Colorado Statesman
Saturday, March 17, 1906
Denver, Colorado
Page text (machine-generated)
MONEY SAVED BY PATRONIZING MERCHANTS WHO ADVERTISE IN THIS PAPER.
COUNTRY PARTY
RACE
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
LABOR SHALL BE FREE
THE JOURNAL
OF THE STATE
THE WILLIAMSON MAPPER FNG.CO
Sin of Worry.
Bishop C. E. Woodcock Makes Plain in one of His Recen Sermons the Evils of Worrying. Says no Excuse for Worrying.
VOL. XII.
Sin of
Bishop C. E. Woodcock Make
Sermons the Evils of
Excuse for
Bishop C. E. Woodcock of Kentucky, made the following utterances in a sermon at Detroit, recently:
I'd just as lief live with a man who drinks as with a man who worries.
The sin of worry—some people call it a virtue—is the sin of a wasted life.
Carelessness, instead of being meritorious, is downright laziness, good-for-nothing.
This teaching of the Bible is meant simply to save us from worry. Don't fret your life out about what may happen tomorrow. The only thing any great man has ever done has been to live for an hour at a time.
It is the very quaintessence of foolishness to worry about something that may possibly take place. It is unintelligent and foolish to worry about tomorrow.
There is no sin in a temptation to worry. It is like other temptations; but worry itself is just as much a vice as any other sin.
You may call it by another name, but in reality it is the same thing. Worrying or not worrying is a matter of self control. Unfortunately some people are never so happy as when they are miserable or are making someone else miserable.
The fact that a person is an invalid does not excuse worrying a particle. It becomes a disease itself, and, when chronic, it gets past help, just as paralysis does.
You see a drunkard in the gutter, and you say what a coarse, vulgar sinner; but the judgement comes not in the way in which a life is wasted, but in the fact that it is wasted. There is no more vulgarity in drink, profanity or obscenity than in worry. The sins are not a bit different in degree or awfulness.
You must know that worry is filling our insane asylums. It is dotting our country with sanitoria for those broken down for one senseless cause, the uncontrolled dissapation of worry. There are men in these sanitoria who are just as responsible for their wasted years as are the men at the Keely cure or behind the bars.
State Historical and N H Society, Denver, Coto
SAVED BY PATRO
RACE
ORADO
THE JOURNAL
Worry.
Is Plain in one of His Recent
of Worrying. Says no
Worrying.
Worry is the sin of a living suicide; it is the Christian's denial of God.
Arizona Letter.
PHOENIX, ARIZ., MARCH 9, '06.
TO COLORADO STATESMAN.
DENVER, COLO.
We are here under the Olive and Palm. As we inquire into the activities of our people we find them engaged with the stern realities which go to make any people great. I may now venture to make several personal mention. Mrs. H. L. Bolton now operates a fine private'boarding house, she is an intelligent young widow, a graduate of Wilberforce, wide awake and progressive. She also owns the finest home of any among us. Her mother, Mrs. Rena Ridley is one of the staunch members of our church. They make a splendid team in their line of work hard to equal, cannot be excelled.
The Enterprise, an afternoon paper here speaks in glowing terms of W. R. Baker a young man well known in Denver. He is a Pianist and composer of no mean ability. The Elks of Arizona gave an entertainment, March 9th and 10th. Mr. Baker arranged the music and composed specially for the occasion several pieces of great merit and rehearsed all the vocalists for the part they took in the concert. He is regarded here as one of the great musicians of the race. Born in Buffalo N. Y. some 32 years ago. He has not a robust constitution but we hope to see him live long to utilize his wonderful talent for the uplift of the race.
We met Mrs. W. H. Smith of Wickenburg, Arizona, and was impressed by the graceful demeanor and evident business tact of the little active woman. I can see why she and husband have made and are making such maked success in Hostelry in the little town 64 miles from here. Its the same old story however and she is likely to break down under too severe application to business long and continued vigils still we must pay a price for business success, there is no excellence without great labor
DENVER, COLORADO, SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 1906.
hence their $25000.00 business had to be won by hard licks again not all of our people here are tenderfoots Mrs. Charles V. Williams and mother, Mrs. Mary Green came to this place in June 1868 bought thither by whites. Mrs. Williams feels that she is "to the manor born" she has an interesting family of husband and 5 children. Perhaps the most interesting character here is "Grand-ma" Harriet Brown whose length of days reaches 107 years and yet she moves about with surprising ease like many who have seen no more than 80 years it is a benediction to hear her speak for Jesus.
Mr. and Mrs. Vanentine are regarded as the prime movers in church circles both of them having been in the organization ever staunch and true they seem to be pillars in the house of God. They have two children, Miss Edna and Master Artnur. Mr. and Mrs. Valentine conduct a boarding house on a high plane. Hard work seems to be the rule along these lines with our people. Rev. Wagner and the writer were entertained at a collation at their pleasant home after services on the 8th inst. Mrs. Maud Watson also helped to enliven the joyous occasion Rev. Wagner hinted that he would not care if such occasions were linked closer together. We also had a delightful luncheon at the dining parlors of the "Bolton" a swell cuisine and splendidly appointed parlors conducted by Mrs. H. L. Bolton. She has spacious grounds filled with flowers and tropical plants, while rows of electric jets makes it a brilliant ideal place all fenced in completely, we enjoyed the courtesy and hospitality of the hostess.
Brother Samuel Steele owns a home on 6 city lots and runs a hand laundry and is doing well. He is an earnest member of the A. M. E. church. We were entertained at dinner by his good wife last Tuesday together with sister Maxwell and Miss M. J. Richmond all enjoyed a splendid meal.
Our baptist brother Rev. Burgess is working diligently to secure money to buy a church lot and is meeting with success. He and his good wife are well liked in the community. They hold services at present in Smith's hall a two story brick building. Brother Allen Smith who owns the hall is an old timer of Phoenix.
Your scribe leaves tonight for Tuscon and regrets the necessity which compels him to leave the most hospitable home of the Pastor and Rev. W. E Ratcliffe and his amiable wife.
J. W. SANDERS.
Want Negro's Rights Denied.
Hon. Hoke Smith in his address at Wrycross last week, advised his
hearers to keep the Negro American down by denying them their constitutional rights, is unwise and dangerous, because it is impossible to perpetually keep them out of their God-given rigets. No people that have paid so dearly for their citizenship will ever submit to the galling fetters he recommends his hearers to bind upou them. If the speaker's recommendation is ever enacted into law, there will never be any rest among this oppressed nation until the last vestige of slavery is removed. Mr. Smith and his kind is doing his section more harm by his stirring up of bitterness among the masses than all other causes put together.
Fate is against this would be destroyer of the Negro American. This suffering people should lay their case before the bar of heaven —in prayer, where their foreparents for 240 years laid their grievances. If congress and her state lawmakers will not hear their complaints, they will be heard and answered as was our foreparents heard and answered.—Independent (Savannah, Ga.
RACE NEWS
Gathered from Various Sources.
Seven tenths of the graduates from Meharry Medical college are a success. They are taught medicine by men of their own race, who inspire them with such great energy that they cannot fail.
Smith Martin, an aged Negro, died at the Stokes County Home, Norfolk, Va., a few days ago. His last words were a confession of a horrible crime. He told how he had killed a man several years ago, saying he cut his victim's heart out and burned it in the fire.
H. T. Colloway, of New Orleans, has established a mail order tailoring business in Chicago, with offices for gentlemen and ladies, and is doing a large business in the South and Southwest, giving employment to 16. Afro American traveling men. He ships over 5,000 suits a year.
Newport, R. I.—Thomas J. Emery in his $50,000 charitable gifts to the Cincinnati fresh air fund bequests $4,000 to the colored orphans of Vondale, and to the archbishop of Ohio in aid of any Catholic institution for the care of the aged and children, provided none are excluded on account of creed or colored, $5,000.
Jackson, Miss., March 6.—Senator McClaurin, of Sharkey, wants to establish a difference in courts between murder and lynching and to make interesting changes in
the laws governing these crimes. He has introduced a bill on the subject, the vital section of which, the punishment wholly within the discretion of the jury in a large majority of instances, be no punishment at all, or probably a small fine and brief imprisonment. In other words, such a bill would almost legalize lynching.
Leavenworth, Kan., March 2.— Capt. William D.Matthews, one of the noted Negroes of the war period died here of pneumonia this evening, aged 80 years. Born a slave, Capt. Matthews came to Leavenworth in 1854 and ran a restaurant that was patronized by whites, especially abolitionist. He was instrumental in aiding many runaway slaves to pass from the South to Iowa, and was termed a conductor in the underground railway. Capt. Matthews was the head of the Negro Masons, of the United States. For the last fifteen years he devoted his time to traveling around looking after the work of the grand master of the order.
Bob Butts and George Bridgewater, two white men living in New Pittsburg, Hocking county, pulled out their guns and made George Donovan, colored do a clog dance. Butts and Bridgewater, after empting their revolvers, began to jeer the colored man, when he turned and fired five shots at his annoyers. Butts was shot in the left lung, Bridgewater was shot through the bowels and stomach. Both men were brought to a hospital in Columbus, Ohio, where they died within an hour. Donovan had his preliminary trial at Logan and was bound over under $2,000 bond, which he could not furnish, and he was lodged in the county jail at Logan.
Eugene Smith, the 6-year-oldson of a colored couple, George and Alice Smith, residing at 3129 Lambdin avenue, St. Louis, has been giving the school board a problem to solve. He has outgrown the kindergarten department, but because of his tender age he cannot be advanced. The law requires that those who enter the grades must be 7 or more years old. When application for advancement was made he was told that he must wait a year. He was given a special examination by the superintendent, who says he is a remarkable child, far in advance of his age in intelligence. Eugene is a native of Tennessee, his parents having moved to St. Louis from Nashville three years ago. After consultation it has been decided that he may remain in school until vacation, as, before the next session opens, he will have passed the required age for admission.
NO. 25.
Two Negro Expositions.
James J. Manuel, recently appointed by Governor McDonald as commissioner from Colorado for the Fredrick Douglas Memorial exposition, has been informed by John G. Jones of Chicago, president of the exposition, that the project has been consolidated with the Negro Development and Exposition company of America, and that these united interests will make an exhibit of work and progress of the race at the exposition to be held in Jamestown, Va., next year commemorative of the landing of the Engliish at that place in 1607.
The legislature of Virginia has made an appropriation of $200,.000,000 for this exposition. The Negroes of that state felt it would be a better opportunity for the presentation of an exhibit showing the advancement of their race than the holding of the Fredrick Douglas Memorial exposition, which was planned to take place in Washington, May I to July 6, 1906. They have enlisted the interest of their brethren throughout the country and all will work together to have a representative showing.
The Virginia Negroes have petitioned the legislature to grant them a separate appropriation of $20,000. The Jamestown Exposition company has invited the Negro Development and Exposition company to make its exhibit upon its grounds and at the same time in states where there are a sufficient number of Negroes to warrant it, the legisture will be asked to make appropriations to aid in making a creditable display.
The Jamestown exposition will be held the summer of 1907, beginning in June.
Mr. Manuel will continue in the same position as commissioner from Colorado for the new exposition. He has under him a large committee working who will see that Colorado is properly represented.—News.
Sherbet or Water Ice.
A method of making a fine grained sherbet—one that will keep frozen as long as a cream—is as follows; Boil a quart of water and pint of sugar together for ten minutes, dissolve in it one teaspoonful of gelatin that has been soaked in cold water, then add sold water enough to cover, and strain the mixture into the can of a freezer. When thoroughly cold add about a pint of fruit juice, less of lemon or currant juice. When the mixture is frozen add to a gallon freezer of sherbet a meringue made from the stiffly beaten white of an egg and one tablespoonful of hot sugar syrup or powdered sugar.
“Columbine”
ZANG’S
New Table Beer
Ts a special Brow for Family use
DENVER’S LEADING BRAND OF BOTTLED BEER
;
Columbine Beer
Is guaranteed absolutely pure
Try a Sample Case and you will use no other
TELEPHONE 1285
The Ph. Zang Brewing Co.
Producers
Fresh Beer Delivered Duily to all parts of the city,
COLORADO NEWS {TEMS
in two hours. —
Representative Hogg has named 2s
cadet at the Annapolis naval academy,
Carrollton G. Northeutt, of Trinidad.
The Denver Real Estate Exchange
will raise $1,500 for the purpose of en-
tertaining visitors during the coming
season.
The new Gilpin County Chamber of
Commerce was successfully Iaunched
on the 7th inst with a paid member-
ship of about 200.
The Battlement Mesa forest reserve
will be cpened to cattle growers April
ist instead of May as was at first
announced by Forester Pinchot.
‘The taxpayers of La Junta have
‘Yoted by a majority of over six to one
to bond the city for the sum of $60,-
000 for the purpose of putting in new
water works.
For the first time in the history of
Teller county both the county and
every school district is paying cash,
the last of the county and school war-
rants having been called in.
James Unteriner, a miner at the
Great Western coal mine at Heathton,
six miles south of Canon City, fell
167 feet down the shaft of the mine
and was instantly killed on the 6th
inst.
Joseph Weir, a ranchman, was shot
and killed on Thursday, March sth,
in Blanco basin, Archuleta county, by
his nephew, Oral Weir, who ciaims
that the shooting was the result of a
quarrel.
Charles Johnson, employed in one
of the mines of the Big Five in
Boulder county, was fatally injured by
either a falling drill or a rock on the
night of the 5th inst., his skull being
badly crushed.
‘There are eighty-one applications
for divorce to be disposed of during
the present term of the County and
District Courts at Pueblo. Why not
decree a blanket divorce to cover the
entire .population—or at least all who
want to unhitch?
‘The Denver Real Estate Exchange
and Colorado Manufacturer’s Associa-
tion are very much troubled over the
closing of the Rocky Mountain paper
mills and have appointed a commit
tee to consider some plan for retaining
the plant.
E. V. Brake, deputy labor commis:
sioner, is making strenuous efforts to
enforce the law requiring a semi-
monthly payday on the part of all
kinds Of corporations. He will send
out a letter to all the mining com
panies in the state.
‘Three camps have been established
on the Holly & Swink railroad grade
at the Holly end of the line, They
are located five, eight and twelve
miles, respectively, from Holly, and
have over 200 teams ard & similar
number of men engaged.
County Judge Mirick, of Pueblo, has
appointed a commission of six persons
whose duty it shall be to assist the
juvenile court in keeping track of the
county's charitable and reformatory
institutions. ‘Three are Repipljcans
and three Democrats.
‘The executive committee of the Citt
zen’s alliance at Cripple Creck has
decided to establish an employment bu-
reau for its members, The club rooms
will be reopened. ‘The president will
appoint a large advisory committee to
consist of employes of the mines.
‘The commissioner of Indian affairs
has appointed John S. Spear to suc:
ceed William M. Peterson as superin-
tendent of Fort Lewis Indian s¢hool
at Durango, Spear 1s transferred to
that post from the school at Fort
Lewis, Arizona. Peterson leaves the
service,
Maggie Pututaro, wife of a well:
known saloonkeeper, was fined $25 and
costs by Justice Bowers at Trinidad,
on the charge of brutally beating 11-
year-old Nick Colasco, an Italian boy,
who had been left in her charge. The
court declared but for the woman's
physical condition he would sentence
her to a term in jail.
Contractors have _ finished over
twenty miles of the Colorado Fuel &
Iron Company's million dollar eanal
under construction between Florence
and Pueblo, for carrying water from
the Arkansas river to the steel works.
Between six and seven hundred men
are employed and the canal will be
completed for the summer hixh water.
Charles W. Rundle, of Grand June-
}uion, a veteran of the Civil War, aas
| just’ received a medal of honor for
bravery displayed in the battle before
| Vicksburg, May 22, 1863. ‘The medal
is of bronze and was made from can-
non captured from the Confederates.
‘There are said to be but 450 men in
this country who are entitled to wear
this medal.
Col. F. T. Davis, adjutant of the de-
partment of the Colorado, has re-
ceived orders from General Baldwin to
inspect the state militia companies of
Colorado, It is General Baldwin's
preference that a field officer do this
work and the colonel will personally
conduct it during April. ‘These Inspec-
tions are made by the army in all
states that are working under the Dick
law and receiving support from the
government.
lo skerocenWnestin ineetine was SRR
The Market Co.
1633-35-37-39 Arapahoe Street.
FIRST-CLASS
Fresh and Cured Meats
Staple and Fancy Groceries
Fruits and Vegetables, Fish and Oysters, Poultry and
Game in Season,
J. P. Knorr, Manager Puones 190—189.
1633-39 Arapahoe St. Denver, Colorado
co F. W. GROMM,
F.W.GROMM™ 6 BS Manufacturer and Dealer in
\/ TRUNK FACTORY, Fe) Trunks, Valises Etc
b eset — ae
i on Stucakbgy Sample Cases Made to Order.
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,
J.D, ORACG. N. M. CAMPIGLIA,
"Phone Main 4885.
a C.&C. LIQUOR CO, »
DIREOT IMPORTERS,
Wines and Liquors for Medicinal Use Our Specialty,
2205 OHAMPA STREET.
Denver, : - ee Colorado,
NT
FLOOD’S MARKET Denver,
The Largest Anti-Trust Meat Market in the West.
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
Restaurant, Hotel and Boarding House
Business given Special Attention ....
TEL. MAIN 3824. 1015-1017 15TH ST.
Star-Wano Feed & Fuel G,
J. STOTT, Manager,
Dealers in COAL--Wholesale and Retail.
YARDS: 2140 DELGANY ST. OFFICE: 1220-24 2187 ST.
Phone Red 1955. : : Denver, Colorado.
———————
H. J, Hesprr, J. A. Weicnnann,
TELEPHONE MAIN 4271.
THE N. & W. LIQOOR CO.
DEALERS IN
Imperted and Domestic WInes and Liquors.
FAMILY TRADE OUR SPECIALTY.
1118 BROADWAY.
All Goods Delivered. Denver, Colo,
SHEFHHH HH HHH FFF F FHF FHFFFH FFF FF FFAS FF FF FFs Hts stots
Do You Know
+Dr. Dameron has reduced
his prices for all Dental #
Worh? # ¥ ¥ www w
$7.00 Sets of Teeth for $5.00; $10 Sets for $7.00; $15 Sets for $10; Gold
Crowns only, 85.00 Gold Teeth, $4.00; Silver Fillings, s0c up; Gold and
Platina, $1.00 up. Painless Extracting. ALBANY DENTAL PARLORS,
Arapahoe street, opp. the P. O. DR. DAMERON, Prop.
4444444444 4446464444644 44444665
“MEAN THING” MADE APOLOGY.
Girt Ie Satisfied. |
| She has bright eyes, rosy cheeks,
and an awful estimate of the proper
confines of propriety. It is an invart-
able rule of hers to obsetve that sub-
tle barrier of modesty which all well
ordered ycung women should observe,
and, better still, she prides herself on
making the sterner sex ®bserve this
barrier in all its invisible but nice dis-
tinctions.
‘Then how this incident must have
shocked her.
Being a telephone girl, it is her ob-
noxious duty to hold converse with
the “mean things” of the world—o.h-
erwise known as men. The other aft
ernoon a subseriber called for a cer
tain number in Germantown.
“What number did you say?” she
cooed.
“Germantown 3333-2, quick.”
“{ can’t understand; please repeat
it”
“Blank, blankety, blank, x y z!!”
“Well, if you don't say what num:
ber you want I can’t give it to you.
I'm not going to fool here all day.”
“Now, keep your shirt on, little girl;
keep your shirt on—"
But the subscriber go: no further;
she slammed up her cam, rushed to
the overseer with flaming cheeks, and
reported the subscriber. The company
rightly said that subscribers had no
right to comment on how its employes
should treat their wearing apparel,
ard demanded that the subscriber
apologize or lose his ‘phone, ‘The sub-
scriber was willing. He called up the
girl with the bright eyes and said:
“Are you the young lady whom I
Just told to keep her shirt on?”
“Yes,” was the curt rejoinder.
“Well, possibly I was a little hasty.
It may be warm in your office, so now
you may take it off.”—Philadelpkia
Telegraph.
Must Have Been a Sight.
A magazine editor was sadly prais-
ing William Sharp. recently deceased
in Sicily, who achieved no little fame
as a poet under the pen name of
Fiona McLeod.
“Sharp,” he said, “wrote melan-
choly, dreamy things, but ne was per-
sonally a cheery, vigorous soul. He
was one day praising. the real literary
talent that humble, uneducated people
often show in conversation.
“He said tha: in Londonderry one
afternoon he was seatea in a barber
shop when a farmer entered to get his
talr cut. The farmer's locks had an
odd. ragged look and the barber, after
regarding them scornfully, said:
“Whe cut your hair last, old: man?
“My wife’ the farmer answered
with an awkward smile
“The barber snorted. ‘What did she
do it with? he asked. *A knife and
fork?”
When vou are oid, and I am passed
away—
Passed, and your face, your golden face,
is graye
I think Whatee? the end, this dream of
mine,
Comforting vou, a frlendty star will shine
Down the dim slope where sull you stum=
bie’ and stray.
So may It be. that no dead Yesterday,
No"sud-eyed ‘ghost, but” generous’ and
kay
May fer'e your memories Ike almighty
“When you are old.
Dear Heart, it shali be so, Under the
Of death the past’s enormous disarray
Lies hushed and dark” Yer though there
come no sien
Live oh Well pleased: tmmortat and al-
vine
Love shall stil! tend you. 88 God's angels
“hen you are old.
—W" FE. Henley.
League for Upright Writing.
In Paris a “League for Upright
Writing” has been formed, and it
takes a phrase from Georges Sand as
its motto: “Upright writing on hori-
zontal paper with the body heid
straicht.” The league crusades against
the English style of writing slanting
and angular, which, it says, is no long-
er really taught in England or Amer-
fea, Slanting writing is said to cause
short sight. “scholiosis,” and many
other optical troubles,
Coor’s
Celebrated
Golden Beer
On Draught . .
441 W. Colfax Ay, Denver, Colo
MISS M. COWDEN
Hair Dressing Parlor.
Shampoo, Cutting and Curl-
ing. Scalp treatment, hair
tonics, Hair Straichtening,
Manicuring. Stage Wigs for
reut—Theatrical use and Mas-
querades.
Goods delivered out of the
city. All shades of hair match’
ed by sending a sample of
hair; also combings made up.
Cheapest Switches 50 cents,
PHONE 1797 OLIVE.
1219 2lst. St. Denver, Cola,
Eat Macklem Bread
And Save Trouble.
Wall Crrocers!
Look for the la:ble “Macklem Bread”
on every loaf.
DEES Ope RESO NB
BES ee OB an SCR
BL VAMES Mic)
DEN OTO homo
) ie OOS Se
‘i DEALERS IN i
} PAINTS-OILS- GLASS- i
\/ _-VARNISHES- = |
-WALL- PAPERS -
-ARTISTS:=MATERIALS
/ ~ ARAPAHOE NEAR FIFTEENTH ~ |
@) BEBE eains GQ)
ONLY $25.00.
= Daily February 15th to April 7th from Denver,
I y | A Colorado Springs or Pueblo.
Good in Tourist Sleepers, Chair Cars or Coaches
um iz) Tourist Sleepers to California daily without change,
\ eZ Comfortable and economical.
a Write to.
ALL THE WAY
J. P. HALL,
General Agent A., 'T. 8. F. Ry., Denver, Colo.
Keep Warm. Avoid Sickness.
Callup Murphy
For the best Lignite and Bituminous
Phone to O. Murphy, Main 4040 and Black 821:
Representing the Rocky Mountain Fuel Co., 1010 16th St.
Full Weight. No Middle Men.
COLD CURE.
Paulins cure for Colds, Grippe,
Acute Catarrh, Headache,
Neuralgia and Fever.
Minine Exonance Puarmaoy.
‘Tel 991 1020-26 15th St.
WwW. P. HORAN,
ONDER TAKER,
PHONE 1368.
1762 Btout St. Denver, Coley
STAR FUEL & EXPRESS C0,
Dealer in
Coal, Hay and Grain.
619 27TH STREET.
Express Wagon. Phone 2667 Red
THE BEST ICE CREAM AND
CANDIES AT
O. .P. Baur & Co.,
CATERERS and
CONFECTIONERS.
PHONE tes.
1512 Curtis St. Denver, Colo,
THE
Ward Auction C0
1728-80 Arapahoe 8t.
Denver, «- + Colorado,
Private Residence
Sales a Specialty
Regular Sales Mondays, Wednes-
deys and Saturdays,
|
TELEPHONE 1675,
Furniture and bankrupt Stocks
bought for cash or sold on com.
mission,
Dr. P. E. Spratlin,
Office, 49 Good Block,
‘Telephone Red 808
Hours: 9 tella. m1 tod4p.m 7to9 pm
‘Res: 2226 Clarkeon St. ‘Tel. York 123,
——
Weiner’s Saloon,
19th and Arapahoe.
We treat the boys right.
I. N. ROGERS. f ¢. A. ROGEAS.
LN. Rogers & Son,
UNDERTAKERS
& EMBALMERS
2
1531 Champa St. Denver, Colo.
“THE COLORADO ROAD? T0
’ S MEXIC
"eCotoenaa x sont EXICO.
From February 15 to April 7
the Colorado & Southern Ry.,
will sell one way tickets from
Denver at $29.10; from Colo-
rado Springs and Pueblo, at
$26.60, and from Trinidad at
$24.00 to all points on the
Mexican Central Ry , north of
and including the City of
Mexico and to all points on
the National Lines of Mexico
between Eagle Pass, Lasedo,
Torreon, and Mexico City,
‘These rates are on practically
a cent a mile basis and afford
asplendid opportunity to vis-
it the Sister Republic at small
expense, Write for particu-
lars.
T. E, Fisuer,
General Passenger Agent
Denver, Colo,
```markdown
```
Phone Main 4537. Columbine
Colum
Columbine
$50.00
CASH PREMIUMS.
Plant our Seeds and Make Money
See premium offer in 1906 Catalogue.
Sent Free on application.
Field and Flower Seeds. California
Grown Sweet Peas.
THE HAINES SEED CO.
Denver, Colo. Phone 981.
R THE BEST DRUGS
GO TO
NK P. MILLER,
$50.00 CASH PREMIUMS.
Garden Field and Flower Grown Sweet THE HAINES
Garden Field and Flower Seeds. California
Grown Sweet Peas.
THE HAINES SEED CO.
1319 15th St. Denver, Colo. Phone 981
FOR THE BEST DRUGS
GO TO
FRANK P. MILLER
Druggist and Pharmacist,
Ice Cream and Soda Water.
2044 Welton St., cor. Washington Ave.
THE
PASTIME SOC
A RESORT FOR LADIES AN
DOOR. Washington Ave. Denver, Colo. THE TIME SOCIAL CLUB RT FOR LADIES AND GENTLEMEN.
THE
A RESORT FOR LADIES AND GENTLEMEN. NEWLY FURNISHED. PHONE MAIN
IT IS EASY TO BUY FROM
THE
John Thompson Grocery Co
I. BERLIN, Pres. and Gen. Mgr. J. W. DE
N. L. CHEDSEY, Secretary.
The Greatest Fruit, Grocery
and Meat House in the W
The Very Best that can be had for Very L
THE
Thompson Grocery Company
res. and Gen. Mgr. J. W. DEANE, Treasurer
N. L. CHEDSEY, Secretary.
The Greatest Fruit, Grocery
and Meat House in the West
Rest that can be had for Very Little Money.
I. BERLIN, Pres. and Gen. Mgr. J. W. DEANE, Treasurer N. L. CHEDSEY, Secretary. The Greatest Fruit, Grocery and Meat House in the West The Very Best that can be had for Very Little Money. Local and Through Train Service
VIA THE
Rio Grande System.
Colorado Springs and Pueblo. Leave Denver 8:00,
1:30, 5:00, 7:00, 8:00 and 9:45 p. m.
Bena Vista and Leadville. Leave Denver 8:30 and
9:45 p. m.
and Junction. Leave Denver at 8:30 and 9:30 a.
9:55 p. m.
Benwood Springs, Utah and Pacific Coast. Leave
19:30 a. m. and 8:00 p. m.
Llamosa, Wagon Wheel Gap, Santa Fe, Pagosa
Rio, Fanningston and Silverton. Leave Denver
Munnison, Montrose, Delta, Ouray, Telluride and
Denver 9:45 p. m.
Orinidad, Elmoro, Walsens and La Veta. Leave
m.
Actor and Cripple Creek. Leave Denver 5:00 p. m.
Pullman Standard and Tourist Sleepers, Observa-
tions and Modern Day coaches.
Observation coaches between Denver and Cripple
complete and satisfactory Colorado and Utah service
ed and the only trans-continental line passing
ake City enroute to the Pacific Coast.
Rio Grande System.
Denver to Colorado Springs and Pueblo 8:30, 9:30 a. m. 1:30, 5:00, 7:00, 8:00 am
Denver to Buena Vista and Leadville 9:30 a. m. 8:00 and 9:45 p. m.
Denver to Grand Junction. Leave
m. 8:00 and 9:45 p. m.
Denver to Glenwood Springs, Utah a
Denver 8:30 and 9:30 a. m. and 8:00 p.
Denver to Alamosa, Wagon Wheel
Springs, Durango, Fanningston and
7:00 p. m.
Denver to Gunnison, Montrose, D
Rico. Leave Denver 9:45 p. m.
Denver to Trinidad, Elmoro, Walt
Denver 7:00 p. m.
Denver to Victor and Cripple Creek.
Dining cars, Pullman Standard and
tion Parlor cars and Modern Day coach
Open End Observation coaches bet
Creek,
The most complete and satisfactory
ever established and the only tran
through Salt Lake City enroute to the
Denver to Colorado Springs and Pueblo. Leave Denvar 8:00, 8:30, 9:30 a. m. 1:30, 5:00, 7:00, 8:00 and 9:45 p. m.
Denver to Buena Vista and Leadville. Leave Denver 8:30 and 9:30 a. m. 8:00 and 9:45 p. m.
Denver to Grand Junction. Leave Denver at 8:30 and 9:30 a. m. 8:00 and 9:45 p. m.
Denver to Glenwood Springs, Utah and Pacific Coast. Leave Denver 8:30 and 9:30 a. m. and 8:00 p. m.
Denver to Alamosa, Wagon Wheel Gap, Santa Fe, Pagosa Springs, Durango, Fanningston and Silverton. Leave Denver 7:00 p. m.
Denver to Gunnison, Montrose, Delta, Ouray, Telluride and Rico. Leave Denver 9:45 p. m.
Denver to Trinidad, Elmoro, Walsens and La Veta. Leave Denver 7:00 p. m.
Denver to Victor and Cripple Creek. Leave Denver 5:00 p. m.
Dining cars, Pullman Standard and Tourist Sleepers, Observation Parlor cars and Modern Day coaches.
Open End Observation coaches between Denver and Cripple Creek,
The most complete and satisfactory Colorado and Utah service ever established and the only trans-continental line passing through Salt Lake City enroute to the Pacific Coast.
Write for free illustrated pamphlets.
S. K. HOOPER,
Gen. Passenger & Ticket Agent,
Denver, Colo.
We do anything in the Laundry Line.
1847-49 Market St
1821 Arapahoe St.
DENVER & RIO GRANDEBR
SCENIC LINE
WORLD
SEEDS
We have been established in the seed business forty-one years. Our seeds are Northern Grown and carefully selected and tested for Colorado trade.
Importers and Dealers. 1549-51 Wazee St. Denver, Colo
Phone
Main 4537.
LAUNDRY
Denver, Colorado
Phone 981.
Denver, Colo
PHONE MAIN 3044
Denver, Colorado
VIA THE
S. K. HOOPER,
Gen. Passenger & Ticket Agent,
Denver, Colo.
A.
FOR STRAIGHTENING, GROWING,
DRESSING AND BEAUTIFYING THE
MASKS
HAIR. ALSO THE FACE BLEACH.
If this Hair Tonic and Face Bleach does
not do as said your money will be refunded.
ONLY AGENT OF COLORADO
MRS. H. W. COX, 2836 STOUT ST.
Call and See Agent for Instructions.
PHONE OLIVE 1654.
Denver, - - Colorado,
MANUFACTURED ONLY BY
The Venol Company
B132 State Street. Chicago, IL.
Accept no substitute. Price 50 Cts
J. W. Rummell, WINES, LIQUORS & CIGARS
J. W. Rummell, WINES, LIQUORS & CIGARS
PHONE 3432 MAIN.
2257 Welton St. Denver, Colo.
Always Staunch And True
The Denver Republican has always avoided the fallacies and knaveries of yellow journalism, and its steadily increasing Circulation proves conclusively that its policy of telling the plain Truth without exaggeration or misrepresentation, standing fast for the Right, is heartily approved with growing force by the intelligent Public to which it appeals.
To read it is a liberal Education, and the citizen who goes without it does a positive harm to himself, to his family, and to the community.
In no other way can the investment of 2 1/2 cents per day for that is all The Republican costs any subscriber—bring such rich results in that Knowledge which is both Power and Pleasure. Information, instruction and entertainment fill its columns and it leaves a good taste in the mouth of the reader. It stands for Law and Order in the State—for Peace, Prosperity and Happiness in the Home. If you are not already enrolled among its splendid list of Patrons send on your subscription and give it a fair trial at 75 cents per month for Daily and Sunday.
UNION
PACIFIC
THE
ROUTE
OVERLAND
THROUGH Standard sleepers and free reclining chair cars from Denver to Union Station, Chicago, every day. Leave Union Station, Denver, 4.35 p. m. or 10.20 p. m. The former is the famous one-night-on-the road train. Route—Union Pacific Railroad and
Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway
Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway
On your next trip East insist your ticket read via the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway, and you will be glad of it.
Tickets from any agent of a connecting line, or from
J. E. PRESTON
Commercial Agent
1029 17th Street, Denver
COLORADO GOODS
SHOULD BE USED BY COLORADO PEOPLE.
KEEP THE MONEY AT HOME
President of Colorado Manufacturers' Association Urges Citizens to Support Home Institutions.
"Few people realize that Colorado is becoming one of the great manufacturing states," said T. C. Scott, manager of the Colorado Manufacturers' Association, in Denver, the other day. "If people of Colorado did realize this it would be a great thing for the state.
"Take the members of the Colorado Manufacturers' Association alone, for example. They represent a capital of $34,346,000 invested and expend $25,000,000 a year for material, support 13,000 people, and pay them annually in wages $9,612,000, and the value of the product last year was $53,000,000."
"Coloradans can buy Colorado beef, bacon, butter, boots, brooms, buggies, brushes, beer, bank and bar fixtures, carriages, chemicals, canned goods, catsup, cheese, cigars, cider, crackers, candles, elevators, glassware, harness, honey, hams, machinery, overalls, paper boxes, saddles, stoves, shirts, shoes, soap.
"The fact is there is practically nothing that is used in the home, the store, the shop, the mine, the farm, the ranch that is not made in Colorado, and every man should realize that a dollar spent for Colorado-made goods stays in Colorado, and when paid for foreign goods leaves Colorado. The Colorado Manufacturers' Association wants to get the people together on this subject.
"What is required in Colorado more than anything else is an increased patronage of home products. Every housewife and every household should ask for and insist on being furnished with Colorado products or goods manufactured in Colorado. There is a certain amount of civic pride in every individual, but with a great many of the citizens of Colorado it has not been developed. I will venture to say that there are thousands of cases in Colorado to-day where the housewife is patronizing eastern industries by asking for and purchasing certain lines of goods. Perhaps she is using a soap manufactured in her native town, or in her native state, because her mother used the same class of goods in the old home back East; or it may never have occurred to this same housewife that she could get as good, if not better, articles manufactured right here in Colorado. If we can educate all such of our residents who are patronizing eastern-made goods to live in the present and future, instead of the past, and to look to the West for everything, our home banks would soon notice a remarkable result in the way of increased deposits.
"Then we have another, and perhaps the largest class of all, the irdifferent class, those who take but little interest in the manner of developing the states' resources, not from the fact that they are not anxious to see Colorado prosperous, but for the reason that it has perhaps never dawned on them that it made any difference as to what class of goods they purchased, whether made in the New England states or in Colorado. If all the classes I have mentioned could be aroused to the fact that it is their duty to be loyal to Colorado in every respect, regardless of whether they are citizens of our state by nativity or adoption, and would demonstrate their loyalty by never failing to ask for Colorado-made goods when making purchases of various kinds, the result would be a landslide of prosperity for Colorado and her people. The untiring efforts that are being made by the various organizations of the state to boost the interests of their town, or of the state as a whole, to bring more people to Colorado to help develop her resources, etc., are all second in importance to this one feature of patronizing home industry. It is within the power of the people of Colorado to double the capacity of every manufacturing industry in the state within one year, and it will not cost them a farthing to do it, from a financial standpoint. Three little words cover the entire situation—PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY, buy Colorado-made goods; tell your wife, your brothers, your sisters, your employees, tell everybody to buy Colorado-made goods.
"Did you ever stop to realize that every time you buy $10 worth of goods manufactured outside the state of Colorado you are sending $10 out of the state that never comes back?" Whereas, if you buy with this same $10 Colorado-made goods the entire amount remains in Colorado and you indirectly become a profit sharer. Could anything be more simple and yet more effective in the upbuilding of our state? If you double the manufacturing interests you help everybody, you help all classes, you help the farmer by increasing the value of his land, by creating a stronger market for his products, you help the laboring man, the skilled workman, employees of all kinds, the retail merchant, in fact, every resident of Colorado is bound to feel the beneficial results of making Colorado the greatest manufacturing state in the West."
Fatal Shipwreck.
Boston.—Suffering mental and physical, and numerous acts of heroism in saving life rarely equaled in the record of tragedies of the sea attended the loss of the steamer British King, which Sunday last, in a raging Atlantic storm, foundered about 250 miles south of Sable island and carried to death twenty-seven members of the crew. Thirteen men were rescued from the sinking vessels by the steamer Bostonian, and eleven by the steamer Mannheim. Five others who had been drawn down in the vortex into which the British King was engulfed, were picked up by the Bostonian.
WHO SHE WAS
And a True Story of How the Vegetable Compound Had Its Birth and How the "Panic of'73" Caused it to be Offered for Public Sale in Drug Stores.
This remarkable woman, whose maiden name was Estes, was born in Lynn, Mass., February 9, 1819, coming from a good old Quaker family. For some years she taught school, and became known as a woman of an alert
Yours for Health
Lydia C. Parkham
and investigating mind, an earnest seeker after knowledge, and above all, possessed of a wonderfully sympathetic nature.
In 1843 she married Isaac Pinkham, a builder and real estate operator, and their early married life was marked by prosperity and happiness. They had four children, three sons and a daughter.
In those good old fashioned days it was common for mothers to make their own home medicines from roots and herbs, nature's own remedies—calling in a physician only in specially urgent cases. By tradition and experience many of them gained a wonderful knowledge of the curative properties of the various roots and herbs.
Mrs. Pinkham took a great interest in the study of roots and herbs, their characteristics and power over disease. She maintained that just as nature so bountifully provides in the harvest-fields and orchards vegetable foods of all kinds; so, if we but take the pains to find them, in the roots and herbs of the field there are remedies expressly designed to cure the various ills and weaknesses of the body, and it was her pleasure to search these out, and prepare simple and effective medicines for her own family and friends.
Chief of these was a rare combination of the choiceest medicinal roots and herbs found best adapted for the cure of the ills and weaknesses peculiar to the female sex, and Lydia E. Pinkham's friends and neighbors learned that her compound relieved and cured and it became quite popular among them.
All this so far was done freely, without money and without price, as a labor of love.
But in 1873 the financial crisis struck Lynn. Its length and severity were too much for the large real estate interests of the Pinkham family, as this class of business suffered most from fearful depression, so when the Centennial year dawned it found their property swept away. Some other source of income had to be found. At this point Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound was made known to the world. The three sons and the daughter, with their mother, combined forces to
Denver Directory
STOVE REPAIRS of every known make
of stove, furnace or range. Geo. A.
Pullen, 1331 Lawrence. Denver. Phone 725.
THE
FAMOUS J. H. WILSON STOCK SAOLOLES
Ask your dealer for them. Take no other.
AMERICAN HOUSE DENVER. Two
room. The best $2 per day hotel in the
West. American plan.
BROWN PALACE HOTEL Absolutely
free - proof
European plan, $1.50 and upward.
THE McMURTRYMFG CO.
HALLACK MIXED PAINT
WESTERN VARNISHES
FOR DRY CLIMATE USE
DENVER
THE
DENVER TENT & AWNING
ALFRED S. PROCTER
PRES.
PHONE 155
1428 LARIMER
Engineers and Manufacturers.
Machinery of all kinds built and repaired. Special machines built to order.
Mine Cages, Switches, Frogs, Hoists Rolls, Screens, Jigs, Concentrators Stenn and Water Power Plants.
Good Sollicitor Wanted,--man or woman in the United States. Send two cent stamp to Mrs. Sara Gaines, Det. Moines, Iowa
restore the family fortune. They argued that the medicine which was so good for their woman friends and neighbors was equally good for the women of the whole world.
The Pinkhams had no money, and little credit. Their first laboratory was the kitchen, where roots and herbs were steeped on the stove, gradually filling a gross of bottles. Then came the question of selling it, for always before they had given it away freely. They hired a job printer to run off some pamphlets setting forth the merits of the medicine, now called Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and these were distributed by the Pinkham sons in Boston, New York, and Brooklyn.
The wonderful curative properties of the medicine were, to a great extent, self-advertising, for whoever used it recommended it to others, and the demand gradually increased.
In 1877, by combined efforts the family had saved enough money to commence newspaper advertising and from that time the growth and success of the enterprise were assured, until today Lydia E. Pinkham and her Vegetable Compound have become household words everywhere, and many tons of roots and herbs are used annually in its manufacture. Lydia E. Pinkham herself did not live to see the great success of this work. She passed to her reward years ago, but not till she had provided means for continuing her work as effectively as she could have done it herself.
During her long and eventful experience she was ever methodical in her work and she was always careful to preserve a record of every case that came to her attention. The case of every sick woman who applied to her for advice—and there were thousands—received careful study, and the details, including symptoms, treatment and results were recorded for future reference, and to-day these records, together with hundreds of thousands made since, are available to sick women the world over, and represent a vast collaboration of information regarding the treatment of woman's ills, which for authenticity and accuracy can hardly be equaled in any library in the world.
With Lydia E. Pinkham worked her daughter-in-law, the present Mrs. Pinkham. She was carefully instructed in all her hard-won knowledge, and for years she assisted her in her vast correspondence.
To her hands naturally fell the direction of the work when its originator passed away. For nearly twenty-five years she has continued it, and nothing in the work shows when the first Lydia E. Pinkham dropped her pen, and the present Mrs. Pinkham, now the mother of a large family, took it up. With woman assistants, some as capable as herself, the present Mrs. Pinkham continues this great work, and probably from the office of no other person have so many women been advised how to regain health. Sick women, this advice is "Yours for Health" freely given if you only write to ask for it.
Such is the history of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound; made from simple roots and herbs; the one great medicine for women's ailments, and the fitting monument to the noble woman whose name it bears.
NARDESTY'S
LEMON
NARDESTY'S
VANILLA
UseLess
HARDESTY'S
Lemon
Is double the strength
of other brands.
NARDESTY'S
VANILLA
NARDESTY'S
LEMON
W.L.DOUGLAS
SHOES
ALL PRICES
BEST
IN THE
WORLD
THE WORLD'S GREATEST SHOE MAKER
SOLE AGENTS FOR
W.L.DOUGLAS SHOES
ESTABLISHED
JULY 6, 1876
CAPITAL $2,500,000
W.L. DOUGLAS MAKES & SELLS MORE
MEN'S $3.50 SHOES THAN ANY OTHER
MANUFACTURER IN THE WORLD.
If I could take you into my three large factories at Brockton, Mass., and show you the infinite area with which every rail of shoes is made, you would see how much cost more to make, why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater intrinsic value than any other $3,50 shoe.
*Bargain Make Shoes for
Men, $2.50, $2.50, $2.50,
Dress Shoes, $2.50, $2, $1.75, $1.50
CAUTION. Insist upon having Waltham-boots
without his name and price stamped on bottom.
Fast Color Eyelashes used; they will not wear brass.
Write for William D. DOUGLAS, brooklyn, MA
COLORADO - STATESMAN
S. H. HOBSON ..... City Editor
JOS. D. VERSEN ..... Manager
1247 Curtis St. Room 25
DESCRIPTION NAMES:
One Year $2.00
Six Months 1.00
Three Months .50
PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.
Remittances should be made by Express Money Order, Postoffice Money Order, Registered Letter or Bank Draft. Postage stamps will be receive the same as cash for the fractional portion of a bill. Only 1-cent and 2-cent stamps taken.
Reading notices, ten lines or less, 10 cents per line. Each additional line over ten lines, 5 cents per line.
Drawing notices, ten cents per square. A square contains ten agate lines. No discounts allowed on less than three months' contract. Cash must accompany all orders from parties unknown to us. Further participation is required.
It occasionally happens that papers sent to subscribers are lost or stolen. In case you do not receive any number when due, inform us by postal card and we will cheerfully forward the complete of the payment.
Communications to receive attention must be newsy, upon important subjects, plainly written only upon one side of the paper; must reach us Tuesday, if possible, anyway not later than Wednesdays, and bear the signature of the author. No manuscript returned, unless stamps are sent 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.
Every right-thinking man wants clean politics, but it is not enough for him to think right; he must act right if he expects to accomplish anything.
The receipts of the Insurance Department for this year are far in advance of the same period last year. The indications are that they will reach $225,000, which will be the biggest year in the history of the department.
YOUNG PEOPLES MOVEMENT.
There seems to be a revival and deeping of interest in the welfare, culture and development of the young people. All of this is prophetic of the substantial improvement of the youth of the race and progress on the material and spiritual side of their acquirement. Last week the committee having in charge the arrangement of the Second Young Peoples Christian and Educational Congress met in Washington, D.C. and set the date of the meeting July third to eighth. The plans of the committee puts the work on a gigantic scale and promises the attendance of ten thousand people.
Another evidence of the interest being taken in behalf of young people is the purpose of Dr. Boyd the Sunday School publisher of Nashville, Tenn., to hold a great National Baptist Sunday School Congress sometime during the year with a view of quickening interest among the growing and intelligent Sunday school workers of the race.
Both of these great conventions are in the interest of young people and show an increasing desire on behalf of the great leaders to see that the young people of our race shall have the inspiration and example as an object lesson set before them and these great conventions serve this end most admirably.
PERSONAL HABITS AND MORALS.
That personal habits and morals are closely related no one will deny but that they are one and the same thing no one will affirm.
Personal habits may crystalize into character but character is an individual and not a public property. To be true a number of persons of similar character in a community may give the community the appearance of a certain type or class and thus cause the reputation or standing of the entire locality to be affected. Indeed this seems to be the case in Denver at the present time. If persons of uncertain character premoninate then the reputation of the whole community takes on a certain predominate then the reputation of the whole community takes on a certain flexibility but after all a sharp distinction ought to be made between the habits of a people which are purely personal and the habits which interfear with the rights of another. While every one would
be glad to see the community lifted up in their personal tone yet no one feels like invoking the legislature to pass upon our private morals. The wise-acres of Battle Creek may be all right in what they allege against coffee drinking, but when people call coffee drinkers immoral and sinners they attack the morals of many who up to date have been considered among our noblest and best men and women.
To be a crank is not quite the same thing as being moral, although some cranks labor under this delusion. What we need to discern is that right distinctions are necessary to differentiate those customs that offend good society and those that simply affect our selves and satisfies our own tastes.
A CLEAN ELECTION AND AN HONEST BALLOT FOR EVERY VOTER.
This is the slogan of the political reformer. It is the crying need today in all large cities of this country, Denver being no exception. New primary and election laws are necessary to give legality to elections and make it possible to convict illegal voters but what is needed more than any thing else is new life and clean motives within the inner circles of political precints. Not a class of men who contrive as to how far they can go and evade the letter of the law but how much they may assist in making the law doubly effective and secure. Elections will never occupy a plan higher than the level of public sentiment in regard to election methods. That political parties have a mission is self evident. That their mission is to serve or suppress some principle of vital importance to the happiness or well being of every citizen is also a truism. But is this true in regard to the political parties and the colored voters of Colorado? Heretofore the colored voters have had no voice in the councils of the political parties, no part in their caucuses and absolutely no hand in directing their policies but they have been compelled to remain wholly on the outside and take whatever consideration that is offered to them. A people that have no part in the councils of a party, be the party what it may, cannot long retain interest in the party. It is self evident that the political parties of Denver are approaching a crisis in their career and they will need all of the support possible in the coming campaign. The contest will be Republican versus Municiple Ownership. Where are the colored voters of this city, nearly ten thousand strong, to stand in this contest? Does the Republican party expect the Negro to line up with them in this election? If so, on what ground? Does the Gas, Street car Telephone and Water interests expect the Negro to help win their fight? If so, for what reason? The Negro has not been employed in their offices or business or buildings. We have had no personal or political consideration at their hands. Why then should we be delivered soul and body into their camp? It simply cannot be done unless there are some fair and equitable considerations entered into as a class or members of the body politic. There ought to be a man on the State Central Advisory committee and a colored member of the County Central committee in order to give these parties a right conception of the needs and feelings of thousands of colored voters, otherwise the party may expect deflection from the ranks.
But the real reform in this matter ought to begin with the colored voters themselves. They should recognize their position and relation to the powers that be and make such demands as their strength warrants. Let them once become aroused to the sense of their duty and this matter will receive attention, as the party needs our support as bad as we need the party.
RECEIVING A SET-BACK
At the rate that members of the high finance fraternity are being transported to Canon City the impression may be understood that Denver is the wrong place to practice this new art.
The transportation of Messrs Imboden and Hill this week to the penitentiary to join "Fidelity Johnson," already sojourning there, makes it evident that the people of the Queen City are not to be bumcoed out of their hard cash without some redress. Mr. Imboden may now exercise some of his genius on a rock pile clothed in stripes and learn that the people of the West are not such fools as he took them to be. His impudence and the air of superciliousness will have time to cool off after nine or ten years' acquaintance with iron bars and big turnkeys and prison food. Perhaps the prison chaplain may get his ear and show him that there are several lessons in honesty that he has not learned that it would do him good to give heed.
At any rate the people of Colorado will feel a bit safer with him behind the bars in Canon City than running loose around the Brown Palace hotel with bell boys, messengers and servants at his command and a public of industrious citizens to play upon. The district attorney is to be congratulated on his success in removing these two gentlemen to a safe distance from the honest and industrious people of Denver.
A great honor was conferred upon a colored man recently in Chicago. The man was Dr. Chas. E. Bentley. The occasion was the meeting of the Chicago Medical Society. Dr. Bentley was invited by the society to read a paper before that body on the "Contact Points of the Medical and Dental Profession." He made a favorable impression and the presentation was one of the most apt and creditable that had been presented to the society this year." We are proud of the fact that we have colored men in our professions who not only aspire to the highest but attain that point. We are gratified that at least in Chicago colored men of merit are so recognized by reason of their achievements. The recognition of Dr. Bentley's ability in his profession by a kindred one is indeed one of which his profession can be proud and the colored people doubly.
JOSEPH H. STUART LAWYER.
PRACTICES IN ALL COURTS. Examining Abstracts of Titles and drawing up Legal Instruments given careful attention.
Cullen's Hardy Catalpa.
Large Leave
Beautiful Blooms. Price 5 cents each.
CATALOGUE FREE
International
Nurseries
4570 Gray S
Gess St. Car.
Large Leaves,
Beautiful Blossoms. Price 50
cents each.
CATALOGUE FREE
International
Nurseries
4570 Gray St.
Goss St. Car.
Phone Main 4536.
Residence 2221 Pennsylvania Ave.
Phone Olive 294.
MRS. C. H. PETERSON.
Magnetic and DIVINE HEALER.
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
PHONE WHITE 1528
22 East 28th Ave.
Denver, Colo.
REGULAR KNOW NOTHING.
Kansas City Standard Oil Company Manager.
Kansas City.—Francsi M. Cockrell of the Interstate Commerce Commission severely reprimanded G. W. Mayer, Kansas City manager of the Standard Oil Company, during the investigation into the alleged methods of railroads and the Standard Oil Company in discriminating against independent oil men hereabouts. The lawyers for the commission, J. T. Marehand and Charles Munn, and the lawyers for the independent oil producers, Frank S. Monett, Clifford Thorne and S. W. Brookhart, had been trying hard to get from Mayer an admission that there was any connection-between the Standard Oil Company, the Union Tank Line Company, the Republic Oil Company, the Water-Pierce Oil Company and other companies. To all questions Mr. Mayer answered:
"I do not know," although he had been a manager of the Standard Oil Company for twenty-eight years. At the close of his testimony he was reprimanded by the commissioner.
Attorney General Hadley of Missouri was notified by an attorney for the Standard Oil Company that the only testimony given in the Missouri inquiry by officers of the Standard will be given under compulsion.
Mr. Cockrell had asked Mayer:
"Tell this commission, are the Republic company and the Waters-Pierce Oil Company part of the Standard Oil Company?"
"I do not know, sir."
"What is your best impression about it?"
"I have none."
"Don't you feel and know in your heart that they are all part and parcel of the same company?"
"I do not know."
"Don't you feel in your heart it is so?"
"I don't know, sir."
Then the veteran senator slapped the desk, with his fist and said, severely:
"I am tired and sick of this effort made by Standard Oil people to conceal this fact, when every man, woman and child knows it is so. Now everybody wants the truth told here, and why don't you tell it? Every tub ought to stand on its own bottom and you folks ought not to dodge this question further."
CHANCE FOR DENVER.
Bill for Federal Building Passed by Senate.
Washington.—The Senate Tuesday passed the Teller bill appropriating $2,500,000 for a federal building at Denver, which was called up by Senator Patterson by unanimous consent. The chances for the passage of the bill in the House are remote, but there is a slight possibility of ultimate success of the measure should there be an omnibus building bill passed at this session of Congress.
It is stated that the purpose of the House building committee is to report an omnibus bill carrying not more than an aggregate of $25,000,000 and to include no single item of more than $500,000, which would eliminate Denver. Should the bill pass the House it would undoubtedly be amended in the Senate and many buildings added which would be omitted in the House bill.
An opportunity would thus be given to include Denver, which would not be overlooked by its friends and there would be a fighting chance to get the amount carried in the bill which passed Tuesday added to the omnibus bill with a view to holding it in conference and securing its retention when final action should be reached. While the House buildings committee and postmaster general are advocating independent postoffice buildings for cities of the class of Denver at a cost not to exceed $500,000, this plan is not endorsed by the supervising architect nor by the Senate committee on public buildings, who contend that it is more economical for the government and more convenient for the transaction of public business to have adequate public buildings to accommodate all classes of the government's work.
TO PREVENT LYNCHING.
Fears That St. John Will Be in Danger at Telluride.
Denver.—The News says: Governor McDonald has been asked to prevent the lynching of Vincent St. John when he is taken to Telluride by Sheriff Rutan. The governor was notified yesterday by J. C. Williams, vice president of the Western Federation of Miners, that he had learned through relatives of St. John that a conspiracy had been formed to seize St. John as soon as he reached Telluride and hang him. Williams urged the governor to prevent the carrying out of such a scheme by the use of his full authority. Replying to the letter, Governor McDonald stated that he would see that St. John was given full protection.
Referring to the matter afterward, the governor said that it was his intention to communicate with Sheriff Rutan and tell him the contents of Mr. Williams' letter; that personally he had no fear of mob violence, but that he would instruct the sheriff to use every precaution to protect his prisoner.
Good Health at Panama.
Panama.—Col. William C. Gorgas, chief sanitary officer of the canal zone, has transmitted to Governor Magoon his report for the month of February. In that month no case of yellow fever or quarantinable disease occurred within the canal zone, though bubonic plague, yellow fever and smallpox are prevalent on the South American Pacific coast and also at Barranquilla, Colombia. One case of yellow fever was reported at Bocas Del Toro, where Dr. Purnell has been sent Among the 23,000 canal employees the sick rate for the month was twenty per thousand, the deaths numbering seyen whitens and twenty nine negroes
FAME AND THE NEOPHYTE
The Aspiring Shepherd and the Beautiful World's Desire—An Allegory of the Fiery Stripling and the Vanishing Ideal.
WHY ALL BROADWAY STARED
STORY ABOUT LI-HVNG-CHANG
AND DAVE "HADN'T BEEN"
BUTLER WANTED THE BRIEF
"The World's Desire, I haunt the lofty peak
Where lordly eagles poise and plume
And bold aspiring souls may favor seek
And fain would win and wear the
World's Delight.
"I am a maid and therefore must be wooed.
I am a maid, and therefore must be won.
My zest in life is that I am pursued.
From rosy morn until the day is done.
"Oh follow me, for I am worth thy strife.
My face is fairer than the' freshening
foam.
Riches I bear, and all the sweets of life,
Oh, follow, follow, I will lead thee home,
"A mountain maid, my brothers are the
stars—
The sentinels that shine without a stain.
My kinsmen are great captains of the
wats;
My sisters are the zephyr and the rain!
"Oh, Shepherd, I have watched you from afar.
Tending your flock that frolicked o'er the plain,
No snarling fang your tender lamb may mar,
The gray wolves eye you with a fierce disdain.
"A youth like you should grasp the skirts of chance.
Why waste your boyhood in this dream abode?
Rise up and try the hazard of romance—
Fair Fortune smiles on those who take the road.
"Be bold, fair youth, be bold, and seek my side.
Longe in the way and fraught with fierce alarms.
Yet you will find in me a radiant bride.
Life's guerdon is imprisoned in my arms.
"Seek mountain peaks that taper in thin air.
For on the heights alone can Truth be found.
There Sunlight makes her citadel and lair.
There's Freedom's shrine and Fame's enchanted ground.
WHY ALL BROA
A certain young woman from Texas got to New York night before last. Bright and early yesterday morning she donned a new gray gown, made especially for the benefit of Manhattan Island, and started from Fifty-eighth street to see what Broadway looked like. It was all joy and wonder till she passed Forty-second street and drew near to Herr Connied's song castle. Then the young woman from Texas suddenly discovered that everybody who passed was staring at her.
At first she thought it must be a mistake—but it wasn't. Undoubtedly something was the matter. Panicstricken, Miss Texas began to revolve like a dancing Dervish and looked over her shoulder to see if the trouble was with her clothes. She could discover nothing to warrant the curious, amused glances that were cast at her. With every step she got more nervous.
"How in the world do these people know this is the first time I ever saw Broadway?" she asked herself. "I'm
It will be remembered that at the time of the Boxer outbreak Earl Li was in Canton as viceroy of the Two-Kwangs, says a writer in the Chau-tanquan. While there he made a contract with a syndicate of native merchants to sell to them the privilege of collecting the likin tax or mileage duties on local commerce. The terms were one-fourth cash and the balance in equal quarterly installments. The syndicate made their first payment and then attempted to reimburse themselves by collecting the tax from their competitors in business while passing their own goods free.
This resulted in riots so fierce that the syndicate was forced to abandon its efforts to collect the tax. They then appealed to Earl Li for the return of their money and insisted that he should take over the collection of the tax, which was properly a government function. The earl refused and intimated that he would hold the
Two old farmers, next-door neighbors, named respectively Lou Hyde and Dave Styles, live within a radius of ten miles of Ossipee, N. H. They are wont to vie with one another in telling of their wonderful luck fishing.
One hot June day Dave helped Lou cut his hay. Next day Dave sauntered into the village postoffice and gave an account of his doings the day previous in this manner:
"Went fishin' yesterday. Luck? Well, by snum, guess I did have luck! Got forty beauties; biggest one weighed two pounds if it did an ounce; littlest feller quarter of a pound, sure as God made little apples."
The audience of native wiseacres was duly impressed. During that same afternoon Lon Hyde drove up to
While E. C. Carrigan was in Gen. B. F. Butler's law office a lady came in to ask some advice. As the general was not in, Mr. Carrigan questioned her, and told her he would submit her case to the general, which he did.
The general was to leave the next day for Washington, and told Mr. Carrigan to prepare a brief of the lady's case and show it to him the next day.
Mr. Carrigan sat up half of the night writing his brief. The next morning, about fifteen minutes before Butler was to take his carriage for the train, he told Mr. Carrigan he would look at his brief and give his opinion.
"O'er all the world behind her flying feet
He strained to clasp her in a close embrace.
And on lured him as an angel fleet,
A milk白 fawn with flushed and
rose-leaf face.
A mocking laugh and scorn from lustrous eyes
Lent courage to the youth in sanguine embrace.
Her tawny tresses lured like paradise.
Her gay defiance put him to the test.
The pace grew swift, his strength began to falter.
"I spurn your suit," he cried; "my quest
"You taint and mock me, though I do
my best.
Your siren charms I flound with fierce
disdain.
I will return—the only boon is Rest!
"I miss my home, I miss the soft-eyed
maids.
Whose rippling laughter flowed from lips
divine.
Whose tawny tresses hung in girlish
braids.
For these, and for my absent friends I
pine.
"What care I for great captains you have
known.
For warriors, poets, who have sought
your grace.
Their fame around the tumbling world
is blown.
And still, you lure us with shy rose-leaf
face!"
Fame turned and flung herself upon his
breast.
Her ivory face flushed like a rose in
wine.
She quivered like a dove who seeks the
nest—
"Take me, oh, love, take me, for I am
thine!"
JAMES E. KINSELLA.
Registry Division Chicago Postoffice.
going to stop looking up at the buildings."
But it didn't do any good. Still the people stared at the little woman in the gray dress. Her course to Thirty-fifth street was all misery and gloom. It was impossible to get away from those looks. Her face began to take on a hunted expression. All at once she was overjoyed to see the face of a woman with whom she had dined in her Fifty-eight street boarding house the night before. The fellow-boarder stared at her, too.
"What is the matter with me?" wailed the Texan, rushing up to the other woman. "What makes these awful people stare at me so?" The other woman gurgled:
"Don't you see all those posters? Everybody thinks you are part of the parade," she said.
There were six sandwich men, each bearing a large placard, reading: "See 'The Little Gray Lady.'" The woman from Texas, in her gray gown, had walked five blocks behind them.—New York Times.
members of the syndicate for the other payments as they came due. At this time the earl was called to Pekin to arrange peace with the foreign powers, and the syndicate, having been unable to secure the return of its money, made arrangements with a band of pirates that they should waylay the earl on his trip up the coast and take back the bullion paid him by the syndicate, for which service the pirates were to receive a percentage.
The earl, however, heard of the arrangement and therefore refused to make the trip in a Chinese vessel, knowing that the crew would be in sympathy with the pirates, if in fact a large number of the crew were not made up from the pirate band; so he remained at Canton, surrounded by his retainers, refusing to go to Pekin until an English war vessel was sent to convey him and his ill-gotten gains to a place of safety in the north.
the store to get the mail (one circular of a new brand of spavin cure and the weekly paper).
The conscientious postmaster duly recounted the great luck Dave had had fishing the day before, hoping to pique Lon's pride. Lon listened in silence to the entire recital. Then, rising slowly from his rush-bottomed chair, he unhitched his trusty nag from the kerosene barrel in front of the store, expectorated carefully toward the court house, and asked:
"Dave caught all them, did he?"
"Sartain," affirmed the postmaster.
"Yesterday?"
"Sure, yesterday."
Lon climbed into his buggy, picked up the reins, chirruped to the horse, and then crushingly flung over his shoulder:
"The devil: he hain't been."
Mr. Carrigan began by saying: "General, I have made a most careful study of this case. I have the points all in my head, and can state them to you in three minutes."
"Let me have the brief," again said the general, somewhat sharply.
"But, Gen. Butler," said Mr. Carrigan, "I had a brief prepared, and intended to show it to you, but I left it at home on my table. However, as I said, I have all the points of the case in my head."
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"Young man," said the general, "the next time you have a brief to prepare for me bring me the brief, and leave your head at home on the table."
CITY NEWS.
Julius Ogborn is on the sick list.
Miss Mable Fore went to work Thursday at the Mint.
Mrs. Eubank of 2343 Pennsylvania avenue, is reported on the sick list.
John N. Buford recently of Chicago died last Saturday at 2358 Curtis St.
Geo. Washington of 786 Lincoln avenue, is dangerously ill with pneumonia.
The young men of Boulder will give a grand jubilee concert in the near future.
Prof. L. L. McGruder of Colorado Springs, is now an employee at the U. S. Mint.
The Denver mint now has 833,000,000 on hand and is coining ten-dollar gold pieces.
Rev. G. W. Tolson of Boulder, was in the city Monday and was an interesting caller at this offide.
T. J. Boyce of 2237 Lawrence street, who has been sick for the past two weeks is much improved.
The Peoples Investment company held a public meeting at Scotts M. E. church Monday night. About twenty-five people were present.
The Baptist ministers conference will meet next Thursday and Friday at Pueblo. Revs. Ford and Douglass of this city are expected to attend.
Carrie S. Joseph has been selected first from the Senior class of the Manual Training High School to read in the annual contest for the Morey prize.
The B. Y. P. U. of Zion church, will give a St. Patrick social and Erin entertain at the church this evening, March 17th. The public invited.
D. B. Holley of Alamosa, Colo., arrived in the city Wednesday for a few days visit with the home folks and to greet his many friends.
General J. M. Hazlewood of Charleston, W. Va., arrived in the city last Saturday and is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. D. Rivers 225 W. 11th avenue.
As we have been very lienient with our subscribers during the winter months we hope they will appreciate the fact by a remittance for their subscription.
Have your laundry work done by School's Modern Hand Laundry at 1841 Arapahoe street, phone 817. No tearing of clothes by machinery; all hand work. Satisfaction guaranteed.
Quarterly meeting will be held at Shorter A. M. E. church to-morrow, the 18th. Rev. J. S. Payne of Campbell A. M. E. church will preach the communion sermon at 3 p. m.
Clarence Sears was shot by Frank Kempton last Tuesday night at 2047 Lawrence street, after a few hot words had been exchanged. It is said that Sears has no chance for recovery.
For sale by Mrs. Cena M. George, administratrix of the estate of Richard Henry George 4 lots in Harmon sub-division, near the country club $1,000. $500 cash, time to suit on balance.
Miller's favorite liniment is the best on the market for flesh wounds, bruises, rheumatism, sprains, corn, bunions, neuralgia, toothache, etc. Try it and be convinced. Miller's Pharmacy, 2644 Welton street.
Mrs. Annie E. Brown, the noted evangelist of Washington, D. O., who has been holding successful meetings in the East will conduct revival meetings at Campbell A. M. E. church, 23rd and Lawrence streets, beginning Sunday, March 18th.
The Bats club which is comprised of some of Denver's prominent young men will give its annual ball shortly after Easter, the date of which will be an nounced later. It will be the social opening event of the spring season. We have used it and recommend it to all.
Mother Goose Party and Baby concert at Campbell A. M. E. church on March 5th, was a decided success. A large and appreciative audience greeted the little folks and expressed themselves as being greatly entertained. The amount cleared was $50.50.
.
At the monthly meeting of the Hill Horseshoe company held at their office in the Good Block Wednesday afternoon, a substantial bank account was reported and Mr. Hill was authorized to go to New Jersey immediately in order to prepare moulds and castings and secure a manufacturer for his invention.
J. W. Taylor and wife entertained Thursday evening in honor of Gen. J. M. Hazlewood of Charleston, W. V.a. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. John Leftridge, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Penson, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. D. Rivers. Dinner was served at 8 o'clock and all enjoyed a pleasant evening.
Ralph A. Whitehall of Schuyler, Neb., and Fannie Mettows of Waverly, Mo., were married Wednesday at 3 p. m. at the parsonage of Rev. J. E. Ford. Only the groom's sister was present to witness the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Whitehall will make their home on a ranch purchased last fall at Parker, Col.
Rev. J. E. Ford has returned from a four-weeks' trip through Kentucky, Tennessee and Alabama looking over the educational institutions of these states and meeting the leading educators in each section. He made extensive remarks on his observation to the Peoples Alliance Sunday afternoon and spoke at length at Zion church Sunday evening.
GEN. J. M. HAZLEWOOD
Entertained at Reception Given by U. R. Companies Knights of Pythias.
Aetna Company No. 1, and Eureka Company No. 4, Uniform Rank Knights of Pythias, gave a very elaborate reception at 1712 Curtis street, last Wednesday night in honor of General J. M. Hazlewood of Charleston, W. Va., who is a guest in our city. The U. R. boys were out in full-dress uniform to show their highest respects to the guest of honor, who ranks high as an officer in the organization. After an introduction of General Hazlewood to the Sir Knights by Sir Knight G. C. Sample, all were seated at a long banquet table which was very beautifully decorated and bore a very sumptuous menu. The General was seated at the head of the table with Col. Wm. Greenleaf on his right and Lieut. G C. Sample on his left, while at the other end of the table was Grand Chancellor W. R. Hardy of Pueblo, who invoked the blessing. Very wity and pointed toasts were an enjoyable part of the program.
General Hazlewood spoke at length on the great strides of progress of Pythianism. His eulogy of the executive ability of Supreme Chancellor S.W. Starks was greeted with a vigorous applause; in fact the name "Starks" stands as a sparkling light in Pythian circles. He also paid a high tribute to Major General R.R. Jackson, who stands at the head of the military department of the order and whose wise administration has increased the membership to an enormous number.
The Sir Knights were much elated with the logical advice of the General when he referred to the help and success that subordinate branches could attain by obedience to law and superior officers. He is a pleasing talker and a very impressive lesson was left in the minds of all who heard him. He was warmly congratulated at the close of his remarks.
The General speaks in the highest terms of the hospitable citizens of Denver and will always "Keep a warm spot in his heart for them."
Local Notices.
Hair cut 15 cents, 1847 Blake street
The Paxton, 1841 Lawrence street
Furnished rooms $1.50 week up. Also
nice transient rooms cheap.
Four-room frame house for rent at 24th and Grant avenue. Apply at this office.
Nicely furnished rooms for rent at 2503 Curtis street. With or without board.
For all kinks of trees and plants go to the International Nurseries. 4570 Gray street. Phone 4536 Main. Take Goss street car.
LADIES OR GENTLEMEN WANTED, everywhere; $3.00 a day selling our toilet goods. Write at once. Send 5 cents for catalogue. C. H. Brown Toilet Company, 5711 Wabash Ave., Chicago, Ill.
SAM MAYER.
Has moved from 901-3 16th Street,
to 1033 15th St.
Phone Main 2710 Denver, Colo.
COPYRIGHT. 1906. BY
L. ADLER BROS. & CO.
THE
Johnson-Noel C
1005 16TH ST.
OPP. TABOR GRAND.
Pearl Barber Shop
1022 19TH STREET,
Opened Under New Manag
RST-CLASS WORK A SPECIALT
ONES, PROP. DENVER, C
FIRST-CLASS WORK HARRY JONES, PROP.
FIRST-CLASS WORK A SPECIALTY.
HARRY JONES, PROP. DENVER, COLORADO
THE TWO JIMS
SOCIAL CLUB
Denver's Favorite
Pleasure Resort.
Whist, Pool, Chess, Checker and
other pastime games.
PHONE 2275 MAIN.
1859 Champa St. Denver, Colo.
COTTRELL'S
DR. W. J. CO
A Complete Line of Drug
Articles, Sta
. . SODA FOUNTAIN
. . ICE CREAM ANT
PHONE 3
TRELL'S PHARMA
DR. W. J. COTTRELL, Prop.
The Line of Drugs and all Kind
Articles, Stationery, Etc.
SODA FOUNTAIN IN CONNECTION
ICE CREAM AND ICES SERVE
COTTRELL'S PHARMACY, DR. W. J. COTTRELL. Prop.
A Complete Line of Drugs and all Kinds of Toilet Articles, Stationery, Ete.
.. SODA FOUNTAIN IN CONNECTION ..
.. ICE CREAM AND ICES SERVED.
Clearance Sale of In
Children's Coats and Hea
make room for our new spring styles we
all infants' and Children's Coats and He
-Half the Regular Price and Less.
ants' and Children's White Silk Bonne
seed and hemstitched, silk lined, ribbon or
25c for Bonnets, regular price 65c.
43c for Bonnets, regular price $1.25.
98c for Bonnets, regular price $2.25.
$1.48 for Bonnets, regular price $3.50.
ants' and Children's Silk and Velour Bon
all colors, trimmed with ribbon or silk
Last Clearance
and Children's Co
To make room for our nee
ing out all infants' and Chi
at One-Half the Regular P
Infants' and Children's
broidered and hemstitched.
25c for Bonnets,
43c for Bonnets, r
98c for Bonnets, r
$1.48 for Bonnets.
Infants' and Children's S
Pokes, all colors, trimmed w
lined.
Last Clearance Sale of Infants'
and Children's Coats and Headwear To make room for our new spring styles we are closing out all infants' and Children's Coats and Headwear at One-Half the Regular Price and Less. Infants' and Children's White Silk Bonnets, embroidered and hemstitched, silk lined, ribbon and lace
Infants' and Children's Silk and Velour Bonnets and Pokes, all colors, trimmed with ribbon or silk cord, silk lined.
25c for Bonnets, regular price 85c.
39c for Bonnets, regular price 95c
63c for Bonnets and Pokes, regular price $1.50.
98c for Bonnets and Pokes, regular price $2.25.
Children's French Fell, Beaver and Plaited Silk Hats, ribbon trimmed.
$1.98 for Hats, regular price $5.50.
$3.75 for Hats, regular price $7.50.
$4.25 for Hats, regular price $8.50.
Children's Cloth, Fur and Velour Coats, sizes 2 to 5 years, handsomely trimmed and lined.
$c for Bonnets and Pokes, regular price $c for Bonnets and Pokes, regular price $c for Children's French Fell, Beaver and Plain ribbon trimmed.
$1.98 for Hats, regular price $5.50.
$3.75 for Hats, regular price $7.50.
$4.25 for Hats, regular price $8.50.
children's Cloth, Fur and Velour Coats, size handsomely trimmed and lined.
63c for Bonnets and Pokes, regular price $1.50.
98c for Bonnets and Pokes, regular price $2.25.
Children's French Fell, Beaver and Plaited Silk
Hats, ribbon trimmed.
Children's Cloth. Fur and Velour Coats, sizes 2 to 5 years, handsomely trimmed and lined.
DENVER DRY GOOD
THE DENVER DRY GOODS CO.
KNIGHTS OF PYTHAS
1834
New Management. A SPECIALTY. DENVER, COLORADO.
9
J. F. CLARK.
PHARMACY,
TRELL. Prop.
and all Kinds of Toilet
onery, Ete.
IN CONNECTION ..
ICES SERVED ..
O MAIN.
Sale of Infants'
Hats and Headwear
spring, styles we are clos-
en's Coats and Headwear
e and Less.
White Silk Bonnets, em-
ilk lined, ribbon and lace
regular price 65c.
sular price $1.25.
sular price $2.25.
regular price $3.50.
k and Velour Bonnets and
h ribbon or silk cord, silk
s, regular price $1.50.
s, regular price $2.25.
Beaver and Plaited Silk
lular price $5.50.
lular price $7.50.
lular price $8.50.
Velour Coats, sizes 2 to 5
and lined.
RY GOODS CO.
G
Denver, Colo
St. Patrick A Condensed Sketch of the Great Irish Saint.
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Patrick began life in Dumbarton, Scotland, in the year A. D. 287. He came from noble stock, his father ranking among his townsmen as a magistrate. Pirates carried him away to Ireland in his fifteenth year and sold him into slavery. For six years he served as shepherd slave. He escaped and was recaptured. He escaped a second time and went home to Scotland.
When he received the divine call to devote his life to the conversion of the Irish, his parents opposed him. They said he already had experienced enough sorrow in that land. But he was ready to forego comforts, to endure hardships, to leave home and native land if thereby the Irish could be saved. To bring him to speedy decision the angel Victorious came to him in a dream, saying: "The voice of the Irish. We pray thee, holy youth, to come and henceforth walk among us!" He began his mission among his old slave companions. He started first of all to give the gospel to his old slavemaster, who, hearing of Patrick's approach, killed himself. He aimed first to convert the chief of the clan, and through him the clan itself. By this method he wrought all over Ireland until every tribe heard and received the new religion.
He established 35 churches, bap-
KNOWN AS ST. PATRICK'S STONE.
Pressless Relic of the Saint Owned by American.
The above photograph was produced from a fac simile of the original stone, caller "St. Patrick's Stone." It derives its name from the patron
1
saint, who while in Ireland prayed so long and fervently for the deliverance from snakes, which were a plague in Ireland. He thus caused the indentations, which, according to the legend, are the imprint of St. Patrick's knees. The stone was carried from Ireland to England in 1839, and thence to America in 1849, where it remains with its present owner.
A Toast to the Irish Blood.
Fill me a cup with the "Dew of Killarney.
Pure than charity, essence of fire;
Ogling a laugh at ye, beaded with blairney;
Breath of the peat-smoke, and blood of desire!
desire!
Fill me a cup, till I drink to St. Jacques.
Drink to the harp strains, the songs that beguile;
Drink to our emblem, the mystical shamrock!
Up with ye! Down it! The Emerald Isle.
Oh, we are the world's great lovers;
To our hearts love fled from the skies.
For we know the secret of laughter.
And we know the passion of sighs.
All that we love fled to our airbnb,
And your soul to our Irish eyes.
We follow the star of the vision.
Whose light to our souls doth stream.
For us swing the ivory portals.
Where the pearls of fancy gleam,
'Mid the coarse, phillistine banter—
"Tis the mad Celt's madder dream"'
In the van of the world's great battles,
We have followed the scarlet ways.
Then, to war with our pen's stiletto!
For the battle, to the battle!
And, behold the Pharisee, blunt,
Impailed on our poignant phrase.
From ceremonies of convention
The heart and brain we free—
Rebels, and mockers, and dreamers,
Of the open road and the sea.
Our pelf is but love and laughter,
Lootless and friendless, we!
Though broken our falling rafters,
Though our larder shelf be bare,
Better the wi and mould,
And the wi and mould that know not care,
And the hand that is free and ready
A crust with all to share!
Then fill me a cup, till I drink to St.
Patrick;
Drink to the harp strains, the songs
that beguile;
Drink to our emblem, the mystical sham-
rock.
Up with ye! Down it! The Emerald
St. Patrick Taught Temperance.
St. Patrick taught temperance. St. Patrick was an apostle of temperance. He desired that his disciples should not drink during the day, but only after vespers. One of them named Coleman went thirsty all day in the fields praying for the hour of vespers, and when the bells rang he dropped dead. To-day any one bearing the name of Coleman is likely to have that of "stadhach" attached in memory of the "thirsty one." The favorite drink of the people, "poeen," dates to the name Patrick. And on his feast day no Irishman need go hungry or thirsty, as "Patrick's pot" is set out for refreshment in every inn and every household and the stranger is made welcome to eat and drink.
tized by immersion 12,000 converts, and ordained 50 preachers. He established schools, mills, factories, and stores for general merchandise. His schools supplied all Brittany with missionaries for centuries. He instilled into his converts the principles of industry, sound morals and good government. The most celebrated of these schools was at Armagh. At one time it had 7,000 students. The Danes destroyed it in the eighth century.
Patrick wrote two books, "The Epistle to Coroticus," and "Confessions." The former denounced Coroticus for killing converts on the northeast coast of Ireland; the latter is Patrick's autobiography. These books betray a lack of classical learning. Patrick calls himself unlearned and rustic. In style he is crude and archaic. His sentences are ungrammatical and incorrect, but clear and compact. His written style in Latin corresponds to Mr. Moody's in English. Patrick seems to have qualified himself in much the same manner as Mr. Moody.
He was an ideal preacher. Simple, but never commonplace; earnest, but not confused; persuasive, but not dormatic; aggressive, but always reasonable. Convicted that he was an ambassador for Christ, he backed up his preaching with the authority of God Almighty.
NATIONAL COLOR OF IRELAND
First Worn by the Heroic Insurgents
of Wexford.
Some orators are wont to refer vividly to the green flag as "the ancient banner of Ireland." Probably, however, St. Patrick and his contemporaries never saw a green flag in Ireland, nor did the Irish for about fourteen centuries after him. There is no mention of a green flag in the Irish annals previous to 1798. At the celebrated skirmish known as "the battle of the Boyne" the opposing armies of King William and his father-in-law, King James, wore red uniforms. In order to avoid killing one another by mistake in the confusion of battle William's men stuck green leaves in their hats, while those of James wore white paper rosettes, representing the white rose of York. Thus, by strange irony, the Orangemen were the first wearers of the green in Ireland. The famous Irish brigade in the service of France wore red uniforms; some of them therefore were mistaken for English and cut down by the French cavalry in the melee when the brigade's charge gained the victory at Fontenoy. The Irish insurgents of 1798. Catholics and Protestants, were the first to adopt green as the national color of Ireland. It had been previously proposed as the "color of hope" by Camille Desmoulins to the French revolutionists, but he was outvoted in favor of the tricolor. The Wexford insurgents at first used impartially flags of various colors—red, yellow and green—but eventually they fixed on green, which, with baptism of heroic blood, was then firmly and permanently established as the national color of Ireland. There have been some fantastic and wholly unsuccessful attempts to introduce a green, white and yellow "Irish tricolor."
PLEASURE FOR THE EVENING.
Euchre Party with Appropriate Colors and Decorations.
This affair is to be a euchre party. Two ladies have joined forces and will have fifteen tables—six at each table. Their cards will be tied with narrow ribbon of emerald hue. The rooms will be decorated with quantities of green cheesecloth drawn from the four corners of the room to the central chandelier. The Irish flag will adorn pictures, doorways and window curtains. Palms and ferns will occupy all available nooks, while the florist will furnish carnations or roses of a beautiful green color. They are really every effective, but only appropriate for St. Patrick's day. The card tables are covered with green paper cambric—this slippery surface is ideal for card playing. The score cards are to be four-leaved clovers with a knot of green.
For refreshments green grapes, but, apple and celery salad will be served with green mayonnaise dressing, sandwiches, coffee, olives and sherbet colored green with pistachio nuts, green iced individual cakes with peppermint bars of the same hue. The napkins are pinned with a green woven silk shamrock and the forks and spoons are to be tied with green ribbon. The prizes are a small picture framed in dark green molding, a green art glass vase, a card case of green leather and a beautiful Boston fern. It is needless to say that the hostesses are to be gowned one in green and the other in white, with sash and bow of St. Patrick's favorite color.
St. Patrick's Day.
For a little dinner on St. Patrick's day, arrange a flat basket of shamrock edged with white violets for a center piece, and have green candles with white shades painted with wreaths of shamrock. Serve the sherbet in little pasteboard pots, the covers of which are filled with artificial shamrock in moss.—Joseph Grenier in Harper's Bazar.
SHOULD A HORSE
BE CLIPPED?
CLIPPING IN THE EARLY SPRING
RECOMMENDED BY LEADING
VETERINARIANS,
i: Thinking Men Readily Recognize
Its Advantages.
“S horse is a valuable asset, and
should receive the best care possible.
He should be well fed, comfortably
stabled, carefully groomed and clipped
& the early spring. If he receives
mrese attentions he will work well
and improve in value. A horse lives
under artificial conditions. In his
wild state he required none of these
attentions, for he was able to look
out for himself. The domesticated
animal, being worked under condi-
tions that are In themselves artificial,
must be Kept in condition for such
work.
‘The clipping of a horse in the early
spring is now conceded by all the
leading veterinarians to be as essen
tial to a horse’s well being as shoeing
him or giving him a comfortable bed
to lie on. Farmers in England and
France have been clipping their
horses for many years, and American
farmers are not slow to realize its
advantages. A clipped horse dries
out rapidly after a hard day’s work,
and will rest comfortably and be re.
freshed for the work the following
day. An unclipped horse is liable to
catch the heaves, pneumonia and all
sorts of colds, rheumatism, ete. More
especially is this so in the early
spring, when his hair is long and he
“is “soft.” If worked hard he will per
spire freely and the moisture will. be
held by his long hair, and the food
that should go to nourish him will be
used to replenish the heat that is be-
‘pe constantly taken from his body
by the mass of cold wet hair. If
clipped, the perspiration will evapor.
ate almost as soon as secreted, and
when put in the stable he rests com-
fortably and his food does him good.
Some years ago a Buffalo street car
company tested the value of clipping
in the following manner: They own:
ed 500 horses, and 250 of these were
clipped early in the spring and 250
were not clipped. A careful record
was kept of results, and it was found
that of the 250 unclipped horses 153
were afflicted with coughs and pneu
monia, while of the 250 clipped not
one case of sickness was reported.
A man would not expect to enjoy
very good health if he did hard man-
ual work clothed with heavy under-
wear, a heavy suit and a fur overcoat,
and after perspiring freely, as he
naturally would, go to sleep without
removing same. It is just as ridicu-
lous to expect a horse to be in perfect
health if worked under the same con.
ditions.
If you would get the best returns
from your investment in your horse,
treat him right, and be sure and
clip him in the early spring A first.
class horse-clipping machine can be
bought at almost any hardware store
i less than $7.00.—Horse Review,
‘Dec. 5th, 1905.
A Horse's Hands and Feet.
‘The horse never puts his heel on the
ground, nor even the ball of his foot.
He stands up on the very tips of his
toes, and this is, in part, the reason
why he can trot’ so fast. Dobbin’s
heels are half way up his hind legs,
and what we call his knees are really
his wrists, The part corresponding to
the upper arm is short and is so em-
bedded in the muscles of the shoulder
that the elbow comes next the body,
but the horse has only one digit to
each limb, and the wrist bones are
comparatively small, The so-called
ankle, then, is the knuckle, where the
digit joins the hand or the foot, and
the “foot” is only a single thick
finger or toe, with a great nail for a
hoof. The lower half of the horse's
foreleg is really a gigantic hand, with
only the middle finger and a piece out
of the middle of the palm, while the
corresponding part of his hind leg is a
big single toed foot.—St. Nicholas.
Rational Temperance Movement.
During the past summer and winter
the officials of the Baden railroads in-
augurated the practice of serving hot
coffee to their employes at the expense
‘of the management of the railroads,
or at the expense of the government.
‘Th experiment has been attended with
gratifying results. The consumption
of alcoholic drinks has materially de-
creased as a result of the practice, and
the efficiency of the workmen has in:
creased:
s Soa ,
gE >.
r- DODDS 2D
iE \
2 KIDNEY 2
Na PILLS =F
wat eA
Reg ear oan
area
SS Ree aor tg
NE ar
gg a
| CURES [50c, and $1.00.|
|| Swine Disease
=3Hog Cholera
rs EAR a SLOAN 61 Aang S,Borton, se
CONDENSED TELEGRAMS
gambling woe ns in futures is
|sambling. Hereafter neither side can
ney
cotton quowey In ‘Texas on deals in
Women of Chicago, despairi
Police protection and Thorough
to baad bY numerous attacks, are said
‘ying short revolvei
milfs and handbags, Y"® 1m thelx
A distinct earthquake shock was fel
in Portland, Maine, March ean
Several parts of the city the shock was
accompanied by rumbling, which
lasted several seconds,
Colonel C. A. Smith, a lumberman
of Minneapolis, Minnesota, has offered
to give $100,00v to Bethany college, at
Lindsborg, Kansas, on condition that
the college raise a like sum.
The three men who February tenth
attempted to assassinate General
Reyes, president of the Republic of
Colombia, were shot March 7th at the
Spot where the attack took place.
A snow avalanche at the Lofeten
Island, off the coast of Norway, on the
7th inst. buried a number of fisher-
men’s huts. Rescuers _extricated
twenty-one dead and thirty-nine in-
jured.
George B. ‘Thomas, retired banker
of Philadelphia, has given $100,000 to
the board of missions of the Protes-
tant Episcopal Church, to be used for
home missionary work at the discre-
tion of the board.
Judge Willlam Hickman Moore,
Municipal Ownership candidate for
mayor of Seattle, has just been elected
by the small majority of fifteen votes,
after one of the closest fights in the
history of the city.
‘The sentence of death imposed upon
Mrs. Antoinette Tolla for the killing of
Joseph Sonta has been commuted to
seven years and a half imprisonment
by the New Jersey Court of Pardons.
The vote stood six to two.
A $1,000,000 Masonic club house on
Michigan avenue is the plan of Chi-
cago Masons, who have organized a
new society for the express purpose of
putting through their project. Forty
officers of Chicago Masonic lodges
have the matter in hand.
An alarming earthquake has oc-
curred in Bashahs, one of the Simla
tributary hill states of the Punjab in
India. Considerable damage has been
caused at Rampur, the capital of Bas-
hahs. Hight are known to have been
killed and twenty-six injured.
Tacloban, the capital of the island
of Leyte, Has been destroyed by fire.
‘The financial loss is reported to be
$600,000. Tacloban was the fifth city
of the islands and was situated in an
important hemp district. A number
of warehouses were destroyed.
Within two months silver shipments
from the single port of Vera Cruz, in
Mexico, have amounted to $9,716,000,
the bulk of the shipments being silver
pesos from London and New York.
Another shipment of a million pesos
will be made within ten days.
Maj. George H. Hopkins, former de:
partment commander of the G. A. R.
department of Michigan, who held ax
important confidential position in the
| War Department under Secretary Al
ger during the Spanish-American War,
died at Detroit on the 6th inst.
Frederick Augustus III, King of Sax.
ony, has asked the Pope for a special
license to marry. In November, 1891,
he wedded the Archduchess Loutse of
‘Tuscany, and secured a divorce from
her in February, 1903, after she had
eloped with her ‘children’s tutor.
Herr Mendelsohn, head of the bank:
ing firm of Mendelsohn & Company, of
Berlin, has received a number of let-
ters since his arrival at St. Petersburg
threatening him with death if he nego-
uated a loan with Russia. Six detec-
tives have been assigned to guard him.
A fire at Sheboygan, Wisconsin,
March 6th, caused a loss og $100,000
in the furniture factory district. ‘The
heaviest losers are Sheboygan Couch
Company, $50,000; Sears Roebuck &
Co., Chicago, warehouse, $30,000;
Montgomery Ward & Co., warehouse,
$10,000.
‘There {s a trust for the dead as well
as for the living in Chicago, according
to the finding of the Cigarmakers’ un-
jon. ‘There is a monopoly of cemeteries
rwithin the city limits and union labor
has no place to bury its dependent
dead except at prices for lots that are
prohibitive.
One of the finest club buildings in
the world is planned by the Univer-
sity club of Chicago on the site of the
present offices of the McCormick Har-
vester Company, and when completed
and furnished it is expected to repre-
sent an outlay of over $1,000,000, inde-
pendent of what is paid for the ground
lease.
Columbia college, New York City,
is considering plans for un athletic
field to cost $1,000,000.. As no ground
near the university building ts avail-
‘able, it is proposed to make the ground
by filling in the shallow shore waters
of the Hud on river as far out as the
pier headline, between 116th and 120th
streets.
The Sons of the Revolution at New-
port, Rhode Island, have brought suit
in the Superior Court against Hiram
Burlingham, a dealer in antiquities,
Hee eee a asec cen Cae) eae:
HERITAGE OF CIVIL WAR.
Thousands of Soldiers Contracted
Chronic Kidney Trouble While in
the Service.
The experience of Capt. John L.
Ely, of Co. B, 17th Ohio, now living
at 500 East Second street, Newton,
_ Kansas, will interest
Say the thousands of vet-
7 ih erans who came back
“ from the Civil War
A) suifering tortures
PAY = with kidney com-
a plaint. Capt. Ely
Fe ae says: “I contracted
a BEAM Kidney trouble during
aw. ere the civil war, and
WARMER the occasional at-
¢ ansas, will interest
a the thousands of vet-
7 Wh erans who came back
i § from the Civil War
My) suffering tortures
PAY = with kidney com-
Lar plaint. Capt. Ely
akg oy says: “I contracted
Bae deme kidney trouble during
PY Peers the civil war, and
M RMN the occasional at-
tacks finally developed into a chronic
case. At one time I had to use a
crutch and cane to get about. My
back was lame and weak, cnd besides
the aching, there was a distressing
retention of the kidney secretions. [
was in a bad way when I began using
Doan’s Kidney Pills in 1901, but the
remedy cured me and I have been
well ever since.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
A man's love for riches may keep
him poor.
Habit-formine Medicines
Whatever may be the fact as to many
of the so-called patent medicines con-
Bing injurious ingredients as broadly
pup ied in some journals of more or
less influence, this publicity has certainly
‘been of great interest in arousing needed
attention to this subject. It pea a
considerable measure, resulted the
most intelligent people wvoiding, such,
foods and medicines as aay, be fairly sus-
ected ‘of containing the injurious tagre-
ents complained of. Recognizing this
fact some time ago, Dr. Pierce, of Buffalo,
N. Y., “took time ‘by the forclock,” as it
}were, and published broadcast all the
ingredients of which his popular medi-
cines are composed. ‘Thus he has com-
pletely forestalled all harping critics and
all opposition that might otherwise bo
urged against his medicines, because they
Bre Now OP KNOWN ComrosiTioN, Pure
thermore, from the formula printed on
every bottle wrapper, it will bé seen that
thesd medicines contain’ uo -alcoliol or
other habit-forming drugs. Neither do
|they contain any narcotics or injurious
agents, their ingredients being purely
vegetable, extracted from the roots of
medicinal plants found growing in the
depths of our American forests and of
well recognized curative virtues.
Instead of alcohol, which even in small
portions long continued, as in obstinate
eases of diseases, becomes highly objec-
tionable from its ey to produce a
craving for stimulants, Dr. Pierce em-
ploys chemically pure, triple-refinod
glycerine, which of itself is a valuable
Temedy idl many cases of chronic diseases,
being a superior demulcent, antiseptic,
Jantiferment™ and “supporting "uutetive:
It enhances the curative action of tho
| Golden Seal root, Stone root, ‘Black
Cherrybark and Bloodroot, contained in
“Golden Medical Discovery,” in all bron-
chial, throat and lung affections attended
with'severe coughs. As will be seen from
the writings of the eminent Drs. Grover
Coe, of New York; Bartholow, of Jeffer-
son Medical College, Phila.; Scudder, of
Cincinnati; Ellingwood, of Chicago;
Hale, of Chicago, and others, who stand
as leaders in their several schools of
practice, the foregoing agents are the
ery, bést Ingredients. that Dr. Pieree
could have chosen to muke up his fa-
mous “Discovery” for the cure of not
only bronchial, throat and lung affee-
tions, but also of chronic catarrh in all
its various forms wherever located.
To Harness Victoria Falls.
Consul General Washington of Cape
Town thinks that South Africa is on
the eve of introducing vast changes in
its industrial life. He looks for the
transmission of electrical power that
is to be generated by the mighty rivers
of the interior. The question of the
development and transmission of elec-
trical power from the Victoria Falls,
the consul general says, is to be con:
sidered by a committee of experts.
Two engineering specialists to the
Victoria company are inspecting water
power installations in European coun.
tries with a view to their application
to Rhodesia, America’s supremacy in
the electrical field should secure the
orders for machinery and supplies
that will be needed to develop this
vast water power.
An electrical ‘engineer from New
York has been visiting Europe in con-
nection with the projcet of supplying
electrical power to the Rand from the
Victoria Falls. He and the highest
European authorities whom the char-
tered company consulted in the matter
were unanimous that the scheme was
not only possible, but was payable.
The experts regarded the climate of
South Africa as the most suitable in
the world for the transmission of
power, because, apart from its dry-
ess, there is no ice or snow to inter-
fere with the working of the plant.
‘The distance over which transmission
woud have to be made presents, they
declare, absolutely no difficulty.
Even those who don’t believe in race
suicide must admit that the stork
sometimes makes a perfect goose ot
tumself.
THE EDITOR.
Explains How to Keep Up Mental
and Physical Vigor.
| A New Jersey editor writes:
“A long indulgence in improper food
brought on a condition of nervous
dyspepsia, nearly three years ago, so
severe that I had to quit work entire-
ly. I put myself on a strict regimen
of Grape-Nuts food, with plenty of out-
ee exercise and in a few months
found my stomach so far restored that
‘the process of digestion gaye me
‘pleasure instead of distress.
“It also built up my strength so that
I was able to resume ‘my business,
which is onerous, as I not only edit
my paper but also do a great deal of
‘outside’ writing.
“I find that the Grape-Nuts diet en-
ables me to write with greater vigor
than ever before, and without the feel-
ing of brain fag with which I used to
be troubled. As to bodily vigor—i can
and do walk miles every day without
fatigue—a few squares used to weary
me before I began to live on Grape-
Nuts!” Name given by Postum Co,,
Battle Creek, Mich.
| There's a reason. Read the littie
book, “The Road to Wellville,” i
| pkga,
[0 :.*s? To sweeten, Dispels colds and
ae Fd (\ To refresh, headaches when §
eves] To cleanse the \ bilious or con-
ey yoo system, stipated;
Boe AN Effectually For men, women
bes : () and Gently ; \ and children;
B\ | oe l.} There is only Acts best, on
B) ~ £316 one Genuine the kidneys |
Bik ee Syrup of Figs; and liver,
pe fF il to get its bene- stomach and
ce wt ficial effects bowels;
ue , poe Always buy the genyine— Manufactured by the
‘CALIFORNIA HGOYRUP@
7 & ‘Louisville, Ky. San Francisco, Cal. Aew York. NY.
e The genuine Syrup of Figs is for sale by all first-class
druggists. The full name of the company—California
Fig Syrup Co.—is always printed on the front
. ‘ of every package. Price Fifty Cents per bottle.
DESERTED IRELAND.
Two Hundred Thousand Emigrants in
Five Moers.
Since the census of 1900 was taken
nearly 200,000 Irish emigrants have
settled im the United States, the year
ending with July, 1905, showing a
larger number than any year since
1895, writes Plummer F. Jones in the
World To-Day for March. A new im-
petus has been given to Irish immigra-
tion within the past two years, a turn
which {8 quite perplexing to those na:
tive Irish societies which have been
unsuccessfully attempting to stop the
great national leak for so many years.
‘The unrest among the young native
Irish element is still wonderfully
strong. An American traveler in Ire-
land is as much impressed with this
fact as he is with anything else in that
country Of remarkaable things. —Ev-
erywhere he sees and hears of whole-
sale departures for the United States.
Even in the remotest rural hamlets
the old people can be heard lamenting
some recent exodus of the most prom-
ising young boys and girls. Almost
every man or woman that a traveler
meeis and talks with In Ireland has a
number of brothers or sisters or very
near relatives who have recently left
for the United States.
Emigration agencies exist in every
part of the island. Every village has a
steamship agent, to whose advantage
it is to use every inducement to infl
ence the young mien and women to emi-
grate.
Plead for Mumanity:
It is said that Prince Louis Napo-
leon, who is in the Russian service as
governor of the Caucasus, recently
objected to having his soldiers fire on
unarmed mobs of workmen. Several
of the grand dukes are also sald to
have lodged like objections with the
Czar.
Write for a Sample Package
of Garfield Tea, the mild laxative whfch
cures constipation, sick headache and de-
rangements of liver, «idneys, stomach and
bowels, Garilcld ‘Tea is made whoily of
herbs. Address Garfield Tea Co., Brooklyn,
N.Y. Senduame of your ruggist.
A catboat couldn't put up much of
an argument with an ocean greyhound.
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured
with LOGAL AVPLICATIONS. as they cannot reach
Tie neat of the divesses ‘Catarti lea blood ur consul
tutional disoase, cud inorder ts cure te you must taken
Internal medi Matfs Catnee Cur fe taken ie
turtuces. “Halls Cuareh Cure te not'n quack inedie
ites Itwas presetiived by nne of the pest phystelans
fnthtaconntry for youre and loa reauiay preseriputon,
IE bs Gomposed of Ue heat. tones: kenwencombned
with the boat bv pariners, nctins direcsiy un the
Ihucous aurfuces. ‘The, perce camblnaticn nt the
we ingredients/s what pruduces such wonderful re
Suite to curing coturrh.” Sond for testimontate, tree.
FJ. CHENEY & C0., Prope, Foleeo, O
Sold bye Drucra price ie.
Take faite Famiis Hilts for constipation,
An eloquent prayer doesn't get any
higher thit the other Kind.
Worth Knowing
—that Alleck’s are the original and only
_genuine porous plasters; all other so-called
porous plasters are imitations.
Treen gp. same of love... makes... it
more iiitresting than satistactroy.
Mrs. Winslow's Soormne Syrap.
ees
Eustis alapspats,curcr wind Colle” ace tues,
4 mine promoter is known by the
company ha touts
Lewis’ Single Binder straight 5c cigar
made of rich, mellow tobacco. Your
dealer or Lewis’ Factory, Peoria, I.
The fellow who sows wild oats gen-
erally mixes 4¢ with Tye.
FITS Eee be Rilnetntirent Nerve ester.
or, hen Gir BREE Bu 00 ‘nl ite wnd teneion
Si ATR Uae rans Sores niga pias Pa
‘Too often @ man's keenness spoils his
ret!
SAVED Sti tis0 COMMON IN WINTER
BY TAKING PE-RU-NA.
PRICE, 25 Cts. 0
eaereer”y ANTI-GRIPINE
“SS INONE DAY 7
c IS GUARANTEED TO CURE
ANTHGRIPINE yu") GRIP, BAD COLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA.
sore .hroat Develops into bronchitis
Mrs. Addie Harding, 121 W. Bright-
on Ave., Syracuse, N. Y., writes: “I
have been a user of Peruna for the
past twelve years. With me it is a
sure preventive of colds and many oth-
er ills.
Sr ie as
\ suri ta izag
=
ee ee tater sane)
Ae sie ks
Pecceices gents 6 cout >
ae ee oe
Ge &
ieee a
Renee AN)
ape ip 4
ge eee NK,
i ie iy K\
Rests eee ah Bs
eo OS
9 Nee hel
RB een SL
SUEY SSL EI
“Two or three times a year I am
troubled with my throat, a Kind of raw
feeling, turning to bronchitis. I have
had the services of my physician in
each case. Two years ago, when I
felt a spell coming, I tried Peruna to
check it, and to my delight was not
troubled with the smothered and chok-
ing feeling and never have been since.
I can check it every time with Pe-
runa.”
HOLD UP!
pend consider }
3 is riti, ROMMEL
5 A sRann SLICKER |i
wy easy e LiKE ALL
ry? AN = ey TOWERS F
\ ie, WATERPROOF
Gi eae CLOTHING.
Ismade of the best Fi
if ) aerur Y
foted and
wee, \( Sheer
Py Toin cote GN_OF THE FISH B
Oe en See
FARMERS’ ACCOUNT BOOK.
Sbatcountac “Kk whole yeaa results shows oe oon
pest attuatlont aad Hastene te aeeaenycee
afoot sinus nd need wi ar saat
ieee care ches BaoRaRRERA TET
tig! PHELPS @60.; Bozeman: Montana:
W. N. U.—DENVER.—NO. 11.—1906.
When Answering Advertisements
Kindly Mention This Paper.
8 7 aa
; Ossie
ae ™
ee a
CR A a a
TR ae
S ay
Se Sail
ee on
ee 2a
\ oe a,
SN aes ae ae
er ee eee,
Chronic Catarrh of Throat and Lungs
Mrs. Virginia Caviana, room 32,
Cambridge Block, Portland, Ore.,
writes:
“I was a sufferer with catarrh of
the throat and lungs for a long time
before Peruna was recommended to
me. I gave it a trial, although I
thought at the time it would be just
like other medicines and do me no
good. I was pleased to find that my
improvement began in less than two
weeks and continued until 1 was en-
tirely well. I gained nearly 15 pounds,
have a splendid appetite and am grate-
ful for what your medicine has done
for me.”
Make sure a yleid of quantity and
Qualify When your father planted
Serey's, cncy were the brat on the
aaretstetity abe pro
mg ever since,” We are: exper in
ftaweor nnd vegctahle secon:
1900 Seed Annual bewuilfally tox
trated, free towitaypilcants.
D. M. FERRY & CO., Detrolt, Mich.
LACK 11 yE.
SOOO ACRES TiN iad Beant ean
tn Reo Samatod
crea plowed, sewn ulise bottom on two creole,
Fenie yaervote ot aaa md bay Tang eu
fonend, on the divide the noted rata baie in Biber’
county, Colorado, were you can ane ten thraahers
Fonntgin one sours dzive, peite OUD per metre
will outtup. f simu hart nsdn Raseas inst sell
This wil ca ntvectivod once’ snips Address omer,
W. Bi Hoot, 3305 Wudivou St. Duaivers Golorader
ENSION Ey Soars,
E DIN Waskingten, Duct
Late Srincipnl Padre S tension sate
yrs in clvil war, ioudjudieating clainm asty aoe.
A Bargain for You-=}%"" jesus jist ane
broldering, 2 for only. ten cents. ‘Wie ordering
ste TP on, woul uke to make aaa om
pve Fancy” Work for cals. Mrs. Margaro
P' 0. Box 133, Des Moines, lowa” ae eee
WHAT FASHION DECORLES FOR WOMEN
WHAT
Bright Colors to Be Vogue.
The shops are beginning to get ready for the spring. The windows rare blossoming into spring gowns of varying degrees of beauty or the reverse. All the colors of the spectrum, and some which do not appear in the rainbow, are to be found in the new materials and you may select anything from a robe of spotless white to a peacock blue or a sapphire or navy blue.
The peacock shades of blue and green seem a bit vivid at first sight, but it is probable that after a little we will get so accustomed to them we will not consider them at all striking. They are really not a bit more vivid than the plums and violets which have been worn so much this winter, yet for some reason the color seems more insistent, seems to attract one's attention more decidedly than other shades. It is a trying color this peacock blue—or green, as the case may be—and there are really few women who can wear it successfully.
The gowns are made with the short round or pointed Eton coat. There is something about this style which seems to particularly recommend it for spring and summer wear. The coat is jaunty, has style, is becoming and is not too heavy or warm a wrap for the warmer days of the early spring. In the white serges, fannels and mohairs which are shown the same style of making up is followed.
Simple Cloth Waist.
Pretty blouse of green cloth made with groups of tucks and finished at
the neck with a little flat collar forming straps in front ornamented with buttons. The standing collar is of linen with cravat of silk or velvet, of which the girdle is also made.
1
The sleeves have little epaulettes, and deep cuffs encircled with groups of tucks and finished at the top with little straps ornamented with buttons.
Best Materials for Summer.
Sicillienne cloth stands at the head of serviceable and modish materials, while all other mohair weaves will continue to run it a close second in popular favor. Broadcloth never will go out of fashion, of that you may be certain; but for summer wear a light weight rough woolen goods that shakes dust easily more than repays the careful shopper for its purchase by keeping its freshness during the entire season. Voiles of sheer and less wiry weave are again to the fore, and are patterned in stunning pladds and checks, which will be made up over plain silks of a contrasting color.—New York Sun.
Concerning the Shoulder
Much attention is paid to shoulder effects, and though the general tendency is toward a shorter shoulder seam there is no prospect of a let-up from the vari-shaped shoulder yokes and emplacements which are to be found worked out with stitchings of bias bands of appliques of lace. The latest wrap models are not lines, even the visionary chiffon foundation of a season ago having disappeared. It is a pretty idea to underlay the open work which trims a design with a band of contrasting silk to bring out the effect of the design, and nothing answers the purpose better than the six-inch-wide strips of ribbon to be found on the sacrificial bargain counters at this season. Green and rose are the shades most in demand, although dark blue is employed.
Crepe de Chine Waist.
Blouse of lavender crepe de chine
gathered, or plaited at the shoulders
and encircled below with deep
tucks. It is ornamented with butt
tons and motifs of embroidery or gulp
pure and finished
at the neck with a little collar of embroidery velvet.
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The chemisette, jabot and sleeve puffs are of lace. The wide crepe de chine sleeves are finished with deep tucks. The corse-let girdle is of silk to match.
The season's skirts vary considerably, some being fashioned after the circular model, with tailored folds, others showing plains which are partly sittched down and show rows of tiny white buttons as a finish; others have the deep yoke effect, with clusters of side plains set in points or scallops, while in others plains alternate with panels of plain cloth tucked or stitched about the bottom.
The little coats are extremely chic. They are made either belted or loose. In the former case the belt is attached
F
1. Black embroidered mull over white satin princess foundation. Butterfly and walls of Troy design in black sequin. 2.
2. Yellow dotted net over yellow silk slip. Insertions of lace in design.
at the back and fastens low in front, the two fronts hanging free. In other instances the entire jacket is cut in the regulation. Eton shape and trimmed with silk braid, straps of stitched cloth or some of the fancy oriental embroidery bands which are so effective when applied to woolen or silk goods. The embroideries are used to simulate little vests, to form narrow revers or are applied as collar and cuffs where the cut of the jacket warrants these finishes.
Summer Negligees.
Among the thin stuffs which lend themselves to the making of such exquisite summer negligees are those new swisses, white, with the tiniest of flower wreaths scattered over them, a wreath composed, perhaps, of six wee blossoms, done in pairs of three colors. Or an odd Oriental figure will be embroidered in two colors, the designs kept to small, unobtrusive figures so as not to let the two or three toned embroidery seem startling.
WHILE THE TEA DREWS
Neapolitan and milan straws are both in evidence.
The shoulders of all new gowns are broad in effect.
Italian braid, closer woven than the Japanese, is very smart.
Embroidered roses in pink, green and silver decorate a white tulle hat.
Japanese straw, something like the tea-box coverings, is new and dashing.
To trim chiffon with cloth is a popular fad, and the contrast of the two materials is certainly most effective.
Little capes reaching only to the elbow are likely to be good style for the spring costume that has a princess skirt.
Very smart is a stiff hat with crown of red Japanese straw, brim of mixed red and white, and trimming of red wings.
A very great use of ribbon is made on evening gowns, on some falling in long pointed ends from the belt all around the skirt.
Plain Coats Not Popular.
Very few plain coats are to be found among the latest novelties. Both the backs and the fronts have lines of braid or embroidery, fancy waistcoats trimmed or embroidered, while the embroidered belt or girdle is ubiquitous. If an absolutely plain coat is demanded then the gown must be of the tailor made description, in severe lines and of quite a different style. Folds of the material draped across the bust do not seem in keeping with a jacket, but such is the decree of Dame Fashion, and the decree is followed, whether the material be one that cannot be easily draped or whether it be of some thin, light fabric that can easily be treated in such a way.—New York Herald.
HINTS TO HOUSEWIVES
Until the plumber can come a leak can be temporarily stopped with a mixture of yellow soap, whiting and a very little water.
Add a little washing soda to the boiling water in which greasy dishes are washed and they never will have a streaky appearance.
Straw mattings may be cleaned with a coarse cloth dipped in salt and water and then wiped dry. The salt prevents the matting from turning yellow.
In serving tea, if orange pekoe is
used a clove placed in the tea ball will give a piquant flavor that will not be recognized, but that will be most enjoyable.
A too hot oven may be quickly cooled by placing in it a basin of water. The steam from the water will not injure anything that may be cooking, except puff pastry.
Plaids Not for the Stout.
The heavyweight sisterhood should beware of the new plaids. They very swagger to look at in the bed but on the human frame they are fatal to the much desired long, lissome lines, and to that almost indefinable, priceless quality known as sweetness.
Pastel Blue Cloth.
Blue cloth costumes, especially in the pastel shades, are universally fashionable. They are made up in princess style or with fancy short jacket and trimmed skirts. A combination of princess and street jacket effect is the latest fashion. At the sides and back there is a wide shaped girdle of satin which in part is hidden by a wid pleat of the material, which extend from just below the waist yoke to the very hem of the skirt, thus giving the effect of a princess gown in front, but with the sides and back more on the coat and skirt style.
Young Girl's Empire Dress.
Empire dress of white crepe d
chine for a girl from 1 to 14 years old
The short bolere
is gathered, form
ing a little frill at
the bottom. It is
trimmed with
bands of Irish lace
bordered with lit
tle frills of valen
ciennes lace.
The chemisette is
of Irish lace fin
ished around the
low neck with a
plaited band of the
The short obelist is gathered, forming a little frill at the bottom. It is trimmed with bands of Irish lace bordered with little frills of valenciennes lace. The chemisette is of Irish lace finished around the low neck with a plaited band of the material bordered with the valenciennes lace. The girdle and knot are of white, or pale green ribbon.
An old southern delicacy is the famous corn pudding, Jackson's formula for which is as follows:
Take a can of corn, or a dozen ears of fresh corn. If fresh corn is used, grate it; if canned corn, press it through a colander. Beat the whites of four eggs and then the yolks separately. To the beaten yolks add a tablespoonful of butter which have been well rubbed together. Beat the yolks until they are light again, after which add a quart of sweet milk and a teaspoonful of salt. Mix these ingredients together and add the corn, beating the mixture until it has become well blended. Add, then, the whites of the eggs, which have been beaten to a a stiff froth, and when they have been well mixed bake the pudding for about an hour in a slow oven, with a piece of brown paper over the top of it. It is then ready to be served as an ideal accompaniment for any roast.
Scholl's Modern
Hand Laundry
1841 ARAPAHOE-PHONE 817
MECCA CAFE AND CHILI PARLOR
The Leading Colored Cafe in the West
CONDUCTED BY MR. AND MRS. D. W. LACY,
Special Sunday Dinner from 12:30 to 3, 25 Cents.
Meals Served at all Hours. Open Until 2 a.m.
String Music Every Saturday and Sunday Evenings.
1918 Lawrence Street. Phone Main 3785.
A
J. W. CASEY,
1741-1743 Lawren
TELEPHONE 2
Denver,
T WHAT YOU WA
That's what the COLORADO MIDLAND
offers you for your California trip.
Through tourist cars daily to Los Angeles
and San Francisco, with choice
of routes.
JUST WHAT
That's what the COLO offers you for your
Through tourist cars and San Francisco of ro
JUST WHAT YOU WANT
That's what the COLORADO MIDLAND offers you for your California trip.
Through tourist cars daily to Los Angeles and San Francisco, with choice of routes. Twenty-five dollar rate in effect daily.
17th and California st.
Denver, Colo.
The Brand That's Always G
AXTER'S
BULLHEA
5 c CIGAR.
The Baxter Cigar Co. Denv
4956 OPEN TILL 2
THE IDEAL DRUG STORE
Dr. E. L. FAULKNER, MGR.
1863 ARAPAHOE STREET.
Of Rubber Goods, Stationary, Toilet Articles,
Adries, Patent and Proprietary Remedies, Fro-
Candies, Ice Cream Soda—all flavors, Hot
Drinks of all kinds.
SCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY COMPOUND
Free Delivery to any part of the City.
Leading Brands of High Grad
17th and California streets Denver, Colo.
The Brand That
"BAXTER
BULI
5 c CI
The Baxter Cig
The Brand That's Always Good "BAXTER'S BULLHEAD"
The Baxter Cigar Co. Denver.
THE IDEAL I
DR. E. L. FAIR
1863 ARAPAIR
New line of Rubber Goods, State
Sundries, Patent and Propriet
Candies, Ice Cream S
Drinks of
PRESCRIPTIONS CARE
Free Delivery to an
All the Leading Brands
PINN'S
JERSEY DAIRY
AND
Grocery Store.
New line of Rubber Goods, Stationary, Toilet Articles, Druggist Sundries, Patent and Proprietary Remedies, Fresh Candies, Ice Cream Soda—all flavors, Hot Drinks of all kinds.
H. PINN, Prop.
PHONE BLACK 3672
2615 Welton St. Denver, Colo.
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COLORADO MIDLAND
Midland
Route
RAILWAY
PHONE MAIN 4956
Superior Laundry
Superior Laundry
ALL HAND WORK.
J. W. CASEY, PROP.
1741-1743 Lawrence Street.
TELEPHONE 2132.
Denver, Colorado.
YOU WANT
CORADO MIDLAND
or California trip.
daily to Los Angeles
co, with choice
routes.
NOTICE
Depart
Land Office
Notice is h
lowering name of his inten
tion of proof will be
receiver at B
Colorado, on
Maria F. Snoy
Eve E. Devan
all beds, H
½ S. E. ¼ a
Tp. 4 S. R. 6
He names
prove his co
and cultivate
George A.
Raymond B.
rado; Thomas
rado; Sumptu
Colorado.
California streets,
Denver, Colo.
It's Always Good
CR'S
LHEAD"
SUGAR.
Sugar Co. Denver.
Notice is here
lowing names
his intention of
port of his o
will be made
ceiver at Denver
1908, viz. He
E. Decatur, H.
S. W. 1/4 Sec.
62 W. of 6th
He names
prove his com
cultivation of
Edward I. C.
Charles Mill
James Smilin.
Denver, Colo
nett, Colorado.
Woman
Alexander
diplomat of
who recently
the Snake In
needed in m
dians, tells o
has made.
Among th
found a wom
Zenobia of h
is Fahnee.
fish, but is
wisdom amo
50 years old
not been a
other matter
at which she
OPEN TILL 2 O'CLOCK A. M.
DRUG STORE,
PAULKNER, MGR.
HOE STREET.
Stationary, Toilet Articles, Druggist
Prietary Remedies, Fresh
Soda—all flavors, Hot
all kinds.
REFULLY COMPOUNDED.
Any part of the City.
S of High Grade Cigars.
[Name]
ideas.
Denver,
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UNION PACIFIC
OVERLAND
MOTOR CARS
Very cheap tickets will be sold daily, February 15th to April 7th, inclusive, to California, Oregon, Washington and Idaho.
Very liberal stop-overs are allowed in Nevada and California; also at and west of Pocatello, Idaho.
You can go via Denver and over Union Pacific without a cent extra charge.
Remember we have tourist cars daily, Denver to California and to Portland For full information address, J. C. Ferguson, General Agent, 941 17th street, Denver.
L. Rushenberg & Co.
IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS IN
MUSICAL MERCHANDISE.
TELEPHONE OLIVE 923
RES. PHONE BLUE 2167
HIGH CLASS VIOLIN REPAIRING.
829 Fifteenth St. Suit 210, Upstairs.
Denver. Colo.
Minnesota Grain Belt Beer.
Also Western Agent for D. Carnegie
& Co. Swedish Porter, Gothenburg,
Sweden.
1644 Larimer St. Denver, Cole
February 17, 1908.
Notice is hereby given that following named settler has filed notice of his intention to make final proof in support of his claim that proof will be made before register an receiver at Denver, Colorado, on April 4th, 1906. viz.: Homestead No. 20787, Alfred Deco, Bennett, Colorado, for the 3. Sec. Twp. 3. South in Range 62 W. of 6th P. M.
He names the following witnesses to prosecution upon and cultivation of said witness viz.: Edwarl C. Nye, of Bennett, Colo.; Charles Miller, of Byers, Colorado; Charles Miller, of Fortish Street Station, Denver, Colorado; Henry Cline, of Bennett, Colorado.
Alexander Posey, interpreter and diplomat of the Dawes commission, who recently spent some time among the Snake Indians to secure evidence needed in making record of Creek Indians, tells of a strange discovery he has made.
Among the fullblood Snakes he found a woman who is the modern Zenobia of her race. Her Indian name is Fahnee. She can not speak English, but is considered a woman of wisdom among her tribesmen. She is 50 years old, and for years there has not been a council of war, or any other matter of import to the tribe, at which she has not been present and given advice.
She is always listened to by the men of the tribe, and seldom has her judgment been at fault. She has been in sympathy with the faction, which has always resisted the allotment of lands.
She has never led a band of Indians in a fight, but she has taken a very active part in shaping the policy of the tribal government for the last twenty-five years.
The late Dean Hole of Rochester, England, was a man of many good stories, and one of his favorite anecdotes concerned a Lancashire minister who received a curious invitation. The minister in question was sitting in his study one night when a visitor was announced, and a miner, to whose wife he had ministered during a long illness, entered. Having cautiously looked around to se that there were no listeners the miner thus addressed the clergyman, with an air of grave, mysterious importance:
"You've been very kind to my old gal when she was sick so long, and I want to do yer a good turn. There's going to be a grand dog-fight in this parish to-morrow, and I can get yer into th' inner ring!"
Wu Ting-Fang, formerly Chinese minister to this country, is now connected with the bureau of commerce and learning in his native land. The head of the bureau is a very conservative old official, the next in rank being a young prince, who is completely dominated by his superior. Under the circumstances it is not believed that Mr. Wu is pleasantly situated, he being a man of progressive Western ideas.
Phone Main 3785
Colorado
Very cheap tickets will be sold daily, February 15th to April 7th, inclusive, to California, Oregon, Washington and Idaho.
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J. T. JOHNSON.
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.
Woman Rules Snake Indians.
A Treat for the Clergyman.
Wu Ting-Fang in Hard Position.