Colorado Statesman

Saturday, June 17, 1905

Denver, Colorado

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Wait for the Big Picnic, R'ky Mt Lake, July 13. COUNTRY PARTY RACE THE COLORADO STATESMAN LABOR SHALL BE FREE THE JOURNAL OF THE STATE Academic Foundation For Professional Study By William Pickens, Professor of Language, Talladega College, in Voice of The Negro, Atlanta, Ga. VOL. XI. Academic For Professional Study By W Language, Talladega The Negro, This is the age of specialism and electricity. The rising student feels not only that he must do one thing, but that he must do it quick- ly. This is true, but like most general truth; it is overworked. Many young, unprepared, misguided men are entering upon the study of law, medicine or theology with immaturity of intellectual de- velopment and narrow foundations. In our rapidly moving world we cannot, of course, take as much time to reach the same goal or scatter our energies over as many different fields as men did formerly. The ancients, who did not have to ride on steam and write with electricity took more time. They could stay in school for thirty-five years, and could combine the accomplishments of general, admiral, statesman, orator, poet, and philosopher, in one man. But now-a-days we go so fast and carry each minute branch to so high a point that we must school ourselves in a decade, and one man can concentrate all his energies on an amoeba! In the hurry toward professional work many are forgetting the importance of preparation. They fix their eyes so steadfastly upon the end that they forget the means. Why should the builder be so anxious to begin upon the cupola as to lay a shaky and insubstantial foundation?. Who ever saw a superstructure of any magnitude and weight suspend in the air without any material foundation? Education should not be an obelisk, but a pyramid, so that the gravitational line of every stone that is put one upon the other shall fall within the area of the base. Such a structure is made more substantial by its very weight; the weighter the material the more firm, compact and everlasting the whole mass becomes. But if a man "saves time" by specializing and entering a medical school with grammar school education, then his education begins and ends in his profession, and his base is as narrow as his apex. Examples of this mistake can be found among men of any profession, but the one seemingly in the greatest danger at present is the medical profession. This is partly due to the fact that medicine is such an inviting field that men are hurrying to enter it. The physician enjoys a large independence and is practically undampered by people's prejudices. When a man is sick he wants to get well, and he does not care who cures him, although he might have sworn that he did care when he was well. When fever is on the brain reasoning is different. Medicine is an opportunity. But, excepting all the nooble and conscientious band of healers who, like the Physician of Nazareth, are carrying health and happiness to the sufferers of humanity, many of our new-fledged "M. D's." are uncultured and boorish. The trouble lies in their training before reaching the medical school, or rather in their want of training at that time. A physician should be an educated man, not simply a "doctor." If he has no training save that which he gets in pills and poison, he will lack those finer sensibilities which alone fit a man to be the hope of the feeble and the confidant of the family circle. If I am going to be a physician, says one, why should I study civil government? If I am to pursue law, asks another, what use have I physics? All subjects of human knowledge are related—correlated. Just as no man liveth to himself, so no humantarian subject or branch of science standeth alone on its own foundation. The great round of human knowledge is "unity in variety." The ancient Roman orator realized this and said that all studies have a commune vinculum and are held together by a "kinship," so to speak. And Cicero, because he did not confine his attention to mere rhetoric and law, but tried to summon all kinds of knowledge to the assistance of his thought, became the greatest master of Roman speech. How did poetry and speculative philosophy assist him in the practical work of the lawyer and the stern duties of the statesman. The one cultivated his imagination and sensibilities the other gave him the power of synthetic reasoning. And if there are certain studies in secondary education which will not make a man the "doctor" he expects to be, yet they will make the "doctor" the man he ought to be. Every male citizen should be a MAN. Moreover, a man who is narrow in his profession cannot rise to any great eminence even in that profession. The higher one asends in and branch of knowledge, the more does he feel his dependence upon other branches; the higher the structure, the broader the foundation, if stability is to be DENVER, COLORADO, SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1905. had. The man in a machine shop who knows only how to make bolts can never rise to the leadership of the whole establishment. Life is a great shop, departments working in co operation, and he would stand at the head must be in a measure acquainted with all. A college education will stand the physician, the lawyer's information should be broader than "feesimples" and "devices." The preacher should discuss other topics than "baptism." The physician must not inhabit a pill as if it were a planet; and let the dentist know more than a tooth. Wrote "White" into Golden Rule. Entirely in keeping with the high character of the man, his profound sense of justice and his broad and sighteous belief in one over-ruling Divine Being for us all, was the lecture delivered by the Hon. Alfred J. Murphy at Bethel Church, May I1. "Our Common Obligations" was the subject Judge Murphy discussed and he said in part: "These obligations are three-fold in their nature. They include the obligations due threefold in their nature: They include the obligations due to the Creator as our Common Father, the obligations we owe to our common country, and those we owe our fellow-men. "Every man who accepts Christianity needs no argument to convince him that the Creator intended no discrimination against any of his children. Yet, if current reports in the newspaper press of this city be true, a pastor of one of the Christain churches of this city has belied this doctrine in his treatment of a lady who years had been a teacher in the Sunday Schools of that church. Color is lent to the truth of the report by the failure of that pastor to deny or explain the charge when opportunity was afforded him. By his conduct he has written the word 'white' into the golden rule. Yet the Master indicated no such discrimination. The sermon on the Mount contains no such distinction and the very first essential of the Brotherhood all human beings entitled to the same essential rights. "The basis document which brought this country into being recognized the equality of all men. It is true that for our three quarters of a century after the adoption of our constitution, this country belied that basic principle by keeping some of our fellow-men in the bondage of slavery. That stain was erased at a terrible cost. No greater service can be rendered our country than to insist that in every bit of territory over which our flag flies, the door of opportunity shall be opened wide for all; that the sole test of manhood shall be as freely to the freely to the humblest; and that the sole test of man shall be the worth of a man, regardless of his creed or color or any accident of birth. "I refuse to concede that any of my fellow citizens is entitled to one iota more of legal right than am I. If this be true, it follows as a necessary consequence, that none of my fellow citizens is entitled to one iota less of legal right than am I. This must be insisted upon in season and out of season. The invasion of the rights of the humblest American, must be regarded as an invasion of the rights of the humblest American, must be regarded as an invasion of the rights of each one of us. "The obligations we owe our fellow men require that we look upon them considerately and fairly. Those of your race have the same hopes and ambitions, the same joys and sorrows as the rest of the human race. The Negro mother whose first-born is taken from her by the messenges of death suffers the same anguish of heart as does her Caucasian sister. That father who sees his son growing into manhood's estate looks to his future as eagerly and keenly as his white brother. "Let us to recognize the human nature that is common to all of us, and which is more vital than mere racial differences. Let us to try to recognize the human nature that is common to all of us, and which is more vital than mere racial differences. Let us try to realize in the daily walks of life the kinship which should exist between all of God's children."—Detroit Informer. Negro Criminality. Much ado is being made now-a-days about Negro criminality as a race. The accusation is entirely too broad. That some, yea, many Negroes steal, we confess; that the Negro as a race, is one of thieves, we denounce with every fiber of our being as an infamous falsehoods. Why make the Negro responsible for the crimes of a few in his race, and make the individual responsible in the white race? We demand measurement by the same standard. Is it not a fact that the Negro learned his first lesson in kleptomania from the white man? This is one of the many bad lessons taught by, and evil effects consequent to slavery. Half-starved and half-fed he was forced to report a shortage in his master's fowl-yard, pig-pen, barn, or smokehouse; and now he rarely ever steals other than the necessities of life; while his white brother is stealing money by the thousands, and breaking banks, stealing real estate by the houses and lots, and groceries by the wholesale. They are even stealing political offices—governorships and the like—from each other. And in many states, without blushing, they have stolen offices and the ballot from the humble Negro. If a plain and impartial statement of white criminals, regardless of the white washed names given to said crimes or their ability to pay the fines and compromise price, and if a reasonable allowance is made in the number of Negroes convicted to account for prejudice, injustice and spite-word in our opinion the ratio of the white criminals would be much larger than that of the colored. Without condoning the crimes of our people, permit me to say their love and practice of honesty will compare favorably with that of any people North or South, East or West.—P. James Bryant, in Voice of the Negro. RACE NEWS. Gathered From Our Exchanges. The colored Knights of Pythias of Mississippi pay out $40,000 annually to widows and orphans. E. E. McDaniel, a contractor, a number of the race, is building 100 miles of railway on the Midland Valley. The Norweigian church employs 75 Negro pastors in Madakascar who are graduates of the seminary at Antananarivo. The trolley line at Jacksonville, Fla., owned by Afro-Americans will have "Jim Crow" cars for white passengers, it is said. Frank Parker was the only colored brick layer employed by the trustees of the public schools of Yazoo, City, Miss., to build a school for white children. The building cost $45,000 and Mr. Parker was foreman of the work. About 123 clerks in the St. Louis post office, 20 of whom were colored, found favor with Postmaster Wyman, Thursday, the 8th These clerks were all included in annual salary promotions. Each one gets a raise of $100 a year commencing July 1, 1905. Two of the white messengers in the post office at Memphis, Tenn., quit the office because a Negro special was employed, whereupon, Mr. Dutro, the postmaster, just allowed them to remain quit and added another Negro messenger to to the force. --- NO. 38. Ithaca, New York, June 2.—Miss Jessie R. Fauset, the only Negro student in her class in arts, carried off the highest honors in the senior class of Cornell University. This is the first time that a "Phi Beta Kappa," awarded Miss Fauset, has ever been given a colored woman. The honor came to her despite the fact that she had to compete with a thousand white students in her course. Washington, D. C., has the largest Negro population of any city in the country—86,702—according to the census of 1900. Baltimore come next with 79,258; New Orleans third, with 77,714; and Philadelphia fourth, with 62,613. Negroes have been flocking to Philadelphia within the last few years, and the Negro population is now estimated at 71,000. Philadelphia has come to be regarded as a "Negro paradise." Among the Negro business and financial enterprises in New York City, N. Y., are a building and loan association, which has been in operation for nearly twelve years, and pays 6 per cent dividends; a national realty company, eight printing offices, a can company, several catering companies, a manufacturing business said to be patronized by several of the large retail dry goods dealers in the city; two large undertaking establishments, one of which is said to do a business of $50,000 a year It is asserted that Negroes pay taxes on property in New York City valued at $3,000,000. Grapes as Diet. Many well-known physicians insist that to eat and repeat the performance three or four times a day will work wonders with thin, nervous anaemic people who are prone to worry and whose digestion is out of order. All we know is that the grape has wonderful gastric virtues and is perhaps the most digestible fruit in existence. Tea Growing in California. Some of the farmers near Santa Rosa, Cal., are experimenting with tea growing and their efforts seem to be meeting with success. It is said that there is no reason why tea should not be grown in some sections of this country, though the earlier South Carolina experiment is not known to be making great headway. Prosperous Benevolent Society. The Portuguese in California have a benevolent and social organization called Irmandade de Divino Espirito Santo, which has more than 4,000 members, $30,000 in the treasury and no outstanding bills. Immense California Orange. One of the largest oranges ever grown in California measured 13 inches around and weighed two and one-half pounds. It was of the seedless variety. F. M. Warner of English Birth. Like Mayor Weaver of Phialdelphia Fred M. Warner, Republican candidate for governor of Michigan, is of English birth. He was about three months old when his parents moved from Nottingham to this country. TELEPHONE MAIN 4271 THE N. & W. LIQUOR DEALERS IN Imported and Domestic Wines and FAMILY TRADE OUR SPECIAL 1118 BROADWAY. Imported and Domestic Wines and Liquors. FAMILY TRADE OUR SPECIALTY. 1118 BROADWAY. Box Lunch . . Delivered—10c. E. BLUMENBERG. Our Box Lunch Consists of Two Sandwiches, Fruit, Pie and Cake. 1824 Arapahoe St. Denver GO TO THE WELTON TRUNK M'FG CO For Bargains in Trunks, Traveling Bags Etc, Old Trunks taken in exchange. PHONE OLIVE 1456. 2240 Welton St., Denver, Colo. SO • THE PEOPLE MAY KNOW DR. DAMERON'S Dental work is so perfect that it can't be improved on by any dentist at any price. See Dr. Damerson's special inoculum. this month—$5 for a $10 set of teeth; $10 for the best set of teeth on earth; $5 a tooth for gold crown and bridge work; $5 for silver fillings; gold $1 up; air and gas used; no pain; no scars; tapered mights and Sundays. ALBANY, DENVER, PARLORS. Union block. Arapahoe st., oppoite P. A. Ward Auction CO 1728-30 Arapahoe St. Denver, Colorado. Private Residence Sales a Specialty Regular Sales Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays. Furniture and bankrupt Stocks bought for cash or sold on commission. W. J. ADDIE. Dealer in Choice old California wines and brancles from the Hermitage Vineyard, also bottled beer, Kentucky whisky, cigars and tobacco. 228 16th street. Telephone 2677. ASK FOR H. F. BUSSEY'S BREAD Dennis Gibbons Coor's Celebrated Golden Beer On Draught . . 441 W. Colfax Av. Denver, Colo Dr. P. E. Spratlin, Office, 49 Good Block, Telephone Red 808. Hours: 9 to 11 a.m. 1 to 4 p.m. 7 to 9 p.m. Broom 2226 Clarkson St. Tel. York 123. hirst Parlors J. L. PENNINGTON, Prop. Fine Wines, Liquors & Cigars TELEPHONE 816 MAIN. 1745 Curtis St. Denver, Colo All Goods Delivered. LIQUOR CO. MERS IN c Wines and Liquors. OUR SPECIALTY. ADWAY. Newport's Hour of Agony. Just as the Newport season is closing and everybody is congratulating everybody else on the eclat and the elan and the everything else with which the "400"—or is it the "600"?—have entertained distinguished foreigners, along comes a horrid announcement from the British College of Heralds that upsets the whole blessed business. An official pronunciation cuts down the "400" with one fell swoop to 177, stating in a cold-blooded, awful way that in all America there is only that number of families of the real sort. Only a beguily 177 in this revised list of blue-blooded society of the international brand, warranted to work satisfactorily on both sides of the Atlantic and to withstand the wear and tear of social inspection here and abroad!—New York Herald. The Minnehaha. LOUIS PELOW, Proprietor. Liquors and Cigars. Pabst Beer on Draught. Cor. 18th & Curtis Sts. Denver, Colo. GEO. R. SWALLOW. President. G. WOOD. Cashier. THE DENVER SAVINGS BANK Deposits of $1.00 and Upward Received. Interest Allowed on Savings Deposits. START A SAVINGS ACCOUNT NOW. Royal Club Bye. Forest Grave Bourbon. IROQUOIS BAR AND GEO. W. DOWERY, Prop. 2645 Welton St. Phone 821 Black DENVER BEST Laundry Soap. THE CENSENIT SOAP CO. BEST SOAP METTER 200.000 DENVER BEST DENVER BEST THE CENSENIT SOAP CO. Ceyserite Soap Man'Fg Co. DENVER, COLORADO. WONDERFUL DISCOVERY Curly Hair Made Straight By TAKEN FROM LIFE FORD'S ORIGINAL OZONIZED OX MARROW CHARLES FORD POST 76 Wabash Ave., Chicago, Illinois. Agents wanted everywhere. J. H. WEICHHAND. Denver, Colo. CASH CAPITAL $250,000. UNIVERSITY OF DENVER UNIVERSITY OF DENVER ISSUES MANY NEW DIPLOMAS Large List of Graduates in Literary, Law, Medical and Dental Departments. Denver, June 15.—Commencement exercises of 1905 of all departments of the University of Denver were held last night at Trinity M. E. church. The College of Liberal Arts, the Graduate school, College of Law and College of Music were all represented in the exercises, and presented a very interesting and impressive program, evidencing satisfactorily the high grade of educational work being done by this institution. Charles J. Hughes, Jr., was the speaker of the evening, and in a stirring address on the subject, "Individual and National Ideals," he urged the graduates as men just stepping out into the world and expecting to bear their part of its burdens, to choose well their ideals, for upon a wise choice, he said, depended their success or failure. At the conclusion of the address Chancellor Buchtel conferred the degrees upon the graduates of the various departments. One hundred and ten degrees were conferred, eighty-six on men and twenty-four on women, this being the largest total, with one exception, since 1900 when Chancellor Buchtel took charge of the university. Following is the list of persons upon whom degrees were conferred: Bachelor of Arts—Henry Walton Allen, Dorr Amerman, Sarah Lorencie Anderson, Latilla Walbridge Bailey, Jesse Ulysses Harry Barker, Austin Norman Chapman, I. Vincent Daniels, Daisy Marjorie Dillon, Marguerite Ruth Frink, John Oscar Hall, Walter Clarence Heckendorf, Anna Johnson, John Paul Lee, Joseph Alden McNaught, Otis Gail Messenger, Julian Hawkes Moore, Charles Emory Morse, Kinya Okajima, Evelyn Rawlins, Laura Belle Scott, John Simon, Grace Augusta Stephens, Mary Grace Twomby, Ernest Dowditch Upton, Henrietta Mae Walker, Harry Chester Warner, George Henry Weber, Sallie Ruth Welsh, Bess Merton Wilson, Chester Albert Wolff. Bachelor of Science—John Jacob Putnam. Master of Arts—Winton M. Ault, Henry Otley Beyer, William Chalmers Borst, Benjamin Ray Crandall, Margaret Davis Ickis, Addie Kendrick McCulloch, Loren Stiles Minckley, Halcyone Jane Morrison, Margaret Alice Packard, Joseph Reed, Ella Viola Veazie, Mary Erlene Wallihan. Doctor of Philosophy—John Lewis Beyl, Albert Johnston McCulloch, Cornelia Scudder Milers, Walter Morritt. Master of Arts—Ellsworth Bethel. Doctor of Divinity—Marquis D. Hornbeck, Nathan Hugh Lee. Doctor of Laws — Charles James Hughes, Jr. Bachelor of Laws—Mabelle Alice Carter, Ph. B.; Lafayette Foley Crawford, John Julian Downey, William Edward Foley, Archibald Allen Lee, Bruce Benjamin McCay, B. S.; John Wellesley Stephenson, A. B.; George Volney Howard, Elson Henry Whitney. Bachelor of Music—Benjamin Franklin Cleverly, Mary Marian Manley. Doctor of Medicine—Axel Aberg. Frank F. Allan, Arthur Samuel Baker, N. Eugenia Barney, Richard Vincent Barther, Frances Grant Buchanan, Shuler Craft, John Douglas Crisp, Christian Johan Engelson, Andrew Burns Fellers, Clarence Mauritz Froids, George Herbert Lee, Elmer Eason McKeown, Richard Sabine Manea, Ira Chester Mierley, Edw. Fitch Milligan, George Lone Monson, Willis Guy Mudd, Charles Ernest Pate, Daniel Fred Richards, Samuel Benjamin Scholz, Jr., Frank Robert Slopanskey, Henry Chandler Smiley, William Potter Spence, Merrel H. Taylor, Charles Israel Titus, Virgil Thompson, Thomas Arnold Triplett, Luther Jackson Weldon, Arthur LeRoy Williams, Frederick C. Windecker Doctor of Dental Surgery—William Claude Adams, James Earl Billings, Samuel Francis Dean, Mansel Homer English, Royal Chapin French, Juno Belle Kapp-Walton, James Ignatius Laughlin, Vernon W. Laughlin, Charles Alexander Monroe, Arthur Jackson Pate, Charles Allen Ramsey, Zenas Thompson Roberts, Clyde Lemen Taylor, Elmer Francis Warren, Charles La Vern Williams, N. Wolfson. Rojestvensky Recovering. London, June 15—The Moji, Japan, correspondent of the Telegraph cables an account of his visit to Vice Admiral Rojestvensky in the hospital at Sasebo. The admiral, speaking in broken English, expressed his pleasure at the treatment accorded him by the Japanese and praised the quarters assigned him. He occupies a private room, which is well ventilated and gives the admiral a view of the beautiful landscape. Rojestvensky sald to the correspondent: "I have everything I desire. My wounds are healing, but my left leg is troublesome, and it will be some time before I am able to move about. In thirty days, perhaps, I shall be well again." Asked for his views of the naval battle, the admiral merely replied: "The Japanese fleet was so good, it was impossible——" Then he completely broke down. Evidently his mental sufferings were acute, for he desired to avoid the subject, and during the remainder of the conversation the naval battle was not mentioned. "By day," said the admiral, "I look upon that lovely scene," indicating the landscape, "and by night I dream of it." Will Not Join Conference. London, June 15—Great Britain, as one of the powers signatory to the Madrid convention of 1880, in answer to the request of the sultan of Morocco to join an international conference for the consideration of the Moroccan question, has answered that its preference is not to take part in the conference unless such action would be satisfactory to France. The United States has taken the same stand, the two powers being in accord with France that such a conference would not be the best way of promoting urgent reforms in Morocco. CONDENSED TELEGRAMS Secretary Loeb has announced October 24th and 25th as the dates when President Roosevelt will visit New Orleans. The National Wholesale Liquor Dealers' Association of America, at its Chicago convention, selected Louisville as the place of the next meeting. The British submarine boat A. foundered off Plymouth, England, June 8th and out of her crew of eighteen officers and men only four were saved. Enrique Daguhob, the leader of the insurrection movement in the Island of Samar, was killed, together with thirty-nine of his followers, June 4th. President Loubet has appointed Gabriel Faure to be director of the National Conservatory of Music, succeeding Theodore-Dubois, who has retired. Secretary Taft has appointed Gen. Ezra A. Carman as chairman of the Chickamauga Military Park Association, to succeed the late Gen. H. V. Boynton. The employers in the building trades of the Rhenish Westphallian district have dismissed within a fortnight 30-, 000 workmen who belonged to labor organizations. The United States Supreme Court refused to interfere in behalf of Mrs. Mary Rogers of Vermont, under sentence to be hanged June 23d for the murder of her husband. The French government will assign a torpedo boat to carry the body of John Paul Jones down the River Seine from Paris to Havre, where a French squadron will deliver the body to the American squadron. Capt. T. Bentley Mott, the retiring American military attache at Paris, has received the cross of the Legion of Honor, with a letter from former Foreign Minister Delcasse, under whom it was bestowed. Vice President Fairbanks was the guest of honor on the 7th inst. among the 30,000 visitors who attended the golden jubilee and the laying of the corner stone of the new federal building at Flint, Michigan. A petition to President Roosevelt, asking him to recognize the new government of Norway, is being circulated in Chicago among Norwegians. It will be forwarded to Washington as soon as the canvass has been completed. It is announced that the Canadian Pacific railway will build this summer the projected line from Golden, B. C., to Port Steele, near the line of the Crow's Nest Pass railway. The branch will be known as the Kootenay Central railway. The government of Chili has presented to the Chilian Congress a motion to reaise a loan of $20,000,000 for the construction of railroads throughout the entire country. These railroads will form part of the Pan-American railroad. E. S. Holmes, Jr., associate statistician for the Department of Agriculture, has asked to be suspended during the investigation of charges against him of irregularity in the compilation and publication of the last cotton report. The Farmers' Packing Company has been organized at Sterling, Illinois, with a capital of $1,500,000, the intention being to compete with Chicago packers. The corporation is composed of farmers, stock raisers and retail dealers in meats. The New York Court of Appeals by a divided court, voting four to three, sustained the lower court in adjudging Albert T. Patrick, the New York lawyer, guilty of murder in the first degree in causing the death of the aged millionaire, William Marsh Rice. What is known as the old packing house plant in Fort Worth, comprising eight buildings, seven of which were built of stone and one of brick and ranging from one to five stories, was destroyed by fire June 11th. The plant cost $450,000. Insurance, $8,000. Reports to the forestry bureau concerning the cutting of timber on the forest reserves show that up to date 91,000,000 feet of lumber, 50,000 cords of wood, 513,000 railroad ties and 36,000 posts have been disposed of under the supervision of the bureau officials. By advice of General Trepoff the Russian censorship, at the instance of the council of ministers, has issued a blanket order for bidding newspapers to mention or to publish the proceedings of any congress or meeting held without the permission of the government. Joseph Richardson Coomes, aged sixty-eight years, a lieutenant in the Confederate army, who, while a prisoner of war at Rock Island, Illinois, in 1863, with seven other Confederate prisoners, planned the Ku Klux Klan, died at his home in Norfolk, Virginia, on the 10th inst. A Fort Smith dispatch says that J. Omerod, Texas manager for the Liebig Meat Company, has offered, on behalf of his company, to erect an independent plant, providing cattle raisers take one-half of the stock. The plant is to be capitalized at $5,000,000 and its chief output will be extracts. Some relics of the dead of 1812 have been discovered in Washington. During the excavation at the Washington barracks lately there was unearthed the remains of fourteen soldiers. The bones were removed to Arlington and reburied in the section of the national cemetery reserved for the unknown dead. It has developed that nearly $80,000,000 of the money raised in this country by the sale of the last issue of Japanese imperial bonds will remain on deposit in New York City for an indefinite period. The money will be allowed to remain in the banks and trust companies until gradually withdrawn in the course of regular financial operations. It is reported that the Spur ranch, located seventy miles north of Snyder, in Dickens county, Texas, and embracing 1,000,000 acres of land, has changed hands, passing into the control of F. P. A. Swenson of New York, who owns extensive interests in Jones and other west Texas counties. The Spur ranch was owned by a Scotch syndicate and the deal is said to have reached $3,000,000. Parasols, Silk Gloves, Shoes, Ribbons For the hot summer months, whether you stay in town or go away, you will need something in our line. PARASOLS were never so popular as now and we are making some special prices on this line of goods, also Umbrellas Recovered & Repaired. Store open until 9:30 Saturday Evenings. THE T Does No Carlson's Cre THE TRUST Does Not Churn rlson's Creamery Butt Carlson's Creamery Butter LADIES Do you know that we can cent. on your MILLI MILLINERY Do you know that we can save you from 10 to 25 per cent. on your MILLINERY Come in and let us prove it. Stylish Dress Hats from..... Street Hats..... 75c Childrens Caps....35 Infant Bonnets..... We have just received a lot of Duck and Embroid which we will sell from..... MRS. C. M. GOINS, Dress Hats from..... Hats..... Adrens Caps..... 35 Bonnets..... Have just received a lot of Duck and Embroidery we will sell from..... MRS. C. M. GOINS, Jon Street, De Stylish Dress Hats from.....$2.50 up Street Hats.....65c up 75c Childrens Caps.....35 and 50c Infant Bonnets.....25c up We have just received a lot of Duck and Embroidery Hats which we will sell from.....$1.00 up 2709 Welton Street, Protected by Block Signals The first railway in America System in the operation of all Chicago, Milwaukee It to-day has more miles of signal rule than any other m Paul Road was the first railw tricity, and it now has more senger cars in daily service. than operated by any other r was also the first to adopt the its passenger trains are to-da America. Two trains from Union Stati day. Through train service on the main line of the Union first railway in America to adopt the absolute in the operation of all trains was the Milwaukee and St Paul day has more miles of road operated under rule than any other railway company. The Road was the first railway to light its trains by and it now has more than 400 electric-lights cars in daily service. This is a greater number operated by any other railway. The St Paul so the first to adopt the steam-heating system passenger trains are to-day the best heated tracca. trains from Union Station, Denver, to Chicago Through train service to Chicago from all main line of the Union Pacific Railroad. The first railway in America to adopt the absolute Block System in the operation of all trains was the Chicago, Milwaukee and St Paul Railway It to-day has more miles of road operated under block signal rule than any other railway company. The St. Paul Road was the first railway to light its trains by electricity, and it now has more than 400 electric-lighted passenger cars in daily service. This is a greater number than operated by any other railway. The St. Paul Road was also the first to adopt the steam-heating system, and its passenger trains are to-day the best heated trains in America. Two trains from Union Station, Denver, to Chicago every day. Through train service to Chicago from all points on the main line of the Union Pacific Railroad. J. C. PRESTON, General Agent. 1029 17th Street, Denver, Colorado. THE PEOPLE'S Ja. Hullinger & Co. DRUG STORE 230 LARIMEN STREET JEL.876. DENVER And our Prices are so exception to go further to outfit for this att invited. Prices are so exceptionally low that it is no er to outfit for this attractive sport. Your And our Prices are so exceptionally low that it is not necessary to go further to outfit for this attractive sport. Your inspection invited. las. Hullinger & © COPYRIGHT A Mardly necessary to tell you able they will feel Tell Your Friend. The Superior Hand Laundry Telephone 2132. 1741-43 La J. W. CASEY, Pr DENVER --- Hoisery, Ribbons, Neckwear, Veilings, Belts, Bags, Combs. Tel. Main 676. Penini Bros. 16TH STREET OPPOSITE POST OFFICE TRUST can save you from 10 to 25 per LINERY $2.50 up 65c up 35 and 50c 25c up lot of Duck and Embroidery Hats $1.00 up M. GOINS, America to adopt the absolute Block of all trains was the Free and St Paul Railway. It is of road operated under block owner railway company. The St. Railway to light its trains by elec- more than 400 electric-lighted pas- vice. This is a greater number owner railway. The St. Paul Road not the steam-heating system, and to-day the best heated trains in Station, Denver, to Chicago every vice to Chicago from all points Union Pacific Railroad. We have the most complete line of Base Ball Goods In the East End optionally low that it is not necessary is attractive sport. Your inspection A Prize in the liquor lottery is a common occurrence at the Western Wine Depot. No blanks there—nothing but the Simon pure article in whisky, whether you prefer Rye, Bourbon, Scotch or Irish, for way up brands are the rule there. If you haven't made a personal test of our best brands, you have missed some of the best things going. Don't forget our specials, 8 year old McBrayey, 75c quart. All California wines, 75 cents gallon and up. Western Wine Depot, 839 Fifthen Street. Corner Curtis The cuffs and standing collars in this laundry are polished on the edges. Hardly necessary to tell you how transferable they will feel. Tell Your Friend. Superior Hand Laundry, Telephone 2132. 1741-43 Lawrence Street. J. W. CASEY, Prop, VER. COLO Corsets, Gloves, Shoes, Umbrellas, Handkerchiefs Art goods, Etc. Denver, Colo. 2301 Larimer street. ee nS aE ae ee dh ecu cated eR ear \ THE UNION TRUNK CO. Manufacturers of Trunks. , ONLY UNION TRUNK HOUSE IN DENVER . . r ‘Tronks Made to Order. Repairing a Specialty. Tronks Taken in Ex- |All Goods Union Made. change. 1957 Champa St, Phone Pink 1992. Denver, Colo, ATTITUDE OF NORWAY Commercial Interests Cannot Be Reconciled—Norway’s Vast Ship- ping Interests Require Separate Consuls. Christiania, Norway, June 14.—Mr. Loevland, former president of the sec- tion of the Norwegian council of state at Stockholm, who will be inducted Into his new office of foreign minister of Norway to-morrow, in an interview yesterday, said that a special envoy would, within a few weeks, be dis- patched to the great powers to seek the recognition of the diplomatic and consular representatives of Norway. Regarding the probable difficulties to ‘Ye encountered, Mr. Loevland declined to express an opinion, but he said the envoy would convey the best wishes of Norway to the powers and would go to them with the highest hope as to the successful result of his mission. “When our case is presented to the powers,” said Mr. Loeviand, “it will be seen that it is not one of antagonism to the principle of monarchies, nor to a single monarchy. Norway has been @ kingdom for many centuries, and is: proud of that fact. The dissolution of the unfon was purely on constitutional grounds. Our constitution existed prior to the union with Sweden, and when there came a conflict between the two peoples, Norway chose to re- tain her constitution. “Our difficulty with Sweden ts in the first place of an economic character. Our commercial interests, our tariffs and our entire economic ‘policy differ from those of Sweden. While the dip- iomatic and consular services were based on the ideas governing the union of the two countries, they worked to the profit of Sweden rather than to that of Norway. * “Norway's merchant marine now ranks fourth among the nations and Norway no longer can afford to nego- tlate with foreign powers through Stockholm. The union, however, was dissolved only when the conflict be- came a question of our sovereignty. “We hope the powers will make no mistake regarding our action. We have never tried to create danger for Swe- den, and will never seek to make diffl- culties for our sister country. We are acting for ‘the benefit of the common interests of each other and for our common safety in tho face of foreign aanger. “The action taken by the Storthing {s irrevocable, and the powers should realize the fact that Norway will fight before this action is reconsidered. The question of peace rests with Sweden, but the early recognition of our inde- pendence will be of interest to the pow- ers as well as to ourselves. “Immediately upon the dissolution pt the union Norway informed Sweden of its willingness to open diplomatic relations, but we are jealous of our in- dependence and of our future, and will avold all alliances and will’ not sub- ject ourselves to the influence of any great yowers.” ‘Mr. Loeviand said he thought that Norwegian interests would not suffer during the interim in which the coun- try would not be represented abroad. Fortunately, he sald, Norway's biggest trade was with Great Britain,Germany, the United States and France, where for a short period consuls were not in- dispensable. -- FOR THE BEST DRUGS | GO TO FRANK P. MILLER, Druggist__and_Pharmacist, Ice Cream and Soda Water. {8644 Welton St., oor. Washington Ave, Denver, Colo, —_—=—_<_—K_«_«X(\UeV"""___[_[__ae ee The Inter-Ocean Investment and Brokerage G. And Collateral Bank, 1436 Curtis Street. {Loans negotiated, available securties handled. cash advances made an 1 all kinds of collateral. Real Hstate Loans a special feature. \Business Strictly Confidential , Hello 1846. Hello 190. The Market Co. 1633-35-37-39 Arapahoe Street. Bids for our trade With all that is tempting y for the table—with fresh neats that the most fastidious connoisseur must relish—with Cudahy’s famous “Diamond ©.” and “Rex” brand cured meats—with a complete line of fancy and staple groceries—with prompt deliveries—with cour- teous attention to the smallest detail—and with the most reasonable prices. Not spasmodic baits, but BEST VALUES AT ALL TIMES, The Most Scrupulously Clean and Best Stocked Market House in Denver. Brussels Sprouts, New Cabbage, Lettuce, Celery, Green Onions Oyster Plant, Cauliflower, Pie Plant, Parsley, Radishes. J. F. KNOPF, Manager. . J, D, ORACO. N.M. OAMPIGLIA, "Phone Main 4885. a C,& C, LIQUOR CO., . DIRECT IMPORTERS, Wines and Liquors for Medicinal Use Our Specialty, 2205 CHAMPA STREET. Denver, - - - Colorado, American Federation of Labor. Scranton, Pa., June 14.—The execu- tive council of the American Federa- tion of Labor opened its sessions here Monday. President Gompers _ sub- mitted a report of the organizing and lecturing tour which he recently made through the West, recounting the growth of the organization, the splen- did spirit of unity obtaining among the workmen of the country, and their devotion to the trades union move- ment and the American Federation of Labor. It was decided to arrange for a lec- ture tour and itinerary for the varl- ous members of the executive council through the different sections of the country. Secretary Morrison submitted his financial report for the eight months ending May 81st. The balance on hand October 1, 1904, was $103,018, and the income for the eight months, $141,074, making a total of $244,092. Whe expenditures were $148,356, The report shows that $70,902 has been re- ceived for per capita tax of one-half cent per member per month. One hundred and ninety charters were is- sued for the elght months; one state branch, forty-six central labor unions, ninety Jocal trades unions, fifty-three Federal Labor Unions. There are now affiliated with the American Federa- tion of Labor 116 international trades unions, thirty-three state branches, 604 central labor unions, 1,043 local trade and Federal Labor unions, the 116 in- ternational unions having 25,000 lecal unjons attached to them. THE GALLUP FLORAL 2 - er) Wee, AND Pa ee toe j Se nN cf SEED COMPANY, gai tt Secs ‘ aN ipa eee Lawn Fertilizer @ oy) B . Phone 543. 4 ei S “2 x Corner I5th and a a a Cleveland Place. Ey i DENVER. - - COLO. Ladies Spring Hats Are here--all the Latest Street and Shirt waist styles ready to wear. The Howland Millinery Co. 16th Street, Opp. Daniels & Fisher. Attorney Hangs Begins Suit. Cripple Creek, Colo., June 14.—Frank J. Hangs, the attorney who has repre- sented the Western Federation of Min- ers in all its important cases in this vicinity, brought suit Monday on his own account for damages in the sum of $130,500 against the following prom- inent citizens. J, B. Cunningham, mayor of Victor; Nelson Franklin, exmayor of Victor; H. McGarry, a prominent attorney and mining man; F. N. Woods of the Woods Investment Company; T. J. Dal- ell, mine owner of Cripple Creek; Sam D. Crump, attorney and mine operator; C. C. Hamlin, district attorney and ex- secretary of the mine owners and oper- ators’ association; Sherman M. Bell, ex-adjutant general of the N. G. C., and G. B. Copeland, manager of the Taylor & Brunton sampler. ‘Tho amount sought to be recovered is for damages alleged to haye re- sulted from Hxngs’ incarceration in the so-called “bull pen” at Victor, causing him to lose a valuable leaso on the Zoe mine on Beacon hill, accord- ing to the report, and to suffer much mental anguish. ‘The Deacon—Do you know, oy be little boy. youwont 2. ere ff goto Heaven if you smoke?” 7 bg mF The Kid-Ah goonwidyer- “fi Wim ° disisa Baxters am 9 Ae Bullhead Cigar.” 3 Wi a - | 5 eagle Ss S me ig * eB we Bargains! Bargainsll ee eee Going out of the Dry Goods i eae ur ea } a es cheap at 2707 WELTON ST. ‘ } , Call Early and get Bargains. S227 ~~ Jennie Tindell. FOUL ASSASSINATION GREEK PREMIER IS MURDERED. (Theodore P. Delyannis Stabbed by a Gambler Just Released from Prison —Assassin Was Previously a Wife- Murderer, Athens, Greece, June 14—Theodore P, Delyannis, the popular premier of (Greece, was stabbed and mortally ‘wounded by a professional gambler jaamed Gherakaris at the main en- of the Chamber of Deputies at 6 Dp. @. yesterday. The premier died “within treo hours, ‘The assassin, who ‘was immediately arrested, said he ‘committed the deed in revenge for the stringent measures taken by Premier elyannis against the gambling houses, all of which recently were j The premier arrived at the entrance the chamber in a carriage. Ghera- @pproached, saluted the premier ‘opened the carriage door. ‘The Mer was in the act of thanking erakaris for his courtesy when the gambler plunged a long dagger into 'M, Delyannis’ abdomen, inflicting a frightful wound. ‘The murderer was !mmediately over- powered by the attendants. Medical assistance was quickly secured and the wounded statesman was taken to @ Red Cross station, where an opera- tion was performed in an effort to stop the Internal hemorrhage. This ‘Was unsuccessful and Premier Delyan- nis died at 7:30 o'clock. The news spread quickly and it ‘would be impossible to describe the popular evidences of sorrow or the anger of the crowd, who attempted to lynch the assassin. The attempt was Prevented by the gendarmes, who rushed their prisoner from the build- ing to prison. Tt is estimated that 20,000 persons witnessed the removal of the body of the premier from the Red Cross sta- tion to his late residence. Members of the Cabinet and of the Chamber of Deputies were among the crowd, many of them weeping, ‘The Cabinet met last evening at the residence of the president of the cham- ber and it was decided that the body should lie in state In the chamber be- fore interment. King George, who 1s at Tatol, was informed of the assassination and an- ‘nounced that he would at once return to Athens. Investigation by the police shows that Gherakaris was recently liberated from prison, having been sentenced to @ighteen years for the murder of his wife. M, Gounarakis, minister of finance, has been appointed premier provision: ally. The funeral of M. Delyannis, which will be a national one, will take place next Friday. FE ; ————— SSS We are offering Bigger Bargains in Millinery Goods than youever heard of in Denver. Our new line of Spring Hats are of a rich variety. Don’t fail to see us for anything in the Millinery line, ‘also Dry Goods and Notions. MRs. A. BRADSHAW, Cor, 15th and Stout Sts. Denver, Colorado. Stopovers on Ty Colonist Tickets Via the Burlington Northern Pacific, the shortest and quickest line to Seattle, will be allowed at Billings and all stations west (except at stations Logun to Garrison, inclusive), provided the desti- nation of the ticket is west of Trout Creek, Mont. Particulars on request. To Butte, Helena and Anaconda..........--.-$20.00 To Spokane, Ellensburg and Wenatchee........$22.50 To Portland, Tacoma and Seattle..............$25.00 To Victoria and Vancouver, B. C.............-$25,00 Proportionate rates to other points B mt in ni i} City Ticket Office, 1039 17th St. A JOHN F. VALLERY, Gen. Agent, mn ele Crusade Against Lotteries. Washington, June 14.—A thorough enforcement of the anti-lottery law is urged on postmasters and all other postal employes in a general order pro- mulgated by Postmaster General Cor- ‘telyou. It calls on all employes to examine mail matter, especially publications, with the greatest care consistent with prompt transmission and delivery, and to withdraw or exclude all such Telat- Ang to lotteries and like enterprises. Many postmasters, the order adds, have been found negligent in this re- gard, as well as In the enforcement of fraud orders against lotterieg in for- eign countries. ‘Tho order says that the terms of the law bar “endless chain” enterprises, ‘so-called “gift concerns” or similar en- terprises offering prizes dependent upon lot or chance, including “guess ing” or “estimating” contests for prizes, as well as drawings and raffles of every kind, whether general or lo- ‘cal, for money or otherwise, for private gain or in afd of charitable, educational or religous objects. Publications, cir- culars, cards or’ pamphlets containing advice or other information relating ‘to such enterprises are required to be withdraemifteom the mails. O xX F a 7, Se OXFORDS eige R is A D Ser S ne St te OS Gig As _ Are now in great a he oa popular favors. We oie ay are showing advanced BN eae Spring Stykes 2 al OO the new Shapes, alJ the new Leathers. We aim to impress upon Our Footwear indi- viduality and character, Insuring to our Patrons distinction & Exclusiveness. ee EE 1. BENJAMIN & CO, gal DEALERS IN . Millinery, Hair Goods a AND ie 3 , Bi te Ladies’ Furnishings. wg) : Dress MaHing and Feathers Cleaned x a and Dyed. 2053 Larimer St. Denver, Colo. r f Confederate Veterans Killed. Albion, IIL, June 14.—fhree persons were killed and twenty-nine injured in ‘the wreek of an eastbound passenger train on the Southern railroad at Golden Gate, Milinois, yesterday. The train was a “Cotton Belt special,” car- rying Confederate veterans to the re- union at Louisville, Kentucky. While running at @ speed of fifty miles an bour, the engine struck a spread rail on a trestle twenty feet high, and the engine and four coaches were over- turned and fell to the bottom of the ra- vine. ‘The train consisted of threo Pull- mans and four coaches. Two of the sleepers were derailed, but did not go over the trestle. The third sleeper re- mained on the track. Most of the in- jured were tien to Louisville. Bandlt> Chase Automobile. Biss, O, T., June 14.—An attempt (was n8d@ between midnight and day- light Monday morning by desperadoes to hold up the treasure party carrying the $40,000 of receipts taken from the show om the No, 101 ranch Sunday. It would have succeeded if the automo- bile in which the treasure was carried from the Miller brothers’ ranch to Ponca, to be placed in a bank, had not outrun the horses of the bandits. ‘As it was, there was a brisk running fight between the party guarding the treasure and the mounted bandits. ‘Tho show was that attended by the Kational Editorial Association, at which more than 30,000 people were in attendance, Orphans’ Automobile Ride. Denver, June 14.—The Colorado Au- tomobile Club will give the orphan children of Denver an automobile ride on June 24th, from 8 to 5:30 p. m. Five hundred children will have. to be provided for, requiring fully *126 machines, A sufficient number of ma- chines Will be assigned to carry the children of each home, and they will be there promptly at 3 p. m. After giving the children-a ride about town, all the cars will meet at City Park at 4 p. ™., where some amusement will be provided. ‘The children will be re- turned to their respsctive homes at 5:30. COLORADO STATESMAN 8. H. HOBSON. City Editor 9. JOHN HERSHEY. City Editor 1824 Curtis Street. Room 2u SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year ..... $2.00 Six Months ..... 1.00 Three Months ..... .50 Remittances should be made by Express Money Order, Postoffice Money Order, Registered letter or Bank draft. Remittances will be received the same as cash for the fractional parts of a dollar. Only 1-cent and 2-cent stamps taken. Reading notices, ten lines or less, 10 cents per line. Each additional line over five lines, 5 cents per line. Display advertising rates, 25 cents per square. A square contains ten agate lines. No discounts allowed on less than three months' contract. Less must cover all orders from particulars unknown to us. Further particulars on application. It occasionally happens that papers sent to subscribers are lost or stolen. In case you do not receive a number, you inform us by postal card, and we will cheerfully provide a duplicate of the missing number. Communications to receive attention must be news, upon important subjects, upon written or one side of the paper; must reach us Tuesdays if possible, anyway not later than Wednesdays, and bear the signature of the author. No manuscript unless stamps are for postage. All communications of a personating nature that are not complimentary will be withheld from the columns of this paper. Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice in the city of Denver, Colorado. Law-abiding combinations of capital must be protected in their right to conduct a legitimate business, but the law-defying combinations must be made to the the mark or go out of business, just the same as any other law breaker. CHURCH LIAR AND LAY LIAR. Every good man is a Christian to the extent of his virtues, whether he belongs to church or not; and he may at the same time be a good politician. The fact that a man is a church member does not excuse him from the responsibilities of the life temporal. He has the right to enjoy participation in political contests in such a way as to make the latter better for his having had something to do with them. But he has no right to lie about it, nor to vote more than once a day for the same man. He of all men, should set the example of honesty. He should be truthful and open-handed, but not always open-mouthed. He has no right to rob a man of his good name or anything else; but, particularly, of his good name among men. A church member who lies about about a political candidate is a meaner liar than the man who hasn't much of a reputation for truth and veracity anyway. In so ding he not only prostitute his own character, but he bedraggles the throne of the God he pretends to love with the filth of his own wickedness. Mayor Williams probably called him and his kind by their right name when he designatem as "liars and scoundrels." That's the plain Anglo-Saxon of it. So you see their isn't much difference between the church liar and the lay liar, after all, only the former infamiously more teacherous, for he wrongfully uses the cloak in which he devoutly sings psalms to conceal the rottenness of his hypocritical body.—The New Age. THE POWER OF MONEY. If the greatest single occupation of all classes were to be determined by a popular vote, it would undoubtedly prove to be the pursuit of wealth—the accumulation of money. All things seem to center about it, great and small, good and evil. No successful enterprise can be conducted without it, for money is the recognized medium for exchanging things of value. It is at once the largest and the smallest factor of human existence. We all must have it and yet is to be despised for its mercenary character. It is the goal of greed and the price of honest effort. It is the root of all evil and the flower of true purpose. One's attitude toward people is swayed, whether one will or no, bo their financial circumstances. Men hate the rich who hoard their wealth, and perforce like the well-to-do individual who spends it. People in moderate circumstances usually desire to make as good a showing as possible, and those who go further than right living permits usually earn well merited contempt from friends who understand the situation. It is unfortunate but true that money will buy position in life where good works frequently fail, but it will not buy self-respect. The Biblical saying about the rich man entering the kingdom of heaven has lost none of its savor, and in all these years the camel hasn't been getting any smaller or the eye of the needle any larger. Yet there is no man more to be admired than the man who possesses money honestly acquired. As an average the man who has lived a considerable number of years without acquiring some degree of wealth may be found to have his faults which he will really acknowledge.—Denver Republican. PREJUDICE EXEMPLIFIED. The Rocky Mountain News of last Thursday Morning gave the following account of a disturbance that does not happen only when some Southerner who is prejudiced to color, finds his way into a place of decency—a place where a black mans' money is not counterfit. It says: Because she refused to wait upon a negro and his white companions, Mrs. Nellie Clark, a waitress at the Creamerie resturant, was discharged by the proprietor, M W. Scanlen and as a result Mr. Scanlon narrowly escaped a duel with W. H. Buchanan of Leesburg, Va; who has been in the North but ten days. Mr. Buchanan in company with Judge J. M. Thomas of Tupelo, Miss., entered the Creamerie restaurant yesterday and gave their order to Mrs. Clark, who waited upon the table at which they were seated. While waiting for their order the two Southern men were scandalized to see a Negro, a white woman and two white men enter the restaurant together and take seats at the opposite table. Mr. Buchanan sought the proprietor, Mr. Scanlon, and asked him "what kind of a place he was running." Hot words ensued, and Scanlon informed the Southerner that he was running what he believed to be a respectable joint, as a white woman in company with a Negro was not an unusual sight in the Northern states. The gentlemen from Dixie took their hats and were about to leave the restaurant, when they heard loud voices in the end of the room. The same waitress, Mrs. Clark, who waited upon them refused to wait upon a Negro, and appealed to the proprietor. He, however, ordered her to return to the table and serve the party. The woman still refused, and Mr. Scanlon told her she could wait upon that table or leave the job. Judge Thomas and Mr. Buchanan followed her out, took her name and address, and then declared themselves ready to pay her the amount of her salary until she could get another position. Mr. Buchanan last night made the following statement about affair; "We come from a part of the country where the nigger is not as good as the white man, and we didn't propose to see that girl suffer for standing out upon a principle which we considered just." The only mistake that was made by Mr. Sanlon, the proprietor, is that he did not assist the two Southern gentlemen (?) to the street by the aid of the point of his shoe. Denver has already enough of color prejudice without the emigration of any more mammons of the South. Who are a disgrace to the race which they belong, and a disgrace to ang decent community. The one from Mississippi is dubbed with the title of "Judge and when one looks over the statistics of the big per cent of Negro criminals, in the South there is little wonder that the per cent is as low as it is, with such men on the bench, whose prejudice alone will condemn any Negro who happens before him whether guilty or innocent. If more of Denver's restaurant proprietors would follow the example of Mr. Scanlon there would be less prejudice and more true Americanism. the height of the Interior. Land Office, on May 19, 1905. Notice is hereby given that the following named settier has filed notice of his intention to make final proof in support of his claim, and that said proof will be delivered to the receiver at Denver, Colorado, on July 10, 1905, viz.: H. E. No. 19,723, Emma Rigg, one of the heirs of Mary Rigg, deceased for the lot of 1 and S. E. 1/4 sec. 6, tp. 4 S., R. 62 w. 6th P. E. 1/4 sec. 6, tp. 4 S., R. 62 w. 6th P. He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon and calculation of said land. viz.: Duraur (Murray of Byers, Colo.), Alvin E, Decatur, of Bennett, Colo.; Henry Weaver, of Bennett, Colo.; Edward C. Nye, of Bennett, Colo. Colorado, May 3, 1905. Necessity given that in pursuance of instruction of the Commissioner of the General Land Office, under authority vested in him by section 2455 U. S. Rev. Stat., as amended under authority approved February 26, 1895, we will proceed to offer at public sale on the TWENTIETH DAY OF JUNE, 1905, at the Exxon Pax at this office, the following tract of land, with W. 1/4 SW. 1/4 Sec. 22, Tp. 5 S., R 60 W., of 6th P. M. Any and all persons claiming the abjection of designation for their claims in this office or before the day above designated for the commencement of said sale, otherwise their rights will be forfeited. C. D. FORD Register. HUGH TAYLOR. Receiver. JOSEPH H. STUART LAWYER. PRACTICES IN ALL COURTS. Examining Abstracts of Titles and drawing up Legal Instruments given careful attention. Office, 329 Kittredge Bldg. 16th and Glenarm. Res. 2227 Lincoln Ave. THE BEST ICE CREAM AND CANDIES AT O. P. Baur & Co., CATERERS and CONFECTIONERS. PHONE 168. 1512 Curtis St. Denver, Colo. J. MALONE TILDON, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW NOTARY PUBLIC. 207 Kittredge Bldg. Denver, Colo. H. C. RADCLIFF, Tonsorial Artist. Ladies' shampooing at home, $1; at hop, 50 cents. Baths for ladies and gentlemen. All orders will be prompt attended to. Ladies' and children's cutting and shampooing a specia Weiner's Saloon. We treat the boys right. DR. W. J. COTTRELL, Physician and Surgeon. Office Hours:—10 to 12 a. m.' 2 to 5 p. m. 7 to 9 p. m. Sundays:—1 to 3 p. m. OFFICE AND RESIDENCE PHONE MAIN 4956. OFFICE AND RESIDENCE 2100 ARAPAHOE ST. (Over Ideal Pharmacy) Denver, Colorado New Clifton Bar and Cafe. W. S. THOMPSON, PROP. FINE LIQUORS AND CIGARS PHONE MAIN 2456. 1701 Arapahoe St. Denver, Colo. Eat Macklem Bread And Save Trouble. At all Grocers. Look for the laible "Macklem Bread" on every loaf. J. Gibson Smith, Formely the Art Emporium Company. Artistic Picture Framing . . . TELEPHONE 973 BLACK. 322 17TH ST OPP. THE BROWN. Denver, Colo. SPENCER'S BLOOD PURIFIER.—Oures all Blood diseases and strengthen the system. Mining Exchange Pharmaqy. 1020-26 152a St. Denver. Party Gown of Linen. Linen has lost none of its old-time popularity, and will be one of the most favored of wash materials during the coming summer. A delightful suggestion for a gown of this sort follows: The skirt is perfectly plain, fitting over the hips and flaring prettily from the knees. The blouse is built on the surplice order and the collar and crosspiece are heavily stitched. Three wide tucks form a round yoke, and a band of narrow embroidery trims the collar and exquimpe are allover embroidery, a band of the latter, set between two rows of tucks, making the deep cuffs. Sugared Sweet Potatoes. Sweet potatoes are never better than when cooked in the southern style and baked with sugar. Boil and peel the sweet potatoes and cut them lengthwise into slices. Arrange them in layers in a pudding dish, treating each layer to butter and sugar in the proportion of a heaping tablespoonful of butter and a cup of sugar to each quart of the potatoes. The sugar should be of the moist, light-brown variety. When the dish is full, with bits of butter and sprinklings of sugar for the top dressing, cover it and bake for twenty minutes, then uncover and let the potatoes brown. Properly prepared, this is a delicious dish. Bridesmaid's Frock Pale green chiffon taffeta, apploued with leaf design in silk and lace. 1 White lace toque with aigrette fastened with a jeweled clasp. English Silks. There is no doubt about it that the most elaborately plenished wardrobe requires absolute simplicity as the characteristic of some of its details, and this applies very emphatically to the morning shirt. Smart though the white lingerie one is, it is not always desirable to wear it, and so there arrives an opportunity for the tailor-made model called the Gibson Girl, with its neatly stitched pleats and its general air of practical utility. There are being sold now some excellent English silks that wear very well, and are not expensive. They should be made with a neckband like that of a man's shirt, and a deep white linen collar should be worn with them, with a little tie arranged in a bow in front. Supposing there should be in the possession of the wearer a set of pretty studs and cuff links, they should be brought into instant requisition. A New Chocolate Cake. Pound to a paste one-quarter of a pound of sweet unpeeled almonds; take the same amount of chocolate and fresh butter, four very fresh eggs, one-half pound powdered sugar and three tablespoonfuls of sifted flour. Melt the chocolate in as little water as possible over a slow fire, and when it is reduced to a paste add the other ingredients, with the exception of the whites of the four eggs. Beat the mixtures for a couple of minutes, then butter a charlotte mold and stir in the whites of the eggs, which have not been previously beaten, merely stirred vigorously. Fill the mold and bake in a moderate oven for forty-five minutes, until it reaches a golden tint; then turn it out and cover with chocolate icing. Volle Is Lovely Fabric. In the wool volles every day brings out new fancy effects, and more beautiful ones. Probably it is the exquisiteness of the season's colors, their softness, delicacy, adaptability, that makes the materials seem more beautiful than ever before, but the designs for weaving, embroidering and printing are certainly lovely. Among the new fancy volles are some in fine checks, with little squares woven in open work design like large checks throughout the material, and over the surface at two-inch intervals are embroidered little dots in the darker of the two colors. In a delicate pinkish orange and white this volle is indescribably charming. Charming, too, is a creamy gray and white volle of the same general plan, but with little flowers embroidered in white silk with yellow centers re- $1 placing the embroidered dots of the orange and white material. Still another new volle has a shaded surface, giving somewhat the effect of fish scales, over which are scattered small embroidered dots. Doudoir Confidences Linen soutache braid trims the smart linen. The untrimmed skirt is by no means unusual. Valenciennes lace comes now in circular flounces. The soft leather girdles are embroidered in colors. The open-work shoe has come. It makes its bow in white kid. Shaded stockings, the color paling toward the top, are new. toward the top, are new. Patent-leather ties are procurable now in both mauve and white. The silk bodice and cloth skirt combination is one of the innovations. Stocks are very wide, shaped high at the back and deep under the ears. Ribbon Work. Ribbon work in various forms and devices is applied to the waistcoats and fronts this season, and very beautiful are the designs carried out on some of the new examples. Old-fashioned brocades in pearl gray, oyster pink, white and the faintest shades of blue, green and mauve, are used as the basis of these schemes, the ribbon being worked into gathered borders with trains of flowers running down on either side, supplemented with embroidered leaves. Rows of ribbon connected with hairpin work and flanked with button motifs ornamented with lace centers provide another effective device which is simple enough for the home embroiderer to carry out herself. New Wrinkle in Belts: Every day there's a new belt designed. The latest is made of flowered pompadour ribbon on a foundation and bound with kid. The buckle is square and covered with kid. Where pink is the main color in the ribbon, pink kid is used. The prettiest have pale blue or white kid bindings. The belts are straight, without fullness, and a little more than two inches deep. They are extremely dainty. Home-Made Cement. Take one-quarter ounce of gum mastic, one ounce of pulverized gum shellac. Put these into one ounce of sulphuric ether, add one-quarter pint of alcohol. When dissolved the cement is ready. IN THE KITCHEN Milk will remain sweeter for a much longer time if placed in a shallow pan than if allowed to stand in a deep pitcher. In hanging clothes to dry always hang the stockings by the toes, night-dresses from the shoulders and skirts from the hem. If there is no mucilage about, in an DRESS Navy blue etamine costume, long skirt and long cutaway coat, white revers, cuffs and waistcoat. emergency take a piece of cold boiled potato and rub it up and down on a piece of paper for several minutes, when it will reach a consistency which will make it as sticky as and an excellent substitute for the strongest glue. Rub the hands with a stalk of celery after peeling onions in order to remove the clinging and obnoxious odor. Peach Gelatine Recipe. One can of peaches, one cupful of sugar and one ounce of gelatin, half a cupful of cold water, one pint of cream. Soak the gelatin in cold water and whip the cream. Mash and sift a pint can of peaches, using juice and fruit, and stew with a cupful of sugar. Add the dissolved gelatin, and when cool stir in the whipped cream. Mold. French Straws. Eight eggs, ten ounces of sugar, flour sufficient to form a dough, half a teaspoonful of cinnamon and nutmeg mixed. Beat the eggs very thick; add the sugar, spice and enough flour to make a dough. Roll out about half an inch thick, cut into slips the length of your finger, give each one a twist and drop into boiling lard. When cool, sift sugar over them. Going-Away Costume. Mauve and white checked volle, with quillings of mauve taffeta. ```markdown ``` White chip hat, underbrim of black, trimmed with bunches of illacs. You Can Pick and Choose. It is one of the whims of the season, the contrast of materials in wraps and skirts. Silk skirts with cloth skirts and cloth jackets with silk skirts are a feature at fashionable assemblies, such as church weddings, afternoon receptions and musicals. The jackets are little Louis affairs cut, almost to a one, with jaunty basques and elbow sleeves. In linen suits the redingote is the prime favorite, but the redingote of this year of grace has taken on many shapes. There are the close fitting, the half-fitting, the blouse body, part and full or plain basque, and even a bolero effect hanging over a high girdle. The redingote, were it a talker, might admit as much confusion as to its real character as the old woman of Mother Goose fame who left it to her little dog to establish her identity. ailee Zeppe Brown mohair gown trimmed with green braid and buttons. Embroidered ecru pongee coat and skirt J. I. W. Fisher arrived in the city this week from California. Mrs. M. Phillips has gone to Cassells, Colo., to spend the summer. Evangelist J. s. Christian arrived in the city Tuesday on business. Wm. Patton of Pueblo, is stopping at Mrs. J. W. Morris, 2530 Welton street. Marguerite Graves left Tuesday for Beatrice, Neb., to spend the summer. Mr. and Mrs. D. Turner and son of Kansas City are in the city to remain. Mrs. A. E. Sharp left last Saturday for a months visit to friends in Topeka, Kansas. Mr. and Mrs. McCrain are recent arrivals from Kansas City, to make this their future home. Mrs. S. C. Murray left Thursday for Pueblo, as a delegate to the Womans League. She was sent by the Art Club. Miss Daisy Henry a "hello" girl of this city will be married to-morrow to Mr. Corwin Osborne (white) a telegraph operator of Leadville. It is said that on account of the recent marriage of one of the ministers of this city a breach of promise suit is in order. C. H. Johnson reports that the high water along the D. & R. G. in the State is not falling as fast as the people had hoped for. Geo. W. Davis left last Saturday for Silverton, Colo. He will probably go from there to San Francisco for an indefinite stay. Miss Eva Beatrice Jones one of Denver's promising young ladies graduated with high honors this week from Mrs. speer's Latin school. Mr. and Mrs. James Vaughn of Chicago, have returned to the city for an indefinite perion on account of Mr. Vaughn's health. The children of Mr. and Mrs. George Washington of 739 Sherman avenue, is much improved from an attack of whooping cough. Miss Georgie Koontz, who graduated with high honors at Lincoln Institute, Jefferson City, Mo., will arrive in Denver to-morrow. Thursday, July 13th is the date of the 9th annual picnic of the COLORADO STATESMAN which will be held at Rocky Mountain Lake. Wait for the grand 4th of July ball to be given by the New Dancing Academy at Manitou hall, Tuesday, July 4th. Music by Harris' orchestra. Miss Ida M. Steward, daughter of Charles steward, arrived in the city sunday from Philadelphia, and is stopping at Mrs. W. Fisher, 2214 Lincoln avenue. Presiding Elder Jordan Allen met with a very painful accident Friday of last week by having a part of a finger amputated with a car door which was slammed against it. Wait for the grand Mid-Summer entertainment given by Arapahoe Lodges No. 2936. Good music and a program will be rendered. Come everybody and spend the evening. Manitou hall Thursday, July 6th. Admission: 35 cents. Messrs. W. H. Ashby and Howell J. Holmes of Chicago, was in the city last Saturday enroute to Trecio, N.M., with the United States Steel company. While here they paid this office a pleasant call. They are jolly and very interesting conversationalists and are two of the most efficient railroad boys in the service. Childrens' Day at Shorter Chapel was very appropriately observed last Sunday. Beginning with a very interesting sermon by Rev. W. W. S. Dyett Sunday morning the exercises were closed at night by the children. A good attendance and good collections wes the result. J. R. Robinson of Albuquerque, N. M., was a guest in Denver a few days this week and he in company with C. H. Johnson paid this office a very interesting call. Mr. Robinson is very much pleased with Denver but says Albuquerque furnishes better opportunities for the colored people than does this. --- The District Conference and Sunday School convention will convene next Tuesday at Shorter A. M. E. church for a three days session. At 8 p.m. Tuesday Presiding Elder Rev. J. P. Watson of the Colorado Springs district will preach. Wednesday evening will witness a Literary and Musical entertainment while on Thursday evening Rev. J. H. Hubbard will occupy the pulpit. A very interesting program will be rendered at each of the day sessions. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Pritchette of 747 So. Washington avenue entertained a few friends last Wednesday night at whist, flinch and checkers, "Little" Willie Crummer proved to be the most successful on the checkerboard; Miss Pritchette was the best at flinch but Thomas Arrington made them all "flinch" when he "gently" laid down the best cars at whist. Choice refreshments were served during the evening and a pleasant time was had by all. Local Notices. Hair cut 15 cents, 1847 Blake street Nicely furnished rooms for rent; all modern improvement at 1717 Pennsylvania avenue. Building boom boost for the Masons. Rocky Mountain Lodge No. 1, A. F. & A. M., the first outing of the season at Rocky Mountain Lake, Thursday, June 29, 1905. Admission 25 cents. Summer vacation rates via Union Pacific. To all Missouri river points, Kansas City, St. Joseph, Omaha, etc., and intermediate points east thereof to and including Memphis, St. Louis, Peoria, Chicago, Milwaukee, Duluth, St. Paul and Minneapolis. May 27, 29; June 3, 5, 6, 10, 12 and 13 and July 1 to 10 inclusive at one fare plus $2.00 for round trip. Final limit October 31. J. C. Ferguson, Gen't. Agent, 941 17th street, Denver, Colo. Summer vacation rates via Union Pacific. To Lewis Clark Exposition, Portland; to Tacoma, Seattle, Bellingham, Victoria and Vancouver, $40.00 for round trip, May 24 to Sept. 30, and on certain dates $61.00 to Portland and return, one way through California, stop overs anywhere, tickets limited to 90 da, s but not later than Nov. 30. Descriptive literature and full information upon application. J. C. Ferguson, Gen. Agent, 941 17th street, Denver, Colo. The Strong Company. Denver, Colo, June 9, 1905. The Union Mutual Benefit & Life Association., Arapahoe Bldg., City. Gentlemen:—The adjustment of my recent claim for illness, amounting to $20.00, meets with my hearty approval. To reciprocate and show my appreciation for the courtesy extended, I shall recommend your Association to all desiring safe and profitable insurance. A policy in the Union Mutual affords an income when other sources fail. MARTHA JETER, 2652 Lawrence st. The Big Company Denver, Colo., May 26, 1905. The Union Mutual Benefit & Life Association. City. Gentlemen:—It is a pleasure to carry a policy in a company that pays claims promptly on presentation of proofs. I filed my proofs yesterday and today received your check for $61.35, being in full payment for my recent accident. The adjustment is entirely satisfactory and I greatly appreciate the prompt discharge of my claim. MARY CLARKIN, 1312 Lawrence st. J. T. JOHNSON. Minnesota Grain Belt Beer. Also Western Agent for D. Carnegie & Co. Swedish Porter, Gothenburg, Sweden. 1644 Larimer St. Denver, Colo. JOHN T. JOHNSON TELLER HOUSE BAR. Central City, - - Colo. Complete Violin Outfits for Beginners. Violin Size, $ Size and Full Size, $5.00, $6.00 and $7.00 each. full line of Violins, Violas 'Cellos, Double Basses, Guilars, Mandolins, etc., etc. Musical merchandise of every description L. RUSCHENBERG & CO. 210 Enterprise Bldg. 15th & Champa Sts. Denver, Colo. WASH WATER WITH WHITE Water White Premium Store, Open about June 20th, 633 15th street, near California street. Save Water White Soap Wrappers. About June 20th, we shall open a store at No. 633 Fifteenth street, for the convenience of our patrons. Here you will find nisplayed the premiums we offer for Water White Soap wrappers. Beautiful pictures, missison clocks, silverware, china, cutlery, household utensils, novelties—useful and ornamental articles that housekeepers buy with money can be bad here for Water White Soap wrappers. New premiums being constantly added. Water White Soap has won its way way into thousands of Colorado homes in competition with the Most famous American brands. It cleans and purifies clothes without injury to color or fabric or delicate hands. It is made in Denver specially for Colorado's hard water—cleans nicely, easily, and thoroughly—try it. The Dunwoody Brothers Soap Co. Premium Store 633 Fifteenth St. Mail Orders P. O. Address Premium Dept. Box 1612 SLAVES SATISFIED WITH LOT. Under Mohammedan Masters Conditions Are Not Severe. "In Zanzibar and Pemba slaves are very slow to take advantage of the regulations that give them the right to claim their freedom," says a traveler. "They realize that so long as they are well used their position is superior to that of the man whose freedom is his sole asset. I have found the same attitude in North Africa. From Morocco to Tripoli one sees most of the slaves well content and flourishing. The famine, the locusts, the drought and the tax collector have no terror for them; work keeps them healthy, they have enough to eat and drink and the future has no meaning at all. There is promotion; there are confidential missions to governors and friends that elevate a slave, if only in the eyes of his follows, and there is always a chance of manumission when the owner dies and wishes to have some good deeds recorded in the books of Islam's recording angels. The sorry truth of the matter is that slaves under Mohammedan rule are much better off than they ever were under the rule of white men—in America and close where." THE NEW Dancing Academy MANITOU HALL 1545 CHAMPA ST. Open Every Thursday Night From 7.30 to 10:30 for Instruction From 10:30 to 12:30 social dancing Admission 25c. R. Phynix, M'gr. MISS M. COWDEN Shampoo, Cutting and Curling. Scalp Treatment, Hair Tonics, Hair Straightening, Manicuring. Stage Wigs for rent—Theatrical use and Masquerades. Goods delivered out of the city. All shades of hair matched by sending a sample of hair; also combings made up. Cheapest Switches 50 cents. 1219 21st St. DENVER COLO PHONE 1797 OLIVE. ALPHA Golden Gate Lodge No. 1, S. M. T. and U. B. F., meets the 2nd and 4th Saturdays of each month at 2:30 p. m., at Odd Fellows hall, 1832 Arapahoe street. All members in good standing are invited to attend. O. L. LAWSON, Y. M. O. GRIOSBY, V. Y. M. THE THOS. HOLLAND Bar and Cafe Co. Lemp's Beer on Draught. Bass' Ale on Draught. Maryland Club Whiskey Guaranteed over 14 years old. CAFE OPEN ALL NIGHT 1744 Curtis St. Nent to Curtis Theaters. Reduced From $4. We want the public to know their virtues. Come at once if you would save money. SEE OUR WINDOWS. THE All the Newest things in Imperial Straws at Popular Prices Genuine South American (Suc. to McDonald & Smedley) 821 to 823 16th St. Denver, Colo HEROINE OF GEORGIA PRINCESS CHIEF FIGURE IN ROMANTIC TALE. Prisoner in the Hands of the Enemies of Her Country Her Quick Wit Found a Way to Baffle the Designs of Her Captors. James Baker, the well-known traveler and writer, tells a curious story of a war 100 years ago. The Persian shah was besieging Tiflis and the husband of the Princess Salome had been slain in the siege. When the Persians entered and sacked the town Salome triomed to save her young son, but he was torn from her arms and hacked to pieces before her eyes. Her own life was spared and she was borne to the camp outside the walls of Tiflis to the shah. He sold her to Djafar Bek, who shut her up in a castle—a part of which still remains—near where is now the lovely tropical botanical garden of Tiflis. Charmed by her beauty, he asked her to become his wife. She refused, and begged her purchaser to slay her. The Persian gave her a night to reconsider the matter and on the next day he lay reclining on a great cushion under a tree on that hot, sunny hillside and awaited her answer. Presently she appeared before him, velled in a long, pure white robe, calm and stately, her face deathly pale. She advanced, her armed jailers following her. The Persian waved his followers aside and asked the princess: "You consent to be my wife?" "Yes," was the solemn answer. "I consent to love you, for after the death of my husband and son it is my destiny; there is no other fate for me. "In Georgia," said the princess, "there are certain families that possess strange powers and dark secrets. My mother foretold I should be the wife of a Djafar, and from my mother I, too, receive these powers to read the future." The Persian was impressed by her manner and her presence. She saw her power. "Give me your hand," she said. "Let me read there if I shall have long years of happiness, with you." He held forth his hand. She held it until it slightly trembled in her fingers. Then she burst forth with a cry of horror. "Oh, my master, knuwest thou that death awalts thee? Perchance this very night." Djafar Bek trembled now. "Thou wilt die by the hand of a man thou hast this day offended." "Is it by Assa Dhoulla Bek." he asked. "We quarreled to-day, and about you. He would have bought you." "Oh, he master," exclaimed Salome, "to save thee I must have some object upon which he has looked to-day, then I can avert this evil and make his arms useless against thee." "What! You can do this?" exclaimed Djafar, incredulously. "Most certainly. Give me your dagger." He drew it and handed it to her. She held it up and, looking up to the blue heavens above, murmured a prayer; then, handing it back to him, said: "Now it is useless; it can slay no one." He looked at her unbelievingly. "Try it," she exclaimed. "Strike here!" He struck the blow where her finger rested full upon her heart; the keen blade went swiftly home and she fell at his feet, exclaiming, "O God, receive my soul!" Then she lay dead. [Picture of a man in a suit with a white shirt and a black tie]. AR BOTLING W J. T. TURNER, PROP. Vines, Liquors and 8762 FAMILY, TRADE A angs' Special Brew ST. ESTERN SHOE ampa St. Den McVICAR BOTH J. T. TURN Beer, Wines, Liqu PHONE, MAIN58762. FAMIL Zangs' Spe McVICAR BOTLING WORKS. J. T. TURNER, PROP. Beer, Wines, Liquors and Cigars. PHONE, MAIN58762. FAMILY, TRADE A SPECIALTY. Zangs' Special Brew. THE EASTERN THE EASTERN SHOE STORE 1527 Champa St. Our Men's Shoes c the price in the city. PASTIME S A RESORT FOR LADI Shoes cannot be the city. Our Men's Shoes cannot be duplicated for the price in the city. IME SOCIAL T FOR LADIES AND GEN HED. PH PASTIME SOCIAL CLUB A RESORT FOR LADIES AND GENTLEMEN. DICK FRAZIER, Manager. F.W.GROMM TRUNK FACTORY 935-16TH ST. GREAT Fifty or more suit can your own price. Salesroom 935 16th St. Bran Phone 1922. "Colur ZAN se suit cases slighf n St. Branch 632 15th St olumbi ZANG'S Fifty or more suit cases slightly damaged at your own price. Salesroom 935 16th St. Branch 632 15th St Temple Court Bld. Phone 1922. Denver, Colo. "Columbine" ZANG'S New Table Beer Is a special Bre DENVER'S LEADING BR Columb Is guaranteed Try a Sample Case and TELEPH The Ph. Zan Proc Fresh Beer Delivered Daily to all Is a special Brew for Family use READING BRAND OF BOX Columbine Bee Is guaranteed absolutely pure ample Case and you will use TELEPHONE 1285 Ph. Zang Brewin Producers Daily to all parts of the city DENVER'S LEADING BRAND OF BOTTLED BEER Is guaranteed absolutely pure Try a Sample Case and you will use no other TELEPHONE 1285 Fresh Beer Delivered Daily to all parts of the city The Drexel Bar 427 17TH STREET. Golden Beer on Draught FINEST LIQUORS AND CIGARS. GEORGE NIESS, PROP. Phone 1431 Red. Denver, Colo. --- J. F. CLARK. 2609 ARAPAHOE ST. NEWLY FURNISHED. 1821 Arapahoe St. Denver's Favorite Pleasure Resort. Whist, Pool, Chess, Checker and other pastime games. PHONE 2275 MAIN. 1859 Champa St., Denver, Colo LING WORKS, VER. PROP. alquors and Cigars. ILY,TRADE A SPECIALTY. pecial Brew. DENVER. COLO SHOE STORE We Positively give the best value for the money in the City of Denver. Ask to see Our $2.25 and $2.50 Shoes for Ladies. THE SOCIAL CLUB ES AND GENTLEMEN. F. W. GROMM, Manufacturer and Dealer in Trunks, Valises Etc Sample Cases Made to Order. LEADER ases slightly damaged at ch 632 15th St Temple Court Bld. Denver, Colo. mbine" NG'S new for Family use GRAND OF BOTTLED BEER ine Beer absolutely pure d, you will use no other IONE 1285 Brewing Co. ducers parts of the city Dr. E. Langston Faulkner, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office Hours:—8:00 to 10:00 a. m.; 1 to 4 and 7 to 8 p. m. Sundays—10 to 11 a. m., 7 to 8 p. m. RES & OFFICE PHONE MAIN 4956. 2100 Arapahoe St. Denver, Cola. THE DENVER. COLO Denver, Colo. PHONE MAIN 3044 Denver, Colorado; J.M. 116 High Grade Pianos bought at 60 cents on the dollar. R. T. Cassell, proprietor of the Columbine Music Co., recently purchased in Kansas City, 11C Pianos, dealer's stock who was forced to one wall. The stock is now here and placed on sale. A chance to buy a piano at $75 to $100 less than regular price. So that all may have an opportunity, no matter how limited their income is, to buy at this sale, we will sell you this week a good piano for $6 down, $1 per week. Come in and get first choice on these wonderful piano bargains. A few prices picked at random from this stock: An upright for $65, one upright for $88, one upright for $125, a $300 piano, less than nine months' use, $195; a $400 instrument for $235, less than a year old; a $450 piano, less than ten months old, $265; a good square piano for $50; a good organ for $25. Free—A three months' course of music lessons. 920-922-924 15th Street. Open Evenings. Charles Block. ED. LEWIN. Importer and Wholesale Dealer in Wines, Champagne, Whi ties and Cigars. Manufacturer of Fine Cigars. Sole agent for the celebrated "Herbert Spencer" Cigar. Telephone 1390. 2400-4 Larimer Street, Denver Colo. The Denver Barber Supply Co Is the best place for good Razors, Shears, Pocket knives, Combs, Brushes, Pom mades and all toilet articles at 1008 15th Street Telephone 842 Black The Denver Republican Is clean, truthful, reliable and progressive It prints more news than any other paper in Colorado. It stands for the best interests of the state and enjoys the confidence and esteem of all intelligent readers THE New York Herald-Denver Republican news service gives the only complete and accurate accounts of the Russo-Japanese war. Special Correspondents at the seat of war and in all foreign capitals V DAILY AND SUNDAY BY MAIL—Postpaid, per month, 75c. WEEKLY—Postpaid, per year, $1.00. PEACE ENVOYS NAMED RUSSIA AND JAPAN TO CONFER Roosevelt's Good Offices May Result in Peace—Place of Meeting Yet to Be Named. Washington, June 13.—Official assurances that the President's efforts to bring Russia and Japan together to discuss peace will be crowned with success was brought to the White House yesterday by Count Cassini, Russian ambassador, who called by appointment and in the name of Emperor Nicholas formally accepted the President's "offer of good will." The following official statement regarding the conference was issued at the White House: "Ambassador Cassini has called to express the Ruussian government's assent to the President's proposition and to state that they would appoint plenipotentiaries to meet the plenipotentiaries of Japan to discuss the question of peace. The place of meeting is at present being discussed." Conferences of supreme importance were held yesterday in Washington. The blue room of the White House was the scene, and President Roosevelt, Count Cassini, the Russian ambassador, and Kogoro Takahira, the Japanese minister, were the principal confeeers. Japan was the first of the two powers to indicate its acceptance of President Roosevelt's proposition. The formal response to his identical note of Thursday last was received from the Japanese government Saturday. Informal assurances of acceptance of the President's suggestion were received from the Russian government a little later, but the assurances from St. Petersburg were not of the same definite character as had been received from Tokio. Early yesterday Ambassador Meyer, at St. Petersburg, informed this government Russia had accepted the President's proposition and would name representatives with plenary powers to meet plenipotentiaries of Japan. In addition to indicating the acceptance by the Russian government of President Roosevelt's proposition, Count Cassini informed the President of Russia's desires as to the place of meeting of the plenipotentiaries and named those who probably would be delegated to represent the Russian Emperor. In regard to a place of meeting the situation is this: Japan does not wish Paris, and Russia is unfavorable to Mukden or Che Foo. Both are opposed to Washington for climatic reasons, though neither would oppose the selection of an American watering place, and among those already mentioned are Newport and Manchester-by-the-Sea. Of the places under consideration in Europe it is said Russia might accept The Hague. Geneva is also considered, and it would not be objectionable to Japan. GARDENS OF DELIGHT. At Denver's Popular Amusement Place. Beautiful in their thousands upon thousands of flowers and with countless trees are Elitch's Gardens in Denver this summer. Always luxuriant in verdure, the gardens have been made more so this summer by the addition of more flowers and trailing vines until even the regular patrons have been amazed at the transformation. While so much attention has been paid to nature, the amusements have not been overlooked and several new features have been added to the popular resort of Denver. Perhaps the most striking of the new novelties is the Katzenjammer castle, named in honor of the imps familiar to readers of the comic supplements of the big Sunday newspapers. The castle is filled with startling mechanical surprises that must be seen to be appreciated. Another new feature is Professor Clark's dog, cat and monkey show. It occupies a large tent, and the years of patient toll that Professor Clark has put in with his animals has been crowned with success, for the performance is truly remarkable. It is the big attraction for the little folks. Still another new feature is the vaudeville theater, with performances, practically every hour, of a high grade. The entrance to the theater is filled with mirrors that distort the human form into many grotesque and laughable shapes and it has become known as the "Temple of Mirth." The old mill, through which you float in a boat, has been provided with new and magnificent scenes, thus enhancing the beauty of a place that was so popular last season. On the merry-go-round Mrs. Elitch-Long has expended $20,000 for new and handsomely carved animals that have proved a wonder to the children, while new cars have been provided for the double figure eight, better known as the "coaster." The circle swing, which has baskets attached to huge cables that swings you far out above the heads of the spectators, is proving even more popular this season than last. Tuesday is children's day at Elitch's and for their special entertainment Mrs. Elitch-Long has had the helter-skeller built. It is aptly named. A grove, crescent-shaped, extends from a tower fifty feet in height, and down this grove you coast seated on a bit of carpet. It is free for the children on their days, and all other days it is 5 cents for everybody. Speaking of prices, Elitch's Gardens are unique for there is no amusement where the price exceeds 10 cents, except in the main theater. In this theater Walter Clark Bellows, the famous New York stage director, has a stock company of players that is not surpassed by any company in the country. "The Henrietta" is the attraction in the theater for this week and for next week "A Japanese Nightingale" will be presented. IS ONE AS NECESSARY AS THE OTHER? Citizens of Large Cities Say It Is. New York, June 13.—In the recent agitation here about the price of gas, the demand for lower rates was supported by the argument that every resident is as dependent upon a supply of gas as upon a supply of good water. It has come to pass that the day laborer uses gas as his only fuel for cooking, because of economy, and the rich man uses gas on account of its convenience. Gas for lighting, with modern improvements in burners, is cheaper, better and more satisfactory than any other kind of light. Gas sells at $1.00 per thousand cubic feet in large cities and from that to as high as $3.00 in smaller towns. The consumer of gas in the country uses Acetylene (pronounced a-set-alene), and each user makes his own gas and is independent of Gas and Electric Companies. Acetylene is a more perfect illuminant than the gas sold by the big gas companies in the cities, and the cost to the smallest user is about the equivalent of city gas at 85 cents per thousand. Acetylene is the modern artificial light, the latest addition to the many inventions that have become daily necessities. The light from an acetylene flame is soft, steady and brilliant, and inequality is only rivaled by the sun's rays. If water and a solid material known as Calcium. Carbide are brought into contact, the immediate result is the making of this wonderful gas. The generation of acetylene is so simple that experience or even apparatus is not necessary to make it. If it is desired to make it for practical lighting, and to keep it for immediate use, then a small machine called an "Acetylene Generator" is employed. There are many responsible concerns making acetylene generators. In practice, this gas is distributed in small pipes throughout buildings, grounds, or entire cities and towns, in the same manner as ordinary city gas. Acetylene is the only satisfactory means of lighting isolated buildings located in the country or suburbs at a distance from city gas or electric plants. Untasted sweets are sweetest. There is a doubt, however, about this applying to kissing. AN AWFUL SKIN HUMOR. Covered Head, Neck and Shoulders—Suffered Agony for Twenty-five Years Until Cured by Cuticura. "For twenty-five years I suffered agony from a terrible humor, completely covering my head, neck and shoulders, discharging matter of such of fensiveness to sight and smell that I became an object of dread. I consulted the most able doctors far and near, to no avail. Then I got Cuticura, and in a surprisingly short time I was completely cured. For this I thank Cuticura, and advise all those suffering from skin humors to get it and end their misery at once. S. P. Keyes, 149 Congress Street, Boston, Mass." The more front we put up the more inquisitive people are to know what's behind it. RAILROAD RATE LEGISLATION. Testifying before the Senate Committee at Washington, Inter-State Commerce Commissioner Prouty said in discussing the proposition to give to that Commission the power to regulate railway rates: "I think the railways should make their own rates. I think they should be allowed to develop their own business. I have never advocated any law, and I am not now in favor of any law, which would put the rate making power into the hands of any commission or any court. While it may be necessary to do that some time, while that is done in some states at the present time, while it is done in some countries, I am opposed to it. * * * The railway rate is property. It is all the property that the railway has got. The rest of its property is not good for anything unless it can charge a rate. Now it has always seemed to me that when a rate was fixed, if that rate was an unreasonable rate, it deprives the railroad company of its property pro tanto. It is not necessary that you should confiscate the property of a railroad; it is not necessary that you should say that it shall not earn three per cent or four per cent. When you put in a rate that is inherently unreasonable, you have deprived that company of its rights, of its property, and the Circuit Court of the United States has jurisdiction under the fourteenth amendment to restrain that. * * * I have looked at these cases a great many times, and I can only come to the conclusion that a railroad company is entitled to charge a fair and reasonable rate, and if any order of a commission, if any statute of a state legislature takes away that rate, the fourteenth amendment protects the railway company." A girl can be so pretty as to make you think she doesn't need any sense. Ask Your Dealer for Allen's Foot-Ease. A powder. It rests the feet. Cures Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching, Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. At all Drummers and Shoe stores, 25 cents. Accept no substitute. Sample mailed FREE. Address, Allen S. Chasted, LeRoy, N. Y. Lawyer—So you married in haste and repented at leisure? Lady Client—No, sir! I married at leisure and repented in haste. COLORADO NEWS ITEMS Greeley is to have a wireless telegraph station. "Pueblo Pushers" is the name of an organization that has been organized to boost Pueblo. An unusual number of tourists have visited the top of Pike's Peak in May and June this year. Thomas Millard, formerly a Pueblo policeman, has fallen heir to a $50,000 estate in Scotland. By the action of the Salt Lake convention permanent headquarters of the Western Federation of Miners will be continued at Denver. A complete school census for the county of Pueblo shows 15,004 children of school age. This is an increase of 200 over last year. The annual convention of the Colorado State Realty Association will be held at Colorado Springs June 20th to 23d. The programme includes addresses by many prominent men. The Denver baseball team has reached second place in the Western league and has an eye on the championship. Colorado Springs will "have to hurry" to escape the booby prize. Money is being raised for the construction of a woman's pavilion at the National Jewish Home for Consumptives. The sum of $40,000 is wanted, over $18,000 of which has already been subscribed. Edward Carberry, one of the most noted detectives on the Denver police force, died on the 10th inst. of heart disease. Mr. Carberry was night marshal of Cripple Creek in 1896 and 1897. Pueblo cackies as follows in a telegraphic dispatch: R. C. Welch of East Second street has a hen which yesterday produced an egg measuring nine and three-fourths inches at its greatest circumference and eight inches around the center. At a conference between Director of the Mint Roberts and Superintendent Downer of Denver, the appointment of Fred H. Chaffin as cashier of the Denver mint was decided upon and his commission was made out to take effect July 1st. Charles Swaney, who was sentenced to a sixty-days' term in the county jail at Grand Junction for assaulting Judge W. A. Marsh in the office of the latter, has been pardoned by Governor McDonald. He had served one-half of his sentence. The Phillipine veterans of Colorado will hold their annual reunion at Colorado Springs belonged 22d and 23d. There are a large number of the boys in the state who belonged to the First Colorado, Thirty-fourth volunteers and other organizations. During the last sixty days twenty two cases of violent deaths have been handled by the coroner of Las Animas county and this number does not include the numerous persons killed in the mines. Murder, suicide and the railroads contribute to the list. Forest Supervisor J. H. Clark is in Colorado Springs preparatory to inaugurating the work of planting 50,000 Nebraska seedlings in the Pike's Peak forest reserve. Approximately 2,000,000 feet of dead timber will be sold off the south reserve this year. The Board of County Commissioners of Pueblo county has formally accepted the offer of Orman & Crook, bondsmen, to pay to the county treasurer the sum of $3,312.90, which is the amount Pueblo county actually lost by the failure of the Bank of Pueblo in 1893. Candidates for admission to the bar in Colorado will appear before the State Board of Examiners June 23d-24th. The examinations are usually held at the capitol, in one of the legislative chambers. There are indications that there will be a large class this year. The El Paso County Horticultural Society is completing plans for the seventh annual flower show. A new feature this year will be the presentation of blue ribbon diplomas for the highest awards. The show will be given in Colorado Springs August 23d, 24th and 25th. John Cameron, as trustee for the city of Pueblo, has filed in the office of the state engineer plats of the Greenhorn reservoir, twenty-nine miles west of Pueblo. The site was presented to the city by former State Engineer J. S. Green and is designed to be used at some time to supply Pueblo with mountain water. A contribution of $1,500 has been made jointly by the Denver & Rio Grande, the Colorado & Southern and the Colorado Midland railroads to the Grand Army general executive committee for the fund to be used in the entertainment of the delegates to the National G. A. B. encampment at Denver next September. The board of control has decided that any measures, no matter how stringent, necessary to prevent the repetition of an outbreak similar to that which recently occurred at the State Industrial School for Girls, will be adopted in the future. The damage done during the late outbreak is now said to be only about $300—hardly a tenth of what was first reported. Carl Chamberlain, one of the executors of the Stratton estate, was severely but not dangerously injured in an automobile accident two miles north of Sedalia. He was on his way home from Denver when a bolt of lightning stunned him and before he could stop the machine it went off a bridge and landed upon its side in the creek nine feet below. May Wood and Ethel Robinson, two girls nineteen and twenty years of age respectively, who escaped from the Industrial school near Denver during the recent fracas, were caught by Sheriff Thomas and Marshal Russell at Lamar and sent back to the institution. When arrested they were dressed in boys' clothing and had been beating their way in a box car. W. E. Pabor of the Pabor Lake Pineapple, Florida, is in Colorado for a few weeks' visit and will attend the meeting of the Colorado State Editorial Association at Montrose June 26th; also the Grand Valley Pioneers' Association at Grand Junction July 4th. He was in attendance at the meeting of the National Editorial Association in Oklahoma, where he read his annual poem. WORDS OF MRS. EDDY ANSWERS A LIST OF QUESTIONS. Announced as Her Last Address to the Public—Discusses Spiritual Science and Hygiene. Boston, June 12.—The Boston Herald to-day publishes under its copyrights a series of questions and answers, the latter by Mrs. Mary Baker Eddy, in which she sets forth her principles regarding poverty, disease, the use of surgery, etc. Mrs. Eddy speaks of these as her last public utterance and expressed to your correspondent the desire that she now be permitted uninterrupted opportunity "to assimilate myself to God." The questions and answers follow: "Is Christian Science a new religion?" "Yes, a new old religion and Christianity." "Does it stand in relation to Christianity as Christianity did to Judaism?" "Are you, Mrs. Eddy, an interpreter of Jesus' teaching, or have you presented that which is new to His teaching?" "An interpreter thereof." "Is Christian Science in antagonism to natural science?" "No, not to natural spiritual science. There is no material science." "Does Christian Science discourage the study of anatomy, physiology and hygiene?" "Not of spiritual hygiene." Not of spiritual hygiene. "Does Christian Science deny the existence of disease germs, or merely assert man's superiority over such forces?" "Denies the existence thereof." "Does Christian Science expect its followers to live immediately as though entirely spiritualized beings?" "No." "Is it proper for the Christian Scientist to disregard the laws of hygiene, or merely to disregard them if circumstances make it necessary?" "To disregard all that denies the Allness of God, spirit and His laws." "Under any conceivable circumstances would the Christian Scientist make use of surgery?" "Yes and no." "In case of infectious disease would the Christian Scientist yield himself to the customary treatment of isolation and disinfection?" "If the law demands it, yes." "Does Christian Science regard property as a manifestation of disease?" "No." "Is poverty a disease of society or the individual?" "Of both." "Can the individual, by use of Christian Science, overcome worldly defeat?" "Yes." "Has an evil mind power against a spiritual life?" "Evil works against good, if it works at all." "Do you regard death as the great world fear which the human race wills against itself?" "Yes." "If the world would abandon the study of disease and crime and devote itself to the study of wealth, health and love, would criminals, cripples and poverty cease to exist?" "Could society exist without jails and almshouses?" Reprieve Has Expired. Canon City, Colo., June 12.—The time of the reprieve granted Frederick Arnold and Newton Andrews, the Youngblood murderers, having expired to-day, the men will to-morrow be returned to their former cells in the execution house in the State Penitentiary, from which they were taken ten days ago. FEED YOUNG GIRLS. Must Have Right Food While Growing. Great care should be taken at the critical period when the young girl is just merging into womanhood that the diet shall contain all that is upbuilding and nothing harmful. At that age the structure is being formed and if formed of a healthy, sturdy character, health and happiness will follow; on the other hand unhealthy cells may be built in and a sick condition slowly supervene which, if not checked, may ripen into a chronic disease and cause life-long suffering. A young lady says: "Coffee began to have such an effect on my stomach a few years ago, that I was compelled to quit using it. It brought on headaches, pains in my muscles and nervousness. "I tried to use tea in its stead, but found its effects even worse than those I suffered from coffee. Then for a long time I drank milk alone at my meals, but it never helped me physically, and at last it palled on me. A friend came to the rescue with the suggestion that I try Postum Coffee. "I did so, only to find at first, that I didn't fancy it. But I had heard of so many persons who had been benefited by its use that I persevered, and when I had it brewed right found it grateful in flavor and soothing and strengthening to my stomach. I can find no words to express my feeling of what I owe to Postum Food Coffee! "In every respect it has worked a wonderful improvement—the headaches, nervousness, the pains in my side and back, all the distressing symptoms yielded to the magic power of Postum. My brain seems also share in the betterment of my physical condition; it seems keener, more alert and brighter. I am, in short, in better health now than I ever was before, and I am sure I owe it to the use of your Postum Food Coffee." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Hundreds of dealers say the extra quantity and superior quality of De-fiance Starch is fast taking place of all other brands. Others say they cannot sell any other starch. Nearly every one has some accomplishments. Some there are who do nothing but accomplish mistakes. TEA Tea is almost nothing; how much weight do you think there is in the taste of it? Weight is no measure for tea! Don't judge cigars and women by their wrappers. TWO OPEN LETTERS IMPORTANT TO MARRIED WOMEN Mrs. Mary Dimmick of Washington tells How Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Made Her Well. It is with great pleasure we publish the following letters, as they convincingly prove the claim we have so many times made in our columns that Mrs. Mrs. Mary Dimmick Pinkham, of Lynn, Mass., is fully qualified to give helpful advice to sick women. Read Mrs. Dimmick's letters. "I have been a sufferer for the past eight years with a trouble which first originated from painful menstruation—the pains were excruciating, with inflammation and ulceration of the womb. The doctor says I must have an operation on cannot live," do not postpone it, and I can possibly avoid it. Please help me."—Mrs. Mary Dimmick, Washington, D. C. Her second letter; Dear Mrs. Pinkham: "You will remember my condition when I last wrote you, and that the doctor said I must have an operation or I could not live. I received your kud letter and followed your advice very carefully and am now entirely well. As my case was so serious it seems a miracle that I am cured. I know that I owe not only my health but my life to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and to your advice. I can walk miles without an ache or a pain, and I wish every suffering woman would be able to do them."—Mrs. Mary Dimmick, 90th and East Capitol Streets, Washington, D. C. How easy it was for Mrs. Dimmick to write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., and how little it cost her—a two-cent stamp. Yet how valuable was the reply! As Mrs. Dimmick says—it saved her life. Mrs. Pinkham has on file thousands of just such letters as the above, and offers alling women helpful advice. THE OPPORTUNITY OF TO-DAY The opportunity for the man with little means is probably better to-day in the prairie states of the Southwest than ever before in the history of agriculture. The man with little means has the open choice of law for the homesteads that existed in the 70s. The lands then taken up under Government laws are now prosperous farms and ranches. There is need of more hands to develop the land. The land is now Oklahoma and Texas, are vast areas of unimproved land not yet producing the crops of which it is capable. Practically the same thing is true in the Southwest, where the land is equally represented. There are openings of all sorts for awake-wake men. Are you one? THE MKT GEORGE MORTON, G. P. & T. A. BOX 911, ST. LOUIS, MO. PAXTINE TOILET ANTISEPTIC FOR WOMEN troubled with fills peculiar to them treated, a solution is miraculously successful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs, stops discharges, heals inflammation and local soreness, cures leucorrhoea and nasal catarrh. Paxline is in powder form to be dissolved in pure water, and is far more cleanling, healing, germicidal and ecological. TOILET LEFT AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists, 50 cents a box. Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free. THE R. PAXTON COMPANY BOSTON, MASS. WANTED Competent men in the printing trades. San Francisco pays the highest wages, in the United States. Permanent jobs given to good non-union men who can furnish satisfactory recommendations. This is not a strike-breaking proposition; the Pacific Coast Typothete has decided to go to the OPEN SHOP and that means jobs for competent men and absolute protection. Address W. E. ALEXANDER, Secretary Citizen Alliance, 501 Croesley Building, San Francisco. BAD DEBTS COLLECTED EVERYWHERE-SEND THEM IN MERCHANTS PROTECTIVE ASSN. FRANCIS E. LUKS GAR, MN. SALT LAKE CITY, UTN. SOME PEOPLE DON'T USE US. NEW PENSION LAWS SENT FRED Apply to NATHAN BICKNOLL, 914 F ST., Washington D.C. O HON. JOHN TIGHE. Assemblyman Tighe's letter should be read by every brain worker leading a strenuous life. Hon. John Tighe, No. 98 Remsen St., Cohoes, N. Y., Member of Assembly from the Fourth district, Albany county, N. Y., writes as follows: "Peruna has my hearty indorsement as a restorative tonic of superior merit. At times when I have completely broken down from excess of work, so that my faculties seemed actually at a standstill, Peruna has acted as a healing restorer, starting the machinery of mind and body afresh with new life and energy. "I recommend it to a man tired in mind and body as a tonic superior to anything I know of and well worthy serious consideration."—J. Tighe. Excess of work so common in our country causes impaired nerves, leading to catarrh and catarrhal nervousness—a disease that is responsible for half of all nervous troubles. Peruna cures this trouble because it cures catarrh wherever located. If you do not derive prompt and satisfactory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case, and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O. Another Cruise to Iceland. With the introduction of the steamer Hamburg into the pleasure cruising field of the Hamburg-American line, the company announces a cruise to Iceland, hitherto an almost inaccessible island, including in the itinerary Scotland, the Orkney and Shetland islands, Norway and the North Cape. The scope of the itineraries of the Hamburg-American line's summer cruises has been enlarged year by year. This season the company has arranged for fifteen trips to the Scandinavian peninsula, Spitzenbergen, Iceland and the interesting islands of the north of Europe. With the addition of Iceland almost every place of historic and scenic interest in Viking-land is visited by their cruising steamers. NAMES BEST DOCTOR NAMES BEST DOCTOR MR. BAYSSON PUBLISHES RESULTS OF VALUABLE EXPERIENCE. A Former Pronounced Dyspeptic He Now Rejoices in Perfect Freedom from Miseries of Indigestion. Thousands of sufferers know that the reason why they are irritable and depressed and nervous and sleepless is because their food does not digest, but how to get rid of the difficulty is the puzzling question. Good digestion calls for strong digestive organs, and strength comes from a supply of good rich blood. For this reason Mr. Baysson took Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for the cure of indigestion. "They have been my best doctor," he says. "I was suffering from dyspepsia. The paina in my stomach after meals were almost unbearable. My sleep was very irregular and my complexion was sallow. As the result of using eight boxes of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, about the merits of which I learned from friends in France, I have escaped all these troubles, and am able again to take pleasure in eating." A very simple story, but if it had not been for Dr. Williams' Pink Pills it might have been a tragic one. When discomfort begins with eating, fills up the intervals between meals with pain, and prevents sleep at night, there certainly cannot be much pleasure in living. A final general breaking down must be merely a question of time. Mr. Joseph Baysson is a native of Aix-les-Bains, France, but now resides at No. 2439 Larkin street, San Francisco, Cal. He is one of a great number who can testify to the remarkable efficacy of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills in the treatment of obstinate disorders of the stomach. If you would get rid of nausea, pain or burning in the stomach, vertigo, nervousness, insomnia, or any of the other miseries of a dyspeptic, get rid of the weakness of the digestive organs by the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. They are sold by druggists everywhere. Proper diet is, of course, a great aid in forwarding recovery once begun, and a little book, "What to Eat and How to Eat," may be obtained by any one who makes a request for it by writing to the Dr. Williams Medical Co., Schenectady, N.Y. This valuable diet book contains an important chapter on the simplest means for the cure of constipation. When a girl looks as if she wouldn't inflate, a sign she is waiting for the chance. The best you can do, Schilling's Best. The best you can do, Schilling's Best. Your grocer returns your money if you don't like it. CONFEDERATE REUNION CONFEDERATE REUNION VETERANS MEET IN KENTUCKY Louisville Decorates for Former Wearers of the Gray With American Flags. Louisville, Ky., June 15.—The United Confederate veterans and auxiliary organizations gathered in Louisville yesterday for their annual reunion. The decorations are on a lavish scale and the American flag predominates. The reunion was officially opened shortly after noon when Gen. Bennett H. Young, commander of the Kentucky division, called the perspiring mass of humanity to order. A rousing reception was given the commander-in-chief, Gen. Stephen De Lee, when he arose to respond for the veterans to the addresses of welcome. Cheers were given the few remaining great figures of the Confederacy as they made their appearance. The venerable Simon Bolivar Buckner, who is approaching his eighttieth year, was heartily greeted, and delivered a stirring speech. Lleut. Gen. W. L. Cabell, commander of the trans-Mississippi division, was helped to the platform by many willing hands, and his appearance was the signal for a prolonged outburst of hand-clapping. When Geo. Joe Wheeler, accompanied by his daughter, Miss Carrie Wheeler, the sponsor for the South, and her maid of honor were seen making their way to the stage, the chairman lost control of the convention and the veterans cheered themselves hoarse over the sight of their famous leader. General Wheeler acknowledged the greetings in a brief speech. In his response to the address of welcome, Berry B. Haines of St. Louis said: "There is one duty that the southern son owes to his father as well as to his nation, and that is to insist persistently at all times and upon all occasions that the history of the war shall be truly written, that its causes shall be asserted, and that we may proclaim, and posterity know, that the soldiers of the South fought for principle and honor and the preservation of that construction of the constitution which was given by the men who made it." The United Sons of Confederate Veterans met to-day in Hopkins Theater. The attendance was not large. T. P. Stone of Waco, Texas, a past commander-in-chief, made the response to the welcoming address. The preparations for the accommodation of the old soldiers have been made on a lavish scale. All courts have adjourned for the remainder of the week in order that the court rooms may be used as headquarters of the various state delegations. The attendance exceeds expectations. Gore Canon Controversy. Denver, June 15.—Rendering his opinion on surveys and other investigations made of Goffe canon, secured under his direction while in charge of the United States reclamation service in this city, A. L. Fellows yesterday made the following assertions in an affidavit taken by United States District Attorney E. M. Cranston, and which will be used by the government in its application for an transaction to restrain the Moffat road from laying tracks through the canon. Mr. Fellows, in substance, declares: That the construction of the Kremlmiling reservoir is a feasible and economical proposition from an engineer's standpoint. That the supply of unappropriated waters is sufficient to fill the reservoir annually. That the needs of the United States reclamation service in its plans for the reclamation of arid lands situated below the reservoir site in Colorado, Utah, Arizona and California make it essential that the reservoir be constructed. That the reservoir site is the only site on Grand river adapted to satisfy the requirements of the lands below it. That the construction of the proposed reservoir will not prevent the construction of the Denver, Northwestern & Pacific, or Moffat road. Rio Grande Earnings. Denver, June 15.—According to a forecast of the auditor's report, which has been sent to the stockholders, the surplus earnings of the Denver & Rio Grande railroad for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1905, will be more than double those of 1904. The actual surplus for the first ten months of the present year is shown to be $2,316,445, with May and June estimated at $454,484. A dividend of five per cent, was paid out of these earnings upon the preferred stock, amounting to $2,220,000 upon an issue of $44,400,000, and in addition one-half year's interest on $1,200,000 of additional stock issued last spring. The total dividend upon the preferred stock for the fiscal year aggregates $2,250,000, an increase of $30,000 over the previous year. The increase in surplus for the year is over 100 per cent, and this reflects the improved condition in the business of the state. The showing is extremely gratifying to the officials of the road, for it means that, if necessary, a dividend of nearly two per cent. could be paid upon the $38,000.000 of common stock which has never yielded anything. However, the surplus will be kept in the treasury, although it is regarded as probable that the earnings of the coming fiscal year, beginning July 1st, will give the common stock the first dividend in its history. Peace Preliminaries. Washington, June 15—Gradually the negotiations for peace in the Far East are nearing a focus. The one point to which the energies of those directly concerned in them are now being directed is the choice of a place for the holding of the conference of the plenipotentiaries of the belligerents. It is known officially that three cities are under consideration by Russia and Japan. These cities, named in the order of the likelihood of their final selection, are Washington, The Mague and Geneva. Thus far no decision has been reached. Valuable Street Car Device. Managers of electric railways in Cleveland have not idled their time in discussing the physiological phases of the fact that women—the majority of women—face to the rear when alighting from a street car. They have simply recognized the existence of the habit, and by the use of a practical device made its continuance nearly impossible. Just a rail put in such a position that it can be grasped by only one hand, and that the one that swings its owner head and eyes to the front, has done the trick, and it is believed that many accidents will be averted by its adoption. And if it does work as well as expected it seems a moral obligation is laid upon railway managers everywhere to protect their woman passengers from their own carelessness. Financial Center at New York. In a recent interview at St. Louis, United States Treasurer Ellis H. Roberts said: "I confidently believe that sooner or lated London will cease to be the center of finance and New York City will become its successor. The financial interests of this country control more than one-fourth of the stock of all the mined gold in every civilized country in the world." It Pays to use newspapers. Cox, Wis., June 12—Frank M. Russell of this place had Kidney Disease so bad that he could not walk. He tried doctors' treatment and many different remedies, but was getting worse. He was very low. He read in a newspaper how Dodd's Kidney Pills were curing cases of Kidney Trouble, Bright's Disease and Rheumatism, and thought he would try them. He took two boxes, and now he is quite well. He says: "I can now work all day, and not feel tired. Before using Dodd's Kidney Pills, I couldn't walk across the floor." Mr. Russell's is the most wonderful case ever known in Chippewa county. This new remedy—Dodd's Kidney Pills—is making some miraculous curves in Wisconsin. Japan's Fisheries. The fisheries of Japan annually yield about 3,000,000 tons of fish worth $30,000,000 to the Japanese fishermen. American nsheries produce about 1,000,000 tons a year. At the conference of the managers of the New York Central Lines, held in New York June 6th, all lines being represented by their General Managers and Passenger officials, it was decided, beginning with the regular summer change, Sunday, June 18th, to quicken the speed of the "Twentieth Century Limited" so as to make the time between New York and Chicago eighteen hours instead of twenty hours, the New York Central Lines having made the twenty hour time during the past three years, and having also made the run between New York and Chicago in twenty hours with their "Exposition Flyer" for the one hundred and eighty days of the Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893, twelve years ago. The New York Central Lines make the point that the New York Central has had in service the "Empire State Express," which has been the fastest train in the world for its distance, 440 miles for fourteen years, having held the world's record for that time, and for three years and 180 days having held the world's record for a thousand mile train in twenty hours. The proposed schedule of eighteen hours is simply the extension of the time of the "Empire State Express" through from Buffalo to Chicago, the time having been made for fourteen years between New York and Buffalo. On this new schedule, the train will leave Chicago at 2:30 p. m., arriving Grand Central Station, New York, at 9:30 next morning, and returning, will leave New York 3:30 p. m., reaching Chicago 8:30 a. m. following day. At the same time, the "Lake Shore Limited" will be quickened up an hour, and will make the time from Chicago to New York in 23 hours instead of 24, leaving Chicago 5:30 p. m., by the Lake Shore and arriving New York 5:30 p. m., by the New York Cental. The "Southwestern Limited" train, No. 11, which now leaves Grand Central station at 1 p. m., will, beginning June 18th, leave at 2:04 p. m., saving an hour to an hour and a half on the present journey to St. Louis and Cincinnati." The clergyman may not drink, but he doesn't mind having a young couple say to him, "Won't you join us?" Here is Relief for Women. Mother Gray, a nurse in New York, discovered a pleasant herb remedy for women's ills, called AUSTRALIAN-LEAF. It is the only certain monthly regulator. Cures female weaknesses and Backache, Kidney, Bladder and Urinary troubles. At all Drug-girls or by mail 50 cts. Sample mailed FREE. Address, The Mother Gray Co., LeRoy, N. Y. Perhaps more people would dwell in the state of matrimony were it not for its variable atmosphere. A Fresh Cigar for a Dry Climate. Lewis' Single Binder' straight' 50 wav in oil which keeps it fresh until smoked. Made of extra quality tobacco. Lewis' Factory, Peoria, Ill. Originator Tin Foil Smoker Package. A dog makes almost as much noise when he barks as a man does when he barks his shins. Piso's Cure is the best medicine we ever used for all affections of the throat and lungs.—W. O. ENDLESS, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10, 1900. She—But I thought you said you had she. I thought you had, but I spent it all trying to get you. TEA you think that is? Write for our Knowledge Book, A. Schilling & Company, San Francisco. THREE YEARS AFTER. Eugene E. Lario, of 751 Twentleth avenue, ticket seller in the Union Station, Denver, Col., says: "You arc at liberty to repeat what I first stated through our Denver papers about Doan's Kidney Pills in the summer of 1899, for I have had no reason in the interim to change my opinion of the remedy. I was subject to severe attacks of backache, always aggravated if I sat long at a desk. Doan's Kidney Pills absolutely stopped my backache. I have never had a pain or a twinge since." Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For sale by all druggists. Price 50 cents per box. Some men think without talking and some talk without thinking. Don't you know that Defiance Starch besides being absolutely superior to any other, is put up 16 ounces in package and sells at same price as 12 ounce packages of other kinds? Many a heavenly tune has been spoiled by a holy tone. TEA The Chinese and Japs are not very nervous people; they drink a good deal of tea. The smaller the fool the greater the folly may be. Mrs. Hen can't upbraid Mr. Rooster for carelessness, for she can seldom find things where she lays them. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure. Its stages, and that it Catarat. Hall's Catarat Cure is now known to the medical fraternity. Catarat is a constitutional disease, requires a constitutive body to do its work. It is therefore, acting directly upon the blood and mucous foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting to doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in this work that one Hundred Dollars for any case that it falls is cure. Send for list of testimonials. Add Hall's Catarat Cure & GO., Toledo, T. Sold by all Druggists. 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Don't request your grocer to supply you with butter of the first rank. "Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy cataract is Disease and Gravel. Allebysheva failed." Mrs. E. P. Minzer, Burgdorf, O. 800 a house. The auto is a perverse beast. It never breaks down within walking distance of home. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup. For children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 225 a bottle. Don't worry about trifles. Remember water in your shoe will let it out again. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of Charles H. Hitchcock. In Use For Over 30 Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought. Don't imagine that every sad-eyed woman you meet has loved and lost. It's more than likely she loved and got him Which do your family think most of, tea or coffee? Your grocer returns your money if you don't like Schilling's Best. "Is there any cure for heart troubles?" asks the Medical Review. Ever try matrimony? Denver Directory STOVE REPAIRS of every known make of stove, furnace or range, Geo. A. Pulien, 1331 Lawrence, Denver, Phone 725 BLACKSMITH'S and wagonmakers' supplies, wholesale and retail, Moore Hardware & Iron Co., 15th & Wazee, Denver. THE C. W. FAIR CORNICE WORKS CO Metal skylights, stamped steel ceilings, piping and slate, tile and metal roofs, etc. The New England Electric Co., 1551 Blake St. Denver, for your ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES The A. E. MEEK TRUNK & BAG MFG CO. 1207 16th St. Denver, Colo Write for catalog THE FAMOUS J. H. WILSON STOCK SADULES Ask your dealer for them. Take no other. THE COLORADO TENT & WAINING CO Hammocks, Camp Furniture, Flags. 1621 Lawrence St. Denver, Colorado. BROWN PALACE HOTEL Absolutely true proof. AMERICAN HOUSE Two blocks from Union depot. The best $2 per day hotel in the West. American plan. COLUMBIA HOTEL 2 blocks from united depot, up 17th St. Rates $1.50 to $2.00. American plan. Oxford Hotel Denver. One block from Union Depot. Fireproof. C. H. MORSE, Mgr. WHOLESALE GROCERS Bakers' Supplies, etc. Western Agents for Otoe Brands of Canned Goods The P. S. Hessler & Hall Mer. Co., Denver FIREWORKS Private ex bldg. btions from $1.00 to $0.00 for catalogue. The Western Fireworks Company Denver Colorado E. E. BURLINGAME & CO., ASSAY OFFICE AND CHEMICAL LABORATORY Established in Colorado, 1866. Samples by mail or express will receive prompt and careful attention Gold & Silver Bullion Refined, Melted and Assayed OR PURCHASED Concentration Tests 100 lb. or car load lots. Write for terms. M36-1738 Lawrence St. Denver, Colo. RELIABLE ASSAYS Gold . . . $ 75 Gold and Silver . $ 1.00 . . . 75 Gold, Silver, Copper. Placer Gold, Gold, Retorts and Rich Gros Bought OGDEN ASSAY CO. 1725 Arrapahoe Street. Denver, Colo. Denver Camera Exchange 235 164th Street, Opposite Court House. Ware agents for Gyco Paper and Non-Trust supplies. Developing specially. Mail your fims. venue, ticket seller in the tion, Denver, Col., says: "liberty to repeat what I first stated through our Denver papers about Doan's Kidney Pills in the summer of 1899, for I have had no reason in the interim to change my opinion of the remedy. I was subject to severe attacks of backache, always aggravated if I sat long at a desk. Doan's Kidney Pills absolutely stopped my backache. I have never had a pain or a twinge since." $100 Reward. $100. Important to Mothers. TEA Twice as Good One Third the Cost Every day is bargain day in the Wave Circle. Come in and get ac- quainted. K C will help you cut down the living expenses and make doctor's bills a thing of the past. Do you realize that you can get the best and purest baking powder in the world K C BAKING POWDER at one-third what you've been paying for anywhere near K C quality. A 25 ounce can costs 25c. Think of the saving! Can you make money any easier? Get it to-day. The grocer returns the price of can if you are not satisfied. All Grocers Send postal for the beautiful "Book of Presents." FREE. JAQUES MFC. CO. Chicago. $100,000 This has made LION COFFEE Millions of American Home There is no stronger proof of ing popularity. "Quality sur- (Sold only in 1 lb. package (Save your Lion-he SOLD BY GROC v6wav WOODWORTH-WALLACE Send 4 Cents in Stamps for Aluminum WOODWORTH-WALL WOODWORTH-WALLACE COLLEGES SHORTHAND AND COMMERCIAL DENVER BEE SUPPLIES Or al kinds. Also Wholesale HONEY BEE SUPPLIES Catalog of supplies irro. GENERAL HONEY PRODUCERS' ASSOCIATION, 1440 Market Street, Denver. Queens in season. Wholesalele Manufacturers of Harness and Saddles of every style. Ask your dealer for our goods. If he does not keep them we will put you in touch with one who does. PISO'S CURE FOR CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS Best cough syrup. Just as Good. Use in time. Sold by druggists. CONSUMPTION 0 Let Common Sense Decide Let Common Sense Decide Do you honestly believe, that coffee sold loose (in bulk), exposed This has made LION COFFEE the LEADER OF ALL PACKAGE COFFEES. Millions of American Homes welcome LION COFFEE daily. There is no stronger proof of merit than continued and increasing popularity. "Quality survives all opposition." (Sold only in 1 lb. packages. Lion-head on every package.) (Save your Lion-heads for valuable premiums.) Send 4 Cents in Stamps for Aluminum Combined Comb and Paper Cutter to WOODWORTH-WALLACE COLLEGES, Denver. NE MILLION Eight hundred thousand dollars in assets. Depositors in 27 states. Write for "Banking by Mall." We pay 4 per cent. We open accounts from a dollar up. The Central Savings Bank Denver, Colorado. t coffee sold loose (in bulk), exposed to dust, germs and insects, passing through many hands (some of them not over-clean), "blended," you don't know how or by whom, is fit for your use? Of course you don't. But LION COFFEE is another story. The green berries, selected by keen judges at the plantation, are skillfully roasted at our factories, where precautions you would not dream of are taken to secure perfect cleanliness, flavor, strength and uniformity. From the time the coffee leaves the factory no hand touches it till it is opened in your kitchen. FREE the LEADER OF ALL PACKAGE COFFEES. Times welcome LION COFFEE daily. of merit than continued and increas- urvives all opposition." Pages. Lion-head on every package.) heads for valuable premiums.) CERS EVERYWHERE WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. Dainty, Crisp, Dressy Summer Skirts are a delight to the refined woman everywhere. In order to get this result see that the material is good, that it is cut in the latest fashion and use Defiance Starch in the laundry. All three things are important, but the last is absolutely necessary. No matter how fine the material or how daintily made, bad starch and poor laundry work will spoil the effect and ruin the clothes. DEFIANCE STARCH is pure, will not rot the clothes nor cause them to crack. It sells at 10c a sixteen ounce package everywhere. Other starches, much inferior, sell at 10c for twelve ounce package. Insist on getting DEFIANCE STARCH and be sure of results. Defiance Starch Company, Omaha, Nebraska. COLLEGES SHORTHAND AND COMMERCIAL DENVER um Combined Comb and Paper Cutter to LACE COLLEGES, Denver. TEA TEA The English and Irish old woman lives in a garret on tea, and dies in a garret on tea; and how did she get to be old? On tea. If building air castles entitles one to the title of architect, then nearly all of us are qualified to hang out shingles. If you don't get the biggest and best it's your own fault. Defiance Starch is for sale everywhere and there is positively nothing to equal it in quality or quantity. No. Maude, dear; it doesn't take twenty men to make a score in a baseball game. --- THE COLORADO STATESMAN'S NINTH ANNUAL PICNIC at Rocky Mountain Lake ON THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1905 Will eclipse all other outing events to be offered the people of Denver and Surrounding Country this season. The past is a criterion for the future, for the great popularity of our Annual Holiday is as wide as the state in which we live. The people will take a day off to enjoy themselves with us this year, as they have done in the past, and we will provide for them a better entertainment and a happier time. Rocky Mountain Lake park is Denver's Ideal Picnic Grounds It combines numerous advantages over any other place in the city, or in the state. It embraces a large beautiful lake and a fine large grove. The tramway cars run direct to the gate every fifteen minutes, day and night. FREE SWINGS AND HAMMOCKS The Day's Attractions Will Consist of Outdoor Sports, Croquet, Tennis, Fishing, Boating and Other Recreations. Get Your Baskets Ready and Join Our Great Midsummer Diversion In this cool and beautiful resort, where enjoyment, recreation and comforts are available to all. We will forget for a day the toils and worries of every day surroundings, renew social acquaintances, recall again the happy privileges of other days, and all will be richly benefitted by the new pleasures which we shall find. The best music obtainable will help to make the day and evening pass like a magic dream. Come yourself and bring your wife, sister, children or sweetheart and treat them to the beauties of this unequalled place. THE COLORADO STATESMAN, its staff, employs and friends will do everything to make the day the most enjoyable one of all the year.