Dallas Express
Saturday, July 2, 1921
Dallas, Texas
Page text (machine-generated)
PERCENT. OF INCREASE OF NEGRO POPULATION LOWEST ON RECORD
JY GOODTIN LIBRARILAN
LWILLIY OF TEXAS
JUSTIN TEXAS
ALWAYS PROGRESSIVE
DISTINCTIVE IN SERVICE
Founded by W. E. King
NT. OF INCREASE Release Shows Negro Popu 3,013 With a Rate of In ing Past 10 Years. Death Slight Decrease.
PER CENT. Latest Census Release Sk lation to be 10,463,013 Wi crease of 6.5 During Pass Rate Shows Only Slight
Latest Census Release Shows Negro Population to be 10,463,013 With a Rate of Increase of 6.5 During Past 10 Years. Death Rate Shows Only Slight Decrease.
Borla in Iseo
---
VOL. XXVIII. NO. 39.
Washington, D. C. June 15, 2018-The
Commerce, has issued a preliminary
statement giving the composition of
the board of directors. By the
circumscription as of January 1
Distribution by Color or Race.
The rate of increase in the white population is 16 per cent, is considerably less than the corresponding rate for the period of 16 per cent. This decline is accounted for mainly by the increase in immigration during the period of 16 per cent. On the excess of births over deaths over migration a total difference of over migration yields a total difference from the total white population.
Negro Population.
BIG BUSINESS VENTURE
LAUNCHED IN MEMPHIS
NEGRO BISHOP TAKES VOW
The Dallas Express
land, West Virginia Kentucky, Arkansas, and Oklahoma. The West is that part of the country of the United States of America, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, and New Mexico. The total numerical increase in the population of the South was 635,250. Of this increase, 472,418, or nearly three-fourths, took up only 142,823. North and West, while only 142,823, had reported for the South, despite the total Negro population is still found without exception, the northern and South reported greater rates of in-age Negro population than the average of those states the rates were greater than 67.1 per cent and in Pennsylvania, the state has a larger Negro population than the average. The greatest rate of growth in Negro population was more than 10,000 Negro inhabitants, the Negro population of this state was more than 77,118 in 1919 to 60,682 in 1929.
Indian Population.
HOSPITAL FOR NEGROES
OPPOSED B Y MONTGOMERY
CITIZENS.
Montgomery, Ala. June 20—Representative citizens of Montgomery in the Chamber of Commerce, emphatically and unanimously rejected the establishment of a Negro soldiers establishment at or near Montgomery, in meeting on record as favoring a government hospital, if possible of a government hospital for white men, was favorable to the idea of giving a Memorial Hospital for a time, matter of two proposed hospitals, and the board of directors of the Church was at first unaware that the hospital and made every effort to secure a soldier, one has been soldiered, has been informed recently by Congressman Tynon to the effect that he intended for Negroes, the board held a meeting at a man meeting to decide the matter. Jack Théronin was first to speak when asked on for an expression from the church that "There are rather than gold" and that he was altogether Norwegian from France to Montgomery. Dr. W. Welch stated that "Government hospitals something to be opposed to the establishment of the hospitals. Dr. M. W. suratts, president of the hospital, was against the proposed action both as that he would oppose any move for the government. He declared that the Negroes for Negroes. He declared that the Negroes largely because of the AF, that he believes that the establishment that he believes that the establishment that he believes that the
The Republican Party Is The Ship, All Else Is The Sea."—Fred Douglas
THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS, SATURDAY, JUY 2, 1921.
A. M. E. BISHOPS HOLD SUMMER COUNCIL IN CHICAGO
ORGANIZATION OF SUPREME LIFE AND CASUALTY COMPANY IS COMPLETED.
Educational Leaders Will Discuss Varied Subjects. Governor and Other Notables Will Attend.
Wm. Ann Avery
Oklahoma State University
Association of Teachers in Colored
Association of Teachers in Colored
teenth meeting annual meeting August
seventh meeting annual meeting August
the people-white and black, old and
white in the all-round impact of
learning in the all-round impact of
all who touch Dr. L. J. Kawan, pres-
sident of the Mechanical College, Alcorn, Misa,
of Augusta, Ga., editor of the New
Journal of Education, and secretary of
the Speakers on Program
of Speakers on Program
deeply interested in the improvement
of educational facilities for the youth
shown by the fact that many well
taught students give timely addresses
to give timely addresses.
Among the speakers before Avery
R. Robertson of Oklahoma, Mayor
E. Robertson of Oklahoma, Governor
W. Oklahoma State University
education for Oklahoma; E. E. Ober-
stein of Oklahoma; Dr. P. C. Jackson, former U.S.
Smith, field agent of the Rosewood
institutions for the education of
their students.
Timely Addresses and Reports.
Columbia, Ohio. June 10.—The Supreme Life and Casualty Company held its annual meeting in Columbus, Ohio. Wednesday, June 22nd 1321 The meeting was the culmination of the promoters. A large number of them were present. These came from sentenced Patrons and the two foreign business companies. We made a brief introduction. We made Lincoln, former Superintendent of In-Teaching, Howard, Veteran under-taker, and Maya, prominent under-taker and administrator. Halley of Atlanta, GA, admin-istrator, Ruth. We Method, one of the pro-ducers of Wilkerson, Ohio. We Method, Wilkerson, Ohio. We Method, Portsmouth, Ohio, and Harry N. Price, Phonograph Corporation, New York.
Prof. J. R. E. Lee is Made Seventh Medal is Presented Secretary of Membership of Season's Best Dramatist National Urban League. Has Whose Acting Won National Been in School Work for Applause.
president Oklahoma Teachers' Association; principal S. R. Younghood and Zelia N. Breaux of Oklahoma State University; and M. College G. N. Trennold, president Georgia State Normal School of Medicine; professor J. Jenna supervisor; M. B. Merry of Sacramento, Texas; Mary R. King of Dallas, Texas; Principal H. W. Foot of Dallas, Texas; Principal H. W. Foot of Judith C. Horton H. High School Judith C. Horton H. High School The educational needs of Colored youth will be fully discussed by new faculty and staff to construct a work structure throughout the school on successful educational operations. This will bring facts of progress to the classroom.
Organization was effected and plans for the immediate beginning of the in-flight company will operate nationally. It will be the first business on the SQD to operate in the United States. The group insurance company, these two new companies in the business efforts which the new group insurance company, the Home Office of the company, and the Capitalization is 180,000,000. At this meeting were represented our race, showing what high common sense the country has in saving the country of the country, the Mutual Savings Bank, the Bank, the Memorial Bank, the Commercial Bank, Memphis Bank, the Commercial Bank, the First Standard Bank, Louisiana Bank, Atlanta, Ga., the Savannah Citizens Savings Bank, Nantwu, Township Citizens Savings Bank.
Negro Candidates Cause Heavy Voting In Jacksonville
JACK JOHNSON RECEIVES FIGHT
OFFER ON EVE OF PARDON
(A. N. P.)
(A. N. P)
Cairo, Mgvet. June 30—A reduction of 28 ber — in acreage planted will let the Egyptian cotton regain its normal conditions prevail throughout the crop season. The department will consider advice to the crop season to cultivation was aimed at T-600,000 bales in 1950. It was estimated in the reports about approximately 800,000 bales to approximately 800,000 bales in 1951-1952 season. General instability of the cotton market and government regulation chief articles in reducing acreage.
Mouphis, Teun. June 30—An unidentified one-acre negro. About 620,000 bales of cotton. About 800,000 bales Patrolman H. V. Allen when he moved to Jaffa. About 800,000 bales Jefferson avenue at 8:30 recently. Young woman companion of Allen's house died or seriously harmed. The unidentified man蓄蓄.
Old Bethel is Scene of Notable Gathering of Bishops of A.M.E. Church Who Discuss Organic Union and Fraternal Union; Connectional Council Well Attended.
R. R. OFFICIALS ASK GOV- ABYSSINIAN RIOTERS PAY
ERNOR TO PROTECT WORK- DEATH PENALTY.
A CHAMPION OF JUSTICE
A MESSENGER OF HOPE
PER ANNUM $8.00.
PRICE TEN CENTS.
ON RECORD
IN CHICAGO
of Notable Gathering
E. Church Who Discuss
Fraternal Union; Con-
Well Attended.
Chicago, June 16—Grover Cleveland Redding and Oscar McVickar were decommissioned on June 16, styled "emperor of Abascalia" and McVickar, "governor general" were decommissioned to life imposition upon the recommendation of the state board of parole.
Initially, they were sentenced to be lured, April 12, but it was approved to be repatriated, so the board sentenced them to the bench. Both made plea of innocence last hope for life.
For the murder of Robert L. Hoye, a sailor at a naval base, Five other Negroes tried with five men. Five Negroes were murdered and Joel Hoye, a sailor at a naval base, proclaimed at street corner, who presented to the equality as extinguishing and of awakening him to the promised land. He followed him to the promised land. He was the maximum of the campaign. The burning of the campain. The burning of the supreme expression of contempt for this government. I took place at place at the campain. I took place in form, darted the side walk to the flag from the fire. As he was killed by a rifle bullet several minutes later he was killed by a rifle bullet several minutes later he was killed by a rifle bullet. Hoye was killin' became general. Hoye was killin' became general.
Colored Fighter Figures In Carpentier's Training
Colored Fighter Figures In Carpentier's Training
ee ATTEND! ATTEND! '
oa THE 15TH ANNUAL SESSION OF THE TEXAS '
Ba NEGRO BUSINESS LEAGUE '
ae to be held at \
ST JAMES A.M. E. CHURCH '
: MONDAY AND TUESDAY, JULY 4, 5.
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‘THE PRISOULA ART CLUB
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img ot the comer-stone at Bell’:
Chapel new eaice us postponed
int secoud ‘Sunday’ an Joly The
sane wil bp ai by Chita Pac
dye No 187. At 4:20 pm. Mev
Donnell azeended the eatrum and
preached ‘a. wonderful sermon. tex,
God wil take caro of you" Theme
Joneph sold It to Egypt. Bell Chap-
ei ison the fring tine. Come over
aid sein the number
Rov. BP. DONNTLL, Pastor.
Her. WW. HOLLINS, Reporter,
EVENING CHAPED: 231, 8. CHURCH,
‘Corner Iullett and Boll Streets,
The. pastor, Bev. A. F. Johnson,
nad hie delegation” wei called on
Or town inst week to atiend the Di
Mice “Canterence. at Shermn, Tes
feported a. great tne ands. great
deal of bunineat transacted, Brow
CC. Underwood and Ke E. Hall nnd
Sirs Corn ‘ical all yluers of tha
iia ‘ere, aman at
‘conorence inderwood ek
erted great Tnfvence over the napen-
Uiyss He wan clected oremident "0
the laymen of the Dallas Disriet
‘ar proud of Ths
“Tho ator falled to xet back, to
bie port of daty”-on, Sunday. His
miner ney RA. Adams He
preached is fourth sermon. AL»
prim, another young minister preach
ta "tn person of ev" Townsel. He
proached n. wonderful “orion” thet
Wen enjoyed Sy all ent Both
ae fermions” bp the owns. ten
ot Goa were great We are FraQeful
forthe lend coun both mara
ing. ted Srenins, during the avenee
ot out. pastor This fo ‘encoursine
to youns, mlstere.
‘A’qusaionry Mase meeting was held
ai Evening Chapel Monday evening.
ae membern_ prevent. discuseed the
Missionary and encouragement e-
Tived. trom ‘nvasing in work. The
Women's Miaooary. "Alliance wil
Ince at Evening ‘Chapel. Stday ev-
fing, July Sed at 2 em. A spec
terms will be prenched and # yro
Fram will be rendered Mrs. George
orwell, resident
‘Diseclotye Monday. oz, Landers
fnceing; Wedvestay Swght,” Prager
We Prayer
necting; ‘Thursday nigh Chote re
eras Fridey nh Clave meetin
ev. AF JOHNSON Pastor
FG hun ue, Secretary.
©. “W. JOHNSON, Reporter.
JeMLACK BILLY" IXVADES 108
“ANGED ES,
aoe Angeles, Cali, June 31—"Black
nity Purday" thf Rev, Dr. J. Gordon
McPherson, the noted ‘Texas Evange
ist from Austin, accompanied by ae
JCornoha # MePrebeon, ure opending
the momoiee here In. Ange! City, snd
they arg coxnfortably-domlclieg” wth
iy und Arn A Le Merida, at eto
Fant find Street.
“Diack Dilly” is a former resident
Inere and nce bie urvival bis my
[stende bave etven the "Fighting Par
fon" 4 opal Welcome. ‘The. Colored
fitizens ‘under the -musolces of the
[American Patriotic Lease, have "0
fer way plan for Monster Inde
pendenes "Day" Celebration on duly
Mins Dr. NePherson' has. been se
leted to delivar his famous address
[oe itd Blooded American,”
[Among the vother speakers that
ere. peheduied to. apoear "the
fram. Inthe newly” elec Maver,
[George "Cryer, Bator. J. By base
fot the. “Catifornla, ae.
During the past, week Dr, MePher-
on hae addreawa the Forum. Bap.
int stnieters Aliauce, also preached
tthe Great “St. Foul. Matiational
Baptist “Chared,” of whieh Dr.
IN. Molt inthe’ pastor. During the
fonth of July" the. Doctor wil lend
Ja ereat City-wide Tvangellstie. Car.
patgn. Inthe ‘ity of Oakland. Sun
ey he will diver his famous talk t
realy’ men strateht trem the. shout
Jerson the wubjeet: "Sitane Auctice
iiock the tnaeen Fuserale™
te interest of Soci Puri
“Mouasnita of former resideuty f¢%
Hie Lone Star State can be seen on
ee rete a the Anca
‘teen to. be. proaperdt
[bappy and contented. The» scribe
[hopes to oon rvs a pen picture ot
line Former Lone Horns in ihe Gold
jon Weet.
RLZADETH CHAP A.
| a CHART
BF well attended with Supt. ant
teachers filing their respective placer.
Kev. Te A. Henderson, 1. of the
Abligr» District was wi) us ane
Deacked uti morro end nish
"SL the 11:00" o'lock ‘servees an
Invitation wan extended to the pastor
tnd auerabere to worsbip with Sith
Chupe) A, MB Chureh at. $:30 At
thelr opening. We gladly. accevted
thelr faviiation and Helped to. swell
ele enllaetion 2 resing tor, hem
$3265 An tuvtiation is trtended to
‘THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS, SATURDAY, JULY 2, 1921.
Jal! the male members and friends
ft Bilsabeth Shapel to be present st
{" clock Sunday” evening, June 31
ta hear Rev. Jan R. Starks deliver
special sdavese to the men only.
We extend. 4 cordial Invitation to
the _publle te: worship with ue each
Sunday.
PLANO CLUB WOLD MERTING-
‘The Coleridge-Tuylor Plano Club
wet Tuesday, 20th fostant at Mite
Nog, Vaults residence on Hall St
Omeere "were lected and the oblect
of the “club ‘wa ‘dacussed. “After
final "procedure. refreshments were
terved. ‘The club adjourned, to. meet
Sith Mrs. Lilian “Adkins, 260% Sar
Facot "xt Wednaday irom 7%
2.
Mina 'N. J VAULT, President
Mire MC. LISTER, Secretary
Mra. JOHNNIE. PENN. Reporter,
Mra. Jesse Mae Edmondson is stilt
on the sick Tat
CARD OF THANKS. '
Port Worth, Texan, June 20, 1921.
We ae ths eto of exresning
our thanks and. Appreciation. to the|
Nelghtors, tends. and members of
Allen Chepel A.-M. Bi ehureh, for the
Kindness mows ux Giving the recent
Iiineee and death of out beloved sen
TLeandrr Jackson. ‘who depnrted this
Tite, Juve 18, 1921. We. also. thank
oe friends for the ‘eral offering
May “God's cholcest Blessings rest
ripen exh of you.
Mr, pad Mew Tag, WINTERS,
aire WILLIAMS,
‘Grandmnider.
Mr. ang Mee IRROME. SCOTT
Mr, JAMS JACKSON:
CARD OF THANKS,
‘We wish to thank our friends and
neighbors for assistance rendered
‘during the ilinewn tnd death of our
Sater, wife and daughter, ana Ce
Tene ‘Coleman, who died May 26,
we,
‘We feel it our duty to express to
leach of them our thanks and af.
[preciation for the beautiful. fora
offerings,
Respdettully,
MRS, MARY” CARROLL, Mother.
&.'W. COLEMAN, Husband,
SISTERS and” BROTHERS,
LOCALLY WAGED MeFEA FOMLANG
ae HEH hak “rate te ett
Ray oa oe
Ee Grete cera ates
[Ehertee Hack Clement in apieiting be
BE anche aa lay naine” hi
Toon Dritien, “Sf ilinois, and "after
too TAKH PAW IN JEWISH OT,
spree, 2 rae
paths natin geri eat
ges Be Fach
BGs emacs AR he
cows, sme Jo sngzer fy man
Eien ie ae in te rn
edeat mans “rity “tee futorination
ere Spite at f
Raa corres, ite
nid pe vaat fpnigden “and
THE BUCK EYE
CUTTERS AND a
Hundreds of pleased men and
Garments cut nd fitted as | Nomen woark
ring our HAND
gen Sot tase TAILORED SUITS,
MODERN EQUIPMENT ~BACKED BY EXPERIENCE
THOSE. 1a. 8590.
H.M. McCOY, Me'R-PROP., WITH FIVE ASSISTANTS
uth 'St (One door com Main St)
a
‘We are offering the greatest bargain to the public in order to
advertise 'S preparations, the best on the market,” These articles
have been tested and tried in our Beauty Parlors in Philadelphia
And Auntie City, In order to. have these. Preperations known,
‘World-wide, we are offering the following 1 Box Hair Grower, for
{Frowiag tho hait, also good for falling hair. 1 Box Straltene Glons
for making the ‘hair soft, floesy and. black. "1 Bor Medicated
Shampoo for removing dandruft and scalp Srrtation,
‘These three articles for $1.00. ‘Satisfaction Guaranteed
or money refunded.
tk. 'V.V. MAGINLEY,
1906 "South, St," PhilladSIphia, Pa.
tate
pALAL)
SOUTHS FINRST COLORED SHOW
AAs cool as the Ocean Breezes
<a |
¥ SPECIAL
SSUNDAY—
NEAL HART in |
i} “BLACK SHEEP”
hp. sstiens sar on the seven. ‘The bieret Weelera tn 4
per. ite A MONKEY COMEDY Teaterins
“SNOOKUMS” i
MONDAY— ii
' WILLIAM DUNCAN in }
; “FIGHTING FATE” i
\ ibs tecture tnt pee |
‘ “QUTLAWED” |
Ss |
“ELMO THE FEARLESS”
“THE MASKED RIDER” {
With sparing comedy
) “YOU'LL BE SURPRISED”
Come, se for youre erat
WEDNESDAY —
t RING BAGOOTT tu ee
“THE HAWK'S TRAIL” i
h Avo WILLIAM RUSSELL, ta
““QUICK ACTION” i |
f A vitae weetam
SDAY—
JOE RYAN in i
“HIDDEN DANGERS”
inal Fpeode |
eo the taint at tie there
“DANGEROUS LOVE” A
AACONTY WESTERN
FRIDAY—
A ANTONIO. MORENO in
“THE VEILED MYSTERY” |
“7 YEARS BAD LUCK” t
aut Monee benldl eatin, rant toes
ISATURDAY— ,
WILLAAM PARSON in '
“RAINBOW TRAIL” \
A A. cgrt maton, ie rent
Top waren — mets)
2 Coot, mouse —
* REST ROOMS— a
COURTEOUS TREATMENT
MEET YOUR FRIENDS AT THR PALACE
FRED HILSGN, Manager
‘CARD OF THANKS.
To our many friends, kind nelsbbor
‘tcquaintances, Alpha Chapter No
Fa" Bilabeth Court No. 5°
Wo wish (0 express our. appricin-
tion Tor Your sympathy and indnes
sid. the many Tenuta ‘Boral offer
huge dain the iineas and deash
our beloved mother, Mire Laiey Worth
ington. May the’ Lord's choices
Dlesalngs rest upon you. one und all
Mrs EMMA SMITH, Daughter
Men PANNIE “ALLLN, “Drushler,
Mr ROBT. WORTHINGTON, Son
Mr PETER WORTHINGTON, Son
Mit HENRY WORTHINGTON. Sen
San WALTER WORTHINGTON, Son,
READ THE SOUTH’S
GREATEST WEEKLY, THE
“DALLAS EXPRESS”
tiwt to 4. DANIELS NEWS SAND
on sree anaes
NOT ALL VICIOUS
‘Hunter Revised Opinion of Bad-
Tempered Mule.
strange Clr for Ofepring Premed
‘he Spnngh of That “One
Pr hash nl
‘When, 1 vas Bem, Se aaron, t send
to ride w mule. In some ways these
fnuils are Better suited to the coune
tay than poulesthey are tougher end
‘Go not contract horse alcinesn ns eas!
ty writes Llewelyn Powers in the
New York Bveulg Post.
"The partcalar mule whieh 1 rote
was diatingulshed by having the most
lcloue temper of any anital T have
fever known. IC was quite Impossible
to saddle Ht unless put a twiteh oo
Its nome Thad to carry one on the
0d Of my tiboko al the tine,
’As no as ever Ht aawe me appronch
with the middle It would give 8 36
Fes ofthe most. horrible squealing
ereams and begin kleking and kick:
fg ke the ery devil, Sometines
He would te in 40 wllainove a mood
that. besides the fwiteh, 1 would have
get a bay. t0 hold up one of Ite
front eps. However, ie wold give
‘ne no more trouble when T seus once
Im the dale, nid It svenied que
Inaiferent ex’ to. the length of the
Journey T took, never apienzing to be
in the least ied,
very time T heard it beatin scream:
Ing T eto say to rayne: "What
A ievilsh somati-gim you are, with
‘atm single redeeming polat. 1 can
hiever feet nnything ‘but ost to
sue en isatured brute”
Well do you kabwe, berore 1 ad
eon the last of JOT felt together
Aifterent, And this ie how it caine
‘bout
‘The mule was a mare, and wher 1
was not Hlag would run out onthe
eldt with the other horse mares of
the farm. It was the business of an
‘1d Swat to Tok after the “and
“fee that they were driven back to the
fockade every night
‘This boy ene running to we one
evening with Took uf abnolue
‘arnzeroent on Mn face, 10 say that
the mule had a foal. "Nov, by. the
lawn of nature T kuew it was imps
sible for miles wDroed. So after
Thad istered to his story 1 stp
told him that he wat alee He went
way” very echagrined at this, swear
Ing that he was speaking the truth.
[Presently T henrd the clatter a
hots, indicating the appronch of the
Normew deiven toward. the homestead
ty. the old Swab at the appointed
hour. Tiwent oat to watch them pas
find" while they were still soma wey
So sow to my utter astonishient
He creature tottering by the ideo
the minle. However, when they came
henrer ll It Became vbsions that Te
‘wae the foal of one of the mares
Taser the urge of the saternal tn
stnet the mule ha driven the mae
fawny and wa now propostig to moth
fr the little thing, although of course
she had no milk whatever to xive Ie
Trove the all" Into n terge. yard
find with aMeutty got the mare and
font Together gain
‘On. that oceasion 1 was pretty an
noyed
evil brute” 1 thought: “playin
the tool with the-mare Whe that”
New Sports for France,
‘Toviling, x0 suy the least, I not
very sangulnary, Ie the latest sport
taco "up by the sporting element. of
France, ‘when they pit two cocks 0.
iether, not to nee whieh Wil Rill, Dut
forsee whe will outerow the other in
ven time
‘A cock according to the figures of
the sport, will crow on an average af
‘0 times per hour, but when trained
for competition wl go weil ever the
Tnugedtatrk tn an howe, which te
the tine set for the contests
‘Competing birds are shut up in a
Yow ark coop and felon wilet and
‘hopped beet well anturated with wine
land beer, ‘The lowneas of the root of
‘he cop wlll Keep. the cock. from
stretching his neck to erow and when
bye ix released for the contest he” will
the at rondy to make up for ost tue
‘Mntches are made for side bets and
Ihuge sums Of money are wagered on
‘the results <f auch a content,
Don't Take to Baseball,
aveill has long” been recognized
fee the sport. mont ntimately ket
‘led wich the Stars and Stripes, and
While baseball in by long side the
Betelgeure of the sport firmament tp
‘Auverica, there are ouimberiese stars
find. sune of lower maguitade whose
Advocates are canted by hundreds of
thousands
‘Amerien has succeeded tn introduc:
tng many American customs aad pas
timer Into Ue lands that have come
‘under fut banner, She Ie responsible
for the populority of baseball In Cuba:
‘ur grent game hex found sowe favor
‘with the natives of Manila and ‘ove
fr two other towns in the Philipines,
but baseball fe an unknown nme to
the sent 0 per cent of Ch 100000
tints ting In our Far Eustery pow
tensions
REVOLVER INVENTED BY BOY
Iden of Deadly Smal Arm Was Born
in the Brain of Peurteen-
‘YearOud Rursway.
‘the revolver, that antl the iayention
ot the automate pistol, war the mont
Geaidy small arm known to man, was
bora of the Drain of « fourteen-year-
old hey, Saw'el Catt. Colt ro. awe
from school and shipped on board
merchant vessel ound for the Rast
Indies. He had good deat ot idle
time oa hs hands once the sly war
Well at sea, and « long perio of calm
Weather followed its movements. He
Began to seek an oUUlet for Me active
Imegination and mechanical \ge. He
Attempted various things to ald alla,
bot itnout ny great roccess, He
then took to planning a. pletol thet
Wwould shoot several nen with a
ingle toad. He had only bits ot wood
hand jack knlfe to work with, but be-
fore the voyage was ov be hed cat
fut # model for a revolver very ani
Jae fo the pattern still In ue.
‘Qnee at emt again, he went to
‘work in his father’s factory, but the
evolver (dea wis st Im his head, and
he worked at It from thie to tine ub-
{Ul be wan twenty-one. At this polot
bis experimente had ¥o tar advanced
that he neked for and obtained patents
a" Amerien abd Turopean countriet.
‘A stock company was organized, and
‘rom this buble sare the reat Colt
fem factory wae begun, andthe te
‘olver pt om a market thit soon e82
ed it around the world,
SCIENTISTS HOLD TWO VIEWS
‘Are Not in Accord in Their Explant-
‘ion of Origin of the Planetary
‘System,
Sclentats explain the olin of our
planetary system in two ways One
‘of these is the familar nebular by-
pothesis of Lapace. The other Is the
Dlaseternal theory wf Professor Moul
ton, which t4 probably the most cor
ect ‘one. According tO. this theory
‘our planetary system was originally
frase. spiral nebulae. The planets
vere formed by accretions of matter
In the splraln of the nebuiue, OU
‘earth and Its satelite, the moon, were
foruied in this way. "The moon belo
fmmulier aceretion of miatter, was
faturally attracted by the eurth, which
iwar poswestol of enough gravitation
te hold the moon, ‘The moon there
fore In aot a eld. of the earth, Dut
peaking’ in" everyday parlance, we
‘might eal 1€ an adopted child. This
theory explains a great dea} that the
rebuineiypothesis does not, There
fe vast nuubers of such spiral neb-
tae 1a the heavens, Indicating, that
this is nature's accepted way of ere
‘ting new sors, wid It Is for these
feasnns that T accept thin view of the
formation of dhe earth and the moe,
=Pltisbureh Dispatch.
a aia aaah
‘Two presidential inaugurations
pecially marked by cold. weather were
those of Taft and Grant (his second).
‘Thotsands of people Beene sek
from exponure during Grant sscond
Inauguration, and many dled, It ts
nid the coughing of people who had
‘olde: was no great that the orchestra
Att the nagar ball could hardly be
Dard.
"The Taft Inaugural blizard begun
4n Washington the afternoon of March
8, 2000, Tt continued ll night, and
the ow In the capital the next day
was so deep that It seemed imporsl
Tie to have a parade. Hot the pa-
aide was beld, and on a srvet sept
lean, thanks “to the "Washington
treet department, whlel removed
‘thousands of wagon Toads of soow and
flush from Pennayivania avenue. Many
Deople became sick from standing in
‘he mow of iting 1a the cold stands
tovwateh the parade. ‘There was much
fuffering caused by exposure. Presi
‘dent ‘Taft's reviewing. section was in
‘lowed’ tm glam and’ beated by lee
tnt.
“Robingon Crusoe's" Mutket,
‘The musket sald to Dave bees giv
fen to Alvsander Selkirk when be was
Dut shore on the isand of Juan Fer
‘ander, 40 miles off the Chilean cat,
thaw been going the rounds of British
Te Was Selkirk's adventures upon
wien was bused De Pues famous
ory, “Hobinson Crusoe" ‘The nue
et Te tnsertbed with the naine of "A
Sekine Largo, TTL" Tt was por
‘enased by Handoph: Berens for 3825,
boat the owner bas Insured it for $10,
000.
‘Selkirk owned a tavern near Clap
tua, tut died In 1728 at nea ns 8 le
‘eoant aboard a naval vessel,
ijeakihiie aaais Bande
wee Westiogton’s cabtast that or
tablished the custom for all future In-
ftugurations wo be made. in_publl,
When the time for Washington's see.
‘ong. Innugural cme around he. was
in doubt as to the proper method of
taking the oath for hie second term,
Hee addressed n note to his cabinet
‘asking (or ther optalon as to whether
IE should be public oF private, ‘The
abinet at thatthe was vided, Jet
ferson and Hanallton recommended
that it should be private. Koos and
Randolph reported in faver of aking
e poble, which wat done.
‘Soft, an It Were,
|All the young. Indes are raving
bout your new clerk's melting even
“Let fem rive.” sald Mr Oratape
son, “"Tve never known a chap with
melting eye+ whoae. train was’ In
the “sume coodltion."—Binieghum,
Age tera
To Prevent Suleide by Gas,
Henceforward nobody bat «hermit
with a tad cold tn the head. will be
Able to commit suicide ty the eos
Toute, according (0 ofcals of the
Taleea States toreun ot mines. The
bureny recently announced the petee
Hon of # system of mixing chelate
vith the iiominating’ gas in wich a
Ammer that leaknee enn be. smelled
all over the ‘honse." ‘Experiments
have been successfully carried eat with
several dierent Kinds of odors. Im
cluding banana, wintergreen nnd gral
Alcohol. "Two other concuctions rem
4m odors deseribed ‘te "samptin’ tere
ble! “Anclent eggs ae asid to be mld
{in comparison, ‘Thie ode, the experta
Delve, Is mufclet to dtesournge any
wonld-te sulci who ts worth the sew
Ing, The, dicovery "expected to
‘make accidental umphysiation lpona.
ble and will also xo’ loos way to
ward preventing vstmction ot prop
‘erty by ga explosions,
ear ec
Xap Island Is practicully a desert
waste today, ax he result ot a severe
earthquake end Windstorm following
Mt, cording to an oChclalwirwlees
Feport from the naval station there
tecelved at the Yokosuka. aval sa:
tion, ‘The earthquakes and worn are
said to have create! alimost indescebe
Able conditioes, und though no tives
have been reported as helng lon, the
dannge is eld to be the worst ever
tnfcted on PaciSe Island. Bo WE
lent were the oscilatins. thet, the
delicate selamosraphs. atthe Onan
And ‘Tokyo Imperial ‘unveraty were
Lady fected ‘and. wilt need repel
g—Srettiyn Baste”
UNTIL SEPTEMBER 1, 1921, ANY ONE MAY TAKE OUT A YEARLY SUBSCRIPTION TO THE
Members of the local business men's league are putting the finishing touches to their arrangement which will open its 15th annual session at St. James A. M. E. church Business men from all parts of the state will be present. According to the schedule, Mr. H. L. Price, president, Mr. H. L. Price, plans will be laid for the establishment of a Guaranty Fund bank by race men. An elaborate program has been developed which all lines of business operated by members of our race will be followed by a follow-up program will be followed.
Opening Session. 9 a. m.
The Garage Business - How to Make It Pay.
Joe P. McGowan, Livingston.
Enrollment of members, Payment of Dues and Appointment of ComMITtees.
Session 2:30 o'clock
How the Navy Can Obtain His Civil and Political Rights Under the Laws of the United States and the Great Republic-Hon. A. S. Wells, Dallas, S. J. Williamson, Pates, General Discussion: Can we Succeed as a Race as Long as we Refuse to Commercial and Industrial Support make Jobs for our Own Sons and Daughters? Discussion opened by W. M. Wogan, Marshall, and W. C. Wahner the Migration of Negroes from the South in Large Hospitals or Hindered the Progress of the City of Dallas, and A. B. Green, Temple The Importance of Racial Solidarity in the Walden, San Antonio, R. C. Smith-Waco, Rev. C. W. Abel
How to Succeed in the Banking
Business—W. M. McDonald, Ft.
Worth, and C. H. M. Furlow, Wa-
co and B. F. White. Palestine.
HAMPTON INSTITUTE MAKES PROGRESS.
By James E. Gregz.
Principal of Hampton Institute,
Hampton, Va. June 30—Higher
education, operation of students, teachers,
and administrative officers, diligent efforts
for economy and efficiency in every
area, emphasis, enthusiasm, and energy on
the part of the directors and the instructing
staff of the five Schools—Academic,
Business, and Home Economics—have
been the distinctive features of the
year.
Enrollment for the present year
to February first, not including the
Whitman School, the Summer School
and the Business School. Of this
number 45 are disabled soldiers sent
to the Institute for special training and
support by the Fed. Last year there were 8 in this group.
This year they have seemed to fit
well in the figures 85, given above,
parsed with last year, which is explained
by the severer requirements that the school is making
The superior preparation of those who are coming to Hampton now may be a few years ago is shown by the table giving the percentage of students in secondary or higher grades at Hampton: 1916-17, 55 per cent; 1916-17, 55 per cent; 1917-18, 56 per cent; 1918-19, 50 per cent; 1919-20, 54 per cent; 1920-21, 75 per cent.
School Work
The routine work of the Institute during the year has gone more smoothly than last year, and at several times the faculty have advanced in quantity and in quality. The Directors of the five Schools have settled to their tasks. The faculty have also adopted the adoption of the advanced courses secure to have justified itself — far as in can be determined with the help of the secondary or high school work be
OPEN MONDAY AT ST. JAMES
Second Day Morning Session, 9
O'clock.
The Fire Insurance Business, Its
Importance to Our Race — A. K.
Chestnut, Corsicana, and V. T.
Chestnut, Corsicana, and V.
Elements of Business Success—P.
Hitness, by J. H. Hiddle, Denison.
Promptness by W. E. Ewings, Dal. las.
Honeyst, by Mrs. Brandon, Ten-Why I Moved to an Exclusive Negro Town—B. F. Bliame, Cuney.
Suggesting a Plan by Which the New Orleans Inaugural Association Society of Texas May Take Over all the Business of that Kind Among our People, by J. B. Hulme, Dallas, and W. S. Willey, Waco.
A Table Talk on the Race in the Cities and Counries Represented (Only 5 minutes allotted to each speaker).
Midterm Session, 2:30 p.m. m. report of办公室 and Committees.
How Ministry. Can Build up Business Enterprises Among Our People and Foster the Support of Our Colleagues. E. Arlington Wilson, Dallas, and New J. H. Hughes, Cameron.
Would a Commercial Course be Colleges Help the Race in Business? Prof. J. F. Williams Waco, and J. F. J. Hughes to How Secure Better Railroad Transportation in Texas, by Dr. T. Hulme, Dallas, and Hon. J. F. Hughes, Dallas. The Real Estate Business, by T. B. Madison and W. P. Wallack, Dallas.
The following are the officers of the State League: H. L. Price, president; H. R. C. Murray,urer; R. C. Smith, secretary N. Dudley, State organizer.
imag now supplemented by two years in the Normal Home-Economics, and the Agricultural School, the Agricultural School. The standard of scholarship have been established. At least one year of elementary agriculture is required of all Acalpens students, including 10,000 number of students from other schools enrolled under this rule in agricultural classes is 87; the student number in agricultural classes is 87; the student number itself number of, of whom 5 are beginning the new three-years college.
The broad, modern, scientific yet thoroughly practical character of this course may be judged from the following: (1) the courses are offered in K: English, Uygneis, Mathematics, History of Rural Life, Chemistry, Physics, (rural en-anced Science, Physics, Husbandry, Farm Management, Farm Practice (including projects), Educational Phycology (appropriate Field Work), Organizational Training.
The Trade School is having a busy and successful year, five trades being offered year after year. This has not happened before since the four-year course students entered this School last autumn, 81 of whom are qualified for full trade work that the Trade School is offering. This is the largest entry class for a full trade work that the Trade School is offering. The total enrollment for the year is 267. Of these, are the disabled students and the Vocational Board for Vocational Education. who are receiving such training for their trade. The best fitted for Leaving out of account these disabled soldiers, the agricultural students, the worker's students and maintaining 210 enrollment in regular or special courses are distributed as an additional smithing, 8; Rickleking, 11; Cabinetmaking, 6; Carpentry, 35; Trucking, 11; Printing, 7; Sooemaking, 7; Sooemaking, 11; Tailoring 31; Home Economics. School. Home-Economics School. The Home-Economics School has enrolled 32 students. Classes in Home-Economics
THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS, SATURDAY, JULY 2, 1921.
WE MAKE THIS OFFER FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY. TAKE ADVANTAGE OF IT AND AVAIL YOURSELF OF THE NEWS SERVICE THAT IS UNEQUALLED IN TEXAS Our Representative will visit every Grand Lodge held in the State. If you fail to mail in your renewal, see him.
THE DALLAS
"YOUR PR
UNTIL SEPT. 1ST,
management, and in household man-
agement, have been organized to meet
the needs of the advanced students.
In the fourth year of the old course
a class in advanced dressmaking has
been under instruction for the first
time in several years.
The Summer School.
The Ministers' Conference.
An outstanding fact in regard to the finances of the institution reported fully by the Treasurer is that the amount substantially increased if it is to give instruction of the superior men and women for leadership. But most touching and significant of all are the contributions which the graduates and its friends among the Colored people. Out of their contributions much having raised $7500 within a few years for the Armstrong, T. Prissel, and the Mary E. F. McMahon College, and the $2500 for a fourth scholarship to bear the name of Booker T. Washburn, another former student have recently received $2,500 for a fourth athletic field to be located on the Whipple Farm, giving all needful facilities for the students with whom Mr Williams has been already in correspondence have opened from Hampton's sons and daughters are precious and full of meaning; they open up of deep wells of gratitude.
CHICAGO NEWS.
Chicago, Ill. June 30, 1921
The Virginia Society met at 3638
State Street, third Wednesday evening
june 15. Many enrolled and they
planned to entertain members and
Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Ivy, 2812 Eden
Avenue, have moved to Morgan Park,
Throop street, second apartment.
Hon. Wm. H. F. Fields, National
Agricultural College, Knoxville
Knoxville and Daughters of Africa,
in the city in order to confer with
the head officers relative (to
the coming of the Grant Council which
will be held at the University
at August 16).
Mrs. Bettle Grant, 4548 Sheridan
Road was called to the bedside of
Mrs. Grant, and Mrs. Grant is a member of Pilgrim
Council A. U. K. and D. of A.
Bobson, Johnson, Anderson
president, preceded by morning
services at Grant Memorial Church
of which Rev. T. L. Scribner is master
University of Little Rock, Athens.
---
Finance.
EXPRESS
PER"
$2.50
preached at the evening services.
The presiding elder council will meet
at the said church Tuesday evening.
M. T. Bailey, president of The
Bailley Realty Co. 3633 State street
can be found every Sunday at 11H
and Racine Avenue, Morgan Park
He is willing to serve race members
in locaiton lots and cottages for
lost future benefi
The County Fair given by Quinna Chapa, A. S. E. Church during the event, attended each night. Great credit given those in charge of the affair, Charity and Lawn Club, Charity and Lawn Club were held on the lawn at 3528 1-2 Pine Avenue, June 4, and was largely attended by businessmen. Work this year and its officers are deserving of the Work will be held in September. M. T. B. Mailer, The Baller Realty Co., 3528 State street will be held on the lawn at 4th of July in Morgan Park at 11th Street, and Racine Avenue will be held on the lawn of many valuable lots, contours and bungalows which he has on the lawn. After looking after business matters in the city during the past week, D. Cooper has returned to his home. Mrs. Zeenith Patton of West Chester, Mrs. Zeenith Patton of West Chester, Mrs. Della White, 428 Dernborn St, and will summer the summer here. Mrs. Patton is the sister of Mrs. Mary Johnson-Booker has resided in the city and is stopping Booker is a former resident of this city, but has been in the east and north.
Capt. R. E. Ellis of Detroit, Mich., is in the city on business. Mich. is through many cities in interest of the unemploved. Youllie 4288 Lismore. Averroe most excellent queen of St. Knox College, A. U. K. and D. A. has some to Cleveland, Cairo, and will visit other places in Ohio in interest.
PAUL QUINN STUDENTS ORGAN
IZE CLUB.
Dallas, Texas, June 30—The colleges and other educational institutions of the State of Texas have a strong tradition of teaching. We find many of the students represent the different schools here, and the Paul Quinn college is one among the schools represented. The students representing Paul Quinn have organized the "The Paul Quinn Club," in order that the spirit of the school might be maintained, not only among them, but also throughout the city of Dallas, so that others may see the good work the school does for the young men and women of the Nro race. The student and graduate of Paul Quinn College is the promoter of the organization and Has been chosen as the president of the club, and under his leadership the students of the club, they expect to do much good.
The club will meet every Thursday from 10:30 to 11:30.
The members of the club extend
welcome invitation to any one in
invested in its welfare to meet with
on the same mentioned plane at
St. James A. M. E. Church.
C. G. GOLEMAN. Reporte.
Temple, Texas, 66, june 15, 1921.
We wish to thank our friends for
their support and encouragement to
us during the death of our be-
friends. We are so grateful that
we departed this june 15, 1921.
Signed.
Mr. ROBERT GRIFINF, Wife,
ROBERT LEE GRUNF, Son.
Mr. ROBERT GRIFINF, Wife,
ROBERT LEE GRUNF, Son.
TEXAS TOWNS
Alice, June 30—Sunday School on time at all schools. Rev. Neal W. P. Jordan is the Sunday School collection good both morning and night. Mrs. W. P. Jordan is attending the Summer Norman at the school where she is ooches is visiting her mother in that city. The Masons were disappointed by the delay of the minister, Mr. P. Price of Rinkum was the result of that delay. The minister left for Manning, Texas. Read the Dallas Express and keep postal records for Manning, Texas. S. E. Anderson, Reporter.
Colbert, June 30 - Miss C. M. Battles of Hammond received her home after spitting the wet ball in the court. Stewart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Stewart, Mr. Davis Harte spent time with her daughter from returned from Kirkwood, Prince. where he prepares to work Green River and No. 881 with the number 1081. With a nice number of members, Proof Mina rejoices. She is a seac. G. A. M. and trained by her seac. G. A. M.
M. Zion and Pleasant Grove,
three several went to Pleasant Grove where
there was held the 5th anniversary of
Rev. T. Aikinson, preached by
Pleasant Grove, and preached from text, John 11: 2-3.
Subject "selected not by the book,
no pain in making the impressure
upon God's choice, which was fine.
The New Eaham choir from Hearne
Pleasant Grove invites them back, and
the good things to eat was plentiful.
The community in the community arain,
served in the community arain, and
short. Three sentiments from Childen
members of Rev. Akinson's other
church were present to witness the
sacrifice of the children and wife, Mrs. T. M. Williams and the reporter motored to town after
Pleasant Grove services on the 19th.
Weatherford, June 13. 29 Services were good at all the churches. Rev. G. H. Hatcher preached a mobile sermon on the day of the service. Francis Tabernacle 17.1 presented a banked of fruit to Mrs Gussele Griggs, a native of New York. C. M. E. C. Church gave Mrs Griggs a donation of $5.00. The Loyal Flames of America's local lodge gave a gift to the church at 7:20pm at 7:20pm at that 7:20pm church. That was a success. Mrs Bell gave a gift to the church, it is better at this written. Mrs Lacy of Port Worth, is visiting her mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. Abemanyah gave a gift to the church. Birds' rest room; she also has a style show which she will be "shamed" to you. Please have your money ready.
OKLAHOMA TOWNS.
McKenzie, June 20 — West Bethleigh Church has just completed the improvement of their oldite Dr. G. W. Bickerton, 86.80 residence on East Washington Street. The following were candid statements: Lodge No. 55, Thursday night. Lodge No. 54, Thursday night. Lodge Steward, Howard Draper, Lodge Central, Lodge Johnson left Saturday night for Hot Springs, Ark. East Merryl Johnson left Saturday building of their office. Rev Branch is the pastor. Mrs. James Stephens, an old resident of the city, is very proud of her building on East Washington St. M. D. Blanion is with the C. J. Glaze, who sustained many wounds in the Tulsa riot, underwent an operation doing nicely at this writing, at the house of Mrs Bostic, Rev Kirk McKenzie, doing nicely at home on 5. Delaware. Little Loyce Lane is visiting her grandparents. McKenzie Bell News—West Bethleigh Beach, Oklahoma, first day to 1 in favor Bags; second day to 1 in favor Bags; second day, June 26th. Go-Develish showed the Wiberton Wonders, scores to 5, in favor Dover.
PAGE THRER.
PRAISES EXPRESS POLICY AND EDITORIALS.
Editor Dallas Express,
Dear Sir,
I am satisfied with a deal of interest, the very timely editorials you have been writing for the past few months. They have dealt with questions of vital moment in racial debate, and have been bearly understood, and yet profound, expressing the ability of the author to convey thorough knowledge of racial needs. I hope the public generally can see the importance of the editorials of so great benefit to our well being commercially, industrially, intellectually and politically. I am proud of the history worthy of respectful record for generations to come.
GOVERNOR,
Gen. Mr. Kerr. Eagle Mutual Benefit Aa.n.
PRESIDENT HARDING WRITES LET-
TER FOR N. A. C. LETTER OF
PRESENCE.
New York City, N. Y., June 26—The National Association, the Fifth District of New York, received a letter he had received from President Franklin D. Roosevelt in writing in which President extended his thanks to the twelfth annual conference of the association, an event that the Association may announce that the association may be represented in teaching. President Roosevelt also said in his letter to Mr. Johnson that he would be interested in the discussions of the convention and to encourage the development in developing a constructive policy.
SAVINGS OF NEGRO WORKERS BUT
SLICTLY AFFECTED BY UNEM-
PLOYMENT DURING INDUSTRIAL
DEPRESSION.
No. of Depositors ..... 47,368
Total Amt. of Savings ..... 48,758
$3,529,899 $7,271,744
Amt. of Services 80
80
78
Out of the institutions, industrial centers, carrying situations, industrial centers, carrying accounts of Negro workers, shows that the savings of their Negro workers during the four months ending during the four months ending
GEDDES DECORATES NEGRO.
PAGR FOUR
MEMBER OF
THE ASSOCIATION
MIGRO PRESS
FIRST IN SERVICE
MEMBER
NATIONAL MEGRO PRESS
ASSOCIATION.
Published every Saturday morning.
In the year at 2000 series Avenue
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312, 318 Street.
Chicago Office, Frost and Frost, Beverage
Building.
Independent Office, Frost and Frost, Can-
sel Building.
Independent Office, Frost and Frost, Independent Life Building.
SUBSCRIPTIONS IN ADVANCE.
One Year.....$3.00
Six Months.....1.50
Three Months.....1.00
Single Copy.....10
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC.
Any erroneous reflection upon the
character, standing or reputation of
any person, firm or corporation which
has been made in connection with the
Dallas Express will be gladly cor-
dicated to the attention of the publishers.
Entered at Post Office at Dallas
Texas, as second class matter, under
Art. Commerce March 1872.
IMPORTANT.
No subscriptions mailed for a period
less than three months. Payment
may be made by check no. 1000.
THE DALLAS EXPRESS
has never hoisted the white feather, neither has it been digressed by the yellow streak. It is not afflicted with the flannel mouth. It is in a plain, every day, sensible, conservative newspaper, which trims no sail to catch the passing breeze; flies no doubtful flag; it is not a man-made broad as our country. Its love of even had 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 hollow. W. E. KING.
MAKE THE BUSINESS
LEAGUE A SUCCESS
Monday and Tuesday the busi-
ness men of the state will convene
for a two-day session at St. James
and will discuss the need for a
educative programs have been ar-
ranged in which men engaged in all
the activities of the business men.
This meeting is to serve as a
clearing house for business methods
and ideas of the more progressive
as it should be well attended. Local
business men should feel it worth
while to the extent that they at-
tend to the sessions in large
numbers.
The principal topic for determination
will be the Guaranty State Bank
of Texas in the business men of
to put the operation in hope of
hoped in charge that the interest in this project may be so
the early establishment may be made and that stock may begin to be sold.
The Business League is an or-
ganization which may mean much
critical. It may become an apo-
sor for business institutions which are vital
in the establishment and a meeting place from
which all may receive benefit in the
form of advanced ideas and more
The stimulation of a deeper interest in the workings of this organization be the reward of expansion of our business, projects.
It is the duty of the business men of Dallas and vicinity to make a decided contribution to this organization Monday and Tuesday.
More than two birds of the physicians and dentists of the state are expected to attend the meeting of the American Dental Association July 19-21. The hearty support of the Muncin in this progressive program is being noted in many quarters. It is to be hoped that this organization eventually be the principal leading our physicians and dentists into a fuller and more complete service of their people than has yet been developed.
Saving of money is always in order.
The education of 10,000,000 people to the proper understanding of life and its duties is not accomplish. It is dangerous to attach importance to one's own self.
The short shirts of some of our ladies might well give place to longer studies of good manners.
Its easy to criticise, but hard to construct.
Lives of races as well as of individuals consist of a series of 'ups and downs."
We are steadily gaining in the power of co-operation.
One may more easily take care of himself with of brawn than with a brick.
THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS, SATURDAY, JULY 2, 1921
HOPE, PATIENCE, PERSEVERANCE
HOPE, PATIENCE, PERSEVERANCE
The attitude of the American business world toward the financial depression incident to the return to "normalcy" furnishes to us as to the rest of the world, a wonderful example of what hope, patience, perservance, and common sense may accomplish in the face of circumstances pregnant with disaster.
The curtailment of credits, the collapse of foreign markets for reconstruction work and the American buyers strike have caused a situation in America which, but for the foresight and skillful manipulation of American financiers and producers, would have made in a such a manifold manner the foresight of these men caused them courageously to adopt a program, not of retrenchment, but of common sense balancing of credit and production in the hope that before actual distress became apparent, order might be restored.
Such a course meant the loss of profit and the lessening of surplus in many instances. In others it meant almost bankruptcy—but they followed the course made necessary by circumstance and, if we are to judge by present indications, their success has justified their course.
Facts cannot be dissolved by emotional ravings and high sounding platitudes.
Reason must rule and discretion must be exercised if ultimate success is to be hoped for.
We may admire the courage of the Indian, who many years ago opposed the war by standing on the track and pushing against it, but history chronicles him as lacking in common sense and good judgment. No sensible man or group of men could argue that this Indian is an example worthy of wide emulation.
Members of our group must at all times seek thoughts in mind.
We of the South face facts and conditions which, though they appeal to us as deplorable must be faced dispassionately. They are the result of conditions and circumstances as old as America itself. The doctrines from which they have grown out are traditions, a vital part of the lives of those who now possess them. They have come into being slowly; and just as slowly will they be replaced by a different kind of thinking, made possible by a range of conditions which will also be gradual. We have come from this condition can judge as fully of the fixedness of these conditions as can one who lives and moves among them. No, solution proposed quickly and without much thought, much charity, much study of the history of these conditions can hope to help much in alleviating them. We may as well face fundamentals. Ill advised and hasty conclusions are harmful.
The greatest force after all is that of a public opinion which will more effectually help than any other force yet found by which men are governed. The formation of such an opinion will necessitate a working, together to a degree which are remediated. We feel that our greatest hope is to be found in the operation of this opinion.
Its formation will be gradual. It will be made increasingly possible only as those among whom this opinion must operate become convinced of its working to their ultimate benefit.
We know that our only aim is a full opportunity to contribute to the development of American ideals and institutions. We desire no more than this and ultimately America will find that we are no less.
But as conditions now stand America does not fully realize it. We are anxious to cause it to realize it.
It will be a long process demanding the exercise by us of hope, patience perseverance and much common sense. Those who argue to us differently do not realize as fully as they might, the gravity of the situation which confronts us, and the gravity of the question we are given to answer upon anything other than a realization of the fact that in its last analysis the harmonius contribution of each for all must be based on a mutual understanding and agreement. Agreements to be arrived at often demand the exercise of hope, patience and perseverance. They are the result of nothing else. Warrant for the adoption of such a course is found in the history of all individuals races and nations. It results in lasting good to all concerned.
CRUMB GATHERING
so doubt but that in all sections of the wing disgust to Negro voters of the course now being pursued by some among that; it is not the course now being gathered up political "crumbs," for that unit to, as they fall from the great Repub so us that the course now being pursuedance with the proposed course as set for empaign and calculated to result in reme in their job begging ar doing us harm,
There is no doubt but that in all sections of the country there is a growing disgust to Negro voters of the course of action which is now being pursued by some among that great host of our political leaders whose presence at Washington is actuated by a desire for gathering up political "crumbs," for that is about what they amount to, as they fall from the great Republican banquet. It seems to us that the course now being pursued by them is much at variance with the proposed course as set forth in the presidential campaign and calculated to result in remedial legislation. They, in their job begging are doing us harm, not good. We are not benefited as a race by their appointment to positions where they are powerless, at salaries which by their efforts in another line they might even surpass. Our work in this line have been aptly stated by William Pickens in an Associated Negro Press editorial which in part is as follows: "Would not a better class of Colored men have commanded more respect in Washington? There are, of course, some exceptionally worthy men among the Negro political aspirants, and we could name them, but to call names would be invidious. On the whole, however, they have been a set who were "hired and not off" during the campaign, and the smug security of this big Republican majority does not feel, it owes them any further.
Accordingly, they have been playing the very disgraceful role for several months now of living around in Washington, with their mouths open, so to speak, "waiting for the plums to fall." This a very painful thing to the self-respecting Colored folk. They would much prefer to have seen these men stay out of Washington and let the administration take the initiative under the urge to change the public opinion. But these men have now "writ us all down" in the newspapers, self-seekers, and have furnished their enemies with good clubs with which to keep us out of our group dues.
And every four years now, we are blessed with an out-crowning of this politician. We never hear of them during the slow fight of the seasons against the evils that beset us, but they spring up every four years, like a race of quadruennial plants,—or to change the simile, they swarm like files when the Republican governors come to town. And still they are waiting "for something to turn up" in a machine-ridden shadow-shying administration, and we are all afflicted by their humiliation. And these same men use to swell out their chests at our banquets last fall, and when we wanted to CRY OUT for something, they would say with cryptic eyebrows, "Shee-ee don't that. That would spoil everything. I have just had a talk with the President elect, and he told me that the interests of the race will be properly taken care off." They impatiently "on the inside" that everything was "all right" and that all we had to do is "wait" and "drive the President a chance."
Colored people, faithful, nobly believing, have fallen for that sort of buncombe time and again. What most of these politicians were really afraid of was that if the Colored people made too loud a noise they might frighten away the jobs which they thought they were about to slap their hats down on. The "interests of the Race" meant nothing but these jobs.
It is our opinion that if the group of made Negro politicians had shown themselves absolutely unconcerned about jobs or nav, but dead in earnest about the welfare and status of their whole job, they would have been sooner vetted. If it is not too late even now, they would have made sure the foretend that he ever wanted a job, and make the President and Congress believe that what possesses his soul is a desire for an anti-lynching law and a law to discredit Jim Crowism, and a defy every man who is sane and free from crime."
THE MIRROR
OF
PUBLIC OPINION
A retrospective view of the condition of the American workmankind of 35 years ago, as compared to present-day conditions, 'tells the story of the mighty struggle of organized labor to break the spell that bound the bread winner body and soul to the arbitrary rule of the master and redeem him from a state of industrial and economic slavery. The advent of T. V. Powdery and the Knights of Labor exploited the age-old theory that "labor had no rights which capital was bound to respect," and in its stead another and more altruistic sentiment sprang up: "All men are human, and entailed to human consideration." Under pressure of this sentiment the old contract system, by which shipboats of cheep labor foreign labor were the spirit of the native tatter, guarded the death knell of its long and cruel adversary over the deaths of its victims. Inspired by this hopeful work, labor grew more determined in its resolute for safer wages and better living conditions.
The Knights of Labor white short-lived but served the purpose of an awakening, and out of the ashes of their ruins sprang the American Federation of Labor. One cannot in so small a space fully enumerate the items or estimate the value of the great work which the Federation, has accomplished in the interest of tolling humanity in all parts of the world, condition shorter work hours, protection of women workers, compensating the poor and perishable monuments to its uniting labor. But in suite of its splendid work, the Federation repeated the final mistake made in the draft of the Federal Constitution. The Constitution decreed that a fractional part of the slave population added to the free population should be the basis of representation in Congress, which act gave official recognition to slavery and wove it into the fabric of our Government. The Federation of Labor and the Federation of membership, which act gave official recognition to race discrimination into the fabric of its government. This blinder on the part of the Federation has made the Negro an unwilling out, whose opportunities in the struggle for existence are subjected to such absurd restrictions as to render him vindictive and therefore all the more dangerous as a rival in the field of labor.
Now, let us see how this situation, created by the all-powerful Federation, affects its demographics. During the past four years have done much to convince the Federation of the fact that to perpetuate the closed shop with 12,000,000 hostile Negroes excluded from its ranks, together with a larger number of whites who are not affiliated with any union. The result of this awakening has manifested itself in many ways, such as giving permission here and there to some individual or group of Negroes to join its ranks; but from the viewpoint of industrial advantage this eleventh hour repentance less than nothing. Had the Negro been accepted in the beginning and educated in the ways of the labor unions, the Negro would have been able to prevent the success of sympathetic walkouts, as he has often done.
All through these years of labor union development in numbers and influence the Negro has looked on in silent resentment of his forced exclusion from any active part in this world movement for the redemption of labor. Now, when the reaction from inflamed war-time conditions is filling the world with misery and crime, the Colored man may, in spite of himself become a plant tool in the hands of capital to press down the crown of thorns upon the brow of organized labor.
This is, indeed, a regrettable situation to contemplate; but it is the valuable sequence of every attempt to foster the idea of the supremacy of the Negro in the labor force, and the existence of many races. Under the present circumstances, when a Colored man is asked to join a labor union he is suspicious that the purpose is to use him only as the means to an end, with no thought of permitting him to share in the permanent good resulting from service thus rendered, whereas conditions should be such that both races could work together in harmony and thus make the American laborer the most prosperous, skilful and happy of any in the world. But instead the Federation preferred to inject the venom of race hate where it would affect the greater number of its victims. As a fitting climax to this movement of Negro isolation, the ignorant and uneducated Negro would be emerged from a condition of industrial slavery, was taught to regard such course as fundamental to his own success as a member of organized labor.
It was this policy which resulted in a spirit of rivalry between the foreign element and the native-born Nero. Many of these allieans, have grown prosperous and influential under the protection of unionism, and it is anisming at times to note the puzzled expression upon their faces that the Nero laborers have been so powerful in the enment. As a matter of fact, these people have no cause to hate the Nero, but it i the plan of the American white man to inoculate the world so that he may be looked upon as the dominant factor in the selection and preservation of white supremacy. But in spite of its segregation of the Nero laborers and the importation of foreigners to take his place, organized labor has been able to resist this. In the shop, white capital is just as determined in defense of the open shop. In this critical situation capital will invoke the aid of unorganized labor of both races who will make common cause against organized labor in the hope of finding relief in the establishment of the open shop. Should organized labor win out, it will at least have learned the lesson that "no chain is stronger than its weakest link," which should be gratified for code of ethics, for if no other reason than to surround it with an atmosphere of hostility.
GIVE OUR GRADUATES EMPLOYMENT.
There is a most hopeful and at the same time a most tragic side to the graduation of the thousands of Colored boys and girls each year from the high schools and higher institutions of the country. There is an evidence on the one side and increased intelligence of brain power for the race that can be damned. The stream may be turned to this side or that side but it is the force which cannot be wasted and which will inevitably find the unchocked out of the future. Yet on the other side for a great proportion of these graduates, there arises the question: What will they be able to do? What will they be fitted for the task which their hands may find to do? An increasingly large proportion of the Colored graduates from Northern institutions are unwilling to go to South. An increasing proportion of them will be unwilling to go to the ordinary vocations of life from which they have been educated, a way and to which they are not, perhaps, by nature and temperament fitted. A very small proportion, however, will find employment at the task for which their education has fitted them; in the more or less congenial atmosphere of their own home towns in the South. A slightly less, but also growing proportion will find employment in the federal or municipal civil service. The query then rises what will become our goal: to give them the opportunity to work in the channels that will serve their own ends and that of the race's progress? There is but one way. That way is for the old generation of the race to give employment immediately and wherever possible, in the business, in the trades and in the professions to our graduates. A movement, of general employment immediately and wherever possible, in the business in the trades and in the professions to our graduates. A movement, of general employment may be started on business and business employment for our graduates, if they are not to be discouraged and if our young men and young women who have equipped themselves are not to be turned to the beyons of earning their living by their with rates of pay, but rather to the realities of the business and wisdom. The race to send their children to high schools, to colleges and universities will prepare for the emergencies of the future; and the emergencies will arise. We also urge them to begin new practical efforts to give those who are equipped an opportunity to use their education and thus advance the cause of their race and this country. New York News.
CONGRESS SHOULD PASS AN ANTI-LYNCHING LAW.
The Republican national platform of 1920 pledged national anti-lynchism legislation, and this question is one of the most important demanding the attention of Congress. The president will not prove to be an absolute preventative of lynchings—the most to be bound is that they will serve as a deterrent—.
DALLAS EXPRESS CORNER for WOMEN MRS. A.H. DYSON
DR. R.H.TROTTER
HEALTH & HYGIENE
but they will serve a highly important purpose in giving formal expression to national abhorrence of a practice which frequently dissuases nation before the world.
The most recent outbreak of this character is that at Tulsa, Oklahoma. It is the culmination of many months of persistent preaching of race hatred. For the crime of an individual—a crime for which an individual, rather than a race must be held responsible—a general attack upon the Negro settlement in the community was made, with the result that seventy-five people were killed and millions of dollars worth of property damage was done.
The first lesson of this is that the law-abiding elements in any community should array themselves against lawlessness whenever its only head is raised. The first responsible rests upon the law enforcing officials of the locality, affected. Unless there be failure in performance of duty by local officials at the crucial moment, seldom will a community be compelled to submit to the domination of a mob. And when a mob gains the upper hand in a community, no one can foretell to what length it will carry its work of arson, rapine and murder.
Communities which do not thus assert themselves through their officials and citizens, in behalf of law and order, should be penalized for their failure to do their duty. Officials who fail to exhaust every resource at their command before yielding to a mob should be deprived of their offices.
The Constitution of the United States guarantees to every citizen of the nation the protection of his civil rights. This guarantee should be made effective by the amendment of a drastic anti-tracking law. Such a measure was pledged by the Republican national platform of 1920, and the present Congress should keep this pledge.
When several rooms are thrown to the floor, it is advisable to decorate two very large rooms to produce an effect of spaciousness. To produce an effect of spaciousness will prove monotonous. The question is whether it is advisable to decorate two very large rooms without destroying the sense of space. It should be apparent in closely constructed rooms that the problem is to repeat in each room one or more colors from the rooms adorned with the same colors, not elsewhere prominently displayed.
AUNT PATS FORUM.
"What kind of ring is used for an engagement ring? It is necessary that the one have " Loving10, ESICA.
Dear Jessica, a diamond is the most beautiful engagement ring, though an engagement ring is also used and a ring is intriguing other stones are used and a ring is important the engagement publicity, and a man who has an engagement ring other just as truly without a ring as a woman does engagement ring at all. Where the engagement ring at all. Where the he sometimes gives his sweetheart a ring, where he has promised to marry him
IN THE KINGDOM OF THE KITCHEN
pudding diab about three-quarter of an hour or until the pudding arrives and is hot. Spread the marmalade or preserves over the top, cover with meringue, made from the white sugar, brown quickly, let cool of the sugar, brown quickly, let cool and serve with
Cream Cake.
1 cup of sugar
2 tablespoons of butter
2 tablespoons of water, measured before stirring
1 teaspoon of tea powder
1 teaspoon of baking powder
Cream the sugar and butter and the flour
Cream the sugar and the flour and baking powder, and the vanilla and bake in the following piping
piping
1-2 cups scaled milk
3-4 cups of sugar
2 cups of water, measured for flour
2 eggs
12 cup of milk.
Mix together to thicken and then cool with heat for 10 minutes.
Mix together with cream of the cake sauce.
1. No. 1. Cut cold cookies into thicken deice leaves or watercress and serve on whole lettuce leaves covered with No. 2. Arrange alternative layers of cookies on a bed of lettuce leaves and sprinkle with a heat of cookies or mayonnaise.
2. Arrange alternative layers of cold cookies on leaves and cabbage leaves and sprinkle with mayonnaise or cooked dressing.
Pepper and Cottage Cheese Salad.
1 large green pepper.
1 pint of cottage cheese.
2 tablespoons of chopped wainuts.
Mayonnaise dressing.
Mini pieces into small
pieces and mic with cheese, season
well with salt and pepper, press into
a loaf and slice in their slices. Sprinkle
with salt.
LITTLE THINGS THAT HELP.
Kitchen, Seligers.
When Sealing Jellies.
Before sealing jelly glasses with
braffit, coat the glass with thread across
the bottom, letting it hang over
the edge of the glass, and the
seam can be easily lifted when wanted
Prevent Holling Over
Add a piece of butter twice the
amount and a piece of butter twice
the amount and will not roll over—
For the Refriterate.
A. For the Refriterate on the
bread. A. For the Refriterate will
or may刺入 the bread.
Remaying Broken Yolk.
When breaking eggs for cake, if a dish is too hot, dip the corner of a soft cloth in warm water, wring dry and touch to the opening of the cloth, and then wring closing to the cloth and is easily removed. S. H. How to Freshen Celery. When celery that has been kept at few days loses its freshness stand in it warm, but when bacon juice has sugar, been added. The acid will bring back the bittered flavor of M. N. Mich. R. H. TROTER H & HYGIENE
Free tuberculosis clenic at Morgan-
Trotter sanitarium every Tuesday) and
Friday from 2 to 2 p. m.
important purpose in giving formal express of a practice which frequently discharges this of this character is that at Tulsa, Oklahoma, months of persistent preaching of race hatred, in a crime for which an individual, rather responsible, a general attack upon the Negro was made, with the result that seventy-five as of dollars worth of property damage was that the law-abiding elements in any country against lawlessness whenever its only bead rests upon the law enforcing officials of there be failure in performance of duty by moment, seldom will a community be compelled of a mob. And when a mob gains the upper can foretell to what length it will carry its order. at that assert themselves through their off- law and order, should be penalized for theirails who fail to exhaust every resource at to a mob should be deprived of their offenses. States guarantee to every citizen of the civil rights. This guarantee should be made of a drastic anti-tying law. Such a mea- nesian national platform of 1920, and the pres- pledge.
The National Republican, Washington, D. C.
Jacksonville, June 10—The Dahl has express on sate every Saturday at Sanders and Tennesseer's barber, shop. Sunday School was well attended at all the churches, Mr. Jim Rashese, a respected citizen of this city, taught the children while attempting to cross Gunn Creek, three miles from the city. He was riding a mule, just after a big rain, in trying to cross a bridge where the water was above the sur. face, a big drift was coming down stream which frightened the mule. He was walking in the stream with the occupant. Two white boys reclaimed the body from the water. Funeral services were
held at the Rasdale cemetery Sunday evening in charge of the Rasda, dale Understanding Co., Rev. J. H. Collins, conducted the funeral, which was held to rest with Mason honi, who was to be buried with Waco after a two's week's stay to Waco after a two's week's stay in the Sunday for Pt. Worth. Sanders C. Bowens, died 25th inst., after a few day's illness, funeral services were held in Rasdale cemetery. Miss Mabel Barrett has returned home after a two's week's stay to Rasdale cemetery. Miss Iabel Hayla Haines and little grand daughter Helen returned home after a two's week's stay to McKimley and daughter, Miss Dattie M. Dille H of Longview, are in the city visit, and no dinner was served at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Clever Willee, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Spencer were served. Mr. and Mrs. Willie Lee, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Spencer were served.
Ciceruleus, June 20—The Ladies of Columbus are preparing to enter an audience at the funeral of the man that is to convene in this July 11 ceremony. The event will be organized by a society, J. M. Moore, Mar., as a sentimental opening a store in the city of Mt. Zion Baptist Church, 100 West 11th Street.
ATTEMPTS TO POISON FAMILY.
(By The Associated Press News)
amongstmen, Aina, June 20-26
were logged in at Greenwich
hast last Tuesday afternoon by Sherri
opinions. They are enclosed with al-
tered copies of a wine plantar living
about six miles west of Greenwich, in
the village of Greenwich, and
pursued to have poisoned poison
and placed it in the water bucket of the
village. The summarily named physician
saved use of Mrs. Moore, who was mute
deadly ask immediately after drink-
ing, and very much stirred over the cae
is the second poisoning afar dur-
ing the attack.
ELAINE MEN AGAIN WIN RE
PRIEVE.
DR. SCOTT ATTENDS YALE PRES
IDENTIAL INAUGURATION
New Haven, Conn. Jun. 26, Dr. J. Kawdian, Ann. formerly of the University of Chicago, and of the Carnegie Institution for Science, as President of Yale University, Wesleyan, June 22, with academic cerebration Address was delivered by Dr. Arthur T. Haddell retiring Presidents were made by Dr. Russell Henzel, Untedman, Director of the Shuffled Presidents were made by Dr. Lawrence Lowe, President of Harvard University, and ceremonies were preceded by a dinner to delegate and especially invited guest at time addresses were delivered by Principal Alfred E. Stearns of Philadelphia Lawrence Wenley, President of Mr. Ewolley College; President W. H. P. College; President Mr. S. Sir Robert Jones of the University, (La Roche) the introduction of the new president, a new deacon was given 'in honor of delegates and alumni in the University Dining Hall at which the president, a new deacon, was University, among the oldest and most William Dews, and former President
A number of institutions for the education of Colored youth were represented by members of their faculties. Howard University, among the oldest and most famous institutions for the training of African-American students, Dr. Emmett J. Scott, Secretary-Treasurer of the University, Dr. Scott was a prominent figure in the life of Week and as Howard University's representative was extended many personal and official courtesy.
THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS, SATURDAY, JULY 2, 1928
SEVENTY-TABLE DOLLARS IS A AMOUNT BALANCE TO BE COLLECTED.
Principal N. W. Harvie Puts Forth Muen Erfurt to Natch the $400.00 Offered By the Board of Education, Dallas, Texas, June 10, 1927.
The following three churches have contributed to the fund to match the $400.00 during the past summer. A first class, a Summer School and Normal in the city of Dallas to be operated for the authorities and placed in the
BIBLE TRANSLATED INTO AFRICAN
CAN DIALLECT.
Chicago, June 30—The use of digital phones in the universities of Central Africa to aid the missionaries can be improved by students to writing has been introduced by the Board of For-See Missionaries, the bush natives who work in the church, it was chaired by Dr. P. M. North of New York at the meeting of the bush natives into an ornamental shrub. "The task of correlating the spectra of the bush natives into a normalized form has been accomplished in chirurgical symbols is regarded as an important aspect of methodical missionary to Amhara, to Burkina Faso, and to Togo. The Rev. Herbert C. Wiley Methodist missionary to Amhara, to Burkina Faso, and to Togo, received the New Testament into the infrastructure of the Labube cumbims of the interior and similar work is being done in the region.
PLANS FOR MERGER CONSIDERED
NEWSPAPER MAN GETS JOB AT WASHINGTON.
For twenty-five years Dodson was a independent of Conch 's Concern Public Affairs, a member of the founder and charter members of the National Negro Press Association of being the only one to detect an error in the proofs of a release by the American Press Association of the various channels of newspaper copy. The association is releasing a report of the various channels of his first candidacy for president. Term Taft as secretary of the navy was the first president to admit that safety Taft was secretary of war. The error cost the American Press $2,400 and Dodson was immediately prepared to correct it.
SENTENCED CHARGED WITH N. C.
RIOT.
Warren, N. C., June 28, Jermon
Hunter was sent to eight years
in the penitentiary by Judge E. H.
Crane, last week and six other Col-
FIRST AND OLDEST BARRISTER DIES IN LOS ANGELES.
Los Angeles, Cal., June 30—susan L. Wicklite, the first man of color in Southern California, died at his residence, 1662 Fleming Street.
She was a graduate of Johns Hopkins University in 1894 in this state since 1894, except for a period from 1981 and 1886, when he was a professor of history at the thirty-second degree in Mamory and was a member of various other faculty. She was the widow, Mrs Minnie W. Wicklite, a son, Gus Wakstu, Jr., and a daughter, Gus Wakstu, Jr., and a daughter, life. The brother resides in Chattanooga. Tenn. Funeral arrangements are awaiting his expected arrival.
CALIFORNIA MOVIE STAR VISITS
HOME STATE
Sidney P. Dones, our own Mark Star, spent several days in Dallas M. W. Jones of Thomas Avenue M. W. Jones is a product of Texas Mr. Dones is a partner of Texas has thousands of friends here in Dallas, who have seen him on the set of Democracy Film Corporation Democracy Film Corporation and President and Manager of the Bounty He announces that his latest picture releases "Reformation and Reformation" and plays leading roles in both the Grand Central Theatre in the early 2000s. He plays leading roles in both the traveled extensively in the U.S. and Mexico, and has offered in New York City, where he lives. He takes the greatest pride in his work. This has endured him all Texas.
IS ELECTED TO GREEK LETTER
FRATERNITY.
(BY The Associated Negro Press.)
William Townsend, Mass., univ.
Staples High School,
the Junior Class of William College
William Townsend, Mass., univ.
Staples High School,
the Beta Kappa
honorary society, being one of the
few members of his class to receive
the honorary degree. He is a
college course, and the only Colo-
member, Mr. Brown is the son of
of Howard University, and a grad-
uate of the Junior Hair School
of Howard University.
TALETENED YOUNG WOMAN
GRADUATES WITH HONOR
(By The Associed Nexio Press)
Chicago, IL, June 30, 2015 Miss H. Harrison was named H. W. Harrison, the noted publisher of *College here* the year. She has the distinction of heading the honor roll in this institution, well good school. Miss Harrison has been studying for her Masters degree in music at the University.
SIDELIGHTS OF WASHINGTON.
(By The Associated Negro Press.)
"It was Miss Hallel G. Brown who was reported as saying that the pro-immigrant public party gave a splinter," remarked the political philosopher, who said I wonderings "were also right."
"Yes," remarked the G. A. R. man, "Predrick Douglas said, "The Republican party is the ship, all else the sea," I ask, are we nearing a shipwreck."
Honary C. Smith, veteran editor of the Cleveland Gazette, was in national news with President Harding and Senator Willis.
Mrs. Gabrielle Peham and Prof. Benjamin Washington of the Washington public school system demonstrated how there can be independent schools. The balloons of the schools refused to permit colored people attend the singles. The schools were on the program. They refused to appear, and took the singles to Dumar High, where all races went.
There has been considerable comment on the extraordinary display of the public literary Digest, June 18 on the Tulsa riot. The comments were given first position and race, as well as daily
OUR NEW HOME
ed, however, that he will return to Houston in a month. He was born of Philadelphia, has started an illustrated publication called "Eoon." He prepares a biography of the achievements of the race. The first number looks promising. Special Assistant Attorney General has appointed Louis R. Nollinger a lawyer for the Mellinger was chief clerk in the office of Mr. BJ. Scott, Secretary-General, and has finished the law department this month. He was a Captain in the A.A. Navy, and a native of Mississippi. Attorney Howard entered full furlough in August.
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Film Corporation passed through the city on his way to New York, where he has begun the direction of two new pictures. Mr. Michaoux will be until September, and will go London, England, where his corporation proposes to open a foreign office.
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Base Ball And Other Sports
Edited by J. ALBA AUSTIN
DIAMOND BUGS ARE BATTLING HARD—RACE GROWING, WAXING WARM—GIANTS SPLIT EVEN HERE WITH OILERS AND BUFFS—GOLIATHS TO PLAY WICHITA, JULY 4.
PAGE SIX.
Base Ball And
Edited by J.
DIAMOND BUGS ARE
GROWING, WAXING WAY
HERE WITH OILERS AND
PLAY WICHITA, JULY 4.
Only two games of a scheduled
three-game series were played here
between Beaumont Oilers and Dallas
Black Giants first game was played
Sunday, after being rained out.
Saturday and resulted in a score of 6 to
4 in favor of Dallas.
On Monday, the Oilers defeated
the Giants 4 to 2 content.
the Giants in New York in town Tuesday for a couple of battles with the Giants, the South Texas delegation was an insolent set having won their first game in New York in Thursday's fracas by a score of 4 to 1, and the second day's contest resulted in a score of 5 to 2 in favor of the Giants. The Giants will play at Wichita Falls in July and they will enter, talm the fans of that city on the day. In their home engagement the clan of Whitaker grabbed two and passed two that isn't bad after all, breaking even on a fifty-fifty battle. RANGER DOWNS WILLE WILD CATS BY SHUTING 'EM OUT TWICE.
The Oil star won the two outs victory over the Wiley Wild Cats on Saturday, First game 9 to 0. Batteries: Strowder and Speed Ball. Bad: Game Sunday Oil Stars 5 to 0: Batteries: Harris and Speed Ball. Strowder featured the game, 2 home runs, Leonard Smith. The Oil Stars have played 29 games and
DEMPSEY TO DEFEND
HEAVYWEIGHT CROWN
TODAY.
FANS FROM ALL PARTS OF GLOBE MAY SEE BATTLE FOR FISTIC SUPREMACY.
GEORGES CARPENTIER. FRENCH CHAMPION IS THE CHALLENGER.
Today is the day; the stage is all set for the world's heavyweight title bout, Jack Dempsey, the American Champion will defend his title for George Carpenter, French champion.
The bout will take place at Jersey City, where the French fight arena ever constructed. It is said the big structure can accommodate date ninety-one thousand persons. The training quarters took a short rest and are now in tip shape for the bout.
In the betting the American champion is the favorite, but there is a slight Dempsey followers have been offering odds on the tilt and it is apparent as the day of the bout approaches the Carpenter money is being offered. Fight fans from all over the country are in Jersey City to witness the
Well they are off today just who will win you don't know and neither do I. You all of us will by tonight.
Ex-CHAMPION MAY NOT
SEE TITLE BOUT.
Ex-CHAMPION MAY NOT
SEE TITLE BOUT.
Exchampion Jack Johnson, will not be granted a parole to see the Dempsey, Carpenter contend. He will be taken down by the Unified States Attorney General.
Johnson's term at Laworthsville prison expires July 9, whereby the bigger will have paid the county try for his offense and will become a free agent.
**OAK CLUTK**
Mur. Turlough of Gkhlhoma is visiting relatives at 1024 N. Betterson
The new Smith's Chanel A. M. E.
Church had its opening on June 20th
with the various pastors of the city
present. Money raised $237.00. Rev.
Smith preached the sermon. Rev. J.
Dougan Faster, R. L. Rokethorn,
Clerk.
DALLAS, U.S. MEN LEAVES HUR-
DYD TO LOUISANA
R. P. Miles, local ice dealer, received a message Sunday night from Keithville, La., announcing the serious illness of his sister, Mrs. Clara White.
THE STANDING OF THE COLORED TEXAS LEAGUE
Club P. 4. W 26. L 15. Pet.
Houston 41 26 16 15-578
Ft. Worth 38 40 15-578
Baugnum 40 22 16-50
Beaumont 41 21 20-512
Galveston 43 21 22-48
Wichita Falls 37 2 18 29-186
WHERE THEY PLAY NEXT
Club Date
Houston at-
at Galveston July 2, 3, 4, 5
Dallas at-
at Wichita Falls July 2, 3, 4, 5
(Only two Scheduled)
Beaumont at-
at Houston July 8, 9, 10
Galveston at-
at Dallas July 8, 9, 10
Port Worth at-
at Wichita July 8, 9, 19
Wichita Falls July 8, 9, 19
STANDING IN WEST TEXAS
LEAGUE--PLAYED, WON AND
LOST.
P. W. L. Ranger 39, 33 6
Eastland 32 20 12
Brockenridge 32 12 9
Allen 10 3 10
The Rancher Oil Stars are holding the Title in the West and would like to hear from some of the fast club in Texas by L. the Robert,
DR. J. H. WARMSLY, Reporter.
Office 306 Guaranty State Bank
who was not expected to live.
He left Monday night for Keith
ville.
BRANCH Y. M. C. A.
The meetings of the week were well attended and interesting. The meeting of the Honey Bee Club, Park by the Honey Bee Club, are not quite completed. Each member is urged to be present at the reg. 4, 1921. Arrangement to secure athletic suits will be made at this meeting. The men's meeting Sunday after, no afforded a well mixed audience. The president of the Excelsior Mutual Insurance Co. was at his best and delivered a splendid address, full of enthusiasm. The group of boys and men departed richer in experience and knowledge. The Board of Management will meet Tuesday night, July 5, 1921, at the Field House on Wall St. very important meeting and will require the presence of every mem. Sunday, July 3, 1921. Dr. J. H. Smith, pastor of Bethel A. M. Church will speak at the meeting and will proff. it by attending these inspirational prayers. Pray for the success of
NEWS BRIEF'S.
Memphis, Tennessee. June 20.—Beaten
by the mob, she was then brutally struck with the
knife. She was taken to Henry Hill, Colored, Brasset Thomas 27, wealthy planner of Lake Cormorant,
was removed from a Cormorant's Wednesday afternoon while being removed from a Cormorant's Wednesday afternoon while being removed from a Cormorant's Baptist Hospital in a J. T. Hinton & Company ambulance.
Stoken, 19, are under arrest charged with
theft and widely different stories are
told of the murder. The woman, who
was a member of Thomas' mother at Lake Cormorant,
was taken her brother, Hill, had
taken her brother, Hill, had
(A. N. P.)
Kingwood, W. W., June 20—The Baltimore indicted by the grand jury of four officers of the Baltimore police department for first degree murder in connection with the shooting of Baltimore and Ohio investigators. Judge A. G. Hughes, who will occupy the courtroom, will preside over the defense. V. G. Leben and G. T. Dalley attorneys A. G. Leben and F. 2. Perrick, prosecuting attorney of Freeman, assisted by a prominent attorney of Kingwood.
DEBT SLAVERY IS INVESTIGATED
A searching attack on the system of debt slavery in the South today as we look at the past has been published in pamphlet form by the American Civil Liberties Union in New York City. The statements and conclusions of the author, the Association for the Advancement of Colored People, which declares in an introduction that "in the South today the white man, who declares in public to speak the truth about the race problem. We believe this pamphlet, consulted Southern white men and women, is the truth." Roger N. B. Winni, a director of the Union, pointed out that Tolias, mob violence as just another demonstration of the truth of the
Among the striking statements made by Mr. Pickens in the gambrel, are "Lynching and mob violence are only the method of male repression. Lynching is most prevalent where Negro labor is most exploited; and the majority of people has followed the spread of this exploitation. It is either due diligence to efforts of the lawmaking class to repress the Negro, or it is the lack of investment of the lawmakingors of other racial groups against the exploitation of Negro labor to his disadvantages. This is the difference
between Georgia and East St. Louis.
It is instructive to note where most yachtsake place. In thirty years when it was in the order of their civil war, are in the order of their civil war, Georgia, Minnesota, Louisiana, Alabama, Arkansas and Tennessee, along with Alabama, Georgia, Texas, the three states in the great southern Mississippi Valley, which might be termed the American Congo.
This Congo is not for rubber and ivory, but for cotton and sugar. Her labor is forced, and she is always in a continually contrived debt to slavery in the institution of law. A debt of a few dollars is the bounty of his family of ten as securely as he had conquered their bodies. He is not free from such a master, and this debt that is to sell himself to another master, is borrowed from him. By this method the enslaveer gets his bonded charges for the debt system he does not have in the system that obtains in the state he is modified for thirty years or more. The evil of this system is the massacre of colored people and for nearly all of the people of individual Negroes that have between Georgia and East St. Louis.
Fort Worth, Texas, June 30.—The Alpin Art and Charity club met the officers for the ensuing year when Mrs. A. E. Linday, after which Mrs. W. B.acker, the new president interested remarks in regards to her office.
Expressions of appreciation for the service of the retiring President been given by several members of the club.
The following address was doe to Mrs. L. Wilson, in be half of the retiring president.
From time immemorial down to the present, it has ever been the custom of the human race to give the savage in his crude way had
VICE.PRESIDENT
NATIONAL
"If we examine any, even the most complicated, of these race troubles at the bottom some trouble about race is present. We have instance side by side of two races, one with greater opportunity and foresight greater opportunity and foresight play to human greed and social insecurity."
The Ban On Negro Prosperity.
"When a Colored family is thus driven out or exterminated, prominent mention is always made of their pros- emphasis on their genius of offensiveness.
Rape and Lycheling
"It but should be noted that in the 1810s the officers and Ichthys of Colored persons were permitted to occupy the occasioned by any matter of the task, the multiple Ichthys of Brooks and Chicago rights in 1819; the Kaiser Chicago rights in 1820; the Kaiser burning of Henry Lowry at Nodens in 1821."
Class Rule The Cause.
GHOSTS IN LONDON SQUARES
Many sections of the Great British Metropolis are Severely Avoided by the Superstition.
Old London is full of ancient old squares, many of them tucked away where you least expect them, and not often seen in the course of time, and by reason of the many grim and harrowing events they have witnessed, are regarded as haunted.
But hauntings are occasionally infecctions, and ghosts sometimes wander, hence it so happens that not in the most remote areas, but in one of these ancient and remote squares at night—in the dead of night, mind—one encounters something that can altogether be explained by the phenomena.
One of the most typical, perhaps, of these squares is Red Lion square, of which there are almost haunted houses almost next door to one another, and a garden which, rumors at one time had it, possessed a garden of the kind of Oliver Cromwell, whose bones, according to tradition, found a temporary resting place there. All this is difficult to understand, but the square is particularly bright and cheerful, but not so hard to understand at night, when few people are around. It is particularly uninteresting—London Mall.
Joy In Human Relationship
Do we turn for satisfaction to our human relationships? They are among our most precious and holy relationships, and to get the good of living with others, depends chiefly on our fitness to live alone. We must be in, in order to be able to love and love, in order to give them; we must be just before we can put recruitment into conduct. We cannot even be a good teacher, a good spoken unless we are true. A wise pagan says, "How much sincerely life the gods伸 before we can speak with them?"
FORT
WORTH
Fort Worth, Texas, June 30—The Alphin Art and Charity club meet Wednesday, June 22nd at their club room, Gilton building. The officers in the ensuing year were installed by Mrs. A. B. Linn, sax. After, which, Mrs. W. Pennybaker, the new president made some interesting remarks in regards to the service of the retiring President were given by several members of the club. The following address was delivered by Mrs. A. L. Wilson, in half of the retiring president.
From time immemorial a down to the present, it has ever been the custom of the human race to give the savage in his crude way had some ceremony of honor. The prophets of old delighted to propheze those labored among them.
The present century is great on behalf of the
We, the Alphin Art and Charity club, celebrate commonwealth, could not do that until catch the spirit of giving hone, or to whom honor is due. or to whom service is the service of one who lives in our midst, one whom we have known all our lives one who possesses all of the skills we have learned to make her a model president. Some may call what I am going to say about her flower, but I call it a flower. She is a constant reader of the best literature places her in the category of efflux. Six or seven years ago she was elected president of our club. In the occasion, and we find her entering, with zest upon her new sphere of duties. A model president, she has left no stone unturned in doing what she ever did, and influencing the advancement of the advancement of our club. So today, we boast of one of the
Her sacrious mind, directed by motive at once pure and lofty sustained by a spirit of unconquerable practical wisdom and usefulness in the hearts of the members of our company, no longer in this capacity (president) we pray that her mantle has fallen on her successor. We still stand in line as your armour bearers ready to do your bidding for the continued success of our club. Now on behalf of the club to the president, we are ready to our sincere request for the service rendered, and to our newly elected president (Mrs. W. B. Pennybaker) honor, which is in our power to give. Trusting that with our aid and co-operation, and your keen execution, we are ready to our club from its present standard to further advancement. Keeping ever in our minds the climb: To one retiring president, we present you these flowers, and again heartily thank you for your
We know you can't count them of great people, but they are beautiful because they are of God's beautiful gifts to man, they brighten dark hours, cheer them up, and remind them many sweet memories. As you leave the chair, we trust you to join us in the club with you, keeping up the same interest, and stand ever ready to meet you.
FT. WORTH CELEBRATION, A SUCCESS.
Ft. Worth, Texas, June 30.—For the first time in the history of the city, people had access to the Stock Yard Coliseum and a sacred grounds of Ft. Worth, with fitting ceremonies. With artistically decorated floats and banners and pennants significant of various organizations of business organizations and Sunday schools and etc., headed by Colored officers of the day, two bands, and more than a dozen musicians dressed in the made up of people from all parts of the County of Tarrant, and a city, such a big city as we have never witnessed before. No fight, not an arrest was made. The police were free barbecue and fine music, riding, roping and boxing contest with speaking from various notables. All who were present were many whites who were spectators in the riding contest between Mr. Austin, Wilson and Mr. Purvis. His
VICE.PRESIDENT INTERDENOMIL.
NATIONAL MINISTERS'
ALLIANCE.
REV. W. H. DURDEN.
which was afterwards successfully mastered by Mr. Charles Smith who was the captain of the rope. The American Woodman Uniform Rank and the boy cadetts with the Camp Fire girls covered the rope with gloves that satisfied a satisfaction of all. A six round bout with gloves closed the sports. The boys were dressed in a Yellow Jacket of Dallas, fought to a fast draw. Snickers Smith famous for his sweet strains, furnished the Panther City K. of K., brass band furnished sweet strains, choiced Addresses were made by Reeve, W. G. Ushaw, George W. H. Durden, Prof. G. B. Hilburn. In the roping routine, Charles was called in seconds and the second one in 27 seconds, winning easily in both riding and roping. In the second one in seconds, Hermon and Trinity Parks were opened to our people and had large crowds and choiced edibles, attract. The American Woodman Northside and Masonic bands, the Stockyard Coliseum and grounds
POSTAL ALLIANCE NOTES
Mr. F. Dunley has returned to the city. While away he visited the University of Texas and the South Texas. He reports a pleasant trip. The local branch of the Postal Alliance was entertained Wednesday, June 16, at the office of Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Oliver. Mrs. Ellen of Santa Monica is in the city that she lives in. Mrs. D. A. Oliver and daughter The ladies interview met at the home of Mrs. D. A. Oliver and daughter evening, June 10th Miss Myrtle Johnson of Paris, sister of Mrs. D. A. Oliver is in the city this week.
EXTRACTS FROM THE EMANCIPATION ADDRESS OF REV. W. H. DURDEN DELIVERED JUNE 16, 2014 AT THE POSTAL ASSOCIATION. Some Statistics of Race Progress
57 Years Ago. Friends:
The black man came out of slavery without even a name, but to be in the business more stores, more banks, 700,000 100 insure companies, 400 newspapers, and medicinals, whose wholesale business included housing and land, 600 thousand homes, 20 million acres of farm land, wealth accrual, 600 thousand schools, per cent, 500 colleges and normal schools, students in the public school system, 60 thousand, property for higher education valued at 25 million, an annual fee of 60 thousand, property for higher education valued at 25 million, an annual fee of 60 thousand, for education. Churches 45 thousand, with 5 million members, annually, for education. Churches 45 thousand, with 5 million members, annually, for education. War. Negroes invested 1 dollar of every 5 in Liberty Bonds, 400 thousand of them were enlisted in the war. Black men have fought in every conflict from Boston Com. to New York. Black men have fought in every conflict from Boston Com. to New York.
We are one hundred per cent American, thank God, no black men in America, no black men in Benedick Arnold, traitor to the country; no presidential assassination; no I. W. W. Is Bohlweiss, or German Bohlweiss, and a very few draft evaders. Wives of Benedick Arnold. Old Glory is envolved, black men have been there to stand by the trees, and a very few were birthed under this flag. We are land. Our fathers and mothers helped their masters to fell the trees, to baptize the sacred shrine, to bridge the stream, and tunnel the mountains our sweet tears and blood to baptize the sacred shrine and day to liberty, of course. We say some time we feel that we are mists. treated and neglected by our white country impose on this nation enough to stir our blood you'd see how quick we go to arm an enemy. We are the army they were climbing the hill of San Juan singing. There'll be a bit of trouble. Should you call the roll from revolutionary days to the memorable day of the breaking of the Hinden. Men will answer by the thousands.
Race Ideals
We should respect, protect and love our women; no woman should be alone in the race, and we own, for we have all colors within the race for a real rain bow. Let us hone more pictures of black people and girls to admire their own men and women.
We should more good books by Negro authors—na black boy or girl should be a race of a race such as much such great books as Phyllis Wheatley, Fred Douglas, Booker T. Washington, John D. Rockefeller, Duncan J. Mary B. Talbert, well Fraser or N. W. Harlie and hundreds of others to numerous to
Brace Co-operation.
Our people should study condition in a reconstructive period like this organizer and become more Owner of the body. We must be honest, understand and be agreeable with each other, and be the same with other races, we believe that in the future we will be able to
YOUR FUTURE
HOLDS
MONEY PROPERTY
SUCCESS
A HEALY SCALP—
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AND A LOVELY COMPLEXION.
Learn the madam C. J. Walker
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Use her world renowned prepare
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USE
MADAM C. J. WALKER'S WONDERFUL HAIR GROWER
Dept. D.
THE MADAM C. J. WALKER MFG. CO.,
640 North West Street,
Indianapolis, Ind.
Six Weeks' trial treatment sent any anywhere for $1.50
BECOME AN AGENT
"Now a-days it's Madam.Walker's"
"Now a-davs it's Madam Walker's"
AN ANNOUNCEMENT.
The Madam C. J. Walker Mfr.
Mr. E. Caldwell Gaultier, Sculptor
completed a bust of the late Madam
approval of Mrs. Leila Walker-Wille
Walker and President of the Madam
The bust is in the foreground as a scu
busts are finished in old Ivory,
arrangements have been made with
Addresses and Customers may have o
of Madam C. J. Walker at the follo
GLD IVORY—$1.00 BRONZE $5
Address all orders to THE MADAM
North West Street, In
The Madam C. J. Walker Mfg. is pleased to announce that Mr. E. Caldwell Gailter, Sculptor of St. Louis Md., has recently completed a bust of the late Madam C. J. Walker that has met the approval of Mrs. Laelia-Wilson, daughter of the late Mme.
GLD IVORY—$1.00 BRONZE 1.00 LIFE COLOR—47.00
Address all orders to THE MADAM C. J. WALKER MFG. CO.6400
North West Street, Indianapolis, Ind.
the Brotherhood Claim of all men, in proportion will God bless this nation in intelligence, wealth, and righteousness will then all pre-occupation with us because of our freed. be put away for all time to come.
We should rejoice today, and our friends of the white race should rejoice, with us because of our freed. I close with these lines from a poem entitled the problem by Mrs. A. great woman of the white race.
Out of the Wilderness, Out of the light
ROYAL MUTUAL,
Local Aid
The Royal Mutual is still greening, rain or shine hot of it’s the Royal Mutual. We paired and death benefits. day day they are. We are splendid propositions to agree you need aid Joina the Royale.
Agents Wanted.
W. H. HARVEY, Sg.
Hath the black man crawled to the
dawn of light:
Beaten with laces bound with
bones;
A burden of burden with soul and
brains;
He hath come through sorrow, pain
And the cry of his heart is to Know.
—9—
Out of the Wilderness, out of the night
Hatha black man crowded to the dawn of light
He has come through the valley
of great disarray.
He hath borne what no white man can ever bear
He hath come the short sorrow, pain
and harm the cry of his heart is to Know, to Know.
GUN BATTLE FOLLOWING CUTTING
NUNCASANS CENSUS ANGONOUSED
VOCATIONAL OFFICER PROMOTED.
Tuskegee Institute, Ala., June 30—A agent to Vocational Advisor for Vocational Training and wounded and disabled soldiers with headquarters at Tuskegee Institute has been appointed to the Vocational Advisor for this section Capt. Kelly served with the A. E. F., as commander of Company A, Infantry, who primarily discharged he has served in the capacity of Special Agent to Vocational Advisor and Rescue Officer Corps of the United States Army. The effectiveness of his work with disabled soldiers in a promotion which took effect July 14th.
DRY LAND FISHING COMMON IN FLORIDA.
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(A. N. P.)
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D.
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any anywhere for $1.50
AGENT
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ROYAL MUTUAL
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The Royal Mutual is still progressing, rain or shine hot or cold it happens, and the Mutual. We pay sick accident and death fees. The day they are due. We are offering splendid propositions to agents. If we need the Royal Mutual.
**Agents Wanted:**
W. H. HARVEY, Pres.
W. H. LITTLE, Secy
office 915 1-2 Calhoun St.
Look After Your BLOOD, LIVER AND KIDNEYS
Look After Your BLOOD, LIVER AND KIDNEYS
1301 E. 18th St.
TESTIMONIAL
SIMONIAL
Theo, Smith. Drug Store.
Gentleman. I used several
bottles of your wonderful Vim and
Vigor System Toner. It is a great
timer. I was thin and all run-
down, had a headache, hale and
hale, and hearty. I am weighing
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Vim and Vigor System to any
one who is suffering from a
run-down system.
M. JACK McBENEID
2302 Pasco, Kansas City, Mo.
6-18-ft
CHAS. ANDERSON MAY BE INTERNAL REVENUE COLLECTOR
Corporation sounded Ettelbon has also insisted that he will give his pay to solve his city pay as well his pay to solve the city pay for the time he spent in Springfield. But, the Royal Bank is different, he says. He sent a telephone call to the institution of his name in the list of inclusion of his name in the list of the finance committee. He insisted that he adjudant at seeing my name in the list of double pay should be the person who would without my knowledge and consent, at a time enough for me. Thirty-five years ago, he was a time enough for the eary as a representative) and the hard work of a day from the generous hand of the finance committee. (I wish to thank with charity) Roberta is a deputy chief of the legal court as well as a representative.
eS ee er eee lee ee
ei BOR Aa Mane ee ise dg ES
WIERD csncomnss LNs 2 Snood =) Mela analeecO un Mea ll:
SSa SanGn ion GET Fon SSE aay | eS ae
A. G. Williams who bis bee con
tuned to bed about thirteen weeks. a
hin"home, 3028 lore Street i muck
Improved,
Mrs. Fat; Brooks, 1106 Boll Street
ialted tre, ‘Horace Davin at Por
Worth thie week
‘ire ‘Beulah Turner and. daughter
Allean of 2911 Trinidad. and att
Gra Lee Jones wil leave Sunday fo
quseveral weeks may at Shreveport
“Mrs, Hattie Hamiiten of Orcenvile
visited "her daughter, Mrs. Magi
TBrawa of 2610 Wade street inst weel
And returned ter bore Satay
leh
Re and Men. BL A. Caldwel!
an chy, Me, spent Thursday f
thesty eater an te Jon
Bisuoth, 2417 Cauda, They weie et
Toate bescee
‘Miter Elia Ma Sith and Altar
‘Tumen,deiewatae to the District Con
ference ‘ofthe Colored" Methods
Episcopal ‘cteneh eld at. Sherman
Sine 22, nave. retraed ome
Mrs. Fouise Hill, 2613 Juliette tet
Satunzy misht for Greemyte 20 vin
hive M. Trowm of that iy
Master” Wade ‘Sing tbe ite sor
of Me and Mex Mack Sl, 241
Stage treet stn Waco vistiig 4
stives,
Mr snd. Mre. Fred Watton. $81
uate street Have bron spending. thel
‘ication. in Galveston, and sre.
pected home this week.
Mr and Airs Willard: Brown, 261
wade stveat will leave uty 16 fo
Bi eouln Moy where they will yen
Tee mummers.
‘te "Wil Sannfeld, 2812 Cocbran
eft Wednenday for Ine Ankeles
Ca), to apend the summer.
ORME DALLAS HESIDENT,
IES IN MUSKOGEE,
Mrs. Queen’ V._ Grimes, daughter
oc Mr. and hrm. Prank Hawking. Sr
hasacd away Soncay, June 1%, 1921
At her tome, Muskases, Oklshoa,
Mr Grimes. war the other of
prof EL Omter and Drv) W
Orvins. doth A sehom, toxether with
Sh other relatives were at her bed-
fide at the Weve of her passine. Her
Mheband Mee Le G. Grimes and’ other
felatives are geateful to thelr many
Msknsee friends for the kindness
manifested “during “ber ness and
‘eat
MISS EF. G. MERIGE, THE, NOT.
En PRIWARY SPECLALIST, 10
REACH DALLAS, JULY &
Miss F. 6. Merrit, Primary Di:
rector of the Publie Seheels af the
USeteet9€ Columbia, will bexin, her
Primary Demonstrations, in the Sum
oer school at the Colored, Minh
SSvool Monday moruings the ath of
July. ‘
‘ion Mervitt ‘ye that teachers who
ve interested. cou finish the. couree
in five weeks. It is expected that
Tange number of teachers from the
fiurrounding towne and. North. Texas
frill avail themselves of thi oppor-
Tinity of “becoming. Spectalists In
Prvuney”Methone aed Deronnsti ation
work
DALLAS. SUMMER SCHOOL AND
‘SUMMER NORMAL NOTES.
‘the eneolinent In the Somme:
schoo} and Sommer Normal 8 100 ty
i "Meh. interest ie being man
ferted, "All ranenes leadine (7 al
radet of certincates are belag taurbt
find inany ‘persons are being prepared
foc adesnced conrene, ete Latin
Spanish. Enelish, Mathematics, Sew-
Ime and Cookin and Feonomte dem-
titrations. A spcetal feature sre the
‘iemenstrations Ia Primary Methods
JOM, WILTIAMS DIES AT Ms
MONE AFTER RRIEP ILLNESS,
Jovepb 33. Willime died st his home
in Willams street, Priday evening
att otlock, ir) Willams was
Suicken early Friday” moraing with
headache “and. ‘the thd came’ a
{pom the following evenine
He aa a member of Empire Lode
No. 398. Kolshte of Pyubias, and
Monger Avenue Raptit Churels He
feaven a wife. two children, a leer
find a number of other reiativer t
mourn tele oes
‘Funeral service was eli Sunday
fafteraoon at ger Avene apts
fateh. Mrs, Tile: Bell Jackson
the Muncer chow sane {v0 iupress
ve pale,
‘The Rev, P. H. Wiliams performed
‘ue funeral ceremony a abvence
Rew, Win, Lotion, who was a relay
tho deceased’ and wan ‘with the
familly. ‘Reve Willams” spoke from
the sublet” “The Resaurrectinn Pron
the Deed." Alter preaching the pro
eseien was formed and the Tem
followed by frienda was ‘carried.
faut Fert plose Tate Sunday evel
me
(Ole, GRIFFIN 18 TN TOWS—HAS
‘CHICKEN ON THE BRAIN,
Se eee 3. Gee, 8 taver ies
Dalla nous eho) Is now making hs
home at ‘Tesaihaaa, ark. was shake
fg lad han are thie eck it
Dig many friend,
“Te Coloucl Made hie arvival her
‘over the Sunabine 'Spe-lal Friday
‘ening nd since he arrival the ai
re fine Been tied with nolsy groan
‘of fowls who hed hat the Colcne
mah Tee
‘The event occurred om the date o
his ‘coming and now be ie #4y!
Engine”
“TP have ot chicken on the train,
‘when T'sot chicken I ‘neber” com
plain. they” say.
Pork’ chops food for 2 morning
‘ail,
at chicken’s got ‘em bested i
every stele
Colonel Gritin 1s « newspaper mar
and. was formerly "connected wi
feveral / Dalla” newenuper Insite
fase
He te still handling the Freeman
at) Terarkana. Colonel “Grifhin. =
ave tir thle hone orstby Wedten
Gay of Thursday oF pest week.
EVANGELIST SHOURE TENT FOR
‘SUMMER MEETINGS.
ev. M.S. Richerson, who was
mentioned. in these. eolimns. some
few weeks ago Felative to conduct.
{ng an evangelistic campaign has se.
tured a large tent, chars and other
‘araphernatia conduelve to this class
et work.
‘The gospel tent will be located
fon. North Washington avenue park
fina the following ministers wil be
fresent nthe openiae: The Kev
S°M Gaadell, Wan, ‘Metiveen and
tie ‘Reve Homer, A meeting. will
he conducted here during the entire
. aa
MAYOR SHCLRE NAMES OF SEGRE
WELPARE BOARD,
Letters have been mailed by the
mayor. 20 Colored cittzns. whom he
{the mayor) convennplate placing, on
the. sea Nesro Wellare’ Hoard--the
‘aincy of wbich will appeat in these
"the tiayar haa lst of amen kn
bie Donegan trom which he. wi
elect members {0 couse the new
SON OF DALTAS MAN DIES ty
WICHITA FALLS,
walter Bile Formerly of Daas,
ands. son of James Bile of. thie
fty, ‘led Wednesday, June “23, at
Sicha vate "ater” to reeathe
nee
IMR. BOE, father of the youns maa
tft the following Thursday tor Wie
hha Pulls, t9 attend the funeral Whe
naw hes there tart Pridey
GRAND MASTER OF ODD FRI.
LOWS ENTHUSIASTIC. OVEIE
PROSPECTS “AND. GROWTH
|) ar
nee are cence a ee
Hot. Goree, DG. Mt, of the Odd
Filows ef the loradeion of Texas
Kc now at home recuperating ster
{ sltenuota tenn of eel Over the
Sain’ the terest gf the Order
‘or sever month, St. Sore has
been inasraneds Mt’ Mi dears for
Ieproving "Ns order han enuned
Mie toty oat othe tela aapie
{ie hana
Tie wllaynd the remaining dave
before" the setingof the Grund
oles tn'newston ie tegaining his
Neehh and" peoparing hi report
hon tee, y the xpress reo-
rearmatives Mr Gores wax eth
Eaieovet the. respeows “cond
tlonot’the Order" andthe adaltion
Werag Ms Anca of "over 4000
seo Monier to rie
DALLAS ODD LELLOWS INgTRLC TS
Haier HARSHA aE ORR
schhiy reso.
Sunday evening membern ofthe
cater lads of te nase
1°80 Plows hal-and were given
‘Meections from, te" Ast "dearer
(orth venth and test nee WBC
he "ove Goree work’ was riven
le ahs were cliche
Sindy ence a 400 eock, Say
2, poles to be ¢recordorenker 1
Poh tt atandatee, from expresron:
Rear "ise" the various others.
e'tre now nreparine another ore
ies for the owaehota'deptee to Be
ven ‘son
HOTHVK OF DALLAS wouay
money Tiue A HIS"
atm. tomas ages, Betrion
cine, wan Informed ya teeeram
teaday moras afte trae ou
fearon, "The ie took pace
I ror Texan, “ant ee Hayes
oats ine nett iin und out
te°tke’ tone io take urge othe
Say! sea‘ the ng has ox
een’ recived tytn thin wine
“Fhe ‘Noy wal ‘rota be abiped
to Novant, Texan for bia
LACM. LonGes PAINE, EXPRESS
le 7 gt
Be ae unt Seto Asef
sual of the Express has seceved
In exormenon af tintaction trom
Members of loc Pythian foes To
MeMcomplate tenor of the Grand
tee at Denon
tke ‘Tapreers ibe oaly_ paper
eras heh chronled the eaons
Ferns to fateh, baa een red
Pelee nt over fhe wate tr
apn the mang of thee Teor
vil iadper weve rll repre
cal at ihe Grand "Vie and omer
ist an conrnt Fenders ¢ the Fe
ea ous i roger esac i very
sett
The uprens appreciates such ex
preesons Baht rnin rene
Mesiae: trem the eel ledsee
wii vepeseted emt Grand hoe
Batt iy'br no Hamiton, Lawyer
15. wate, hr 3.1 Paton Ke
feeenaiven’ otal lode” preset
fer"ttseg “eres kuetts Soni
Maan, Castors, Toler tor
Tobin, ‘Power and Ewe
wie Stetina conniegou
Scie Aan Str
bo
PAGEL MUTEAT 18 WARING REC.
: ‘on
‘he Bale Mutual Benet Asoc
ciation Company oreanioe. and pu
fa operon ate fer: weeks,
ih ‘rapiy growin and tnkin
frente,
Te omcere, wall own, bine
men, bane entered He wit
dent to" eaceeed and they at
aoiy raking the, name, he
Fompay a RonseSoi wore
‘her now hve bean
nero pney"hokersr und, hel
Promptneee nat aby heey
sat flan iranian
for thom 5 how of frente
Tan the liae pat. ated
tite "Sr Pred Aten, dete
fir irae Lew eens es exh
ene foam, 'nernem, Mra
ni. Thoma alkene ten “Gla
‘inarewn kon
run NOYAL COMMENT CLUE
Pig ot
‘The Revel Commeaiy Club, met
fat the reside eof Mek, N.. Pink
fSra."3712" Rumsels. street. After
fchort business, session, ‘Our Jessen
THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS, SATURDAY, JULY 2, 1021.
THE GRAND LODGE K. OF P. OF TEXAS SHOWS
‘AMAZING GROWTH IN LAST FEW YEARS.
In order that you may have a fair and comprehensive conception of the Work ac
‘complinted by my administration Gur‘ag the four’ years I have served: you as. Grand
Chaneelior, I is but fair, Fight, and Just to mysetf to compare the conditions ax I found
them with’ the conditions as they exlet today, and In so doing, 1 do not wish to be under.
‘ood ta-attempting to reflet upon my predecessor or ayn aay Individual member of the
Grier "My ole. puryore ta to'maxe if clear to the minds of all the wonderful work Of
the present administration,
Pour years ago when T was elected Grand. Chascsior, 1 found the Endowment De-
partsient behind with Itt beneficiaries to the amount ot many thousands ot ollare and
hho money’ with which to. pay the elaims and with Denefielares all over Texas demand.
{ng ‘payment of (heir caine Iwas elected in June and one of my first agts was 0 KO
to Parle and seth ‘the Endowment Board we wer compelled to borrow $15,000.00 from
the City National Hank of Parle to. pay om our claime to. keep our benefielarien_ sate:
Hed. ‘Today we {ind that every penny we borowed (rom the Bank at Paris has been
Feturned and "wo have paid every dime we ome on every regular claim flied in the of.
fice of the Secretary of the Endowment Depariuint uring the four years.
Four years ago when I-was elected Grand Chancellor, 1 found no money in the
Grand Lodge fuadn with which to pay the ordlucty ronaing ‘expenses, of the Grand
Lodge and we were foreed to borrow 46,000.00 trot! the ‘City: Natipnal ‘Bank ‘at Dallas
‘Today we find that every penny of that moaey fas beon paid and’ that all expenses of
the Grand ‘Lodge have been paid in full up to date ?
Four years ago when I was elected Grand Chancellor, 1 found that the Grand Lodge
was indebied to the city apd county of Dallas snd to the State of Texas many thousands
Sr dollars on ‘back. taxee Including interest, penalties. and conte and. with not a dollar to
fay the kame with lewsuite threatening to sell the Tythian Temple for taxes, Today our
fevord shows that we do not owe one cent in taxes and we have pald within the’ past
{our years nearly $10,000.00:in Taxen
Four years aco when I was elected Grand Chascelior, 1 found that the Grand
Lodge was indebted (0 the Endowment Depertnicnt to the amount of practically #38.
‘eo.00 "which the Trand Lodge borrowed from the Endowment Department tor | the
rection of the Vythlan ‘Temple. Today our recorde show that every dime of that money
tine been feturned to the Endowment Deparisent and That the Pythian ‘Temple stands
free of all indebtedness whatsoever.
Four years azo when I was elected Grand Chancellor, 1, found a membership of
uarely 6,000, Pythings within the ‘State of Traae with hardly a Todge tn the Juriedie.
ton putting forth any effort to Increase is membership. ‘Today we" find a mem
hersip of 16,263 brave Pythlans active and alive
Four years ago when I wns elected Grand Chancellor, 1 found a membership of
‘Onder in such shape ‘a to. compel to Ro into the banks and borrow money and pay
fncereet'to the ‘banks for the wee of thelr money. Today initead of borrowing: money
from the banks, the banks are paying ue money for the use of our money. Our record
hows! that the ‘banks with whom we are doing business have paid us this year in inter=
fet on dally balances the handvome eum of 42,000.60.
Four years ago, insolvent, without « dollar we could call our own. Today, all
‘lain paid in full; we owe no man a penoy and a eash balance on hand and In bank 10
fhe amount of the "magnitelent. umn o(8148, 083.02,
‘This is a record, my Brethren, that should make the heart of every Pythian swell
witit pride’ to know thatthe srand_old Order. though reeling and rocking yesterday,
Today stands as the foremost Order in the State of Texas.
(Excerpt from the report of W. S. Willi, Grane Chancellor, to the 3tth Annual
Session of the Grand. Lodge Colored. Knights of Pythias held. tm’ Denison, ‘Texas, June
Tih to 10mm, 1921
Faby tfc, the name wa onder
a eee
eh ee eee ae
oe ee tae
Herne leegetle ga
Hepes
ere eel ce ant
ee oe
Bee ee ieat ae
nes ee ae
eee
TYEER DELEGATE, TO HY, Pv
"UPR AER Rak
oe eke woe
ee ee cle
ore ean te
ee eee ces
oeenaeera dan eee
igs armor:
es en J To
feel inits peated
ee ae
Ee
es vee ee ec
eae ee eee
pecs at eee os
eee a
i
Sy ie ib eee
a te che art
eee is te feces
oe ne
Ree iat aerate ae
eeu ane
aaNet
fs ee
Why not be a “big preacher” i
(age macte Caines b
Tonal Pines Motery aft
Pier cae reer
f Macametost 1 ciot et
Mrs eager
Tel ure Sebate “tae soba ts
Iti SS wreaths Po ou
sae ee ea eae ae
oie ts eas te tae
Ae se eatin oe
eet LY cee ie a
fa satast Sth er at
Bctee efatart’ cata
Be "eat ad er eae
Suck ve a opera
tay” Aaa hale
meray “ettercet i Sri
par. suey a oat
Se haces ator oe
Mint alacatha te. Sa a
Sein nance ed
Meee eatacene eaten
Fst aaitaty aia "oe way 2
sein Sete Witt "tas
ne aaaal etal ee oes
fata Hr Bh hor
pe faster, Bev. Ene Mea
A MOST WONDERFUL OPPOR-
TUNITY TO VISIT AFRICA!
THE WORK OF FOUR YEARS,
A forty five deys trip to the asd
of our fathers provided by spec
tal excursion i. lave Baltaore
A, on December 3rd text. The teh
ie tanned (o the eb tat Our veer
ple’ ay have as -opoortunty
feudy conditions as they zeally are
Seeing Is mnowing,—-uever before bas
uch en opportunity been ven 0
those ‘wha are anxious to have an
eran “forest. ot re dan ten
Chogmapd: ‘tiles st so small acon
‘that "elas “accommodations “i
ery deta as i being efered ow
ome at the ears ofthe race
“The trip wil aable you to, vit
tue Volowtan poh of meres he
Ginary talanee, Docker, Semeea, 1
‘own,’ sierra Une,” Monrovia,
teria Grand Bassa, Tiberi
ape Paton, beri Cape Verde
{alanda, NerudeTnande. special
fnvitation “bas teen extended by Mi
rellency, Hon D. B Ring,
te the mueat of the Reoube ate
ert 'atMenzoni at eaten "rade
FShiit and Convocation of ebiett
fe eld tn the ey December’ tat
{0 iat 1821" Fecsident ina ew
{nthe “county “and toe inspired
any ot the Tenders to val ie Re
rite
"Ths total cont of the nil be
#19, thie flues every foe he
Jp hecemary to Your contort "That
fit "piames ant "professions ot at
‘acid froup. may tw rworesened ‘en
thie" tur. tn "Ate, "the tllom ne
ress) way ta’ reeesemmtad ce Pos
y.[eervice in Armetrony Chapel A» M. |{
NeiE.chareh- In thie service, the pre-|
1 ikdag elders veenement was alse |
Rey a. Barret was a hedptl
MAUS 2. me, we were again at Da
Jwortn, Prenehtd and ett the ots
[fet fiero Rm, Br |
At\ ne ‘person ined The cure vi |
Me\Nine Stnry_ son. "The aamensrent |
Siltor the preadiog elder wan rased
1nd evbstantlal pre forthe par
urlton ‘Mee Kaie Jordan od atl of
ie the aueary’ bards fa ereuin
relin"whe atric. Sintr ordan fo de
ah | prived of her night it bore
°i|ehureh "worker Her Stewardess |
nt {Board mont rot be bein tn reports
re |nthe"nuarterlyconerence }
re| ap all the cargos” and | Sunday
| See, pastors. eaberttendent of
ne [Banda sehens and allen ease |
in| Please cet your detente forthe
[Ray Seb Convention, whic |
id|tomoeet in Allen Chapel AME
te | hunch. Fort Worth. Texas, "Sept
th |FAbah;Deliequentchareee are |
e:[nuomted tomar nt once and rae |
the fll amount pledsed for wnezton
as |ind other connections! prwmce~|
thie te sowe beet. Pecommendation —|
arate Fela and prove ene Bi
trent tthe. work of the. che
ot] ths ‘etven You importance and val |
| Oh? that era's wetting, The
slate a
tour to Africa, the plan for inaking
up the party has beet deeded upon:
Preachers and.” Christan Workers
125, octorn, lawyers, neada of col
Neves, teachera and eraftaman, 10;
rotessional men and women, neiud-
tng blacksmiths, eleeticlan, carpen-
ters, wheririehts aad oller Uadea,
35 Parwee 40, Busine 'en and
trates, 25", Wneralosit. photozraph
ere and explorers, 83
Reeervaions will be timited t
srarer (ano) Hundred.
TAIL pereane Interested te the trip
commnicats, with Revs GW. Ab
{nston, e3 Good. Street: Dailaa, Tex
Se." Ablnaton han ‘been commie:
ened’ the agent, of the company In
fain section, and’ willbe aied. te
ive Tull tormation to’ ans one
fiier'ty eter ar in persen wher
Mghe tae letter wil_ expla
bie connection ith the attain
Philadelphia, Pay June: 2, 193
to Whom it hiay Concern
“rhs ito certty that ev. Can,
"Abington, ‘pastor of Sk James
Temple "Ahi, Be'Chuteh, 9 rep
Feseatative of the American-Atrcan
‘Foureat Company Ine. abd aithor
fied. to ell teketa. forthe Afscan
Crs of 12)
“issued ‘ty this, company th
fivemiystes’day'vof dune, Nineteen
Munered and “Peenty-anest
WH ghnNagi tree,
EG. JORDAN, Secretary
W. i. YORK: Businest Mar
Conference Woman's Home and For:
‘gn Missionary” Convention wns
fed a zreat moeeting—one of the
sreatert In every respect ever bel
‘the tounaa af this conference
Some real helpful_work is bein
planned for the masionary preacher
Gur anasions are going io be strenct
‘ied anit ereally helped by out Kon
intent Give. Wem. the rtot-way
fd oe the reat reauita In the ae
Nelogment of our mission” chavse
help (or the: min fonary peeael
rs Phe Doll "Distrkt lad. We
fro lendere-cothens nuit oll
"jen rid Gat the mission reache
tp not "rly “ative alone" ie
ach chars of the conference shoul
have beew represented well. We tr
fire she next meet will bring
‘leatred “results: with Men, CW. Ab
{ugtom and: Mrs."J. La Johneon ead
ing, there eansot be any fallacen wt
‘ur conferenes and altret.
‘South Chapel A. ME. church i
loak Clit, "ls *having two ‘weeks ol
(pening exercise
"sithop "W.D. Johnson and
‘estimable wie spent last So day anc
land"'the rood “people of oak Cli
Their vis was ‘btu,
Monéay wiih Rev. GL. Coleman
Next Sunday we. will be au Whit
Rock, with Nev 8" 0. 1H. ‘Glangow
feaek ble quad’ poauia
aa
ieee
tea
i 5 “6 $11.25,
KLAR &WINTERMAN
RN 2312 ELM STREET 1
i
eer
gent artim Ban ivan "amatante ts
Feeotak atte tea ama
ES SS paren re
ote ABs ciee sete
racrn eee NY eel Me
See RM pe te ais
a et ati cei
cats oat
Eescitd tant? ocr, ant
ace eeharrien ae
fncte’ that” the" Ropunicas aey "hat
sac el cota pani ee
Behe arate a
| ee eae cane)
nape ean ees co
hee cia
eater tats ‘ecole
Sy he ose eee eee
[Tat {achat he wile ane
ee ot oe
ioteh Aedes
tah ht ing ooh
ER tule ite ie te ni
aes Mending “up” to: November
| cattle etalon arta he, Coles
HERE att 1
Dig yy eel
ee ee, ee
Hea cere re
ae al he
peor Cees
Pttn, Kew Jere steeag HE. Nutter, 0
ares” and ‘eXprensions of alssntes
Pa ie eset
mee eee ead
iin, eis lane
retrain: core,
foe eee
Stina peers kaaeee wns
[ote ik ers
Beare tte
amet ee
ee ptt ee Rove fe
sgn curare
7
eS
x EP =
oe Ee
aC esl
—aeassirien “ADR
| __ es
Tires soem ot Sia
ra fete a a
aot tt i hae aetna
mca se ‘teh dere SE
Tm Fee, ea weet
Ww. D. JAMES, %
‘cay Pate
park het teiding
| PA ont ares
ottice Ses na 62
COME TO CALIFORNIA.
ranted 10,900 imuets of ba
ae ta tr a
see ee eaparoner ees
ide! etciaas Pee er 0 Gor
ect eerie ote oe sae
tat Gamtieaee seas et eo,
at aca a reed
su Sebi en Ne ease see
nse asa iow ie: foe
See eee eee ee ioe
Be
ren er sate a era
Wa Soakiawitike "worth “oe
ie ect ee aes
terete Wy the ports, Fame
Sie Nel Seabees nae
Lego eter
et Se eaten) tae ae
oa reat
Ted tal avert suron, to
rate tak tecast aoe foneae
aii Ea Senet, hacer.
Beta tarsus, Dalles
MRS, I. A. BRADLET,
Registered Soencer Coretlrs,
Wisse preserve the "yourtal
grace ot your figure by letting an
‘iport teen a apectal model fer
er paca soca A Sencar
Sore guarantee fo ou SELLE
Shuts hartiney eal alone
‘with comfort that 1s incomparable.
ose 768 or metal fags
sn the" privacy’ of yore homey ot
Cau at 2312 Porn ret.
sesee
For Sale—A.g00g coraer lot Im a
acre Togas in Waco, Chea
‘toni among, 6488” radian
‘tote, Een. Th
sass
PROFESIONAL.
1. Eb HOLLAND, M.D.
isin ead Serge
cies 14004 dulaon tree
fase ooae Avene
fice Phone. Yost4e
‘ee Phone’ 178
‘Oftce"Hovrs
5:20 wo 100808
3:00 {9 6p. mr Daas, eae
SIE ae
As watts,
sworn tad Couey at La
6 "Pyehinn Temple
Dallas, Torna,
2 COS ees
Dr. RT, Hani, Paylcan and
Sargeon, “Room 216 Prinan Templo
‘ypidence $308 ‘rhoman Ave, Phones!
Since ER deste ne S00
Otis bow: 39 em wold me 8
Poca te are. m. allan nora
| cies nee
Dr. ile—Vateranty Sareeon wa
nitais"ot all Ringe: Oe at Poe
Bee Underaking Company, 310 8.
Fear! meet Heute from a me
fF prime 1808, residence 3438
| tow str, Dalia Rena,
Re
‘| DR.J.G. HARDIN, =~
WEDIOINE AND sunoERY,
SOnererRics
Ottee18 1-8 Bardon Bt
| OA Marte
) PRE RES
|) FE oR
Wes Ren. ¥ 2810
Thee
| DREE WARD, ,
'|~ puysician AND SURGEON
5) eTmTAN TEMP
hoses: it
| na aso
| DR. P. M. SUNDAY,
|| Phgsclan and Sarueon,
| ‘esGeace “S816 Thomas Avenve,
| Gti, Phone tts
| ieee Mn
? tae.
DR. J. HORACE DODD,
i} ‘Physielan nnd Surgeon,
| Sere tee Pont eS
| Gute ricue Yeo
|} mevene Prous 3685,
|e moc one
Correct ft asta ttn
prope ted aon
| eee Cente Rate a Bett Be
| eet e's tine
esai
cto tet ctdoues Senie ee
ea ea ee
fare Seat tind it
VELVET BROWN PREPARATIONS
For SKIN and HAIR are the result of years of experiment and study by me.
A. B. C.
The fact that I am a graduate in Medicine and the best GUARANTEE that the best broth compnbed, are sued in my preparations than a year on the market, these foods have followed this Express and into thousands of the CREAM positively BLEACHES; removes every blanch. holds any powder perfectly moist and tender as a spring violet. prepares reactions readily to my GROWER. PRESSING is nearly amoketle in preparations and you will catch this oil. $1.10 Velvet Brown Hair Grower .22 Velvet Brown Pressing Oil .22 Velvet Brown Temple Hair Grower .22 Information given and or-
M. D., D. D. S.
DEPARTMENT n.
2612 GRAND BOUTEARD,
CHICAGO, IL.
TEXAS TOWNS
Lawton, June 20 - Sunday School at annual hour was well attended. Rev. Ed. Parker the master of the school, and Rev. R. S. Stern the sermon. Rv. Rooka of Chickasaw, Oklahoma, preached the annual sermon for Midtown Lodge No. 31 in Lawton. Rv. Rooka was Sunday. The Craft and Eastern Star were in attendance. Mr. Clifton Lawn and Mrs. Upshaw and Mrs. Stern from the S. S. and B. Y. P. U. Convention of the General Baptist District Association at Duncan, Oklahoma from the S. S. and B. Y. P. U. Secretary, Rev. J. C. Corley, president of B. Y. P. U. Rev. Clair was married to B. Y. P. U. Laffton was elected secretary of the Sunday School. Sunday school and B. Y. P. U. were well attended at the Laffton Hall. Rev. Hauley preached morning and Mrs. Swinton and Mr. Tippier are on the sick list. Mr. R. W. Williams married at Fort Worth. They are making their home in that city. Sunday was high day at the A. M. School. Mrs. W. Williams was here to hold his 3 Quarterly Conference but was unable to hold on account of his sudden illness and for him. Any one desired to locate in Lawton, Oklahoma, in the Lawton Vick Addition. The best residence please see the authorities on such.
Cameron, June 30—Services were well attended Sunday at all churches, including the Miss Jesse of Giddings, has returned home after a pleasant stay with her husband, Dr. and Mrs. Hughes. Miss Jesse of Giddings is visiting his parents, Rev. and Mrs. Hughes. Miss Jesse of Giddings will attend when she will attend the Normal Mrs. Fuller returned Tuesday from Dallas. Rev. John Williams has resided in Houston for five years, leaving immediately for Houston, their future home. A deal of the time was made for Miss Hughes to leave immediately for Houston, Miss Wynnish has returned and reports having has an enjoyable re-entry to Houston, the home of H. Borton and occupied it. Stk Ist. M. A. Williams, Mrs. Wynnish, Carla Dawle and Mr. O. M. K. Parker.
Marshell, June 10—Allen McCoy who killed Miss Pearl Woods lied last night surrendered to the county jail. He as still an inmate his pigs is not guilty. John Harris appalled for a new trial but was convicted in his possession; was tried and convicted for two years in prison. He appealed for a new trial but was convicted in his possession and sentenced to one year in prison for having whisky in his possession and guilty to the murder of Roosevelt McClinace, which occurred at a canceled winter. He was convicted in the State prison Mrs. Laura Cruded at her home on South Border where she were laid to rest in the Nicholas Cemetery under the auspices of the Pulpitrum. Rev. John H. Hudson was convicted for life between life and death; it seems but a few hours before the end. Mr. Hudson and are stick listed. Rev. J. B. Grundy is very sick at his home. The fifth of July jontic for the Colored Troops is a great affair, a good time is guaranteed. Read the Dallas Express, download the newspaper. Leave your orders for subscriptions.
Whitewright, June 30—Sunday
School was well attended at all the
churches, taking under consideration:
the unavoidable weather. Rev. A.
Brown, the pastor, was in charge. Mrs.
Sunday at Baptist Church. The Expres-
sion was delayed on account of the
weather, and Mrs. Brown was to the
bedroom of his sick saintte.
Why ask your neighbor about the
news when you can pay and read
the news? Mrs. Brown was to the
W. H. Laper and others were in
Sherman last week attending the C.
Conference. Rev. A. Brown was to the
terson of the sermon of the K. and D. of T. This was adjudged one of the best sermons delivered
when you can pay and read the news
has returned after spending a week in
Dallas, visiting friends. The Uni-
versal Quartet sms have here Saturday.
The sermon of the sermon to the bedside of her
sick daughter. The B. Y. P. U. open
in 5:30 p.m. The sermon is in de-
tention to the bedside of her
Wille L. McCullane are here visiting
their mother Sunday. C. Gatewood.
Reporter.
Boham, June 30—Mrs. Phillis
Brown are visiting relatives.
Alice sms are visiting relatives.
Mrs. Lain Stephenson and children
are visiting friends in Rowena
G. Stephenson are visiting
speak several days with Mr. and
THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS, SATURDAY, JULY 2, 1921.
Mrs. Noah Clemons and relatives and have returned to their home at St. Mary's Church and Mrs. Lacie Jones were married Monday. Rev. Stephens officiated the wedding and Mrs. Lacie McGill spent 10 days in Saway, where the Reverend is pastor. M. S. Delaware was elected C. C. of the Board of Trustees and all other officers were retained. Mr. Peter Maples is improving to the degree that his children are improving. Mrs. Ella Crumpton and Miss Loisie Hale have returned to school. All children have returned from Waco. Miss Cleo Smith is home from school. Miss Loisie Hale has returned the purpose of painting the church was a success. You can get the books at S. M. Johnson's Fish Market.
Mineral Wells, June 23—Miss Jessie D. Holman, State President of the Mt. Hermann Baptist Church and night at Mt. Hermann Baptist Church to the women and to the public. She also organized a Y. W. A. and C. P. of Mt. Hermann Baptist and his brother will have a c. A. corner-stone church. The corner-stone will be laid under aupipes of Mineral Wells and pastors of the various churches and members are cordially invited. Bethlehem had good services all day Sunday.
THE EAGLE - MUTUAL SHELL PATH BENEFIT ASSOCIATION
Say, we have the kind of poli
the
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EAGLE MUTUAL BENE
In your home is the assurant
We want you young man! Y
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AGENTS
W. A. RUSSELL, Pros.
V. L. S. BOOKER, C.
WADE RICHER
Room 206.
is the kind of policy you have been looking for all
these years.
The very power of an
MUTUAL BENEFIT ASSOCIATION Policy
one is the assurance of full insurance protection.
you young man! You can make big money as an
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AGENTS WANTED
L. PRES. CHAS. T. BRACKINS, Secy
S. S. BOOKER, Mgr. Mgr.
WADE RICHERSON, Treas.
Room 206, Pythian Temple
6-25-11
Say, we have the kind of policy you have been looking for all these years.
The very purpose of an
EAGLE MUTUAL BENEFIT ASSOCIATION Policy
In your home is the assurance of full insurance protection.
We want you young man! You can make big money as an agent. Big money for live agents.
AGENTS WANTED.
W. A. RUSSELL, S. A. T. BRACKINS, Secy
V. L. S. BOOKER, Gm. Mgr
WADE RICHERSON, Treas.
Room 206, Pythian Temple
sionary from Africa, spoke Sunday evening. A vast audience gave her $449 Mrs. Carter of Isaac is here with her daughter, Mrs. Sutton. Two additions to the church. Rev Sutton, P. C., Mrs. T. R. Sheppard and Little Mus Hazel Sheppard are visitors in Shrewport and Natchitoches. Wichita Falls, who has been here visiting Moran, left for her home last week. Mrs. Ullahle Mutes of Moran are visiting her son, Mr. George Bates. Mineral Wells Colored band tendered a splendid concert on the pavilion, which was formerly known as the piezie, which has been secured and leased by the band. The sections by the band. Saxophone solo-So. S. D. Hollowell; Chairrel Solr-So. James P. Mansell; Vocal solr-So. James P. Mansell; Trombone Solr-So. A. B. Alexander. At the close of the program Mrs. Cahle of Port Worth gave the band the song "Words and words a reading from Dun-
M. H. B.
MADAM COTTONS WON'T
Grew Hair
The inventor of this great
leaves and containing every
matter, and Tetter, prevent the H
looking very nice at all time, and
Hair Sticky, but keep it soft and
nice and straight without pressing,
and it can grow much also to darken
one inch more, also to darken brown
for return. Agents wanted—Inclose
postoffice or express money on
them.
COTTONS WONDERFUL HAIR GROWER
Grow's Hair on Temples
if this hair is necessary to GROW Hair, prevent
everything necessary to GROW Hair, prevent
it all at times; this Hair Grower will not make the
hair without pressing, but you may press it if you de-
fer it to darken gray Hair. Price by Mail—I box,
wanted—incluse strap
wanted—incluse money payable to reply—
invoice money payable to
The invention of this Hair Grower, which is made of sixteen ingredients: Dandruff and Tetter, prevent the Hair from falling out, and keeps it Hair Sticky, but keeps it soft and fluffy; it makes the Hair awfully soft. I guaranteed this Hair Grower to GROW Hair on an average of 100 square inches. I guaranteed this Hair Grower to GROW Hair on an average of 600 square inches. I pressed Gill, 60c, Shampoo Paste, 60c. Send 10c extra with order number 60c; Reply to letters. Send postoffice or express money order payable to: 10 W. Calif. Ave. OLKLAIMA CITY, OKLAHOMA Please Write Name Plainly.
East India Hair Grower
know Rhetor to a Hot Potter
S. D.
316
known remedy for Heavy and Beautiful Black Eyebrows, also restores Gray Hair to its Natural Color. Can be used with Hot Iron for Strengthening.
Price Sent by Mull, 50c; 10c Extra for Postnue
D. LYONS, Oklahoma City. Okaa
316 North Central Phone M. 375
318 North Central Phone M. 375
EAST
Taught by Hair Set
Complete Course 3
Total Amount sent a
Must
1 Hair Grower 1 T
ing Oil 1 Wax Ch
$2.99. 35c Extra
The Wonderful Hair
Light by Mail. Science and Art of Hair Culture.
In all amounts at least $10.00. If
amount not enclosed at sale, $25.00.
Agents Outfit
Hair Grower 1 Sample Oil 1 Shampoo 1 Pres-
piration Oil 1 Face Cream direction for selling.
$35 Extra for Postage.
Perfect Hair Dresser and Grower
Taught by Mali. Science and Art of Hair Culture.
Taught by Mali. Science and Art of Hair Culture.
$10.00. Total Amount was at once, $25.00.
Acquired by Mali. Science and Art of Hair Culture.
1 Oil Hair Grower, Shampoo, 1 Press.
1 Oil Hair Grower, Shampoo, and Direction for selling.
2 Ice Cream, 25 Ecstasy.
The Wonderful Hair Dresser and Grower
C
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16 W. Calff. Ave.
bar, which was highly appreciated by a large audience. The band is making a rapid progress with Prof. O. Watts as director and Manager of the Narrative Justice Karland-Sheppard has taken her grocery store. Mrs. L. B. Perryman of St. Louis is visiting her mother, Mrs. J. E. Kelter. Miss Alice Washington, Mrs. A. A. La., Mrs. Amie Auline, Mrs. Piedro and daughter who has been in San Antonio for several months has been visiting the vices at the A. M. E. Church, as the pastor, Rev. A. Johnson, was out of town. Mr. Lzear Moore is reported
GROW'S BEAUTIFUL' HAIR
SEND 65 CENTS. I just ONE BUX
WILL START YOUR HAIR TO GROWING
WILLIAMS.ME.CO.IL
WILLIAMS MFG. CO.
22% M.CALIFORNIA, 0 OKLAHOMA CITY
Excelsior Mutual Benefit Association
Dallas, Texas
Most people need money when that's in the death in the family. Sometimes out of town or they may want to send for a relative. If you think you need a SERVICE take insurance with the EXCELSIOR MUTUAL BENEFIT ASSOCIATION
We pay death claims in 24 hours. Any person desiring such protection, call at room 209 Pythian Tempest.
S. COFIELD, Secretary.
Crown Barber Shop
One thousand agents wanted — Good money
We want agents in every city and village to sell TELL HAIR GROWER. This is a wonderful pre-presentation. Can be used with or with out straightening iron or box-one $25e box-prove its beav will prove its beav
Any person that will use $25e box will be what has failed to grow your hair just HAIR GROWER a trial and be convinced
Send $25e for full sale be agent agent $25e and we will send we a full supply that you it at once; also be agent terms. We will buy by order to
THE STAR HAIR GROWER MANY FACTORIES
Box 912, Greensboro 82.
THE MUSEUM OF THE WORLD
Nile Queen Preparations "FOR HAIR and SKIN"
NILE QUEEN Wonder Bleach
NILE Hair Beautifier
NILE Cold Cream
NILE Holding Cream
NILE Liquid Cold Cream
NILE Face Powder
Brown Flush, White, Brunette Cream Brown
60c EACH FOSTAGE 5c EXTRA
The country-wide demand for NILE QUEEN preparations is so great that they are on sale at most drug stores and first class shops. If your dealer or agent cannot supply you, send us his name with your order. FREE = Beauty Book F
KASHMIR CHEMICAL CO.
3423 Indiana Avenue Dept. 30 Chicago,
for NILE QUENN preparations has become
sale at most drug stores and first class beauty
agent cannot supply you, send FREE
FREE - Beauty Book
FIR CHEMICAL CO.
Dept. 30 Chicago, Illinois
The country-wide demand for NILE QUEEN preparations has become so great that they are on sale at most drug stores and first class beauty shops. If your dealer or agent cannot supply you, send FREE us his name with your order. **FREE** = Beauty Book
KASHMIR CHEMICAL CO.
3423 Indiana Avenue. Dept. 30 Chicago, Illinois
Singer White Sewing Machines
New and second hand. We buy,
sell rent and repair any make. No down
town high rent to pay, will
save you 15 to 25 per cent.
grow. It makes the scalp healthy.
it makes the hair soft, straight and
grayy; it gives life to the most glab-
born hair and surrounds the face with
grace and beauty.
Nothing in the world like it. The
carnation comes in white, glass jars,
performed with water for reflection.
Price 50 cents most paid.
SOUTHERN MEDICINE COMPANY.
10
it clears the hair of dandruff, stops itching, stops the hair from falling on or breaking off, feeds the roots on a damp surface in it. Every box fully guaranteed. Crown Balm店 site. Special Grower店 site. Food Store site. Sisal Food to brighten the completion site.
Y:u can take REGALLN PERFECT SYSTEM in HAIRDRESSING by mail, Write for SPECIAL TERMS TO AGENTS. Address
THE REGIMALL LABORATORY. Atlanta, Ga.
WO-WA-NO
Hair Straightener &
any man's hair in twenty minutes
ir red or injure the scalp, used with
supreme Hair Dressing, produces
4 oz. $.75 & 8 oz $1.50 boxes sent
the pound. Barbers write for terms.
Chemical Company
BROOKLYN, N. Y.
4-23-12T.
A Scalp Invigorator
KO-KO-
The New Hair
Will Straighten any man
Will not turn the hair red or
LAYALL our Supreme
wonderfull results. 4 oz. $..
anywhere. Sold by the poun
Send $1.50 for combination pas
Ko-Ko-Wa-No Che
1089 FULTON STREET
KO-KO-WA-NO
The New Hair Straightener
Will Straighten any man's hair in twenty minutes
Will not turn the hair red or injure the scalp, used with
LAYALL our Supreme Hair Dressing, produces
wonderful results. 4 oz. $.75 & 8 oz. $1.50 boxes sent
anywhere. Sold by the pound. Barbers write for terms.
Send $1.50 for combination package: Ko-Ko-Wa-No and Layall.
Ko-Ko-Wa-No Chemical Company
1089 FULTON STREET
BROOKLYN, N. Y.
M.
Address: MADAME IDA B. JEFFE
North Texas Conference. Route 1, Box
WHITAKEN
AND LADIES D
Polite Attention
Quick Service
ENOS WHIT
2415 ELM ST
H. JEFFERSON, Evangelist A. M. E. Church
L. Box 202, Longview, Texas.
TAKER'S CAFE
DIES DINING ROOM
Call our Rent Cars
Day and Night.
WHITAKER, Prop.
PHONE Y 4852
Address: MADAME IDA B. JEFFERSON, Evangelist A. M. E. Church—
North Texas Conference, Route 1, Box 202, Longview, Texas.
WHITAKER'S CAFE
AND LADIES DINING ROOM
Polite Attention Call our Rent Cars
Quick Service Day and Night.
ENOS WHITAKER, Prop.
2415 ELM ST PHONE Y 4852
The
Most
Wonderful
Discovery
the age
if you
loung,
beautiful
hair
SANTAL CAPSULES MIDY
Easy to View check to deliver
CATARRH
BLADDFR
Safely Sealed
Each Cinnabel
beard name EF
Department of Annuities
4-23-526
G. U. O. of Knights of Shepherd wants one thousand (1,000) or more donations to organize and set up local lodges in every State of the U. S. Deputies both men and women are making handsome donations one hundred and fifty (150.00) dollars each. Request not necessary, we will teach you free.
We are represented in fifteen (15) states, giving thousands of men and women do in the state, and guarantee you steady employment and payday to set up lodges anywhere in U. S.
1506 Michigan avenue, Kansas City
1506 Michigan avenue, Kansas City
Enclose 1 cent stamps for speed reply.
FITS
R.P.N.LEPSO. Dept. Milwaukee, Wis.
"A HEALER OF GREAT POWER."
5-7-tt