Dallas Express

Saturday, January 13, 1923

Dallas, Texas

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ATTEMPT TO MURDER FORMER GARVEY LEADER ALWAYS PROGRESSIVE DISTINCTIVE IN SERVICE MPT TO Twice From Behind as Services. Says Assail- ony in Garvey's Com- ATTEMP J. H. Eason is Shot Twice He Leaves Church Service ants Fear His Testimony in ing Trial. J. H. Eason is Shot Twice From Behind as He Leaves Church Services. Says Assailants Fear His Testimony in Garvey's Coming Trial. Eason was able to tell the police of the attack upon him. He attended services at the church at First and was walking along the street and was walking along Fire Station two negritos stepped out of an alley after he passed. He heard the firemen open fire with a revolver. Eason arrived in New Orleans, Louisiana, and he intended to leave for New York Tuesday morning to give evidence against Garvey, who said he is to be tried for the murder of the funds of the Black Star Steamship Company, a firm Garvey promoted to Liberia. Garvey was in New Orleans seven months ago and spoke before transporting Nebraska to Liberia. AGED MAN PLEADS OWN GREEK CASE; WINS. TY. GREEK LETTER FRATERNITY MEETS IN PHILADELPHIA. (By A. N. P.) Washington, D. C., Jan. 11. "The Omega Pai Phi Fraternity, which holds the unique distinction of having been the first Greek letter fraternity organized in a Colored Inventory, has been invited to annual convention at Philadelphia, Pa. December 26-30, 1922. In many respects this session was the greatest in the history of the organization. Official and unofficial delegates from the twenty-eight chapters of the Omega Pai Phi Fraternity, this brought the section of the country brought a message of an awakening among our group. A section of the country seemed to be filled with regard the fact that the race had entered upon a new era where there was a demand for educated leaders. This demand was expressed by Garnet C. Wilkinson, Assistant Superintendent in charge of the college of Columbia, in the principal address delivered at the public address of the conclave held at the Allen University, October 27, Assistant Superintendent Wilkinson, who is a member of the College Wednesday Fraternity, spoke on "Group Leadership" and stressed especially the call for well prepared teachers, docu- J. Alison Atkins of Tulsa, Okla. was re-selected the national head of the National Park Service of Washington D. C. was named national secretary and William Gilbert of Nashville, Tenn., national secretary. The next annual convention of the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity will be held in St. Louis, Missouri, in December. Founded by W. E. King. VOL. XXX, NO. 12. (By A. N. P.) New Orleans, La. Jan. 11. "I am positive that my assailants were acting on instructions to put me out of the way and prevent my appearing as a witness against Garvey at the time, already been threatened several times." Thus spoke J. W. H. Eason who was to have left for New York this morning to testify in the trial of Marcus Garvey for the New York public. He was shot twice from behind by unidentified assailants as he was leaving that building, reported at Charity Hospital. Although one of the bullets struck him in the head above the right eye, he was unhurt. Greenbaby, N. C. Jan. 11—One of the most remarkable cases of "white man's justice" ever recorded in Guilford county came to a dramatic and startling elixim last Wednesday. Benton, aged 54, the defendant, was told to stand up by Judge W. E. P. Harding of Charlotte, and told that a white jury had found him "not guilty." The case, one of chicken theft, was told to stand up by Judge W. E. P. Harding of Charlotte, and told that a white jury had found him "not guilty." The case, one of chicken theft, was taken out of the ordinary, when Benton, who was unable to hire an attorney, was examining witnesses and contending with the solicitor, John Bower, a man well and long versed in Defended Himself. Benton staked his chances on his ability to convince the jury of his innocence, and he forced the jury to cross-examine every witness that testified against him and did it with ability, intelligence, and experience by the police and admitted that he had twice served time on the jury for fighting. After the evidence was presented, the address the jury, nor did the solicitor. The Judge delivered his charge to the twelve men, all white, who formerly, later, they returned with a verdict of "not guilty." Benton, a Colored man, who had been handed a two year sentence in the Municipal Court, win freedom in the Superior Court with himself the defendant. The jury had previously been sentenced in Municipal Court, but his appeal was granted, with the subsequent acc Used Unique Method. Benton used unique method of cross-examination which scored heavily in his favor at times. The court ordered that he be barred. Barsen, 18-year-old youth, a scammed to testify against him, Benton said: "If there's a God in heaven, he'll point out that he was that scammed. Pointing his finger at the witness on the stand, Benton would say, 'Answer my question.' And Benton said, 'I pleaded, was on the stand, Benton was scammed in many of them. Benton stated that he was a victim of a frame-up charge of two other "White Man's Justice." It was a great moment for Benton when the jury announced its present climate moment of the present case, however, when Judge Harding addressed the man who had been deceived by the judge, "stand up, don't, so you said," the judge, "I want to talk to you. You ought to be a great deal better than you are." Of this charge, You might have been convicted. I don't know whether you realize it or not, but this is a case where you are, a Negro, a poor man unable to have a lawyer to represent you in this case. You fight the case against you, a white men who have listened to that you have had to say and they have acquired you. Hereafter, if you believe that the courts of this state don't give a Negro a fair trial you just turn, around and tell him he's a N I GOODWIN LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS MUSKIN TEXAS The Dallas Express (By A. N. P.) "The Republican Po THE DALLAS MURDI MASKED MASKED BANDITS ROB BISHOP LEE IN HIS HOME VETERAN PILOT OF UNDER GROUND RAILWAY DIES. METHODIST CHURCH GAINS 119,007 The present mayor, William Hale Thompson, to all intent and purpose, seeme to have his "hat in the trousers," and in other to hold the treetruss, or trouser, as they might say in Indiana. He has had two turbulent terms, and in other to hold the treetruss, or trouser, as they might say in Indiana. He has been formed, is the only logical candidate of his faction. Chicago, like New York, has represented the two big parties, but these two big parties are eternally split into factions. There are the Thompson, other as cats and dogs, and there are the Democratic aliens, certain Democratic aliens, hold big braw. That he has the fight of his life in his hands now, he himself apparently admits, is the one elected in February, the election in April. Since the last election the city has been redistributed in wards. Instead of the three wards, each there is now fifty wards. "The Republican Party Is The Ship, All Else Is The Sea"—Fred Donatus. THE DAILY EXPRESS, DAILAS, TXAS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 18, 1928. BAN BANDITS R NEGRO. LAWYER NAMED ASST. ATTORNEY FOR BROOKLYN. Brooklyn, N. Y. Jan. 11. - Sumer H. Lark, Nerk lawyer and editor, appointed Deputy Assistant District Attorney by Judge Dodd, in the first representative of his race to receive a position in a prosecutor's office in New York City. He at 225 Washington avenue and died in Wellesley, wife and philanthropic circles in the hero. Lark is the son of a South Carolina slave, born on a plantation in Hamburg, S. C. in 1874. His early days were divided between picking cotton and struggling for an education. When he was 17 years old, he gained admittance to the Haynes Normal School, in Augusta, the normal school, and he came to Brooklyn. For the two years following, he was an instructor in chemistry in the normal school, and he came to Brooklyn. "My father was a slave who liked to read and encouraged me in education and business." Lark told an interviewer that he came to Philadelphia and in 1905 became part of an a printing company, of Washington street. Beginning in 1906, he published the Eye, a weekly newspaper devoted to his race. a newspaper for time, he was also manager of the Brooklyn Law School in 1912, and was graduated and admitted to the Bar in 1916. Since that time he has 87. The new Deputy Assistant was a founder and is a member of the board of directors of the George W. C. Hale and Sister, Elizabeth, is a director in the Negro Y. W. C. A. He is a member of the church, Lafayette and Franklin and owns several apartment buildings in his district. Since the inception of the church, Lafayette and Franklin have a leader in Democrat politics of the race. 87. While he was a teacher in Georgia, he married a college student and his teaching staff. He was named in after General Summer. The Larks have seven children, four of whom are married in Virginia. The public school. Two are married and live in Hampton Institute, in Virginia. In three years they were $45,243,385. The church maintains fifty-one homes, two juveniles, in indulgence, seventeen homes for young men, thirty-seven for aged, forty-two for orphan, eighty hospitals, five foreign fields, under the Board of Foreigners, sions. The East Calvary Church Philadelphia, a Negro congregation, with Dr. C. A. Tindley, pastor, is the largest of the Methodist Episcopal group. It has a membership of 6,955, and the church attend in three idols each Sunday. CANDIDATES FOR OFFICE IN CLEMENS CANDIDATES FOR OFFICE IN CLE with one older man, who receives a salary of $5,000. There have been two older men in the famous "Black Belt" Second Ward, Louis B. Anderson, Anderson, who has the distinction of being the floor leader for mayor Thompson, is a candidate to be elected mayor, if other candidates, chief of whom is Virgil Williams, well-known business man and an official of the city hall, it two years ago. Anderson and Williams were business partners for a number of years, but they separated in business, and Williams is making an aggressive campaign and is making charges against someone or later be answered by Anderson in order to stay the onus of opposition. Adler Jackson has moved into the New Third ward, and is a candidate there. He, likewise, has opposition. How strong it will eventually be, Anderson said, is known to be fearless when once his program is arranged DeFriese is being strongly urged to serve for War Committeeman. This is a covered place which makes the post of political procedure, biased H. Wright is the present Committee- OFFICE IN CHICAGO ELECTIONS ```markdown ``` NEGRO PROPERTY OWNERS WILL FIGHT FOR TITLES IN BURNED CITY. INCINDIARIES BURN BARN OF WEALTH PLANTER. (Preston News Service) Little Rock, Ark., Jan. 11—The police department received a call early last Thursday morning from Jesse Branch, a wealthy Negro planter, who was the Little Rock Hot Spring highway, requesting that bloodhounds be sent out to track persons who were on the branch said his barn was destroyed. He o'clock last Wednesday night, the origin of the fire being unknown. He said several other barns in that area were destroyed in the past few months and that the fires were of mysterious origin. Branch lost all his feed, farming horses, two cows and a new wagon. **Fresh News 'service'** Wilson, D. S. —The Rev. Dr. S. D. Gordon, for many years a missionary in the orient, addressed the student body and faculties, he shared with me Friday morning. He impressively set forth the importance of right-rooting living. He told many interesting incidents in connection with his misadventure. man of the Second Ward and the only one of color in the city. It is very obvious that the present outstanding political leaders are on the defensive, and must give a good account for their stewardship, and that they are in the group who claim that a "few leaders have gotten everything and the masses have been ignored." The government has not nudified publicly, that gambling and prostitution get protection under a fee system that is amusing, in its Upon the results of the spring election will largely depend what port Chicago will play in the midterm. The state's Republican Senator Medill Mccormick will be up for re-election. It is plain that a United States patron could not purchase a seat in the mayor of a great municipality. Nevertheless, Senator McCormick has been closely studying South Side Hilltop voters, the number of friends by his attitude on subjects affecting Colored people, but he admittedly has a big struggle with the Democrats are laying plans to capture Colored voters. They have been encouraged by what happened in the recent election and the recent display of indigen- ```markdown ``` AT WILBERFORCE P LEE IN Marauders Break Masked Covered Seize Valuables and Marauders Break Into Home Heavily Masked Covered Occupants With Guns, Seize Valuables and Escape. (Preston News Service) Wilberforce, O., Jan. 11—Two heavily masked bandits entered the home of Bishop B. F. Lee, senior Bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal church, last Sunday evening at 7:30 'o'clock and after covering Bishop Lee, his wife and gun robbed them of a considerable amount of money and escaped. It is said the burglar's boldly entered the front door of the house while the bishop and his family were rested after dinner and while one of the men guarded Bish- SERVED 43 YEARS IN PEN-ITENTIARY, DOESN'T WANT FREEDOM. SERVED 43 YEARS IN PEN- INTER-RACIAL COMMISSION ITENTIARY, DOESN'T WANT COLLECTS ANTI-LYNCH ED-FREEDOM. ITORIALS FROM SOUTHERN Birmingham, Ala., Jan. 11—Henderson Poppins, of Mobile, who has served 42 years in the Alabama State prison, declined to accept a parole which Governor Kirby has indicated he will issue at any time. Poppins expresses no desire to receive the parole. He claims that he has been in prison so long that he has lost all touch with the outside world. His home, his friends, his all are prisoners with him in the prison, and he tends to die a ward of the state. Poppins is too old to do manual labor and will spend the remainder of his days at odd jobs about the prison. He is admitted to the military in Mobile, January 26, 1875, and gave a life sentence. He served until May 27, 1888, when he was convicted in Elmore county where he was convicted of the same offense again November 7, 1902, and given a sentence in Elmore county. He department show that he must serve until November 7, 2001, because of his previous conviction he would be permitted to any time for good behavior. Indications are that Poppins does not know his age. If his state prison sentence was 99 years old. When he was sentenced the second time he gave his age as 70 and he has been in prison the second offense for twenty years. SIKI SUES FRENCH BOXING COMMISSION. Paris, Jan. 11. — (Grusader Service; Battling Fiori, former European heavyweight champion, has staged local proceedings against the French Boxing Federation, which recently robbed him of the title he won in 2002, and suspended him for three years for charcoal, of various escapes usual to the boxing fraternity and for which no white champion ever has ever been penalized. Ski has had a summons served on Paul Roseau, President of the federation in without justification because he three days the re-orders which he had been charged. The document maintains that the federation is without justification in any except purely boxing matters and that the disqualification was conducted not related to boxing. The federation's decree was illegal in any case. Ski contends, because the decision in that case was mony and the decision was never legally served on him. The commission appointed by the Federation to investigate charger that the fight between Ski and Carpenter was a mistake in that decision was to be allowed to vint and would have won but for Ski's change of in face of the taunts of the spectators in that fight, taking evidence evening and will report some time next week. dence in the fall election. To what extent they will seek to develop an alternative to the sport, will they, to say the least, be interested IN H Break Int vered Oc cles and Es S IN PEN- IN NT WANT CO IT P (Preston News Service) EADER THIS HOME Into Home Heavily Occupants With Guns, Escape. INTER-RACIAL COMMISSION COLLECTS ANTI-LYNCH EDITORIALS FROM SOUTHERN PRESS. The Dyer Bill is a symptom of which the States would do well to take serious account. The crime of lynching giver to the whole Nation and the States must find a way to put an end to the capacity to deal with this evil, ultimately some measure of the general character of the Dyer Bill will be achieved by a stretching of the Constitution. —Charleston Post, On the face of the ostentable cause of the surrender of the measure, there is a challenge to the States in the Dyer Bill. The "Surrender" of the Dyer Bill advocates ought to make the anilynching law more effective in every state, already ample State law, if citizens so will it. can meet and master the mob spirit. the challenge to stand upon their right: the stamping out of lynching is put upon the honor, the pride, the character of the people of the State. —Savannah News. The Dyer Bill has failed of enactment, but if lynching and mob lawlaws is permitted to continue to shock the conscience and sensibilities of the people from time to time, it is as certain that soon or later a means will be found whereby the will be invoked to put an end to it. —Alliance Constitution. PRICE FIVE CENTS op Lee, another went through his clothes. They also picked up a purse containing $50.00 belonging to Miss Lee and another containing $10.00 belonging to Mrs. Lee. They pocketed the money and left the house. On account of poor telephone coverage, the police report the matter to the Xenia police and no report was made of the man. Nom. Wilforceber is about three and one half miles from Xenia. The police give any description of the burglary who were heavily marked and could not tell whether they were white or black. —Charleston Post. Lyaching is a crestion that should be taken up by the States. That is preferable. But something must be done to prevent it from being done by mobs. If it cannot be done—if it is not done—fum it on mounted cliff. (Continued on Page 8.) WELL KNOWN DALLAS MAN DIES AT HIS HOME IN ALLEN STREET. Final End Came Peacefully New Year's Morning. Funeral Services Were Held Wednesday from Bethel A. M. E. Church. --- PACE TWO Citizens of Dallas were palmed to learn of the death of A. G. Andrew, a pioneer resident of this city who died at his home, 1732. Allen street about 11 o'clock Monday morning. Andrew had been in ill health for several months, but was also to be up and at his pest; apparently he was doing fine until a few days prior to his untimely departure he contracted cold that quickly developed into pneumonia. Mr. Andrew was born in Echo, Texas, in 1850, years and 5 days old when the final summon came. He came to Dallas at the tender age of 14 and has since lived here. Miss Larita J. Shaughner, the woman of his choice, they wooded and were married and slues have lived happily together. He was a high churchman, having filled many positions of trust in Bethel A. M. B. church, the church of the church well and faithful for more than twenty-two years. For twenty-four years or more he was trusted captain of the church and Texas and Pacific Railway and stood high in the estimation of the company. His death was deeply deployed by each memorial service. Mr. Andrews who was familiarly known among his friends as "Gus" stood high in the estimation of his life and was a man of sterling worth and Christian character. He was well liked by all who knew him. Sam Andrews, a brother, and William was a man of sterling worth and Christian character. He survived him in his widow, Mrs. A. G. A. Andrews, Mrs. D. Tanner, a friend, Sam Andrews, a brother, and William. Funeral services were held at Bethel A. M. B. church, Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Dr. J. H. Smith and G. W. B. Wington, afternoon at 2 o'clock. RESOLUTIONS FROM WESTKERN EAUTY COURT OF CALANTHE To our dear Sister Larita Andreas on the death of her beloved husband who died Jan. 1st, 1923, we remember her with pride. She took in flight to a new world there to dwell eternally with the God who gave it. Dear sister, we feel tied to you for the bands of fidelity, harmony and love that we have in adversity; in wealth or poverty; in health or sickness; in life or in death you are one of us and we are your friends. Therefore, we rejoice when you rejoice, we weep when you weep. In this hour of your bereavement we mourn with you. We go out to sympathy with you. We find no better words to say to you for consolation than the words in this poem written about DALLAS DISTRICT POTES Rev. R. S. Jenkins, D. D., Lt. D. Presiding Elder. The services in Smith Chapel A M. B. conch reached the acres for aftercare, finance and spirituality and band quarterly feeding and conference we have The Dallas Express Pub. Co.ony --- our Savior's counseling words spoken to the weeping widow of Naina. The same Jesus that spoke these words to the weeping widow of Naina speaks the same words to the weeping widows of Dallas, and to your sister. We point you to him for consolation and protection. He has promised us a marriage to the widow. Try Him. He will prove true. Sincerely your sisters. WESTERN BEAUTY COURT OF CALYANTH. Oh! sweetest words that Jesus could have sought. To consoling the mourning widow's heart. "Wep No." They with comfort on my car, when life is dark and trouble near. Words that were spoken amid sorrow's stride. And in the very mildest of death and life. They shall refresh my soul at last. And strengthen me till life is past. Oh! sweetest words that Jesus could have sought. To cheer His weary troubled ones, "Weep Not." And weary, "Lament." Thrice blessed words! I listening stay. stay, Till grief and sorrow flee away RESOLUTIONS FROM BETHEL A. M. E. CHURCH. The pains of death are past, Labor and sorrow cause: And life's long warfare closed at his Husl is found in peace. In the early history of the Missionary effort of Bethel Church, when just a few meet, Bro. Andrews in company with the late Bro. Andrews in company with the later and exchange ideas and divide his means with the women for this great cause. Bro. Andrews was well known as the best teacher in the world, but interested in every move in his church, how well do those of us remember his last evening in the class room, how earnest and with so much feeling, "Jesus Savior Pilot me, Over life's contemptual sea." And speaking for the Master, he said he could not afford to be any more earnest. The man still found at his post of duty, WHEREAS, our Father who knoweth and doeth all things for the best has seen fit to take Bro. Andrews to the church, when men are so much needed, FURTHER, how our bow heads in humble submission to His will, believing that He will supply our "RESOLVE, that a copy of these resolutions be sent to his wife and the minister in the minutes of his society." LEAKE MISSIONARY SOCIETY, BETHEL A. M. E. CHURCH, ever witnessed in the history of this church. Every department of the church presented a written report and the "wherewith" accompanied the doctor, Dr. E. W. E. Bailey has brought about a wonderful experience, and this coming up to the mark of a great congregation, why not? Brother G. L. Coleman will well his part and possibly the success and the change was timely and helpful to all, Dr. Bailey is an experienced pastor, great power in leadership. Watch Smith Chapel take the wings off a morning, St. James, Beloved. Watch Smith Chapel is coming in great force for first place, considering her numerical strength. Next Sunday, Smith Chapel will be revived, G. E. Brown and his great people. Rev. Brown is one of the best pastors in the State of Texas. Rev. Brown will be the last of last Sunday evening. Dr. J. H. Smith prescheduled a wonderful sermon, a sermon, of plain goodness, replies with great jolts. ANCHORED. THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 18, 1923. AMONG THE CHURCHES CARD OF THANKS We are indeed grateful to our friends and most especially our neighbors for the care and comfort of us in the hour of our bereavement, for the husband and brother, A. G. A. Andrews. May we also express our deepest appreciation for the beautiful floral designs, for such we have received from our memory your deeds of kindness. Sympathetically yours, Mrs. Larnita Andrews, Wife. Mrs. Martha Tate Andrews, Sam Andrews, Brother. EL BETHEL BAPTIST CHURCH All day in church services was how Sunday was spent. The day was given to the Home Mission Society for a service. Sunday School was reviewed with interest by the Sgt. Bro. Black and the Superintendent. Sunday School was presented with a convention were presented by Putter and Superintendent. Secretary of National B. R. W. U. Board was present and made an interesting talk. At Morning service the Commerz Bank Society rendered an interesting program, and the Pastor delivered a strong and instructive message on "Persistent Missionary Work" Swann, President, Mrs. Gladis Wright Mistress of ceremonies. A. R. tendered an excellent program, Mrs. Rosa L. Green, President and Mistress of ceremonies. K. P. U. was a meeting of retrospection, and resolution for the New Year, twenty new members joined and the presupposed for a great Gala. The Star Light band, with Ms Alma S. Jones, Directress, gave a presentation by the Stille Stainley and Emmy Loyd, and Masters Leroy C. Moore and Anderson Hoyer, Miss Emma Loyd wins the prize. ST. PAUL M. E. CHURCH. Rav. J. W. Wookey, Pastor. Wm. M. Gordon, Reporter. BETHSAIDA 21. B. CHURCH. sunday School was well attended; 11 A. m. the assistant master, Rev. B. m. the assistant master, Rev. M. B. B. X. P. W. convoyed; group No. 2 won the banner in d'ill work group no. 1 was banner in finance group no. 2 was banner in finance Sister S. Hunt. Pastor Becker will fill his post Sunday 17. th. trust Mrs. James has retin ad from BETHLEHEM PRIMITIVE CHURCH Bob Ibblembo Primitive Baptist Church had a new successful meet-up with the church's definite to the church. On Christmas day Brie and Mrs. Taylor gave away a gift to the church in Dallah. On New Year day they gave a dinner for the old people in Dallah. MT. HORER M. B. CHURCH. Sunday School 10 A.M. review by the poster; new A.M. service by the poster; new A.M. service by the competition entitled at 11 A.M. M. B. Y. P. U. wan held at 6 P.M. M. f-lowerd P. M. High wan held at 6 P.M. High wan all thirtieth round in a Hick daw daily Sunday. THE COCHRAN ST. CHRISTIAN CHURCH. The church had a busy day last sunday. St. School at school at a oclock attendance. At the afternoon Superintendent's meeting, writing in into the Sunday school will the assistance of Prof. T. W. Pratt, who has charge of the adult department. The services were very impressive and the son preached to an appreciative audience in the morning and at night, Prof. T. W. Pratt made the musical response. Miss Bettia sang a beautiful solo Sunday night accompanied by Madam Pratt, the musical directives, and the musical response on night H. T. TR musical programs at each service. A cordial welcome is extended to students in the last one hour each. Sunday school at 10 a.m. M. Preaching at 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. M. Wilson, Pastor. Dear L. Grison, Scoy. GRIGGS CHAPEL BAPTIST CHURCH. Sunday school conducted by Supt Rev. Roe of Sherman, occupied the pulpit at both morning and evening services; two admissions to the church; B. Y. P. U. services well attended; collection for the day $77.55. SALEM BAPTIST CHURCH Salem Baptist church Sunday School was largely attended by both young and old; at 11:00 o'clock the pastor attended Communion services were held at 3 p. m. The President of the B. Y. P. U. has returned from Oklahoma and evening services began early in order that the pastor might leave at 9:45 p. m. as he had to meet his son at his home, there were 14 ad- Rev. M, B. Bilbrew, Pastor. M. Hawkins, Reporter. CLUB NO. 2 OF THE EVENING CHAPEL ENTERTAINS MADAM LAURA JOHN'S, LEADER. It was a case of fair women and brave men, although it was a reception recorded by a church. When he was on the floor, E. church on last Thursday, when a staff reporter of the Dallas E. church on last Thursday, when a staff reporter of the Dallas E. church touching the life of Madam Laura Johns entertained the club with a bufe repast when a scriptural teacher touched the life of Madam Laura Johns and added to the Scriptural lesson a regular literary program was also carried out by some well known authors given with correct delivery and well received. Clarke, pastor of the Evening Chapel delivered a timely and instructive address. The music was very excellent and the number of known planets did honor to the occasion. Say what you will. Mrs. Johns is doing a commendable work and but for the community. The reporter knows of no other club that works both financially and morally. MUNGER AVENUE BAPTIST CHURCH. The W. H. M. Society held an interesting meeting Monday evening with a large crowd of Sisters regard to greater work for 1923. At 4:30 p. m. the Y. W. A. met and launched a great program for two building their department this year. The laymen are still on the job and the program this year. The prayer meetings Wednesday night continue to be a success. The choir practice meeting for all its members Friday night is becoming a favorite night for the Sunday School worker. The business meeting for all its members Friday business meeting was full of information for all the members. Each departmenting report was a conference work had been accomplished during the year. All obligations met and a treasury to begin a new year's work. Sunday School met at 9 o'clock sharp, about 50 present. Number of students served throughout the day was ideal. The pastor preached two worship sermons, one addition to the luncheon given by Sister N. Norman at 3578 thomas avenue. Thursday evening was most brilliant, and the luncheon was 3 o'clock in honor of Mrs. M. F. Clair of St. Louis and for luncheon was 3 o'clock in honor of Mrs. Ride, Yolks, L. Smith, Shackles, Mrs. Davenport. The luncheon consisted of a delicious menu. At 4 o'clock the repeat hour came, and Mrs. J. Simmons and Jones, Mrs. Jesse Greer, Mrs. M. Richardson, Mrs. B. Parker, Mrs. Hendenford, reported a merry evening. Sister A. J. Wortham is convalescence this week with lacework. Mrs. Simmons and Henderson Mossman sang two lovely selections at night service. Church donated to her as a token of our appreciation 725. W. M. Lotton, Pastor, J. H. Snakes, Reacher. ST. JOHN BAPTIST INSTITUTION AL CHURCH. Sunday was a busy day as we were completing our organization for the year. At 9:15 a.m. a m a de- signer arrived in the social room for the success of the work. At 9:30, the various departments opened up. Owing to the large number of officers, the teachers gave only 16 minutes to their classes. The attendance at all departments was pretty low, and brief remarks by public the church HES school was dismissed. Pastor Harper preached at morning service, the helpman was very instructive and helpful, several additional to the chair. At 5 a.m. in the funeral of Sister Ruby Jackson was witnessed by many. All St. John join the family in their grief and we will miss her from our ranks. The Junior Union opened up at 5 p.m. in the gymnasium. In the lunasion the election of officers had to be. Sister Martha Scott succeeds Brother C. H. Wright as president, Collection Communion was held at 7 o'clock. Pastor Harper again preached at night, service from the subject's room, and the crowd was big Crowd." The Chapel was crowded and the sermon was well mastered and enjoyed by all who heard it. The church manifested more and more by and among the members. St. John members do not boast but they make use of the three buildings, one house of worship valued at $20,000. Institution building valued at $65,000. The church maintains a community center, Alus house, public dining room, beauty culture department, Kindergarten, Christian workers and ministerial The program of the institute includes many and varied activities such as young girl culture clubs, such as the Girl Scout troop, by projecting machines, home for the homeless, relief for work activities and facilities for social commonly under religious direction, roof garden, industrial art circles, athletics, a regular organized childrens church, a library filled with select literature. Some people say that John's money is not John's money. Who said that said well and last year it succeeded in raising $17,184.94, balance on hand. 7/22 Our motto—We do things. We extend an invitation to everybody. We welcome you in our dining room for the price than you can get anywhere. Keep your ear open. W. C. Harper, D. D. Pastor, W. H. Saunder, Off Repter. EVENING CHAPEL NOTES N. W. Clark, D. D. Pastor. Edited by MRS. GENN. (Dec. 31, 1823) "Call on me in the day of trouble; I will deliver thee, and thou shall slorify me, Psalm 60:1. Call on me in the day of trouble, text Dr. N. W. Clark prescheduled a most elegant sermon. His thoughts were logical, his language unique, his applications graphic, to exemplify an assertion of Job "Man that is born of a woman is of a petal, and that is born of a flower he cometh forth like a flower and is cut down," he chose the rose. The rose was pictured as a more petal, and that is more real, were through the inner walls and coming forth a beautiful, fragrant, "But even a rose," the writer, "has a struggle for existence, it must suffer to be trodden upon, and it must fight the insects that are in the garden, and that is masterful water, Dr. Clark depleted man in his combat with troubles, but we were admonished but we were admonished in the text: "Call on me in the day of trouble, I will deliver thee, and I will deliver thee." Evening Services 7:80. After the usual form of opening, the pastor, Dr. N. W. Clark, read for a lesson, a part of the 15th chapter of the book, "The Gospel of Jesus text;" and now also the aix is lailed unto the root of the trees; therefore every tree which brings not down, and cast into the fire. In his usual scholarly manner, the pastor preached with power, Dr. Drewin, a professor of theology, an incantation, broken only by occasional outbursts of spiritual rapture, is calling from men and women as this man of God portrayed death as the aix which lay at the root of trees, cutting down whom he would kill, and whose leadership with unaffirming confidence by the members and friends of Evening Church. The sermon was followed with a lecture on "Mistakes of our race" by Prof. N. W. Hartle, of the best known educators of our city, limited experience and travel just what one should possess a to treat, advantageously, this subject of paraphrasing. 1-6-41 Phone PHONE X 7240 We Dye For Others Why Not You? LAING'S DALLAS BAND HOUSE, DALLAS. — — TEXAS. 1925 Main Street. Phone 3034. KING BAND INSTRUMENT. State Agent East India Hair Grower East India Hair Grower blooming flowers. The best known species are Black Eyed Susan, also known as Gray Hair to its Natural Color. Can be used with Hair for Earrings. Prices Price Sent by Mail, 500c 100 Extra for S. D. LYONS, ORKNEY CITY, Oklaho. The Mail Box Number: Phone M. 37 SAFET INDIA SYSTEM Mail, Mail and Art of Hair Care 2 Lines and Adresses. $35.00. 0 sent at once. $25.00. Aquatic Guest Provides 1,000 Lines of Shampoo, 1. FACE Face Cream and direction to Bailing the Extra for Postage. Taught by Malt. Science and Art of Hair Culture, Bachelor of Arts in Hair Science and Lipstick, $8,000. Total Amount earned at once. Amount paid: Hair Grower, $1,500. Shampoo, $1,500. Oil, Ice Cream and Direction, $2,500. Balling Agent, $2,500. --- by popular Race Artist LIZZIE MILES Exclusive on Okh The Record of Quality Take It, It's All Yours, Hot Lips Muscle Shoals Blues, Shake Uaked Right Up State Street Blues Virginia Blues 75c Each 75c SEND NO MONEY Mail us your order. Pay when received. THE MUSIC HOUSE Bun 1234, St. Louis, A S. St. Louis, A ADA MONTGOMERY# HAIR GROWER In three months will make the hair long, soft and grayy. A girl will prove it. When in Kansas City es! on the manufacturer We want lire- gents to represent us in every city and hutte. Box of dressing Oil, 50c; Box of Hair Grower, 50c; Special Grower 50c; Add Montgomery, Mann- theimer. We guarantee our goods to grow hair and to be handsome. City Missouri Don't fall to visit our up-to-date Fair Dressing Sessions Money must be sent with all orders Send 10 cents for postage The Dallas Express Pub. Company Meritorius Printing and Designing A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z. W. Ha. Stu. an He an Hip Gl roo sk wri sil known a Black S. to its N King Price S. S. D. L. 118 Nor. Taught by Mk. S. Complete Course, $ Total Amount $490 1 Hair Grower, 1 log Oil 1 Face O 12.60. $25.80 [Name] REAL ESTATE and LANDS Come to Mexico, if you want a home and a farm. The climate is fine, no winter no frost good year. We can raise two crops of corn, beans, peas and anything that you plant each year. We will collecting land from the fields, for cash, for cash and on term. We also want five hundred families to work share crops, to brush all information desired. This is a free Country for Colorful People—Great opportunities for the Colorful People. 1-6-4t LAINGE Instantaneous Hair Dye, the very best System of Hair Dressing Taught by Mary W. Browne We manufacture the following LAINGE Product: Colour Shampoo Dye, Shampoo and Straightening Oil Scrub Disease Treatment Dilomas given - Agents Wanted - LOCKHAM 2019 Fairmount Alloy, Dallas, Texas 4-39-4 READ THE SOUTH'S GREATEST WEEKLY THE "DALLAS EXPRES"S published at Dallas, Texas, every eighth sold, at 1408 E. St. Ninth Street, Los Angeles, CA. Published in news of J. D. DANIELS' NEWS STAED 1406, E. St. Ninth Street, Los Angeles, Cal. Published in news of J. D. DANIELS' NEWS STAED 1406, E. St. Ninth Street, Los Angeles, Cal. CARR, 100 W. Green Street, Pasadena, Cal. Agent TEXAS. LEEDY and LUDWIG DRUMS and DRUMMERS TRAPS VEGA GUITARS, BANJOS and MANDOLINS. Musical Merceandais of all kinds. parting on all instruments. Recorded by HUFF'S MARKET & GROCERY COR. SWISS & CENTRAL Full Line of Groceries and Meats PHONE H. 4811 --- TRY THE MENTHOLOW HAIR SYSTEM. Guaranteed to grow hair on bald spots a six-week suite, for $1.80, cash must accustom you to agents. Agent's orders from $2.50 up Mue, B. SAMPSON, THE MENTHOLOW MFG. CO. 2526 Bryan St., Phone H-0867, Dallas, Texas. T. H. SAMPSON, Proprietor. Excelsior Mutual Benefit Association Dallas, Texas Most people need money when there's death in the family. Sometimes they want to carry the body to a funeral. Sometimes they want to send for a relative. You should you need this kind of SERVICE take insurance with the EXCUSSION MUTUAL BENEFIT ASSOCIATION We may require in 14 years. Any person desiring such assistance, call at room 209 Phyllan Temple 2549 Elm St., or call Y. 4659. H. STRICKLAND, President, a. COFFEEL, Secretary. MEMBER NATIONAL MEGA PRESS ASSOCIATION. Published every Saturday morning On the year-end Monday Avenue by THE DALKAS EXPRESS PUBLISHING COMPANY. (Incorporated) Dallas, Texas FOREIGN ADVOCATING REPRESENTATIVE: W. R. Ziff Company, 208 South Dens- bor Street, Calgary, Alberta. W. R. Ziff Company, 404 Morton Boulder Street, East Masson Street, Boulder, N. W. Any erroneous reflection upon the authority of the publishers may appear in the columns of The newspaper, firm or corporation which may appear in the columns of The newspaper, firm or corporation which seceded upon its being brought to the attention of the publishers. THE DALLAS EXPRESS, SUBSCRIPTIONS IN ADVANCE. This Year.....$2.55 Three Months.....1.25 Three Months.....7.55 Single Copy.....0.65 THE DALLAS EXPRESS has never hosted the white feather, neither has it been disgraced by the yellow streak. It is not afflicted with the flannel mouth. It is a plain, every day, sensible, conservative dress, well to catch the passing breasts; fire its doubtful flag: it perks up, patriotism as brand e. w. country. Its love of e. x. ed justice covers all the terrestrial accepted by the human race. This is pretty high ground, but it is not a place of revelation. Rays of the press come up and stand with us. This ground is holy. AN APPEAL WELL WORTH HEEDING. Rev. Dickson through press and pulpit is calling upon the people of Dallas and of Texas to come to the church on the third time this year been made homeless and well nigh inked by fire. First his girl 'dormitory' was burned by the fire; then to be a frugality; then the office was burned by the same child; and now the boys 'dormitory' in which they were living was burned with all of the boys of the institution has been destroyed by a fire which started from an exploding chair. In all the Dickson Orphanage has suffered more than $25,000 worth of loss by fire his past twelve clothes, nor beds, all of their belongings having been lost in the fire. It is winter time and they are crying. They are in animal need and want. These are our children. We have as much duty to see that they are safe, though they were our own kinmen. Their trouble should be made our trouble for truly their appeal is made. Dallas might well lead Texas in beating this appeal from the armenians at Glenns. Her other wife were numerous; her citrus boast of more prosperity, they claim a brand of Christianity which is practiced and they honor the work of the work which the orphanage is doing. Each a time as this more appeal should not be necessary. It should be sufficient to my to the people of Dallas and of Texas "The people of Dallas and of Texas" the about clothes and a home." The response should be hearty and prompt. It is enough to remind of Christianity that no suffer, appropriately the showing of the stillbirth spirit can be found. It is written that "In much as we have done it unto the heart of the city, we have also done it unto me." The first week in the new year was remarkable among other things for the display in various parts of the country but particularly in the South, of the spirit of hatred and intolerance on the part of one race for the other. In Sapulpa, Oklahoma, troops were called out to keep the races in their various sections of the town following the ambush of policemen by angered Negroes, so press dispatches state. A Negro was lynched in Tennessee. A race riot was staged in Florida and though the authorities reported to the governor that the situation was well under control, even as late as Sunday a mob was peaceably engaged in burning the remaining homes and churches of Negroes one by one. It was not molested. The Negroes, all who were left after the alleged rioting was over, were hiding in the woods. Thus is the New Year ushered in, thus if what old folks say in true, will the whole year go. But what they say is not strictly true though lynehings and riots may continue. It need not be American, Southern Americans, particularly, decide that it shall not be. What is needed is a thorough going campaign for the Christianization of the mob forming masses and their admonition through fear or argument or prayer to cease their reigns of terror. America now lacks little of being guilty of pogroms and massacres. Nor is it to be believed that Negroes who suffer most from them are the aggressors in as many instances as news dispatches state. Many even of those who publish such statements are not so violent, so by constantly repeated publication they hope to prove to the public mind that such barbarities as are committed are necessary. Lynching and burnings, arson and rapine seem to increase year by year. Men, women and children running from burning homes are shot. Often as is the case in Florida, they are forced to seek safety in the woods and even there they are not safe. Sometimes someone ought to ask America what it hopes to gain by such a course. We cannot be more patient than we herefore have been. We cannot be more submissive. Rather would it seem more reasonable to expect that some day, thoroughly satisfied that there is nothing better to be hoped for than the Lynchings and burnings which are almost daily occurrences and that at best death quick, merciless and sure is his only portion—the worm may turn and seek it rather than suffer it always to seek him. Such a thing now is not possible on any large scale and any signs of its existence which may exist are infrequently encountered. They would die abnormally in very fact could it but happen that the spirit of kindness be kindled by an active crusade on the earth and direct this mob forming mass. The incidents of the past week are all of 1923. Shall it continue and be allowed to grow or shall it be replaced by another more constructive? The settlement of this question need not be left to Fate, American men can decide it. WHY NOT AN AMERICAN NEGRO RACE CONFERENCE? A racial conference composed of representatives of every organization and agency which is working in the interest of our group has been proposed by Kelly Miller who bases his argument for its need upon the following circumstances: "The times are out of joint. Racial portents are onious. The rising tide of color threatens to engulf us. The problem is becoming more complex and perplexing. Unless the Negro's courage rises with danger the cause will be lost through timidity and owdirness. The welfare of the ten million Negroes in the United States is less well, safe guarded through self-directive leadership than that of any other group of similar size and like advantage in the world. There is the widest margin between what is and what ought to be. Loudsome boasting of our present attainments blinds us to the magnitude of things yet to be attained. This gap has been widened only by wiser thinking of the new year emphasizes our delinquency. Within the next generation there is going to be a tremendous change in the scheme of race adjustment. Whether this is to be for the better or for the worse depends upon the initiative, the courage and the wisdom which the Negro displays. The present tendency is in the wrong direction. Forces and influences now at work if unchecked will fix him for good in a helpless and hopeless position. Instant action is demanded. Hesitancy is dangerous. Delay may prove fatal. The time if fully ripe for a race conference to deliberate upon the serious phases of the problem, and as far as practicable, to formulate a platform of principles and a program of programs of procedure. The Negro group has special and peculiar interests and relations infinitely more serious and vital than any other subordinate element into which our population is divided. The peculiar problems of the foreigner are temporary and limited to one generation. The Jew is isolated only in religious and semi-religious areas, and the Catholic differs from the Protestant only in the mode of worship. The Negro alone is separated from the rest of the nation by the whole diameter of social difference which entails the regulation of all of the essential intimacies of life. This regime is imposed upon him. He didn't make and he cannot unmake it. Special and specific racial interest require as thoughtful and as wise Congrès gives to the affairs of the Nation. And yet today we have no Congrès to present the various interests and activities at work in the field absorbed in their own objectives and are wholly without efficient coordination or union of aim and purpose. The waste and friction are inexhaustible. The Negro can no longer look to the white man for intimate advice and direction. No one outside of a group can regulate the instinctive needs of the inside. The white philanthropists have done a good part. The men who must be helped forever are not worthy of being helped at all. Lynching and lawlessness of which the Negro is the chief victim, the shift of population, congestion in cities and the acutisation resulting therefrom, the moral ableness and religious indifference of the abducted classes, the downward moral tendency of the times in which our young people are being carried away, the necessity for cooperation in business and trade, the growing apathy of the white race and the need for concerted endeavor to stem the fire all unite in demanding the proposed conference at an early date. The situation calls ludy for the requisite action. There is no doubt but that this suggestion is most practical and timely. We need some means by which our efforts along all lines may be so coordinated that their result may be more productive of progress than is now the case. The tires demand unity of thought and unity of action. These can be had only as a more definite program of procedure than is now the case, is determined upon and followed. Such a program can be determined upon only as conference on the part of all correlated makes it possible. The Express is heard in accord with the idea. But now will such conference be called? So far we have not produced a such endeavor from the confidence of the general public is so placed as to make a command. It is of the omission however that the importance widely of the proposal of Mr. Miller will make more apparent the imperative need of such a conference and it will eventually be held. So far, we have proven ourselves covardy—and inefficient in taking care of our own concerns. That we are now becoming more fully awakened to the gravity of the situation which confronts will be proven only by the co-ordination of our agencies of progress by the adaption of common sense program such as the proposed conference would make possible of formation. THE MIRROR OF PUBLIC OPINION AS TO MIGRATION. A gloomy picture of the North as a dwelling place for Negroes is drawn by the Charlotte Observer and the delights and comfort of the South as their home are painted in alluring colors. Much is to be said on both sides of this question and the State forebears to enter the lists to debate it. Negroes should be capable of judging for themselves whether they would live in the South or seek new homes elsewhere. Undoubtedly the North offers them some advantages, while children for example Individually on the other hand, the Southern climate is more to be desired whether by whites or blacks than that of Michigan or Massachusetts. Many more white men have left the South, on account of the presence and industrial competition of the Negroes than have Negroes on account of boll weevils, however considerable the migration may have been in the last half dozen years. The white migration has been proceeding more for than a century. The State is not nearly so much concerned about losing Negro as white population, however we do not hear of whites leaving in droves. In time, the migration of Negroes will be a factor in turning white toward the South—though that time be now distant. DID NEGROES PRECEDE COLUMBUS? The researches of Dr. Roland B. Dixon of Harvard University in the ethnological history of the North American Indians, as presented at Cambridge before the Association for the Advancement of Science, offer conclusions illuminative of the wanderings of prehistoric man and verify what had been more speculation before. Measurements of the oldest known Indian skulls carefully conducted show that the Indians had a race stock almost as composite as that of the Americans of today. Dr. Dixon finds that some Indians were descended from Negro or Negroid groups; others from primitive Australians; others from Mongols; still others from the Nordic races. That there was a long series of migrations to the American Continent by way of Bering Straits, he is convinced. The thought that Negroes came here first as freemen and long centuries before Christopher Columbus, is a fascinating corollary. That the Negro or Negroid wanderers came by way of Melanesia Dr. Dixon thinks is proved, though he believes that they came by way of Bering Straits, as the Nordics did before them. The Nordic type skulls are found among the Eskimans near the Arctic, and among the Indiana nearest the Antarctic, as if the Negro invaders had crowded them to the outer limit of the continent. Dr. Dixon accounts for the dark composition of the skulls, that the North stock in Siberia shows less blondness, more of pigmentation than its ancestry did. "The earliest skulls of the Iroquois and some other Indians," the investigator declares, "show strong Negroid features, continually modified from age to age, as the Iroquois extended their power and territory, taking captives from other tribes and absorbed them." The suggestion implied is not at all new to ethnologists. In savage tribes, historic and prehistoric, the conquering of one by another has meant the carrying off of the women who became mothers of halfbreeds. Possibly our age, in which woman is no longer property and conquest means something different, may prevent such wholesale modifications of race stock. Perhaps the pussies of ethnological history ten thousand years hence may be less troublesome. That, however, is nothing but guesswork, outside the field of exact science. —Brooklyn Eagle. THE JIM CROW CAR SERVICE. The United States Supreme Court the other day refused to review a judgment given by the Mississippi Supreme Court in which damages were allowed to three white men who were compelled to ride with members of the Colored race in a conch on the Louisville and Nashville. Mr. Briabane's comment on the decision infers that this is the first ruling of the higher court on Southern Jim Crow laws and that it is unjust. Mr. Briabane is of course entitled to his opinion as to the justice of a decision maintaining the constitutionality of these laws. But as a matter of fact their validity was long since established by a court that was neither southern nor democratic in complexion. It was held that while Louisiana nor any other State might discriminate between the races, it was not violative of the Federal constitution for any state to compel their separation on street cars and railroads, provided equal accommodations were furnished to both. In the Mississippi case apparently there was a clear violation of the law. We think there is room for improvement in the execution of the Jim Jim crow car laws, which exist in the South only. Often the railroads not only provide accommodations to the illiterate of the Colored race, but when they travel, are entitled to fair treatment—they should have seats in cien coachs with such comforts as are provided for the whites. Whenever they are there is no discrimination and both the letter and the spirit of the Federal constitution are observed. —New Orleans State. At a meeting of the executive section of the Federal Council of Churches at Indianaapolis last week one of the speakers on racial relations in America was a professor in a southern college. In the audience was a Negro minister from the South, the son of a slave owner by the father of the professor. At a point in his address the professor called attention to the unusual situation and asked the Negro minister to come forward, so that the two together might face the audience. "Now," said the son of a slave owner as he grapped the hand of a slave's son. "If you feel as I do at this moment, we "have in our hearts the solution of the "race problem in America." The Negro minister in some remarks a moment later left no doubt that his sentiments on the question were identical with those of the white man. The incident take one to the villa center of the race question in the United States. That question has been made a troublesome problem large through the fact that most of the efforts at solution have come from the outside or from each race at work independently. Misunderstanding, antagonism, an inability to see more than one side of the question have been the result. In recent years a more promising force has been in work. It aims at the improvement of racial relations by the co-operative method. Leaders of both races are getting together in this effort, which has gained common eneble way in the South and is attracting favorable attention elsewhere. The idea is not to work through a national, sectional or state headquarters with nid secrecy and publicity agents, but through the officials, the ministers, teachers and other prominent citizens of both races. These facts have been in the home towns, districts or counties, and discuss their common interests so how best those interests may be served through action of both whites and Negroes. It is this kind of effort that the churches are beginning to unite with. The Federal Council has a commission on racial relations which is seeking to do its work through the local church organizations. The fled is broad. There is hardly a city or community of any kind in the country where opportunity for co-operative racial action does not exist. The churches can not afford to miss the chance for a leading position in this kind of work. The Columbia State recalls that thirty years ago a meeting was held in a R-8 Carolina county court house to condemn that paper if daring to denounce a *bathing*. A State senator presided and many prominent citizens were present. The State december no such meeting could be held today, and sees marked progress in the light to abolish the xylan *e*wil. The State is right in assuming that the public sentiment against *bathing*. The State is right in assuming that one head thirty years ago could be held in the *ope* today. Responsible newspapers throughout the South are unanimous in their condemnation dation from the people of the State of Texas, I mean...(the thinking people). PEN SKETCHES OF PRESENT- DAY NEGRO NOTABLES. By W. H. A. Moore. Some time ago I read an editorial concerning the "State Teachers Association of Texas" condemning the practice of carrying out in recent years, I have been waiting and watching for a line of defense from those whom I know to be responsible for teaching. I have been aware of the reason. The reason I know, is because I have been interested in the profession of teaching for years and have been a member of the association. I have been forced to set forth in your article are true. The sad feature about it, to my mind is; that the men who had the greatest organization, to do a large constructive work, have used their power in the organization to permitted their desire for a "big time" to destroy the first principals and aims of the Association; to work out new methods, to improve the profession who really need help, to my mind it is necessary to have a social program in the annual gatherings but I believe (with the writer of the editorial) that social features should not play the I am wondering how many men and women who have been the bone of the association of Texas will have their names written upon the fair pages of Negro history for some great reason, or to the people through the association they have fostered. Teaching is a great profession, a great reward in Texas. The teacher is a lesson the child never forgets; and this being true the teacher ought to be the most. I am one who would like to see a new program for the association, we can have all of the so-called ought to want such as dancing, auto riding, ball games, etc., and we ought to be willing to spend one day to better our conditions as teachers and finding better methods of teaching, that will be beneficial to those I hope the association will in the future be an inspiration to higher ideals, rather than a curse to our students, rather than a burden to the host who support it. I hope that Texas from this good year forward the teachers of the Teachers Association with pride, rather than with dismay. May we who have the teaching profession man who had the courage to write that splendid editorial, attaching the worthless program carried out by our students, against the material progress of our country. Continue to have the manhood and Christlike courage to attach every student to the teaching profession. Such a man is a high tribute to our teacher. Write on and on, until every man and woman who have the high calling to the teaching profession. Uncerely yours for a better State Teachers Association. Chicago, Jan. 11—(Crimson Service Simple) Stepice to the workers in the steel mills would involve the ruin of the steel industry, according to Eberhart H. Gary, Chairman of the Board of United Steel Steel Corporation, and one of the chief exponents of unrestricted immigration. Mr. Gary, during his visit to the city, declared: "We are short of labor. If we adopted an eight-hour day it would mean much higher prices for steel, the steel business and the country. COMMENDS EXPRESS CRITICISM OF TEACHERS' ASSOCIATION. "If we eliminated the twelve-hour day we would lose many valuable mugger he still want to work the mugger in order to make more money. I have been reading your editor's day we would lose many valuable labs with much interest for some men who still want to work the time, and I wish to say that they longer hours in order to make more should receive the highest commem-money." of lynching, and they have the majority of the best people in the Southern States with them on the issue. But public sentiment against lynching has not become militant enough to push the progress of the lynching civil itself, or to urge the State authorities to stop lynching. It is likely that the State makes any serious effort to apprehend or punish those guilty of much murders. It is apparent that the influence at work to stop lynching have a considerable way to go yet before they have public sentiment sufficiently militant against lynching to translate itself into action through the enforcing machinery of the States. At the present time the status seems to be that while the majority of responsible citizens deplore lynchings and condemn them in an academic sort of away, they stop short of doing anything about them after they occur. Unless public sentiment becomes more militant in this respect and acts through the States, the reholling the proponents of States' rights have been indulging in over the recent defeat of the Dyer anti-lynch bill will be short-lived. The lynching evil will not be become more of a further in the United States. If the States do not become more effective in suppressing it, Federal action is inevitable in some form. The reckless element in the population which is ready to take the law into its own hands on slight provocation, should not assume that the defeat of the Dyer bill gives them free reign to vent their passions with impunity. 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. FORT WORTH OTHER TEXAS TOWNS ST. JAMES BAPTIST CHUDCH deacon, in fact every officer ADOPTES NEW FINANCIAL PLAN every and any disci系 in a CANADIAN DAY, (SUNDAY, JAN. 7) "HIT ordinary auxiliary work to THE HIGH WATER MARK." Special to the Dallas Express, Dallas, Texas The St. James Baptist church yesterday "hit the high water mark," according to a reporter some time ago by the pastor, Dr. J. H. Winn to give "try-out" to please the church to break all previous records and it broke all previous records and church organization and finance. At 9:30 a. m., the Sunday School held forth with Supt. Williams presides in the year in the found 501-person School. Mr. Williams, the Supt., presides in the school. Mt. Pleigh Baptist church of this city was a pleasant visitor, he made timely-remarks, many other visitors were present, but the press for the church was quiet. At 11:00 o'clock, the pastor prescheduled a remarkably interesting sermon, the first of three sermons Without Evasion or Exemption" at the close of the sermon six persons responded to the invitation, and the church membership. At 3:00 p. m. dr. D. L. Williams, the blind Evangelist, very instructive sermon, usable for his subject: "That Old Black Her." The Evangelist, brought out many books, and the monster monr Dr. Winn led 12 happy souls into the baptismal waters and addressed the congregation of baptism, the Lord's super was then given, the largest number parishioners, and the fore in the history of the church, according to the observation of the pastor. At 5 o'clock, the R. V. P. pastor, Rev. S. M. Montgomery, the church was literally "packed," the new course now being taught in the Union (training in Church membership, is taking like wild fire. deacon, in fact every officer of every and any description is called upon to turn aside from his or her whole heart, united, co-operation to the collection of "church dues" who are also members of his or her class in the regular way, when the time comes for taking the offering all members of the church who are classes are called upon by these teachers to pay their church dues everybody who pays them both of those who pay and those who do not pay, the effort on the part of the teacher is to collect the month that is to say, if a person has agreed to pay 25c per week to pay $1.00 for the month that is to say, if a person has agreed to pay 25c per week to pay $1.00 for the month when the B. Y. P. U. session is the same effort are made on a like effort is made so when the day is over all the church dues for the month is collected, hence all of the foreign missions, education, foreign missions, education, Society Department. Creamed, shaken in petits soya pen sps on lettuce leaves and bread crumbs, then mixed with whipped cream and cake. Mr. Burial John, Mrs. John Ashley, Mr. John (Continued on page THE DALLAS EXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 13, 1923. Carthage as pastor; preached Sunday subject; "Arise Yea and Denise last week here with her daughter. Misses Nannie and Era Moseley spent night with Mr. and Mrs. Tippon passed through an route truss board. Mr. Jim Goodwin, Mrs. and Mrs. Janes, Sister Grace all of Tippon passed through an route truss board. Mr. Jim Goodwin, Mrs. and Mrs. Janes, Sister Grace all of Tippon spent Friday night with Mrs. and Mr. J. Scott or route to Pheasant Ridge. Mr. Jim Goodwin, Tippon is spending the week with her niece. Mr. D. Jones of Beckville was in Carthage. Mr. and Mrs. Tippon passed through their parents have returned to their home. Miss L. Booth of Cen- McKinney—Mrs. Hardy Berry has returned from Kansas City, where she spent Christmas. She brought her husband Duncan and Willie Turner to visit their parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Duncan and Willie Turner—all the churches of the city well attended Sunday, M. Zion Baptist church, the pastor, Rev. W. H. Ervin of Jarvis Institute was a visitor Sunday night. Mrs. Emma Carter, sister of Rev. W. H. Ervin of Jarvis Institute, Mrs. L. L. visited the W. H. M. this evening; come again Mrs. L. L. Minoola—The Superintendents of the C. M. E. and St. Paul Baptist churches are very proud of the interest manifested in the Sunday Schools, Mr. Alfred Arnold and Miss Alberta Arnold has last week for Mrs. L. L. returned to Texas College, Rev. and Mrs. Curtis returned last week from St. Paul Baptist church and all enjoyed a pleasant evening. The C. church has a new pastor, Rev. first and third Sunday, Mrs. Allie Williams left last week for Fort North, Mrs. Hawkins has returned from Fort North, Brant has returned from Longview. Tyler- Dr. Stewart delivered a very interesting sermon at Bethlehem College, where he played the quartet by Meeson, Frennell Caldwell, McManiel and Miss E. McManiel. He received loud applause p. m. conv. John Hayman of Dallas has here visiting relatives. We regret very much the loss of Mr. Hayman of the Mr. Major Morgan at his home. Mr. Tyler, Mr. Alpha Dooley, passed away Monday night, Jan. 11. She had been a faithful member of *St. James C.* M. E. church for three years and attended at the above church Thursday day morning by Rev. Thurkill. She leaves a husband, two children and a niece to return to her maternity loss. The high school will reharden a musical at Bethlehem Baptist Church Friday night. Jan. 15, 2014, she will lvy Jackson has returned from Dallas. The concert at the East Side direction of Miss N. White was a success. Mr. John T. Rattell has returned from Oklahoma. Wesley has returned from Oklahoma. Mrs. M. Calhoun has returned from Terrell, Dallas and Ft. Worth. Dr. B. Wright has returned to his home at Omaha. Neb. The high school girls have organized a basketball team to play in the State. Dr. Ch. Allen has returned to Port Arthur after spending a few weeks with his mother and other relatives and friends. Temple—M. Ed Brown, who has been sick for a long time, passed away Sunday morning at his home in South, 11st street. He is survived by his wife, two daughters, two brothers, and other relatives. Funeral services were held Tuesday evening from the Wayward Chapel Church of the B. Y. P. U. a member, the Rev. L. M. Sander officiated. Interment was made in the Belfair under the Underkinder E. B. French and the of the American Woodmen, and the G. U. o. O. F. of the Belfair. Burial of Belton at her home, Jan. 4th. Burial was made, Jan. 5th in the Belton cemetery by Underkinder E. L. C. Branham. Burial of Belton by one son, one daughter, one sister, and other relatives. The Rev. W. M. Muckeroy, State organizer of the B. Y. P. U. was the chief of the Corinthian Bishl church. The Wayman Chapel A. M. E. church has launched a financial camp policy to fund the church funds to complete the new church. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Crawford of East Avenida C were delighted to meet Mrs. Harvey, L. B. Ellis of Bremham Harvey D. Payne of Waxahachie Payne and his sister, Miss Myrtle Payne during the holidays. Mrs. O. Payne last week of a box of groceries from her daughter, Mrs. Viola Williams of Bremham and little Thima Warner are improving rapidly. The Sacred Concert night, conducted by Prof. Scott was a success. Mrs. Beatrice Benton is Greenville—Now Hope Baptist Church held its thirty-seventh annual church service well attended at all the churches. Every Christian in the community has a duty in this work, therefore the church is good for himself as well as the good of the community. Mrs. A. Linnan morning, Mrs. Mary Miller died Wednesday night. Mrs. Linnan Collins entertained the "Snow Club" "Palm Sunday" pring, luncheon was served to the guest. The club will meet with Mrs. Laveur Fullbright, Jan. 12, 1923. Paris—All the city schools opened in numbers. Every room increase in school is literally packed with the embodiment of humanity. All other schools are rollincats and the Colored population of Paris should at least be proud of the teaching force now in service. The faculty of the high school entertainment the football team, serving with a daily preparation of foods and games. Kinds of cards were placed for the respective members of the team and for the teachers and the coaches in the game, in an arrangement in every particular and it was arranged and prepared under the direction of the teachers. Principal Monies and it is a fact worth mentioning that the brief remarks by the respective members of the team and the teachers are not given in no little encouragement to the football feature of athletes in the future. Commendable remarks were made by Dr. P. D. Ransey and Mr. William Cone, Captain and Quarterback of the team. The annual Library rally no familiar 'o all Gibbon high schoolites will hold forth on February (2nd), second the annual craterological conference throughout North Texas, will make place on March 5th. A new committee and direction of Mr. T. class, an Easter Cantata on March 30th under the arrangement of a desneh committee and direction of Mr. T. class, will bring Folk Song and Literary Entertainment will be offered to the people of this community on April 12th. Please prepare to enrol in the program and be pleasing and interesting in every particular. We are all pleased to have the presence of Mr. Joe Browning of Bishop College recently while on his tour of the powerful factor in the football contest between Pani Quinn College and Bishop College. We are all pleased in this city on January 1st between Gibbons high school and Sherman high school. We are all pleased in G. H., S. G. H., S. defended every team on Clarkville and Pacific between Clarkville and Pacific SUNDAY SCHOOL CONGRESS GOES TO INDIANAPOLIS, IND Indianapolis, Ind., Jan. 11. — This city will entertain the Sunday School Congress, June 13-18, 1922 according to an announcement made here by the Allen Boyd of Nashville, Tenn., and confirmed by Doctors B. F. Perrell, and already making preparations to take care of the throng of Sunday school teachers there. There will be an Entertainment Committee, Reception Committee and the Mecca of Sunday School workers for the year. The announcement was made by the Mecca of Sunday School workers for the Baptist forces of the city and state. The Rev. Henry Allen Boyd was in Indianapolis Sunday the 17th and the Congress, although Indianapolis was bidding with other cities it had no word while here, that she had lost her chance. The announcement was made by the Baptist leaders are being congratulated on this opportunity to enter the Congress, that is to be held in this city. DR, S. A. ELJOT WILL DELIVER FOUNDER'S DAY ADDRESS AT HAMPTON INSTITUTE. Hampton, Va. Jan. 71—The Rev. Dr. Samuel A. Elliot of Cambridge, MA, president of the American Museum of the U. S. Board of Indian Commissioners, will deliver the foundation presentation on Sunday, January 14, and will pay tribute to the life and work of Gen. Samuel Chapman斯普林. Dr. Elliot entered the Uttarian ministry in 1889. He is vice president of the Massachusetts Federation of Religious Organizations, and several large religious organizations. He is also a member of the edi- tion board of the "Hibbert Journal." CLEMENCEAU NOW EATS GRAPE FRUIT. NEGRO GAVE HIM FIRST ONE. Orlando, Fla., Jan. 11 — A Colorado fruit grower gave George Clemson, former Former of France, a tour of the country. The Tiger fell in love with the fruit and has arranged for regular shipments to Paris until the end of the year, when to an order received by a local citrus fruit concern from its New York office. The Tiger instructed the fruit grower to ship him every two weeks. PROF. R. S. THWATT, TEACHER AND PRINCIPAL OF ONE OF THE CITY SCHOOLS OF PARIS, TEXAS, LEAVES THE STATE TO RESIDE IN CHICAGO, IL. Prof. R. S. Thwett, who has been prominently identified with interests of uplift in Texas for more than a decade, has been appointed as principal of Baldwin School, Paris, Texas and moved to Chicago. Thwett is a well known character in Texas. He was prominent in educational, fraternal and celestial circles and will no doubt be a key figure in the state, having held the position which he resigned since he was 17 years old. He is also one of the one of the best teachers of the state, having held the position which he resigned since he was 17 years old. He also holds a permanent certificates as evidences of his qualification and also holds a certificate as a member of the War-work Council of the Young Men's Christian Association of America; which honors he is received every year in Nitro, W. Va., terminated. Mr. Threatt . . . presses himself as satisfied with the changes as he sees them, and that writes to Chicago, will find him at 3477 South Park avenue, Chicago. CLARA PHILLIPS HAS NOTHING ON "SUG" GRANT. Stateboro, Ga., Jan. 11—Garla Phillips, the harrier of hurriers of Garla, makes a grant of Georgia, when it comes to making a complete get-a-way from modern bastiles. Maybe, "an angel grant," she says. Garla Grant tried to imitate Samson of old. Anyway the George officials had to release Garla until they capture the elusive Grant. According to reports they have their thief, Garla, and they have already termed him a "human cat." It is said that Grant was put in jail during the night. Officials claim that Grant did not wait until night to get the grant, and it clocked in the afternoon, probably the busiest time of the day. The latter commenting on the pet gate, which was a wooden sawn the barn, picked their way through the brick walls and others through the barn, just as they reached the jail door, but Grant is the first to actually put the iron pins out of the box and deliberately lay the door to one side, the latter being found leaning up on the wall. The former were found upon top of the cell where they had been thrown, seen by several but he did not tarry. This is without question the most known to the annals of jail history. Solicitors and Agents Wanted Write: H. L. PRICE. Supreme Counsellor. Uney, Texas. s Hair Dressing will make you Proud of Your Hair It is thought that Grant has made his way to some northern state where he hopes to evade the Georgia officials. He is a man of ordinary build and not regarded as a prodigy of manual strength, just from observation, the police say. Nelson's Ha NELSON'S HAIR DRESSING is demanded by particular people because they know that a preparation that has stood the test of 25 years has real merit, insists on having Nelson's Hair Dressing. It makes Harsh, Stubborn, Curly hair Soft, Gloomy and easy to do in any way you wish. It helps to keep the scalp and hair healthy. Sold by all Drug Stores and dealers in Toilet Goods, or send 30 cents in stamps for a box by mail. NELSON MANUFACTURING CO., Inc. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA WARNING KEEP YOUR LUNGS IN GOOD SOUND CONDITION. DR. LINK'S CREOSOTE-TAR COUGH SYRUP YOU DO. The Cold Sore Winter is now on us, and it is highly important that you do not neglect your Lungs. If you do, the cold sore keeps the Lungs and Throat in healthy, firm, robust condition. Fine for pau- monition, prophylactic throat whoring, hoarseness, or any lung and throat affections. PRICE 25c, 50c & $1.00. DR. LINK'S GOLDEN TONIC-It will build up the system and pre- vent sickness—Price $1.00. DR. LINK'S MEDICINE CO. Sole Manufacturers 305 S. Erray St. Phone Y-8815 Dallas, Texas. Free City Delivery. By Parcel Post Pre-Paid. AGENTS WANTED TO SELL OUR REMEDIES. DALLAS EXPRESS PUB. COMPANY. HIGH- HAIR WITHOUT Without a doubt, the best H-BROWN R GROWER OUT AN EQUAL 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 STRAIGHTENER. 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. Our HIGH BROWN HAIR GROWER stands as one of our highest achievements—it is the preparation we look upon with pride. All we ask of you is to try it. If you don't find it the best Hair Preparation you have ever used, we will gladly refund your money. For Sale By All Drudgists. MADE ONLY BY THE OVERTON HYGIENIC MEG.CO CHICAGO ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` BRAKEN It has a relief fund, a burial fund and a protective fund. It creates a more friendly relationship between the Colored and white man. Madame Jefferson possesses a natural-born talent. She is a licensed professional preacher of the age. She has a supernatural girlfriend, and she will lead her people. Her business on business problems are worth more than her salary. Her business matters will be answered. Madame Jefferson has discovered a wonderful hair restorative. It grows back. Ed ene a oo ee ere mee renee ate —e pe iad Stl ae eee : * antennae = 1 | PAGE BIN i 4 KB. Williams entertained ‘fide, in honor of Mrs. ics sa oe ee ee ec Weaver’ Vicbers ated a fee aie oos 3: p Mira, J. Collins, Bre a eins it some ast, at faeces ae he ta ate ag syaaais ‘Ghar eeicoed te" Du : et fy very plonsant Fs 2 os 7 “Mattie: Joftorvon of 3403 pi t,t a2 Sa ae A WOMAN'S OPPORTUNITY. | “prom coleatific tavouttgation and eee eee re tat Bie ait aan We Bae en i a Ss eee ear Hee esate "al +» ballon dorsal selina pet Beer i Soot ats ‘eter the tleld of competition ‘tie, hone. who have not got ee ea Hae east coast Ramet ee care Remar ak iene rer cn ea iciey io wi ns Parana nos tt Be wae ces F, 6 Mot BE Adalans, Texan : tien witmaraie pean, len, Mack ony gatertained a! seme a? Hora rt * , nonoriag her pe Sanat Gah vsrinday. Gaturdy SSabeesaydcorniod sre” se wo by ier mother ira. i Mat aad pre: $e" dlicoun irthsay cake iby Men ‘Hous. Poland of Foor Wt tig en ‘By Ville Mim Moasie Minor, wha ‘vo nated Men ims 12 Tendering finale You. cat tnagine” Me. Sins ferme soon rahi, Sie and Swaine’ Sim, nebue tnt ard Bing! wore ae outs “te Bier nd re, 3 Melon, and Afra "RobwetDuior, Meant airs Win, % Vaught, Mr oul ttre D. Garnier, Me, and Mia. 3. Richey Mv nd Mira ka Bin, Nn. Lota ‘While Mer Anron hth aisetdotia Boutros and. hr, A. Hara. Me, Beauty Ai tar ving had a dolight tiuie, Beer IXPRRAION Ov APERELLATION, Jp, Tlehardooa and wite tate this thon of cape tne Seren te thn meaers af Sombets ea taal of ettanets tenes ‘contribution tem ang. tel cate te A ‘eles, whore bo han a charge. ~ MMNG ES PORT WORTH. ; ‘evening at tour alee, Ren, Be Wnt, stor tthe) Gocuran "Stes Gian Sime Me 0G totay” Seas ‘Thomas sen" aud Mins’ Bortha Ghison. ‘Teo Wedding Coremonion wore hold er an Brow ‘on Moxndaly vende, Wert fora ‘Toe wedi ianer fas nerved by. the" howtos, are Drown at fo. thirty o'clock ater » forint boar pent txgther the new ‘wovhted “cous "wi Me ara Bes Gru ov "wlio and feat who. wont fro Pai itnd he corns 0 “ih to. Dalia Us tne Bervlecs"Suntay” wight Exe nappy oust howe tt 2298 Thane ‘Rene, repaving "eke teense. 00 hiddE Aa 0, 0, ‘names Cen “oat st offionrs of the I> ins Nar 978 Arnot Ved Octet Dalows were vyatecta ex ; the effice of warden: Cram Fontan ron olestea 0h the yoution YouKe Couns ceieaieAen AME WHODING Ny LAMAN. Stender Ciro. 918 rel ecibentad tee ‘ire: wode ite son fini hom, sey gL Ha Sand ‘lie toRhRlgt oases whieied Reoeer eat! oee eee erareatienetey, vc “he Stny ecient of 1) BORNE paws _LRA- ‘NIGHT, OFFICE RR REPEC Ot hy tase yences ott Mtounde of 6 Nor sisa sagan ae mt bare. toga tosis manne fear rier ts SeASR ae is oe eros aane. Cores Were Bid Loe 48. on Johawon of 80" ‘Thomas oat mater of the evening. ‘Mru D, R, Campbel! entertained ith a Chrintoas dinnes at ar. 8 B. Campbell 2430. Clark strut Courteenguiets were. present. ‘eo "A. Campbell” and Jobe on apent ie holding Wook Wit ire. Rh, Campbell of whom sere oleae Sanyo Ter. Lous Beat, tomo Rev. D a. Scots INT Allon “net i ome. rocnpersting afters lon fineenTe Soot expecta to take tp the mimicry gal when bo a {thy recovered Mra Hob Whittaker of Pe, Werth, ‘eran, was convolng” sven ot Mrs A'G" anarevn of 1724 Allen street thie week Ing. 1m order (0 do thie and com Mie tithe reaver of part ol Iho mombnen. A. Re Drvor” ie Drinident her tus x call of th Boag to moet Tuesday, night, Jan ary Fn tho ties ot tho, Pro frunive Five Innurance company’s sities 2601 ryan ptrest or Lite Gam: Drag store Mioch Intoree is boing manifote in the coming meeting an aa cle ton offers for the” next en sting toym may be had, Some wn Berna reported to’ have purchaned new broom for this ocsanon st the war louie gather ft Kier fos ike “clean recep.” YOUNG TAbIS OF TenRELL. ONG ENTRAINED. Msn & D Caapil, 2430 clerk si. nteriaied‘Turaday afternoon, iniaary tthe Mien dohaon and tape oth Terell,eaas a ner home MRA. CAMPRIRLA, —RovrReEAINS ee mene Se DB. Campbell enierialacs atthe Noe of hry 83 unpbal CR ron iG oh gee neglenee aces sen en ose ac le fei eee eee tence Sante mene cece t's Bie pee sce proireree a rae or emreeens ae aces epee ss Sst Sn at Seay are rate: sotes naisie cera nom Sorry is chit at aa sein a eee ene ae Re fom Serta are Te Ret ioany is cee stats ts Recreate oe ra cies weet Ses aie Ken ie ner: poe nes ona Ss aeenn, aie nw ial re et tone at Pees eine eta pean metrta tic eal se a meas ae sere soutee aasrtc Rverend’y ministerial fiends were Drosiase. Atanas the. Seng? were; ere Bec ae ee. Aas he a ee a Church and Rev, J. R. Starks, EUl- wena ifn’ ala che : pire Ay aa eee ave tne Gar DEAS |, On Thursday, January sth, our trlend ‘and broinee Je Paterson aaa ter Stee as eet Pee cas ree eect pe mere eo gh a A ores cai cote Be ee ate ere Se meu cr tht Seatac mr ere Bane et te oer eee a er ee ea oe anaeene ae ace ieteors peer tnt os Bonamassa ners arate aes cs tt ee ees or Seek an wa a SaaS deg ee cere o CEES oe re eeooeen to ore riers, = Eeeare oe sored me hs, spigot lang Bae sae Pome Tait ace Bk Bonar pneecet 2 eer ees Baie re ee ty ere ee Sey facta "ih pene ieee nee ae eee me ee ee Se ind ke a good worker thotoughbred, Mra, Hodge has ‘9 mupertarn and fow equals and with eer Seemed fi tee aetet Teeepnet oe ‘he Wining nthe next Pees tre aes PROF. GEO. CARVER, WIZARD OF a TUSKEGEE WILL SPEAK IN DAL- | LAS JANUARY 26. bee or American Realty and Construction Company, Cancorporatea) Resounows: 1axELeTTs: Beast nec APTANTAA — Capital 00K on 482,880.00 Noten (1m und 2nd B,J, Gannon 19,360.00 Lal) cencnnenn BHAB.00 WT Pittman 6,200.00 Due Op Capital Stock. 2,170.00 Undivided Protte 4870.61 Purnitre and Wiatueen 486,00. ‘Taxes... 2542 ah In Bank vn TOROT Addin Machine 12.08 ‘Polat Rosourees j.--88TAHS-A1 Total Laabiliien ..467.188.21 ‘The above statement ts correct aecording to my best knowledge and elle # “A. G. WEEMS, Secretary, Ga be beiacigal OP Onee wait "Principal C.F ot ihe Hooker rarhingon id febool, Prot. Georga. W. Carver hewleal wlan of Tuskegee. wii Sint allot dauuary 30, under the npc o¢'the, Booker ‘Washington igh een ea? apeak (0 the. Dub Tie om that sieht. pn, Carvere walt (o Texas ts be tng arranged’ under” the auspice oft Sarvin Chvatian. Toatitute, Pres Meat X. trving rill nceompany Prof, Garver om nia four whieh: wil fangs five aie, ‘Prof, Carver te visttag Texas upon hua wh sire, “pontpontng oth {rips tn Sosthera Staten In order t i0"ao" Later he. will ait ‘Gearea Sehers »speca train has been paca Erni dispel Routh "Carolina to Iaeson ee nag Gene’ treioa "by toe A914 Art and Charity Club me |wth ‘tas Johnson, Senki ieee, Wedtenday evening, a. [Tae genera routne of basta ws eovita out after whieh w dello enn was served by lat Johann Sect aceting il be wih Ms Ror Iwona ime". Roae of i et toed to Oklahonay wheres He Testing. sebot atte” epedin the “oldayaith Telatven: Sr Joico “Alesander” aba “ite” Lea Temmons “returned nome. _ fom Browaood, where hey apeat th cigar with’ selauver” ‘Theatr ated.‘ roudenee ot "Me, and iin. N Hotitoo, S105. An ae sive Sutarday, Dee. 20th ana ef 'en-# pound” Yor, nother snd ay Song aly. Sim Moats and le tarts of oxi, Ness eit for eit bom after apenas ke dese with are tehtson aie 'R. aale ceo Mrs ay Wells ot Roglon” Sonia, in te lig vialting. her sater, MC. B obuson, 1816 B. Anno Stok Mh HAA Norwood, ie Anne areet Ih now employed an stenographer Rod ofc gi by Dis A”. Pancho, 300 Sonor street {i laos Inlted to tne a aoa Temas ut Fort Worth on Fiat 9 ty to's damonntatin of Nout rene; irs, stout Tedusig rush ial and snlren le en nein carats to ho iven by tr. Neve ‘of Chicago, Taursay Sun, 38t Yom 2 C0 9, m Domon: evion on ving model. eden are ted from Datla nod other towne nthe south, to Teproent our nes Por information writen. Wo ile, Nox 1att, Port Worth, Teme Mrs, 0. €. Crook Entertains Many Out of Town Visitors. A Pretty, effete wed. the | Now Years Reception given "Tuesday Jan, Sod trom 2 to 8 by. Men 01 © Geek) at ner senate howe Hob siset ay hawor of hold Vitor hss Sulla ‘Gannen Of C3 wane," Mts Curry oan Bian, han ‘GH. Turner of cater vie” Kana. Mis. Ninn, Thorne oi Sheago i Air: Willson ot em eta and Bugene, MSC Oitnns, Nu The tee wad aftneally de‘. oa wits Ohrsanea wrvath, bile Seren main bona” Miser oD Antec venuty Toten cirmaione niorsed tt man"? ites Mb flomert ers ait the sparing hve From ‘Yea cluded, 0 the hoe oarty_wab enn Mt Foner, RAs Ba fem, Allee Hicks, en Jonson, Len fine Proven, 86. rok, Pear Min ah clare ater tine SB Taner Wit) Sith a Mira Viet’ Tobinon. "lols Crook scved pane bow Tach eit ras pretend te ror. Daisy tote of Huet, por. fas wery rosnted tothe Guta at honor. L/:tlo Japanese fruit bas- kot» wore given the. house party, wile" um ere ey tats ware tashed “ty” ont "I wy chr ma, nb, Sutle was furlihed for thin oc cation ny Prot. Cnet “Thomo. ‘ances of erie with ot de ti ven tryed Sate atic y ; sine br Sr wit emit ae See taces a aeanen, Te’ Serapitar Governor, He is now tourning Mis- tei, "Prot. Carver last your was speak er al commencement at Jarva Oats tia inatitnte andthe soaring’ ws srs ee ton more of Texae eained wate, th any yours of experiment and taperience with agricultural pro Quctn has given Prot. arver”an Ability to" speak authoritirely upon fet ubjecte and" hin menage Wl contain iatormation of interest” t farmers, Ti sdlsan eto be hare nur Tectures Aft wil ve’ welcome to tee. and Beat BOs. ‘rans for, the place of ls ap. pearance in Dallas wil be announced Inter Prinipal ‘Gurr as charge. 0 bis DAI senvarensas Mr. and Mra, W. H. Harvey of 1208" Meatio wivet “were. Host” and hostess at a sumptuous turkey dia ner of Mra. C. H. Turner of Coffey ville, Kans., and’ atrs. 1. 1B, Curry of Tulaa, Okla Alphin’ Art and Charity etub reat ined" $60.00. from thelr’ Christmas bazaar Instead ‘of $6,00. an publish ed by the Dallas Expreas | Alphin Charity and Art club mot in Fegular somsion Wednesday, Jan ‘Ard, 1925 at 9:80 o'clock atthe realdence of Mra J. ©. Curry, 1800 Edward vtreot. ‘The meeting wa formally opened by Mr¥. Ben John. son atter the regular routine 0 Trusivess te vasiting Ingles wore 15: troduced, ‘Twenty members answer fd the Tol. A palatable two: course hhc of ren, chicken” in rat Kins, truit salad on lettuce, olives Botato chip, toasted erackers, cocoa with whipped ‘crea, cherry: briek geet an home. ade "cake, "A favor gf dainty ‘ottlen of ‘perfuss tied with ‘tonsil was, prosented ‘enc! slting Indy and club members. The lub adjourned. to meet with Mrs George Jamies, Jan, 10, 1928 Mtr, and Mra. ©, F. Starks of Dallan were in the elty over Sunday visiting thelr mother, Mra. N._ M. Carry ‘of: Henrletta street, and’ sie ter, Alta, C,H Lindsay. Prof. H, 4. Buller and wite have oth been confined to bed during the past week. ‘De, N. 7, Wallis has tnstalled radio 1a. ali home. on Humbolt St Rad!) fane are. enthvsiastially ae bepkiig Invitations to” "laten” in.” Mra Nina Thame of Chicago, TL, daughter of Mr, Tom Beol “pent the holidays Ja. the elf, the guests of hor fath’r and. af. and Sra. H.C. Wied of East First street. She was the recipient of tung social affairs ‘Mrs. “A. Majora-Ward. spent the holiday with her father In Waco, Texan. Bra, C. Le Jackson and Mra, M. U. Tucker gave Mra He G. Roald y sur: prise. oarty on her biethday, Jan. Ist, 1223 Among tose present were Mr. aud Afra. .0. €. Crook, Mr. and Mri. Jones, Mra. Minerva Water, Mim Lena Trai, ar. Tutaet, Nye Roorela flarveey, Mr.» Dan Oliver. The honoree received many beautitu eta, Tee ctpam, cake and “aneh Wat served. The evenine was spent Shavlik (easate,: ‘OAK CLIFF HEIGHTS, Mak Geneva, Colilne Yott Saturday tor Kansan chy, Mo., to viet he mn, tle Yohn Bdgar Collins. Services wore good at Emanuel Baptist: ehureh. ‘The pactor, Rev. c Ee Hutt us si his post of duty. ‘The entertninenent given 1 tur diy “ksght” by "the. Home. Misaton Slators ‘nt tho renldenco of Mra. J. ©, Patterson was a. scree. Her, A. Ferat proamhed at the Free Wiil church Sunday at 8p. m. Mr. HL ‘Mion’ ban completed io house and la gow livtog et his own Some to Me Gaston Adation, a Anno Thontan sayy Tam lon op without the Bxprom, please Come fall to being 1€ To me every ataeaay, eae oe TO ALL WHOM IF MAY conciRN: é | This 4810 cortity, tat he TROGRESSIVE MUTUAL, FIRE INSURANOH COMPANY, ALIAS, THXAS. has int renpecte fully complied with the Tay’ af Texas as conditions precedent to ts doing business In this Biate, wad 1 have inued te auld Company x Certfeato of Authority trom thi afice entitling it to do business tn this Stata forthe your ending the 28th of February, 1923. “ ‘otyen under my had and seal of office at Austin, Texas the date five above writen, "). I, CHAPMAN, Conimissioner, ( : MR, HERBERT DUDLEY, Mr, Horbert Dudley, formerly. of Dalian, Teaas, and. the son of Mr, fand Mire. 1. in Dudley, 2818. Coch: ran street, i now purmiing his mas fers degree’ in corporation nance in the. Wail Street, Division of New York University after having com pleted Ils high school course at the Dalian gh. ar. Dudley went to Howard. University, Washington, D. [C. and trom thls University received the Bachelor of Arts. degree. and igo. & commission xa Second Lieut in the Rowerve Otticers Corp of tho United States Infantry. Av Mr. Dud ley {4 contemplating. spectaliing tn corporation law he. will in all prob fabity locate in one of the ‘New York corporations ‘who mako spec: ial otters: to etudents entering. tuch tela nase EVENING CHAPEL €. M. Re ‘CHURCH. Board No. 2 met Thursday Dec 2s, at the home of rs Lara Jolt: opened wih sone and prayer re eating the" 23rd. Pralw, sort Teasons were conducted by Sister Bh fer tapior after whlch an excelent rocram ‘was rendered: 15 inember® frore present and four vistors Prot Tari” made' tne talk which shal aver bo forgaten by those present {fue beats served dalilou, menu consisting of the. following: cream poteiaen, chicken” and easing ho Hiscottn’trutttalad. and exe Aa ouened to meet at tne home of Mrs fu cart on ® Grand ‘Thurs, Jan. 4 ‘Mes. V. Cratchteld, Sees Mex. 6 Tinley eporay ‘We wish to thank our many feiends, Nelghbors andthe America ‘Wood fan for their kindness shows te'"Guring the inese and deat of our deat” beloved liter, re fiubieJackwon, who. departed ths Ip Jes, 8) 1938, We also thas the followin name peronn for hee eau floral offerings: Mr, and Mmm A. te Walters, Me and. its. E. Le Gorden, Me. A, J Dickson,” Mr, ‘and. Mra, Wells Me snd ir, Bea on, ie andre Kener (whlie). Mrs and Stra, MB Wilboro Molened: ‘Gr. Juckson, Honband. Xie nny, Batner Five Sister: and Five Brothers Ie Costs Only. $2.10 fo Give You Hiheumatian an up-to-date Puneral See a iy. |THE FAMOUS JP RHRUMATIOM POWDERS Ap "TABLES ~~ ‘Teeaiment for both for 18. day treatment $2.10, one" of two teat ‘Seats valt taster the most stubborn leeen, So matter ‘what you have aed te thie treatment ahd’ put stop (9 your pains (The Fr moue Jap Manhood Twblet “Prentment 8110. For Patling Moa with ron own eonsitations to restore your \ fuinoon Tf You have been falling t fom. ap to the requirement ot 8 ‘an, Jap Manhood ‘Tablet wit com: Dplotly reatare you te Your tzuo wet rain and yo1 tan depend thoy wil but you to thinviog how they can Fedtore you fa tach short tim” The ets pomsets the power enitel shutraie the ptnen tist texpa you down and puts you in the down and oot ces. TNO. G.0. D, Orders filled. Write Ime dIR. ANWAR, WHNGHT, Bee (6%, Longview, Teana 3-40 ‘The Dallas Express f Pub. Company Meritorius Printing and Designing “THE SUPERIOR” IS A VERY PRESENT HELP ‘IN TIME OF | Tho most pitiful thing in tho world ts a man dying leaving « wite and ioe Su re pe aie ae suo tu trey Golo ose tse hae ety ataey Src trainin ervey ran set ete Teer ie ot taten act coer at caer Prom tt Bate’ Wet note ee SUPERIOR BENEFACTORS OF AMERICA lai tect woe eae cree | GRAND CENTRAL THEATRE | ALWAYS BETTER PICTURES | MONDAY AND TUESDAY, a JANUARY 15TH-16TH | Fae. “NY OLD ork KENTUCKY o HOME” 2 ‘with an all star east inctud- Ce? cay fox keine set 3k eartinterest; mother love; ae Rien ace oer WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY, JANUARY 17TH-18TH “PROTECT YOUR DAUGHTERS” Sis sis os eae alias as age sind” Seas oat nas pa ne tne oar ‘DEPARTMENT OF = _ INSURANCE. AND: BANKING - ‘STATE OF TEXAS: . ui 2 tra Seu a ees pile vaccs sae pe ees arr : ees a Tout Relative—The daughters of pa Ramarao cess eae ene tare ee toon Ph ee find "woul ike: to heat from "hins| et meet eae ee i eA aerate hornets a ae coker Wotton Wenorit oen-| Bea, raion me a ae gata Prtontx: Arizona, ‘Help Wantel—Girl or Lady, who A os ~Mindamne Ceola—Phrenologist and | ocmiens, Sota sation ree oa at oor’ find her advice benetcla, Col- er tn nia re, red admitted, Satithetion guaran. [aoe eee, Dees «Mtoe Involee of fixtures and mock, twenty four hundred doliars, wil take nine eon hundred doliurs. Address A. Harney 8830 Ross avenue, Dallas "Texan risa Wanted —Rgintosed Pharmactat a ‘onte—-Addvea, Dr. ©. Mellon, Bas aol ne $500 GIVEN FREE! ty guno 20th, 1923, wo hope to fre the above amount of money fand. men" more in. other valuable rites, "Wo "are xiving. thee Drew feats to all who are willing to Wel dvertiso our ‘oods. There. ne oth about this Just wend ‘un your athe, address aad & ime and Te fin put ‘you im touch with ‘chanee ‘you may never. have again. “Write today, betore You forget 1. Address: "P, & P. SUPPLY COMPANY, Box 4, Cotteyvile, Kans, T19-40 Comet Lasige No, 9194 G. V, 0, ot ‘0. F. And Household. of Tath No. (067 ‘Twenday, Jan. 16th, at 4:30 o'Oloek PM. Past Most Governors’ Chamber ‘especialy invited, Atusie and Refreshments Served 0. 0.0, OF 0. F. CHAS, M, WADE. ¥. 0. D. B. GARNER, P. 8. 1H. OF RUTH: Ans, 1B. RIDGE, MN. O. MISS BM. WEEMS, W. R. Sata ‘PROFESSIONAL, 4. & WELLS, ‘Attorney and Councellor at Law 206. Pythian ‘Temple Dallas, ‘Texas anem De, BT, Hamilton, Physician and Surgeon. Room 218 Pythian Temple; residence $08 ‘Thomas Ave. Phones! ‘Ottice ¥ S844; residence 4037; ‘Oftce voure: 10 a.m. to 12 mit Spm; Two 6:80 p.m, Dallas, Lucas net ‘Dr. Lytle—Votstinary Surgeon on imate ofall kinds, Office at Peo- les Undertaking Company, 310 Peart street. Hours trem 0 a.m. te'S p.m X 1306. residence 193i ‘Wulew street, Dalian, Texas Just Opened DRAKE & JONES’ MUSIC SHOP, ALLA HALL, CORNER CENTRAL, DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF Talking Machine Records Piano Rolls We seclaliee in Columbia, Parn- mount, 0. K. and Black” Swan Mecords nd repair all” make’ of masbloes Pree ‘Dellvery 40 Any Part of tho cy, TELEPHONE H-1491 Matt Orders sotlited, SHINING PARLOR ‘in Connection ‘ive we a trek pivat [Emoroccooocososooooloe eae SISTERS’ INSTITUTE Boarding and Day School CContacted by Sintom of the Hoty Chon If Saa'teem Besinn Feb tat I$ Domente Sconce, Muste, Voea I$ ea Paiting. Secla‘clamses If atter tp. mi for: puplin not 1g attending’ "the.sehoc BVERYONE WELCOME Phone H-7473 2018 Allen St, [rue DALLAS EXPRESS PUB, COMPANY ae | ‘and ‘Designers = ho. db oe ee ee al oe ee aa a ge A 5 ss ee inte ” a, Ss ; fits , — 7 d he Ce mt * a: err ee een a en@rl 2 (iggy ew eel MT ; coon a en te ramen ese as ee Si Mea Me Oo ‘o's bi ras al eon ame at eS New "your by, saying. good wil to|See, and. Reporters “Mrs.” Watk Terris esate aaa lnc. See ca Se ere esa ns Sed eae Pl Seas per i es ai at See el Sorter eens wate | ih neon etecioeiy a meen eo reser ar moet me ah ‘We adjourned to meet See ’ eee eer bagi or te Depringae ‘Mra, BM, Brown, Net ae tee Tene, 2 Re ae a aera eae acct late | tae Fe ac 3 iene oa ear | ciettegk ee 3 Sere rent aes ste licen cheers neg © Peta tens ete eoccs eae etuS ‘After the business session 30 min-lnye, ‘The guest arrived early Sp ere er ee ese ioe aay ant ee eee at as Be eee’ okies |neeetgeae ee ame eae at cates ramen ene oes Scenes ier oe em ee a iy cates Soak oa oe Corticeltt Art club held its weekly meeting Monday evening, Jan. §, pea, win Mrs ‘W. P Yaughs, Meyers “street. ‘Ten. mombeers ane ‘ered {0 foll call with, quotations, ‘The club » looking forward to. the valentine “party fo. be ‘elven Feb. 14,1828, "After needle "work and Dbusinens the hosteu served a de- Iefoms two course Tuneheon, ‘Next meoting "will ba wiih Mrs Chas. Wiley, 2831. Trinidad. St. irs. J.D, Tee, Prew ME RAIN HOW ART CLUR, ‘The Rainbow Art lub entertain: ed thelr friends with thelt-anpuai ance, “Dee.” 29, In’ the Pythian Temple, ‘Doors were opened at 9 o'lock when gally dressed fndion and hand- omely. dressed gentlemen entered Fenay’ to promenade, ‘Messrs, Banke and Kalght acted as receivers and tach guest recely- 4 4 Christman favor, ACT otto the grand march Munle was furnished by the Fohn- ons molody five. Barh ove eft ‘with an exression of Joy ‘The, Rainbow Ae. ok Pri day, "January 5, at ‘the home of Mem. D.M. Brashacrs, 3606 Rose- and avenue. After the completion of “burners ong hour was. spent ‘with weete work, the club waa lad to receive. Mrs. C.J. Austin as a few member, "The ‘hostea served a delightful repaat. “Adjourned to" moet. with Mra P.M, Kalght, “3116 "Thomas Mis, Le 0. Clark, Pros Mrs, W. A. Ramey, SeoRept. THR PRINCESS ART CLUB. ‘The Princess Art club met Jan. 4, 1823 "with stem. Gootby, 3507 & veryNreandyPXa—HT HiT HH Washington avenue ‘The meeting ‘wana very full one being the tie ‘of the Your. The president ad ex Dreasions from the members, ‘Every ‘One seem to have caught the spirit Sind ve almost had old time speak: ing meeting. Report from the Christ: fan ‘entertalnment. ‘We then vent Into. the election of oftieers, Mra ee Inge—Roberta Holmes and Lula cole atentes the Banelation Selroraon. at" Wharton," Monday. Sica"Mara “Seater tied Prday treting at the Kom of'« daughter Sear Born he retaion were hip fi fo Pledge. Tho decane lett t mourn ber Jone % brothers, 2 le term, a non” and GAUghor” and umber of grahdchilrwn and trinda, We extehd trough the el fimna ofthe Breas out hesrtl sympathy to the Tolan aad aad friends of ocean. Mian. Novell Hier soternet to Lowa, tir day to recive her positon in tha fic, Me Tim Law of Rotts Pola ialied inthe ome of Me. Paa Battios Bunda.‘ Riley Davie a Reding: sc th reporter Sum Aoeine Sunday school and‘. Wb. oF the Shion Bait church ‘rere welt sttended Sunday Grand rte — Sunday Soot swore well aionted tai ehareho TeCaunday'wtn Superintendent and teacher at" ther post "ag “3 Sate nervicee wore wil stored Aetto"p me he BY, PU. AC the ation Bape ‘cneh: wit Brother esd" at temporary prea feat the following subject aa i fhectPaae eto te Re tana” rot 8. W. Bikornon aa ‘auledaptn and-mnde some tery em SStracine amare rewarding” te Sooper, ofthe, User ew a Tmt of McGregor called, fo the Puntorate ofthe" Antioch” Dap ti ehereh Ror, Sich te a abl tian a.m gonpa renner Mr A Aono went to ‘allan font Bak oy Mantas est Arab ie {Tot Grand Matron ofthe. Jerad tion ot tesa af the ‘Heromes Sereno toed, walkers ‘our No. eee? rand patie: the tnd Ton tbewiaresot ad vee Peston —The F, DL gh sehoo annowsens hat the Chilatuan tre fran a desided suet. Quite «nun Tir tmsothore tah the eae ene tes Ht, J. Polk, President; Mra. 1. A. Eoaner, vice Prendent Mex Gear Brows, Chaplin; Mrn 8. M Brown, eq and, Teporter: Mra.’ Watkina ‘Aunt. Bey! Are MJ. Cook, ‘Treas fret: Ars, Goosby, oral ‘Treanary Mis, 0, G. Love and Mrs. I J Polk Art Directresses. "The hostess, as is her cuatom served an apetising ment. inWe adjourned to meet with Mra Polk, $408 Munger avenue, Jun, 18 Met 8. M, Brown, Rept. ART CLUB ENTEIVEAINS MEM. ‘hiens ROVALLY. Ladies of the Royal Att club were entertained Christina morning with R''Christmas tree and. German at the well appotnted. home of. Mre Johnnie Holland, 2928 ‘Thonas ave: fue. The giest® arrived early and the spirit of Christmas wan much in tridenee, both nthe spacious. iv" tog and ing rooms. Nusie and o- treshments wore in plenty. Bach fucet wan prevented a et, After thin "was! masle again and the teimosing LAPY MARY ART AND CULTURE cE This club met Jan, 6, at the home of Lady Pinkie Clark,’ State. stroct. Lady of the Seoptre filled her chal Alarge number of ladies were pres: ent. Meeting. opened in usual. form, Lady. Geneva’ Bills was aprotated Ss Instructor. We are’ studying & teny 000 book or art and culture Anil AI aro "very” much pleased. as having such a competent instructor. Telng’ preased for time. the needle work was omitted, our next place OC meeting will beheld at Lady Te Adkins, Jan. 18, 2820 Thomas avo. forner “Allen. Wo werd. ser‘od by tie hostess io “blmento. sandwiches tied With the club colors, fruit aalad on lettiee, paltines, tea and cake "The chib entertained Tuesday night, Jan. 4th atthe Community House, the feature of the occasion wana musleal and. gingham” art reas revue. Te was quite miceoes, Among ome of the distinguished unt preuent were Prot, Carr, Mis 5H. Waller ‘and others. Mrs, A ‘Amos won ist ‘prize on the ‘eaten Randatiteh Om drem. Mra. Me. Jet= fervon won. 2nd prise. We kindly thank all-wno. assisted us tq every way to make this affalr a. hucoea| Tidy C. Gaston, Lady of the Seeptre Lady C. Thawley, Lady Reprter, ses: a dh Fade the Pe nx CaF EWR ‘The Oak Cliff branch of the Y. MG. A, met last Wednesday night and organized. Seventy-nine” mem- bere were enrolod. TLecluren were roade by :a num: ver of old eltizens of Oak Cittt. The vote tople of the evening and. the Hlogan was: "Saving the young men tnd boys of Onke Clift” and making them better eltlzens. "The meeting was largely attended and. as held at Crabtree’s halon Batt Tenth treet. TW. Weatherall, President, ‘A. &, Bonwell, Secretary. BUSY BEE CLUB, | ‘This club held Its regular moet- ing ‘Tuenday at. A p.m. Meeting opened. with nual song and prayer. Bach momber responded to roll eal with Bible auotation, “We had one to. join in “our last” meeting with following. officers: Mex.” Virgiaia Key, Supervisor; Misa Myrlle. Den- his,’ Prowident; May Vivian Gard- ner, View President; Miss Aretta Haines, See: Mas Latiam Spark, tat, See'y: ‘Mine Abdry Boswell, treasurer Mise Inex. AMfitehell, Chaplin: Mis Titiian Gar@ner, Deperters the Parent-Teschers olth, Mra. BA- Wa Hong presen ain BG Se tetnat el ont se fer seuy aoe oe Sat la: futsal Bula te ts aoe Ft San Bo thle a Se ea tan See er eee si tte a Sa Br gear moots ch Nas Fat an Oye ial e sage ates Yee Hart ta hate on Soa ceiee ae oa es ens eo eee hee mei, aia “i es orient vet a Bi cSee tassel ins eee Brcaattna hia Se sn ete iar cin aaa Sap pe he Sis thoes ot su fetes oh pee Sah svi eng” oe au fet Lact tered Si a ovo onto iy th» re, Mr, db, 1, Allen for 18. yean PS ingiceiba ot Sean Tut "fostay for" Dala wher Jt antes rf madi wintteace aon See | GabvertPriday evening at th Perinat: inte oes ae oo staircases a a PRS et ate Eiare ere ta Hammond, treasurer; Mra, Jessi seep: ere tao Neder tee oie Se eosoe we tite es Spat ttt “he wate Se ace sae as Stace al aaa be ie pect oan "Sati Betset: Si tniemoaet & Cenc beeen Ne ies 1 tlt Fehone and © P. Anderson of’ Wace at Sar ts hoe ls 2 Rate tater toe Haas ape Be ce EF inte feat er ‘nee Haha pene” ra esbiues szpeke, Seial ean ‘THE DALLAS BXPRESS, DALLAS, TEXAS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 12, 1088. KNOWLEDGE 1S POWER! THE DALLAS EXPRESS WRITE 2600 SWISS: AVENUE and Mra Let Alexander are back from "Beachley. Meme Whithild cr Hous tomding fev wake fs learn Socal and Art club wotnengy_attrnons tha cs ad sate chord” Vetere Ss. Bo win oman Joharen and Mis Br wel ivenae A ther, bases Shin: wes sid alter “when Os Sven Wea gion Co sola lass toa de vstoes weet ‘Mesdames Vs ik "iating and uc We tackidg, the hortenes sr te the felony delins Tanehecs Retee” crear tat eregee eee Derry sy, sream_ pe in’ potato Rede, Str anh whit cake tna etn shart fu tarers each lady recived» ext send palteg tg’ boring SS ven sone aud ike soon ecoiiug te euke_wie’ Galt rik Sit coloce'a'thell hand palate i fell Se. ostemen ware thd fy ioe Alexander, "ate Phuc re‘iiourned fo eet Thc 'hiom Wigs mee Tom Perea Stents wih bags a fr Wing tae haan Si Phos, ent. Cieberne—the Sida end An cn enteraiged_Tatrday ater Soon, Bre Hh wi is-tgond an that’ howe patg at ihe heme Kieu Bewa 3schasom and ita ce Bri he ham 10808. 4m teat The tie hoe proved teen of beau, a evinaon and frees whemewet_the. cera erved, ngs the. Crista tet. The woes ere rected {he oor ty hi 2G, Mati an Mrs, Eddie Givens, Muile aud games free the diversion ot the evening Tn th torent gamer which were Paved the‘ Nigh are grace wor on ty ‘Maatanes Cit ath, ax Bout, Wile Sanda oni te Phin, Mie" Pa Prose ber ei Mra 3 ttoutone tthe ono sows The flowing tle stort ere artes Tune sind om lta Teast arsoon Make rent tat olotalpanth fat re watnet beset ite wis inner inte tng. ed wih th ab "clo" luet and ld Te Romo gusta wae: Mondsies Rel Bandas a" woimty ter oti River aig Ron lth Pe fWetcon “er Asien," ote. wii Bethy a trmee some” of un He, eton of tai, Ron ulfoni nt Dallas Vote heen Billie Vernon, Misses B. Hortense uot ideale © Grande iat te Ls Ouver an gote MW Mat otk od trandview. Corina At the home of re aR" traion, Wolneeay, Dee Bi at 4p. m. the Fluer-de-Lis club en- tertained afew of the aged of the city’ with Christman surprise, red fnd green was the color scheme and was earried out with paper, holes tad other appropriate Xmas’ decors: tons; a familiar hymn was chanted as wre several sucred gonga, Work ‘wan suspended and all'Induiged. in oocial chat for thisty minutes after which the Christnar” ple was. open- SH and ‘ouch guest ecetved useful titer from tho «lub. The club nerved {detectable salad and lee course. fr, Richard Willams wan arrest ed and. teantorres 19. the. Federal oticers at Dallas, Mra. Nancy Black- Well, who has been I for some Une ied’ early Sunday: moraing, the 7th et, ‘The. wile of Mr. John Davis ‘died on the 21st last and ‘was bu- ied on the 4th, Mra. Laura Walker, mote ot tr la ne Moseley ‘ied on the 2nd and was buried tn the 4th. Robert ills Nar. von. who liv atdent of Meharry Medleat Col Togo nt Naabvile, attended the fun feral of hla mother. Me. B. Lillard, feeneral State agent of the. National Cite Assoclation of U, A. ts tr the ety tooking “over 0 Buntness Jot the. company. Rev. 7. 0. Bledsoe State tend of the ¥. BU. was in the eity Sunday visting ro Union The tons expected’ Gusher near” the farm of Mr. Green. Spetugtield_ hss been brought In and Mearly aM Cor- ‘loans went ovt to nee it today, ‘Among the ehurchet~-the atteuldanes ‘was "good. Pastor Walker spoke Briefly of “hin prosram for the. year ‘and. kaked” the cooperation ‘of the fieahers. Rev. Peak ‘with “roiled Hoven "and ‘ron inte Rroened the Joy aut of dancers and challeng- ‘Governor, Hie Is ow suring Mie ‘dancer to. ait nthe eholr nnd sing ‘the sacred hysne Of Zion. "Kev. {C. Diese war with the Pleat church 'Sonday night of which Rev. A. I. Moore ta: Pastor, artlete—aort everyone enjoyed ‘a very pleasant Christmas, servic lat the A. M. 1. chareh, preaching Iby Rev, R. W. Jones, Christman leree Monday nist. Tuesday night lemon social, Fuir was given Wed- inesday night. Prizes were given on ittorent hinds of work. Mex. Jane ‘Roya received tho frat prize on the patch beet design, Mrs. Martha Mayen, cond prite. Mex, Brown, firet prise on quilt and Mra, A, J Jones, second prize, Servleos well at fended at the A. Mf. 8, ehureh:, Sun. fing: nchool, 9:43 mi. At 11. im. preaching by Bider J. V. B, Oo- Thea, night services: watch moet Ing. A splendid quarterly conference eld Monday night, all olaasea and Ausiiesies “reported, total amount faeed $37.43, Mra. A. Williams and danghter are back from their visit to Ditto, Mra, F. 1a darmon, teacher AC Granger vialted bar brother. Prot, & E, Cooper and wite, Mr. Joo Gra Nam and Mire. Muy Granderon mo- toreg. to South, Texas, during the holidays, Mr. and Mew, Fred Price motored. from Itasca here to. visit Mra Mary Scott, Mr, and Mra. Gatomage motored to’ Austin during ‘ine holidays, Tov, Dee Taker, pase or of the M. 1 Chureh ie back, | West—-Rev, A, Ts White proached both morning aad evening sermons At Bold: Springs Baptit ehureh. Mr. Doykine and. his mother. Mrs Tohnson Gf Waco wore here In. the interont_ of ‘his undertaking" bust- esa Mra Hicks of Italy svent two weeks with Mra, Rost, and returned ome, Saturday. Bro, ‘Charles. John- ton, our’ now Superintendent han Drovet to be the Fight man In hie Dineen ales. ©, Andetson spent Christ fas in Dallas and ie at home again, | ervis—Rev, Miller was at. hia feuren Sunday. Mr Nathan Tesby tnd one were called to Dallas. to ‘attend the funeral of Mo daughter, Mrs, Ruby Risby Johnsons she. ya faery ith, an? was loved by fall. The family. haw the rympatby fof the community tn the'r regent ‘bereavement. Fonnls—datllee Sunday Scho! ad xood attendance Sunday, Watch meeting Sunday night largely attend ied. Mra Magri Sanders and Sis tors are. Kellle have returned hom. Mfrs, Nora Burks has returned home from a vinit to Hearne. ara. Hattie ‘Odom is back trom Oklahoma, Mra DM. Clmey of Chleago ts visiting Ther melo and) aunt. Alls Myrtle ‘Boliins has returned from F', Worth ‘The ‘frat Quarterly. conserence. of Wayman Chapel A 3. 8. ehureh Told ite first quarter with Tey. A. H. Stark, PB. AC TE a.m. tho P. R preached: all. reports. were food. eve W. D.. Daker” has” the haven well organised; amount rate fed during the quarter $61.00. Rewtland—All churches were a tended Sunday; 3 o'lock, Tey. 1. Comelian preached at the'A. M. B. ‘chureh! Rev. Le Keo! preached at the Jeukinw Chapel. MR. and Mex, |W. 6. Pit gave a foncheon in hon- ‘OF of ev. W. MH, Warmly of Tang: fer; the” guest. Ioeluded,. Mr, “and Min. W. A. Love, Mr, and Nef. San- ford Taylos, Mt.'and Afra J. Moore Mra, Lida "has gone to. aka Chartes, La, due to the Miness of ‘her ainer, ru 8. ‘Brown hag re- ‘tured from EI Paso, €3.60.” was False: by Miro, Geo. Given at the huren Sungey. Me. Sam ‘Brown ts ‘meeting with suecean a orgasieing 1B hand laundry; ho ts soliciting paMlavedlbarsaze-peiiep gy 3 Cnt ote oe Athens—Servicet at the various Recngonnter arr wor oko at 3 math arth Ree os Path tnd pls Sn ah to avr te wre ett orm mare rvs Bons shh ned Bai soe “b se bat wo tc fia ett sce vi he era Sia aed cient y he eat a i Ss oa mu Bap sami Ms air tr oto 1 wet ro i ay ta oa, a ae fee eit aon A Ae Sat tt Mh le SE, aap le ate Wks, “a trae ets Tec iy alts atta fading Sly tw IS eatvtn ree 1 Tat ee Se ka Se SR a Peseta wee Isso sts Ere sade hs Sine isa att A Sade iameaas erred Sacco att Rae tft Mc fay. ate, 2°, Richard" Sf ee Baie hen fate de "a Sate et a ene Sera ea 2 See vars Sa musta Lawton, Okla—Rev. and Mrs. W. ©. Watts ‘and Stev. and Mrs. Owens tnd Mra. C. W. Woody were the guott of Mr. and Mea, Kenerson for: din- her Sunday. Sunday ‘School and B, ¥.P. U. wer well-attended ut the Dathlehem Baptist ehureh. ‘The pad tor, Mev. Owen was at his poot, and Drewched morning and night Sunday fehoo! was good at the A. MH chureh; "ev. Watts preached. morn: Ing and night, Dixie. leaning. and Dressing ‘ean'vat, eloved Dee. 14, 1922. Mr. Thornton Green ‘won the feat prise, a pale” of pants: Mea B.'Focter, 2nd’ prise. and. Ara, B. Fierbert. the. third prize, Sunday School and BY. P. 0. were wall Attended. st the” Callie Baptvt Chureh ev. B.D, Parker ax Re Owes motored to Aus, Me Lang: worth "Allen ‘of Denver, ‘Golds. fa Visiting hin brother. A plate. paety ‘was riven by” the Hof P. atthe seudtace of Meru, methaa ‘waneiean HURCHES. agate". ser, ont AF UME, santa M tive The aston, Mer Saal Supt, Hampton were at thelr pod of duti-, Sunday schook 80, ‘At 1 o'dlock, nantor Soult, pried | sorte’ smn, tek th Great Model Acty 16-38. ‘rence the past wl hl mae gation met with Rev, Caste amie Sonareeation © glorious “tie wae Swtnenet at 5:40) the Be Xe BoD ‘pened wu 8 hrge uma tore’ promat. At 2740 pasa tame forward wus tesa Sermon bie tiasnge {tow who’ Over Comet ‘hhreh. Pastor ‘Seely nd faa fave moved to th sty, Ibe woe fv’ will soon be tanked, AN ae ied wo “atemd eres. the shuren, ‘oraer Oven snd: Kate ier Wie Rute, Pastors Stor LA. Davis, Reporter nveNiNG RAPED @ Mm mower. Doard No.2 iit at the Momo ot Mrn"Solie. Cartan Bast" Gram venue, "Thursday evening Jan. % s"tovely mocking won held, gta few persone preety” ACE row {ine ‘of busta had ‘ees fnihed nr soncon nerved 2 dacous meee cansiniog of panent sandwiches forte. sxndwiche mith tues ama sad ‘arseng, Diack: eatten brie Prensa ck, met, meeting (0 cia a aie Uc A, Oarpente, Jan ce ¥, Cratnfil fe. Ate. Sones Mest. ire & tale Reporter noe, maaan Ra Mi Hebron: Bante) Shane ee cor ica a8 Hoan wither et ohms the BYP. «tery infesting programm was ame forat, at 71. t pengermocting Conte. ty Sanne Hood and 8 amy purge took hie tent fom Bont RAIL YARD TO COST MILLIONS, Freight Terminale fe Balt wt Once ‘Lon Anges Wal Gaver "eo" heree. : Acton coosrastion ih atte etter Salat ete tone we rae be a Fermumfe toe, began Bt te Trontvay yanin by the Bourn Dae ‘Se haley compeng ats cot oe er aiions oe ster Fan one trent wa tne remy by. HL WH Tim” aso renera mpsager ot the coms acoraing fo tha Hs ‘ngien iio : “Toe completed pd wit be oi be the toa extenne compres freaht teria theme. | sti'incace mei. for. atom | Toa receteng arenas Sey pt tach sick resting ory ee | Rae power howe Uti ton for the yar tea Sata Foe omen tava ineka etmek ‘tater takes amino toa “the "conmurtion of thie”‘Migd teoiht ormina nL Angsen bo frnetiel recogiien othe tendons trowth of they and.potownog {nm and the refer ert romect" aa Mr, Wn Tate, n nm Sear, ove rand comary ‘spat’ mere tan, $0009 for'teterae: ant upptes In hap ‘Ancien, Ti noma pay Pl a iomtely 6000 7s epee tett oath New: Toum caen rene. SSeS ee ote forvign cy, With connderanhy tore man hat ot In popaaion fot Stowers” at of forelgn parent See ant wh tilly leo Min rendenthJewth, fe iy ft ae Curing toy bath etter Oat fre dieinety not Asneican, ough ial te artim eon of moh tien tn the ets opinatmatle forty toword Americaieae. aro be tag made ‘The pital soley at worm te tals end in eed "Ameri Saklng® tte hese hy Dr tohm, Moston Frntey, trmety pre ient ot OF Tone thd ely own 1b caflona Gree ALA carnival" ecely fnve a the Hotel Artor the omer ov ning there were gro. of er fat antomain, Im native drome fi al or tne were New eres, Wn Own sDoubiat” Few movery eaten are the shy fect at mo inn geod Moe. nm Me Gremencen, we eehtoat. dew fn'one of the Tater i The GOW auf ho Som hp street hurts of uo tata peng fovowing. ea bait hinge fer"hioe’t,"Aaking of frou tobe of the salle the pee Ses righ 9h tl 0 oe “They ane to dea” he petennd “a wit ive yeu ity Tha toh Toked at hm amine pethapn to nee It won wrth Whit gating, eo hen ad? ‘Fer wl You shall have thom fr sy, Deore yi a, you ‘eset our grad Meweneae > ‘aia ule aoc eee } The cmutionsty | SCOR SEE amerely Tend oan impractical ape tiveace. "The "wore of oueton Sebi cogtnany ewer shrug eke Glove inert we ocala 8 Sort Stay looding ver Jodgment sn ny {eccivi the Inf comets sei ror aa “ha angns an” ‘an the “proverh terely Hutt ie “renal ang aalene? Se winger 0 Vth the othe: iioon "ao site tea tee ra in Silda bors ot spe Timea thetic” peace the fcoatly ‘emcent the wigeemtinary, “Sit Avuaton truce" Oe Cong! Dalty News ‘TMX DALIAN EXPRESS” fon, Conran : ecto ‘hed Bedigetee tie SS eee 2 OS mont Oe ol an, i sy FP a eee “a. Cee co. =e Aecre LvMcaiga EDITORIALS. “,@ontiiea From Page any aie om foe Gems Heanor epirious, conatetot, 8 ae _senncy Tene jnemedy EW the Staten, ha ther do not hte Sd moot thet ‘ying era ob ie Fount hae po wt tly” atom ‘mo ay Soir acta ws ty pnts ‘Ny the Cotndlishinent of « ronarchy Teta "ekuterer tayo i name «essen Olt Aa (nie esaulin on ie Dyer ‘aabtsneting Bil the South ‘SSinate of oer, paeod tat fie fouts ta sto cope wit th SSP erie ee out tan pet [2 Clinane one tt me te Ean soterrnnety to tho tsk Sowa tuck ths obi coed spt ant shoe ina tio ssh is equa” to ths, wanton Beeentt ope that ¥iianteen wi mis catecire i autetng ‘oe Seaciment ot b federal ntltroesing fer ors oy eo at, t Selon and that ar AETESS date ti Snr tana etc partion by" Sontbor oon Faille tie tempat GiaREn Fie Pe RGA RAPT. DOCTOR. ‘Tw White Mem Changed With Loot a Vr teers ee idee nt van tinea hore Lato Wed TPoaday" evening Sen." bby" As fiat Goat Airs ohn eda W. Raw, Hrcat tiaieen sad drug sore own fe whe wan srraied Calowing 8 Bost the Reg ut, es ag ga which wore Ti “remtauran GGG Patten "rior and freunded: four ether ottoer, ‘Ghatass of re. dortee, bia ‘were alse tea sgunat hey. Vi form and ‘Oharlo Heuer two. white Faas “Sih ge? ore fase abrtig iho Shosiue at aa petal aisge Sic ign cholera were arrtod wit Widener and Pinger, wory folaond menage na Pitncaee ste he toys tated ant Meckor ‘and. Finger owed ae Special eticers fathom aa got tem 2'beap search the Towra ronnscon Ga, Barro, das '33- 2 Ociinasor Ye icuteota staan itm ottcals "ery duces pant three "tonthe Cook piace hen Dr. hiewhy Tevace of Taw schoo! "hore was shot dead yan Keyatinn patriot whale ciding “eicrde through’ the atta fet the shooting was a political fom, 208m, Ray ¥ eowine ae a ‘Wee Haven, Conn. Janu, t1—at eer as nade a ee ee ete eee era i ig ae ee ere Renesas ae eee earns pee os pare iewere: 2 pee Paes fea ree praise Sic ently eh feat tee eos Eee a Seta et ate pace, a Rares bene Filan Rage fbn eon Breer a he kee Pipes teen a eae Sa ate eos RETR pearance renee snee siren by jublicslons to the cow. Tia ya ae Sera ere et fin eee Pa ee te ri cen Weak peso emesis Gees Remit toe PES Famer mi at Pattee Seta es Lee ers Bee eee on Popa Senna aes ae Be abd ty ah ARRAN Sort Son eS oot oe SP geticn sttations Jur, pom GIVEN HY DAsCING ¥ WAMMOT SNC Pec hans "Whiie Becvio. ) ( Kingdieher, Okie, Jun, 11—Tho Peston sistas tor score Fei oe Bree St ESS tae peach tae ce jacenti tuna aoe ‘cha itabte Beer ae seer Sanat = decker ti ita Gal ee gad el daa Mea gee iyhenns Por women's arte alti, cnay'e nt te aie te ts ial, bteg Bo neta tho. tala Raesifehassisbe petrowes. phe year ws eh ent dor iis wane “Naline tie. DH. WILEY BM. WILSON ANSWERS Wiis SOIT BY ASKING FOR $itwo00 PROMISKD COLLATER- An Clie Me Mareled Mrs. Tova Wilson,” Daughter of die Tate Madame G. d- Walker, Wick the Understandigg’ ‘Tint She Would ire Tilm ‘Pup Houses and Cosh ‘on enepote lees. ti unin “Wm point she ay. farce Saiees os fei a oe Rite cs ate ee Pesta ait Rratrandt w oe eto i diate aa Sh i at ent Sere ate a atte erctet oan ce ae Saohetee Ce ee ere a ae Gee aetna te a eval a ene Sch aera aces Toner cst ores oe | Re eect Renae corks foe Se rags > rh ee rae Son es ian eke ers pace en ERS ees ce fe eee ateerateres i Pier ear ar eres ee art Mie anne. etm anger Oo eae aaa ie en cise oe eueeeucten rae ee woe as akg Rearace srs eee te Se peace coms S Rose ae ies oe Be eae on peers cen ne a Sst sacre ac Spr an ae Bnet pees ears "een See Rene en eee eee TS or om ahem Pete ce Ree rekce eee him the $10,000 he aiionen ah an eae Wats" Orphanage. Named fo "her, Peton Sold to Have Deen Signed ig Large Sumber" Colorsd Soho Cues ‘Chattanooga, Tenn, Jan 11, tormigahiepeiion,aatd to contain the 'namea'ot ome 1,600" Goloed hoot etilares, has cen prepared, alg aon the reper, whore fo mate tho_ new Nopro orphanare is booar of Mattie R Juckron, who aid tant September aftr 4 carver ee"about shiny rare in We pul scno" of thie ‘iy, alo. neh fina She vas’ congioted ‘with te i seo department on” account et hee nbnantsaualifeaions er tervise tr’ the Colored. ehilaren a th ey, her art In raleng te ov rate finds’ whieh were "Added Ropropratony from sity and ous for porchare of the Dlacktord etree propery eden willbe Theor tioage’ are atered ‘hs ‘eason Pek thw inntltalton mould bat he ‘The ordnance introduced in th cotton providing ora ral af the. new orphanage eoatnine a action to tho eter tha tthe Iattotion shall ln trmtees Those oficial ts be from the Colored rac, thre eleced by the sity andthe a at only wit Ce ile wes St tayo Shamus nd dates" Go fare acted that an oftca! boar ‘be comllatedprompy an rope ataed ower to Chom Torna eur Soy em fn ar selection nha ie hy com tied hy Mayor Chamba ‘h Gat thy more ft bare tae orton ain Hort daceaned rather rian |i, Hira” Him schoo ‘ant z ‘were ilboraly a0 ene SEG ana olber 00 fo rors ensra. } ee Sek. WORKERS PARTY PLEDGE SUP- PORE To" Necno’ Wonka Wi apport Mace brite Strate £0 beet cnt Sock to Opa oor cae Now Yorks eal 14-— (Ornate Berne) tha Wontes_ Sure Rect aretha ber 24, 26 ana 26, adorted » pro- ae br teen ar tees pee mo: cing the Rents coer aster taeeh oy ale Mine Wohat sy tne ao Wil Seip ie Moos i Hebitinagete sesatose ast it wae me nee hee ene, cle ta ey wi ea teins” {an otetes vot elt fettminations, ineluding those par Sidr Bobo aust. ete sates ot oer ue svek saan, hs Pee at oc fcr the “aitalorniy" of the “ne ira! ute yt worker etry nwa fortes pea eerctaane” ‘Sy a th cor en dcr onreyne toe eae ta ft "Cote area Rodis aeett Lewpouiie thw Negro struggie to: SATURDAY, JANUAR 38 meee tociaeat reas et te : es seer rai eet Sat ie micas Be| ten eee eee penne Sel ees ant sibs Son Monster ke eet ee nee ees Ten meee SS a eed capes of every county le hee wen he anit wit spare 4, 3 Pola is ‘ LIE geht ge eae Pahpie 4 R RT cele Sin"Wckers Pry deste, [lan Ye ante” Envi | a ee ee ee sn wae ci eigen nape al eainat American’ eapltaliam, the the polite arrived “and took both ‘Winn SR my i a) Sook apiinlg weg os oe Beer cecen so ee mw = paki iam Famroeacs rina sig fr tn dtnonaty 28580 HACE ERED FUEL) vanpon ete ig a fea ee ci at gene rhe Mice nena TEA tne Apps tor Mat Ue |" 8? Seattle] ian Soe md Peis Gamieed ot el ie hae SR) ar Soll range a Bee ee a ere Steet ate ea Ming the capitalists be dletaiorJand "6 dinuanion of "ihe provtems| “Nan Maki ese ghd A aa yp eae ee rs os nee ee ne eames %, etn ee aa arr cate meee meen che tee ee NeseN"cal cats Scat ints "stacs "Dassen. ste | Sane Perea ree arcane blige ment of the 20,000,000 workers ot] ‘Dr. Moton dectared that the Ne-!Committee, se ant cha ares lieu es See sas weed ceaaeer) Pet ant otc ee eae nate set eee ae ee Sever an ames cr ae |e ir tenes mete fen cement Sosa eee tee eae te nas a cele Bees meme ts Vania scent care elma Se atin collective eawerehip.”” —” |that-'ye do. not condone crime in| munity, Ho etter faay. form and’ that we. do not tike| ee fr tht Auer ans meiwasba: Ieee net eee . be pc Rage A ree Wienke Foor [fed he, eri [et eae Colored Man. eee Se Teen at he preteen ee sbliahed December 14, in the Los ublahed Devember 14, tm the Los ttc a Ps Sai Suara Re rae Seen to st ant Sud cour Soe Se Fraok’s father wan a New ag te ae cn a "ate eas erator ee ee ee ee ne ete aera Uy Baar a [Seated ae [servant tee i Vest er ate cebu art |S teanare aM Ieee or nr Si igs aa a [ese ices pa et ae [Steno a es aha een eh A. haar fesse a Tete aia fact cata a Pte cat |ScPeadStaateat a A |S el Sa [eta Sa [ate ear ae a eta ans Pa lis cai a, a |S of a ua Hae “thc” dt polities! world. ‘The ‘auperiority” leas ate Pe | ve inherent or it doen not exist, ‘The dette at $i arse ult ent |e ett |e a lc et ] Sia Moet St | ait hate sate with Walte people. *| Liem Hill, the “Mammy” im th ‘Jease, never weakened at any stag |e tn a ahi {]She developed a much fimer charac ter, to our way of thinking, an | etd ee fe tt Paes" Se Se ac Sls a cst rant a *lof bia mother and eared for hin fg mn, ee ie *lanme care and attontion that wh Se create licen "a ate Sa tlin her, sho Kept te secret of “hi d}mother’s misfortune. for 44 year {Jand. too, although no doubt poor tt Albis world’s goods Curing that en is Eat ih ea es ion Sr Ba rite ite cee | a eh octet ore a eaten ag ca el "Vea feet Pa ee tally wt se ro et Sieattiata star it Faanous other pevie [tt hr Sec ae one ef | ENE Set go Ratt Seat at td ns sic veka ea a eM sli daca pans Fa" ae tS ocean ‘are cls ITE or Bae RAZOR WIELDER SHC DEAD. | New York, Sag. 11) —(Crunader Service) Moort Shielda, ¥8, died to Harlow Mnezitn: Yesterday attornoan After he Wad been uhot in the mouth ‘Willa Bentley, 44, ‘a. reatan ant Keeper, who. was thikou to the Toapltal "for “treatment. for‘ yasor ‘pone lites tn. bie fase by i ettiy pled mi-tnee. aitezantte cotanetc cit Basin rhe gis det ares ant Ba area Sates Se Berea SSS Cee reer nc Tan na ame acne resend, ct a Sa tata ie Bie oh itch BANISH RACK PREJUDICE, PLEA ‘OW TUSKEGEE HEAD. i seta me a | dermanding Between Whites and 2 jgeess bm me Sh tetas ion taster Se Paces Sebati Siete to a eatin os. tears Pk Ae te arte alata Se ieee aera tae co pr. Moton daca that, he fers Sa te tet Se celta eae hsnaetectaer eat wa conti Sees cans a Se Seta oe escrow aes tees tot este ee heck a ta gate chr a ree ce ah ro rine tetas me Bere erent See anette a Sa eine “nea th hea a enh eee eerie ores et Be Scr aa eres Se ea 8 honteta facet, a rill MEMORIAL TO NEGRO TROOPS URGE MX COLORED CITIZENS, Washington, D. C., Jan. 11.—Col- ore eltizeas 9¢ Ohio ate not In fav- or of the bill recently tateodueed tn congrem. by Senator John Sharp Walliams of Mlsrssippl to rect onument. in Washington to. tbe “raithfal Colored. mammiey” ot the ivi war. "A shen? of letters received at tho orfies of the Ohio ‘ronators” from individual Negroes and” Negro. so: floties throughout the state attest this, ‘Those protesting tho Willams bill say that If any monuments are going to" be. erected to. faithful Colored otk "in. Washington they should Jcommeorate the ‘Colored soldiers ie fought in France. during, the "the faith of thone men was tn hole Ideala” and in” thelr" country and they eeguttted themeetven nobly Jon. every” battle. fled" sxys one communication. "ta ‘not that more worthy of a memorial ‘than the Hare sonal foyalty which the Wil isis "mouument would” commen: oratet™ NBGRO TAD IS INDICTED FON MURDER. William P. Battle Bald to Have Con. essed to Strangling White Wom: cas ee Deo Se Es Set ee serve) Wiliam Date, 18 Fearn oi a ald bythe bles to Rave conieoed yowtrdny tha he Dd astuaied aud murdered Are Uae Brehas hie, i her None ox Wedvenay”ftoravon, December 31, ‘Mra ‘Drcham wan choked, to death wih «Jumping ron, a Cas. Tanai from her’ to eae of he the imal eiiren ‘aiden wo liver with hla miner ai G00 hadion Soret, waa tnaleted tac tho erime within $0 ‘nour ater tho ie svery of the, death body ot Mis “ella "pat" non Sectng with an alleged Neer mate rer Jersey duties ha apparent Ip rrang” showy ater” midnaht Wednaday ta Tout ot informa to fumithed 3y Vienne, been-year ela daughter of the dead woman. Virginia elaima Battles came aco ‘hr rom ata Wednendey at fermodn” apd” tld ber mother” bad eae, out for oat of read, Sur fated” Yo ‘th "ortat “tr eeree sion cont ual ange nar Fest ‘Daitoe alleged. 0 have Sroea down and ‘confewed othe [murder of Mra, Drigham, but dened fe atack ten het, whieh eda rumination" esablaned, "ecored ster dot 6 S, Mownis. an. SPRAKS AT ‘ncssuanis"ieierrUr (Penton ows Serve) ‘Tunkase, Ain, Jan. 11-—Chasio sate orsa fe, popeary known te ey Ora deere ant ara afore ae at ee haamand yorons tet, ae rity newt Youug Mori buliveot octal Wa. He gla for nieeacl unr analy [rou toauent ded at ana nas |e ACh cog of ia ara fice We Makow, Pastor” |wnle We"schure, eared Ch [foun Mora ‘isthe oat tase Convincing weaker to whew |i ever been ty Be lege to. Pemee ores perce, eee: “at hima orn ier) san te eee ee roe ee owen eae ae mee se et eee ish dogo, isa Nour Bey, tn eee Sy oe ee Pg Perea pe sh Tader. “Tver rt always caus ae een Race ci te jin soalters which aro pecuifarly. ure Hee te a a ty at oo ey age ie @ good ruligton/? 200 NEGROMS OF HAMPTON AS- / SEMILE TO MONOH ABRANAM | TANOOLN. Sie Spent at Hampton tnstieate on ee | ‘Winning New Freedom. So itRe ate i aur We ay Altar ep casei nor ri: Par ot Camanty Br ease caters oracen tees een tae Setar ean ere ar eee ere aarel Seer are eee cee as eee enn ee een tos eres Periiegeeier eget evn phe eke aia een ee os rea (Committee, of which Dr. J. T. Lat eee oe ere a ere eee ae ot een as ee eerste “ay yee [pte get Speer er naets eterna a Secor are eens Reinert eee Peer at pee cineets mane feeble Syoetnye fees eee ceo fares eee anes ere ce cag ieeeene ene po aaa pore became fees cere cr Reamer Sac preerer mot S ere ee fee eyes pte y seal es meerete mes arene ones ieee coer pence ere ater aciics bce cheer Sa ence ete ek eee eee eres ee eee ae oor it eee cea eis ees eee ek eee foe eee fees aces woe aes oes, er tee we cele gcdeny ym i tastane ets (a ete oe Hato cece cee renee ee aaa a che [Sg aoa ly ee ne hee ce mn ene cre eee ie eee ee pee feat (eg egg Pes ence ieee were 2 Nee mate re a oe ee eee en leg au ar Seine ay tae jai iat as aceon es ee oaeeten een oes hae er cwere ts Heats ve pe rane tenet ieee laareetets,e Hee eee ci os a eee ee ce fie tee eae ea eeerrans es poems ec roa oa eet eae ree ae sete Gott or are care aan igre a ee Heres caricea fae Nero aeet "uur "marnon or" scar Mas See Sg “tel Bees. ened a aoa. ee i ne bd ‘er a Se ‘eed ‘ ri a) ‘a Ye ee (eae pecan, Sie as pt oe facet eet le aeeay res ove arco Besa tia eed oni aban a A ease | ae f yea Pitas . Constant Carg-—Not Lvok Sea ee tcnak neo Human history and soeees: have taught us thet ‘many f~tons believe that a head of naturally long ee Ulcttar hain, a healthy welp and « Jorely ‘smooth complexion come from luck, but they do ‘not. Constant care and the frequent use of Preparaijons of proven merit are the secrets, Use Madam C. J. Walker's Vegetable Shampoo . Glossine fe oops on meen tes hair and scalp. curly hair. Wonderful Hair Grower [Noutshosandwimuldesthe trom of wor ielew bale, Tetter Salve For Tetter, Eczema and Itching Scalps. Reet repent Siatecign Son a cth cscaaacer esses AEN aia ae SE Pia testnay"Coapen tong Washed Oe Mellncased ik bala checiowy ceca eee ee Free Booklet-—Write To-day The Madam C.J. Walker Mfg. Co., Inc. 640 N. West St, Indianapolis, Ind. TH, DALLAS EXPRESS a ae ena youn EVERY MAN WHO HAS LOST THE VITAL YOUTH MAY BE RESTORED. Scientist Makes Wonderful Discovery. Says | 100 Years Should Fee! Old YOUTH MAY BE RESTORED. 100 Years Should Feel Old. ‘A new @iscovery ts sald to haveloaretal research, have such great twon mado by a eletiic study of|faith in itr resirative power that Sertian mountain people, who sclea-|they hare arranged to” make tt tne ay lve longer than aay other|avtiale. to all ‘Toe treatneat ts People. Tt fn eld hla dlacovery|put. up in tablets Knows a8 Vin- should edd. many yearn to live of|Big and ls aula to produce almost people tm all parts ofthe world ad |immadiate remit, fret Indleations quickly restore manly strength, being Improved appetite, nerves YouIhfal vigor grace and) beauty tqnog up, restful slp and retora lat By, neeect or abuas, Scena cr youthful vigor. The rerlla ob +e? et‘ the icin glands and|taloed by scientific teats were 90 it*theoerlandn a> nirGlated and! wonderful the Atlan -Laboraorin oot in norsal aivty, nan might Sate arranged fr oreeyone tates lve forever and ments toch as edn Tons ite, youth visor and trea worn out. feeling, weaknees, ealth to teste without the alght hervour debit, allow ‘eomplenion, eat Fisk All you need. do. in_send Ioan of welght' poor memory, pre-|rour nuine and address (Ro money) tature seats, scrawny Beok. fee (o Atlan Laboratory, Departament Teemets ut aight, paint, headaches. Lawia, Maourt) and they” wi Maeno, depose, ots ola wna Mal ge, oe of Vi mea rll under ‘pain: wrapper, he litesty erountre,by tal nrra pay. pnian ony 400 an medial world fa: been to tad, the| postage it you arw’ ‘ot Righ ent Invigorator ortho snndn, Thin pleased (mobo. week, ast noty Bow gistvoryinsimple, perteeUy the laboratory and your mouey” wil armiee Inexpensive and ean’ be( be" promply rotund ia full” ABy Haken in tho privacy of the nome! one’should fel free to accopt_ {his Ht was browent to too tenon et taal ofr an tho ace fully gua aa hae ocean eae wits aetna esr STRAIT S HAIR TONIO 8 S Be ccareremcrtirage Te we to so Tes agent toe Je seven reasons wh-vou noun ues IB i eroarrrex MS i iit net ire tho hte ve oe sa RK Wins tnre th ha reany teal your at UB 5 etose ne sve itr te your hale a | & Whit sou evsghane to tae gouty evant ae ane net ha te Bat osu es See T Stop wang Gusen cums or greces and woe Ba rors sclosulle operation order tract tom ua Seat $ha0 te SRS ak BB faathkx tae wmeccaie ie € ee Tho Stralt-Tex Chemical Compar DS ba PAG oo ein Avenue Phuburg, Pans r= Soy 30) > en ia Ga Se Petes Sas fr Rend G10 for ale work freak: Ee ead eee eon ae ms ORE. 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