Dallas Express

Saturday, November 18, 1922

Dallas, Texas

8 pages

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KANSAS AUDIENCE HECKLES AUTHOR OF ANTI-LYNCHING BILL ALWAYS PROGRESSIVE DISTINCTIVE IN SERVICE KANSAS AU RESENT STATEMENTS MAN DYER THAT NEG FEEL PROPERLY TOWA PREACHER LEADS OBJ ST. LOUISANS WIN FIGHT LILLITT AGAINST SEGREGATED SOUT PARK. Colts Carolin ST. LOUISANS WIN FIGHT ILLITERACY DECREASES IN AGAINST SEGREGATED SOUTH CAROLINA. --- VOL. XXX. NO. 4. St. Louis Mo. Nov. 16—Pointed assertion that the proposal to create a separate park for Negroes was "objectionable and humiliating" to the Negro population of St. Louis and that if the proposition were in favor of the Negro voters of the city would work against the entire bond issue, were made by a committee special aldermanic committee of Negroes, who appeared before the special aldermanic committee of 12 at the Negro park out of the bond issue. The members of the committee following the voiced objections of the Negroes unanimously decided to oppose the Negro park out of the bond issue. The Negro delegation appeared before the committee an invitation extended to them by the members of the committee, who were unable to decide at their meet- ing. The Negro park park would be favorably received by the Negroes of the city. Advocation of the proposed park was received by 200 voters, have asserted before the committee on previous hearings of plenies held nearly at O'Fallon Park was exercised a rudine influence upon the property adjacency to the Negro park. The peace of the citizens of the North Side. They suggested as a remedy that in the bonds issue a sum be paid to the Negro voters for the exclusive use of Negroes. The first speaker to the inclusion of such an item in the Albert Burgess. He said that the movement seemed to be a movement to segregate the Negroes of the "I am sure that I voice the sentiment of 90 per cent of the Negro people in the city, and they unalterably opposed to this proposal," Burgess said. "The Negro people are humiliated not a little more than they are supposed to be a thing by you gentlemen. They are aroused, and logically, too. Would the citizens of the city not so no angry to create a special park for the German citizens of the city, or for the Negro people? I don't believe that you gentlemen have a legal right to segregate the Negroes or the city into groups." "I am sure that if you undertake to include this item in the detail of proposition No. 7, that every Negro gentleman should work against the entire bond issue." Homer G. Phillips, another attorney, said he thought that the matter of Negro he thought had been settled in St. Louis once and for all time. He said that feeling that existed now was amicable, that it would be foolish to include it. J. E. Mitchell of the St. Louis Arms, denounced the proposal as "unAmerican, unhair and unfunny," remarks being that they were op- N I GOODWIN LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF TEKAS AUSTIN TEXAS AUDIENCE NTS OF CONGRESS-NEGROES DO NOT OWARD THEIR OWN. OBJECTORS. The Dallas Express bill. "We compiled 10,000 cases of lynchings and found the above statistic and also found the number of newspapers that news papers, in many instances, gave news of lynchings hours before or after the execution of the twelve million Negroes in the United States are disfranchised and segregated," he declared. The federal judge of the district in which the lynching occurs shall call a grand jury to investigate the matter and may order the United States marshal. The jury is called from counties so far away that the members will be unaware of the lynching occurs is penalized $10,000 for each offense. He discussed recently enacted laws that prohibit the Baltimore party and urged the voters to send Bird back to Congress. "If you send Ayres back to Congress, we do nothing to help the victims of the traction. He is a Wilsonian Mc-Adoo-William Jennings Bryan type of Democrat, and we don't want him to be involved." There was only a small crowd at Arreola theater to hear the speaking and a majority of them were Columbia, Nov. 16.—That South Carolina's blot of illiteracy is being wiped out is shown by the annual report of Miss Will Lou Gray, supervisor of adult schools for the state department of education. The report covering the last school year is superintendent of education this week "The Republican Party THE DALLAS EXPRESS E HECKLE NEGROES AN "The Republican Party Is the Ship, All Else Is the Sea!"—Fred Douglas. THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1992 NEGROES AND INDIANS ASK HARDING TO RECOGNIZE MEXICO AFRICAN NATIVES RESENT CHRISTIANITY'S COLOR BAR. Johannesburg, S. Africa Nov. 16. — (Grunder Service) Commenting on the recent conference of the African Section of the Diocese of Johannesburg, the Abantu-Batho, one of the leading native newspapers in Johannesburg, the Abantu-Batho, one of the leading native newspapers in English, makes the following interesting editorial statements: "We are on the threshold of great things. There is something moving about the people with which both Church and state will reckon in the near future. There has come into being a spirit—a spirit of nationalism. That is why there is a religious and people place in God. They day they know that they are a people, and that they have a definite place in God. They have a thing in God and they make into manhood it will be useless for anybody to try and preserve them. That who followed the discussion which took place in the conference must have been struck by the horrible reality that they were made against the colour bar in Church. To some people these protests may appear to be childish and insignificant, but in consequence they will attach no importance to them, but they will be in the matter of their rights can see looming in the distance something similar to European reforma- "...Christianity as taught by Europeans has no far failed to carry out the objects and ideals of its mission, and has failed to establish one church and in consequence has made him eschew of the mission of Humanity of God impossible; while it teaches the Fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man nevertheless it still remains the same encouragements with all its might, the gulf between Jew and Gentile. It draws a line of demarcation between religion and nation. Thus it may be said, without exaggeration, that it is the greatest bitterness that exist throughout the Christian World. For how can we account for the atrocities and suffering during the great war by the Christian Nations of Europe. We never heard of a Mohammedan nation that had been a state of Islam. But the world today is in a state of turmoil and manking is suffering because of the jealousy of the Christian Nations. "The failure of European Christianity lies in the fact that the reason as a political weapon for taking undeveloped races to facilitate lionization of the Son of Man has been their exploitation by white men. No one has ever been able to take the lionization as taught by Christ on the banks of Jordan, the sea of Galilee, and given it to Jesus. Three Christ taught the love of God for all mankind; He taught the Fatherhood of God and the Brotherhood of men and fixed faith with gospel of peace on earth and good to all. Montgomery, Ala., Nov. 16—In the federal district court at Montgomery a hearing was held Monday Oct. 30, which will probably mark the closing of litigation growing out of an ambitious attempt; by prominent northerners to establish a Negro "experiment colony" in Alabama and to obtain a whale in failure some time ago. On this date the court will take under consideration a content filed by the Bank of Alabama and other creditors against a report of scale of the Dixie Industrial Company. Villard in Project. Associated with this company were some notable men in the life of America; Oswald G. Villard, New York editor and publisher; Clarence Kelsey, president of the Title Guarantee; George Burnham, New York; George Burnham, official of the Baldwin Locomotive Works; John Prow, Gotham clubman and artist; who was president of the company when it went into bankruptcy. The real father of the project, who induced the eastern capitalists, to furnish the "sawdow of war" was an Elmore county Negro, William E. Benson. AUTHOR ARRESTED FOR VAGRANCY SHOWS BOOK AND IS RELEASED. Some twenty of the science, the promoters of the scheme, spurred by the success of the Booker T. W. hashington school at Tuskegee, Ala. launched on the enterprise of estab hishing in a "white section" of rural Alabama; a demonstration on a grande scale of what could be accompled by the Colored race with the white race; a thousand acres in adjoining sections of Elmore and Tallapoas counties were purchased and the machinery was set in motion for a million dollars in time to be an educational and industrial unit well-nigh complete in itself. Land was sold on time payment to the Dixie Industrial Institute; machinery for the industrial use was established, known as the Dixie Industrial Institute; machinery for production of lumber was installed; and a railroad, twenty miles in length was built from Alexander City to the center of the centers of the community. Negro Farmers Become Landowners The cotton oil mill is a thing of the past; some of its machinery PRESIDENT HARDING RECEIVES EQUAL RIGHTS DELEGATION. Washington, D. C., Nov. 15.—A delegation of the National Equal Rights League had an audience with President Harding at a thee White House office at 12 o'clock today for the presentation on the Dyer Anti-Lynch bill. The audience had been arranged through Senator H. C. Lodge of Kentucky and lasted about 50 minutes. The delegation consisted of Wm. M. McCarthy, of Chattanooga; M. W. Spencer, of Delaware; J. L. Nell, of Tennessee; Rev. W. O. Carr, of New York; Rev. W. O. Carr, of Alabama; Stanchers of Chattanooga; Editor of the Dyer Anti-Lynch Bill by the U. S. Senate, especially in connection with the contemplated mission of the President; and as it was a remedy for mob-murders and these were continuing for mob-murders then presented a petition with 10-000 signatures from nearly thirty states asking the President to name him in his call for the extra session. The first petition was from the President's home town, Marion, O. C., from the University of Georgia, from members of the $4th U. S. Infant at Benton Ga., s. from Georgia, Mahlstah, Al., etc. Each member of the delegation briefly urged the need of Executive action to make the Dyer Bill major and emergency legislation, to be taken on the floor, to be considered, continuously. Delegate Taylor reminded the President that this bill would help the white as The President heard the delegates attentively and expressed himself as in sympathy with the cause as he said he and always as been. — ment and such other tomy-rot that quick witted layne Negroes are fostering the cause as he said of their race. Material progress of the Colored race in this country will be the salvation of the Negro. This white man of America is the white man of America. The Negro must now consider life seriously and develop himself and help better his material condition if he has the Negro and I love the American citizenship. White men have to work for their salvation and why not the Negro. I sympathize with the Negro and I love the many difficulties confronting him. There are too many layne Negroes that made me in this country. This group must get to work and contribute something to the Negro and I love the only hope of the Negro race. has been sold to distant Brazil. It is stated. The railroad ceased running some years ago. But the school at Benson is still functioning, and many of the Negro farmers have bought and paid for their land, justifying to a large extent the hopes of the founders of the experiment. Compaint is made by the Bank of Wetunka and other creditors of the Disie Industrial company that the property brought to tee little at the bankrupt sale, and will be ironed out at the federal court here. It is stated that the property was bought to consider the sale of $225,000 of Clarence H. Kiley and the New York Title Guarantee and Trust Company of which he is president. The property is in a good deal of the original land holdings of the company has been sold to the Alabama Power Company is "overflow hand" in the hands of Colored farmers who have either completed their purchases or made substantial payments thereon. PETITIONS SIGNED SIMULTANEOSLY IN TWO STATES ARE BEING CIRCULATED IN FIFTEEN OTHERS. CALIFORNIA SETTLERS IN MEXICO LEAD MOVEMENT CADDO PARISH BUILDS FIF- BOSTON TEAM RESENTS TEEN NEW NEGRO SCHOOLS. INSULT TO NEGRO ATHLETE Shreveport, La., Nov. 16. — On account of the fact that Caddis Parish has built, during the past year, schoolbuses for schoolbuses at a cost of fifty thousand dollars, the superintendent, Mr. C. Ebyr, arranged a tour of inspection. J. Callaway, Field Agent for Rosenwald, Colored, Rosenwald, Schoolbuses Building Agent for Louisiana. The schools seen were found to be of high quality. The building, cording to plans and specifications of the most modern school buildings. The furnishings consist of single whiteboards, blackboards, teachers' deks, etc. for the class rooms; and equipment for high water mark which indicate unusual interest on the part of the public school officials toward New York. Similar trips of inspection in Louisiana, as reported by Mr. Calloway, prove the importance of the school building program directed by the officials of the State Department of Education. Mr. J. S. Jones, a professor of education, in moulding sentiment in favor of such buildings throughout the State. A week of observance of the program was noted in the physical improvements of Negro schools in the State. Mr. Leo M. Favrot and Mr. A. C. Jones, teachers in schools for Negro students spent considerable time with the party on trips of inspection during the week. They are doing everything possible to improve the efficiency in the Colored schools. SOUTH CAROLINA WOMEN TO BUILD GIRLS' HOME. Sedalia, Nov. 16—The Nero people of north Carolina, through Charlotte Hawkins Brown, president of the North Carolina Industrial Home for Girls, to be established at gifft, under the management of the Women's Club, and Women's Clubs are distributing in North Carolina, one half million stamps bearing the image of Colored women of the race who want to see the young girls who find their way into courts at an early age given at Eafland, with the approval of the state site of the building, nearly 150 acres, is being purchased by the Negro women of the state. An intensive campaign to stage and begin the work of saving to the race through painful occupation and wholesome Christian instruction will be the use of stamps once only, that every member of the race in North Carolina will purchase ten A CHAMPION OF JUSTICE A MESSENGER OF HOPE HING BILL GNIZE MEXICO NED SIMULTANEOSLY ARE BEING CIRCULAT- OTHERS. CALIFORNIA MEXICO LEAD MOVE- 18, un- mun- ments. He has brought order through out of chaos in Mexico, and this with no outside assistance and in spite of outside interdressing. Mexico is the great land of opportu- nity for the American Negro and the Indian. When the United States recognizes Mexico, the opportu- nities for the Negro and the nations, It was rumored around Peabody square this afternoon that members of the football squad would start training and take an apology from the Southern officials for objecting to have their colleague, Chandler. The team had been plagued after he had plugged through the season, working hard at all times for the best interests of the Peace Corps. After the same Saturday Dr. Marras of the school committee presented Chandler with a ticket to the football team, and was approached by W. W. Woodman, principal of the High school, who told Chandler Superintendent Robert Robinson that to the office of Superintendent Robinson and there he was told that the Southerners had 'met and retreated spoke, the tenor of all of their calls in the same hall with a Negro. FORMER GOVERNOR BEING TIED FOR PEONAGE. dilimited memoriam have been summoned for the trial of former Governor Sidney L. Jats, and a federal indemnity of two counts charging ponance. The memorial is now set for the way to see it. Nov. 6. Originally, the indemnity held twelve counts, but at the last term of court ten were dismissed. U.S. public school named chained state school, now in tandem with the United States state school and thus help to create a favorite impression for this undertaking. Mrs. Thomas W. Bickett of Raleigh, is chairman of the board of occupancy of the school, which is associated with her on the board, Mrs. W. G. Pearson, Durham; Mrs. J. A. Cotton, Henderson; Mrs. W. C. Moore, Joint office; Mrs. F. Kidney, Salisbury; L. V. Mehane, Rocky Mount, and Charlotte Hawkins Brown, president for the Sedalia school for Culford girls. ee le 3 Bs. 4 i a , a ee cae 38 s os ae ee i ie mieas « s as ——————————————— ia ae es eG. ee a a cle a By a Ea ..| ; ie i: To me Galte MUEAhCoMhice ee) ce ene ei elma cue ay | le 5 SE EOE EET IK «ES RS ag St Pa EET ee x fee DR. C. W. ABINGTON ENDING 18 YEARS OF SERVICE IN TEXAS, SEEKS HIGHER OFFICE IN CHURCH. te MB Mitehsll and Mins Jos ‘Aleaander entertained at hon Priday night , ut 8p. m2, 3116 favenue, ‘in honor of Mas GR Hawking © number ft Invited amis, yore prevnt, ihe ule maaan a . ‘and pleasant fate Mia Stawaina was presented a litle (ok: ‘en by Prot. Phillipa trom Mra, MI holy Mine Hawkinn lett for Lo Aneslee, Gall, Monday evening eg try oie je In your homie, paper be. speaiy ride "ta wl. Your “oape fepreteats’ the’ prosreeniveneas "of Four sity. Wideawake publishers Appreciate your support and will give Seq Bia cae pebieatign Tewie Verwood of Pt Worth gat Me Dre ot Bort ete. ‘wite of Dr. Daniels wars sRuesta of Mra. N, Lane, 2422 Caddo treet, “Task week. oes Gs Shentavaiacs 60 Wevikenee, seem She Seeing ot hie enatervess tals gran‘ GW Abin, wal iris eS ace eater o ita eon fates a Ge de aera tee tare bs setae es Sy aa aS oS iain ok ee nee ors ees a et ret er cat aes ae pee coe eras Sea sos ae ee Biman ner Sf eraemceae laren Bae eats Sear et aa fats ine ea Setiractatits Cease Ste rte ES Seon tina alsa te nace MF Bak ts tsa ot een Fe ica oo Swe ate Ee os eee Sense on poe noes atin one, rae tari latent ects eee THE GREATEST INVEST- MENT TO BE MADE BY THE COLORED PEOPLE OF DAL- Are wo interested in shaping the tical of our hove, moral: tee Soares portunity to, thow hia interest tke the ell made By the GateedSranen ng Ben Che fin" Aw clan Ped biast. st passsenint i ingoehad e600 98 cama fe WEecet Le Gene ded {her oy info groupe. acceding to {he ctenpaton, ry one Bede poe Se ener fron. Mere wl hopens tm thin oe Soy honk bes task brous ha SSettnnlog ana in thie way wl Show which group of people u me Toate tn the Rare of oar yung ee hare an von e: committen: ap nad SS lek te im cio» fellows: Churches encore ‘ris "sand" Proesslon Gt pten’ Conn Laborer, baer Mgnt ark, againe Cay Lars Munger Place gnlat South, Dulas Smiury sommitice i expend toe org he Fatt eon al very Mond akt. oo “seared om Ste mlsdew Dat flied tou and ‘ok alo dhe gecrecay's dy ty ane benny fort can con Be ite ee out mervaey aeree meet, ‘i ‘m ailugenty more rie or of te oi " ere a and every bears te tana seas Soe GReary cooperation ty (hn capes " y naeunpay Sarina ee ee ane. Saat ge ar ah bac ee eek oe ee iyo ere a suri arn Daan, Toeoday, Wed ne Tauraday of ins week He bet for hie nome Friday. Tu, itehiom, 2, of Waco. wu in oma 8 0 jtckwn ot Houston, was ene lig Taween? atoning 0 ban in ‘mater Mr onnees man, advertise yu wares, How do we haw you wa evel your goods? "at ut be You oct and. preverve a few neo frintere ak for that nck" bon uD the wad atch the era sta Maud Moore entecaae at hase om Feiday"ceening at 3 reach 2811 "Cochran "Btret ore Her. arn Clark aio it arn other vied evextn were, Rew SP “Soucy and wile Rar A. Sonnaon: hte A Mller. ire 3 Montgornr, he ntelatton ot ue svat for them at» ah Bieceen jexpreased themselves as feeling that tho particularly tn fitted for this po- ition. Por many yeart he has been ‘A imember of the Board of Mis sions and han always led tho fehurehes of the State’ in contribu. tone 10 that board despite the tact he his congtegaion has not always been the largeset in point of num- bern Moreover he, more than any other Jmomber af the connection has had fepportwnity to study the needs of ‘its department of the church by virtue of his violt_ few months ‘ago to Afriea whore he studied the field at, clone rangé and fave ont rome of his observations of gen- eral nature to ih. public. through the. colusans of the Dallas xpress. “These artielas. rend’ by students of ‘Asean atfaira all over America faused. favorable comments to pour into the editors and to Dr, Abing- ton himeelt from many quarters. "The Deople of Texas and partie larly of Dallas are both. to. part ‘With one whose whole sojourn fusions them bax been #0 construc: tive, ‘Their only. solace in his lose Twill he: the fnet that he goes to eek & fleld of large wsotulnoss ‘where “hit. tremendous constructive ! may be teed with more gon- eral benefit. |The people of Dallas wilt turn out en masse ot Sunday night to his losing service and exprone thus thelr appreciation for hia serviee among them. vehicle wied In transporting -the salen rood ‘Ta tholr Tot were three sacks ot vonns, nd peas, number of hams, Taree majority of bacon, whole Mock ot cigars, sssoking and. chew- Hag, wwheceae. ead enutt and maar ier atiolen of value, ‘Toe intruders, anid, "Mr. J. Row- en, must have lett the store, about 4 olclock, Saturday morning.” Officers were notified and a search was tneticated. DALLAS DOKINS ‘TO HNIC FIRST ‘SOCIAL EVENT. nate Senate We. 2,: Drisatie lorder ‘Kalehia ot Osi will eater {ai yest Muesday nigh, November i ih a ad ener, She re Ue blac seertion fou Fe rytlen"Tomole_ Arnone the fingsabed goons to be prevent i Grand) Ghanetir WS Wil nee ott of tw Botaies as ie rasent tc glv tse Wo thea Tir The’ ico omnitien tad ales well has and it Vota of Kauhe Temple antonio © rel ‘ecention jn 'he aking. Rack Vo Sey athe omanon allots ex tac Suporte to vite am Biber Fnaselal prother” Xaieht t hare the fey na’ "cana flim ney siford oturee eG. W. alla, A. exque snd avian Gear 0 W. Nar ay have ealanve cage of thn a ‘ingemenin Pina AWAY. Mok Suna Taylor of Maria ree famed sway” at ero hit "Thorny srening Re 38 rece am Taptor wan the mot facia ot oar fellow towsemase Mr tae‘ donen'yhorvan at Re ae when bet demise cn, sr WAY 10 TaEw NoneTH. EKA NCR cone ome to Dale tat tng "waco Inerurban’ at e:30 0 iba nem eet oft Tiny ak ER GEN inain ‘to tone. Don't the above morning ear Tho, Iter wr ih ake ncn Wt Ey. al, Sari ore Wort oa at ut ame Th, Rn Halon eta Irena" Prt ome on co trom Ht wa gv ft ste kon he ana. fant a 8 mare tantra comig a Magnus and. the 10. Ni the taal ik item terevet, Irece. >, eae ay Ssociet <atm LR : O* ere oo foe amis wean cmct| ecw aaa a are ne ees = fs Tatil RRM Gry tl Swe Priday Miss P. L. Tyler, Fu-| Thursday, Nov. 9th « mati ese. Mac, aa oa ata By Netnty retin! Melee ae eae eae ese a te Wns ot the eitieede o ules oie Pee is ae gee histaSsecy utente, eee a eee es hare ss Se Bs tee este nevon| Mate tie ag fed cone female | kha Oh ke meres ee ae ie Lane te ae (Mth, Oooh, Terns bee, Le tiktar Csaba whee nies oa! hehe, Ben Ate | we aT he an a eye oe Pe serrate Getta aha! se sh a Bs an 3 ER a a Mit gr ag lg gf ag Tea tile he, [Pe crear eee Be IS Bla ce ta GrEe sraoenAon OF Cotanmn | He Comte Mr Toure ce ee oats _ ste ate Sten tea Pit eset Ahern arte as Tae Teanga ewe "SG te, feat Pe en cee eee, re eae mean see Oe ee forts er ecie Seaece a eo ani vam Axo worm cum |. Ht ge Rll ta Be cao Sel ha th ant ope i no hate] __ > Set Sol eee elie tao cen vistin Wamater my with Mrs. S.A. Wilton, “ater 'a| ‘CLUB, i canter ca wore added fo. the delight of the| The Phyllis Whealtey Art « Sn, free wai te Sedat rally SVS ME Sa aun Joa au Seng CB‘ patac recat on tara eee eet os pe ee) ecmcer cece ence ri, eee tte tees) ieee ae | EE fete veremac” [Sater Phat ane Rahs ween toes (eee ee ee, Boer ene nae ee DOROTHY ART ouum, —— |Whestley, Many words of eratit pit Viola Reed was hostess to Iitteen members “of "the. Dorothy ‘Are Clan Wednonday afternoan, Nov th, at her home, 2726 Blate St. Fach "member" responded. with ible quotations ang pald duce. One few member The. afternoon was fen In all Kinde o¢ beauttay taney ork, Ail Slats were. made for ou Thankagivine Ganer whtes_ wil be tt ire Hate Rage, 3716 ‘Trindad Stryet ‘he sia Utend to nome tn airmen sn fr. whe haa returned froma two Fein? ait thn north end east ‘Keer ‘bdninem’ hours’ the hosters forvea thicken atin, hot cnocolat, fee cream and miied. cake. he tiab “adjourned. meet Nov. 2304 with “Men "Jeane Greer, i808 Phoman sven Men "Atmle Dita, Pres | Mie 8.'M. Whitfield, Rept ORCHIAN cHORAT, CLR, ‘The Cecilian Choral cub met a the Pld House at 4200 o'clock Fr fay." The “meeting wan devoted to 1he"sletion ot attics and ‘other Dusineas, This cub wily mest every Friday under the nipervision of Mrs. FR. Gitgon ana Men, BG, Rice. ‘acto Wright, Pres Bile’ Terry, Reporter, “NRL ROAR SOCIAL cLaTH, ‘The Nett Rose Boca Club met i rorular meeting, “Friday afternoon, November aeh xt the residence 0 The preent, Mis AB Kirkwood preslged. Soug and prayer: charae tered. ihe opening.” Members Te tpondea to rll ail vith Bible quo {ationn, ‘Phe minutes were red and Adopted. The president made tel Femarki. One ‘new member, In per ton ot Mix. M. Townsend. Mrs. Go: Bie wren Bleasant vintor: An exo Tent” cau waa served bythe how Net AL be with mecting rs Con '3920"Kimand trent. ime MH Kirkwood, Pres umn 3.3. Tuompaon, Secretary. nie eee | CARNATION CHARITY CLUB. ot with re ala Jordan, 2611 anger” arene: Tue: iegting. re eoened ty the Opin, Mos Cadel Sich song, prayers seritars vending iter eit busens was than tn Snaps A collection ff. ae sate” to tho ned)” $408 We. ae teSaer That the publ wil no forge enc Thanking Giaer ai rt Titus ew, Drie’ Sloe ta he Senstt st ele he neo. Seen esting Prd, Ree 3, w redone tir “aaichews, 284 ord Weanington_nvente nt Bt eencong rw Mec A Amu Tenor. sreimey wives corn, Bombers ot his cub wore bight anlerlained Thats evening, Ror Sy hes pat he seridon i n"6, roto. "an nverening Sates wien sue Aid wih ib prams A, emer ore prse raious Recah, fete of eves We fiadiy nde the mame oF ar pe Marsa an Me, FW tuaws tour toh. "The “beaten termed amon rlahng pes tthe chu adored meet Nor 14 at tn, Poners, aaron Ot Wha MP. Butler, Pree. Mie @ Procor, Set. M.S Gales Nope. w. Wow. ane corn, |The W. W.-W. Art chuy mot 1) ie aay "hoy. Nish at the Toubenes Hird "W!" i ile." One. hour "was fect Waving the needle. Vag the hor sure a seria ot seams rove Panne fre ee aes ie Oe Reeds were enrolled as new mem ber. The hontem served an see ‘Thursday, Nov. oth a matine. party “ot twelve attended. the. Pal ce “Theatre. Meadames ™ Brassion Brown and Mr. Williams of ‘Colors o, ae ieuests. A tour of tho el And suburbs. Wan also a feature of the afternoon’ entertainment. "one club wil "be entertained Mrw. ‘Gunter, "Tuesday, next, at he resldonce, 1027 1-3 Doll mrect ‘Mine’ L. B. Hooper, Asst. Sec’, WH FEUGIR ART oLUB, Nov, 18th, the Pollete Art chu met at the’ home. of Mra. W. Mt Ambry. Fourteen members respond: ato roll call, Prayer was offered by Mra. Seott Campbell. Mra. WIC Me AM. Ambey was elected elub his torian, Tt was agreed, the club have an ari exhibit during the holiday Aso" the fourth Monday. of” each Mouth be a soclal. meet "The hoateas served a two course Tuneheon.” Next” lub adjourned t meet with Mrs. Brown, 3710" Mose: Tand avenue. Mente Be Riehle, Pres = Mr AC Coleman, See'y Mem Scott Campbell, Repet. THE PHYLLIS WHEATERY ART LO ‘The Phyllis Whealtey Art club met In a body at the Wheatley School tnd” presented the schoo an “emergeney” eabinet with thirty Articles. Presentation speech was tage by Mra J. L. Johnecty who delivered a "beauittur “addres, his forising that great character Phyllis Wheatley. Many words of gratitude Were given us bythe principal Prot. TD, Marshall and ‘his staf of ‘teachers, We then passed out onthe rounds ‘where we were onlookers Of the Pag Day exercise which was ary beautifully “rendered. by. the children. "After Toaving the schoo! We went to the beautiful home ot Mra." H. Moore, where we enjoyed a Very pleasant evening. Stra. ‘Jo Gunn ang Sire, Gumm wore pleeagant Visitors with ws, ‘A. dupeneso “Tea, On Noy. 24, an entertainment wil bo given at the, home ot the Preat- dent, Mex. KS. Toney, ‘om Casey Bireet, Tho proceedn to be used to help fill ehatity haakdtn for Christ ‘We meet ‘next Friday. evening with Mra. Peace, at 3506 Dunbar Street ‘Mrs. KS. Jonen. Pros Mra @. H, Robinson, Rept, LADY MARY ART AND CULTURE ‘cum, Lady Mery Art and Culture club met at the Home of Lady Johns Sat Urday even, Nov. 11. The. meeting wax opened with song and. prayer fate and plane "were sugKested for the benefit of the club. A Dum ber af members anewored the rol, Halt an hour was spent in embrold crying. A delicious menu wan served Hex. ‘neling toe at Tithe Gon Drug Store, Saturday evening, Nov UA at 3 lock. lady” Norman, tenn; C. Gaston, Lady Sceptre; G."intley, Lady Teporter. SOCIAL SERVICE OLUB, Sevier: sorvien Cich Wo. 2, mat at the hotse af tn Uaura Joh Sate een cs tre erent te ee ae Bi Cpa: a are Bae tet ae sit aak erates ae ie ae earns ie tase er feat ewe eee ea Renee pee a os Reenter ene Rel tee ene tare Be tag Te em ea eee Seamer a Sea eeere aee Marka. "Che hour ‘was given fo eee, Reese ae eee ea ee eS cae ty a lear firar ac fe ae ews Bip tte ce ro Facies ae core Sse ne oe alae ape tio ee cae one saat dia ace te ison ues saeco oe or iota ee seeemeas am ee Senet ore ees nares se — PERN ie Se at ate ee Peeetets ms x Beas cas ieee eae rw oat Coane’ Pre Bee er ‘cab GiGe GOW ee cet: eat ORF beat mestings was Triday, Nov. 10, a1 the home ‘Mother ©. ¥. Cates, 2016. Flora Ganesh, ‘The ‘Sieeiing ‘wan opened te By Fire, Hail or Tornado. | THE PROGRESSIVE MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY | Cher Serio a Conininios ot Tneracy ‘nd Dashing HY iscunes nusiness wovsns, rExrunes, nmiiDuNcDS, FURNITURE, AUTOMOBILES ‘ ‘hesine Low by Fr0) OPVICERS_w 2. Crantora, Pree; Dr. BB. Howell. Vice Preu; Prise A. Wren, Beet. IL D. Winn, ean, iNBOTONS—oF ik” Silth, Ohairmany A: G Wem, Seey; Be. Grier, ris ‘A Wrenn, De Be, Howell HD, Wan, M. Wren NOME OFFICE—2001 BRYAN ST, PHONE PHONE ¥ 4516 ive Agents Wanted-—Call or Wetet, PRICE A. WREN, General Manager . or A. G. WEEMS, Supt., of Agency the umual form with a large num- be, event Anare,rone Peeunen the ‘eet of the fteraoss wan sent in haa work, nil the SPECIAL Roster began to serve a, delelous Mount witch wie" enioyed ty all Fer'cubs auourace to eet” pest CASH FOR XMAS Frans with sire Us An Mamey, Seles area are, Precast. | CONTEST Sir LR, Carter, Rept |$ 173.00 1N CASI TABERAY, COMMISSIONS oe SER |§ Exerypody wine ota of Mme SRNCLIA ARE CLUE. | ‘Woman's Voice, a monthly magazine ain. fe rome ot Sit Grab met Tyee $ women as by wotear postive genuntce tara the falta ‘The Pesan Art ub met Ture F Tne a"tne atest contenant i Our Hone 30 aye "Cash aay rgnine, Kor, 1th with Mt $ for GhietmasSubseripuon Content a tee ee ee a 4100.00. for the largest number of yearly subscriptions over cee pe 50 went im within 30 days beginning November 20, 1923. een oe eens Oe Oe $50.00 for the 2nd largent number over 60. Diagonal Koni ang Kloster ioc | $8505 forthe Sr lvoe numba over 8 reer Speers svete: Ses spent Fifty cents for each subseri over ‘and not exceedin 20 Priscilian were present at roll $ 59 vw: wech eubseription over 36 and sot ing an F hes al Rwentytve cents for ach subseriton eu than 25. Minn Law, the uvercatar bean $ Wout Vole ie chck fll et goed ve veadng mate. Stor- ase of the ety, wil addon 6 $ iq, ature iin, ‘sterain and Mumorods oplnon, = wacket= ea aout ae Tlf yagi fo 60 Yeu, it nt hw amie et 30 ome’ iro, Nov. |g months old and tacked by sufficient capital to guarantee its con- Brum #218 Thome avenne, Nor $ fn un comes monty appari. Wena Vle nia f very home, we want 7on 10 help pat iter, to hep ‘Mie. J. M. Lane, Pree js your chance to win a neat sum of extra cash for ms ‘Mmm J. M. Lane, ee en ane Bee LIFE SKETCHES OF COMPOSERS TASTED IN. MUSIC MEMORY g BE jJamee W. and J. Rosamond Johnson "The Fohnson brothers are cele lorated. Negro composers of ‘National [repute and are nallves of Jacknon- ite, Florian "The older. Jas. W. Johnson was born Sune 17, 1811. He received his AR. and A, M. doptees from. At aoca, Univeraty, For seven year ihe served as prinelpal of the Jack- vile high sehoot and ‘wat subse favently submitted to. the bar. On ‘Boving to New ‘York, be: formed a association with his brother, pf ducing several light operas for [New York stage. He ina written the fworts for & number of clnssleal and popular tones, the musle of moat of these ‘being composed. by his broth. fer. One of thelr reateat works le ithe "Negro National Anthem” dedi Jealod to Booker 7. Washington and [Which “to. beautifully portrays. the [progrese and. hope ofthe. Negro Face, enaing with the prayer: "God of our weary years, God of ‘our. silent tears, |taou who. hast brought us thus ‘ar on thelr way, ‘Thou who as "by Thy might, Jed ‘is nto the, Mah. Keep us forever In the path, we ‘bray: Lent Our feet stray from the places ‘our God where we met The, ‘teat our hearts drunk’ with wine ‘ot the world we forget Thee [Shadowed "beneath ‘Thy hand,” May we forever ‘sand ‘True to our God, True to our Native Tana"! Mr. Johnson has served many yearn as United States Conaul, with ‘great ‘dignity. Hee national "or franlser for the N. A. AO. P. and fat Aare time contribute poems’ to the Independent, Century, American Magasine and other periodiealn ‘The youn brother, a. natural silted ivualelan. was orn tn 1879 fand in a graduate of tho Now Eng” Tana Conservatory. He developed new style of Negro musle which be ‘came very popular. Hla fret succes wax "Under the Bamboo Tree.” La {er he connected himselt with Cole forming the tauious Cole and. Joh son Company. Thalt greatest. tue (cena wat "Tho Ted Moon,” a. comi opera’ which received the etitielam fot being ciore. uited for "Grand [Opera than Comte. ‘Through constant urging and inspiration © from. his (brother, "Mr. Johzs->. han’ become Jone of the Yeading w'sicians of his leountry, "He has» weftten light loperas for noted. theateial. manag ere, a8 well ax Lilian Russell, Ann Hold ‘and others. “Atter che’ deat ot his father, “he composed ant |dediented to. him, the pupuar sons. "Seema. ‘Lak to" Me," ‘At onetime, MF. Johnson a lenarge. of ‘soclal settlement work fq New "Yok. He ‘has been man tims= abs and during the: Worl [War ‘was commissioned or Pir [Lieutenant in the American Ne ‘onal ‘Army and was the director o ‘the Ninety second Division Band. ‘THE DALAAS EXPRESS | TUN, COMPASY Meritoriae Printers ‘tod Designer : ‘cuasetemn, | Wikies Wondered" + quickest Sala! At(ail“Grug stonan Ye tna be, Rae Tort Retative—Would Meo to know the wherorsout of my fatner, Wiley Wrigt Last heard of was ai Oriley, Texas in 1916. Address Granville Wrign(, 1008 Bast Poca Street, Sherman, Texas. 11-¢-1t. + $1750 1N CARH TABERAT, COMMISSIONS Breeds Wine ‘Xo Tan of Tine | Woman's Vole, «monthly. magasine edited for women, of | ‘women and by women, ponltively foarantes to ve, the folowing Frise to. the uceesefal contenant now specal "30-day! "Cash {or Ghrntmas Subscription Contest : 4100.00 for the targeat number of yearly subacriptlons over | 50 sent in vithin 30 dave beginning Novemver 20, 1922, %50.00"for the 2nd largent number over £0 425-00 forthe Sra largess number over 60. so, PHO cote foreach Wubecipin over 36 and not ceeding ‘Twenty-five cents for gach subsertion teas than 25, ‘Woman’ Voice is chock full gt good ive reading mailer. Stor fen, feature artes, editorial and humerous opinion, a efack-a Jack magazine for $1.80 your. It Ie not a new magazine but 80 onthe eld and backed ty” stffiient capital to guarantee ln con. {inved und consecutive monthly appearance. Woman's Votea sould be in every ‘home, we want you to help us pM fe there, to belp Ua {im your chanee to win w eat pum of extra cash for Chriatias. ‘Men, women, mhool boys and girs ener tha contest now-t0- day. “Sends Your mame tnd address at once, we do the Test Con- {eet opens November 20(h and closes December 200. Just i time {o"have your extra eartaga Teach you for Cavisiman All informa” ‘lon and necessary buppitn wt be wnt by Ttura mall. Act ow. CONTEST EDITOR, {040 . Went Sere, ndlnnpetis lane, pencpeccecossaeibecdboseneoncsesecosoosooncoceones’ ‘Will protect your entire family at a very small cont. We have no membership drive ou now, but enjoy a steady growth which is ev!- ‘onced by the new Chambern wo aro organising weskiy” ‘You sould Join this Order for its reasonable rates, courteous (woutment and prompt payment. Join the “SUPERIOR” today because It Ip really what you need. If there ln no Chamber in your tows, -~write ws for our or anizer's offer and got one started at once, 4. G, MeDONALD, Nat. Pres. ©. B, CLAIBORNE, Nat. Sec. Room 204—549 ELM ST, onval 11fC LCAiT &@ AnfINTeT imenunasar., ROYAL LIFE, HEALTH & ACCIDENT INSURANCE CO, Of Texas PROPOSED CAPITAL STOCK $25,000 Fort Worth, Texas Pay hon sts se Sen "Wort wart gh etceniars pie Ss ae 4 Seat ae arte ia cinta Seat Napa che ite hat rete, pet, hye ae ae Eee ae reel By Steel tote nd ar ocd prvi’ ‘ot pate Investment for’ the ‘people We. county over Wacee betel, RAPS ied aero cee She Bho Soin Ree, eat iat iS i Coens eaters Se om Dosiors, tuborine man, preachers, tc chers and wernen of all wale Sherbet man empotent Tronarabee' men nthe Soencty. the comet Perea Pian eke tl eo se oe Jor a heey Ls Ne Sate eter. met ore Biattnze, Fior's cette assert ee ire rola i other stina. sre bulk an Ot Lae Tae amaltit BOcPa ut Eth TaN tse enn Sic tee mere i earners Were reee cramer Neen THEODORA PREPARA- TIONS. (onmnan) Dg Prise Gontest Nov. 1 10 Dec. 31 Diamond Ring, Watch Bracelet, string ot Pearls, Ivory. Manicure Set and Leather Puree, given away. Write for particulars ACT NOW. Vogue Beauty Shop. ‘Denison, Texas wen YOUR FISH MARKET— DALLAS SEA FOOD CO., ‘00 LA 8, Whoteale and Retat Fist, OYSTERS & GAME {2 weaton ‘We suaranteo our merehandioe Sanitary record perfect. wait [=| Texas Towns | = Tabbock,—Rev, H. Brown preach- ed, Sunday sehool and B. Y. P. U. ‘fre marehing upward. Brother’ H. Pejerson, president of the B. Y. P. Ue ie pling. a life to the work. Miss! 'B.-Waliar and. Mr. Willi Lee’ were folnod in matrimony at 1:40 p.m, Rev. Brown, pastor, of fictaed. Henderson —Me, Walter Prank in made his arrival after being ab- tent for about elght weeks, Prof W. H. MoCane left last week for ‘the Nospital at Marshall, Mlaos Pearl Henry, J. A, Belle, Olle Wal- lage, Bertha Robinson, M, J. Hurd, ‘Anna Boggess and Mr. George Hurd ‘Atended the aut Texan Baptist A foelation “at Alto, last week, ‘Tho Dest session of the association will convene with Mother Zion ‘Baptist ‘chureh, Henderson. Rev. Garner and fmombers of the ©, M. B. chureh are atsiving. bard to. make the sunval Conference sueceas and I fool sure that altho ‘attend. Uhe conference ‘will Want to ‘come to’ Henderson, ‘guin.” "Students are coming from MMT parts of the country to. enter ‘choo! at Hxcelsior. Mr. Jone Oguln Feturned. home after spending & tow aya with hia ‘Brower in Lufkin Mr." aluck.Siries is on tho sick lit. ‘Sanday schoo! good at Mother Zion Young, men” and. young women's lass holds the banner. Wedding bells are ringing for Miss Savanah Garrett. ‘Moyal Society met Tuesday ‘evening at the home of Ars. Nettle Moore.A "very. delicious menu was ‘cerved by the Nosteas, ‘Thanksgiving Supper for the club ‘will be at_ the home of Mra, Mack "Diggers. Nr. Pratile Simmons, prosgeat; Mrs ‘Aims Garrett, See'y. Wedding bell ‘are ringing for Mr. ©. Patker and Mine’ "Peart Stmows, Mira Mary "A. Rice, O.H. Po, of Knighte and Daughters of Tabor made her annual ‘alt to Search Light and W. M. C. G. Tabernacle Monday. Hon. J. Ford of Tyler made a flying trp here this ‘week. ‘This is Mr. Forde home, he was the prinelpal of the Colored “high school here. for, 18 Soare, Mr. and"'Mrs, Johnnie. Gar- Fatt will make. thelr “home on 7. ‘tnd HL Mise 8. Garrett and’ Mia RB. ityers are calling. Mr. H. B. ‘Borxees, Mr. Briekly Simon will a: Cameron —Splendld services were ineld-at chueher Sunday: Rev. agh- fe wan on duty at Bethel and was pleased to have with him Rev. Av J lerander of Crockett. Rev. Humber ‘Mao on “duty ‘at Cameron, Grove ‘Thin being the 6th ehpreh jean Wichita Fatla—Mrs. BY. Lewis of Sherman, Teras, waa the guest of Mr. and Ara, HB. Newsome while in’ the lly. They motored. to Fort Worth, Texas, rounding the cornems at'35" because “Me. Newsome. had hold of the stern wheel. Mrs. Lewis was gladly recelved here, hope. she wih fait again. Mr. Le Butler has Purchanéd "a handsome steel gray Rearae, onham.—Mr and Mrs, Bud Ma son have returned from Weet Texas, ftivto Mine vile Perriman, Tra, Yar trough, Mra. Gussie Lee Wottord ‘mon the sick Mat. Misses Ann Har ris and Clayton Chapman have lett {0 take up thelr schools, Mr Houston ‘Mosley lett for Contra ‘Texan. College Sunday. "Mr, John Crompton made a flying trip ‘ere Saturday, ‘The fale and earnivay et fn the G. M. E. church was a Aue ‘ean, Dr, Ariington Wilson, will be fin the Bible Inaitute on the 24th Ste, ‘Houston “Cannon who died af ‘Denison, Wednesday war buried her Priday, funeral ofticiated by Rev Rartley of ‘Denison, Quite a num: ber of Knights and friends accom: Panied the body. Me, oy Camon Tet for. Oklahoma City, Saturday ‘The infant of Mr. and Mrs. B. P. Pyles died Tuewday and was buried Weanesday at Mt Zion. Mr. Leroy Stewart har parchasad © house and fot om. Franklin ‘avenue from Mr eon aware ey. ort of bat Xin breached Sunday at Bethe Se pee eae bcos reve PORT WORTH. Fort Worth, ‘Texas, Nov. 16.— ‘sunday School openad sharply at 9:20 a, m, with our mort excellent Superintendent. Prof... W.. Wi ams at the helm. ‘The weather was Inclement, but upwards of a score of feneral offers and teachers. were Sresent, walling for th: opening Dour. The lesson tople for the ay was: “Zenon the Great Teacher" Mime 0. Parnel?'s long standing ‘Hiah was gratified, when Superin “ndent Willams announced that the 100" sonx oaks ordered. some. tir ano ‘had. arrived ‘Ati a. Oo "Blask Billy 80 aay | (Rese 3, Gordon" MePherson) preached & vory Interesting eermon, Bring aa Na tople "The "Devine Touch’ the Reverend dellevered. Wonderful sermon. "At 3:00 ‘p.m he preached to packed house of imen only, ha topl for. this occasion was “orlal Pu Hig” he took off his colar and eos fant went at ft cx only “aly” ean {Lone before the hour of speaking th ‘att auiliortom was packed to 1 Capacity, It was entimated that be ‘fween 1,000 ana 1,200 persons wer Drovent, notwithstanding” the dow pour of tain" Prof. G. W. Wiliam Toa the singing. Again at 7:30 p tm, Black Billy Sunday preached Moat excellent sermon, "from th sheet "A. Wonderful Name,” qult ft namber of white people were pres fent. many ef" whom could be nee fonlag thelr andkerebtots freely a he ininister thundered way will iin exceptional power. ‘the BP. UAC § p.m. wa ‘very. interesting feature of th fing, Rev, 8. M. Montsomery 1s mak {ng’thinge hum as head of the at Mary. ‘The choice aud orehoutra ar among the beat fa. the state, the fay it Soa rare (reat to heat thon Writ singers of Israel in the spects ‘Black Billy Sunday wilt speak of tae tabowing mabe” uri th ea ["nuay went —tonag Fr i Mes aes seah alae eee Meitatuy—ttion. ian.” meer ne eines aay ett! atau” went Sit poeta” Sah ene teal nee Unt Sata ia esd parent as Soothe al pete (Aes ee ee fee rene Se arene nt, Soa" Seles St egeioe tag lagetegs (pase Creare tara tee eas anne had a [ah ater ren Bec eee rte este eae asta eee, ear se err ase ance eee fro a corey eer err acetate eee rear ee |" ents Bie ot Oban ic acai ees oun no ome [hire Satie Davis. Rev. 6. C. Be [ie eee Bec pce lie emu eat ee ears cotter a (aaa hal ie ee ees (eee pian Se aa a Isreal cen tah ese cea eared Seine on eaters ae co erie [eile mien |tent her gir} to see why he did not ieee as ae {tatty ‘dressed with the exception of i aerate Seemann fasten, ‘The girl called her mother Se cat eran |D. High—The entine schoo! went on be mae eetaca partment going a different direction, pcre eon sere le ides con teem oe es fans se need oe a acanernateercen ae becirmcr sey yar nary rain a ae Neco nernomaee oa a Sa am etc eens eens ee ey ata aes ieee fe eisai al ioe stamncieee ac ees sweater. a eles tern Nace tet ae ipeeeeace ress tae ise aee tema oe Isat ata ht lt etait tea | See 0 | T tna et a eeeas ncoureetanwend ie | ‘The evening was a very enjoyable sal mits chore a coments sna char aie at ceaceral cet ean ort pege cere, a eran fee eae ree at Star, pea Sots eee fost rkians WC Wis ee cmticar Wee Vie ie eat ey eec jjand Sunday at Grand Prairie, aled beara ces ca cerns aah een ee ke ee ele citizens and expert farmer had his [teen cea eta cer te lmadtee nee canes [sesame te iicergrae ge Seema ints Sok aces cena Be [et dala ser tune lore eae sees el eter [pve Sa ame as os esa aca cee ia eed eet ta ae Boe Sate |e seeere tie Sie cette Sse a ee see et ee Meee ieee oS Pa sear ocepek aka ee | eae capa tit a ca aches ae uae a seers, Sete Cay tae Soa Re Pence eae dP A gglorg k er mene rare "| viniting her son. Mrs. Loulse Savag Neate tatate cee [ee remesdanen areas asta, Hurts Pat ey cy ae le ‘our elty, a SE ea ating tot tony conference hela at Nash ‘Su ieee caaae ta ee I pear tebe astas: | ne Sate Ce eran artes ore aM eet ithe Pa yey as ae ee caren te ie ees ca Para [agit a lee aateee eae eon ole a tert Theteday: worsing fe lair atl uaneten er fatinl teeee amt ane, ean eros a at te ao cat ea erat eat be eee creme cae sabe aeons hoe ce +\days of last week. Miss Jane Gas leesccreee eta hea as en eae a tits h Smith College. where she goes to er [ter school. Nn i ai insneae eee ier, Saneel, San Wee attended at both churches. They. E. Banier cause to the members ot Oak Hin Vaptlst church with a. great message Sunday at 11. o'lock a. fm. Anco we have not bad any rain slice June Wo don't kaow ‘whether eet nae bea ako fender ‘THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1902 organized a sewing club and dolas Gra vk. "ela hoi“ canoe cans tae Ba ete ee can mean eee are sed lake ind te St ue an men BY cok Sits tana oe ie oe Tee aa eh ele fe esac we efi Toe Site Fake tate oe ene ie aa Le oo ioe saat ae St Br ee eens Sa Panay Sal fa te nc ced i at ae a oe et seca area Sere wee settee ito carpe ee at ae Sn." ces naar Sa She Sidi tas en cee pe cnr ae eae ee se cee ma ia const ee fee ee oss wed aes siemens eee rate, enor aces Sac eee cee fe a ee a ta bee teeta cer heen he ie ati, as aaa tes ae ae eee Saha a Seer el ace 3 mt ot Vira, Te ee emcee at ale na aici tse arate cent, satin nea Sea Tin aw an Bees ter eeu ce si ee een ee Zt Ste ie Nai sc eaameray cues ie gcc ate a ee a Seana tie Seas te Bere a, ea a uk Seatac ae Be ate a pos ae eal eae foe oon rea sien ares ots ie ere et Chyetey, lr oe Sens arta Babess sila ore aman tae Mee ae Reva sehen te a an to ee en Mt a et se aus ota oe tae at pt Ra a acs ie tes ores eteroias eran es sre Giney eneras ets eeepc tae eee ta Soe cies Setar en ae Saat eee a Teens ra ser diet Pao Seer setae Scour soon Secs f Soa ara canta atone aa ag ae oes ss Sav ve set peace ace isoeee Pray amet FOE ge Pecans meiece Bue ae anaes oe ec eae BS ane ee om Secet ro Sane e borelstaas cena ees caren aa i erences Pristaitacth emiaa ae Boe aa a ema a! a none Set Sock a eee Fees ie ns a ere con aaa ae eect ae oe teeny oe Sat a peat deer’ ieee pean a eat ete Eo Ae tee ee eatin, St Sie Biot oS Gnas eti Pictu oti Sr tase Sareea Pace a ae, Oe hort pin ie Same Santa 2 a elma st pra races aetna eee eta ee esteem ccm fet ss a ean ese “dy MEd alr ees cae eee Se [enlred ‘by all present. ‘The layma Sire ec ee ae Bete Slt at Reset a tae ra See eae tes eae ue tae eg Sone ee aati eta ts na ek atte ie: at ce a sa tea for rns ded her Bow Peper Son dears oe Baccece aetna Ha praanadinshinpe ree Sieroter’ cee cae sae Stee bate apie aera Lectin gia ye sees ae Seal ceas ecm, Sea een ee {Texas Mr. Will Griffin retrme Es Viet Ss, Ma So [esata ind tt |i BeBe Soe ieee rane 8 Sas [esas See area eee SPS eet pe eas see Vette at fbi last week. Mr. Bud Hawkins return- |e‘ Revise a in Dose [sm Sree ot tice nt sean | afternoon, . | Temple,—M-. Mack Hamlin follow- | eng i a |S toer ita meters eeverel Neate oases ert Se ee Pier vine, Tjasce a Rao it, Sac tet eae Sateen tee ea sie ete nce Reese ae |e ttaaodty vce athe a eee ae [i thee Nearevreea ess Gos we Reragicus os ns cas ee ariias wrested. Come eter races wea a ets oar hu a Vag ee nae eee eee Seieaarss cc. tert Ta ee ean aaa oe ee oe fees, era as eats, ie ates Bema ta to meat ee re narias ssaral, So eeatee times Eocaes us Re ae na ecocee Pee eg eee Beg seo ae fig cee ol ee ti re gna Sues Lane ae ee te te ues he See Be Sema ee es cae acter snes art fieaeees et ese feel ate gai |B ae aa ic mre ee ees ae oe oe feces ree ersee a ete eae Seen | ear ear ne corte eer cen cae gareeupatice. Sea mine Ieee dete sitet ae tease | Cleburne—Grand Chancellor W, 8 eee tat Cates’ a, ac eta [roi Mg ay (hese rot dae, "Se rata Ste ete tones te Re | Seal’ Pte. Sins axurch set ene ee ase Jee tata Teter act ae Se at ate a | gehenrm, Mice ee ite i tues,“ usen | ea aa Oa | Aine ene aera es Steen, ee Reo A eee Saale ale Ren TEE TTL tsa ie bes. er Be oie hams re an [eatttaritege ae dn "a [oer een Reeth Me emt, een || Rive. Keller of the C M. E. churel Breteler hr anaes nia tant esto, preted eraenun si | reece arnt “We, ca ee a, nwa i, at a at” ora ee dios Ss || mother, Mrs. Pinkie Laprases, Mra ater um dine teen ie Bis ecco Suan Ben ante ie atone Sagi Ms a wt inca Sf ona: Sr a ci tne Ba ct cee, ta rtm, hve. Vr [Seer ior trae tee ash of tema 1 nes cieey Lala, | dat ces at Pte Mea |e aa Hatem [tre 2 ge Gren stp TE Sale i Rect [fae i eon r\uble to got ‘The Civic Teague wil ie te Sais a ee a eco Sa aad a ee, "Seka oli sas i feu SE ate ses ee. tone Ge fan ie week, Mrs. G. H, Washington 0 |Sivekoree Oklahoma ts viniting he Caistor Mrs, Carey, Mr. Charite Grav ee and Mr, Roger Graves left fo ®| Corsicana Saturday. Mr. R. Brad | Sete lures | fom ‘nase mana stay dn Palen Gainer -Sunlay schon ea, | i ates at tot | ea sat unt Sent indent yt oho | Sen re a eh A A\"intion has donated to Holland ot ae yy ah i ete |e a ne | in ems“ Ee eben havo a ities Ba ac Bone ‘Deen a at npn bees ta ae noe Tra ee attanar, Cora Dorie er Douglass sn Sa at ora re cece, “aeemeage ah, ‘Wiicots. Mr. Hollis Woods and Mi Ata cy Mee uty are IPS, Traugott ate Re pag moc Le eet cet Or Stan ae ete ce so eh mae ot aa it nea A” cmon suatay wot x sls toot gestae Ble a oe = teweis Cen Veta rare at ie aod: c\ofate"at ‘an Breck ist Hae Cook aa Se Ate, | ae Deze Saat spot a |e oat one Ar ey ee m dlendld crowd. at lon after whl aot Retaaeee. ew See OSes for big aay on Thanoniving & concert. wil Be conduct At alah Ste et Yer —— ving tn inten wentherSonday, tervicen at TY. apt and ht ‘Er church “won saresly attended, Tho three night trices tao week. were larg A tended anda lend occas’ with thet BR people, Rev. Prince I winding ip hn year's work ead wl Bevott tor the anneal ronteenen a Fotam on 2400" Hl tombers and frends are praying for‘ his ret Nine fires Stclnha pnevmonia Rev. Starke, PE, Ac MB chureh wi hota Tas auartor here Sun Sey. "Ait are invited Serman—Mre. Lena Sadler has returned from, t_banionn ip Rockwall Mir Mack Taylor wna eal rato atend the fener} of his au, Mira” tena Jesters who’ lod. at het home. Toth fnet tn Mount Pleesant evs. 3 oll of Payne Chapel A He chureh wil swe Fear workout Bunany nigh 18th peeps trator to guint to his annal eon termes at Falmer: opens hore 2384 inn him, Pareto Chite n Watag Nor hurband tn aries The. mar the of titan Weight to Mw Wille "Mae" Woogre, wan contume mined night of oth Mate by Rew Asthoman ot Retblegain "Baptist At the parwmage. ‘The "Old, Male” ‘ish wan renmty progentod at 8 Sem CM eereh th As, De DW. Povier an manager wot igh coniiimentea Wy hundred” of people Sr" eaient rendition of eh Sharer presented themasven Th company wi ehorlypresemt_ thi shay tn, Denon, MeKianey, Dallas For Wort, another ‘eran ten Nes ‘oorgia "Nickerson, he ted faneeiiat of St John CM. resend, er aiden wefan eth fet "strive to Benton at the Saunt Gate" wan anetualy. re feived by all at St ohn C. Mt, Shure, Nts Eugene Dean en, roate from Oxlahome, to his home 1a ta Soma vintad relatives, Mee, Candy Sohnson and tem Rev, 1. Robe ison ot CM. B ehuren In Yort forth epent 10th and 17th hers 0 ones an weleme vet of Ra tnd are A Fountain, Meek everron ot oi) mil at Ardmore Oui, ad 8 an Sle vfes Mires barhary thet Miner ana Mev ward Toran ay wating her sate te, Ran {ar Gainervnie ‘Mire, Rew, "0." Washington of Mantoges, Oxia: wh fue" boon winting her” uebvers firs. 3D, "Boodson and’ hub Inf 13tn inal for Abione to. wat or nite. to. return here Thanks ving for stow dave’ on ber em Rome AAC the Cupltol Theatre, on thanating, 20h ie at nee nnd night lb fekerel 0 fe screen “Spite” trom 4°00 ta 00" clock. matinee with Lol Sypeopated orchestra of Gold ‘com Pruing# pleco aicoursng. ewe fron Beginning st nine ook ie" dances mene ny ‘he orchestra Bitnop ana. Mra 3) W.Mekinne it eaves shorty. to ‘praise ove is conferences tn Aaantpply open tne Ma, South Mlaasppt conference In Jackson, 32nd" font: ‘Mant harieston290h nat tant, an Mia,in" Tupelo, “ihe 8th” pro los the North Mle tn Te, 12th prox” They wilt beain for ove one stonth before retaraing, vain fete son. Mr. We MeKinsey, whe {ee tadeat ty Pik Univer Se Maggie Datos bas returned from the edad of her mother Mtr ato Scargemt ot Delton Stes” Panay Sohtson, summon of sans 22 Pre ours hg" school teaching Ts ton Ore, shoo! due to the ioe ion’ Adal Alexander Mes toute Drowning and" Subs. Dual ster "hr doe. Bullen, brother Mee"Garter gree mesh, allo Fina Oia, were het at the. ba fide of Mr” Frank Sulivan Me Fw." Crowe’ of Van Alstyne vate hi son, Mr 'R, ls Crowe and fam fy. “At Monday” sighte eosin frie for sear of Saint John C. Me Steal yard meeting "andere onferenee membership ofthe ehure svar reduced fom’ 100 to. bose fd amber ef 247 haount runt to ie year Tor all parpowes $3,010.08 IAT cloning ot conferences Mrs 3. ward, Sane Black ‘prosnte eran hire 7M. Fountain ve by otcer and swans of ere {tderrarments, sien, socks, towel |tnd" other arlene bale Ta teil able Yo be out again Mr. am iru “Lonnie” Douglass of color fering Colas are vaiing tha unter” aise’ Sophie” and Nell Douriaae Conter—cServices at the Mornin ur Dapdit cheren’ were. excalle |Senaay’ Prot... Daniele wae eal to Hemphill account of the det Jot hig mother, who dod thee. Re ‘ind hn TA. Avon Maw Alber |onaings, in mma. Lane an |feve "Ghas Nobles atondee_ th | Asi, 2: Anaual Conference at How top, ema, iat week Aa |i ater" ror Jan inurune compan | Piano—ach 8. 8. fuperir't wa \at thetr post Sunday with atten |dances that were small account ¢ {he In-iemeney ofthe weather. Mi Rauie mp haa 2 exelent bet tay dimer, Min Bate Dah moved ato ber recenty. purchase Rome, in the’ western ar oft elt er. FS Bartow tem for’ the’ anngal_ conference "whe mi convene in Oak Cit, Dalian | Wile Pla -Arminton day ; highly celebrated in Wichita Pall “kind was highly enjoyed by the en- {ire sty ot &. MWh, Bure Gommander st ine ‘Ameritas Wood men wea here abd elosed 8 Me ang ie""in elie of ain eat ray Sopra dor the oes wee ear BStoet itn cootaest Revs OA [Simpoon Tot the ely for ama onfrvace "tt Pais eae th eet ait aval bron Bingen ina wating botnet ‘street tate ii"aec aw any thought io pus ire, iat, ale ony ster than to se “her. ‘Sec wh, Site ti wil no Baek is Mgnt Nr “itn” chapel |G. M. B, church it Justios if our otter fae Wo rota, Bough ea eee Eald t ir aieteloee, ‘aera Geportnent seen Eettiomad d's pasar De. Sea eal Sin et Mouaty fn remorse, Ot on ben ‘Monon! Frida ‘Nov. 0th th Roti Give as’ mat athe’ ra lagees st Stra A. are The c Aetce ver neve plans fot ai Ie owes cantina Ie wore [Minne ‘eat the: aeheol ay tre Feeey tnteroting trary po ram ae Seo planned fore es Sct wnick Bil be. Hea at rie, ee hn 0. eae, Saueete’ Peale’ G:F wo. sonny. “Ts Parent Tuachen? Awodaton wi 'meet "Weis Now, V8. We ae \Siecting «'sanber” at" parent Biave yon bovehtyoue tage 76 te nol aoe ato secure oa fom Ie Sar or members ot ber com tee |" tawien—A tnd Baby as bor a tng tet car Boke, Tone fig uatnags Nove tha ath (ane Hayate geting alone nny We tere. he Snot s emocat Sonany'Sonca and'B: YF. wor Sen Suoaed at th Guee apt Starck ae ‘pater, ar? Purr wae'ts Se pest a reach oot and night, both were filed fri Weasel Rey, Owens. we [ae te fans ly om acount ori etka is sien ute Ne [sie Holmes im very much improved ‘for ten run" gown by trek [Fort Sil. Her. 9). To. Wharton o \Eeiinens Cie wia brecdng Bla jor Otiseun Distt washer an [Srasaied x ehek nt, Monta tithe hey ‘fesamed al “Oran Sia, ice Jcnnen vane te Ber fac? toads auring "be. leer Be "taenee Cnktwel—No_ election aso [nore Petey atmo pen at |Senday' choot taste ot Burios [county is holding call meeting se"Pilanat Grete nd boasted Her be Ee Winn of Chia Sine product They donated [Sette theaine i hi be |ginning. Now he is leading th ori ing he Wot ereit O8- ya |S". roe an ssheret Me [Desi ‘have retired fro House /Pamue Rel of's selina trp, Mer |W tigntower’ ot Para ema [Prather thi week fhe See saln'a, ie. Noniaony 6. 2 {tae Pot; Sharman, Geo, Agen ity lian Annis vanes [ise Samond Witkerton. ts ven iu ts went, mental arms ie ‘old folks at old Bethlehem 10 onan, every ee perga cote: Fr iinet ae “a! THANKS 70K OF P.. vine Hike eon nac or | wc, Joa, Nor 16— rab ooatintle gra ea tot corsa atte fie rec Me a ae Se matinee i Sr Sota set Sara ee seal te aaa re fat es ea miso foe ah eet Ye Coca en apne as por Stan wae sitet Ty ea ete ie one mune ty Se at mart rile Ha ne ee Tele ein al oe arr aar as meee seo ie ame a Se opie endeavors #0 riehly deserve. Netseate sa a Bat eatin Pat eect 2 So sa Ra eter hoe . rn por cow oft Et Ea ncx, oP ae COHEN GETS $5,000 6. 0 eaten To Men 18 ite ean ory noun ate Stat, enue i tao as SEY at a a iar cae ear ot Boat Tac abd ot le aint a [the ‘Position held by Major A. W. en tet a |uet went into effect as the vaval ihe Be os Mea ee eects ge ets Ste a ace ie arte Ser a [erty year an OFFERED TO BRIBE RACE MAN "WT kaw UTE OF CLOTS Kansas Ci, bo, Nor. 26-—PR upneed feign the. Wanda cnc art co te ta Seat ile on hleheay_ saber ito cltioe to teat gaat th ut St eth tte no nein ofr th ti mat Reed sald vate tit moat Reed fet "Weed, "sho. saw the, boldoup sai Heal, ree anh es a PAGS THHES A PIONEER PASSES AWAY. eatbrooks horn ‘Macon Gas 1840 Wertbrooko, horn Macon tnd came to Bastrop County at Tear old, Ste was Maried te Gavcline Serogyina in duly leven children were. born’ of wnion, seen bays fot ee Bore it oad a tn, except Rael, who tive in Obtahomn The poveaf i, Hawt Gry, Oa Toy Hous and areaon, tre: Mew, Clay aad’ Me Ponoot af Bicin and Mrs. J: W. Patton ot sae eotoiee are, Ohler, Hs rao ula he an he band, tivaye ready to ad nd tamales He house wan called the ministers home, He tived 24 youre im the cnugeh ax deacon nad rete 6& of Mt Moriah Baplat here Ha fitfered ‘untold mlsry ut wan pa tient and plonant to iy etandaate Hie often ming and outed and when he" wan too" weak 10:60 thls Ie takea “hie frlendn tang (oF Prato ete Harthiy oy esi ana ad rhly Jor ie. ang Dye,_ When the Morting Comes ta vf'Am Bound for the Promtaed tina ie led Oct, 280) at the ane of 2" youre Telegenas of nym an sont the tly by Pro te 8. Anderson, ‘Supervisrr of Atstin City Beha fim Wateou, ‘Denton? Mex 1. b. Wentbrooks,((wnite) of Bale lenger. Teaan, and. "olhers” ‘The Thambo undertakers, and Mi Hoo: el Moronle ‘Lode’ ‘No. 1" handled the ody the funeral wan very Iatwayalionged by Black aad’ wht, Rev. J."H "Winn, & former pasot of Port Worth and Rev: Lic Camps teat ‘ot “Auatin, a moderaior had Gharge ot the funeral. ‘These mien ind known’ deazon Weetbrooka for tong. tims, There wore tany waiton who know Mrn” Weathrooh Tndtome added’ to the’ eulogy by testing of hie character atthe fat feel Among them ‘were the Baaer Hon. ‘Win, Cute, and. Hon, AH Garter ‘and, Ye. M Owens, tomers of the M,'B churen. Wencan, Wea Trooka "was a. member of sever fcret orders ‘and Inaite ‘ot aot {wenty "years ot tlneae he aft en fate words pomtbiy $16,000. et fa0-000. trial, ut identified Milter. The unt orate. Ch yremeuto ts tarstinie ee een eae wt elo hea etn iat he ed sins Fuk cea hs case ot Mote helene the tal CARD OF THANKS. Cortcana, Team, Nor, 16, 1092, Gotee pe act Tren. th eet sorta ew spas pee ‘ote ‘eid “Caan? ad wih tan ‘als saapoben the ‘laiy" eaters Sas. ws dot (o_hank_ od tind who so kindly assisted us through Tie sldetem Gad gras of oer ae ies tater sad “tne, ute ttt oe , snes: a. temp, une Teas Urals Das. Daughter | We Riot. manphiee - Rauhie'covesuna Even aie . Annie Granville, Sister, silo Gorse | ms. 4. Ks Abn Fx i ae aR, ADR The Alphin Charity and Art Cia mat Wadtesiay, Nov. fr a4ah: ste Se Seat af he releeans Frenant Mathds Sail at ee te. ay er nt oie oaks coos saree elke ae jeasion “aa well”: the guest of ar, Be oan sae le a Soi eich ie le Re esi Sos hae gi ae tat te sik Saas iota Eat" Weta ea kare fn aie oat ne ae eat ae laa es a nice a eel wet Soc, tana to tr set ae a ee a ates te a te Na Sie Stee uel oe eee one lina sie nb i Seneca ee ene oe coun mete fy east kao oss conc ane hat cited a ek gest fe rea aes oe ee Seah a Se ae ee ut "tact “tna tei eet nagar tae ie ose ee. a ee Sits ere Tae ores cae tue east any “of hae Bee rat at eet sc" ae oan ts ie a ai teats "en ee See ice Taek oa UP gocuing satupal. theca aa ioc st es ies Me | Young, 1100, Tith Avenue Wedner: eat, tag Soe aru Yash paoven vol vai i! ‘ERormn A total profit of 938,078.50 wae: made wating, the 198% ‘Sate. Fue, ‘eording fo. xn audit ef the book ofthe eras ate Pu. Asoctation resented and. adopted tthe Pueee fay noon seston. of the directors of thet atthe‘ ee port sow & total Go.is ‘with total expense’ ot 8285 TILES. The major part at the 8 ene being construction of thy new ‘Astomobile. and Manuraoturers Balidine- Total” kap“ovementh to_thw fui amounted to” #167408 and fe [Emount expended ate the gloss ie taat fair wan gba Dh argos part of Qu Incoese Wa tee pores are a THE MAGICIAN SALON OF FIRST IN SERVICE MEMBER NATIONAL WORLD PRESS ASSOCIATION. Published every Saturday morning in the year at 2:00p Swain Avenue by THE DALLAS EXPRESS PUBLISHING COMPANY. (Institution affiliated) Dallas, Texas. BUILDING ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE: W. B. R. Company, and South Dean Bee Street, Chicago, IL. W. C. Company, 611 Morton Street, New York, N.Y. W. Y. Company, 411 Morton Street, New York, N.Y. Entered at Post Office at Dallas and under Art of Congress, March 18, 1939. IMPORTANT. No subscriptions mailed for a period less than three-thirds Payment for same must be 18 cents. NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC. Any erroneous reflection upon the earth, estate, or reputation of any person may appear in the columns of the newspaper upon its being brought to the authority upon its being brought to the THE DALLAS EXPRESS, SUBSCRIPTIONS IN ADVANCE. One Year. $2.25 Six Months. .25 Three Months. .75 Single Copy. .05 THE DALLAS EXPRESS has never hosted the white father, neither has it been dis- graced by the yellow streak. It is not afflicted with the flamed mouth. It is a plain, every day, sensible, conservative newspaper, which stirs us in to catholic thought. It is a flag of freedom flag! It is pop! morn! parietism as broad as a country. Itsown area: . . . judice covers all the terri- tory occupied by the human mind. This is pretty high ground, and it is a place of peace. Parks of the press come up and stand with us. This ground is holy. MAKING MONEY WORK FOR THE COMMON GOOD. From Oklahoma comes the news that Mr. L. W. Thomas, former Media man who was catched to the plot of the kidnapping of the dollars by the discovery of oil in his section, has bought 576 acres of land upon which he hopes to found a newspaper. Cerically in this case there is the prescription that here was the initial talent lacking only the local talent with which to back his 16 years of schooling, Mr. Thomas may mature along the most practical lines and that the coming ten years may win the prize of a model of efficient operation. Consideration of the use which Mr. Thomas is making of his wealth of experience, the many others of the many degrees made wealthy at Mesa, have been invested in property purchased on farm property purchased on themselves and their people. One of whom we know has invested more money in loans on farm property purchased on themselves which they were in danger of toil. Others have backed a manufacture of a month of operation furnished employment to nearly fifty people. Men in encouraging and heartening to those who have wondered whether or not the vision of those who have been encouraged to become county had vision unmeasured with it. It is asking to note that some of the many clubs of the city are adopting concrete fireproofs as they need to. They should be no more for the spending money that they possess which they wish for their members and their friends. Whose name must often be. THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1922 The only way to guarantee a lasting or perpetual remembrance of events which transpire or of men who make definite contribution to the age in which they live is to record those events and the doings of those men. Tradition is unreliable. Only written records are authentic. Lack of such records in the life of individuals or of races and nations almost surely guarantees a lack of appreciation for the things which they have accomplished due almost solely to the lack of definite knowledge of them which such a lack entails. It is in such a realization that we welcome the recent tendency to perpetuate the past heroes and great personages of our group as evidenced by the records of them which are almost daily being produced. Most recent among such works and especially worthy of colse study and large appreciation are the "Negro Year Book," complied by Dr. Monroe Work and "The Negro in Our History" by Dr. Carter G. Woodson. The Negro Year Book, just released is in its sixth edition not only has much new material been added but the information contained in previous editions has been revised and brought down to date. Events as they affect the Negro which have transpired since the World War have been chronicled and its general scheme of compilation as arranged to make it a real Encyclopedia of information as it concerns the Negro of today as well as the Negro of the past. No less worthy of respect as a reference work are the recently completed volumes of Negro History by Dr. Carter G. Woodson which bear the titles "The History of the Negro Church" and "The Negro in Our History." The amount of research shown in these volumes gives to the reader a keen sense of the painstaking energy and the high regard for authentic record of the author. These books may well become texts and works of reference for individuals who seek facts concerning the progress of their race and the splendid contribution which it has made to American civilization. And aside from the aspect of their worth to the student, they furnish the material for added knowledge by our children of the truly great of their own kind. Without a doubt, the lack of appreciation which we have for ourselves, the almost universal conception which we hold of our own inferiority is born and nurtured by a lack of knowledge of our actual accomplishments and an acceptance of the valuation placed upon us by those who have least cause to publish our virtues. These works, as well as others with which our acquaintance is not so close, give reason for the hope that such a conception will not long endure. To peruse the pages of such works is to gain a new and greater respect for the race with which we are identified and to believe more fully in its future. Parents and students alike may with advantage read these volumes and give them prominent places in their libraries. Children will belight in the stories of men of their own race who have performed deeds of worth. Parents should see to it that such stories are told to them well and often. Such books contain this information. Students need facts. These books furnish them. Records endure long after the men who cause them to be written have passed off the stage of action. In that the perusal of the things of the past gives courage and hope for the future, records are to be appreciated. We need them. We are highly gratified at the appearance of these which are authentic. South Carolina recently was made to feel that its illiteracy was not decreasing at a satisfactory rate. The reason for the feeling was a report recently made public which chronied the progress in education in that state from 1918 till the present time. It contained the following information: In 1918 where there were 380 schools in 25 counties with an enrollment of 7,738, there are now 381 schools in 44 counties with 10,447 students enrolled; these schools employ 224 teachers; in 1900, South Carolina's per cent of illiteracy was 35.9 as compared to 18.1 per cent today; the Negroes outnumber the whites of that state by 52,000; Negro illiteracy is 29.3 per cent as compared to 6.5 per cent for whites; of the 381 schools 223 are for whites and 158 for Negroes; the average amount spent per capita for whites was $3.95 as compared to $1.52 for Negroes. The following significant statement is contained in the report: "It must be remembered that economic development depends on the intelligence of the masses rather than a few, therefore, so long as over 50 per cent of South Carolina's population remains ignorant, just so long will her God-given climate and her rich soil fail as wealth producers." Nothing could be truer. The high rate of illiteracy of South Carolina is due directly to the high rate of Negro illiteracy. The high rate of Negro illiteracy is due to due small amount spent per capita by the state for Negro education. Nor is South Carolina alone in the condition. All Southern states fall in her clos Every Southern State which with each successive report in its literacy lament the fact that it is still far behind the rest of the great American educational process can blame its failure upon the lack of realization of the fact that all of its citizens need the same amount of education. The sage who declared that "no chain is stronger than its weakest link" might well have amended it to read that "the state is more enlightened than the most ignorant group of its citizens. Civic and economic welfare depend directly upon popular ability and execute efficiently the things which make for progress. Appropriate composition of the knowledge which such ability must not be discriminatory if have results are to be hoped for. The South is America's richest section. It has for more than a few generations had to develop it ten million black men, who though here against their own accord have gladly, cheerfully and loyally helped to the extent of their capacity. None will argue that they as a mass have not lived fully up to the opportunities for gaining added skill in production as they have been presented to them. Yet today in a civilization which is the symbol of enlightenment to the whole world it is found that their lack of enlightenment is the greatest retarding element. They have been so weakly speculation on the part of those who profess an altruistic view that this is unitarily true to cause a general awakening to the reason for its existence and more active measures to aid its remedy. The bulk of the Negro population will remain in the South. It will continue to hinder it by its lack of mass efficiency due to a lack of educational facilities, or it will help it on to the "splender which" "possible to attain, in proportion as the fact is realized that unequal appropriation for education cause unequal development of groups which must cooperate since they are mutually dependent. The percentage of Southern illiteracy is too high but the peculiar and false notion in regard to what amount of education was needed for Negroes is to be blamed for it. This condition will be ignored in the report of those who prepared South Carolina's latest report that "economic development depends on the intelligence of the masses." RECORDING OUR PROGRESS WHY ILLITERACY IS STILL TOO HIGH THE MIRROR OF PUBLIC OPINION SENATOR GEORGE AND LYNCHING. Judge W. F. George, the newly elected Senator from Georgia, heralds his entry into the less populous branch of Congress by announcing his opposition to the Dyer anti-lyching bill. Evidently he is not 'absbed by the civil form of his native State, at the Commonwealth when most of the people seem to death, and the error in the law, order, Christian morality and sense of regard for public decency, is most rampant. Georgia maintains an appalling leadership in the crime of lyching, the records in the thirty-six-year period from 1885 to 1920 inclusive, enumerating 528 cases of murderous barbarity in burning Negroes at the stake or hanging them with primitive brutality, averaging above sixteen lychings a year. The nearest competitor in this shocking form of lawlessness was Mississippi, with 400 lychings in the same period, and next in order comes Texas with 264, showing that Georgia has a sinister precedence that no other State wishes to challenge. Ordinarily it would be expected that a Senator jealous for the honor of his native State, and sensitive to his wide-reaches of public opinion, would be anxious to remedy these conditions by any machinery offered. He informed the Senate in advance of the Ku Klux Klan and an avowed candidate of the secret night riders, is secretly in a position to take a stand in favor of an anti-lyching bill. - Philadelphia Bulletin. FAIR PLAY FOR THE NEGRO. Prof. Albert Bushnell Hart advances the one thing that is necessary in order to effect a solution of the Negro problem. He is not the first one who has advanced this idea, nor is it any remarkable scheme. It consists merely in fair play. If ordinary justice can be done, a long step toward a settlement of this problem will come. For that matter a good many things cannot be worked out in a single generation, but must be given time and opportunity in order for a solution to be reached. Prohibition cannot accomplish in one year or two what is can accomplish in a decade. This is true of other reforma of a sweeping nature. It is true of the Negro problem. Considering the fact that the American Negro has been out of slavery but a little over 50 years, the advancement which he has made is astounding. Negroes are to be found in about every profession, business and trade; they are among college graduates; they are property-owners; they are law-abiding, respectable, orderly citizens for the most part. The entire Negro race is not to be judged by the relatively small number to be found in our penitentiaries, nor by the decided minority who have not made good, any more than it is fair to judge the white race by that type of citizenship that disgrave our nation, cause eruptions of the social order, and mean a veritable pest and ensuance toward things that count for progress. The Negro should be given the opportunity to make good, and he should follow up every opportunity. Racial equality is not necessarily implied in this position, for that is a matter by itself, Booker T. Washington said. The jabors of that influential Negro were in behalf of a better understanding between the two races. He held no brief for the Negro, nor did he hold for absolute justice, well knowing that only through fair play could something like an understanding be reached. That is the only panacea. —Leoiminter (Mass.) Enterprise. MORE NEGROES LEAVING THE SOUTH. Only a few weeks ago, we referred editorially to what a Southwest Georgia banker said to us about the starvation wages" paid to Negro farm hands in his section, and all over the state, for that matter; his main point being, that trade conditions in the smaller towns could never materially improve until the bulk of the wage earners, these Negro farm hands, earned enough to give them a little spurious spending money. In this part, in that section, we are taking occasion to repeat it herewere, because it seems to be applicable to a situation that has recently arisen in the very section referred to: We heard a Southwest Georgia banker say, one day last summer, that there "never would be very much better business conditions" in his section of the country, where the Negro makes - up the bulk of the laboring population, "until the Negro is paid a living wage for farm work." And this, mind you, was from a hard-knack - most-fitted banker, who wasn't permitting mere sentiment to influence him, in the least; he was looking strictly at the business side of the proposition. And he went on to say, that ten and twelve, or even fifteen dollars a month, were permitting more money - added where a Negro, as in most instances, has a family to support - doesn't leave very much "spending money" for him to distribute among the small-town merchants. Nor does it, any one may see. In fact, it reduces him, again to a basis of pauperism, from which he cannot rise by his own efforts. * But it is easier to state the case than it is to suggest a remedy. For farming in the South, just now, is not a highly productive proposition, from a dollars and cents standpoint; in fact, there are many, many farmers who want to carry wages hands! at any price. Nevertheless, we cannot be one, and one that calls for selfishness to overcome in the solution of it. But if everyone involved—and we all, more or less involved—to solve it, if only to make business better for ourselves, by putting get our banker friend's viewpoint, we might succeed in doing some more money in circulation, instead of compelling the bulk of our Negro population to live on less than fifty cents or a dollar per day per family. With the above mind, you may read all the more interest, and even some concern, a news story, sent out from Albany a few days ago, to some Negroans from Albany from that hundreds of them leaving to seek more profitable employment in the North. The story in question goes on to say: Albany, Ga., Oct. 29 — Indiesers are rather pietnic that another exodus of Negroes from this section to western states is about to begin. Indeed, it has already begun. Within the last few days two coaches filled w.h. Negro men and well-grown boys have left Albany for Steneburville, Ohio, where it is understood all are to be given employment in a steel mill. More than $2,500 in railroad fare was advanced for the two lots of passenger. There were no Albany Negroes in the lot, but they were neighboring counties and met here by appointment to begin the trip to Ohio. It is understood that labor agents are at work in this section. They have been careful to comply with all laws by taking out licenses and registering with the municipal authorities in various towns where this procedure is required, and it understood additional coach loads of men and boys recruited largely on the farms will leave in a few days. Farmers are little apprehensive over the outlook, for although there was sufficient farm labor this year, there was none to spare and a considerable migration of Colored farm help would be seriously felt. The above presents a matter of very serious interest; for, what we have seen in Negroes, any more than whites, to work for fifteen or twenty dollars a month in the South, when they can get that much a week in the North. At the same time, it is difficult, of course, to suggest a practical remedy; for farming conditions in the South are such as to warrant only the most meagre wages. Nevertheless, the problem is one that 'has to be met'; for if this exodus of Negro laborers continues, it is only a question of time before there will not be enough left to do the necessary farm work of the past. In the case of the farm, in some sections of the state, that have been almost abandoned, and a suit of labor shortage. Something will have to be done about it before very long; so, it is well to begin to give the matter serious thought. BETTER RACE FEELING A movement which is working for good and not receiving the appreciation it deserves is that of promoting better feeling and clearer understanding between the white and Colored people of the South. The work is being done for what is known as the Southern Commission on Inter-racial Relations in Atlanta. Two-thirds of the counties of the thirteen South Carolina counties are seminales of the white and Colored people, respectively. Ken'kush has re- officeholders, by the very nature of their appointment and tenure, are disqualified to demand or contend for the rights of the people. LEST WE FORGET—A POLITICAL POLICY FOR 1024. The Fall Campaign is on. The two great political parties are facing each other in battle array. The issues that divide them are neither the nationalist distinction has yet been stated. The party that is in, wants to stay in; the party that is out, wants to be in. The conservatism of the Republican party is a political constant, the democrats are not. The Northern progressives find themselves fettered by bonds of iniquity with Southern Democrats. The Northern progressives find themselves fettered by bonds of iniquity with Southern Democrats. The Northern progressives find themselves fettered by bonds of iniquity with Southern Democrats. The Negro stands beheaded between the inkwar-favor of the Republicans and apprehension of the Democrats. The attitude of the two parties is rapidly gravitating to the lower level of the political spectrum. There remains but one ray of hope amidst the encircling gloom of the Negro voter for the United States, who restricts elective positions which rest directly upon the suffrage of the people. Unless the Negro is able to send his own memorial to the Congress of the United States there is little hope for further political progress. No white man will kindly dangle a vote for the Negro or impress his claims upon the mind and heart of the American people. He may indeed speak about the Negro in his own words. The black man must plead his own cause with his own voice. Whenever the white man essays to speak for the Negro in advance, the nation therefore pays little heed to such artificial plea. The world expects to hear the voice of the Negro, for the Negro, The Negro's attitude towards the present administration may well be expressed by a Kliping quatrain: "For to admire and for to see, For to behold this world so wide. It never done no good to me. But I can't drop it if I tried." And so he will go into the Fall Campaign under stimulus of the name old appeal and with expectation that he will man's bluff. The established policy is the liberal party offer little or no constructive advantage for the Negro, and precedence set by Tatt and continue to be changed by their successors. There is no sign of relief in sight. The presidential campaign of 1924 will try to browdwink him with the same prejudices, which has worked so successfully for the past ten quadrennials. It must in all candor be said that the Negro has been have have heretofore displayed little statesmanship. They have been content to round up the Negro vote and crumbs of patronage. I am describing rather than criticising our political leadership which under all circumstances done perhaps all that it can. But the outstanding fact still remains that no constructive or comprehensible program has yet been forthcoming. The nomination of independent Negro candidates for president, senators and governors, merely as a pro-terrorism policy has not yet resulted in any clear advantage to the race. The terrorist threat to help. "To contribute indirectly to the national triumph of the Democrats to spite the Republican Party, we are in face of the well known and emphatically avowed attitude of the dominant element of the benefited Negro population, who would rather see his Democratic rival elected than yield to the threats of the Negro recruitment. For much further racial advantage through appointive positions. All government appointees must be loyal to the Negro party, and cannot represent the Negro where his interests run atwart the adopted policy of the administration. The Negro party must not be the "net" is to vindicate the ways of the administration to the Negro. Appointed officers all trades and the government of the Negro's just due because of his party fealty and by reason of his governmental power. But complaint Here then is the Negro platform for the campaign of 1924. We have a public administration for 1924, with a "block" of three or four Negro congresmen. Signed: KELLY MILLER, Howard University, Washington, Copyrighted 1922. Pittsburgh Courier Publishing Co. ANTI-LINCHING CRUSADERS HOLD MONSTER MASS MEET ING, sentatives and how it was kicked and cuffed in the Senate and finally jetted over unpressed by the last senate members of the United States Senate were sufficiently convinced that the Negroes throughout the country had been forced to pay this bill to stop the curse of lynching in this country favorable action could be expected. The lack of coercion by the NEGROes through by Negroes throughout the country failed to compel the members of the NEGROes to act favorably on the Dyer Bill. The strenuous effort by Negroes through the country on the eve of this bill was to bear fruit. He urged every Negro vote to write his senator asking for the passage of the Dyer Bill. He urged from Negroes from all parts of the country urging the passage of the bill will aid great "in having the NEGROes to act favorably." He urged them to ask their white friends to use their influence with members of the upper house of Congress for the passage of the bill. MILTON ROGERS HELD ON CHECK CHARGE Toledo, Ohio. Nov. 16.—Charred with cushion a governor; check for $40 intended for another. Mitch McConnell held under $1000 bounty by U. S. Commissioner Gaines. Wednesday, Rogers was recently indicted by the federal grand jury here for steelings from a parcel post package. The speaker pointed out in de- Rosario was recently indicted by the tax the long and difficult struggle federal guard jury here for steal- ing and for fath to pass the incigars from a parcel post pack- Dyer Bill in the House of Regime ago. cently supplied two illustrations of the benefits which accuse- at Madisonville when a mob formed to seek out a drug- erased Negro who had murdered the Sheriff, the commission met and it was seen clear to everybody that the guilt was that of an individual and not that of a class. The Negroes joined in the search for the assassin. They deplored the act. Sheriff Hannon had been friendly to the Negroes and the friend- ship had been reciprocal. The guilty man was legally tried and legally ex-ecutioned. The mob had considered burning the Negro section and preci- lated it. The saser course was followed because the inter- racial commission could be indicted in a sensible way. At Corbina a Negro was wrongly accused of a white man. The cutting was not even by a member of the race of the white ruth- leaders of the mob which formed and barded all of the Negroes of the town was sent to the penitentiary through the efforts of the inter- racial commission. Mob law is anarchy. It brutalizes the community. It lowers the stan- dence of white and blacks. It discourages the ambitions of Negroes to be good citizens. It is anarchy and has no place in civilization. Every- body knows these things, but it taken organization to make the kode ledive effect. TEXAS TOWNS Brennan—The churches and Sunday School in good condition. High ground. S. Stewart is the great Negro writer of the Associated Press delivered a lecture at St. John's A. M. church Monday night. Rev. J.ackson at St. Joseph's A. M. Rose Baptist church. Rev. G. W. balloon will leave Tuesday afternoon to attend the annual conference on an excellent report. We hope for his return. A. W. Walker of Palestine and Aiding Eider of the Jackson District was in town green friends. Prof. Geo. Hicks of I Lady was in town on business. G. W. Motley has been assigned Rev. Alexander to Trinity, the mbers and friends aloft to loose a wife. Mr. Wren Houston at Saturday, the station, Saturday and Sunday. Mr. Whee Will Onel has opened a Ft. Worth—Miss A. M. Norwood has returned in spending an opening week at the company, member Miss Norwood and the smiling stenographer of Dr. W. S. Cross completed the course in business. Henderson—Presbyterian to have a sanitarium at Nacogdoches. The Hon. Rivon Cleaver has built his cleanroom at Cleaver. The Presbytery honors the dead. The Presbytery names the C. P. church here after a great hero in the war. The Presbytery person of Mrs. Bettie Session, who at a very early age united with the church and died in 1924 and filled every office trusted to her care from Sunday school superintendent to president of Woman's College, to organize the State Board and was its first president. She organized the district schools and she has children in boards in several parts of the state. The work progressed nicely under her administration. Today we find the work of the Rev. George, which is identified with the church. The Rev. Geo. Session, Waco, member of Brazos River Presbytery. Rev. George, Mrs. Lovie Simon, vice president of the East Texas District board. Marshall. In the recognition services at Bethesda Baptist church, the watch word is $10,000. Mrs. Susie Taylor, one of Marshall's noted a love of her knee he knew die when she hanged herself after a speech or concussion of the brain, caused by a fall several feet. She was a member of Bethesda Baptist Funeral attended with honors of the Knights and Daughters of Tatiana Boehner, Boehner, theaeda, attending leaves two daughters, Mamie M. A Jones, Miss Helen Taylor and a son-in-law, Mr. R. Lee Jones and a host of friends. The rest in the Powder Mill cemeteries by her late husband, Hiram Taylor. Card of Thanks. We take this method in thanks and extending our appreciation to those who so cordially assisted us in our work, to those who cared for our illness and demise. We want you to know that your kindness and generosity there will be a tender place in our hearts for you always. We also want you to know that with their kind words and many beautiful formal offering, we will be honored, Daughter, with Holen Taylor Daughter. Crockett — The Big Store Shifters is celebrating the 9th birthday in celebrating the 9th birthday found the Crockett Colored bich school and on exhibition. Crockett students. Amara friends and patrons will pursue both from them. Sunday is the 9th birthday. The largest attended. Rev. Holman was at his memorial P. L. Woodward of the Rockett School. Milford—Pilgrim Rest M. E. M. Rev. M. Monton, pastor. Sunday school was well attended. At 11 o'clock Church service was dispensed owing all the students. M. Morris Baptist church, only the Y. W. A. program was a grand affair. Collection for the day was the Miss Bernice Richardson went to Italy on business. Mrs. Tennie Hines of Waco, was the guest of her paternal grandmother. Charley McMullen of Muskogee, Okla., is visiting his parents, Mr. McMullen. Miss Iretta King, who has been attending school, is visiting home on account of her eyes. Mrs. E. Z. McDonald of Mexia and Mrs. A. C. M. Goodwin of Omaha. Neh. were prof. of Prof. and Mrs. L. G. McDonald. Weatherford.—Services were good Sunday. Mrs. Nelson, the District president of the Baptist church gave us 11:30 o'clock at the C. M. E. church to go over the claims of the church. Each dept of the church had a member each member $2.50. We hope to get our good pastor back another year. This is a good day. The wedding bells are ringing strong. Weatherford's party given by Mrs. Earlie Johnson at her home for the benefit of the church was a success. All enjoyed the party and were served hot coca and ginger tea. Jacksonville—Sunday was a rainy day. The Benson Chapel C. M. E. people had two very and the D. B. book agent of the C. M. E. D. book agent of the C. M. E. church occupied the pulpit morning and even the sermons were preached. The church is determined to make all of their reports round and send their past to the agricultural leaders in the person of *P. Waller, Prof. Johnson* on Thursday night and Prof. Waller made a great speech. The musical made a great impression under the auspices and special direction of Miss Phillip, the music teacher, was an occasion of great interest and a sensitive of American Human Society has been in our city a few days and has made several interesting speech The Deshorn Chapter No. 226, Eastern Stars pulled off their Invitations Saturday night, members being installed by Mrs. Wiley of Ranger. The entire membership was mostramada. Mrs. Lizzie Brazel, who has very successful ruled this grand gavel, the gavel ever to Mrs. L. A. Love. Miss Carry Smith is back home now after accompanying the remains of her husband, Bryant, a few weeks ago. Mrs. Mate Meade is still in Bramham, and she or Oklahoma, for an indefinite stay, has returned from Mexico City, after a week in that city, having made the grand gavel has returned from Winter, Texas. Fastland - The residence of Mrs. Sam Brown last Thursday night was the scene of a grand entertainment, with Mrs. Lizzie Brazel and the writer made a trip to Ranger. Thursday night. Mrs. L. Kennard is expecting to leave for New York. Mineral Wells—Armature叮了 observed here Friday, Nov. 11th, four years ago to the day, 1918, when peace was declared, there were a large a park that took place at 11 o'clock through the main streets of the city, all of the business mothers and fathers of this city should go to visit the public school some times and find out how your children are sitting along the street with their mothers and fathers of this city should go to visit the school. Mrs. Loula Shoppe has returned her parents to visit her relatives. Mr. L. E. Bryant of Detroit, Mich., in the city visiting Mirage Simmons, Mr. L. E. Bryant of Michigan, the star visited Mr. and Mrs. Pete Hicks last Thursday and left a 7-2 four-day baby mother and a 7-2 four-day baby mother and are resting nicely. The Rev H. C. W. Robinson, P. C. W. Robinson, returned from Cleerhouse where he has been visiting the board of which he is secretary of, Mineral Wells is being visited by) Alaski cold spell. friends here Sunday. Mr. Grant heard meted over to Glen Fiorn, Sunday evening on business. Forkey—Sunday Schools were well attended at all churches in spite of the inclement weather. Rev. P. M. Mitchell was on the job delivering the goods as usual to the church. Rev. W. H. Pratt, pastor A. M. E. church was with his people for the time before the Annual Conference hopes his return. Rev. Mitchell preached for Rev. Pratt at 3 p., m., Sunday. Mrs. J. M. Nichols of Dallas visited her husband, Sunday. Saeed's cake is still progressing. West—Sunday School was well attended at both churches. Rev. Holt at his post Sunday. Rev. Holt at his post Monday. Rev. Baptist church and his members worshiped with Rev. Holt and his members. Rev. Jones preached. Rev. Holt and his members. Collection $0.50. Mr. Walter Williams was here from Waxa on business trips. Collection $0.50. Mr. H. S. entertainment Saturday night was a success, the boy preacher as he is called, was up from his mother. Collection $0.50. Sunday morning at the A. M. E. church. The reporter went as far as Waco with her mother, Mrs. Cornelia Degrate, Mrs. Rev. Navasota to see her old friends. Sick list: Mrs. Doll Scott. Mrs. Corne Degrate. Mrs. Rev. Holt work. Mrs. Rev. Holt. Come again Mrs. Holt. Athens—Services were well attended at various churches Sunday. Rev. C. H. Puech of the A. M. E. Reformed Church, who is men to his people at eleven o'clock. A strong sermon, many souls relied and the Excelsior Junior College, with Mrs. Laura H. Miller, pianist at night. Rev. C. Davis of the church of God filled the pulpit for many hours, and Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Brown, Jr. a girl and Mrs. and Mr. Clandi Whitfield, a three course luncheon. The table was set with two nets and two night social at K. of P hall, celebrating the Armenian Master of Arts, and the father in Dallas. The United Helpers club met at the home of Mrs. Salite Club, after two weeks, and the sister Pinkie Morris, presiding Open hymn by president and we are yet able to see each other daily. The goodness of the Lord and Scripture lesson, read by Sister E Guyden, after each one present念essed the goodness of the Lord and Scripture lesson, met last. The holy spirit came and felt the love of God burning or the altar of the hears after the Sarah Lewis. The hostess served a beautiful decorated Mrs. Pinkie Morris, president; Lula Cree, see her. Pulaskie—Mrs. Little. Swanson has returned home from Texarkana, where she had been visiting Mrs. J. Campbell and she had a few days ago for San Antonio, to join her husband and father, Miss Clorene Campbell let'l' Friday morning. She will teach this year, We wish her much success. Mr. Richard Washington's two oldest sons from Crookett, Mr. A. Thompson, and Mr. and Mrs. Occle Stell, Miss Bardie Mc Scott, Mr. James Swanson. Mr. A. T. Thompson, Mr. Mamie Swanson, Mr. A. Thompson, hold its grand session here last week. Mrs. Harriet Montgomery, daughter and grand children are here. A stammer reader of the Express. STRAIT-TEX HAIR TONIO Born to: Mr. and Mrs. Roosevelt Johnson a fine boy, a few days ago he went to Daisy. Born to: Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Scott a fine girl, a few days ago. The mumps began raging here among his children. He went to Dallas a few days ago to visit her aunt. Mrs. Minnie Johnson received a telegram last Wednesday to her sister in Dubois, La. She has our sympathy in her sorrow. We Swanson out again after being confined to her room for 8 weeks with dengue fever and acute rheumatism. We pastor this year. His name is Rev. W. R. Roberts. Mt. Vernon got her mother another year. Rev. B. J. Jackson. Hanger—Sunday was a quiet day it rained the entire day through Monday morning no services at either church. Rev. Miles Yelp of this church concerned Mission work and preached at Sparks Baptist church a wonderful service. B. M. and E. Convention of Texas. Mr. Gus Campbell of Marshall, Texas District Deputy of F. and A. M. Reverend of the shook hands with old friends and departed right out for Lubbock. Texas, Mr. Grant Wyman and child of Rev. N. W. Niles of Vilasia, CalF, passed through here with her new wife. Mr. B. Loyd has returned from Mineola, where he went to his father's funeral A. M. E. church had a wonderful success and reports wonderful success. Fleur-de-Lis Club. This club met with Mrs. M. L. Jackson as hostess. An hour was spent in art work and business. A meeting with the secretary Johnson was read by the secretary on account of the absence of the hostess by all. The hostess served a delightful ice course. Next meeting will be Mrs. E. Jones, East 6th Avenue. A very pleasant meeting of the F. Kennedy family was needed, Nov. 1st with Mrs. O. C. Jones of E. 8th avenue. A brief business session was held. The meeting changed to 7 p.m., during the winter months Miss Bake and Bloker were added. ADA MONTGOMERYs HAIR GROWER in three months will make the as- song, soft and glossy. A trial wi- ove it. When in Kansas City as manufacturer We want liv- ents to represent us in every city and hamlet Box of screening Oil, 66c; Box of Hair Grower, 66c; Special Grower, 66c. Ex. Ada Montgomery, Manufact- We guarantee our goods to grow 1113 Bucas, Alabama City, Missouri Job call: tell us up to-date 金钱 must be sent with all addresses. HIGH-BROWN HAIR GROWER WITHOUT AN EQUAL Without a doubt, the best and most excellent article of its kind—a combination HAIR GROWER and HAIR STRAIGHT ENER. Gives the hair a natural soft and silky appearance, stimulating hair growth in some of the most hopeless cases. HIGH-BROWN HAIR GROWER OVERTON HYGIENIC CO. 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For consultations other than sick- ness, and if you take the treatments, this will go on your head. (Angelistel A. M. E. Church, North Pascal Conference), R. I. Box 100, Pascal, France. Peer ik Pe can Oe cia ae a ae ae eS bo i it aa se FRET ia 4: a j ‘ee PYAMONG « CHURCHES == BALEM BARTIOT CHURCH. “ te stil holding its ee the atioment on: a rw ‘Yard sow ees Daley of Resa Sains tan "who.trenchod rol i cn rn Pi Sha taa feet sores ewing tthe Shatin al ceettie ine ene oe wan rather wonall, Be rt renter « nie aut tan, 2 We Toa, te eat dean toh Sire ting amar st aka Ge ton St teccee’ "Nie nervces at hare Suroreecnen: “on Tan Hlondcy. nigh thee roped” ss0nat? ont the 95,00 mig Rov. MB, Ditrew, rato. Beane, tenor Dt, Henkow WAPTIBF owoRCH Icey ainet Wad pnt Gadend took mimctoaes aad Seen we et een ty theme cas oe tec cant st te SR cigar i sereutan nnd ss fa te tee eae Min 3 a Bemen at ike "pe ort faite oe coeees trae tok eset te hance tie eee wi anne. bara owen uletion $14.70, call tor the ‘Daler Mestad i 010 Indane er" stony paste. a Maker, Reporter a catia ‘Sunday school was largely atten- ed’ ana at ateren_viiock an feileat a2timon’ was delivered by. on J. Winsion of Mount Tow Tapiat chara Friendship. ha fawn a ‘food, increased. tn atten ance, ‘spitaatly and faaselaly finea ‘callin Ter. J.D. Lenard ot Bimthvite, eran The BW. P. Meat Freat succes, ating proiden We We hilor te kunching” 9 div for 8 front line Bev. Vand Aik ‘tae cooperation of che ‘chur {in general -An eeallent program ‘as\rondered by class number 4 ‘A apical orion was Gitverea by'nley. Winston, at 1200" tock ‘The pantor being beet fom th ae MR. OLIVE nAPTIBT CHURCH {rae Onan and Lawrence angaysehool at 8:30, Brotbe Mi. G: Habpton, Bap. at 11:30, Mev a Rue be Sra0h asd: 6 Gar read at ite Shi Ganeay” alent We Bats erery Monday evening ni & o'clock Sitter Mattle Hay, preeiten. ‘Th fctertainmont Saturday given by th ‘We mented the news That otr pes ‘We mented the news That otr pes Moe, Toys Sou tio his baby. “Ar {aim tre om the tek tet at Bevan ‘Peran. Dorn to Mr. ung Mrs. 3 ‘Gatinoa, "a fine bor, ‘mother and fon nee dotng fit.” Members an ‘Vinkote are cardlalty tvitod to Oe thre, : ey, We, Saul, Pastor Tey. Thon, A Rats, Ane BIN’ tA Davin, Reporter. HL BETHEL BAPTIST cRURCH. Bags agg rt ola eta the, Minne Sn eee tee oom Se ee a Re Wess ae ee ees reece Seperate aor ta ee SS NS Soe tn, hn Se ee oe ee ee eee ae abit te ee eS Senses Be sandra tae san So aaa oe eu ate erie Het ttt ae Sieh ake eae pee RSS Sn abt ca tet ac SO RY dass pa ice Sat ‘Malt. 26:14-19. There was no doubt as wrote Settee area Se ec ta Set a ce Sa ar a ea (chases “pares LAPS Sh. alten eee. as ston eae. ate fees hee ass, Beis ek Si UE A 8 se ae sn me Seen ae ete Ee Coes Ot wervice. BS A sews Fa ie he (PRIEXDAP BAPTIST CHUnCH. Sanday Schoo! was well attenr-d. GRITS gers weit wing sera Sas ativeréa “wr. 3D. aw Be ea" met on, tin tin elect ‘wan mice ent ian Bove ana Tate the 8, YP. 0. «eons Pen mateo at “ms by the. pastor” nr cemt goon and fnanct iat work in) “evionanhp, i "pallor ‘at for. ot Sibi. "Feare ie mach owt the comfort ns Pat are weiemnn at ai tee, MF h Be Leceed, Paster. Muka AVEO Terie is Be gait mone _ Ninaber % aebolsre ii Ronee ee 1 eG ee a aces cor eae a tet at ace. EVERY MAN WHO HAS LOST THE VITAL ee OF YOUTH MAY BE RESTORED. SCIENTIST MAKES WONDERFUL DISCOVERY. SAYS NO MAN UNDER 100 YEAR S SHOULD FEEL OLD. 5000 AGHNTS Wawrep, (Bore, the Beet ince a eat Xt ‘Goods ‘sold Through” agents vor, at beet SRN aS it ive ut “HE nai vena te ae a inl iy SN ax ae me 9 We: aia Nelsoa’s Hair Dressing will make you Proud ‘ez. of Your Hair ae ee cause they know that a preparation that: ae er Pent TDavis merit. Insist om having Nelson’s Hair | “Bite — Dressing. It makes Harsh, ‘Stubborn, Cary Soft Goes; and ey to do'up | a ina way you wih Tee to kee te scalp and hair healthy. Sold by all Drug ‘Stores and dealera in Toilet Goods, of send ith) 30.cents in stamps for a box by mail, | “Rima te NELSON MANUFACTURING CO,, Inc, ee MON ViRGA a ree wen Repay, sotented Bieta a” an ae See cone oe eee aoe oes ee ee Pao cee ee escent ec oe coger ce eee eae ee ee ee eee ree anes gate ee acon : a Monaay night: Prayer meeting, Wed ee Soe 8 oo ego ee cue oe eins eee hints Eros eet ete Sem ee Poe oS ores Reet at ares eee cea ereeeers ee tee aeccre sre eee ee age UG net Pace eee Bees oe oe ae ee ore st 0:08, upto, i Mexincy haw oe fake rte Sy a neti Wises cr den teh et Baas" as eee Sees Paes ie teeet ce er Saat intl emai anses e ea wal ac he's a eee a NO MAN UNDER 100 YEAI epoca Sper ten peat oe ae ese wa cate a esetnes enor eee aes ee mark see ae eee ee ats oe a heen = ae a hee oe (to iow <omplexion, “om of weleht. poor Ee ee Pee re ae re sie? cease, “estos Fein aaee pret eect at eee ss Se ere eae Se oeeie ote dar hesmans: 3s One chai ee” ea ‘THR DALE! « BXPRISS, DALLAS, TRXAS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1022. Mr,‘ Jumen ‘Tedwell Spencer con-| tombiaioe ‘iving a {tea Fools) con cert under auapen of, the, Junior chole:Tuenany ‘niga, Nov. #1. Wo cxlta to the pubes beasty wo ‘ter. 8 0. Guster, Pastor ev, 3, ann, Ast, Pastor. Tire: 3 Dooley. porter NEW IVTERURDAN LINE TO 1H ‘OPENED FORMALLY JANUARY rust. ‘The Terrell Taterurban willbe tormaity opened Jan. i, when full fasnnter "nervice "between Dalian ean Terrell will be. inaugurated, Hchard | Merttother, genera! man’ heer of the Dallas Rattway Company, ‘nounced. Monday. *potica was recsived. Monday that ral for the five. milo netsh. be- Ernonateaguive andthe ‘Bast Fork pom, ave ee, sigs. from frmingham "and wil arrive ink frock or ten days. Laying of these Tails wi completo the tne Plan Progra, ‘Opening ot the Terrel line will be eslobrated. vith appropriate core- nin tiny, eral aad toe tween’ tho terminus ete.” Sr eriwetber said. Della 0¢ tho pro- in wil be worked ont tater” by ‘Mayor ‘Aldredge and De. Mertwether: “Bguiment for the Tarrll Hing te eyaing tive pamboger cary and” two fexorees “cars wl arvive by tho mi ate ot December: Hourly nervice wl fe malatntned between Terrell and Dayle een Perel eae “Fhe Ferrel lino enters Daan ove new line ont Porney road. connect tng withthe Second vento ine tn fret of Pale ark oh Pore ac fnvs. ‘The “Terre iatorarban car fei ko out Commerce stroot_ from The interurban wtaion to the ‘com La gg ll og [DALLAS EXPRESS rom. constr aertocs Pitn cot Dein ERFUL DISCOVERY. SAYS § SHOULD FEEL OLD. ‘Atlas Laboratoriee who, after careful ernie on Seoe cer wae ns Rat ars eae eat se Mageccreres wees Reteiets nats et sie SSeS pee uate nos eat oe eras gg Ren Stee tome core eee ene ces race tiger elias ara eae hare hee Rea leet Noe ete en arn Pears maser Seer eee erin Lol yee aba fa Ero accept this al ace hey SUPERIOR BENEFIT ASSOCIATION, Dear Friend: If your wife and little ones are worth your, protection while you are living, ther cotanly are worth i tar 7ou are dea ‘Whi, tot make arrangement for ther protection sow by Jing ch Orsi tho. B, Abe your guardian; 1 wil provige x decent burial fo you, faralsh food and clothing for Your famlly and abelter them from the Rardabipe ot lie, ait this for the lito sum of 80¢ per month. Now for the couifort and safety of your love ones you can't afford to go without the protection of this Order, no write today ror an application blank as th ext thirty daye $1.60 le all It cools to become financial the 800 pe font fe all Ht cosa to nay financial. Wo offer a good proposition fo frgaslsers, write for ovr terius which means much it you area hustler, 5.'0. MeDonal, Nat. Pres. 0. 1, CLAIBORNE, Nat. Seo oom 208-2540 im St. Phone ¥6460 ‘Dalian, Tex ———————_— MAUNENT’NUGRO MUSISIAN AS-|DALLAS mxrmess SAILS MISUSE OF SPIRITUALS|ron. commas, IN DANCK TUNES. ML. . BUR LEIGH URGES COOPERATIX OF WACE LN PRESERVING MUSICAL | PeRASURE. Meritortows Printing /Barisigh the eminent Negro Musician and composer has written a letter {one Retival Awetion “tor the Navancemeat at ‘Colored Poopie in teh he urges he coperstin. ot olor and ete ‘peone a preery fing tron basen in oa the sin! crane tthe, Necro Bl toca: Mr Boris tor made Pus by he Atvancement hast Mon’ odiy‘at 10 Fits avenoe, New York, ‘yn in art “The growing tendency of some, of oar musicians ties the mnedoa Stour epirtcate forex trea dance coors ss somtaentimental somes infer mac, te ianding and” developement tthe ace ‘thee loten are oar ited. por asmionhey were crated ford ie paren ei snavarate ad pertain the dep. es aratnee enaorment ot the ace iy" e th ‘only acne of very faye fist ‘we ‘can te proud trout en, cet “cea isi Ruste produt athe ‘Unites Suter in hem we have n mine ot usica veut "Spi a sit makina ‘owred the ag tion ef a racer bondage, howe flee inten fetwas”, “tha uole'rap nad comter nthe et ici “throush whch hee inner Sects. sour tre’ they rank with the, great fok- anette worst at on ie fovelet of chanted. prayer” wane thao kn x meal oa oe Hoek Rabyining Toe Ie ad aot at else at cheapen Was for Te erence andre devin to itn ‘signicanee Yet those de inquent_muriclany“sontempetca sac, ee taulns for eon st commer nist asa the poten debaves te re aaatag ofthe Con con erdag' "usd pervertioe, thes. tno Tart dente Mostares or modi Perse a, Te wok rere ont ‘eaerleions snd "wantonly ntracive if sfonde, setbote feating ‘fall {roe mariana tod black. and betaune tome’ Ret teceora ete to Mik th Bus semester art wor om Mereatse the seed heritage 9 on opie ns, bat rater revere Red eral ies al oroot ot the Negroes spent ‘ascendancy. ove Srorsion "ted ‘buntntion, ve, oe Seog, that tne wit bersintnt fopetce istorion ot our folk toner i sbockinayreprebenae ‘hued ‘mustiane_ ca daec in stanly the serant“imppronca Hex ina tmaearian perversion, Beir are ‘otra te "enaiid Potlan’” cna partouaiy oo ema pomke who Uavest te. te Sinutothese prayers whe xnaot dating the fase fom fe fe, the maken from te Ta is eperoae tres the. cevalay, "te Stet fron toe opie unde terion bolts fest with 8 reng ean" talce‘yavation “ot allt Hei telat iaberttsnos ies Seyret How cant estopped? Tew ntfs seem nt Wo realize tha {Sey atend the deepest setient e's They eee ease of on ateading the'enormily ef ie of ean the farcrenehing ete pon fate genraicaa fs. the indie" pile properi and trait neta meant of provectng them txaopehroosh race pie. are ee mene sae race ove to Tove the ‘heap. meee Seis etny"oney ave’ they hi lot’ ‘eat pre to rene to Reouy'e¢ out. splecalst Can we ‘oor syste? Cane Bot coins the that at Bon fastest ie ke potting at fe font a ar oy " e mitione pspio wo. tre and roere’ the Ente wh Daleve owe oa todlen etn’ Se ementa taetor tn ine cutorieevolotion ot he race swat an'n powertrain (os Riera “developmentsand tn fe “inderet of os fw emia fw ah covert ie ita vod ‘eho ter het. Rees Mande a the eaten of human oltre ‘is: hande” fen, ful 8 Sane “ste 3 camenty a eur fio’ andcoptraion fn nie Terie tert fo perenne ox min HUONhende ease that rene hoor ua protecting fom an seta econ tthe” Spiral rowenta Aerie tat confor “tothe: sce, o- finition of folksongs [mum DALLAS EXPRESS | oe om ona anys oe DONT USE YOUR oer FOR A HAT RACK ONLY. sores ite BO eet cette aoe Pee eee ote | _R.G. BISHOP and CO. a eae, DALLAS EXPRESS rom, commany, Merttrions Printing fend Destentng eaVa—————= ‘FROFRSSIONAL. REL HOWARD MD ‘Pui ane Surreon ottee 800%, Ducson Siva 0 ate ae ontcs "pnoas_Yea14e hea, Phone i880 ‘Ottee Hears: 1330 w 103808 H “at un, tm Bee ‘eau a & waa, Attorney and Councellor at Law 0 "Priban Temple alas, Ter 4x De, RT, Hamilton, Physician and Steer Agree et tie bose: 18 am. 38 my Star Tw #80. om, Dalen, boa Ral eee ae ‘De. ile—Yaeranry Sarton. samalh'ot al ada, Ouce At Pow bins Underitiag’ Company, 310 Fran scsceHeure tien9 a, Gt pm x ive, reaidnce 138% WPulow set, Dall Toms ase owlego Is the Ancidow to Fou ~—-GLYKA-NUXSIN + the Knowledge and Anite For INDIGESTION At your” drugeat of by mall_upon RG lth Gay Slaton TS-BUYCLS “Som cS oe os Poe ea \ ae = \ | | The New | Remington, | ats Coase | Axe i Constr D eeeeeatane Saeotennd ie ee Now yee can piahtiosdtor ere Sa Eiley Gab Wtsest ReSere | on. Ee Trplonttoo, | Xia & Waterman, | J ons mx oramee fl COLORED TEACHERS’ STATE ASSOCIATION, ‘18 Robin 8t,, Houston, Texas, ME ggrammBulletin of the Colored Teachers’ State Associaton ls now pelns emo the addons of evry fnchar howe nate appeared oR Tey Melat ation ‘oll ast year, whether he attended he meeting or not Nee rents “RATES. allroad Rates are one and one-half fare for the ound trip on the mininain cortfieate plan, Dates of sales Nov. 28, 29 and 30, Return De- ember 4th. "Me ‘nave to sak the ticket agent for n Certifleate Recelpt when pur- chaning your sraight ticket to Port Worth, Sign your name to the “e- chim the presence of the agent. If no “Cerificate Receipts” are avall- She at your nation, buy Your eet to nearest sation fom which, the agent saya they may be proc HALY VARE BACK Immediately upon your arrival at the meeting prevent your “Certiti- eate'! to President B.D. Plerson of the convention who will endorse samme Sn ascertain ‘whether or not the minimum number required ts vouched for uy the certificates prevented, and will notify you of Your reduced rate ot one-half fare on return trip. Boalt for tlekets at least 30 minutes before departure of trainx to snnure aaliafuctory service, HOMES. Alt perwonx Intending to attend the Asgoclation are requested to write tumedlately wo Mr A. Me Moore, 1115 %. Terral Ave, Pt. Worth, Texas ‘This will probably greatly add 10 your comfort and fucllitate matters for ie local committee: Board, 91.60" per day-—two meals, xo states the locar committee. ‘THE PROGRAM. ; ‘The Aesociation will be in seetion from ‘Thanksgiving Day 9:20 a, m., aaity und Saturday evening, Dee. 2. Work over, a part of Saturday after- toon may be eiven over (o cnleriainment provided by local committee, ‘Every teacher and thove anpring to (each are urgently requested to be on-hand the frat day and remain throughout the session as the program in fied from start. to finish with Just such things as are helpful to. all eachers—be they experienced of unexperienced. Aloo both State and Na- ional eduentors have promised to be on hand to help in our quest of larger things educational. ndleations from every quarter of the State point to a record-break- ing attendance: Fort Worth Is preparing for an attendance of 1000 teach fre. You owe it to youreelt, sour profession and the people you serve to ive present. "You mugt not fail. We will shake handd in Port Worth. dee Mamie Smith far me Fe Ok ef mee © Records : We list below Mamie Smith OQ records -which have taken the - » Country by storm, THE VERY LATEST ree Manoa 78ers Tel rao 78e| tr 75¢{_ cease 75e[_ Tor be vote (Shee reg be na ge $T. LOUIS MUSIC.CO. name uo. ke Pie Retceae tor se Trot ae MS Ce : vers ; ee a x CREDIT! uy Now, Pay Later. TIRES, TUBES and Accessories For all cars. _ | Ho War Ta, Me intrest. | UNION AUTO SUP, CO,, | 1708 Commerce, | HUFF’S MARKET & GROCERY COR. SWISS & CENTRAL : Full Line of Groceries and Meats | PHONE H. 4811 fa VN & ! | a To Hold Thirty-Eight Annual Session at Ft. Worth, Thanks- giving Day. Local Committee Busy Planning for the Com- fort of the More Than 1000 ‘Expected Teachers. OR. LINK'S GOLDEN TONIC, mp1aEsti0n MALARIA BILLIOUSNESS CONSTIPATION Take Dr, Link's Golden Tonle for Dengue, Malaria and Lagripne ‘Take’ Golden ‘Toole and et wall. ‘Take Golden Tonle and Keep wll = Tonle wil bulld up your ars. tom and relieve You of that weak nervous condition ‘whieh follows Dengue Fever and give you aap: petite PRICE $1.00 DR. LINK MEDICINE CO. MANUFACTURERS 1805. South Bray Street, Dalla, ‘evas, READ THE SOUTH’S e GREATEST WEEKLY THE DALLAS EXPRESS” Honk ee Cain ioe Ww. Oren tree Pada ae ham --- PAUL QUINN DEFEATS TEXAS TEXAS COLLEGE BY LARGE SCORE. Waco. Texas. Nov. 16.—Paul Quinn College took the first step toward the championship of the college, by defeating Texas College of Tyler, by the decisive score of 10-7. Tyler, by the decisive score of 10-7, off their feet in the first quarter by a series of well executed line bucks and runs, and was never headed. Quinn College defeated Tyler, does not do justice to the efforts of the Texas College eleven during the second half, and Second Michigan might chasers scoreless. However, Coach Long sent his entire reserve team, and replaced the second half, with striking distance of the goal. There were no outstanding stars, the entire P. Q. C. eleven performers, and the entire College gained splendidly in midfield, but seemed to lose their drive when within scoring distance. The experience game will be with Prairie View, at Prairie View, Saturday, November 16. The Texas College—Paul Quinn Summary Paul Quinn Texas College Lincoln, re Redwine, l Jefferson, rt (Capt.) Banks, l Shavergut, r Sanders, l Sanders, l Madlocke, l Kirvin, lg Brown, r Morgan, lg Jones, r Nigel, lg Jones, r Sheppard, qb English, qb (Capt.) Tinkley, rb Patton, lb Nigel, lg Jones, r Sedberry, lh Baker, rh Paul Quinn Scoring: 20 13 0 0 Texas College 0 0 0 0 Sedberry, downbass, 2 Sedberry, 1 substitutions-Thomas for Lincoln, Campbell for Jeffer for Sanders, Fields for Morgan Dykes for Tinsley for Sheppard, Mosely for Tinsley, Johnson for Sedberry, Staplen for Time of periods, 15 minutes. TUT JACKSON MAKES A NEW START. Washington, Ohio, Nov. 14—Tut Jackson, the local heavyweight made his first appearance last Thursday in a fight that ended with Harry Wills in New York City last August. An exhibition beat he forced Jack Martin, claiming to be from Toledo, O., to quit soon after the fourth round started. The bout was contested. INJURY KEET EARL TATE OUT OF SATTERDAY'S GAME. Waynehys, Pa. Nov. 16 — Gloem regained supreme in the Waynehys College football camp when the philadelphia back field for the Yellow Jackets announced that Tate would not be game on Saturday. Waynehys defeated Waynehys by 10 and it is expressed by many that if Tate had been a different tale would be better told to Tate. Tate was injured in the game with Allegheny College Saturday night and badly smashed. It is said that in every game the opposing team had to be the Colored man as he is regarded as the most dangerous man on the Waynehys squad. Waynehys' newspaper day that Tate was the first member to team to receive serious injury this ing to a statement made public by Dan McKenzie, eastern representative of the Kearns-Dempsey inter-communal rope again, this time to meet Battling Siki or Harry Wills. McKenzie, the first bid, he said, offered Dempsey $125,000 to meet Siki the second quarter of a million to meet Harry Wills. Dempsey will do in the matter has not been announced. Kerens is striving in every way possible to keep his meal ticket because he wants to take a serious chance in a fight where there is a possibility of losing the title. If it is thought that Dempsey will win, Dempsey thinks that Siki will be a set-up and he appears anxious to meet the conquer of Carpenter. European fight fans are anxious to see Harry Wills in action, but say frankly that Dempsey is the only person who can win with the Bronze American Panther. TULSAN BEAT WASHINGTON HIGH SCHOOL—SCORES 11.2 By Edwin Hurdle The powerful Washington high school foot ball team of Tulsa, Oklahoma, played football and heavy line, forming interference, defeated the Washington high school team of Riverside Park Saturday. The Tulsa team were more muscular in first half. They capped at will and threatened the Washington High School goal more times. The Tulsa team used fair passes, criss-crosses and runs of college type. ball enthusiasts witnessed one of the most spectacular games of the season Saturday. More than 500 were Pits (fb) of the Tulsa aggregation played a star game. Washington won 10-4. The runner with the ball was downed near midfield. They gained standout possession and touchdown. The Tulsa kicks off to Washington HI and gained but on first and second down. Donna HI and gained twenty yards. Tulsa waded thru, made another touchdown and place on first and second down. Donna HI who gained little or nothing, first half ends. Tulsa 13. Washington HI. The last half Washington HI came back more determined. Tulsa kicks off. Washington HI gained possession and to the Tulsa' ten yard line, Johnson for Dallas, line plunged and made touch down, third quarter In the fourth quarter neither team scored. Washington HI kicked off Tulsa fumbled best recovered, but Baltimore HI ball went over to Washington HI. They brought ball back up field, but Baltimore HI ball went over to twelve yards. Dunnell plumed line. Pass from Dunnell to Wilson netted fifteen yards. Ball went over to field. Pitts plumed. Hudson of Washington HI caught but was downed in his backfield. Washington HI nets ends with ball on Washington HI thirty yard line. Gilboa Gilboa and Mitchell (milquarter) formed the Tulsa's backfield which performed the excellent trick-plays. Their line: Drown Ball, Hartz, Tucker, Tucker, Tucker, Tucker, Tucker, on defense online force forming interference. Jones their center was ejected from the game in the third quarter. The Tulans are coached by Prof. Williams of the faculty of the Washington HI School at Tulsa and once last year they won the championship of Oklahoma among the high school. This season they are out of the last year and west. Two weeks ago they held Langton University to 0 to 10 game, and for the fourth time this season out of eight games already, by the Washington high team. The Tulans returned before the game and would take the it away from Washington HI as easy as taking a piece of cake away from them. That Saturday they confessed that just experienced their worst beating of the season. The Washington HI team though young is on the road to a successful season. The material this year is good. Donnell though knocked three times in the game, stuck to the ball and Hudson worked exceedingly well. They were short of nothing but inbounds and Hudson worked exceedingly well. Clark and Watson (center) hit the Tulans' line for good tackles and the next game will be with Plano. Saturday at 3:30 p.m. Riverside Park. ATLANTA UNIVERSITY HAS ONE OF THE BEST TEAMS IN ITS HISTORY. Atlanta, Ga., Nov. 16 - Atlanta University has this year one of the most successful programs it may prove to be the champions of the South this year. Under the skill of the faculty, the students are grown in efficiency by leaps and bounds. At the opening of the year its schedule was an follows: At Atlanta - Knox Institute vs. Atlanta at Atlanta - Oct. 44 - Haines Institute vs. Atlanta University at Atlanta. Oct. 45 - Colgate University vs. Atlanta University at Atlanta. Oct. 28 - Fisk University vs. Atlanta University at Atlanta. Nov. 4—Tuskegee Institute vs. Atlanta University at Atlanta. ve. Atlanta University at Atlanta. Of this schedule Atlanta University at Atlanta has played six of the successive victories. The score of the Atlanta University-Knox game 7-6: Atlanta University-Palio 8-06: in Atlanta University-Pleak, which was indeed a very hard fought game. Tunkezee 18-0; Atlanta University- Clarke, 21-0; next Saturday the ball class of the south will be classified. This game is to the south what the North. Morelton game is to the North. Morelton game was won at the her six games already played and Atlanta University won at Atlanta University Morehouse game Saturday will be the all-southern champions. Atlanta University Morehouse game next week. PRAIRIE VIEW-WILEY UNIVERSITY. Prairie View adds one more trophy to her belt; the victim was Wiley University. The battler was the second Saturday, November 11, and the score was 18 to 6. The Prairie View squad in November 11 accompanied by several members of the faculty left Prairie View Thursday night. November 9, reaching Wiley, is recognized as Prairie View's most formidable opponent and for this reason the management sought a new coach necessary for a context of such pro- THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1922 THE SPORTING WORLD COLORED BASE BALL MEETING A FAILURE. ```markdown ``` What Is Style? we see a lady in society and we say, "She is Stylish!" it is hard to define the quality that makes her so. the same applies to PRINTING Phone H 5761 DALLAS EXPRESS PUB. CO., 2600 Swiss Avenue. ```markdown ``` Meeting of Colored Base Ball magnates scheduled for Tuesday morning, November 14, in the office of the Excelsior Mutual Benefit Association at Dallas failed to materialize on the grounds that the town affording the biggest problems in the city failed to send representation to send representation. portions as usually takes place between these two teams. This was the first time in the history of the school that as many as twenty players were carried such long distance and at such heavy expense. It was through the interest and consideration of the Supervising Accountant, Mr. B. F. Harrison, who has the welfare of the athletic program of this school at heart that it was possible to carry his many men. When he teamed on the field, the second team Wiley filled up and tried a disconcerting picture because of their seize; but even they were not as bulky as the hunky eleven whom the Prairie View boys finally had to play. The team outweighed Prairie View by at least 15 pounds to the man; and nothing save the indomitable character an determination which characterized the team. The Wiley back. Public sentiment was of the opinion that Prairie View was the greatest surprise of its life. The local team showed wonderful training, and the words spoken by Coach Grisby to his men as he sent them forth to battle seemed to ring in the Prairie View team. The moved their antagonists down three long periods and to final victory in the last quarter. He told them that if they were thing about ball foot, he wanted them to show it in the game which they were then about to entice. The final It would be hard to tell which one of the Prairie View men exhibited the most unusual ability in the field, but he did with perfect co-ordination; nothing else could have won from Wiley on her grounds and under the given circumstances. There is no question about the Wiley team being a strong aggregation and whatever else may be said their coaches were using to get the best out of the situations of fresh men in the second half; although it did not prove The failure however was much to the disgust of the president and his immediate cabinet. Those present at Tuesday's conference were: L. B. Kinchon, Jr., representing Mexia; M. T. Blanton, Wichita; H. A. Bentley, Housatou; A. S. Wella, Dallas. President effective. It simply wasn't Wiley's day because it was Priaile View's day because it was Priaile View's day because it was Priaile View team said to the manager "If you will let me maneuver this battle according to my rules, I will be willing to take the responsibility of the outcome—whatever it may be; otherwise, I had rather be a speculator and willing to take his own way and we are all glad to give him the credit for leading the team to a glorious victory. We were Priaile View was: Priaile, right end; Ted Hunter, right tackle; Bunion Johnson, right guard; Dillon, center; Larsen, left guard; Lard, left tackle; Jingles, left guard; Toliver, captain quarter back; Tartan, right half; Carroll (1), full back. Substitutions: Walker for Pierson; Little Pollard for Martin; Thompson; Franks for Big Pollard. All these substitutes proved a great strength to the team at the time, and we are for the ultimate victory which every man on the team contributed to winning. Our last Conference opponents on this campus Saturday, November 18, at which time we were the team medicine given to Wiley. Meritorious Printers and Designers. SHAKE OFF THE SHACKLES OF INDIGESTION. There is no reason why anyone should have INDIGESTION now GLYKA-NUXSIN is the sure remedy for that. Sta. A. Dallas, Texas a turning point in your life, take GLYKA-NUXSIN For THAT INDIGESTION Then you are fitted to succeed At your druggist or by mail upon receipt of 75c R. G. 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THEATRE PICTURES MONDAY AND TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21 AND 22 HARRY CAREY, in A tremendous drama of adventure and romance in the lives of an out-east who fell hair to the bread ranges and created a world beginning who came back from the land of the Porgoteon to wrest it from its enemies to the field, beginning the awestest girl you ever saw. A drama of stirring end-whilewind action, engrising suspense, appeal to the public, and situations. A climax that will hold you breathless until you make you wish for more. NOV. 28-29-30 WIVES" LOREMED SINGERS ONLY Steady Roll).....Trixie Smith Kate).....Mary Straigh Ethel Water We mention below on Lovin' Blues, You Missed PAGE SEVEN PAGE EIGHT AFR CAR NATIVES RESENT CHRIST TIANITY'S COLOR BAR. (Continued from Page 1). men. To him Jew and Gentile were the sons of God bound together by the ties of his Fatherly love. But European Christianity is the antithesis of these doctrines; it prescribes nationalism, racism and sectarianism. Now the question is whether here in Africa Protestantism will be allowed to continue the mischief made by the church, and whether it has been made by the Native section of the Diocese of Johannesburg clearly shows that it will sooner make a difference. No one can deny the fact that our people throughout the country are fed up with the policy of segregation and not far off when the will claim absolute control of their affairs both religiously and politically. Already the church has been controlled by themselves. The agitators Native section of the Anglican church for equality in religion, and the times it is a sign which shown that Protestantism is passing through a crisis which is bound to culminate in a crisis already said to European reformation. More and more the educated Africans feel that they cannot occupy a place of infertility in church and that European Christianity is in many respects foreign to their national aspirations, traditions and customs. In the meantime, from the North virile Mohammedanism is steadily sweeping southward. Before its prac- tice the people of the Fathherd of God and the consequent brotherhood of man, the Fathherd of God and ever contact between the advanced lines of the two religions is established. The logical mind of the Fathherd of God and the consequent brotherhood in a religion which fosters race prejudice and the colour bar and even in the case of native converts to Islam, the Fathherd of God and repudiate the religion of the dominant races of Europe for a religion of Islam, and apply the application of the brotherhood to South Georgia Hours of Planned Excursions. Albany, Ga., Nov. 15.—Evidences are rather plentiful that another exodus of Negroes from this section to Western states is about to begin. The exodus will begin in the last few days two coaches filled with Negro men and well grown boys have left Albany for Newfoundland. The exodusood all are to be given employment in a steel mill. More than $3,500 in railroad费 was advanced to the exodus, but were no Albany Negroes in the bat but they were recruited in several neighboring counties and met here on the obstination to begin the trip to Ohio. IMMENSE NEGRO THEATER COM BINE. Clive Bennett of New Orleans is Directing Head. New Orleans, La., Nov. 16.—Con- sultation of the Theatre Owain' Booking Association and the Man- gues and Performers' unplac- led office. Theatrical work has been Bennett, one of the owners of the Lyric Theater, was named pres- sident of the organization and adopted the name of the Theater Owners' Booking Association. More than 5.500 performers will be furnished to the theater and acts will be furnished to between 40 and 90 theatres throughout the country. Theatrical annuities by the syndicate being worth between 110, 000,000 and 115,000,000. All of the theater acts are those furnished by blackface performers. Funding from Key West to Philadelphia on the Atlantic coast and take in every cir- lone the Atlantic coast as well as the larger cities of Missouri, Texas and the central west, every city in the south and the larger cities of Missouri, Texas and The circuit is furnishing more theaters than any other theater booking company. Same as S. Reevil of Chattanooga and the booking agent. All of the acts are booked out of Chattanooga. At the meeting here, all consolidated bulk circuits were Same S. Reevil of Chattanooga; Milton Start of the manager; who presides the Chicago, Pennsylvanian and other Easter circuits. theater o'erion; Charica P. Sellly, Alantaura G; B. L. Cummina, M. vamacola, Fl.; H. J. Harry, Birmingh, hamia, Ala.; A. Barrasso, Memphis, Tenn.; L. S. Boudreaux, Lyme, New Oceans; G. H. Turpin St. Loma NEGRO STUDENTS OF BOSTON ORGANIZE. Union to Advance Social, Economic and Religious Work. Boston, Mass., Nov. 16.—The Nogro students of the universities and colleges of Greater Boston have organized a week-long conference has for its object the advancement of Nogro young men and women in social matters, economics and real estate. The conference pledges him or herself to devote an hour a week to this work among groups of young men and women in the community. Edward Gourdin, a well-known athlete has been chairman of the Nogro girls' basketball held at the home of Miss Josephine Crawford at 55? Massachusetts avenue. The following officers were present: Miss Williams, vice-president. Miss Marietta Bonner; treasurer. Miss Emma S. Gilbert; secretary. Miss Caro C. Gilbert; executive secretary of the city-wide boys' department of the Y. and Nogro who has charge of the Robson community work of the Y. M. C. A. $75,000 FOR COLORED HOME DEVELOPMENT. Twenty-five Bungalows Being Built On Congress Heights By Walsh and Ce. Winston-Salem, N. C., Nov. 16.—Congress Heights is the name of a new Colored residential section he built in northwestern section of the city by B. & Company, on which the company has already started the construction of twenty-five attractive four and five-bedroom apartments. The company has been let to J. H. Grubbs to build these homes and three of them are now well under way. A company has been formed to occupy every sixty working hours, according to the statement of Mr. Grubbs, he maintaining a sufficient number of homes in the house is completed it will be placed on the market, says Mr. Walsh. For Colored house purchasers. It will not be sold until all of these houses for rental purposes, it being their plan to establish a community of thrifty Colored house owners on the de The property is located on North Cherry street, about a mile from the courthouse, with good streets and property. Two streets traverse the property east and west and will be connected with Twenty-third and Twenty-fourth streets ultimately to connect with Patterson avenue. Cross streets connect with the property. Colored development known as Kimberly Park. Twenty-third street, running still farther west, will contain a large number of eightteen acres in the tract, providing about 107 lots, each 50x128 feet. Each lot fronts on a forty-foot street, the plot of the property. The property is part of the public works of the city. The streets are being graded by C. Bryant. Twenty-third street is being completed, with the exception of soiling. The homes will be of varied type of bungalow and each will be painted with a distinctive triple lights, and this convenience will be provided for the community. The homes also providing a well on each premise. Mr. Walsh states that there is a great demand for moderate homes, affordable housing for people, and it is in response to this demand that his company is to expand fifty to seventy-five thousand homes and build homes and building homes for them. GARVEY, 'AFRICAN PRESIDENT, JUST DIDN'T SHOW UP. WOMAN 52 YEARS OLD TO STUDY MEDICINE Iown City, Ia. 14, Nov. 16 — Miss Lettie Register Mitchell, Negro woman in 52 years old, has entered the world of nursing. She were snires on who were taken north and freed. Ever since she was 18 years old, she has Mitchell has supported herself. Mitchell herself herself through high school. When she finished her work in an Illinois hospital, she was the cause of her color. Later it was given her. She took nursing at the Chanuutum Hospital of atlanta on her own there. After 20 years of ursing she has decided to become a doctor, and she has the nothing can keep her from it. Perhaps so little is being said about the new dormitory just mentioned by the larger and more experienced being erected on the site of old Shorter Hall It is really an important building. A Shorter Hall taking form as the walls are rapidly going up. The brick layers and steel workers have been laid out and the third story of the main structure and are pushing forward with the work of the anditrium. The builders are confident that weather has been ideal for the work, and it is hoped that the whole building will be enclosed before it comes. A Big Day at the Force. A Pilgrimage to Wilberforce was planned for October 20. Invitations were sent out to the Churches of Philadelphia and New York in large numbers. The Ohio Conference, which was in session at the University, came in a body. A big mass meeting was held in Galloway Hall. President Greg presented Bishop Jones, the pastor of the church, to forth the object of the meeting. The male quartet rendered a number, sold out many by Mason Berry. Mary Meyer by Mason Berry. The wonderful address was delivered by Dr. H. P. Jones, pastor of Edulie H. P. M., M. E. church of Pittsburgh, Pa. The delegates then made a visit to the new building where they were welcomed and like the realities of old, were filled with a “mind to work.” The visitors were guests of the University, the living room, the dining room, and on every hand were heard the words. “The Pilgrimage must be made an annual event,” with the enthusiasm evinced by all, and promised that the building would be ready for dedication at the next commencement. Many new features characterize the work at Wilberforce this year. The College Department has established a new academic work that the Academic work has been standardized, and the Industries have been strengthened by the addition of the President Gregg's efforts to reestablish the R. O. T. C. work have been successful and Major John E. Button the Button are whipping the recruits into share. Nearly forty thousand dollars worth of accountments have been given to eight piece band costing twenty-five hundred dollars. Ten new teachers have been added to the staff The university will celebrate its 100th anniversary this month with its sixth anniversary. Greg promises the greatest commencement in the history of Wilberforce University. SCHOOL BOYS SEND GOVERNOR 15-POUND SWEET POTATO. Mount Meiga Ala. Nov. 16.—The boys confined in this institution for Juvenile Negro lawbreakers have potatoeweed potatoes were grown on the state farm. Governor Klihy last Monday weighing 12 and 15 pounds respectively, the potatoes were grown on the state farm. It is claimed that this institution is regarded as one of the best in the state. Governor Klihy youths into good cities. Governor Klihy congratulated the principal of the school for the spainful strain in his efforts to train the boys. BALTEMORL NEGROSS ATTERT TO LYNCH NRGRO MURDER ER. Ballimore, Md. Nov. 16 — Excellent ran high here last Wednesday afternoon when a mob of more than 100 people stormed to take Bishop Hawkins from a policeman, said that the policeman and Hawkins were stabbed in the mille. The man was killed by a police officer, killing of Miss Mabel Starling, and was waiting at a patrol box for the wagon when the crowd began to rush. The man killed murder from the officer and lynched him. Police dispersed the man officer to a hospital. The man officer to a hospital. ELMAH RUNKELS AWARDED CARNEGIE KEER MEDAL Pittsburgh, Pa., Nov. 6—Dr. 3. V. Holland, for almost 19 years, connected with the Carnegie Hiro Mine, H. HALIFAX. Acer is wanted. Write ocells. Wash from agents order. From 1450 up. Try the Wonderful MENTOIL Grower for week-trial for $1.95. That include the Halt Grower, Fressing Oil Temple Grower, and the Agent for the MENTOILGROW. Human Malt Goods for Sale. Fund Commission, was elected president for unanimous vote last 1 Friday after among those being awarded pardonable medals for conspicuous service was Elijah Funnel, age 24. The company was in the attempt to save the life of his employer, a farmer, from drowning when the latter slipped from a boat. The employer likewise lost his life. The ages of the various horses ranged from 1 to 48. Practically all were school children or stenographers. GIRL SAYS MOTHER SOLD HER TO MAN. (President News Service) Cleaning up the Pennsylvania railroad tracks Nora Moore, aged 17 years, of Philadelphia, who was found tied to the Pennsylvania railroad tracks on a rainy night, recovered consciousness and told authorities that her mother had sold her to a white man who had been a prostitute. "He gave me something to drink - and that's all I remember," sobbed the girl. She told the sheriff that she had been a prostitute, but believed that she could identify him. Officials have started an investigation to locate the girl's mother, a woman hope of finding the man in the case. According to Charles Gilliland, who found the girl tied to the railroad tracks, she spent minutes before a Pennsylvania passenger train was due to pass. He declared that the victim's legs and feet were bound and the ropes were attached. AGED WEALTHY WOMAN PASSES AWAY. SAYS. NORTH SHARES IN DUTY TO NEGRO. "We owe him sympathy above measure; and justice, that he shall be governed by the law and protect him, and that he shall be cause for violence. Criminal justice is slow in this country. Its rules pedantic, and its constant failure is to fail. It is not a situation for violence taking its place. The Colored man should be given opportunity to achieve that for he is fired, and the greatest agency for his achievement is education. He should be given the opportunity of a career but in many instances he is shut out for the Colored. "In some trades we in the North virtually exclude him. In others we treatment of him in the South is largely our fault, for we have refused to consider what his position ought to be. We abandoned the question and ally them to the battle in his own way in South. In Mrs. Henry L. Schensel, chairman of the 'Women' Interracial Committee of Virginia, spoke on the need for a more balanced needs of the Clered race generally. A quartet of Color'd singers ain't Charleston, W. Va., Nov. 16 The high standing of Lincoln Uni- versity's football team has been handed a serious jolt by the being I great Won spots MEN MEN MEN MEN MEN MEN When One Thinks of Hair and Toilet Preparations, One, at The Same Time, Thinks of “PORO” THE “QUALITY” PREPARATIONS KNOWN THROUGHOUT THE UNITED STATES AND FOREIGN COUNTRIES FOR THE GOOD THEY DO! WRITE PORO COLLEGE PORO CORNER ST. LOUIS, MO. defeated by the West Virginia Col- lege, but it was Howard University has any team battle with Lincoln should be easy. It is not easy for the game here was sic. This results makes fans set up and take notice of the western GOVENOR ALLEN FLAYS KU KLUX KLAN IN KANSAS. Great Bend, Kans., Nov. 16. "One pistol shot could produce a state of civil war in Kansas similar to the one that happened to Henry J. Allen in a statement last Thursday in his fight against the Ku Klux Klan, during the course of a political speech here. He was also a series of political speeches in his pre-election campaign. He took a filing at religious bioscopy and community organizations in Klan, not only because of its attitude toward some community questions but also of the manner its activities are said to be carried out. He said "Ireland is fighting over a quarrel that is 800 years old but we cannot write the constitution that all men should have the right to worship in Ireland." WOMAN BURNS TO DEATH. Tewarkham, Ark., Nov. 15. -Mr. Frances Edmond, aged 60 years, living in an Arkansas side surpair, was killed by a burst of bursa said to have been sustained several days ago. She was standing beside a hot stove when her clothing fell off. She was burned before the fire could be put out. no physician was called following her injury. Coroner Vinson decided that in inquest was necessary, and his jury, after hearing the evidence, returned a verdict of acet DALLAS EXPRESS PUB. COMPANY. Meritorious Printing and Designing. East India Hair Grower [Image of a woman with dark hair and a white dress]. CONSTANT GARE—NOT LUCK Human history and experience have taught us that many persons believe that a head of naturally long and beautiful hair, a healthy scalp and a lovely smooth complexion come from luck, but they do so without care and the frequent use of preparations of proven merit are the secrets. Use Madam C. J. Walker's Vegetable Shampoo Pure, the oily cleanses hair and scalp. 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