Halleville and. Harelton judgment war awarded the Blain $100.00 ‘het anide for sume, New Year's. day Desned over quietly. Mra Jas. Joun Kon lien" ‘unconscious at her home fon North ie, er, J, 0. Willams, PE of the North’ diate of ‘Texas, 16 fe’ town Misting’ family. Misa Golda Price Of Jacksonville, reurned home afte siting her brothet, Mr. John. Price Muerta Perce in visklng ber prot erste Jot Price ‘wins va ‘Jones does, not_tmprove singin citically hy Pay your” rl tae Bir. and Mra Jas. D, Love. gave Men EDR, Baker of Tusk Spring kia, & reception, the young peopl enjoyed themselves. tnt they” wer satiate. ‘PILOT POINT. Pilot Point, Texas, Jan, 6—Attor- ney TM. Belts, formerly of Giddings, Texan, now reciting in Chicago {poke to a large. and_ appreciative Atdience, Sunday evening at County Live Bapust eheeh, subject: “whit Shalt We Do With the Negro.” Never Defore in all the history has a apoech ade ich an Jimpreasion "on. our Face’ ar the one™ Judge Batts "made. Pilot Point, tas. or arms open. A All" times, to receive all race. "men Ike ‘Attorney Betts Prof. Lave act fas master of ceremony. Mr Joe rome! aud wife, mane vt of the Mammoth "Theatre ‘at Dat lan visited thelr parents New Year's fay. ‘Mec and. Mra "ramaicl. ates ova “Molatein han feturmed from Sherman Prof, Coc" Trimble ol Kautsvile, Kye Uv iaiing he. facil fand friends iq) Webila Pulls. 0d Plot Point. ‘Mies Cassio Jackson and Mr. Pay- ton Bruce were auieuly married Stn day morning. ‘Wek Lila Foster bas feturned trom x thee months" vis fy. Wiehita Fall. Migs” "Vera Phil ips hae returned to her school in Gainenviie. Mist Mary. Wright ol Denton, visited parents Saturday, ‘and Bunday, "Mies Erie Avery us return ft to Oklabonia, Mtr. Charlie. Pil fe nd family has toved to. Okle oma, CHICKASHA. Chickasha, Okia., Jan. 8—The wed- fig bells” have been rinsing im “Chickamha. "Miss Nellle Warten find Mr, Givens were quiely married Ute home of her aster, Mrs. Me Rittrel, "Mise Lalla “Clark and. Mr 3.'Le Richards, Miss Viesie Clark and Sie," aMotten ‘hada. double marriase At the home’ of thelr parents, ev, find. Mire PC. Cli, “Goldie: and eela Thomas, Just re tuned “trom OKlahoma Ci wher ey have been Visine thelr Mtr, fiso Mrs. Darthula. ‘Thomas. " Rer Grimmette. of Oklahoma City, spent Friday blgne with Rev, and Mira, A.C Reaves. Mra. DettaSinith Tett i fay evening for Mealester, Okla New. Matilda, Wiliam of Lawton, Ole Thon Is. the guest of irs. vA. Heaven. ‘Afre, Lottie Croat left” fo Okiahoma Cliy, 10 iat her brother Mee: Pune Med te on, the sek. Hit his week, Rev. (B.C. Clark and Wife Teft Saturday” aight for. Texas Rev, A.C. Meeves, Supt, ot State Sundgy school and D. Y. P, U., Ml ‘lonsfe holding an insitute at the Firnt Baptist: Chured, PALESTINE. —* Palestine, Texas, Jan. | 8—Wateh night wae’ carried’ out all” of th ‘churches and. was merry. Mise Jon: fle Dean was, mafried. to one Me. Davis “inet” week, Are. Caraway Spent Xtaas sn Menderson, Mtr. Dur Kee of Henderson visited Miss L pe, earn ie holds ‘tC. Conally of "Wichita, Pall, is here. atek vat her mothers, -Mre Sula Weard.” afr. Re Jackson of Ter Tell was the guest of Ter. and Mrs, Gi edly daring” the “yalldars. ‘Mi.’ Pullin was in, the ty last week shaking handa with friends Mts, Punnie ‘Kelley of Calvert, came ‘in'watch might to viait mother and fiends and left Saturday” for. home Te senate ante were tied to.dine with Mr and Afra, John Mat ewe, New: Year's day.” Mins’ Lalla ‘Ray and. Dewitt Ray of Fort. Worth ‘wore here visiting "thelr mother. ATHENS. Athens, Texas, Jan. $—Mrs. Jo- sephine ‘Alex spent few days Dalian. Mire. Simith “and daughter Feturned howe this morning Me Marcfo Mitcham returns from Green. Mile, bre, stella ‘Knaop returned From an ‘extended stay in ‘Dalian Menara, W. . Richardson and Back shear schol ia over rumocd, eth {eacher has been put to work. Mla ‘Tommie ‘Leon Braw of ‘Tyler Jude Faulk (white) spoke to the A. M. E people Bunday McKinley Harris spent a few days in Dalles. Mins Ruby Coit spent’ few days in Dal Jas” sine Brown ‘of ‘Tyler ialted ‘Athens in this week. The remains ot Alsy Michurdson ts expected ‘here en ‘the Sth frém” Okdahoma. Star the New Year right by not getting Dehind and on Saturday always have Wnlekie ia change. 1... Paher High "Dank, Vistored ‘his soa, Pra. ee pee. eee Carver, Tesamy Jag, kare 1 Sapna and" ane ‘iu eve Mt, E"Covineton and was Oe meh ‘atsiatance tm fhe big ally Suga Sires. %, Harney npent Xnae at at hos! ana WoeRer staat Tv, Jobn Reagan and family are vow idaenn ote ira bove anders othe Chapel nul conomumigy wan te cy one oy “ie. wm, Henderson loft afonday night tor Nott "Texan. lla Made B, Wilson of $. Paul comuatiy wat’ thet, Senay: ie "Dand obinsos tae pened troush the ty, Wedneaday faeoute ta Palteld to vt hs fuer Pro A. HS i, company with anand Stra Andrew sew motored to'deurne “endanger the figert af Mra BA Wendie. Prot and: fia. no, Wel owed to Calvert, aay, “Faoxday mate ‘i i raptne instars "were at sth att aE chureh “Poesy. to tht Yara at Wood Wr. Chan Wotaker fe moving waco. : ian Vata Washington spent Xmas ty'Hounon, the reports t miei nae Bit Auta Brown and’ wie of Con sian, apent "Rtas at Calvert ad iano Sie "Crea returned to hit bose ly Navarta, afer "spending several faya wit his fatborand. her iat "Ot Rowers "ands 4 o. Powers were the ch wih tat finer ie" Power Ae" lcloe“aferhoon, Mra te ne itarwond, bretbed” her ian Xie aywood wan an old esiente of Calvert and Feared eg tey of sil she' vata member oie Segendenc tet church ab ee circ worker PTR Avan of Hearne vst ahaa satay : irae Host made a qulk sia oot Sir. “idhn lion. of Waco, sent Saturday in Calvert On Monday eyenige at p.m at the oie of Siete At Sonoa Sure Peer White 28d Metab ator wane atledy tarsed an et for tn ote a Contre saa Tey’ Wm Washington of Pot word wi ihe ely for few da Donon ‘eanovertn ot Garrett grove Community was ta the cy ‘hedayon busines fica “Roker wan tn the oi Mo Min Rola Dison in tack trom ammount abe spent welch i er ser Mra BS Youn ix out of a cig intin= Mw Ttammont “Curry inayat tee ek fibese MP tnd ea Pie Elo sent sunday "with we, Hanke. "hee father” in aod air, ‘Gor Jackin of Duin ace the cl fore fon aye aap at Send ts, Accoioat Ste adaon Jobnion ttt rriday nicht or Renter Okay to viek Wie tater ant sate Sion esecn “achion ofAtper- mont epet Rina wert nie iy the rust o¢ Sire Sarah darken, Si Whee of ay in the uy he eat ot he rae ste, daw’ Weoley Stim GA Co and le daustite, tron ot iouston spent a tow hontp fn Calvert Ar Joi Thoma sent Now Years aay in Marth "texan Bors Hamer spent Xmas and New Year with hie" in eatne “The som ot Re. Frank Faby as pala njused'a few ape set He" much Improved at thie evita Sura "Walton and. Jaron “trom Garret Grove Commit drasiers ot fer. Nelo. were inthe iy Monday on bxinas ‘Me Zion. Ma, Mra, Annie Mac Partin and daugh- tet ae nore Parvo Gc. Wiume aaa wife tor the New Your. "Sammie “Spencer tlt or Dees 20h was gran ie Ham: mond vite moter rr the Hanmond Willams” spest the Xinae holders Prot Dea back st Peasant drove has pened school stein Wana c. higpent hie Nagel” liana, Mre Mamie “Thigpen pen Xia poldayn tn Mar. ry Willen angie it tor thet home, rs," Sarah Gentry acon panied tr her nom-intaw”hrPed Graneer ‘came ome air a the cnthe_ vant to Mexia with her aaah. ico Graner, Nr Lay perry andr. Mie Wut, wee blesapt vitor ofthe reporter. Nr BA Willams andi rn Rast Prat and Met Sti ee ot eS eee TAYLOR. Tyler, ea SA, am sae aes fee eras caer Boonies tes Fa eee. i ie Mains ot sa on aan Sete Sc hi ei Cea See a AMS ste Be el adn andl ie $e Bone Rac a la ie Sosa tate it SE Or ek oe Sos ee coke sta aun a ‘bell, the newly elected pastor of Mur- Siu gear erat hr 1H ower ena ean Sere na eS Min ica Tang se Sao te tad Sate Sein aad ba Sls ie i Se Mts et SPE crm va abe ad Ie! Near ie SL daly mt treo Sony Neu" poner "oti newly sequired property in Okls THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 10, 19 20. [Newsome have moved to thelr new) was very low sles { ome recently purehabe “Gpntuat “fervor fan, hich, Sunday ‘Ms, Savy Edwards of Pine But,/night at. the Fist Baptist church, | SOD geass See ark: ie vising roatves fees Rey. ‘Talley preached an ex: ‘Mis. "runnle “clark. returned tol cellent seem. Tervel "was tillaboro after spending the holidays] was called to the funeral ot ‘her aera ee Bie Ser action of Oasenite TI "xtra, Ante J. Moore made a trip|wan in town on business. Her. K. a to" Avatin to visit rand Mror Pu) Racker Yet fr Stembenseite hold = i fin quarter. Sige fisted Mie 0 ‘lie im Thomye _coting ot] tnt, en Fort ‘oon Len atic view accompanied. Mee te |iucer i courte SR" Moore to het home ere to] Mls Rebooga "Willis served x via five-course Taseheon at the rerience ee fot hrs and. rm AW." ion Aur, Chyna ll, ea, Jan Aes ae mae | ‘Anwmber preached at ‘noon and night to. ae . _ rowded. houses Mrs ert asters, Mord, Texas, dan... Mears ihr of huni, Is spending a tow | Harty” Wate Mid dahon, Lacie aie with bs |(Gtter Usonara are went Dallas | eau seers Alona Monroe of Porn, spent [Mada Sale Carr, thd Oita aturday and Suntay. in our town fom went to Waxahachie.” Airs. Helen ‘ra Adlige. Miller and “deognter,[Zehnvon and. Mist Glad Cooper hretio returned Houston, Aatur:| weit to Waxahachie. te. ane day corsage 8°. Burton and ful so si ins James Martin returned to|t ttgea. Prot. W Mebonald and Neale eons ris. fete yore the gente of his brie, Stlsea’zote' and. Bs Mae. Rich-| Prot. te @. Mebonald rs. ober ardaon: se Lela Yohnon uid ira |Browa aa retuned front “bulls Martin’ retirhed iy ete A. iaat| Mw Laura, Sims. went Dallas weak | Mex, Dela "Davenport and daushtery fe Slee Jobnie Kyles tet Stouday for] went 0 H'lsboro f Wiley" Uateruty, Sunday schoo! was welt attendea WER | —————_— Xie, John Jones of Forest and ata} at_ all churches. Ter. "W. it. Pure Asia ‘Richantson “were “marred at{Rell filled is. appointment in nite la $9.20 to live in the the "home ‘ot the “ride Saturday] boro and aly 4s Culin Cue Yeap ight Jan, 3, 1920, = E eens Mey ‘Mainie Haiti and ister Waco, | 4 Luseindn returned home "Saterday 5. THs ight afte apending three weeks in|, Waco, Tekan, Jan, $—Now chat MS Frankston, wining relate he aeeeeeeeae en of 2 oaths tle p Sire tuck’ Croveh "ad Ms. tng Wiag down for the Wier S| Dallas, Tena, 420 herman were gulelymartied Sac]. Mar At J. Turner Campa, spent |B ata ues ey aes el a tk Ja aw days wi Poot ah ieee | to mines a ies Dia ii Ming ettatna to Conroe." |he Ininutesaftar LUPKIN,. [Pei AeDtxon ‘vistted San_an-| pa ‘ness, well we don dicen, peeeupal Lavan haan Sees ees: See a et ek eee ts eee ees fone os ae oe oben igi a! sees ea trom Naeordocher where ape cos one, eee ca Scheee a it der i aa eect eae Sraeeateas Baia Beker tas Sever nee cee aoe ie cs card Oo paar ies eats nee once ee ee Ea oe pe See om wears Her Se eae oes ees Pop grt pce pa ema ieet ae | punk, Texas, das. SE. coneert hat was alven at Mt Pleasant M's” church "wes lt honot of the Btinday school "wan success, con flucted by Mies Te A. Seals ev, ows preached an “excellent sermon Sunday at Me, Olle. Bapt. Shureh, vollection $22.50, " Hider Dousias, Doi, af the Henderson District” passed uhrough Rusk, this week Mr B. F. Sherron of Waco was here’ two. lights Init week, Aire. Egbert hae returned from Houston. Me: Lona Cook has return: ft trom “Houston and. Galveston DM. Allet Henderson and. faully are moving to Fort. Worth ‘ulse Gertle ‘Dunlap, Mrs, Lotte fioore and Aire. “Allen Cook ai of Howton are’ the ‘auest of Mr. abd tra. T. Hebert. Rev. al Holite i leaving his former home. moving ts Husk Mg Arthur Weems of ‘Tyler motored (3 Tusk, Sunday. ‘Str Milton. Pye, Mr. Robert Parks and” Mr, Tombarner Moberson mow: fed to Nacogdoches, ‘Sunday. Mrs, Hattie. Cook “has” returned from ‘Terzell, with her two nelces ‘On Jan. 1, 20 at 9 welock. the people ‘af Colledse. Hist, gathered Th"tront of the Colored woman's Store for an opeaing in the person of Miss) Hannah Elia Master" of cere: ‘mony, Aire. N. Pe Weems, Opening address by the reporter of Dallas Express, followed by Mr. P. Kebert and Me. A Weems, 5 ‘Arter eakins "punch and cae ales eye, Paks and ats Mattigeen "Weems. Prot. Seals and family lett for helt ebool Sunday. ‘irs Ad. Latimore was in town saturday. ‘Mr. Sain Roberson is in bed at this writing JACKSONVILLE. ERS Pema. See, bee 2G, "Young, PE Palistine hel his Firat” Quarterty Conference wit Bunson Chapel C.-M. E. chureh, Jan Sed and ath.” Tho Elder preacicd Splendid sermon at the noon bout Services. "Total raised during te fuarter” $4.06, Site M."C. Croteh Spent few aya in Arp, ant week Waiting’ Mer daughters. Miasen T. 8 Galaway wad Almeta Patterson. Lit ie Rubel ett. Satsraay. for” Eon Rev, TB, Johnson, pastor of Swe Union tapcist eure led ‘hls’ Tes ular appointment Sunday.” Mas ‘Ar Melia ‘Anderson penta fow aye i Tyler, last week ‘Miss “Moselle "Alexander and. Mr Arthur Mltghell were married. Dee 9th at the’ home’ of the ‘brie. Mr. Joe Kennedy and James Ear. tot tecord tthe Ggown ‘con Ca Botiling work by ‘otling. 60" case of Soda at hour. MINERAL WHLES. ‘Mineral Wella, ‘Texan, Jah, 8.— Mrs." Ada Alexander of. Cleburne spent “the week-end with her’ son Mr. and'Mrm A.B. Alexander ‘and Sisior, Mra,'R. J. Rocker Mrs. Raberia Alexander of Port Worth and ‘her. dauehter, Mrs. Pow- ell “spent the holidays. vilting_par- ents, Me and Mra. W. SL Alesande ‘Me. BV. Agama ‘was called to Wichita Palio ts ase his sunt) whe Spina ervor ran hich, sunday sight at che Birt Baptint chur, fehen Rey. ‘Talley preached an ex ellent “ecrmon, Attu Terrell" was Star ‘alled tothe funeral of ‘he Jane. Reve MePaerson of “Gaines fas in town on bonnes ir: Racker Tet or Stenbensvile to hol Tin quarter. Sige fisted Mie 40 Stngote Mira Pollard Leona xl "Sits Heivega Wil ‘ils erred ve-coure tancheon at the teidence foes and. rm "A.W. sen Chyna auLvoRD, Mitra, ‘Texan Jan Mears arry Waters and daiabtcy, tach {Garter conard Hart went. Datas adam Mate Carter and ie i om went to Wasahechie» Sry eles Hfchneon and. lst Claais cooper teut"tp Waxahachle. tev” ant Mv 5°. Burton and family sce vain it Tagen, Prot. WeDo and fete yore the gente of his brie, Pro, "te 0. Mebonald. rw. Iotert Brows” tas “retumet iron Daas cw" Tatra, sim ‘went "to bales ‘Mra, Dela "Davenport und’ ushers sent tlre ‘Sunday acho! was well attended call ehdrebes. ‘Rev. "W. it Pur al ted his sppotatinen in ae foro snd tay Wito. ‘Waco, Texas, Jan. &—Now that te holidays are Over, Waco is et Ung down for the winter Mra ALJ. Turner Campbell, spent 4st wa Pra sre | Hines retrain to Contos, ‘rH, ‘A. Dixon. Visited San An: tonto’ and Gonanles last week ‘iss Anna Belle Lay. of owas) University, spent & part’ of bir hol ays in envo with ber aunt, Mev Xb, Thomas. ‘aire, Me D. Jackson is convalescent ager belng in bed during tho hol hays, ‘The. play renered. ‘by the hott of tbe Becond Taptist.chuteh Wat a" decided muceeet. “The membership. of St. James Mt church have raised theit pastor sary to S000 per year She hollaye brought large ia fereave In Our publle schools, a though ‘Nt "was" raining. furiously Monday, there: was a large! tncrens in ‘ever ‘sehol, Last Monday” night the cholt 0 New Hope rendered a, Yeautiful can fata to's large” and. appreciative ulesee.| “The funeral services over the re uaina of Mra. Calle Alten were hel Sunday” evening from St. Pal, Dr Miller’ oteated. The ‘Gaiety ‘Theatre, owned an’ lontrolied by Negroes’ Is "now opat foyusineas! very ace loner wh fenioya this” form” of astugemen Mould flock this ‘place. ‘Dr. J. W. Frida accompanied th body” of is slater, Mrs. Mary “Tur ner’ t0 Avinget for "burial, ra ‘Turner, had’ lingered. in ilineas fo sowe me.” Dr. W. G. Sorreie, ou Depular dentist bas retursed "tro his "swing around. the" loop a Cen frat U.S. Ay the Doctor saya he {fe time’ and be looks, it Ma ara" Dosan, the Bistory. teacher the: inh school” returned from. he Vacation much Feffeshed (or ibe Te Tnaining mouths of wehco}. GREENVILLE. Greenville, ‘Texas, Jan. §-—The 14th General Assembiy"o the churel of God was one Tong to be. remem: ved The Hoe. wan alle to yr der by Hey. L. G. Shell, chairman ‘Thera of minieerw was cabled and ieee teins” twenty-Bve minister bresent.— "Rev." Penticton." arrive ‘Thursday morning after making his tunouncement cf the disolvine the South Texas Assemhly of which Ihe wan the. moerator ‘Bight. hundred and forty-five do lars "was raised forthe industria home ‘three males east of Greenville Bishop JA. Edmondson was on th ene” with his" usual Yateresins fray. “Letterk wete recelved from ministers of the faction that thes Were soon to join In this Steat up Tin movement." '" S KELITS. Keltys, Texas, Jan, B—Mr. Rueben ‘Lee and: Jean ‘Thomas made yin {ip o Diboll. Vr. Ea Mallers war falled to ‘Nacogdoches to the antral fof his helce who was shot Mrs. Ad {ine MeAdam and soo. Siltgn i viet ‘ng ter mother in Center. tira, Geor: Ela, Wittlame, who spent. the holidays ‘rity her son has returaed ther Home tn Pollok. ie. and. Aira Fred Clay’ has returned. from ‘Tyler. Mr Soe” Green te called to” Houston fn: account of the death ‘ot his bro: ther, Mr. Pallip Wallace. ‘Stes, Vader Sackson made & fying trip to Dibol Mra, liza Bolton”speat the day” tn Bucks ‘New aft, Zion Sundav schoo! was well attended, all otheers were pres: fat. ‘At T1'a0 o'clock, Rev. We 2. Tinsley, the pestor ‘filed hie pulp Ani delivered’ strong. sermon, afer While & collection wan lifted by Deacons Taylor and," Sallory, mounting 10-$10000 and. at 4p. tm: Rev. Collins preached ma excellent fermon, 8 collection was lifted hy Percon’ A. J. Johnson. alah fey or rl tended ator ‘reached to a crowd: ea house. ‘Deacon. Lee and Taylor ifted collection: amountins Xo. 818.0, total day's election #2400, Four” mem- bern were restored to full eltowshty Inthe church. alr” Florence Wal- ia eon tae alah 1 LAS CRUCES, Las Crees, N, My dam, 8—Ever one has ‘enjoyed. tho holidays. te find. Mra. Haynes are i. te cit from El Paso, to live. Mre. Wm Avant ‘spent several days Bere this Week visting relatives Tier, and Mrs.Z. Z Johnson cele: brated their th aonivarsary Jen with an claborate banguet. Cover Were tala ‘for tn: Sire "Lena Jones is viaiting at Ft Pana this week, Rev. ‘Cook was {3 towa ow Monday. Quarterly Conter thee will” be held at Methodist Shared Sunday "evening, Jan.” 4h, Rev. 2. Johnson, Ea’ iw conve: teecent. aacKsnono. | Jackeboro, ‘Texas. Jan, 1—Sunday school wan! well aitended. Sunday tlasion at” Sinter “Adele” Johnson Mias."Mary_ ‘Hembra Toft ” Sunday morning, for Central Texas College Minn J. Re Causey Toft for her home fa Dalia, after waving «while with her nlater, Mr. Hays: "Born to Mr. and Mra. James teson Des. $i 2 80 git, aeeeer i ccoeneneeaeaaenmnaieemiiats GOLDEN CHAIN OF THE WORLD.| This Live Wire Institution Is The Talk of Dallas —— < A tumber of the leading Men and Women cast their fot with this LIVE WIRE this week | | a se In cose | THREE CUSSES | Die to-day | // > your to 15 yr's e family | This Live ‘ i receives, | b) 16 to 52| Wire beats] [& ome for burial the Under: | \ ©) 88 to 90 taker to S | about your 3 $9.20 t livetn the | $500,00 | Thats ys | home we Cua One Year | | 7. E-TOLAN THIS LIYE WIRE INSTITUTION RECRVIEVED NoviCR of 2 deaths this past week—Doth were financial, we pald to Mra, Peale Hancock Dalla, Texas, 4200.00 within 48 minutes after we recolved note ot the deah of bet husband, Alex D, Hancotk, We sent $200.00 tJ. G. Hackley, Latha, Tesaa, WHkin 0 alain after receiving otce ofthe death et George Hackley.-It this ain Wo ices, well we dont know, let ders bay Bis propesiton to offer some ood man or woman in every city, town, or rir inti Texas Oxlahonas—Weite 1 day unheard ot efter opportunity to take ——_o After Joining | GNI | The Chain a SY dees “OC. OW. You should by all means, eater the mysteries of the Golden Cbtin’s Royal House cx, Soloman eupe eh only HL er pets es bays ease of Seth see‘Sutere may come afier vs, and copy or ape’ us, by using oer method—remenber they are hot th original Chai, tha apeaks Of wit I Has tude Solsaot what i soins to do anil the peopl, ten, sak our bank, the Baal, The Aimeieah Ba" Shange Nous! ene, Dale big base GOLDEN CHAIN OF THE WORLD home M. 1302 Rooms 20410 es ae SS amd daughter doing fine. | Miss Bra Bell Barges spent the holidaye Xt home also, Sine dn Sostey. Mle ‘Nia Tlengon spent holiday at home ato, | oxtanona, | Oktabpow Clty, Okla. Jan, &—Kev J: We dtchson of Jonesboro, Ark, as inthe ety Tast week. and served for the Calvary Baptist ehured, he ide Tasting topresson on tho member hi. cy. & EJ. Watson of ‘Topeka Kant also preached for the Calvary Peopie last" Priday- night. Rev.” Wat fen vte the feat andthe, Inst Wor Th” preaching hing "0 aay" ‘edo ‘good. in "in beeping. with former record. CLEBURNE, =~ Cleburne, Tema, dan. 6. Rew Johnson, presiding” elder” of the C Mo Eogtreh closed. hs quarter fcinferener, Sunday.” with “aucceas Stra Pearl Prince ‘t Fort Worth, ts Visiting ‘ber stator, Mrs. Alle Rey holds Airs Beatrice Parker has re firmed trom” Palestine. Afra. Alice Ted who has teen Visiting relative At Caneron ‘has returned home. Mr Violy ‘Kendell has returned om ‘Went, Texas." sts” Dasy "Jones 0 Ergaat ‘pent the bollays in te City visiting retativen Mr. Wil Norris has been viniting. daughter and rela tives at Yoakum haw returned. ‘Meats, Buen “Koy and Cit avis of Denver, Cola. are’ nthe city watt relatives” Afra. ‘Mati Hunt “and Stra, Rosle Yenrser" were Called “to Caldwell to attend "th funeral ‘ot thelr ner, Mea te Th earl ait. and Mem. Radie. Msn Of ‘Oklahoma City, are guests of hr aid ra Wan. agtor. Ms “Hae pniipe ot Brownwood pent the hotidays with relatives. Mrs Flee Imingn ot Blooming “Grove, was. the fest of Mra. Ada Gre” Me Gen ral MeCreaty of Rone i vtalting be ninter “this week, Ara, Margaret WcaiNnRY, MeKines, Team, | Jey. 3-—Hies vorest "Phea of Oklahoma Oly, here visting” her mather, ates Mitle and Siar, Mrs. Mite Phen Miss ‘Bomle Phea Mrs, A.B. Lind ay" intertalned the laidis of Gaines Mill," Monday evening. "Mrs. L 3. Groner, Mos, J. Le Holford, ates WM, Waller, Mee A. alow, Mr. nd Mrs Johan eniertaived Sunday” wih thviey inners Thirty-two. quest ‘were: present. ABILENE. Abilene, Texas, Jan, &—Rev. FP ‘Thornton’ pastor of the ‘Second Tap fist church had 'n sreat rally Wehled they ralsed 4529. taking. $9.0 Rev. C. Hamilton in surviving with hewnatlam in hia wrist. We had reat time Christan moroing,” al the churches hada union praise ser Vice. att i. Thomas hus. moved trom Abiiene on North Sth street, 8 nelehor to. Deacon’ Henderson, one Cf our moat prosperous Negroes at Abilene, "Rot. Glover, the principe Of "Abilene schoo! "spent Christnas with his" people” in Tennessee, Mr Xr. Cumby went to. Mershall Christmas to meet his tntonded bride Miss" Lila ‘Witvon.” Sunday” school at various churches! were. nicely at tended, tho M. 1. glethodiet quat’er- ly Conference will be held here, the frat ‘Sunday’ in January, 1820" and Invites all 19 come. "Mev. A. D. Jace gue or arc reprenetative and r. Git, Hamilton, our pastor. We Ao” pray for a high day ‘spiritually and’ financially, the titerary” willbe Organised the Aret Tuesday night in January, 1920, R. D. Anderson, prest- eau" When ‘you want the” Dallas Bupress, come to KD. ‘Anderson's barbershop, DENTON. Denton, Texas, Jan, Rev. J. A. Jones. PE. of Dallas district A.M hiaren ‘hela bis first quarterly Jecnference Sunday with Rev. ‘W. P. fCrceket pastor at “IT” a.m. Rev. oues delivered one of ls best ser mous at 3p. m. Mer. Henderson of fC. M. 1 clirehy preached. Tis aie ours wat timely” aod helpfal. ey ‘Swaney of Pleasant. Grove. aptin fhurel preached to large’ comsre- ations "moraine ‘and evening. The iY 'P. Us, was also well-attended ‘Ain. Paitarson of "Welfe. thy, ‘Ainos ‘Gordon of Kansaz City, Mo. and” Mra Le" Johnonn of Sherman, ehtidren for “tvs, Masle Cordon, Pat fon epedt Christmas here with: thelr mother. Charte Seay, Wille ©. Mil Ter, Wade Bean of Hcnbam and Mrs Lulu Johnson of Fert Worth, sister Visited ‘fre Maud Roblnsoe during {he holidays, “Mise “Mamie Whitten returned: to” Wiley University attr Spending, Christmas with her totter cee Lala Hughly is visiting in Oklaboma. P WHITEWRIGHT. Whitewright, Texas, Jan. §.—Gun- ay sehool was wall attended at bot fhurehes Sunday. ey. G.E Pat terson'was at is post. Me. Parks war bere Sunday with wife, Aira Au fle. Parka. Mt. "S.A. Deboney. In Dallas thie Wook. Mir. Wil Bay: Yer and. wife ‘from Meiinney and rw, “Moitle. Brown from Pitsbare Wat the guest of Mra 'B. Gatowoo. Christmas. Ste “Getome ialden was here vialting mother. If you want t Keep ‘up with. the news you Ws Fuad the Dallas Express, Bloor” Al fey hid) ksand wateh meeting a home with two lite daughters. St ter "Marshals. wateh meeting’ wa Pestponrd on account of the shortass Ot fuel, Rov. Shaddock instil 0° the ek tnt ‘re Allen was in Sherman, at arday" on "businers. Mr. Carlin Maral" we ‘are. having. some (i Weather. School” narted "Monday, Jan. &. alra. W. He Lauper. ie back from Groesbeek, where the bas heen Visiting mother” She will” oped tehool in full blast. I vou want the Express by the year or by the week see’ Cecil Gatewood. RosEncD. Rosebud, Texas, Jan. Services rere" exceadiny "sod at the Inde Pendent Baptist “church, "Sunday fhe pastors Rev. AG. Harris wa ath pon pei wore sand he St Lak ht Ehren, Rev. McKay, paso Prenched an eavllent aero a bo Services. which wore very. effective Mra" vous” and’ ars Ht chon “oyailynteratned” the. ase of woth wr. "At the home ‘ot rx P. oung. the old nodlers wer fade to fee” yous” asain. Each "on Fecelved a" present and went home Felon "Phe "pastor of Independent Dap tit ‘chureh wii be installed onthe Sd Sunday. inthe month. Mra. 2 iE starkn o¢ Sam Marcon was ithe the ely visting her mother and father, Mek, Burnet made a trip to Wac on basen ‘rand a Htchinon Tey toy "ie Column. Texas ‘ra Julio stringer Delian, i here ‘visiting relatives, Mr. andes Heed."‘Mrm. Hester Brown of Pano, ts here’ ting “relative ‘atle Mayteig “ot Dalian tx here ving her mother. fee ade ere royally ater: tained ata ‘i ae Ss 5 Seats onan tn ot PAGE FIVE ‘Thornton. Mra, Alberta Banks in om the lek tat thie wetk. Thetse have nickels ready on Sat urday’ mornings for the Expres ‘MILLSBORD. Hilaboro, ‘Texas, Jan, 6—Note lense. ‘have. your, mney ready” fo the paper wien Master. Pred Sm pe els” have eect fo teave no papers without the Not thac'T question the. veracity a ay patrons “or it ts only the bet er ‘lass of ‘people who” rend. the Exprem. “tne Mollie Howard gnd. Otte ase eit made’ a fying trip. to" Por Worth, Sinday? Mr. Herthtah Heke jot" Okinhna, waa tn the. city” laa weeks ‘rx McConnel of” Waco, an irs ater Mekeley of Ray Are pene Sunday with hele ana Mee M"Miaehen.” School ‘epened” Monday Atver two. weeks recena a oe forte arn cemia co to Bay yout oll tax. It you fr'rather refuse odo hla oar [wort thna the valacker™ who. aden lowed the” coutinds of” bis nally, threo: years azo, to evade the Fgh tthe conscription iawn ‘Girls ‘thin is Teap Year, don't forge our ndren, CAD OF THANKS. We wish to thank our frends her and ‘in Denison, who. s0 nobly stead en the of ot ere ment” occasioned by "We untimely fiath ‘Ot our tetored ‘busted and other” award Ty Garland, whe ied Dec, 27,1919 and for the tay beaut’ floral “terines, May’ "God Bese each one. of ou Mts. ROSE GARLAND, Wite MIS. DAISY STANTON, Slater MUS, ALPHRETTA MILLER Sito MRS. CARRIE WILSON, Sister Wm. GARLAND, Bomar, CUARENCE GARLAND, ‘Brother ‘Runeat of Wa fabvend eae ae ae Wile Bene alee aes ee are Seana | REBO | i proceiin Oh a i Se cae DR. J. G. HARDIN, ae = wei OUR NEW HOME PENDLETON AVE. ST. PERDINAND AVE. PAGE SIX PENDLETON AVE. 25,000 MON. Equipped w Poro System Terms Moderate Poro Corner "No normal person would knowly drink such stuff. And no normal person would knowly drink the stuff that is being sold now as whiskey addicts who have suddenly seen one of them from something to which they are accustomed, and cannot resist the craving, who are purchasing and drinking these addictive drinks, and cannot resist the greed for Money Partly to Hause. "Oh course, there are those whose whiskey addicts take care of the purchasing, coloring and sale of this deadly mixture as whiskey, but they are in the minority. Sooner or later, they deal with the tolk of the law, but until none provision is made whiskey whiskey addicts are taken to buy and drink anything that contains alcohol and satisfies the whiskey craving regardless of the consequence. The revenue officials are doing their best to detect and arrest all persons who sell pure or had whiskey, but the law does not prevent persons from buying wood alcohol in the making It is expected that the suggestion recently made that the makers of wood alcohol he required by law to use will render it immediately unpalatable and thereby result in its detection even by a notice, will he cause it to effect within the next few months. Guard Against Poison Urged. Corrective upon the report in the House of Commons, the deaths from whisky made from wood "In many cases," says Maj. J. Pullman, "it is obtained in this manner for drinking purposes." MILLIONAIRES INCREASE. Washington, Jan. 8—According to income tax returns there are 20,000 persons in this country who are rated as millionaires. It is stated that during the four war years more than 2,000 new millionaires were created. LOUSIY WOMEN PLEDGE OTH RACE HERE SOUARE DEAL. Louisville, Ky. Jan. 8 - At a joint conference of the National Consumers' League, the Americanization of the National Council of the Women's Council of National Defense, and the Kentucky Conference of the Women's Council of National Defense, was a very important session, devoted to race relationships and women's recently, was a very important first meeting ever held in Kentucky where leaders of both races came together before a large audience of women, and matters of common interest. The spirit of the meeting was encouraged by the session the following: resolutions were adopted the establishing of district sanitaria with state aid for the care and treatment of all persons, Kentucky, who suffer from tuberculosis. "We urge all the people of our Southland, both white and Colored, to attend the meeting about a better understanding between the races and to this end provide educational facilities for Neuro youth. "To adopt measures that will improve the recognition of the good and the higher qualities of the Neuro through press and otherwise. "To recognize the good and a recognition of his rights before law and to stand for the equal enforcement of the law." "To labor for industrial justice for the Negro. "To endeavor in every reasonable way to give the Negro a man's chance in his life and his work but own salvation as an American citizen." RESIDENTS OF SOUTH DALLAS WILL OPPOSE OPENING NE- GRO PARK. Residents of South Dallas, who are opposed to opening a Negro park at the Park Board and not Sunday night and decided to send a committee of five to protest to Mayor Frank W. Wozencawk, to discuss the discussion the plan was adopted to form a large delegation of about ten objections to voice their concerns. The discussion Monday morning. Up to noon, however, the delegation had failed to put the park on the agenda. The chief complaint against opening the park, it was brought out, in a public meeting, that the measures are scheduled for the park, the South Dallas street cars will be THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS. SATURDAY, JANUARY 10. 19.20. St. Louis, Mo. two crowded with Negroes for the comfort of the purchasers and the large commercial gardens will take place at Second and Forest avenues when transferring from Negroes. NINE COLORED EX-SOLDIERS LYNCHED. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, 70 years old, has lished a statement showing that 3 Colored ex-soldiers stated War Wear during Wartime 1919. Of the nine, two were burned to death, four were wounded, four were and one was beaten. Colored Soldiers Lynched During 1919 March 14, Castlebury, Fla.-Brad Johnson, burned to death. Said to have confessed to attack on white woman. April 9, Pickens, Miss.—admitted he had hired a woman to a white woman. May 23, Eldorado, Ark.-Brad Lilek, accused of an insulting note to a employer and the latter's wife; buried to death. May 23, Louis, Miss.-Robert lynched for having made indecent proposals to a white woman. Hanged. Aug., Fayette County, Ga.-Charles Lillek, accused of stealing a woman because he did not turn out of the road soon enough. Aug., 14, Pope City, Ga.-Jim Grant, alleged to steal a white man and his son. Hanged. Sep. 20, Montgomery, Al.-Robert Clement, with having assaulted a white woman. Shot. Sept. 3, Star City, Ark.-Pinkie Dillen, with having insulted a white woman. Shot. Dec. 21, Smithville, Ga.-Charles West accused of murder of white women. REPORTS SHOW U. S. CHILDREN ILLITERATE. That many American-born children are growing up illiterate is shown by figures from the Chief of the Children's Bureau of the U. S. Department of Labor. These figures show that 19 percent of the Bureau's administration of the Child Labor Act of 1916 was later declared unaccentual. They coveted the Bureau's administration of children was general. Of 19,686 children between and 14 and 19 years old, certificates were issued, more than one-fourth could not write their names legibly. Nearly 10 per cent had never gone to school, and more than half were in the fourth grade or lower when they went to school. More than half in eighth grade and about one in a hundred had reached high school. Children were native Americans. Of the whole number, only 24 were foreign born. The responsibility for their needs was primarily the vocational education of children. A similar national policy might well be followed in regard to elementary schools. "It is general agreed," says the report, "that . . . the educational output of children in rural areas is inferior to those offered the children in cities or industrial towns. Literacy is everywhere higher in rural areas than in cities. Unless prompt attention be given the problem the children of rural areas are not educated, they are assured at least the elementary education which every citizen in a region needs. It is not afforded to ignore the need of a national guarantee of at least an elementary education for all the children." FREE Fashion Book Mailed Upon Request Real Human Hair All our wigs are hand made and strictly to order from maker to wearer. Wigs, transformations, switches, braids, and all other articles of hair goods. We carry the largest selection of stretching combs and hair dressers' tools. The celebrated Mme. Baum's Preparations which make the skin vel- t-like, the hair silk-like. Postpaid $1.00. Write for Catalogue MME. BAUM'S MAIL ORDER HOUSE When writing, mention this paper RICH IN TRADITION RICH IN TRADITION White House Replete With Tender Human Memories. Associations Dear to the Heart of Every American Cling About the Historic Home of the Chief Executive. When President Wilson, because of his illness, received the king of the Belgians white propped in bed, with a torn tern sleeve about his shoulders, and told the prince of Wales that the king in which he confessed to him infuriety, later King Edward VII, and Abraham Lincoln, he added traditions to the host that already cling about the White House. With Baron Borrow, later King Edward VII, and Abraham Lincoln, he added traditions to the host of the presidents which, it says, has more tender human memories than any other public building graphic society has issued a bulletin on the house of the presidents which, it says, has more tender human memories than any other public building graphic society has issued a bulletin on the house of the presidents, ples "like mother used to make," to attach, the Rosewood children played and romped, there are associations which range from the President Wilson's enforced dishable recalls the premeditated negligent—worn slippers, yarn stockings and hats, the old dress code, impress the British ambassador with American democracy when that official arrival in full official dress to present his credentials to the president. Adams had to cool their heels until that president finished three chapters in the Bible and walked down back of the White House, where he "drop in" at the White House evening, quite the sociable thing to do during Jackson's terms, meant finding the chief executive before he was done doing duty as a smoking jacket, puffing at a long pipe with a bowl of red clay. Every room of the White House is paired with a white-painted dining table known dinners of the homely sort that Jefferson gave when the Washington village burcher brought along his son, because he was a member of the table; of the picturesque kind, WHITAKEN 1669 Jac Bigger, Brighter and Better the book and in connection. Tables su- fords. Service unexcelled. We wa Lewin's WHITAKER'S CAFE WHITAKER'S CAFE 1622 Jackson Street. Bigger, Brighter and Better than ever. Meals to suit the pocket book and in connection. Tables supplied with the best the market affords. Service unexcelled. We want your trade. Lewin's Market 2411 ELM STREET Turkeys 38c Per Pound * Bacon, sliced, pound 50* * Ham, sliced 50* * Bacon, sliced, pound 50* * Oleoargerine 35* * Whole Cured Ham 36* * Brains, 15c, two set 20* * Pork Roast 30* * Pork Steak 30* * Pork Sausage 30* * Land Compound 30* * Pig Liver 10* * Pig Snouts 12½* * Beef Rolled Roast 75* * Beef Roast Roast 20* * Beef Rib Roast 22½* * Prime Roast 22½* * Sausage Roast 15* * Chuck Steak 15* * Veal Round Steak 35* Bacon, sliced, pound …… 50¢ Ham, sliced …… 50¢ Bacon, sliced, pound …… 50¢ Bacon, sliced, pound …… 50¢ Oleomargarine …… 35¢ Whole Cured Ham Baking, two set …… 30¢ Pork Roast …… 30¢ Pork Steak …… 30¢ Pork Sausage …… 30¢ Last Compound …… 30¢ Pig Liver …… 30¢ Brown Rice or Lamb Beef Rolled Roast …… 12¢ Beef Rolled Roast …… 12¢ Beef Rump Roast …… 17¢ Beef Rib Roast …… 20¢ Prime Rib Roast …… 20¢ Seven Steak …… 15¢ Chuck Steak …… 15¢ Chuck Steak …… 15¢ Oleomargarine …… 35¢ Ground Beef for Chicken… 5¢ Delivery Made in Any part of the City like one given more than a century ago to the Tunisian ambassador, who was aggrieved because everyone would be given a piece of gold, though his secretary showed his good will by ceremoniously kissing the ladies present; of the bizarre kind there were many pencils, punchers, ex-prize fighters and distinguished men of letters, not to mention the famous one with Book T. Rivers, who made memorable banques. Like those to Marshall Joffre and Sir Arthur Balfour, when the china set up 1,500 pencils and memorable pieces of which is engraved with the arms of the United States, were used. A room is better know to the publie than the easter room, of late years the scene of brilliant receptions and White House weddings. It, too, has memories of a cruder democracy, with the servants being "follow about the servants who carried refreshed receptions, seizing upon what ever they could get," and upon one who met them, and applauded upon the chinney piece to get a better view of the colorful scene. World's Greatest Blessing It is RADIUM SULPHATE, not a medicine; not used internally, cures by eumannation like heat cures hand of cold; dropy in three hours; cleans out the disease of rheumatism, tuberculosis, kindness, backache, headache, catarrh, asthma eczema, female sickness, tumors, pallor, malaria, nervousness, heart and stomach; all others that cause pains; ulcers including the worst known diseases; the greatest of all God's present curing, gifts. You will not get best this time. International Radium Company $ \mathrm{C O}_{3} $ 749 San Julian St. Los Angles Cal. Free Sample THE LADY Of Creoline Hair Producer, the late derful hair grower in the world. Will give hair upon hair upon bald heels. It bothered with falling hair, dandruff, tetter, eczema or any kind of hair trouble you should try Creoline. It makes short hair, wavy and curly in a few weeks, makes most beautiful eyebrows, a $35.00 amount, and silky hair. Course in the Creoline College of Hair Culture free to our students. Send 25 cents solid brass Straightening conb to agents and customers with first order, send 25 cents solid brass Straightening conb to box of Producer and Sham- poo, six weeks' full treatment, $15.00 box, 50¢* Agents wanted everywhere for faint fish everything. Write for agents application. CREOLINE SUPPLY 10 Lock Box 751, San Antonio, Tex ENOS WHITAKER. Prop. The best Order on earth. It pays $200.00 within 24 hours after death and a second Relief each year, in July of about $200.00 making a total of $500.00. It costs you only $8.95 per year to live in the Order. Representatives wanted in every town in Texas. For further information contact the Grand Master. write— 2528 1-2 Elm Street J. W. HUNT, National Grandmaster Dallas, Texas. No More Short, Harsh and Unruly Hair If you will insure your Hair and Scalp with the Vim and Vigor Hair and Scalp Treatment. What the Vim and Vigor Treatment will do for your hair and scalp: (1) Remove dandruff. (2) Will increase the growth of the hair. (3) Will heal the scalp and keep the scalp and hair in a healthy condition. (4) Will protect the hair soft, thick, streight, fluffy and beautiful. Get it today. The Hair Promoter and Shampoo, 50 cents each, or $1.00 the full treatment. At all drug stores. If your drugstreet hasn't it he will get it for you, or you may send money order or $1.20 in stamps to Theo, Smith, Drugsist and Distributor, 1301 E. 18th Street, Kansas City, Mo. YOU NEED VIM AND VIGOR SYSTEM TONER America's greatest general tonic. It make blood and builds up a run-down system. Vim System Toner is a powerful Alterative, Blood Tonic and Appetizer. A wonderful Blood and remedy. If you are troubled with Serofula, Rickets, Eczema, Catarr, Falling of the H Ringworm, Scald Head, Boils and Various Skin and Humors of the Blood, give this remedy a convinced of is great value. Price, $1.00. Specials for Today and Next BY MAIL America's greatest general tonic. It makes rich, red blood and builds up a run-down system. Vim and Vigor System Toner is a powerful Alterative, Blood Purifier, Tonic and Appetizer. A wonderful Blood and Rheumatic remedy. If you are troubled with Serofula, Abscesses, Rickets, Eczema, Catarrh, Falling of the Hair, Tetter, Ringworm, Scald Head, Boils and Various Skin Diseases and Humors of the Blood, give this remedy a trial and be convinced of is great value. Drive. $1.00. Specials for Today and Next Week 25c Teeth Brush ____17c 25c Black Drunge ____17c Vim and Vigor System Toner ____1.20 Vim and Vigor Hair Toner ____1.20 25c Star Hair Grower ____1.20 25c Sq-2L Combination Fonction Syringe ____2.25 NOTICE—We carry the largest and Drugnase's Sundries of m Our Motto is: Your Money's W Today. NOTICE—We carry the largest and most complete stock of Drugs and Drugs'o Sundries of any NEGRO DEGUGIST in America. Our Motto is: Your Money's Worth or Your Money Back. Order Today. Theodore Smith 1301 E. 18th St. Hall Depart 1301 E. 18th St. Mall Order Department Kansas City, Mo. A CHANCE TO MAKE MON Learn The Beverly System of You Can Become Independent A CHANCE TO MAKE-MONEY. HAIR GROWTH ASSURED Learn the Beverly System of Hair Dressing. You Can Become Independent With the System and the Rev-Marie Preparations. The Rev-Marie Pomade. The Magnetic Hair Dressing and Pressing Oil used with or without straightening irons, makes the hair soft and silken also promotes growth. Rev-Marie preparations will positively grow four inches of beautiful hair in six months. A trial will convince the most sceptical, that Rev-Marie is far superior to all other hair preparations. Acts wanted. Sells like 'Hot Cakes'. Liberal commission allowed. Stamp for participation. Full sized box sent on receipt of price, 50 cents, postage 10c extra. Adress all orders to— MADAM A. M. SMYTH, 500 E. 4th Street, Oklahoma City, Okla. Sample outfit, 1 Pomade, 1 Shampoo, 1 Temple Oil, 1 Hair Grower, full instructions, $2.00. for your hair and scalp; (1) Remove dandruff. (2) Will increase the growth of the hair. (3) Will heal the scalp and keep the scalp and hair a thick, straight, fluffy and beautiful. Get it today. The Hair Promoter and Shampoo, 50 cents each, thick, straight, fluffy and at all drug stores. If your druggist hasn't it he will get it for you, or you may send money order or $1.20 in stamps to Shee, Smith, Druggist and E. 138. E. 18. E. 18. Street, Kansas City, Mo. general tonic. It makes rich, red run-down system, Vim and Vigor alterative, Blood Purifier, wonderful Blood and Rheumatic coupled with Scrofa, Abscesses, wrth, Falling of the Hair, Tetter, Boils and Various Skin Diseases d, give this remedy a trial and be due. Prive, $1.00. today and next Week BY MAIL 25c Black and White Ointment 18c 25c High Brown Face Powder 18c $1.75 Straightening Comp. $1.39 25c Do Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener 18c best and most stock of Drugs of any NEGRO DRUGGIST in Americ- s. Worth or Your Money Back. Order All Order Department Kansas City, Mo. Excelsior Mutual Benefit Association Excelsior Mutual Benefit Association Dallas, Texas Most people need money when there's death in the family. Someone may be out of town or they may want to send out of town or they may want to send out of relative. If you think you need money with the EXCELSIOR MUTUAL BENEFIT, you pay death claims in 24 hours. Any person desired such protection, call at room 209 Pythian Temple, 1000 W. 12th St. COPFIELD, Secretary HONEY. HAIR GROWTH ASSURED of Hair Dressing. But With the System and the Dev-Marie Preparations. The Dev-Marie Pomade, The Mag- netic Hair Pressing and Pressing Oil used with or without pressing irons, makes the hair soft and silken also promotes growth. The Dev-Marie preparations will positively grow four inches of beautiful hair in six months. A trial will con- vince the most suitable that Dev-Marie is far superior to all other hair preparations. Agents wanted. Sale. The most suitable that Dev-Marie is far superior to all other hair preparations. Stamp and seal on purchasers. Full sized box on receipt of price, 50 cents, postage 10c extra. Islandia City, Okla. Sample cuttle, 1 Pomade, 1 Shampoo, 1 Temple Oil, 1 Hair Grower, full instructions, $2.00. “THE MAN OF THE HOURS An Address Delivered By Dr. 1. 1, “MeKinney tn Honor of Hon A. 1 ‘Terrell at the Odd Fellows? Tan- qoet tn Denison, ‘Tesas, Dec. 1s inn (Or, Terrell is moving to Mem- Pils, ‘Tenn, Hie Putsre. Howe) ‘The man of the hour would be tard to fl.” We tls Took anne 4 slllion and fal to. dhcover him, Ho Is tot inpossiile, bot he fa a rate specimen of humn power. And he Ia rare ecause he mst fil the full meature of a devinely commie sloned leadership of ia generaton Such a man ia not found by search fanons the multitudes. He’ reveal Himseit ts we moming sun reveals tee" ay" oa ew days Ho Me either dlacovered nor tntrogiced ty other men. He in a man with « mls tion, aad ho comer endowed. with seltimpeling power to ff ke He heeds no mestongers. with spectaci Jar announcements of bis coming He wants no Neralds. with trumpet and ‘drum, Me lt hinwelé the Yolco of one crying in the wilder teas. The tan af the hour wat be {tan of vision, And he mst” be 4 man of vision without being vision fry. He mist sco thinar and events fad men in their teue_ perspective He muse comprehend the’ history of ‘oni condtions and be faa With the current event ¢ ti ae But ne" avo ‘ore than these Koowledge of tho pax, "aut. be ned wit whdoat af he fiat Fh prophet sett. He ut Tok down the" coming eeitures and fore: Sen the efects of preent reaive ses He tnt Tock with hie Goes. Hie nt be Tareer_ than ‘he fnvirontents down he aces‘on thelr inion” of soo ‘The man of the hour most be a eenstructve hipker. He must have owtedre, tobe sures but the mere Tectaton’ of knowledge wit tot ti Fice"te must wine hie now ete toning comsenctvey about the {Sura oat ents He lent merely to destroy the fil forees Ut Carte the Wot fat tathon” anda, ober form oc human “evizaion forthe foming agen He must Have’ the Sremtal power to discover and ‘to Sittke down (eco a tenorance fd piace In thle atend the sods of Intetizenee. Ho mnt pomsess. and ferise a high’ order” of tnelecteal Segreation that wil ‘chalense other fren to thine lofty ‘and construc: Ihe. “tei not merely a deserter World! ent he" ing. bullder ot ‘ory ea for his people. ‘The’ man of the hour must. be an crinal penalty No copist can Hot the tile No. ponoeraph record fam thr the heat athe ace nor Sean te dormant "enerw’en ofa People. Me tunt ben red londed Healthy, bociedane-sotled prince of men," must see ‘thne® for Minuet tein orislal ‘discoverer. "He"who Mlk only where he ses oder my Tracks, maker "none dizeoerion e‘tnt break new stowndand ea {ate new feldn "He unt" possens brond ultra Te Denlahted iad feds only. to_ outer” darkness and disorder.” Narrowminded, nlf-cen tered adore are ononits “of evi rulers of ‘el pronbecy, Only the cultivated Intellect nuneied By 2 Tefined pint eam meet the. demand Sh the hours He who climbe: hl fr, thou he ellmbe alone draws a the word afer him “ime man of the hoe vast ben arruplite ten days when Sra ie'rampant and boy’ tines are ex- oli for eltish ures the tan of the: howr oust stand uoon the pin Marte with the Christ aa aout mek” eon trnducers: "GET THER BEHIND ME, SATAN” “The man cf {he hour Ut without w price He can {tbe sold and ih cannot te housht Ko, Iuee ot old, "no" promise ot 10: int ‘fevation, ‘ho "ibe of polial Dreferment ran” tran hin nmacs Iai ite af ay be, tte with the souls of the Boop, ‘or coward eve tet the deman sof roputar Teaferrhin "The maa of the Tour must therefore, be tna of ourake, Hic must be ebotutly fearies of the fatery of trend and tthe Insist of he foe cone Sietlons are par of hi hein He annette separated from them. He} famnot_surrander ten witht xtee fending “hs character, adhe would Dera ‘at the stake before he ould Hild to heats of violence or bene imitated the power of the woh. Te chattel the whole_ world to Aetense of hs peincipen. tle te not scatter He em fvhter for the acted rights ofall ren, He a rave tothe point of elteftacement He isthe apostle of truth and ust tise, “The man of the nour is 4 man of a Tinztoness af proses "There. te fo division i" hand and heart fs to. what he shail" dow_o-himan ower tan secre him from de ane feline ton phich he tae 8b fine’ With Tedomitane™ wil be thoves forward, ehangeesse" and uh Shangeable toward. the ove oat to Shieh he hae ‘diented hn if Such then were Abraham Lincoln’ and Booker “f. Washinston. ‘The man of the hour must be a mat of nsptation. Prom some Hine, hueen”soree.tevend” ns, he'arame the secret of hs ower. He lives much om hia hoes He i fo hae withthe shores” ot alice, ‘tnd many” times, with. are bead fd nsandalet feet ea climbed the rugeed atreeps of Mount, Clivet Aint the “Sin ot “the erat, noisy orld: ne heats the ‘STILL. SMALL Voice "Oe don. "Such en were oranom and telah, Giadstme and Waatinston ‘The man of the hour It «man of great warm human sympathies. Love fee Talia pasion Of hl ie.” At- oe ree pennes Oe | NEGROES IN INAUGURAL SER Nite OF KENTUCKY. GOVE yon Frmkfort, Ky, den. 1-—Deprtng rot pant ity ied vee Sor acer Repecae ele acre elon Sate Govt” soruberors eu hi oe esta jac ‘ote tats‘ Ristacka thd sever olga me es ests otter wi oe ated Bao oe outa’ nae ae. ee can, Sloe Heep thureh at Kemacky® pttecied tne “Gate Soe with AS Ole tat ot on kin the su ef os, Th Stet ation wes nae eating Ete "David tte sao ne Si HE church ‘ot Rentucky, just sear te iuusurat tuiet Gevetaee Hoe rvs epech tats asiriote E'veanicd ac worthy ot the Bate bis Decent lb ee tut. escted Goere Norte ae Be ance over Sarno’ cadres Rejeer cae sien eet ney: di val wus lyse seed fim the stun ak tn Seen cenpeisn and cariea to theo Ste ike cate strike Goveree tare to rect wae ton GPs, tie key GF Dav hr of etington penta Bistcuh “nun on eile the NOE Bion hut St kta ts Mi sosch of preesiatne e Biante "Sshmected spe Gofermee errs cove oe nes erie ike done Bets tare ab and that he Mad tet agente te saprested‘coniigets at fe Gort sore dad i pate tenth ie Nb i al nae ot fhe bane eal rer Nerow nd Lietent cantor palard"oinen ‘ele et Sind upon thee clea wee Mt Wht" ie Smt Seeral ot the Ghee apoieie a ofa eh, eaten a ia wife oe no toeivs ate a th oie oot HONESTY. on spueisHyesss | MANTRA Bene we /Grecpeicgal ot tampto, te oa eta tat oe cay cee a ns a ey ke tea ees Wats cee aes Ti net eny the sent of te clos as Uh eee te Bea ose Get ae etn ee Soc tien Sind etal otis et tet teat ES ames ona a srr teas a tase eet sts a tn dua oe de os encue sae ae Sha athe Ca ace me ecru sate foun iekaraseni St be Soa eats ie vale ane nm eee pig ya pects ak ee Same Sei ea a Se a ie a Fheten pan Wael Sane ty altel ein Wks mee, et ee Bey eta te aes pi a oar tee cee I alah wie ote Ue baat Boat ete Ser Sea ae i els ok ae as Crs Ra lias id so st | pe rat mh Stam aa Bate ete ore i, aa ne ete sper cones toe Be wees be eat Sin ae Tia ier ata Sate i Teen te mie le riba ti ean coe en ea ee WHITE MOB BREAK INTO COLOR- Hp SCHOOL MUCH DAMAGE IN: hacen. Anheito, NG, Jan. 1-—shertt aitepon fete nerd" fnvetiate hare that vnfentited sates ome posed of whlto men and oye” broke {ato ‘and dimondertomed Colored sl iv at an 1 en from Ashovie, and” that another bs te otea sae eo injure oe. ‘nib host outbreak is belleved. to have’ started over a fight between ite and Colored. boys ‘Another seioun. outburHt occurred when a group. of hie tore ite Mlogedy red shot aun at's roup of hiliren who. were en ther Way foe trom school" “Ate ei) Was rock om thei by same of ihe fot, hot was noc heroualy Hur The Oaclals have learned the. tates ot the aagrmory Wn elds and prose: cations are expected “10 follow. A teacher from the boo! reported the county auperintendent tint every Mindow had heen broken fromthe Tehoo!"hawse ring thera door Seve torn trom ther ‘Mses. store Man torn down and ether damage tas Tete (0 the Interor of te balding he, andar not deere aati he Bext morning, when had tobe atapened,trporarly be: ease’ of" the ‘untenable Condon of the ballding» The teachers managed to vecure nate and toured up the Bold "hey apeated to tho county Reta, "They angated tothe coun fthories for finanelal ld ma er, THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS, SATURDAY, J/ YORD INDUSTRIES ANNOUNCE! 1. W. We AND THE NEGRO NEW YEAR GIF OF EIGHT] — MILLION DOLLAR BONUS AND) Thins or was one ot te many pinne Grrun ‘oF "Fasrienearioy IN) be i We, enlbe erty FUIURE PROSPERITY, je yace war tn Gistherance of the ne. Detroit, Mich Jan. 1—Heary For snd is ton, Eauet Ford, announce today the dstebaton of a 8.0000 ions amine Wie 0:00 empires 0 branches of the. Ford ntret ft the toautiration of nave feat naa whereny. very worker from the man. who wilds a. bron {othe chet exceniventaa pare Peso inthe pron oF the bases ontaes Which wi pal cash tony, Come’ iain to profieharing pian whieh wan tn rated several years au) and Fehicswit ‘be contied, te th atentin o¢the Par oretaaio to mae, the atribton ot the footer ‘an annual vent the ture ine of de company perm ih cash ‘and in the hnber ot men concerned, 'and without cosine the ora econ Tadenty ‘whole iiss of economic ste anrpese snything ithe story ot hal he ewan ar pa oe tone en arereceting the atta by Bess day and who, ave eo i fi 'enpio’ of the rious companies fire monte It anmumts 4 Th test award “zoe ty he aie workers “who. pave, teen wiht oman five years and"Wn ree elving’ #10808 days “Phe: bos received ‘bythe latter stants Fin. ployes who receive a salary wit ine reat bomen” tie So Henan ef rvig wil’be te anne frien whi the’ words wi 6 ated in announcing the plan whic per natn euplayen io avest up tn One thir ‘6 their pay tthe onan tion and are'in ho property iso cimpany: whe ated” terest Henry Ford’ ale" carting out th into Ste, Ford hat Ior hat cht to participation te bench ak the promerty which, elpe t erento ana; ithe words ot Hens Ford mec shoul havea are ts'wall as aso Pathan hu coiplete ownership. tne Ford Motor ‘Company was at fired by Memry Fort and he tn thse summer atepr wore tment {shen to work ot the eta of the Senta and Inveximent plans nara fatodays i aiways tae’ feet Ford "lcy to dcournse ie" dv tends fo non-producing ok bolder, fh tune protic fn teva aor tnd “in ekpanting itaty, Th Paley, "ag "Henry Ford revert feat not nly rood pay and share Inthe ‘prot for the workers bu the enflevment ot tore and 06 People te the aes xo tency Por ld end tas epeat aly mated it an biaHe shat tran ‘thold be pernited’ 0" op nck fan Induatty unions he pit t"prodtine part ini, opern oe hat industry “ant the natin Of the tavestnent lam i'm praca Ahplation of tha ble Tinder the. loveatnent plan cer tuctes wil be net nde nase of ‘employes "in tenominaton® Sto "Haoh and” sh Onl er fon inact and active nerve the! oranraton wil be ‘permite {S'o or habt orient “Tue certfiaten wil bear sunreneed infor atthe ‘rete o Sper cen ner ann yd inn fino thi archer pay becnade semi-annual” the earn Ines the ermapany. pera, a a Tat feed ‘bythe bound of direcirs in case ot death or MEAD co teal ntanding nthe tam of a caploye ey centnues at the de cretion tthe dincions, to" dene intrem and papoents for the Gea fot is depbromente ‘Depots ward tho narchase_of cerifcater nny be. te within“ tags after an’ exployee reeves bi bey" tm' Ge compense the not Repose, however aot to ened ones’ ef” pach pay. Depont tia toward he urtiaie of Unesies "il dete” ntren att rate ef three er" cent et ann compounded scn-anmaly erienes “mune Pa for ot ot tnt or ayn mo empoyen wil be "permitted to draw ‘money om his Bani neeount oF eer notre mie" pagent. A seaceatsateinent ony He toan"invone of the clown emtencs ot the company’ snnownement i readh’ “other plan for, enlaring ihe facome and ‘increasing power the doar of eur sapover re ander conaeration "Foe. eflctod by thine an- nouncemtnts is'nt withthe Ford erzeneaton, he” Mor of the eon forthe ln fv gare show ats Lal “ot intra force aa ways ben Mike fa TH the Ford otor “Company” at nounced ann Pav of 6 a dy since whet thas dated soorecimatty 19 tion ayn praizta empioes.Polowins the Min ford wan reed bye monty sneateery and” competed "to pay civiende intend fraying sat faa at Increasing waren no We: cred "Some Inte’ however, came the announcement ofa #6 fhm the avenge oth ding mimo tockhiders by. Went and stay wsieaan acale of Par and Bate ord ‘No Fooner_ was. the oreanitation Inher "complete omsrsom tan be teran tor artinee for san at inal ietsiton ot rote with tha thowean of worketsna the resut ir the New “Year annmmee ment of an $8000.00 mon an th neh im share inthe. bromerey of ie infty FISK “I OPRYS #200000 DRIVE New York, N.Y. Jan, 1.—Pisk University vot Nushvitie, "enn, the Tarceat privately” endowed iti tion of Negroes "in “America will be enriched by $2,000,000 If Ube drive In Tis interest warted “here reaches “x fecenstl conel tion, ‘Ath tangust ziven at the Hotel Astor ‘ast night, Cov. A. H. Roberts of Tennessee, Abraham Flexner, of the General ‘Education Board ‘and Chanoeitor J. H. Kirkland of Vander bilt" University, all talked. ns up. part at the drive. the oblect of which Ie to make possible a broadening of the veork of the university. ‘Governor Hoberts declared that the education of Negroes for” leadership among. their own people. was the Ereatest need of the day. Negroes, he sald, are naturally celisiows and. pa- trotic and ean be made into the most valuable. citivens if given an oppor tunity "to find” proper” leaderhip cates tematheis® cabo ehe’| eeames iterennanate crown Sisce"Bicd haa served an ele ot adnan ot the tie ane Soca ane ve eects iiiet, Kore, wh tt) yore eh as ine "sanction of bean” te Pounds Hel Ghote “ster in Ee tons epeatoates Mees serie irermaoct he, Be biel Araoune ut" Verdun "stfonee in the fe fits inthe faut secu, ese ‘Sout the ware Sate ie ae Wa Groat JONINSONS Carr. ovod ftom Mit Central to 382 Soot ‘ene, Short ona’ in cree this coi "ake, “Pots "secon ‘ROMER JONSON, Prop. Test WHO INVENTED WORKE Adams Express & Transfer Co, We do all Kinds of Hauling, Pace tne, Shipping and Storing. Household onde « Specialty, Skilled and com potent workmen enplayed Oe 8825 Ross Aves 6 We HL 168 Rel Phone M. 280 Auto M, 249% Dallas Furniture Company 1005 Him Steet Is te: phe fe, etberei gad wiven, Our” pees tre tn, Sees Sal oir toes teria tea bout frnang. gest cas pce fr Setond Hand Faratore ASH on CxEDIF po ee eae oe Se ae wong, otk and elegy A tial el Skpaut ertprecent us ta Grery a rode Oe =e arses eens "Money oust Seinen rich tase ee is Go Over The Top of your head every day with PALMER'S (MLUeie053] DRESSING and knock out the enemy (Dandruff) A finely perfumed Pomade for coarse, stubborn hair. ‘Only 25 cents for large package at all drug stores, or sent by mail upon receipt of price. ‘The Genuine made only by The Morgan Drug Company 1512 Atlantic Ave. - - Brooklyn, N. Y. Makers of these Two: Peco Sa Pepe, EGE L W. W. AND THE NEGRO ‘Thin to oe was en6 Of the many plans ‘of the TW, W. to eallat Neste i ‘trace war in furtherance of the ne farious achomen of that objectionati ‘reanleation, has How been rove be Sond ail douthit the contents oc ular fecentlygelaed ra its headquarters in Doutian Att ona, by United Sates clas is iin alteged that one ot i alleged iat one o¢ tho pao ota that bas come into {he possession ff the authorten was idee onorea "people, tetting a ons it fot wronge wlfered for the. whiten find" writing” them 10" Jin the 1. We ona plan of easly ih tte members Ande this wat ot snows aaa eicul. i i ald, was "found supplementing i ‘with an" annoumeenient sires in fo many "words to. "Distributors. of Be We titeratre™ ih al ixtra activity in reaching the Nesro fu desined. "We donot arty want Hh raat, Want to" help ate tp unreat and senera Aisorder. "the Negro. is rapids" ne fig’ to a high ‘oclat standing. We Seed to break thls up. Ife can de fociate him trom bis present tenden- ies to what they call ceo itven Ship ‘tnd ket ental wn on him We'ean drop im oUt of the “Assoc Mon later” ‘All ot which will 0 t0 show to wat feneth these peo” “were prea furing it indeed they” ate" not St Hepine to go) to use the Colored ma Against the alters Individual inter ft forthe sole purpose raplne feciety and doing any and cverpthing Wich’ ta prefudlelal 1 the well bee Tne of decent eltizena and the nahi ity of the country. "There ia no reason why it should be take for granted bythe 1. We W orzanlention that the Nosro ti in the Nast desieoun ef uasoclaias. with x0 oblctionne a game i halu tr that our people are on” record an holding the Red Workers. ton ‘come temptoun an entiation to ever re the matter of jlnins therm & thousht Yet thls fact seem. to have cone hated nodhing. foward conning the Independent Workers, of The ‘World an tothe adaoitenossiiiy of collating any help. whatever (soi tn in the matter of endeavoring to. ace comtlish what amownts to nothing hit 'so" soany. empty ren And thereon be some way whieh this bit of vial Information shoud we conveyed to these. people. It woutd hel to" Keep. them’ "from. cryin to Impileate the Negro. fn ther” trouble makin transactions and Teave the inter alone. to_properiY. attend to bis own. business af whieh he, ha Tiere than ‘enouith Ao devote bis tate anf toushis (a ‘What the” Negro would really” be more that wiline. (0 help ini to effectively” rouup the TW. Ws with all’ their Ideas and dispose ot them "as they should be. And It tent” seem. ikely that the "Reda Mill" ever" have the opportunity at carrying out thelt pet scheme ot “reaching the Negro” and. “breaking uw his rapid Hee to. ish “roca mtnnne, "Netter: do” we thik thin’ thelr power: to "set" as they tre want ( apial "down en him Rene tia reasonable to. muegest that enpita. i for ehowid bey mora tn sym "with the exinanee’ of the ‘Colored! wn thaa be ie wiling to tlerate the" Bk Ws. "Thee te nothing in the Negyo’ wich ean he ot any ersice these people and RED CROSS OFFICERS DECORAT: Pot wane Sty Nise Detar Recall, Ja tty ies have Setiacrta he Riag herniated test IBoshere' ott aterieen nk Ge Elsen hy Netra Thera Seca uta ra Pe tala Caste gare ht ihe bes Been waders oficer of the a ‘ADA’S HAIR GROWER f, THE STAR| HAIR ERCWER § WonpERFCL main DRESSER AND One thousand agents ‘wanted "Good money made. We want agente In every” cy and wile age to sell THE STAR HAIR’ GROWER. This {ea wonderful prepa: ation, "Can be aed with’ oor without Mralshtening irons. Sella tor 250 per box —ane’ 350 “box will prove: itn value. Any Berson that will use & Hie" box. will be ‘cone ¥inced. No mater what ae fated "to grow yor hale jue “sive Tite Sa Want GROWER & trol ant hen sconvineed. Sent 250 for full size box, I you with tobe ‘Agent sed" 41.00. ant Wwe wil send Sou a full supply Ghat Jou" can Benin work with “at nee; alto " agent's terms. Send all mone Sy by) money order to vite “Stan HAIR GHOWER MANU: PACTURERS. ow 912, Greasbory, / ew Wake Up! Open Your Eyes! 1 will place In your possession a secret of power that will give you amie bmn aac Salt sel ees ae sans ae? wea mas 2 ee ee Gea ee ers costugeat de hcl he alk en Scns Sou re eapeet cat Aare ae seca cate ae reek a ak eee at cores so mp son cat timer ea a oe ee Barer avers ear fn nc ae SSS bee om erro oh ore 0 ee Sean Conan es we) eee ie, Soa) ake ac eg er oo aaa tratasatieny Mavecee ren.scs Sn Woe haeey ae Tank ua sees on Sates ty Te ee on i ‘in every way, Send all orders to— OLIVE OIL, SAGE AND SULPHUR* DEST FOR GROWING BEAUTIFUL Kai eeC Se ee fi SSeS O'S as Shon ari w merge cree DN xs Sona sae lmao re gon Seba ele ae ya eras ee \ FINE SKIN PREPARATIONS P| eae one Gey Shosare iesitinersmeeracae eS rae eo epee ee ? SSR rer irag Eanctarne.vemne tame WG) | SS SaSetios igi BEA SCALP SPECIALIST iy | Sess UO Bee THE SUMMERSETT COMPANY MONTCLATR, 8. 3,0. 8. Ae Hy 8 \ | PAR pe A of YoY } } % Mibu Lona “popete Change: Mh, Fi CB Gonthier? q Hd Hike Guster puparatina toe done i lredi dy oy Ha a shan! f Tiade realy reg, | Mtl hacthite wie YaslS ahead Sows Ul Wie trvrmnte ely tn dager on Wg acl eg Lt ol Phe Me 4 Alou, then’ wh Try Fake Cece : 9 Usa tcl Upon hl ie Walle Cpscd> i q Cae fj / q it if [\eyye] NILE QUEEN | H Preperttions for Hate énd Skin F FREE! Dyk in ny sy mE! q KASHMIR CHEMICAL COMPANY ; fesse en ee to i) Sy TNT 4. W, Mdaron, 10 Ginn ata, To Lil de Dro Staten ryan 8i-——Dalg, Tene ‘in Panrmcy, 4 tm stale Fem Sewers Deut Sor, a8 Hn Duta, Ten Mine Dros Oo, 00 Mim SL —pule, Fem, Frank Me. Mtoe, 2617 Altes Bi;——Dula, Pome WF Travel 218 Bin So ——~—-pulea, Fema uta win, 201 Dynt 1, ————taeg, Tena ee eee Iie fees ae 405% N. Greenwood Belore using yas & inches eee Xe more_DANDRUVE, cae ae hres Malt t ee Foun on MME. JESSIE CARTER Selene Sealy Serle tareret ‘St Denver, Oty, sue ‘heererae acto fe Samp at Keto | ‘PAGE SEYEN ‘Tulsa, Okie, Some Towns In Texas Some Town FORNEY. FORNEY. Furney, Texas, Jan. 8. S-School school was largely attended at all churches Sunday. The school elected new officers and among the new ones Bro. C A. Smith was elected Sectus of the Sunday school and on the Sunday school raised $31.26 in just oldday Sunday school. Macy held his pulpit Sunday night and preached a gory earmon. Mrs. S. J. Parrish was re-elected Sunday the B. Y. P. U. for another year which means more programs in the union. Total raised $12,000. Mr. Mitchell was with his people Sunday. He has been all the week carrying on a holiday meeting, Little Rev. Herron was at his post Sunday and preached two strong sermons every pastor was at his post Sunday means more work done for Christ in 1920. Miss Charlotte Scott returned home last week she was very ill and was reported not much hope for her but we hope she will recover. James Harvard of Dallas, was in the city Saturday and Sunday, Mr. Myers, Sr. was out of the Saturday, Sunday and on his district work. Ragged wounds are painful and cause much annoyance. If not kept clean they foster and become runny. Wound cream is an antiseptic healing remedy for such cases. Apply it at night before going to bed and cover with a cotton cloth bandage. It heals in 7 days. Soda by Little Gen Drug Store. 1-10-41 SOUR LAKE Sour Lake, Texas, Jan. 8. -The Unity and o-operation of the officers and members of Mt. Rose Baptist Church, and one of the best Sunday schools in this part of the state. They were good service at Mt. Rose Church with the young minister in charge. They postponed the evening service for the B. Y. Lee, U. and there was good service at Mt. Rose Church with the ministers to charge again, total amount raised $12.00. Rev. C. L. Lee was on duty at Taytown Church and reports a good service. Miss N. Taylor last week for assistance to resume college duties during the holidays with relatives here. Mr. V. Brown resigned his position with the Waldman Rose Grain Co. to accept, a better position in Hull. Heartburn, indigestion or distress of the stomach is impatient relieved by the relief of digested food out of the body and restores some in the stomach and bowels. Sold by Little Gem Drug ROCKWALL Rockwall, Texas, Jan. 8.-Sunday school was on time at New 'aldonna Baptist church. Rev. F. R. Randle filled the bullet. mat. 12:30, mid-10:00 Miss Carril Carroll of Sulphur Springs, visited Louise Bratton has week. E. M. Young and wife spend week in Port Worth, Missouri. Margaret Nichols visited in Dunlain during the holidays. Lizie Day and her sister spend days in the city visiting her sister. Mrs. P. Roberts is home again after spending several days in Dallas. Mrs. Roberts is home again after spending several days in Dallas. Madam L. Bratton made a flying trip to Dallas. Joins that ache; muscles that are drawn or contracted should be treated BALLARDS AND MENT. In the spot where it is needed and relieve suffering. Sold by Little Gem Drug Store. 1-10-4 WEATHERFORD Weatherford, Texas, Jan. 8. --Mr. Wiley Bell, formerly of California is here spend time with California friends. Mrs. Vesta Tysta of California is here visiting relatives. Mrs. Sorrell of Almere Wells is here spending time with friends. Mrs. May Shaw of this city has been on the sick list, but is gradually improving. Mrs. Mary Crawford departed this week. Mrs. Crawford is clocking a brief illness. Mrs. Lena Rucker was called to the bedside of her daughter. The liver loses its activity at times and needs help. HERBINE is an effec- tive liver disease that fuses the bowels, strengthens digestion and restores strength, vigor and cheerful spirit. Sold by Little Gen Drug Store. 1-10-4 MARLIN Marlin, Texas, Jan. 8. — Everything is moving along smoothly and all of the churches and Sunday schools are doing good work. Rev G. W. Sullivan preached a noble sermon, Rev G. W. Brown of Jewett, Rev G. W. Brown of Tulip, Mr. and Mrs. Henderson Livingston have returned from an extended trip from Houston and many of the Roma Hager have returned to Fort Worth to join her husband, Mrs. Ente Polk at the home of her amt. K. G. Harker at the membership of the M. E. church under the leadership of Messara, M. A. Cocke, Jennie Childs the Ada Roma Hager, married their pastor with groceries to the amount of 800. Hoe, Mr. Fisher, L. Hanks of the up and Miss Buman Glace of Mesa, married at home with the Mr. Hanks is at home with his bride at 12 Pall street. Mrs. Bertha Johnson of Highbank is in the city. Dr. C. L. Chandler left for Dallas on business. Rev. E. S. Green of Kernes is in the city on vacation. McGill has returned from Mt. Merritt. Glace has moved into a new home. PURCELL Purcell, Okla, Jan. 8.—We had a successful box cup suit at the Bap- church lunch last Thursday night. Mrs. Bap- church lunch was the which was a cup and saucer. Mrs. Aap- Jefferson and mother spent Christmas with her brother Lee Balley and Mr. Jauper Arbuckle spent their Christmas at their home in Bonham. Mrs. Texas Mr. Henry Griffin. Mrs. Texas Mr. John Walker spent Christmas with their brother in Oklahoma City. Mrs. John Walker visited Mrs. Anna Jefferson. Mrs. Nettle Iwe the wife of Prank Ine is our city. Mr. Jack Stone spent several Christmas visits. Mrs. Jack Stone a flying trip to Oklahoma, Sunday. Mrs. Jack Stone a visiting Christian is in our city visiting relatives. Mrs. Anna Jefferson and Miss Jefferson and others made a trip to Oklahoma City, Monday morning at $ 0 o'clock. A good remedy for a bad cough is BALLAND'S HOREOUND SHRUP. It has the lime= and quieti- itization. Sold by Little Gem Drug Store. LUFKIN Luklin, Texas, Jan. 8—The work of Goodwill Baptist church and its auxiliary Sunday school was indeed man of the hour when it comes to Sunday school work so much so unquestionably that he made him succeed himself as the head of the school. A second gorm. Noble church services throughout the day, and the afternoon. At night we had a good representation from our sister church. Many participants displaying all marks and Christian religion, friend and neighbor in town have been present. We have emerged into a new year with new resolutions. The Goodwill pastor Bres. James Uteskler, clerk. REISEL Riesel, Texas, Jan. 8—A. livey Sunday school and a spiritual meeting was witnessed at the New Zion Church, where the full Sun well attended at, the Rising Sun M. E. church, Sunday. Their new pastor was at his post and preacher was at his home. The new member was held in the afternoon at the members seemed to be well pleased with new pastor. The bi-midday meeting at the New Woodman closed Saturday night with a great success. Mr. Clifton Thomas and family of Spring Hill was here. Mrs. Laura Carwell has returned from Port Worth. Mr. Lee Lansing and Mrs. Lansing trip to West Texas. Mr. Johnny Garrett spent a few days in Oakwood, Texas, on business, Mr. Dan Porter lost his 13 year old daughter, PARIS. Paris, Texas, Jan. 5. The public schools open Wednesday after a rainy day, and faces were present at the opening. Mr. and Mrs. S. Shelton have received the awards and spent the holidays. Dr. J. H Bell will serve Dr. F. D. Bassett from Nasheville, Tennessee. The Henry of Ida Bell, Ohio, was a visitor in Paris this week. The fixtures for the Domestic Air department of Gibbons high school were being installed this week. De N. R. B. Ben of Clarksville, ms. Weko. Dr. N. B. Roe of Clarksville was a visitor to the city. Mrs. Maggie Daily of Ardmore, Okla., visited her father and other relatives this week. Mrs. Dallis, visited, Mrs. and Mrs. W. B. Harris last week. The newspaper press which was purchased for the printing of the Occupied States Postal Weekly Advice' is being installed in the brick building recently purified in the museum of the investment Co. a neoorganization. Mrs. Lois Waters of Tyler and Miss Linda Waters of the guests of Miss Ophelia Ward, ins the holidays. Mrs. Waters gave a party at the Buffalo Theatre 'last Tuesday evening in honor of her Visiting friends' American Woodmen will have a rool on the second Thursday night in January when all new members are invited and instructed in secret work. Mrs. Juanita Roe, who has been attending school in Littleton, Rocky Mountain, Mrs. George Littlejohn came home from Wiley University, the Christ- BRENHAM. NEGROES ORGANIZE BANK. St. Louis, Jan. 8.—The Natural Bridge Bank of St. Louis has been incorporated with a capital stock of $100 million. George Elhart, Henry C. Niemeyer Louis Wolbrink. The Mecca Banking and Truss Co. has been built by Serco but business men with a capitalization of $200,000. Dr. Charles H. Phillips president and E. L. Harris, C. P. Turpin and J. H. Evans form the board. THE DALLAS EXPRESS. DALLAS. TEXAS. SATURDAY. JANUARY 10. 19 20. BONHAM. Bonham, Texas, Jan. 8. Mr. Lular Boureaubridge last week left the office in Sherman, last week visited her son Florence Barbay has returned from Fort Worth. The A. M. E. members and friends on last Monday night while their children visited relatives and his official board surprised him with a pound with all kinds of edible Mr. and Mrs. Calhoun of California visiting relatives Mr. Willie Stone was awarded at his residence last week in honor of his friends quite a crowded room. Master Pittman died Jan. 1. F. Memorial conducted by Rev. J. D. Johnson. P. E. A. G. Winn was in the city Monday. P. E. A. J. Swan and Rev. Melton left Tuesday for Ladonia to attend ministerial counsel. Services were good at all of the churches. Mr. Frank Hamilton left Monday for Fort Worth. Mr. Wilford Nicholas left last week for Fort Worth. TYLER Tyler, Texas, Jan. 8—After several days of pleasure and amusement, the faculty and student body returned to campus on Friday, Jan. 29, 1919, every one appeared refreshed and anxious to get down to hard study. The student-body continues to grow. The present enrolment of breads (students has passed the four hundred on) on Tuesday night occurred the weekly prayer service conducted by president Banks. He gave a very interesting lecture upon the subject. The coach of the foot ball team gave the members of the team a night from 7 to 10:30 marches and games furnished the amusements for the night. The Thursday and everyone enjoyed the holiday. On Thursday night occurred a slave pageant under the supervision of the Negro from the dark days of slavery through the days of reconstruction up to the present time. We were Mr. Cuny Dansey, Kilgore. Theodore Smith, Mineral Wells, Nellie B. Smith, and Harwell Hartwell, Ga.; G. M. Wilson, Van Hartwell, Ga.; G. M. Wilson, Van Hartwell, Ga.; F. Pinke, Fugger. Sunbath Springs: Alwain Featherston, Ft. Smith, Smith, Dallas Florida, Klomar, Klomar, M. Phillips, Shreveport, La. The members of the Y. M. and Y. W. day morning at 11:00. Sunday school was held at the usual hour. The Vesper service under the supervision of the Negro was quite a few musical talents were discovered. A. B. RICE, Reporter LAWTON. GAINESVILLE. Gainesville, Texas, Jan. 8. Services were well attended at all church Sunday. Rev. Benson died long illness. He is an ex-pastor of the C. M. church of this city. Purple Mountain is at the st. James C. M. E. church Monday afternoon. Rev. Harlie of Dallas is here attending the funeral of Rock, Arkansas, to visit his aunt, who is very ill. Moore has returned from Nashville, Teen, where he has been visiting his sons, Allen and Katherine. S. M. Brown is visiting her relatives in Wolf City, Texas. Mr. Dr. Struempfer entertains her friends and visiting friends from Sherman, Texas. Tuesday night at her residence. S. M. Brown returns from Sherman, Mrs. Ruth — Fears left for Oklahoma City, Friday after you may purchase the Dallas Express every Saturday from Herman or I. E. Blackburn or Bernard Holt. You may purchase the Dallas Express every Saturday from Herman or I. E. Blackburn or Bernard Holt. Mrs. Chestnut left for the Becker Washington sanitation at Pt Worth, where she will undergo an exam. STEPHENYILLE Public school re-opened Monday with a large enrollment. Mr. J. P. Oliver of Dublin, was a visitor in 1520 and is now living in 1520, let's try to make this the crowning year of our care. We are that of many that so that of us. FORT WORTH. Fort Worth, Jan. 8.—M. Zion Bapst church. School opened on 9:30 a.m. Lesson Peter Chappell and Reverend Beason and Jackson are asking for all the parents to send their child to Sunday school every Sunday. 11:00 a.m. clock service opened on 11:30 a.m. Lesson Beason and Jackson excellent lesson. At 3 p.m. four persons were baptised. Junior and Senior B. Y. P. U. opened at 5:00 p.m. Night service opened at 6:00 p.m. Night service opened at 8:00 p.m. Pastor Curry preached a glorious sermon. Since this is a new year, the school has prosperous year and more souls will come to Christ. Rev. C. C. Harper will meet and every one is cordially invited to come and hear him. Rev. M. C. Curry, pastor, Mattei L. HONEY GROVE OKMULGEE. Misa Daisy Anderson, who has been on several months died Sunday evening. Misa Roe Williams of Muskogee spect pleasant hours with her Sister, Marcia B. Williams of 1116 E. 2nd street, last week. Mrs. Alice Manuel of E. 2nd street, is indisposed. Church News. Services at 1st Baptist church were recessing. Dr. S. S. Ponses delivered a sermon. Rev. J. C. Williams, pastor of Olive Presbyterian church was called to speak. The Presbyterian Sunday school is taking on new life. The Presbyterian Sunday school is taking on new life. The Church This church is one of the leading churches of the city. Sunday was high day, being first quarter three Mrs. J. W. B. Thompson, church reporter. See that your church news gets to her. ATLANTA Atlanta, Texas, Jan. S., The Christian ladies of our city came together to celebrate the birth of Richardson to a shower there were many good things carried besides a nice sum of money. The ladies and wife left Sunday evening for their home in Detroit, Mich. after spending the day with the Williams John and wife last Tuesday for Dallas to spend a few days with Mrs. Johna mother. Mrs. Savannah hardened her teeth and was able to Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Lee Christmas. Mr. Elizabeth and Eugene Green came to the delight of home folks. Descon W. S. Hale was called Sunday morning. Mrs. Amie English, who was stricken with paralysis, and Andrewws is back home after an extended visit in Port Wroth. Bro. A. M. Mulreid of Queen City worshiped with the children, Browns, W. J. C. Curley entertained with a nice dinner Sunday. The ground is covered with snow, but it is delicately to see it especially the children. Mr. Richard Rains left for Stammeridge. HEROLIN POMADE HAIR DRESSING Grows Your Hair Long, Soft, Straight Lots of Hair—Fluffy—Soft —Brilliant—Straight— Pliant—full of life and beauty is yours if you ap- ply to your hair a little HEROLIN You Can Have Hair Like This Pomade Hair Dressing It also stops itching scalp, dandruff, removes ringworm, tetter and scalp disorders. Herolin Pomade Hair Dressing is truly most satisfying. A scientific wonder and so harmless that a baby can use it. Straightens out the kiniest hair that grows (no hot iron necessary), making it nice, long and velvety, of an elegant natural appearance so you can easily do it up in any style. 25c Sent by Mall or Drug Stores Agents wanted everywhere. Barbers' trade urgently solicited. Write for particulars. Send 25c in stamps or coin. Herolin Medicine Co. Atlanta Georgia with the madam. Rev. G. R. the proud pastor of Shiloh church was at his post, Sunday and asked the vernon. Ansonian. Alexander of Kildare was a welcome visitor in the Brigantine Home, Sunday. The wedding bells are ringing. Mr. Samuel Washings- are to be united in maternity Tuesday night. We wish them much joy. Miss A. B. Brignan returned from Mr. and Mrs. Sam L. James made a quick trip to Atlanta in their new car. Mr. Jesse James returned from (Clarksville, Wednesday, New Year's) day. Mr. Jesse L. Washington, when you want, your paper. CORSICANA. First Baptist Church Corsicana, Texas, Jan. 8, 1919. This church held a special meeting, now replacing to see the old year and the entering of the New Year, two additions to the school was well attended by Rev. Suv, Rev. L. Morgan, visitor, Rev. Bannan, "Bannan" view and short by the pastor of one aweening and do more in future than in the past. Collection $31. At morning services the church held a pressing Presentation and the house was set on hallowed fire and pressed Forcing the first Sunday as usual covenant meeting enjoyed by all, one addition. Collection of the day $33.05. We have launched a sixty day camp with work and faithful prayer, we Mrs. Leo Ashford and little Malcolm spent a lovely afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Creshaw, Stun- PINELAND. Pineland, Texas, Jan. 8.-Sunday school was good at all churches, Rev. D. S. Smith, Pastor C. M. E. church, Rev. D. S. Smith, Pastor C. M. E. church, service, all day. The Pudde party at Mrs. J. E. Beverly was Grand, Many Man's Christmas to spend at church with relatives and friends. Prof. J. M. Hurdy from Diboll and Rev. N. P. Johnson were visitors of Pineland Christmas week. Rev. N. P. Johnson was from Ressmore and Beaumont, also Deacon Craig and Craig and others visiting relatives. The Christmas Christmas evening was fine given by the Sunday school. The town, Rev. Hays, preached a short sermon on Christmas morning of the our old ministers. We highly honor his service. The C. M. E. Christmas day success was grand. DOEGLASS Douglass, Ariz., Jan. 8. —Services were well attended at all the churches in Madison, Iowa, and Milwaukee, where in the city last week visiting his son, Homer and mother, we met with Goodly and heartily we welcomed a group of friends. We are always glad to have men of such nobility among us, and we are grateful for the emancipation celebration, Jan. 1st, at the new brick school building a grand time is anticipated. Rev. J. W. H. McCormick is here with his family and is slowly on the mend after a very serious MART. Mart, Texas, Jan. 8. - Sunday was a real go-to-church day. The 1st Sabbath Services were good at all churches. We are hoping to have a Colored store soon. Mr. Bill Douris and his wife, Jennifer, open a first class barbershop. We were blessed to have with us Rev. Halley, our pastor, who deliver a service every Sunday with us in his God gift and hope for him success. Collection $16.54. CLARKSVILLE. Clarksville, Texas, Jan. 8, 1920. The several teachers of this city have returned to their respective schools. They are joyous enjoying a beautiful Christmas, Ser- vice was well attended at all churches. The M. E. church has a new pastor in person of Rev. Blues, who is a man for the job, and is putting things to the front. Zion has the Old reliable Rev. Hill, who has been TERRELL. Terrell, Texas, Jan. 8.—Sunday being the first Sunday in the New services were largely attended all day. A new schedule of service has been adopted by the Hope Baptist Church, which preaches at 11:45 at the night service preaching at 7:45. If you want to be benefited by the sermon come early. The family spent last week in Muskogee, Okla., with his father, M. E. Church had a sermon of entertainments in the basement all of last week. The trip across the conserve site of New Hope Thursday evening was enjoyed with much bliss. The trip to Hope Thursday was a doubleheader was played the enthusiasm was high. Each side was successful in winning one of the "balls" of the game. The doubleheader was a day Tuesday from a short visit to Houston and Crocken, Texas, his home, and a day Tuesday from Marshall, Texas, where she has been visiting her father, Mr. Jasper Flowers, the mother of Mrs. Jasper Flowers, a few days from Marshall, last week. Mrs. V. M. Pinkinson and children of Mrs. V. M. Pinkinson and flowers at Sulphur Sortie. Rev. J. O. Williams was here on Sunday and preached at the M. E. Church. Dr. R. L. Williams of Chicago, IL, was in the city last week, the guest left Monday evening for Chicago, the Sunshine special. He purposes to take the dental examination in the state of Wisconsin. He visits Lloffs, Mo., is in the city. He plans to give a high class movie picture show Monday evening at New Hope church, and evening at Bettlehurn church. TROUPE. Troupe, Texas, Jan. 8, 1919. We take this method, thankin- our friends and neighbors for kindness rendered during the illness of our brother, Sam Jackson, who wrote this book. My life's choice blessings be with each of you. FANNIE JACKSON, Wife. E JACKSON, Brother. DOSHIA WILSON, Sister. HENRY WILSON, Brother. OLLIE STEEL, Daughter. BEAULAH HALL, Daughter. JIM Brother. ELISA DANIELS, Daughter. JESSE DANIELS. FRANK HALL, JESSE JACKSON Louisville, Ky. Jan. 8. -Mrs. Lilouis E. Lynch was killed, and Private Earl Hager of the First Division probably was killed, between a Negro and soldiers, on a train ride Camp Taylor. After he had been carried by soldiers he was car for cursing in the presence of women passengers, a Negro drove a revolver and shot him. He was killed when the Negro jumped from the car and ran three miles to Louisville, closely pursued by a number of soliders. As the Negro ran, Mrs. Lilouis got between him and his pursuers and fell dead with a bullet through her Police arrested J. L. Hudson, on charge of killing and a Lynch. Hudson was killed and shot at the Negro as he passed. He does not believe, he said, that he shot the woman. The Negro ea- OUT OF TOWN CLASSIFIED Position Wanted!—Embalmer desires a position. Reference if required. P. O. Box 58, Bonham, Texas. 12-13-48. BONHAM Bomah—B袋袋 and Transfer see me. Safety-first. Wood sold and their part of the city at. D. DeJonette. See MRS. M. G. Bonnet. For Porla Hair Grower. 50c; Porla Pressing Oil, 50c; Porla Grower Tiger, 25c; Porla Grower Tiger, 25c. GREAT SECRETS. 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