Dallas Express
Saturday, November 13, 1920
Dallas, Texas
Page text (machine-generated)
KU KLUX KLAN PARADE THE STREETS TO FRIGHTEN NEGRO VOTERS
KLAN PARA
PARADE STREETS
FLORIDA BEFORE
MIDATE NEGRO VO-
TATE OFFICIALS IG-
PROTESTS SENT IN
DES.
SOMEBODY IS GOING TO GET AN
AUTOMOBILE FOR NOTHING,
YOU MIGHT IF YOU
TRIED.
KU KLUX KLA 500 MASKED MEN PARA OF JACKSONVILLE, FLO ELECTION TO INTIMIDAT TERS. CITY AND STATE NORE SCORES OF PROT BY LEADING NEGROES.
500 MASKED MEN PARADE STREETS OF JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA BEFORE ELECTION TO INTIMIDATE NEGRO VOTERS. CITY AND STATE OFFICIALS IGNORE SCORES OF PROTESTS SENT IN BY LEADING NEGROES.
"We were here yesterday. We are here forever."
They fearless and without repre-
sentation, they witnessed the parade. With the com-
petition population got itself in the house,
the parade went down downtown shops were in the basi-
dary. These kept close to their places of
occupation, and the casual incarceration was. There was no incarceration with the parade either by civilians or
Traffic Cars not Interferer. The downstream district were at their posts and made no attempt to keep the peace, but made no attempt to keep the peace.
Notice of the parade was carried on the street. Another story appeared in the newspaper. Herbalists would appear on the streets half-hour before the parade started. This story stated that members of the would participate and that other would attend. Another story mentioned Haitian Haitians. It mentioned Haitian Haitians who were going among the cities which were going among the cities strives. It also stated that it would be useless to attempt to ascertain who the klan one seems to know where the klan one admits membership in the klan.
Holds Up Traffic to Help Aged Negro Blind Man Across Street.
Ku Klux Klan Would Find Outlaws Who Cause Order to be Blamed For Arson. Holds Aged Across
Ku Klux Klan Would Find Holds Up Traffic to Help Outlaws Who Cause Order to Aged Negro Blind Man be Blamed For Arson Across Street.
---
Founded by W. E. King.
VOL. XXVIII. NO. 6.
Jacksonville, Fla. . Nov. 11. -Three Klan members struck through the streets of Jacksonville Saturday, the following day. The order, supposedly a warning to the police at the polls Tuesday, was masked klan members was站着 despite urgent requests to the local police department, city officials and also to State Police. People of Jacksonville got their klan lockout when two mounted and a clock when two mounted and a main streets warning motorists to the men carried a burgle which he had thrown. The other inside this announcement. We are a band of determined men and will brook no interference. The main body of the parade was a military pace more than twenty miles behind them, watched them from the curb. Some of the evening for the coming of the klan members who are in jail were marked in the recognized Klu Klu coat of many of them. It is said that a police force was observed, the only insurrection carried at intervals in the
Eight Persons Killed in Cuba Elections.
Hawaii, Nov. 11—11-Eight persons have been arrested during the elections according to provinces during the elections according to the followers of Gomes started a demonstration in Hawaii after a governmental board had temporarily closed its office about 10 a.m. on Friday. No officials return from today's meeting, but the electoral board at 2:38 p.m. clocked to
Liberal headquarters claimed that Jose Mimicucci, the leader of Havana Province by approximately 10,000, and was lead by a group of two in two of the other five provinces.
Refuses To Return Negro To Georgia Sheriff.
Refuses To Return Negro To Georgia Sheriff.
(A. N. P.
Milledgeville, Ga.
11—Governor
has refused to deliver or
state of Michigan of
Milledgeville
County because he
continued to
contribute
returned to Georgia
and Dr. Chwired
to a white farmer of
Wilkinson
County.
The Dallas Express
$ J GOODWIN LIBRARIAN
UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS
AUSTIN TEXAS
Teach Thrift in Norfolk Public Schools.
Norfolk, Va. Nov. 11—The school has been promoting safety fully promoting attack among the children of that city as to attract attention to the south. The simplicity of their methods has been effective.
The percentage of Colored an-
nies as a comparison of the amounts
they have drawn out over half their savings,
the Colored ones only a sixth of therese
savings to $2.500 excess at the end of the
year, have a wider range of ranges; but
have a wider range of interest and overnight from Colored to White anneans more home teaching of titho to re-
tribute the work by giving it for memorial
cation they have and child white
black, may come to the banks and
may be drawn out of the banks and
The banks believe that they are ther-
ese anneans present and future inter-
est.
Military Funerals
Given Heroes
(A. N. P).
Full military honors were accorded to the officers over the bodies of forty-eight men of three Colored Cavalry and finally over the graves of the four officers of the American Legion, American Red Cross, Canadian Women's Legion and detachments of three final tributes. There was an unusually large number of graves.
The Republican Party Is The Ship, All Else Is The Sea." —Fred Douglas.
THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1920.
MORE HAITIAN CONDITIONS REVEALED BY UNITED STATES MARINES
St. Louis Negro Wins Place Southern Traditions Shattered When G. O. P. Carries Negro Boy Wins Poultry Prize in N.Y. Contest. in Missouri Legislature.
Democratic Pre-election Propaganda Would Charge Harding With Being of Mixed Blood. Charge Refuted And Author Pun-
ONLY ONE OF OHIO'S NEGRO CANDIDATES IS SUCCESSFUL IN ELECTION.
Henry 0. Higgins of Cincinnati Wins Place in Legislature Five are Defeated.
HOLD SERVICE FOR DEPARTED
NEGRO SERVANT.
COLORED WOMEN IN ATLANTA NOT ALLOWED TO CAST BALLOT.
Claimed Georgia Election Laws Did Not Make Voting of Women Possible.
Atlanta, Ga. Nov. 11.-Efforts of Negro women to vote and the fact that about seventy-five of them did not vote in the 1968 Ward poll place were the outstanding features of election day in ATL. The Sixth ward polling place was the only one in the city where women were allowed to vote, a time, but quick action by Ordinary Thomas H. Jeffries in leasing a permissory ornament at the polling place, prevented further difficulty and no more women were allowed to vote. Dr. Peck was informed that he would be summarily removed if he did not carry out the terms of his cath. He was allowed to vote when his name was nicked by the election manager. Dr. Peck observe the terms of his cath. The clerk had placed a document at the cath by a Negro woman and when it was placed by a Negro woman and when these ballots will be thrown
Southern Traditions Shattered When G. O. P. Carries Tennessee.
New Y. prices of mitten by
(By A. P.)
tion Propaganda Would Cause Blood. Charge Refuted A
Could Charge Harding
tited And Author Pun-
onymous.
. oynmous.
---
---
Republican Vote Is Larger Than In Former Years, Due To Negro Votes.
Complete official returns of the general election in Indiana county gave the Republican party a one-third count over the combined Republican and Socialist parties in a dimly lit room. The figures, completed Saturday, Democratic electors, 14,931; Republican electors, 13,681; combined Republican electors, 14,612; combined Republican electors, 1,635; American party, 30; Socialist electors, 11.
Many Split Tickets.
By a comparison of returns, agile Democrats, Democratic nominees, for congress, received a total of 14,833 votes. Democratic nominees for the party electors, J. W. C. Burkeon, Republican nominees, received 14,833 votes. Democratic nominees for the two nominees were 2,833 less than the nominees for governor. Nefl polled 14,191 votes. Republican nominees C. Ault 1,477 McGregor 1,183.
All three constitutional amend-
ments passed on Wednesday were
Totals announced Saturday were
(BY A. P.)
New York is Tennessee swine into the swine republic American institutions of the Solid State, return from the Volunteer State show, and return to the national ranks, coupled with a similar upset of the electoral votes, as against the electoral votes, in the
No further actual upsets were reported in the race, and two owners in Florida, Louisiana and Texas, who were incumbents by bilingual Handling up. The Republican congressional candidate, the former vice president of the victory of Senator Nicholson, in Colonial County, was the only one in the upper house, securing 244 seats in the House, giving three contests in sixteen states.
PREACHER WITH STEAL
ING COTTON.
A N P.)
Santa, Ga. a prominent Rev. B. W. Wynn. a prominent Grape preacher, with standing cord of cotton from the seating and standing cord in a session. The evidence is said to be in the manuscript.
United States Senator Warren G. Harding, Republican nominee for president, sent a message from the "Middle West" to Lillian K. Flippenck, president of the National Institutes of Health, warns "Democratic programs promote the health of our nation." The daughter of the founder of the Negress and his father a multimillion-dollar broadcast in this section "captured broadcast in the southwest," following is from the Southwest: "Democrats have two women here and probably have two women here and probably have two women here, and providing is giving the information that Harding is part Negress, charting two purposes to have been made possible." Harding's purposes to have been made possible. Wooster University, Ohio, Harding and Charging that he is a Democrat,
New York, N. V. Nov. 11. Tw-12. The school is by school pupils by the High School Poetry Society of New York have been awarded to Committee Pupils of the DeWitt Clinton School, and Alma Rochford of the Main Training School, Brooklyn. The context was a boy's participation in a Pupil of centenary party participation. The boy's poem, entitled, "I Have a Rose in My Heart." An Alnaean dogger's famous war poem—foul. I have a benevolent with Life in days hope of life. I have a strength and strength of mind. I have a rendezvous with Life. I have a rendezvous with Life. It may be I shall great her soon. She shall sit at her best. She will be a vain. The poce of her downey breast. The poce of her downey breast. And deem all harsweet greed. It is the end of the long white way. Sure some would cry it better far than face the road the wind, the rain. She called the dead. The wet nor blow nor space I fear. Last Death shall greet and claim
me ere
I keep Life's rendezvous
From the Middle West were received
of the two following:
the Chairman should to say that State be flooded with dumplings from a farm in some places the school teachers are not familiar with and can discuss the country may be spared the diagram from a border state "Dumplons are distributing a statement of generality of Warren G. Brown's University, Wooton, Wooton of Wooton University, Wooton, and great-great-grandfather were black and the father is a matriot. WOI will respond regarding this matter, which is being visible to you to print on this matriot. The chairman should have a message from you (Continued on Page 5).
BY DAVID J DAVIES
Stories of Eyewitnesses.
Marines who have served in Haiti
married women who had been told to
tell what they learned while they
married but a short time in the twin
nation was inflicted with the stories
of the women others who had been through certain
burials at Sanctuary de la hoja,
During my time at Sanctuary de la hoja
countersued a marine, a former resident
of the island, who had been their
third child, and he had been
married to a woman.
Sues Jeweler to Recover Historic Trinket of President Taylor.
YOU'LL BE SORRY IF YOU DON'T
ENTER OUR GREAT PRIZE
CONTEST.
Charge Negro Candidates
Raised Color Question in
Campaign.
Quote Candidate Walsh.
The statement by Lattimore and Bullock
"Our opponents, soundly beaten on the front lines and back on the floor, have bolted into our laws for support. They forget that this is decided. We demand of the old few that Boston is the last place in the world to appeal. This appeal is almost too weak to win. We invite the attention of our opponents, our opposition, our own candidate for Governor John Kerry, and I will hold him accountable. Race prejudices and religious intolerance are ever to be defended, and the religious intolerance these horrible demons are encouraged by the people who think benefit by such a statement that American lift ought to be buried in the ground. The statement is accompanied by a statement that Lattimore and Bullock are the only man Hall of the Republican state committee, and by Chairman Hermel of the city committee.
TEXAS
TOWNS
Accept "California" Syrup of Flu
only—look for the name California or
the package, then you are sure your
child is living in the best and most
luxe, laxative or physic for the little
stomach, liver and bowels. Children
love its children with kindness. Put
directions for child's done on each notte-
ble. Give it without fear.
FREE Made to Measure SUIT
The wigs, show your friends, and make new hair to a new place. A new suit, made in your size, a new length, a new number of hair pegs. Put a new wig on your hairstyle. A new wig offers a new look for your shape, $100 to $300 for your size, $100 to $300 for your shape. No impersonation needed.
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Formal wear. No matter what you wear, or what you do, or what purpose, for the first time, every inking agent writes us a book of cloth samples, inks foundation, and prints your new impersonal picture. Everybody goes this way.
KHUCKERBOOKER TRAINING CO.
March 10, 1915
New York, N.Y.
are on the skid last. Public school is progressing nicely. Quite a number of visitors are here this week. For the Dallas Express see J. P. Price, Agent and Reporter, who is the first in the Western Mutual Fire Insurance Company of Texas, see H. L. Price, Agent, Agence, Tucson, Texas.
Do not fail to be out Friday night before the fourth to leave Prof. A. S. Jackson of Waco. There will be a church service on Friday the church lawn. So don't miss it. Mrs. Alice Long danked up to Waco and viewed the Cotton Palace, Mrs. A. Jackson, and Underraker J. J. Washington had charge of the remains.
Insure your property against fire and insurance Company of Texas, see C. L. Humber, Agent, Marlin, Texas-1-6-4-6
Athens, Nov. 11- 1SERVICE all of the churches were good. Pastor Pachne preached an inspiring sermon Sunday night. Mrs. J. H. Miller re-readed the sermon. Mrs. A. J. Simmons is here from Stanford. Mrs. Johnie Mace Patterson left this week for a visit to Athens where she is visiting the Cotton Palace. Mr. A. J. Simmons is here to Dallas returning Sunday night. Miss Carrie Mae Moore of Corsicana was here this week. Mr. Cedric Mane was here this week.
THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1920
and says that cotton is plentiful and he leaves Monday, Nov. 8, with twenty men to gather some of the cotton. At last Sunday was a bad day this Sunday was a hard day with all of the churches. Sunday School was well attended with Supt. Fulton slightly above E. Blackman. Covenant meeting at 11 Subject for discussion "Lay Up Treasures in the Church." E. Blackman, Gerrt Hardt, secretary. Owner much. To the readers of the Dallas Express: If you have anything to be published, please send it to the editor of E. Hardt at his post. Mr. Dud-Hill is one of the leading voters of Egypt. He will pay more. Mr. Zion and Sunday School was well attended at New Zion Plans were put on for a Thanksgiving dinner. E. Blackman and Arie Gonner and B. Ivey went to Roxton to attend the funeral of Mrs. Jane Jones. Little Elizabeth attended in Glory on Nov. 7. The funeral was conducted by Rev. Johnnie Lyon of Torrell and the pastor, H. B. Mrs. Annie Wyatt is making a success in her automobile visitor. Mr. Ed Crumbyn is very will be
A. Saults went to Dallas on business. There are several of small businesses in Dallas, some of our members from doing their duty. Mira. Maggie Saul and Nance B. Johnson were Paris visiting another fine girl. Grand mother Goree was here visiting Excelion College in 1833. He found both orders progressing in membership. Mrs. Lotus and Horace Paul are sick this week.
Mrs. Suzitt's mother, Mrs. Carter left for her home Friday. Secretary of the Minister's Relief Board, Mrs. Suzitt, was invited in Bethel church. The young ladies seem to be taking to it nice and certainly invite you each Monday to meet them and present. Mrs. Etta Alexander entertained the Eastern Stars last Friday and the Irish Stars last Holland and Mrs. Bryant of Fort Worth were in the city guest of their sister, Mrs. M. L. McMillan. Mrs. Suzitt, drinking the water and is much happier.
Tyler, Nov. 11. — Mrs. Lottie Prentice Holton has accepted a position in the University of Hawaii at Prince Hawaii lectures were enjoyed by all. St. John's night is enriched by all. St. John's night is enriched by all. Young has returned to her home in Washington, D. C. after spending many days in Tyler, Dallas, Washington. We were in last Saturday, Mr. Jim was formerly Mrs. Jim to be a cow on business. He has returned to his home in New York to join her husband in St. Louis soon where they will make their figure home, Mrs. Mary Love, home, Mrs. Mary Love, came home Saturday on a wood truck. German, Nov. 11. — Sunday was an unusual day at Bethlehem Church. Sunday School was well attended. The pastor praised the sermon many times after the sermon many times testified for Christ in an old time speaking
mon many testified for Christ in an old time speaking meeting. The Union met on time and a spindleid man spoke. The Union met on time and a spindleid people. The pastor preached another wonderful sermon at night from Gen. 13:13. Many more testified for Bethlehem is on the upward bench for her collection for the day $28.37. Rev. J. M. Codel, pastor; Bister man for her collection. Secretary. Our man is "Owens."
Egypt, Nov. 11.—Uncle Jeff Hill, one of our oldest and wealthiest sons of our oldest, and the leading voter of Egypt. Mr. Dud Hill is one of the leading voters of Egypt. He will pay some young lady to correspond with the Vickery was in Egypt Sunday. Vickery was in Egypt Sunday. Mr. Henry Hill and brother John Hill were in Johnson's sack town. Mr. E. Floyd is seriously ill, Mr. F. A. Johnson, and wife are visitable. Johnson's sack town, Mrs. Parra, was able to see after his horse again. Mrs. Annie Wiley is making a success. Joe Bradley and family visited Mr. Frank Anderson's family Sunday. Joe Bradley and family visited Mr. E. Floyd Sunday. Tom Carter is visiting in Grand Prairie. John Carter and wife and Mra. Choice visited Uncle E. Floyd last week. Garland, Nov. 11.—Services were well attended at Santa Chapel all week. Garland was a great success. Get next issue of the Express for reports of the town. Mr. F. A. Johnson was called to Garland, Saturday to her sick sister, Mrs. Burton, Mr. Robert Neal, and Mrs. Crawford to occupy her new home. Mr. Will Hamilton was in Saturday and got a paper, Mr. and Sam Samson.
It is believed that Mr. Geo. Beride will be assistant to F. A. Johnson in handling the Express in the Bible. The Bible discussion, the night of Nov. 4 conducted by Rev. W. B. Bond assisted by Rev. Bradley and Susan, assisted by success. Many were in attendance Miss L. A. Shaw was in Garland, Saturday. Miss Shaw sells all news published by Colored Press. We
The Influenza has again broken out here, and many are sick as a sick child. He is very sick, and baby is seriously ill at this writing. The toiling of the bell at Plain Law each afternoon, the death of one highly respected citizen of this place. He departed this life at 2:20 p.m. and was buried at age 79 years, his wife preceded him 2 years and 4 children, and great grand children to mourn his departure. The toiling of the bell at Mt. Moriah C. M. E. He was born at the residence of Rev. J. W. Handocke wife, Mr. Annie Hancock, Friday, Nov. 5th, families who have lost loved ones have our deepest tender care and we trust that each will speedily re-recover. The death has robbed them of, Mr. E. E. Fuller of Galveston was called the bedside of his sick babe
Wichita Falls is here visiting relatives.
OKMULGER
Okmilgee, Nov. 11—Rev. T. W. Kiddi, pastor of Shore Chapel A. Kiddi, pastor of last Monday to attend the last afternoon convented at Clearmore, Okla. He carried a round report, Judge D. J. Balacock, and Judge M. Dr. White to be praised for the service rendered in getting out people, last Thursday. In spite of the un-American practice judges in some of the voting precincts with a heavy Negro vote most of our registered voters cast. Judges in more men of Dr Jones's callout. The Dallas Express is on sale every week at the Owl and City Center, 515 E. 5th street.
Office Phone Req. Phone
Lamar 4082 Lamar 3200
Office Hours. 8 a. m. to 6:30 p. m.
Sunday by Appointment
DR. J. RENNELLE SIMS
Dental Surgeon
Fort Worth, Texas
FORT WORTH
Fort Worth, Texas, Nov. 11—All churches were well attended Sunday; the church was in the morning, and a beautiful day. The Barn Dance given by the congregation was the most enjoyable of the about 75 guests assembled at the beautiful Hermann Carr park and the guests were attired in Over-aisle, while the ladies looked their best in gowns and the guests will leave this week to visit Tulsa, Okla. Please phone or write the address of the Drug Store. We are pleased to note, Miss A. M. Norwood, who has been a patient for 15 years, will soon return to the city Miss Norwood, as we remember, in the popular office girl of Dr. W. S.
NATIONAL ALLIANCE OF POSITAL EMPLOYEES MEETS.
J. GENTRY HORACE. Bent.
ST. JAMES BAPTIST CHURCH
Fort Worth, World 11, 11-Rev. J. H. W. Johnson
Second Street Baptist Church, and
Mod. of the St. John land-mark Association, a man of visions,
Second Street Baptist Church of Fort Worth, James Second Baptist Church of Fort Worth, thank God for such parents that have raised such a son and for such a woman and for such a man that has such a vision. On the 8th day of Feb. 1974, we met this church. At that time we did not own a foot of land and only 104 members, and he with a vision, was a man of faith. (1) Spiritually, (2) Morally, (3) Financially, (4) Materially, and he set up a $25,000 bank in numbers, and own and control a block of land, valued at $25,000, parsonage valued at $800, a store with $2,528 in numbers, and own and control a $40,000, a store house and two wells, Senior and Junior and well up-to-date Sunday School and in Y. M. Church in the United States. All this we have accomplished in nine years, we meet all calls of the denomination.
Who are the makers of our Dean O'Connor hard to handle her stand and hard to do the first thing first. We pulled off a rally beginning the First Sunday in Sept. and ending the Third Sunday in Oct. which pays our church $4,400, which pays our church our debt from A to Z. and we love. We also thank every member who helped us the best they could in the rally. Our deacons club lends us the best love of our workers, our best love and wish for them God's best blessing. Our deacons, about seven in number, are our best friends. Our b. Y. P. U. more than $335, Junior Choir over $112 Smart One. Two and Three over $200, volunteers. over $160, Starlight Band. This is not monies in round shape, but our ought to have been there Sunday night, October 17, 1920, to see the money dying and falling on the deacons and a number one church clerk. You are welcome at any time to come. Every member should honor this.
Simple, though beautiful and impressive was the home wedding of Miss Jessie T. Morgan and Prof. J. W. Rice, Wednesday and the morning's brother, Winston Street Plumly. Promply on the hour (8 a clock) the bride cause on in the morning the bride created on nine crepe de chine carpeting on her arm a gorgeous bouquet of tiny white crystallineum, Rev. W. Rice. The spacious home was decorated throughout with roses and crystallineum. Informal reception was held after the ceremony and about twenty guests extended congratulations to the guests. Many valuable and serviceable gifts were received. An ice course was served. The spacious home is the accomplished sister of Mr. W. B. W. Morgan, a graduate of Samuel Houston and Prairie High School, and public schools at Hillsboro. Prof. Rice is the brilliant son of Mrs. C. R. Rice and the late Mrs. C. W. Rice, and public schools of this city and the editor of the Dallas Express. Atlanta University is his Alma Mater. Mrs. Rice were reared in Dallas and are very prominent young people in the social world, are donoville at 1966 Hall street.
church, in that we are trying to do our full duty. We are learning to give our hearts to the God that we might be suffering. We are learning as much as it is in Heaven. we are out of debt now, and yet we did not forget our duty to the causes. Our church is now a place where we are having her Sunday afternoon meetings. We are out of debt now and our duty is helping the world for Jesus to Evancline the lost, housing the homeless, healing the suffering, teaching the young, training the poor, helping the city visit us. You are welcome—corner of Harding and Harding.
ALLEN CHAPEL A. M. E. CHURCH
Rev. R. S. Jenkins, D. D. Pastru,
The Sunday school service and
the Alen League meeting were well
received. The formal, formal
fear was commendedly great.
Three persons joined the church,
services and administered the sacrament to a large number of commissaries, assisted by Rev. J. W.
Brown, the pastor of the services
trustees with a new record. The
Honorable R. S. Loving, Sr. Grand
Ambassador of Templar, and a worthy
member of long standing in Allen Chapel,
the Church of Templar, and the
nation of $25.00 received by Mr. Elvin
E. Guinn, president of the Railway
Mall Corks, with $12.50, and a num-
ber of $25.00 complimentary to the new
record. Mrs. Susan Garrett, a worthy
member of the Railway Mall Corks,
with $12.50 to the payment on the new reefin. Mrs. Garrett,
a worthy member of the railway
policy to Allen Chapel, is great her love for the church, and a good example for others to follow.
The class meeting was indeed great. Dr. D. S. Moten, B. D. Ph. D., and Dr. A. M. K. Conference and lett the A. M. K. Conference in Oklahoma. Come next Sunday and Dr. V. M. Townsend of Arkansas. He will speak at 11 a.m. in the room. We are requested to pay their "Dollar Money." Look at that beautiful metal Chapel, which is galvanized on Allen Chapel; it is a member to get free in the great farewell rally—$5.00 for ladies and $7.00 for the gentlemen. Let us all meet Tuesday night, November 16, the Harry T. Burkle club will give a great musical in Allen Chapel. Come be them; they will please you.
MT. CALVARY NOTES
CARD OF THANKS
Mineral Wells, Texas. Nov. 11. We make this method of thinking American, not Israeli. No. 128, and many friends of Mineral Wells for assistance and kind consoling words spoken during the illness of our father, father and brother, George Pollack, who departed this life Nov. 2. May God's closest blesses rest ucn you.
Signed
SUSIE POLLAR, Wife.
BEULAH RAMSEY, Daughter.
MARY STEPHENS, Sister.
11-13-17.
For Sale--Deep Red Horse, 5 years old, in good condition. No marks on cover. Phone H. 6357, M.C. W. WILLIAM 6350 Caddo Street, Dallas, Texas.
Miss RUTH H. COSSLEY,
Chief Secretary of the Supreme
Secretary, Miss Coxley attended
Prairie View State Normal and
Industrial College. She has had six
years experience as a teacher in
the public schools of Texas.
Miss JOSIE R. HARRIS,
General Bookkeeper Golden Chain
of the World. Miss Harris, is a
grandate from Dallas High School
also attended Langston University,
Langston, Oklahoma.
Miss MARY ABNER HENRY,
Individual Bookkeeper Golden
Chain of the World. Miss Henry,
is a graduate of East Texas Acade-
emy, Tyler, Texas.
Miss JIMMIE MAE M. BOLTON,
Individual Bookkeeper Golden
Chain of the World. Miss Bolton,
is a graduate of Wiley University,
Marshall, Texas.
Miss LEOLA V. ADAMS,
Secretary to the Supreme Auditor.
Miss Adame, is a grudate from
Hishop College, Marshall, Texas.
THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1920.
COLD WEATHER IS COMING!
Everybody Will Need a Nest Egg. The Best Nest Egg On Earth Is GOLDEN CHAIN OF THE WORLD
[Image of a man in a suit with a tie and pins on his lapel, set against a decorative oval frame with intricate patterns].
A. B.
J. W. JEFFREY.
Supreme Secretary, Golden Chain of the World. Thirty years a teacher.
Join today—Die today—Pay today—That's us! Nobody else.
T. E. TOLAN.
Founder, Organizer and Supreme Knight
Golden Chain of the World. That's us.
[Name not visible]
Mrs, E. E. WILLIAMS.
Supreme Empress, Golden Chain of the World. An accountant.
GOLDEN
We present on this page the Golden Chain of the World's office force. All of the office's pages are employed daily in your office, except M. N. H. Tolan. The reason of her appearance is fully ensured her appearance is fully enforced.
The Golden Chain of the World has a bevy of 10 lovely young women in the office who are without contradiction in their appearance young ladies in Texas. The most of them are school teachers. But many of them are also dealing as well as good salaries they have cast their lot with the Golden Chain has the finest offices in Texas; worth $5,000,000 and no incumbrances.
The Chain does not owe $1.00 to the members families, that is due.
After paying your fee you pay in cash and become financial. Die in 10 years and will be due about $232.00 to $500.00-$200.00 in your home by telegraph within 45 minutes after payment.
A-Class—6 months to 15 years.
B-Class—16 months to 52 years.
C-Class—53 to 90 years.
From the cradle to the grave-
That's us—Nobody else.
Knight
Mr.
[Portrait of a woman in a white dress with a high collar, set against a decorative oval frame with intricate patterns. The woman's hair is styled in a high bun, and she is looking directly at the camera. The background is plain and light-colored.]]
A man's wife should be his partner. The successful man is one that treats his wife as such, and to
T. E. TOLAN, Supreme Knight
J. W. JEFFREY, Supreme Secretary
Mrs. E. E. WILLIAMS, Supreme Empress
2549 ELM
ROOMS—208, 209
PHONES—Y 4518,
EN CHAIN OF THE WORLD
MAIN OF THE WORLD
[Picture of a man in a suit with a white shirt and a black tie].
2019 ELM
ROOBS—208, 208
PHONES—Y 4518
O. B. CLAIBORNE.
Supreme Treasurer and General Field Agent, Golden Chain of the World. A teach.
Mrs. N. H. TOLAN,
V. T. TUBBS,
V. T. TUBBS,
Supreme Auditor, Golden Chain of the World. An accountant of note.
have love, peace, and happiness in the family, a man must honor his wife and provide for her according to his earnings. Mrs. Tublin, was born, seated and finished school in Oswego, Kansas.
ORGANIZERS WANTED
V. T. T. TUBBS, Supreme Auditor
O. B. CLAIBORNE, Supreme Pres. and Field Agent
LM STREET, DALLAS, TEXAS.
208 1-2, 209 1-2, 210 1-2
18, Y 2302, Y 4807.
V. T. TUBBS, Supreme Auditor
O. B. CLAIBORNE, Supreme Pres. and Field Agt
STREET, DALLAS, TEXAS.
1-2, 209, 209 1-2, 210, 210 1-2
Y 2302, Y 4807.
PAGE THREE
Miss T. E. EUBANKS,
Chief Secretary to the Supreme
Knight. Miss Eubanks, is a student
of Bishop College, Marshall, Texas.
Miss CLESTINE HAWKINS,
Assistant Secretary to the Supreme
Knight. Miss Hawkins, is a graduate
from Dallas High School and Chicago
Business College, Chicago, Ill.
Miss JDMIE E. CROSS,
Secretary to the Supreme Treasurer
and Field Agent. Miss Cross is
a graduate of the Cavert High
School and a student of Prairie
View State Normal and Industrial
College.
Miss OTHRIE COZIER,
Secretary to the Supreme Empress.
Miss Cozier, is a graduate from Prairie View College, also a student of Tuskegee Institute and Wiley University.
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The Chain has 14 people working in its offices and 60 organizers on the road-That's us.
We have 6 rooms in the Pythian Temple, but as our business is increasing so fast we haven't enough application to the management of the Pythian Temple for the entire second floor of the Temple. We will get it as fast as Dr. Hamilton, Sunday, Dyson, White, Ward, also Mr. Mason, Wailchuck, Lawyer, Wells, Frank, Pranks and Pool, Willis and room, Grand Chancellor and Grand Keeper of Records and Seal of K. of F. William, that is us-Nobody else.
V
1941-10-27
MEMBER OF
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ASSOCIATION.
Published every Saturday morning in the year 1920 on the DALLAS NEIGHBOR CURRISHING COMPANY.
(incorporated) Dallas, Texas.
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THE DALLAS EXPRESS
has never hoisted the white feather, neither has it been disgraced by the yellow streak. It is not afflicted with the flannel mouth. It is a plain, every day, sensible, conservative newspaper, which trims no sail to catch the passing breeze; flies no doubt flag; it proclaims its independence 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 holy. W. E. KING.
SATURDAY, NOV. 18, 1920.
OPPORTUNITY.
Opportunity knocks at every man's door sooner or later. it wakes him and forces no entrance it only allows him to embrace leaves to return no more in exactly the same form, the opportunity too often. We embrace it too seldom. We sleep on our rights too often and when we find ourselves in circumstances and fail, to consider our own slothfulness. Learning is essential to success. It is important in even the most ordinary life and its value is inestimable. We all need it. Too much can be had and we as well ourselves of the opportunities for its acquisition. Now more opportunities for the gaining of an education that there are those who seem to desire to avail themselves of them. We should not continue to be so. The public school system offers a variety of aary branches for all classes of students. They are hardly well enough attended to warrant their continu-
The Knights of Columbus offer free night school courses in auto repair and small branchy branches. When the number of service men now in our town is compared with the number actually in the back of interest is highly noticeable.
There are too many ignorant and unutored ones among us. It would advancement would cause them to sacrifice advancement would cause them to sacrifice advancement would cause them to own their own improvements. There is no excuse now for the crass ignorance found among our students that an insecure girl and a needy student. It is no necessary that they be so. Opportunity for changing their unutured condition in everywhere open to them. They should be urged in every way to improve themselves—know, be, be, be the duty of every considerate person to urge them to embrace it. The duty of every considerate person to urge them to embrace it. They will prove highly beneficial.
Will soon be looking back to the good old days of high wages and widening that we had spent less and saved more.
Many like long bears voted. Many like long bears voted. We believe that brings change.
Men who succeed are too busy working to lament their lack of opportunity.
Home owning increases self-respect. Let's encourage it.
Insurance is by far more costly than education.
After all it doesn't pay to be "Coexsure."
LET US BLEND OUR EFFORTS TOWARD A LAW AGAINST LYCHING.
The campaign is over and a Republican administration out is assured. The victory was the greatest since the Civil War and well might it be so for America is sadly in need of constructive direction. We believe that it will be furnished by a Republican administration.
The campaign methods used by the Democratic machine, while rendered infiltratory by their signal failure to influence the great mass of voters, more than at any other time have shown the utter lack of conscience and value of ethical niceties which a campaign for the highest office in the nation ought to bring to the surface. Their methods were highly worthy of the repudiation which they received.
We as a group should be interested in those methods used in the Democratic campaign which strove to use racial hatred as a means of influencing voters and the way in which they were received by the voters as a class.
The utter repudiation of the "Social Equality" and "Negro Domination" as a means of influencing voters, many of them Southern by birth, gives a reasonable amount of proof that as a class, they are realizing that there may be other considerations more potent than the fear of Negro influence to be taken in consideration in their choice of chief executives. Or it may be that they are realizing that for many years they have been the dupes of conscienceless demagogues who bent them to their selfish wills by playing to a passion unworthy of them as true citizens of a democracy. Whatever the reason responsible for this utter disregard to racial hatred of campaign leaders, the fact that this disregard has been so efficiently expressed should be highly gratifying to us.
We have suffered much from the appeals to racial hatred made from time to time. Since almost immemorial they have been used with telling effect upon the SOLID SOUTH. But in this instance they failed miserably despite the fact that they were more vitriolic than ever. Never before in recent years has any campaign witnessed such scurrilous personalities as the one just closed in which even the presidential candidate was accused of having Negro blood in his veins and the "Social Equality" theory worn threadbare.
We glory in the defeat of such propaganda and look forward more confidently to a day when America shall be truly American throughout. We do not consider it more than reasonable to expect a change in the thinking quality of the national public mind to such a degree that all citizens of America shall be freed from the restraint imposed upon them by a prejudice unworthy of enlightened people.
We have such a condition will maintain. It will be gradual in its coming but it is sure. Its speed will be limited only by the soul quality of the leaders produced and the growth of the readiness with which the individuals who go to make up the public mind, give to all circumstances and conditions the proper valuation.
We as a group more than ever must realize that our effectiveness as a factor politically and economically must be increased by an increase of cooperative ability and a determination to make progress. While it probably does not yet appear so, the nomination of Negroes for public offices will in time to come have a decided tendency to give us a solidarity never before realized.
We can gain recognition only in proportion as our ability to do makes us valuable in the scheme of things. Kindiness, consideration and the spirit of humanity do not wholly govern this condition. We tend to become able to do in proportion as we concentrate our forces and combine our efforts, becoming a unit.
In this campaign we were valuable: we were a great Republican based.
Our crying now is a national law against lynching. We need anti-lynch laws even more than some other legislation. It is a national need. The fact that we do not have such a law is almost directly responsible that for the fact that our lives are in jeopardy and our possessions never safe. It is our due in the interest of a safer democracy.
It is a thing well worth bending our efforts toward and, if we are to judge of public opinion as expressed at the polls, its passive may be accomplished.
We know that the problems which face the new administration are many. We feel that they will demand and make necessary the absolute co-operation of all Americans if the reconstruction and adjustment of national affairs is to be satisfactorily done. But we must realize first of all that such cooperation cannot be effectively secured if any class of the citizenry is not protected in the giving of its efforts.
We do not feel that the spirit of the incoming administration will be found to be as hostile to efforts made at the lessening of our oppressions, as the Wilson regime has been. In observing the utterances of the candidates we have been impressed with their sincerity of purpose and determination to serve all America.
Particularly do we remember the speech of Senator Harding, made in Cleveland in which he declared:
"Now the world in anguish calls to America for a new contribution. It calls for that understanding among peoples and nations which shall draw all together into harmony and unity, which shall allay contentions and conflicts, which shall remove ignorance and prejudice. We must lead in making America a land where men and women place the welfare of America where their own selfish interests; where no class contentions can arise because men's minds understand other men's hearts and aspirations; where the strong serve all of us to the end that all of us may serve the weak. I want in years to come to dedicate myself to bringing all American men and women into a brotherhood of understanding, so that we may act together, free from destroying contentions; so that we can be a great fabric in which each individual is a vital thread. I want to bring about the greatest service that America can give to the world—the service of an ex-communist representative democracy undivided. I want to preserve and foster America." "That is my ambition. That is my opportunity for service to America as I conceive it. It is my faith that America, reaching for new understanding and new strength and new unity of purpose and of aspiration of all her people, shall not fall." We hope that such a condition may eventually maintain. A law against lynching will help to bring it to pass. Let us all bend our energies toward the passage of such a law. It is a racial and national necessity.
LESSONS FROM TEXAS' ELECTION RETURNS.
The Solid South has been broken but not by Texas. It is still Democratic and by such majority as to render untenable any supposition that it may soon go Republican. It is true however that a greater Republican vote was polled in this election than ever before. This is due in our opinion to two circumstances more than any others.
The first is that many Democrats found that they could no longer identify themselves with that party with justice to their convictions of the proper course necessary to the success of the party, and that doubts having for some time been ashamed of the partialities led to a fight and lacklessness of the leaders of their party, in this year found the courage necessary to break away and follow their better judgment.
The second is that the Negro voters, unable to reconcile themselves to the attitude of the Texas Republican Council formed an indictment, no less Republican, and voted for an independent state ticket, attributing results when the actual number of Negro voters in former years is taken in consideration.
While it is not presumable that the Republican voting results in Texas prove worthy of special consideration to National campaigners, the results should be observed carefully by local leaders to the end that Trump gain the knowledge of the actual possibilities of Texas and the need of a systematic education of the great mass of Negroes of voting age in Texas.
These leaders, who might have imagined that of the great mass of possible Negroes in Texas at least 15,000 would become qualified and vote the Black ticket, are possibly disjointed. If they are they should not be.
When Texas election conditions as they have maintained are considered, and the fact that heretofore there has been no incen-
THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TENAS SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1920.
THE MIRROR OF PUBLIC OPINION
THE NEGRO AND THE RESULT.
(By The Associated Negro Press.)
The results of the campaign just closed has come to us through a vale of tears. Much of the old-time enthusiasm of the Negro for Republican cause was shrouded in a mist of inexplainable uneasiness. There was no lack of loyalty for the ticket and the large Negro vote cast in all the sections of the country, wherever allowed, showed small disposition to a turn of ear to the call to rally around the Republican flag. But there was a lack of bairy spirit in the response, a sort of interest in the outcome of the election, and a lack of content that forbade a future break from the traditional political moorings of the Negro.
How far this break will go or how soon it will happen is not for discussion at this time. The instances of Negro standing for the United States Senate in Maryland and in Virginia, with slight variation, be cited as the beginnings of the break. But they caused so slight a ripple in the current of election events that not much importance can be attached to the part they have played in shaping the future political course of the country. It is true that relics of the "old guard" were in very active evidence around the general headquarters in New York and in Chicago. Yet this in no wise gives substantial inking of the ferment of discontent that has been ranking in the breasts of the rank and file since the passing of the momentous June Convention. The Frank O. Lowden shadow awake grave fears in the minds of many; the strength of "hily white" sentiment which nominate Senator Harding was unquestionably, contributory to the feeling of discontent that has since grown to the dimensions of out-spoken discontent.
Narrowed, however, to a close consideration of the questions at issue in this convention there lies a situation so small in compass that it almost defends detection among the most expensive objects at hand. A short, stocky brown-skin man sits at a small desk in the public department of the National headquarters in the Auditorium Hotel in the city of Chicago and dispensed favors with the bated breath of a man who place a thousand and dollar value on a one dollar ring. But he was all powerful and a throne of power. He was the president of the presence of the Negro in the council of the Republican Party. He played in the part of his master's力. At least this is the claim of Negro men and women who are reputed to be personages of high standing as Republicans.
This man is accused of divers things which if true, must of necessity place him in the unenviable position of one who has lent his money to the carrying out of a deliberated plan to reduce the Colored vote to a condition of political sermon. Ordinarily this would be beyond the ability of a man holding down an insignificant clerkship in the public department of the Negro. We must bear in mind that the for "the Colored-man-and-brother" in the council of the Republican Party. The charge may be or it may not be true, yet there is enough of outspoken disapproval rampant all about the country to give it the temper of at least reasonable probability.
It would be unfair, however, at this point not to say a word concerning the very credible part that was played by a considerable number of men and women in the conduct campaign work done among the Negro voters. Henry Lincoln Johnson, Robert R. Church, Charles A. Cottrell, Perry H. Woward, Mrs. Belen C. Fleming and Mrs. Victoria Clay Hale in charge of the Chicago headquarters. In the East, William H. Lewis, Mrs. Belen C. Fleming and Mrs. Victoria Clay Harris, Fred Moore and Mrs. Mary Church-Terrell carried on an intelligent campaign from New York headquarters.
"But what of the future?" is the question on the lips of many people black and white, who feel the need for the Negro being keenly alive to the duty which has come to him in the present social crisis of alarming unrest sweeping disquietude throughout the length *nora* breadth of our country. The Negro is the most vulnerable and insistence of its southern element to keep alive the "color problem," will it make extremely difficult for the Negro to pull away from his Republican traditions. "And yet he is confronted with the stern necessity of acquainting a 'tily' element in the Republican Party that he is determined, at all hazards and risk of immediate loss of social and economic profit to do the thing which he feels will make him, finally, a worthwhile Citizen," declared a Negro of prominence in a certain northern state. "Questions of rights and problems of duties now confront the Negro with increased importance. He must give jealous care to the maintenance of his rights, he must put serious thinking into the performance of his rights. Leadership will play a small and unimportant role in the operation of any schedule of schemes unless it springs, literally, out of the soul of the people. He must put serious thinking into the performance of his rights." asserts another member of the Race who is rated among the thoughtful thinkers of our group.
The Negro did an honest share of the work which resulted in the victory of Seminar Harding. His lators, however, are not ended, they have just begun. A survey of the situations facing the Negro and the country alike betray the necessity for exercising the highest expression of parity in the lives of the men that no haskewed step will be taken in the conduct of public matters and no blindness placed in the way of the common people.
SOLID SOUTH BROKEN FOREVER.
The Solid South has been "broken," though not by Oklahoma, which, of course, was not in reality a part of it, but by Tennessee. Tennessee has not only elected a Republican to be its Governor, but has given its electoral vote to Mr. Harding, by a majority which, will probably exceed 10,000. Thus an end which the Republicans have sought more or less persistently for half a century has at least been attained. It is not easy to make out the extinction significance of it, for it is evident that the Republican victory in Tenn. is due very largely to peculiar circumstances, circumstances of a kind which are apt to repeat themselves. The Harding candidacy was not only a success in Tenn., but a personal popularity far exceed that of any other Republican in Tenn. and perhaps that of any Democrat, and who no wife little of his popularity to the affectionate memory the people of Tennessee have of his dead brother, the lamented and immirable "Bob." One is pretty safe in saying that no other Republican could have been elected Governor of Tennessee and is saying, with even more confidence that no other Republican could have led Tennessee into supporting Mr. Harding's candidacy. The dispatches, in explaining the results, say that the Negro, and particularly the Negro women voted in surprisingly large numbers, and intimate that the white women made but little use of the ballot, which, if true, is another exceptional circumstance, in that the results of their recurrence is likely, in the next election, to overcome the reluctance of the white women of that State to discharge the duty of citizenship which he ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment put upon them.
However, in saying this, there is no intention to disparage the achievement of the Republicans in Tennessee, nor to imply that it is without significance as a portent. Even if Tennessee had not gone Republican, one must see in the gains that party made in several if not most of the Southern States an evidence that the South has become a political fighting ground. The indication that the ability of people been destroyed the action of Tennessee will of itself strengthen the tenuity which several of the Southern States have long been under to break away from the Democratic party. Whether the prospect of party competition in the Southern States, and particularly in the Southeast States, is to be viewed as an tive for the Negro's bestirring himself in a political way, the vote of the Black and Tan is far from disappointing. It should serve however to indicate to local political leaders the need to be prepared to fight in city elections, which must be given our general voting public if results potent in any degree are to be obtained. There are enough possible Negro voters in Texas to have surpassed even the grand total of Democratic votes as it now stands. But these voters will not register or begin to see the need of becoming qualified unless special effort is expended in their direction. The national campaign is over but local campaigns are staged each year. It would appear as a bit of wisdom if local leaders of our group, in their various cities, should begin even now to educate their small groups as to the necessity of qualifying and voting. It is possible that they may wield great influence in their local schools of participation in these campaigns will render them more easily welded into a powerful factor in state and national campaigns.
inviting one is a question which only the thoughtless will answer outright and positively. That the Democratic party is in need of the stimulus it would get from having to fight to retain its ascendance is not to be questioned, and it follows that the public service would be bettered as a consequence. But if this consideration urges one to contemplate with satisfaction, one must be restrained on reflecting that may be the consequence of putting the politicians under the need of bidding for the Negro vote. The solidity of the South is not the reason of political prejudice and bigotry to anything imagined in the Northern South. The considerations, whether they be sound ones or not, and those considerations will continue for a long time to operate powerfully against the efforts of the Republicans to establish their party in power in the South. —Morning (Dallas) Newsw.
A GREAT REBUKE.
At this writing it appears that it Harding is elected, and it appears no less certain that he is elected by an overwhelming majority. We say this with the fact in mind that Hardes seemed to be surely elected at this time in 1916. But the conditions are not the same. There has been at no time the sentiment for Cox that there was for Wilson in that year, and the returns from no state showed such extraordinary unanimity of opinion as is revealed in the present reports. With a tremendous Harding majority in New York and with majorities but little less impressed rolling up in Ohio it is difficult to see any possibility of the election of Cox. Has been conceded all along that Cox would care for all of these states to win, and with both of these gone against him and with all the other states more strongly Republican than ever, the case seems utterly hopeless for the Democratic
But upon the basic of the returns now in there is plainly to be seen strong and unmistakable evidences of that revulsion of feeling which has been felt by all whose business it is to keep the fingers on the public pulse. It is safe to say, we think, that the result of the voting yesterday was in but small part the development of the campaign. It is safe to say that the people, speaking collectively, had virtually decided to ago, even before the conventions were held, to nominate made, and that the number increased more than a year ago, and it was against Wilson and toward the Republican party. The campaign but served to strengthen that trend. The men chosen by the national conventions were but little known nationally at the time of their nomination. Both in a way a disappointment to their people. But Harding had, to begin with, the qualities that inspire confidence, and he has grown continuously in the public estimation since the day of his nomination. There was nothing spectacular, nothing showy, about him, but his work was substance and dignity, and his use of his utterance was sincere and sincerely. On the other hand the National Democratic Convention abandoned Wilson in all but perforatory words, and set up a candidate as free as possible from any association with the Wilson administration, and, unfortunately for the party, as free from these qualities of mind and heart that made Wilson great. Although Wilson and the Wilson administration had been condemned before the convention was held, there was much in that administration that might have been well defended, but Cox made little of the capital he had in the convention. Wilson had not been able to draw attention from that record by preferring courses of many kinds against the Republican organization. He gave little attention to the great economic problems that wehed upon the country, his speeches with works of personal abuse that turned dissatisfaction with Wilson into resentment against Cox, while his opponent, disdainting to reply, calmly gave his attention to the questions of the hour. Governor Cox, could not have turned the tide of public opinion in his direction, but he could, we believe, have averted the availance that seems to have fallen upon him by a more serious tone. Wilson had not been able to draw attention but they want him to fight fair. Cox was a fighter, but nearly all of his bows were below the belt. That sort of fighting is unpopular in politics as in the ring, and the great majorities joined up yesterday as Cox are in part due to the strong resentment against his tactice. —Goble Democrat
N. W. HAIRLEES TWO-MINUTE
TALK FOR BOYS AND GIRLS.
THE THREE LITTLE CABLES,
WORDS. THROUGHS. ACTIONS.
Form The Triple Links In The Gol
d'a Chain of Character.
Bv N W Harllee
The Import of Words.
Words are used to express our thoughts. Words are the parents of our actions. We are measured by the emotions we feel. We think with words that effect certain emotions in us, we are affected by them. We are affected by the murder or as hogs are affected by madder which turns their bones red. So words tincture, our habit, our environment, our mood. A bad word will occupy as much room in our minds as a good word. A vulgar word is a dangerous word. A vulgar word is in the very nature of the word to do this one thing. Vulgar words are used to express our thoughts, and they are to be measured and used at all times as though you were in the presence of the most
The Import of Thought.
The Import of Actions.
Our actions see in motion through our thoughts in motion, as words give rise to our thoughts so our thoughts give rise to our actions. Relate to me your thoughts of actions for tomorrow. Actions have their birth through thoughts which start and move starting point of our Motive by
which the court calls our actions into question.
Formation Of Character
All habits, whether in words, thoughts and actions are but elements in the formation of character, the way we interact with the box or girl. All training seeks this one object. Words fly thoughts, though rightly directed, conversation wisely engaged, honesty the true gateway to the real formation of character, the individual. The formation of little things into a larger thing in the Ocean cable, or the tiny wires, threaded like twisted into a ring, the tiny weed leans against the river. At the base of the Rockefeller, the tiny weed leans against the mountain for support thus onward one object, Character-formation.
FIVE NEGROES BURNED TO DEATH, ONE HANGED IN FIGHT OVER ELECTION.
Two White Men Killed and Several Wounded, in Florida, Blot.
(By A. N. P.)
Orlando, Fla., Nov. 11—Peg Nerges have been burned to death and armed with a firearm, the result of a fight which started at the polls at Oceane, near here, after a protest against a permit to a Negro to vote in the state that he had failed to pay his tax.
Two white men were shot and killed and several others, including a former police chief, were wounded in the fight which preceded the wounding.
Armed whites were patrolling the region and closing in on Negroes fond of the woods, the pursuit accompanied by intermittent firing.
More than twenty buildings in the Negro settlement were burned. Reports from the community of considerable amounts of ammunition occurred as the flames swept the buildings, numerous fire-arms were found in the later. One Negro woman was among those reported burned, it was said, but no one.
The battle was precipitated by the attempt of July Perry, a Negro, to privilege by election judgment the ground that he had not paid his poll tax. He returned later, armed with a firearm, taken from him and he was driven
After dark, according to reports from the scene Perry again approached the citizens at once formed a pose and citizens at once formed a number of other Negroes by a number of other Negroes. The citizens at once formed a pose and were fed the Negro settlers. The following, and witnesses said the Negroes opened fire from the buildings, and reinforced walls, but reinforcement arrived, and proceeded when the fire became the attackers centered on Perry's house, intent on his arrest. Two of the whites, Lois Borgard and Eimer were killed in the back yard of the house, their bodies being found inside the woman said seven or eight armed men, who were killed in the back yard of the house, which ultimately was set on fire, then dislodged, then the fames spread, which apparently was set on Perry apparently was captured and taken by a mob and laughed. It was taken from an automobile in which he being carried to the fall after having been carried to the fall after having been taken by a hospital. Details of his capture were
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RESOLUTIONS.
Carthage, Texas, Sent 29, 1827
Whereas’ the teachers are looked
pom as leaders amon” thelr people
alone elisious sad educational tines
‘and Whereas me ‘see the eed ol
cooporatien aleng the fsdusrial fines
ie 2. Resolved that the teachers
orznnize themciven im a cooperate
hesy of co-workers by the way of 2
County School Sesto some. fixed
date net aside by the Inatite In
vatious ‘cowreste nd
Whereas, we) have, received as
invitnion “trom the Shsiby. County
Teachers Insitute to become a mer
ber of the Division of the Distr
County, Meet, be. it
‘esolved hat, we aMliate wit
said rounty in ¢heir_ meet.
‘Be “i farther Mosolved, that we
the Insite. aiate with pore coher
county in thelr tavttate for “he
ensaln ear,
Teeotved thet we, the teachers. at
tend the Teachers” State Anciaton
whlch convenes at “How/on, Tex
Teciing Dey rch nal
iy la aad
12s fener Recaved atm
2 cout schoo! mormihly Pape
and cach echoot send in ‘news. t
thie paper mouthty.
‘Sizned
BEV. 58." MOORE
Sin noes
MJ. HARRIS
MISS IDA GREEN,
Mm BT. JONNSON
- MRS J, TL "PENDLETON
1-6-3
‘THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 138, 1920,
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Feil BE ce na
25,000 MORE POROQ AGENTS WANTED
‘Equipped with the Very Latest Apparatus for Teaching the
Poro System of Scalp and Hair Culture
nee Rapes all Branches of Beauty Pe eeuae eae
hin Ir he Pree
ei POROLCOLLEGE pane
©. 0. 0 of Knights of shep-
herd wants one thousand (1,000)
or more deputies to organie and
fet up local lodges in every
State of the U. 8. Deputies both
‘men and women are making one
‘wundred ($100.00) dollars t+
fone bundred and fitty ($160.00
follars) per month. Experience
‘ot necessary, we will teach you
tree,
‘Wo are represented in fifteen
(15) states, giving thousands of
men and women work to do in
each wate. We guarantee you
sendy employment and rerular
bay. For District Deputyablp to
fet up lodge anywhere in U. 8,
write Sir L. W. Davis, 8G. C.,
No, 1606 Michigan avenue, Kan-
‘mas City, Ma, Enclose 2 cent
stampa for speedy reply.
ae
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Agents Wanted
Southwest largest makers of tollet goods
Have Your Property Insured with
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1 tae neve Saale ie ete
Your property—agninst lost by Hall, Lightning, Storm and Fire. §
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We neces’ Soe aoe ee
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————————
Home Owning Increasing With Opening of Negro Additions in Dallas.
PAGE SIX
it will likely be a revolution to the readers of the Dallas Express to receive the new additions that for six and one half years past have been on the market for Colored People. Recently the Editorial Board of the Inspiration of the Ideal Development Company to inspect the newly opened IDEAL ADDITION to Dallas The years have so successfully handed over the new addition now handling this new addition. In April of 1914 the addition of 214 lots; this addition has been completely sold out. No. 2 Addition with 125 lots and No. 3 Addition with 125 lots and Next, arrive the Southland addition. The latest in the new Ideal addition consisting of 45 lots in Dallas for a residence addition. This cut up into a residence addition. This cut up into a residence addition. So as to enable anyone to buy a
owners of the addition have been the city's own owners for school purposes and there is a school district. The city also promises to have four or five other churches belong to the city. Mr. Amos Apperson owns a cottage, and will establish a first store well stocked and also a second. Mr. Biglin owns those who have bought lots in these new additions and have been rented by Dickson of Glimmer, Texan. Rev. J. Dickson of Glimmer, Texan. Rev. J. Dickson of Glimmer, Texan.
Harris County Shows Heavy Negro Vote
Official Totals.
7. A. Bintford and the ticket with 1600 black and 200 white and zand second with a close second with 1600. It is estimated 7160 Negro votes. Thus the black ticket is black straight black and ten republican ticket and 1600 a straight republican ticket. Nearly 4600 of the Negro votes.
Protect 11. a city boy at Preston
county 18 to the county sheriff and
the count to the county clerk and
the clerk to the county sheriff and
the sheriff and the party and, without
the party, as in others, the count
protects as in others the county
Amendment Carried.
The school amendment was carried
into law on January 26, and the
count is 14,107 for and 2106 against
the three amendments to have
the school over with far the greatest im-
pact. Returns from the 94 voting prescents
in the county give the following
proportion:
Electorate: Democratic, 14,435; republican, 7079; black and white, 4555
Democratic, 14,435; republican, 7079; black and white, 4555
Governor (official count): Neff, dem-
nial, 12.15; Calberson, republican
6921; Capera, black and tam, 6325
Gregorian, American, 2402
Lichtenstein, governor. Davidson
Hawkins, governor. Davidson
6070, black, blond, and white; 5112
Congressman. Owens, democrat.
Congressman. Owens, democrat.
Black, black, and white; 5110, Gibson, an-
derson.
County judge: Chester H. Bryan
Memorial, 8:58; Jones, Joseph
Memorial, 8:58; Jones, Joseph
County clerk: Townsend democrat
37,088; oedipus, republican
38,088; oedipus, republican
District attorney: Branch dem-
ocrate 37,088; Allen, black and
37,088; Allen, black and
37,088; Allen, black and
At the opening sale last week, quite a number of people already has number on the ground to put up his home; others have already had a number of town people writing and writing to the community. The entire addition will be sold out before the end of next month, rent, receipts in payment, real estate and services. States over 500,000 homes to take care of five or more cities. Cities over 100,000 homes to solve the housing situation. The City of Dallas showed that 1550 families had moved into their homes in the last three months. Our people are better than ever, and we are more confident about living in Dallas residence lots, saving money when the which is more expensive, and some off until we become a people of the city.
The Ideal Addition offers opportun-
ities to purchase the best price and on the very easter-
ly dates of the city, Dallas, one of the best known at-
torneys of the city, title to the Ideal Addition and save up to 50% of the price not covered by the grant. The firm also completes the insurance coverage favourably known in Dallas state and offers fact and straight dealing
MISS JANE HUNTER VISITS HAMP
TON.
Phillis Wheleyle Association of Cleveland a Victory for Negro Leaders and better girls Better Homes, Example of Interracial Cooperation.
Hampton, Va., Nov. 11. - Northern industrial centers are becoming better organized along social-service migrants. The movement of Negroes from the South to the North, the East, and the South, continues, in the industrial areas. What Cleveland is doing to help young Colored women and girls from small Southern rural communities, was recently presented to some of the leaders in the industry. Ms. Jane Hunter, founder and general manager of the Phillis Wheleyle Association, the active financial and moral support of Cleveland's white and black citizens, Ms. Hunter also association building is not adequate to meet the needs of Colored girls in Cleveland. The program probably includes eight or nine hundred girls a month. With proper services, included probably, some girls are educated, some are uneducated, some are poor, and are in good circumstances. Our children are working the working girl. We have never lost sight of the girls who have never
"In 1913 we had one worker, whom we paid $2 a month and gave him $10. Now we till now we have 13 secretaries. Our salaries averages $14,000 a year. Our employees cost $23,000 a year it was $23,000. We feel quite sure that we can secure money for our training. We have white people in the benefit of their training. If white people will give
WORLD ASSOCIATION ADOPTS
FRONT LINE SUNDAY
SLOGAN.
Henry A. Boyd Makes Big Hit Before Body-Touring Japan.
(Special from Tokyo, Japan)
Nashville, Teen, Nov. 11. News from New York about Henry A. Boyd, the accredited deli of the country to the Work's Sunday convention, that the eleventh annual sesquicentennial to come a close and that much work
THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1920
was done in the ten days session, which reflected great credit upon the modernized Sunday school methods. According to the program handed out by the special officer of the Rev. Boyd was to appear four times, thus giving the Negro Baptist of the Southern Baptist Association the officer who drew his pig and for a few minutes it appeared he would be an anvice place in the program of world's school school work. Rev. Boyd received at headquarters, had an opportunity to give out his recipe for front line Sunday school and how to appreciate the manner in which he put it and it was world-wide for a foundation by the World's Sunday School Conference, which was hit upon a front line school. FRAIRIE VIEW COLLEGE LOSES TWO INSTRUCTORS.
DOODSON SCHOOL
Says Color Acts
Dedison is calonol in the notice a college hall, "Chalmel is"
NEGRO SAVED FROM CFOWD BY
SHERIFF.
Arlington, Texas, Nov. 11—Quick and determined action on the part of Sharif Clark of Tarrant county saved the life of a man injured at the hands of a crowd in the town of Altobisco the town alaboose had Tuesday afternoon been arrested on suspicion of criminality, including a year-old boy in a mission Monday who had confessed to the crime while undergoing the "third decree" and surrounded the jail and debated the question of taking the man out and hanging. Sharif Clark after the crowd had refused to disperse suddenly drove an automobile through the mob, speeding away while officers fired and speeded away while the man is no longer the Port Worth jail and the grand jury is investigating the case with a view of returning in
Little Girl Attacked.
The near lynching came as the result of a brutal attack on Letha Shipper, 10-year-old daughter of Mr. Shipper, who was suspected residents living in the north-eastern edge of Arlington. The little girl was attacked Monday evening and was taken to the hospital and for 20 minutes the black bristle kept the child in some high weeds. She was taken to the railroad right-of-way. She was dragged into the weeds as she was returning from a nearby grocery and drug store. She threw off of her home when attack.
Pitt was first investigated Monday night a short time after the attack found at his home about three blocks from the scene of the crime and denied all connection with the affair, but he was found to have home but the house was watched and kept under surveillance until the attack came into custody. It was said that the Negro was taken into the woods by a number of men and officers where he was found. The fession and admitted attacking the girl. However, when he was taken before the girl she stated that he had been the victim of her. It was this statement that saved the Negro, as he would have no need to be identified the child identified him positively.
"If he is guilty you know he will be given the death penalty and he will do no more than take his life here The little girl has failed to identify the man being held and the descrip-tion of this man. It is a serious thing to take a man's life and I want you men to think twice before doing anything
Judge Makes Ples.
Judge Honey followed Sheriff Clark and spoke along the same line. The mob demurred to letting the black be removed. In the meantime the mob demanded a gun in a few minutes driving a big automobile with a number of deputies. Before the mob seemed to be unaware of the little calaboose had been unlocked and the Negro was busted into the automobile and Sheriff Clark was able to draw the little fight occurred at the calaboose door and the mob startled to follow him. The mob drew his pistol and fired into the ground. The mob panned just long enough to give the shifff a chance to move on to Fort Worth.
In making his hurried departure from the jail the sheriff ran down the street and broke into the badly hurt. In the meantime the anger of the mob was venerated on the street and the few minutes it appeared he would be roughly handed. Cooler counsel prevailed and the outwitted crowd slowed. There was talk to the effect that the sheriff had been home of the Negro but Sheriff Clark declared this was untrue and said there were no physical facts to contend with the attack on the little girl.
PRAIRIE VIEW COLLEGE LOSES
TWO INSTRUCTORS.
Prof. and Mrs. A. D. Ewle leave Prairie View and will accept Spring primes in Atlanta, Ga., and Augusta, Ga. at a very handome and flattering place to succeed at Prairie View by his brother, S. H. Ewell, who is a graduate of Prairie View. On Tuesday evening Prof. and Mrs. A. D. Ewle were entertained by the Principal, Dr. and Mrs. J. De-Decker, who was entertained after which they were entertained by Dr. and Mrs. AnneHueeDHSRID Dr. and Mrs. AnneHueeDHSRID a most select musical program at 7:30 p. m. the whole facade of the building, recorded assembled in the spacious chapel where a most select musical Women: Music—College Band; College Song—Audience; Music—Band; Women: Music—College Band; College Song—Audience; Music—Band; Women: Music—College Band; Solo—Miss V. C. Carrington; Introductory Remarks—Prof. W. P. Terrell; Introductory Remarks—Prof. B. Solo; Scotty Introductory Speech—Miss Luranda Calloway; Response—Prof. D. Ewle; Remarks—Prof. B. Solo.
After the program was rendered Prof. P. E. Hiede called to the room of Mechanical Department, who in glowing, term speaks of the wonderful preparedness of Prof. A. J. Ewell to the young men and women to be prepared as they know not when higher duties. Following this Prof. B. W. Scott was called to the restructuring of the career and success of Prof. Ewell and his higher duties. Following this Prof. Scott presented in the name of the Officers, Teachers and Instructors of the Mechanical Department a service. Next, the student body as a whole was represented by Miss J. Hilde, advising and student to be Faithful, and Mr. and Mrs. Ewell two lovely pieces of jewelry; a beautiful bar pin enamelled with advancing student to be Faithful, and Prof. Ewell responded with many thanks for himself and Mrs. Hilde, advising and student to be Faithful, and God in their various walks of life. This closing exercise for the life of Prof. Ewell, advising and student, possibly, for any former teacher's leaving Prof. Ewell and Mrs. Hilde, on Wednesday, train for Houston, Texas, from which they will depart for Atlanta.
Mr. A. D. Ewell's address will be Supt. Service Corporation, Alborn Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
WACO MAN KILLED IN TEMPLE
Met Death In a Fatal Tryst.
(By S. M. Romelle)
Temple, Texas. Nov. 11. Henry Moore, an employee of the Southern Oil Mill, and to have resided at $13 million, killed by George McNeese late Wednesday night in the later's home. The oil Mill, but on different shifts, Neeese on at night. Some time after 10 o'clock Wednesday night Neeese was on the service from the works and went home. According to a story told by an officer, when McNeese arrived at his home, lights were out and no one there. He soon heard the sound of a car and made some inquiries after that the hour of action had arrived, he kicked open the door, entered the house and made some inquiries after five fire shots, the first shot struck Moore under the gve, killing him. The Oil Mill, phoned City Marshall Fisher what had happened, and upon the arrival of the officer, gave him
MNees was arraigned before Justice Hassel Holi, secured courtroom bail. Bond was set to the amount of $1,000 which was speedily furnished and the man given his liberty. The judge and Jury will take action on the case.
Valdez, Ga., Nov. 11—Colored Valleans are taking extensive proactive steps to secure Florida-Gloria Fair to be opened shortly. Their efforts promise to secure the state's future.
DODSON WOULD STOP
SALE OF GALOMEL
Says Calcmel is Mercury and Acts Like Dynamite on Your Liver.
Dodson is making a hard fight against calomel in the South. Every druggist has to deal with it, and Dodson is calomel. They all have the same reason, Dodson's Liver Tone is taking its place. It is a bit of a lie, it, while Dodson's Liver Tone is perfectly safe and gives better results, but Dodson's Liver Tone is personally guaranteed by every druggist. It is a lie, and if it fails to give easy relief in every case of liver stingerness and constipation, you have only to ask
WANTED.
Agents everywhere. Make big
sales. Toilet Exquiles. Big demand;
easy to sell. Write at once.
2607 Prairie Ave, Chicago, IL.
WANTED AT ONCE.
RATES
Third-15th Annual Session of the Colored Teachers State Association, Houston, Texas, November 25th, 2016. Reduced rates on certificate plan on all lines entering Houston. For information concerning board and management of YAN, Chairman Local Committee, Box 527, A. E. HOLLAND, President.
IMPORTANT NOTICE.
Marmall, Texas, Nov. 11, 1920.
TO THE MISSION MORE,
GREETING THIS MAY COME,
THE PRESIDENT OF
TEXAS TO convention
that I, W. F. Bledsoe, by and
with the authority in me served, as President of the Praternal Congress of
Texas, on the 4th day of Dec. Sat.
take due notice and character
take due notice and character
convention the City of Marmall,
Texas, on the 4th day of Dec. Sat.
the industrial societies, industrial insurance
Standard Life, Mutual Aid,
and all others of character
and finally office and
govern themselves accordingly. Let's
make this the greatest session in
the history of the Congress.
Convention.
Done in my office this the 9th
Day of Nov. 1920.
Most cordially and Fraternally
Yours,
W. F. BLEDSEG,
President.
MRS. A. B. THOMAS.
See'y, Waco, Texas.
11-13-20
Our remedy has stood
the test of 46 years.
Most cordially and Fraternally
from 1875 to the present
time. Read what
he says. Send today for
our FREE Booklet on
EXAMS. (8) Milwaukee,
Wis.
MEN AND WOMEN WANTED
If you are alive and wide awake, you can earn from $10 to $15 a day. No house to house can meet you. A HIGH CLASS and STRAIGHT FORWARD business. For full information write—
Norris' Candy Factory
today, and be the FIRST in your locality.
Box 481.
Athens, Texas.
8-21-tf.
Our policy is a needle that will stick through
Death claims paid as soon as proofs are submitted. Over 120,000 policies in force. Over $698,754.00 paid to beneficiaries. 275 race men and women employed. Doing business in Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana and California.
B. J. GRIGSIA, Pres. W. M. NICKERSON, N. DEFENDER, Pres. W. NICKERSON, Texas. 419-1-2 Milam St., Houston, Texas.
TILLOTSON COLLEGE
TILLOTSON COLLEGE
TEXAS.
1921, a course in Mechanics and a competent instructor. For
AUSTIN, TEXAS.
Offers for the year 1920-1921, a course in Mechanics and Automobile Engineering under a competent instructor. For further particulars apply to—
F. W. FLETCHER. President.
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time-and eternity.
NOTICE!
To the Colored People of Texas;
Now is the time to buy you a home, and Cuney, Texas, is the place. I have 100 nice well located business and residence lots for sale in Cuney, Texas. I have the T. and N. O. railroad, ten miles west of Jacksonville; also 500 acres of good, rich farm land for sale near Cuney, Texas. I will provide the terms to suit the purchaser. If you want a home, phone me at Andy, or write me at Cuney, Texas.
WAVE OLA
Your money back without question
if WAVE OLA fails to grow the hair
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Sample box sent to anyone for
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22 1 W. Cal.
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SI0.00 a DAY.
10-23-4t
Insure your property against fire in the Western Mutual Fire Insurance Company of Texas. M. D. Shaw, Agent, Event Management. 11-6-41
SAVE YOUR KIDNEYS
Your kidneys are intricate receivers into which your blood is emptied. They separate the poison from your blood and labor tight and day to day to keep you well. They receive from heavy eating, change of temperature, checked perspiration, cold cuts, and the whole body from the warmth on either side of the spine, soreness of back, chilliness, pain in the abdomen and heart palpation are positive indications that your kidneys need timely attention, and the kidneys are more serious consequences may follow. When inflammation of the kidneys results in suppuration, a purpureous discharge, or dexserionization, or dexserionation Commonly known as BRIGHT'S
FOWLER'S 10 DROPS
TEXAS TOWNS
TEAGUE.
ing to make the 200 membership mark by Jan. 1st, 1922. Rev W. T. Marshall, Jr., of the W. S. W. Seyc, Mr. S. W. Booker, Asst. Seyc, Mrs. Kate Glover, W. T. Readers. Readers do not need to know for the payment, but I must send the money, else I can not get the papers. S. W. Booker, Agent and Re
Rice, Nov. 11. — Sunday School was good at Hopewell. Womens' day was good at Hopewell. Cemetery met and arranged for a church fair which will be announced later. Mrs. B. B. Cohen, E. church, Rev. J. B. D. High-tower was at his post. Rev. H. J. Rev. Harris of Bryant was with the people of Hopewell last Monday and Tuesday nights and preached early on Friday. Mrs. B. B. who had been visiting his wife's people were here en route to Baunville. Mrs. B. B. visiting her mother, Mrs. Kizniez left Saturday for Tyler to open her school Monday. Mr. Henry Giles of Chaffield who has undergone an operation died and was buried Sunday. Mr. Jim McKnight, the Taft, Oklahoma City, died in year with her son, Bea Arnade, daughter.
NEGRO WOMEN REFUSED
BALLOTS JN SAVANNAH
Savannah. Ga. Nov. 11—Negro women have registered voting places in Savannah today. Many Negro women have registered because effected, but the election is not entitled to vote because it is not entitled to vote because it requires registration six months which requires registration six months.
No white women presented themselves at the polls.
WIN.
Insure your property against fire in the Western Mutual, Fire Insurance Company of Texas, see A. Harper, Agent, Emils, Texas, 15-6-41.
KUR A LITTLE HER-THE-LINE.
Grow. It makes the scalp healthy; it lends hair and browns; glossy it gives life to the most stubborn hair and accentuates the face with grace and beauty.
Nothing in the world like it. The cream contains white hair, perfumed, especially, for ruffled people. Price 20 cents post solid.
MME, OLLIE M. WESTER
HAIR, SCORE, AND BEAUTY
SPECIALISTS
And Discovery of
POW-WOW PREPARATIONS
Pow-Wow Hair Grower
Heat the decaying hair roots,
stop hair growth, and dandruff,
to compound with Burdicane Herbs
and Roots to free from poisonous
drug and acids.
A man is all I ask. Send for free
sample of Pow-Wow Hair Grower.
ADVERTISING
MME, OLLIE M. WESTER
BOX 131, DAY Street,
Montgomery, AL
HER FITS STOPPED
M. Delia Martin, a resident of Wortworth, N.J. writes that she stopped her wife with a fire in the house because she was too drunk. In the house, she says she has not had a fit since she first did the fire and that she wants every minute to know about this wonderful incident and relative from these difficult attacks. She is adored name and address at once in R.P. Lewis, Leesburg, Va. and is excited to visit to a battle of the same kind if she goes to Mr. Martin. Free to any advertiser she wishes to.
**"7-TN"**
COURAGE BRAND TABLETLES
For Vim, Vigor and Vitality
Price $1.00 at any drug store or to any address on receipt of price.
Agents Wanted Everywhere
COURAGE TABLET CO.
Macon, Georgia
WATCH
P
Of Creoline Hair Preparation, the most wonderful hair grower in the world, will grow hair upon bald heads. Fine for men. Can be used with hair and not bothered with falling hair, dandruff, letter, eczema or any kind of hair trouble, you should try Creoline hair long, soft and glossy in few treatments. Makes most beautiful hair long, soft and glossy in the Creoline College, diploma given. Beginners complete $35.00 outfit or $20.00. Special offer of $15.00. Heat and heating stones, send 25 cents, stamps or coin for sample treat-ment. $15.00 single box $57 cents; general agent's outfit: six weeks full of Creoline hair $15.00; $1.50; 1 Face Cream $25 cents; Home Hair dressing course and salesen's instruction $5.00, all sent special offer, write quick (today).
All makes of talking machines, motors repaired. All work guar-anteed. Reproducers a specialty.
Phone Y 2665
100
Buy yo Today
THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1920.
Buy your Blue Buckles
Find out for yourself about Blue Buckles. Test the long-wearing denim cloth, the wide double-stitched seams. Try on a pair. Blue Buckle Overalls and Coats never bind or rip—are big, roomy and comfortable. Workmanship in every detail is bound to give your money's worth. All sizes—Men's, Youths, Children's. Ask your dealer today for Blue Buckles.
Biggest selling overall in the world
$200—GOLD PRIZE—$200
FOR A NAME
To the man or woman, boy or girl
*ho* selects the most suitable or
acceptable name for its extensive line
of Toilet Preparations the
Dept. 25.
2134 Central Ave.,
Cleveland, O.
GEORGE DOOLEY
Dallas, Texas
10-23-26t
A man is holding a chain.
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 only original and unrevised system that you can do perfect, up-to-date work on either race. This system is used and practiced by thousands of suitors.
Mine, DeCarroll, an old, experienced Hardware dresser and Beauty Technician, has many others this trade, will teach you this complete course by mail on one of our courses. Gary Guarreiro diploma awarded. Send a money order to THE IDEAL CO, Nov 70. Station G, New York City, NY. Send a check to the institutions and enrollments blank today.
Rheumatism
Mard H. Jackson, No. 1051, Durant Hldg.
Riverhead, N. W.
Je. Jackson is responsible. Allow statement true.
KIKKY
HAIR
BECOME LIKE PICTURE
Fluffy, Soft, Silky, Long
By Using Herolin
FOR LONG DIRT DRESSING. Not only are we
able to create a long dress for you, but we are
able to create a drug store for you.
ALL DRUG STORES IN 2-6
ACQUISITIONS ON WEEKS. Have your child
dress for heroin or drugs.
When dollars have been called upon to pay when the question is the scrap-heap and results entirely discard the problem of how an purchase for her toilette. For milady's beauty sist upon articles that
MADAM
Wonderful B
Vegetable Slice
Glenamine
Tetter Salve
Temple Grow
Vanishing C
Cleaning Cream
Cold Cream
Witch Hazel
Vegetable Oil
Completion
Superfine F
Compact Rose
Antiseptic D
EXPENSIVELY COMED
PRICED
THE MADAM
When dollars have decreased in buying power and the public is called upon to pay the additional costs of production, and when the question of quality of preparations is thrown to the scrap-heap and dependability of service and quality of results entirely discarded, Madam finds herself confronted with a problem of what, what with the same money may she purchase for her toilet.
For milady's beauty and saving her precious dollars, insist upon articles that bear this seal.
MADAM C. J. WALKER'S
Wonderful Hair Grower
Vegetable Shampoo
Glossine
Tetter Salve
Temple Grower
Vanishing Cream
Cleaning Cream
Cold Cream
Witch Hair Jelly
Vegetable Oil Hand Soap
Complexion and Toilet Soap
Superfine Face Powder, (white, rose-fles
Compact Rouge
Antiseptic Dental Cream
VELY COMPUNDED BUT CONSERV
MADAM C. J. WALKER MF
Wonderful Hair Grower
Vegetable Shampoo
Glossine
Tetter Salve
Temple Grower
Vanishing Cream
Cleaning Cream
Cold Cream
Witch Hazel Jelly
Vegetable Oil Hand Soap
Complexion and Toilet Soap
Superfine Face Powder, (white, rose-flesh, brown)
Compact Rouge
Antiseptic Dental Cream
EXPENSIVELY COMPOUNDED BUT CONSERVATIVELY
PRICED
THE MADAM C. J. WALKER MFG. CO.
640 North West Street.
GOLDEN TONIC,
"The Wonder"
I was sick for several years, spent hundreds of dollars, but failed to get relief. I am now well and would not do without GOLDEN TONIC for one thousand dollars. Will give name to any interested parties. Ask your druggist for GOLDEN TONIC if he hasn't it in stock order from—
DR. LINK MEDICINE CO.,
Manufacturers
305 South Ervay Street,
Dallas, Texas.
Price $1.00.
Buckles Why get mad that your loc
That the girl
When the girl
By using the
The Wolf bro
Will save you
For between it
Why get mad and fuss and swear,
Pull your locks and tear your hair;
When the locks will all come out,
By using the comb I’m talking about
The Wolf Bro. Comb you’ll find,
Will save your hair and tear it
For between the teeth it will be found,
Smash, curved and perfectly round.
No. 31 — Wood handle Brass Comb
Length 9 inches, round
between the teeth 75€
No. 32 — Wire handle Brass Comb
Length 9 inches, round
between the teeth 1.50€
and you will avoid the commonplace ' in dress. There is a real value in
your gift to the garment. GOOD TASTE linked with QUALITY is what you get at the
$1.00 COMB for 59c
This comb never sold for less than $1.00. It is made of solid brass with de-
colored hair. The extraordinary offer is made to acquaint you with the
extra quality and low price of our comb. Our comb for 59c is actual
price and thus cost to purchase. Daily business to take
59c is actual price and thus cost to purchase. Daily business to take
59c is actual price and thus cost to purchase. Money
remained for our anti-odority. Fill in in attached clip, and send combs
as payment.
FREE We are duly dressed in Colbert Winnery's hair and tail articles.
We are duly dressed in Colbert Winnery's hair and tail articles.
You can buy two combs at our store. We will send you
your comb. You can buy two combs at our store. We will send you
your comb. You can buy two combs at our store.
HUMANIA HAIR CO.
23 Dame Street
New York
DEPENDABILITY
I have 40, 80, 120 and 160 acre farms for sale near the oil fields.
Write for them. James Hoover,
for the team. Olmigle, Okla,
Okla. Phone 2026.
11-13-1t
NOTICE!
To the Negroes of Texas:
I have the have to be building a exclusive Negro at Cuney, Texas, ten miles west of Jacksonville on the T. and N. O.
We want you to buy a lot or a near Cuney, good churches, good schools, good water and a progressively invest your money, where you will furnish employment for your own sons and daughters.
ANDY REALITY COMPANY.
J. Z. Thomas, Vice-President, W. A. Halt Secretary; W. C. Price, Asst. Secretary; W. D. Thomas, Treasurer.
power and the public
costs of production, and
operations is thrown to
service and quality of
ourself confronted with
name money may she
precious dollars, in-
KER'S
rose-flesh, brown)
CONSERVATIVELY
ER MFG. CO.,
Indianapolis, Indiana
NME. LUELLA McDANIELS. SCIEN-
TIFIC METHOD OF SCALP MAS-
SAGE. A MODERN WONDER.
TO MEASURE
in dress. There is a real value in
STE linked with QUALITY is what
ARK TAILORS
women who are particular. Write or
Phone X 5638
Texas.
10-9-26
A. H.
PAGE SEVEN
[Picture of a woman with long hair and a white shirt].
State Street FREE Styles
Not an oem contract
under our
conditions. No extra cost
for fancy stylish boots, golf bag,
sneakers, hats, shoes, etc.
Before you buy a unit or purchase
one of our free samples, call
HEM DEAL
That Will Open Your Eyes
Amount of your tailoring business
with us. We work every man in man-
hattan. We can tailor suits, dresses,
shirts, skirts, pants, suits, or
what you write in letter or phone.
MKMICKERBOCKER TAILORING CO.
Dept. 1019 Chicago, IL. PHILLIP HUCKS
READ! THINK! LOOSEN! "This Will Get it."
THE VELVET BROWN COMPANY
wants a few more live agents who
for some quick money.
We have agents who are make
ever, we want a few more, "As
give some agent, a trip to Chic
thing after you leave the South
"Windy City" all free.
We are planning an agents'
one who handles
wants a few more live agents who are willing to do side hunting for some quick money.
We have agents who are making money for themselves, however, we want a few more. "As an inundecent, we are going to give some agent, a trip to Chicago, pullman, ding car and everything after you leave the South and a keep at the sight in the "Windy"."
We are planning an agents' contest, you can't loose for anyone who handles
Velvet Brown Preparations
will tell you that they are great
them and our commission is libr
THE FACE CREAM is a rea
a knockout and a joy-maker to ar
THE HAIR PREPARATION
the old dome to action and amb
you want seems to awake and blo
will tell you that they are great sellers. People actually cry for them and our commissions is liberal.
THE FACE CREAM is a real "whang." A beauty producer, a knockout and a joy-maker to any one who uses it.
THE HAIR PREPARATIONS have the kick that stimulates the old dome to action and ambition, and the kind of hair that you want seems to awake and blossom like a rose.
VELVET BROWN FACE CRE AM,
daintily perfumed $1.10
HAIR GROWER .52
TENUE GROWER .52
PRESSING OIL .36
Dr. Frank J. Hawkins, M. D., D. D. S.
Suite 102 Pythian Temple, Dallas, Texas
Questions: Will this ad get you?
Answer: Will wont me!
M., Isaiah Chappelle, 3130 So. Dearborn St. is still confined to bed. She is a member of the N. Q. J. College, 127. U. K. D. of A. Chas. T. Jackson of 4323 So. Wahain Ave. is much improved.
FRIEND OF ELECTION REPUDI-
ATES ANTI-NEGRO CAMPAIGNING
Chicago, Nov. 31—"Negro Domination" and equally earned recognition have been the recent general election, the recent general election, in all of the states in the North where numbers have been increased by the recent migration. The plan of operation has been out, and thousands of dollars were expanded in the efforts to prove its validity. The same of daring was reached in Harding has strained of Negro blood Harding has strained of Negro blood Press was aware months ago that the state had a degraded appeal to prejudice. In all localities throughout the country information from a number of southwestern states has made their election laws in such a way that Negro Domination One member of Congress from Alabama is known to be more forward looking than a great number of other states made the following comment: "We will permit all the people to vote for officers in the long run. We will know political denomination has been used to determine the race. There is no more danger in this situation, and in my opinion, not as
PAGE EIGHT
PETER BROWN
CHICAGO.
ASPIRIN
Name "Bayer" on Genuine
BAYER
BAYER
"Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" is genuine
Adenium by millions and pres-
scribed by physicians. We are
years. Accept only an unbroken "Bayer
by physician. The tablets contain pre-
scriptions to relieve certain condi-
tions. Toothache. Kearache. Neuralgia. Rheumatism. Cold
and fever. Tuevel. Infections. Bells coat. few scabs. Drugs also soi
larger "Bayer packages." Aspirin is
mono-encodicder of Salluricillin.
THE EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER
#
Hair is Dry and Witry try EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER.
If you are bothered with Failing Hair, Dandruff, Iching Scalp, or itching skin, try a jar of EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER. The remedy, contains medical properties that go to the skin, helping nature do its work. Leaves the hair soft an silk. Perfumed with a balm of a thousand colors, Heavy and Beautiful Black Eyebrows, also restores Gray Hair to its Color. Colored hair used in Hot Hair Strikesmen. Price Sent by mail, mq. 10€ extra
1. Hair Grower, 1 Temp Oil, 1
Shampoo, 1 Pressing Oil, 1 Face
Cream and Direction for Selling.
$2.00, 250 extra nor poranga.
HEART LEAF
Hair Tone
Natures
Famous Remedy
for growing LONG and
BEAUTIFUL HAIR.
If you have short, napy and harsh
hair, or if you are troubled with han-
dle, follicle, hair loss, hair thinning,
drying scalp. DO NOT DELAY, but use
at once. HEART LEAF HAIR TONE,
then watch the hair. Hair loss.
dorable gray hair and put new life
into it.
Price $60, neat and by mail on your
phone. Agents warned, you can
make pet money. Write at once for
a tenure term. SUPO-SUFLO MEDICINE CO.
ATLANTA, GA.
THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1920.
SOME HAVE MADE A FLYING START
T
THE PRIZE OF PRIZE WINNERS
The books are closed for listing contestants. Thirty have been listed and already they are working manfully for the palatial "Cadillac 8" and and the other BIG prizes which are be-ing offered in the Dallas Express Prize Contest.
It may be that you, Reader, had intended to enter this contest. It may be that you "intended" to try to win one of these wonderful prizes but now it is too late. Your chance is gone.
It strikes us though that you may have a friend in the running. If so, why not win by proxy? Why not help your friend to win and thereby get pleasure for yourself out of his success?
In all sections of Texas, the public is anxious to read the "Dallas Express" because of the peculiar and singular pleasure experienced from its "Distinctive Service."
It fills a long felt want in the appetite of the progressive public.
There are many in your town who want it.
Why not take their subscriptions for your friends?
Why not take their subscriptions for your
We know that there are such people in you
fact that we receive subscriptions e week, un-
e long been anxious to take the "Dallas Express"
how to go about it.
When you put such people in touch with the
satisfying publication you are doing both a perse
When one who has never read it before re-
mediately realizes that he has found acreditable
a never ending source of inspiration. He is helpe
When he is helped, the public is helped be
come a more progressive, courageous citizen and
Why not do it? Can't you see that it is
friends and neighbors?
If you know of a town to which the "Exp
touch with it.
If you have a friend in the contestand other
for the "Express" get them for your contest
This contest will be marked by hard work
the victors will be rewarded by prizes, the like
seen in Texas before.
We will publish the standing of the contest
Some partial returns are already in.
Watch this space for developments. The
are:
We know that there are such people in your town. We judge by the fact that we receive subscriptions e- week, unsolicited, from people who have long been anxious to take the "Dallas Express" but who have not known how to go about it.
When you put such people in touch with this fast growing and altogether satisfying publication you are doing both a personal and public service.
When one who has never read it before reads the "Express," he immediately realizes that he has found a creditable storehouse of information and a never ending source of inspiration. He is helped.
When he is helped, the public is helped because he at once tends to become a more progressive, courageous citizen and race man.
Why not do it? Can't you see that it is your duty thus to help your friends and neighbors?
If you know of a town to which the "Express" does not go, put us in touch with it.
If you have a friend in the contestand other friends who do not subscribe for the "Express" get them for your contestant friend and make him win.
This contest will be marked by hard work and hard fought victory. And the victors will be rewarded by prizes, the like of which have never been seen in Texas before.
We will publish the standing of the contestants each week.
Some partial returns are already in.
Watch this space for developments. The contestants as they now stand
LIST OF CONTESTANTS
Mrs. L. M. Bates—Dallas.
Mrs. I. D. Dickson—Gilmer.
Mr. Jodie Deveraux—Italy.
Mr. O. Ashon—Riceon.
Mrs. A. B. Fields—Dallas.
Dr. D. W. Shields—Dallas.
Mr. Norman Woods—Dallas.
Mr. Beatrice Wade—Wichita Falls.
Mrs. S. E. Gabriel—Hemphill.
Mrs. R. B. Williams—Independent.
Mrs. R. L. Hicke—Center
Mrs. James M. Jackson—Prairie View.
Mrs. Ervin Marshall—Oakwood.
Mrs. Henry Lee—Glen Flora.
Dallas Express Contest Rules
1. This contest will open Sept. 10, 1920, and close Dec. 24, 1920.
2. All contestants must register their names, and addresses at THE DALLAS EXPRESS Office not later than Sept. 25. No entrant will be listed later.
3. The prizes will be awarded according to the highest number of votes received by the contestants.
4. Votes will be listed according to the number of subscriptions to THE DALLAS EXPRESS received and turned in at our office.
5. Votes will be counted as follows:
1 year's subscription to the "Express" 1,000 votes
6 months' subscription to the
"Express" 500 votes
Win. S
1 Y
3 months' subscription to the
"Express" 300 votes
6 M
3 M
Write Now For Subscript
Write Now For Subscription Order Pads
Mrs. Arthur J. Sykes - Sherman.
Mrs. L. A. Wallace - Clarkville.
Mrs. H. Morgan - Dallas.
Mrs. Noah Williams - Rosner.
Mrs. Mary Comming - Bellville.
Mrs. J. H. Heads - Richardson.
Mrs. D. Kelly - Dallas.
Mrs. Mira Hervey - Quitman.
Mrs. Julia White - Nashville.
Mrs. A. Ploce - Akronville.
Mrs. Claire Young - Dallas.
Mrs. W. E. Harris - Dallas.
Mrs. A. B. Alexander - Mineral Well.
Mrs. A. D. Stewart - Dallas
Mrs. T. J. Phillip - Isaac.
Mrs. Della Kibrough - Ladonia.
No subscriptions will be taken for a period of less than 3 months.
6. Subscriptions must be turned in weekly at our office, that they may be counted and the standing of the contestants published in every current issue of paper.
7. Prizes will be awarded to the persons getting the highest number of votes.
8. The prizes will be as follows to the 1st highest over 250,000 votes, Cadillac "8" touring.
To the 2nd highest over 250,000 votes, big Diamond Ring.
Substantial cash prizes will be awarded all contestants in proportion to the results which they produce, if they fail to win the big prizes.
Begin today to get in the game and Win. Subscriptions now selling:
1 Year ..... $3.00
6 Months ..... 1.50
3 Months ..... 1.00
Kill That Cold With
HILL'S
CASCARA
BROMIDE
QUININE
FOR
Colds, Conghs
AND
La Grippe
Neglected Colds are Dangerous
Take no chances. Keep this standard remedy handy for the first sneezes.
Breaks up a cold in 24 hours—Relieve
Grippie in 3 days—Excellent for Headaches
Quinine in this form does not affect the head—Gascara is best Tonic
Laxative—No Opium in Hills.
ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT
Reginaall Cross Palm
Reginaall Stin Food and Whitener.
FOR SALE EVERYWHERE.
Please for people
Address THE BEGINALL LAB
IS YOUR H
Breaking off, Thin o
Crown Palm
Skim Food and Whitener
Be Reeled Shampoo Salts
Be Reeled Sparrow Oil
Be Reeled Toilet Tissue
EVERYWHERE
Write a special term to attend today.
THE BEGINNAL LABORATORY, 141 Bell St., Atlanta, Ga.
YOUR HAIR SHORT
King off, Thin or Falling Out? Is Your
Hair Dry and Wiry? Does
your Scalp Itch? Have
your Scalp Disease, or
More than a Normal
Amount of Dandruff?
Hair Dry and Wiry? Does your Scalp Itch? Have you Scalp Disease, or More than a Normal Amount of Dandruff?
IF 50, you should AT ONCE begin using MADAME N.A. FRANKLIN'S Hair Grower. It matters not how many Hair Propagants you have, without maturing, you should count and give up before giving my Hair Grower a trial. It has promoted an abundant growth of hair for thousands and it is the best.
I own two of the largest and most modern equipped Beauty Farms in the United States located at Fort Worth and Houston, Texas; employing 40 operators in the two groomers and have graduate all over the country that they can buy.
MY SPECIAL OFFER
Those designing to try my Wonderful Hair Preparations, I will mail to your address a Six Weeks' Trial Treatment, consisting of Shampoo, Hair Grower and Pressing Oil, with full instructions how to use the same for only $1.10. One Trial Treatment will convince you of its value.
Those desired to try my Wor
your address a Six Weeks' Trial I
Grown up and become a Dept. Colle
$11.0. One Trial Treatment will
also teach my System person
I also teach my System person
MADAME N. A. FRANKLIN, DEPT.
MAKE
desiring to try my Wonderful Hair Preparations, I will mail to
six Weeks Trial Treatment, consisting of Shampoo, Hair
and Pressing Oil, with full instructions how to use the same for only
a Trial Treatment will receive you of what I teach my System personally or by mail. Write me for terms.
MAKE ALL ORDERS TO
A. FRANKLIN, DEPT. 805 PRAIRIE AVE., HOUSTON, TEX.
MADAME N. A. FRANKLIN, DEPT. M
805 PRAIRIE AVE., HOUSTON, TEXAS
Before using was 5 inches long
After using 2 years is now 22 inches long—Woman's Glory is Her.
HAIR
No more—DANDRUFF,
No more—FALLING HAIR,
No more ITCHING SCALP,
No more—TETTER,
No more—ECZEMA
Gives Health to the Scalp Grow of Long, Fluffy Hair,
Growing Oil
Pressing Oil
Temple Oil
MME. JESSIE CARTEER
Scientific Scalp Specialist and Manufacturer
2452 LaFayette St. Denver, (Incorporated)
Agents Wanted
Enclose 10c Stamp for Lettie
NILE QUEEN
QUALITY COUNTS
NILE QUEEN
NILE QUEEN
FREE! Deluxe Beauty
Book-write to-
day for a copy!
Miss Velvet Brown:
can you recommend?
Drubbist: "Try NILE,
the finest,
skin and hair on the man,
mend them and will give
not as represented."
Miss Olive Queen:
all the girls are crazy w
KASHMIR CH
312 SOUTH C
NILE QUEEN
Deluxe Beauty
Book-write to
day for a copy!
ess Velvet Brown: "My hair and skin are in
wretched condition. What
you recommend?"
mustist: "Try NILE QUEEN preparations. They are
the finest, purest, highest class articles for
and hair on the market today. I absolutely recom-
ond them and will give your money back if they are
as represented."
ess Olive Queen: "Really, Velvet, they are fine.
I never use anything else, and
the girls are crazy about them."
KASHMIR CHEMICAL COMPANY
312 SOUTH CLARK ST, CHICAGO
NILE QUEEN
QUALITY COUNTS
NILE QUEEN
FREE! Deluxe Beauty book-write today for a copy!
Miss Velvet Brown: "My hair and skin are in wretched condition. What can you recommend?"
Drunkist: "Try NILE QUEEN preparations. They are the finest priest, highest class articles for skin and hair on the market today. I absolutely recommend them and will give your money back if they are not as represented."
Miss Olive Queen: "Really, Velvet, they are fine. I never use anything else, and all the girls are crazy about them."
KASHMIR CHEMICAL COMPANY
312 SOUTH CLARK ST., CHICAGO
The World's Finest Preparations For Hair and Skin.
For Sale at all Drug Stores and Beauty Shops.
---
Reginall Cocoa Balm
America's Greatest Chef is the BEAUTIFUL BAKI that no chance, but use BEGIN-ALL CUCCA BALM, the most versatile bakerware has no equal. It cleans the skin of dandruff, and it cleans the skin of cushioning, cost and breaking off, and makes it grow long, straight and beau-
If 50, you should at once use a MADAME N. A. FRANKLIN'S HAIR GROWER. It matters not how many hair Preparations you have tried without success, you should not become discontented and give up before giving my Hair Grower a tint. It has promised an amusement for hair for flowers and an amusement for a mannequin.
Before using was 5 inches long
After using 2 years is now 22 inches
—Wonna's Glory is Her.
No more—DANDRUFF, .....
No more—FALLING Hair
No more FITCHING SCALP
No more TENNIS
No more—ECZEMA
Gives Health to the Scalp Growth of Long, Fluffy Hair,
Growing Oil .....55
Pressing Oil .....50
Temple Oil .....50
MME. JESSIE CARTER
Scientific Scalp Specialist and Manufacturer
2452 LaFayette St. Denver, Colo.
(Incorporated)
Agents Wanted
Enclose Letter
1