Colorado Statesman

Saturday, August 4, 1906

Denver, Colorado

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THE COLORADO STATESMAN THE JOURNAL OF THE WEST. LABOR SHALL BE FREE RAGE COUNTRY PARTY AT BLOOMFIELD PARK. GREATEST EVENT OF THE SEASON Washington's Advice to Negroes. A clean House and Baths Necessary He says. Epigrams that Meant Much to His Hearers. VOL. XII. Washi Advice to Negroes. A clean H says. Epigrams to His The Kansas City Star of last Saturday gives the following account of Booker T. Washington's address in Kansas City. Booker T. Washington spoke yesterday to 500 Negroes in a tent on the West Side. It was a thoroughly appreciative and enthusiastic audience that cheered the homely philosophy, the good advice and encouraging words of the noted leader. Continued applause greeted the speaker when he said: "There is no race in the world that I am so proud of as the Negro race. I wouldn't belong to any other race if I could. If God should take me up into heaven and BOOKER T. WASHINGTON order to make me over as I should desire, I would say, make me a black man." "The home life has a very vital and practical application to Christianity," he said. "History teaches that people who have practiced the most Christianity have had the most homes. Fundamentally we should get to the point where every one of our people would own his home. One weakness of our race is that we have too many shanties. Many of our people are living in filthy back alleys. One thing about the Negroes of the South is that while poor they can live on the farms and get plenty of good pure air. They are an ignorant but not a degraded people. "When I say 'home' I mean a house with several rooms in it, enough to give privacy and convenience. There should be a yard with grass and flowers. It should be a home that the boys and girls will remember in after life, no matter how far they may wonder. Such a home always exerts a helpful influence. Make it just as beautiful as you can. Put good ELKS' BIG OUTING AUGUST 8TH State Historical and N H Society, Denver, Colo ELKS' BIG COLORA BLOOMFIELD P ngton's House and Baths Necessary He that Meant Much Hearers. carpets on the floors, hang pictures on the walls, have a good weekly paper, and a daily paper. Above all have a beautiful bathroom. Get the bathroom first, if necessary, and build the house around it. A good bathroom in a home goes a long way towards civilization; a long way toward Christianity. "I don't believe it is possible for people to live in a rented one-room cabin down here and go all at once into a big white mansion up vonder." he said. "To keep peace and happiness at home have a definite time for each meal of the day. At my house I have my breakfast at 7 o'clock every morning. Each meal should be made a time of sacrament, the most holy time in the day. The wife should see that everything is neat and attractive. A man and a woman are not likely to quarrel over a table when they have a pretty boquet of flowers between them. Another sign of a well regulated household is a broom. I've seen whole households stopped for ten minutes when the time came to find the broom. It is hard to find a clock in a house that is not telling a lie every minute of the day. I pay a boy to regulate my clock every Monday morning. It pays. "There should be a definite time for the family to gather and talk over affairs. Give the children an opportunity to say something for themselves. You can't raise a family with a broom stick. You must get the love and confidence of your children. "I like to see the husband take his wages home on Saturday nights, gather the family around the hearthstone and decide how to spend the money. Husbands should tell their wives all the secrets and they will help to pay off the debt they've been hiding for three or four years. Some men never tell their wives anything until they get into trouble. Then they are the most humble men in world" Boulder Notes. Mrs. J. W. Bryant is on the sick list. J. W. Sanderson is visiting in Boulder. Mrs. E. D. Harris is in Boulder on business. Miss Willa May Hall left Saturday for Denver. Mr. and Mrs. Goodall are visiting in Leadville. Miss Anna Hall of Texas is visiting in Boulder. Wm. Johnson is doing quite a business at his chili parlor. Mrs. Fletcher is in Denver on account of her husband's health. An entertainment will be given by the ladies of Boulder in honor of the strangers. A very pleasant day was spent at Glacier Lake last week by Mesdames Wilson, Willis, Hall, and Misses Rucker, Mable Johnson, Nellie McSpradden. RACE NEWS Gathered from Various Sources. Nashville, tenn., July 26. At Kingston, in williamson county, this State, a colored woman yesterday gave birth to six children. The children are all well formed and all were alive at last accounts. The Metropolitan Mercantile & Realty company opened a department store at Baltimore, Md., last month with seven departments, giving employment to 14 colored men, boys and girls. S. D. Howard is the local manager The Chicago postoffice is the best example of what civil service does for a young man or woman of intelligence. There are probably fully 300 or more colored men and women in all branches of the postoffice, and they have all won their places by competitive examination. Pittsburg, Pa., July 30.—Bud Williams and Cornelius Combe, Negro murderers, who are to be hanged here September 6th to-day agreed to shoot craps for the honor of dedicating the new scaffold. There is no double scaffold in the Pittsburg jail and both prisoners sent word that they would like to try the new scaffold first. The sheriff agreed to referee the crap game. The Catholic church in America has decided to establish a Negro bureau, similar to the Indian bureau. In this connection the National Mirror, a Negro paper published in Kansas City says: There are those among us who believe in and subscribe to the doctrine of the Catholic religious denomination, and there is little occasion for surprise when it is remembered that the Catholics have always been in advance of other denominations in their relation to the race question. It is said that in the dark days of slavery the Catholic denomination was about the only one whose clergy was not numbered among the slave-owners." Atlanta, Ga., July 31.—Floyd Carmichael, a Negro about 22 years old, who was identified by Miss Annie Poole of Lakewood, a suburb of Atlanta, as the man who assaulted her early to-day, was shot in front of the Poole resident, in sight of his victim, this afternoon by a posse which had captured him. After he had been shot there were cries of "Burn him!" but county police, arriving at the time, prevented such action. About 10 o'clock this morning while returning from a visit to a neighbor, Miss Poole, who is 15 years old, was attacked by the Negro and choked until unconscious. When the alarm was given a posse quickly formed but it was not until late in the afternoon that the Negro was caught and brought into Miss Poole's presence. She identified him, a volley of shots rang out, and the Negro fell dead. washington, July 14.—One of the most noteworthy incidents of the week was the issue of a new $10,000 gold certificate by the Bureau of Engraving and printing. The total issue amounted to $40,000,000 consisting of four thousand $10,000 bills. The ordinary man absolutely no conception of the magnitude of $40,000,000, and very few Negroes, with the possible exception of some of our editors and correspondents, ever saw or handled a 10,000 dollar bill. The most remarkable thing connected with the incident is that the signature of w. T. Vernon, Register of the treasury appears on each of these 10,000 dollar beauties thus legalizing the issue. During the Spanish American war, a regiment of Southern troops refused to accept their pay from Paymaster John R. Lynch, because of his color, and a few were foolish enough to kick on bills bearing signature of two Negro Registers of the treasury, B. K. Bruce and J. w. Lyons. Some of these moss backs will never be able to even catch a glimpse of the new ten thousand "butes" being the signature of "w. T. Vernon, Register." WHITES ORDERED OUT. New York—Hanuah Elias the colored woman who got $685,000 mostly in one bunch, and a great deal more at other times from John R. Platt, has jarred a goodly part of Harlem by ordering all the white tenants out of two big flat buildings and notifying the neighbors that in future none but colored families will be allowed to occupy the premises. This indicates that the wealthy colored woman will make a colored settlement out of one of the choicest neighborhoods above One Hundred and Twenty fifth street. Phillip A. Payton, a colored real estate dealer of No. 67 West One Hundred and Thirty-fourth street, purchased a few days ago for $100-000 the two flats at Nos. 168 and 170 West One Hundred and Thirty-fifth street, occupied by more than 15 reputable white families. West and East of these houses are many high priced apartment houses. The occupants of these, as well as the tenants of the purchased houses, are the ones who are jarred by the edict of the rich colored woman. The sale was made last week, and each tenant of the Elias houses received a note from Payton, notifying them to vacate at once, the note adding that in the future none but respectable colored families were to occupy the flats. Hannah Elias, who has been discouraged in her frantic and expensive efforts to make her complexion fade, is said to have resolved to openly espouse the colored cause and to associate in the future with her own race. "I've already rented most of these flats to decent colored people," said Cook, the new janitor. "Oh, we have lots of wealthy colored people who are anxious to move into this stylish neighborhood. It' going to be the bon ton of the colored colonies." THE DEVIL GOT HIS DUES The old and perhaps true saying, "Whatever goes over the devil's back is sure to bind his belly," was forcibly brought to the mind a short time ago when a Negro barber, who caters to the vicious, envious element of the white race, by drawing the color line, moped into a white restaurant for lunch. The proprietor, one of his patrons, being of the same calibre, refused to serve him on the grounds that the said barber was a Negro. Instead of taking the medicine of his own making, as he should have done, he went to the court and kicked like a bob-tail mule in fly time. The justice court which is catering to the same element at the expense of the Negro's rights, fed the barber on his own swill by turning him down on a technicality. A few weeks ago we stopped to get a shine at a bootblack stand in front of a barber shop run by Negroes and was almost paralized by being informed by the Negro bootblack that they didn't shine shoes for Negroes. We have witnessed insults of every kind and character heaped upon our men and women by low, prejudiced, whites, but we never experienced such a feeling of disgust, anger and humiliation as we did on that occasion. Two blocks away, and on the most prominent street in the city, we went to a bootblack stand run by a white ```markdown ``` RACE COUNTRY PARTY ASON NO. 45. NO. 45. man and a first-class shine. These white men are shining shoes for money and as soon as they get enough of it, they will go into other business and their children will eventually move in first-class white society, while children of the said Negroes will be shining shoes all day and shooting craps all night. Like begets like. The stream cannot rise higher than the fountain.—Portland Advocate. JUSTICE IN SO. CAROLINA Because he was violently ejected from a trolley car for taking his seat beside a white woman, Hudson Johnson, a fifty year old Negro of this city, was awarded in the common pleas court here yesterday damages against the Greenville Traction Company in the sum of $500. He had asked for $5,000. No other cases were heard in the court yesterday. It was convened at 10 o'clock, with Judge R. O. Purdy, of the Third Circuit, presiding, for a two weeks' term. While the jury was out several orders were taken in discontinuance and reference, and counsel was heard in argument on a motion to amend. Hudson Johnson, represented by Messrs. Maudlin & Townes, alleged that last October he boarded a belt car and paid his fare, taking a vacant seat in an orderly and peaceable manner; that the conductor, after having directed him to go inside and soon after the plaintiff had taken his seat, came into the car, jerked the plaintiff violently from his seat, presented a pistol at him, and kicked and beat him, subjecting him to grievous bodily hurt and great humiliation, all to his damage $5,000. The traction company, in its answer, said that the plaintiff, who was a colored man, did enter one of its cars on the day alleged, but was intoxicated, and instead of taking his seat upon one of the benches on which no one sat, dropped upon one occupied by a white lady; that when told to take another, he began to curse the conductor, who thereupon took him by the arm and led him to the rear of the car, the Negros still cursing and otherwise misbehaving; that the Negro was not abused by the conductor! Grievous bodily injury is denied, and it is stated that defendant had no means of knowing the degree of mental anguish, humiliation, etc., suffered by Johnson. Considerable testimony was introduced and ingenious pleadings were made. The attorneys for the plaintiff implored the jury to neglect altogether the fact that the plaintiff was a Negro, or at least to remember that he was an old darkkey, of the "slavery times" type, not an impudent product of the modern regime. That this plea had weight with the jury the verdict shows.—Greenville News. NEWS OF THE WEEK Most Important Happenings of the Past Seven Days. Interesting Items Gathered from All parts of the World Condensed Into Small Space for the Benefit of Our Readers. H. H. Weakley, pulisher of the Evening Herald and one of the well known newspaper men of Ohio died at his home in Dayton, aged 69 years. Gen. Oku has been appointed chief of the general staff of the Japanese army in succession to Gen. Baron Kodama, who died July 22. John D. Rockefeller has returned from his European trip. Capt. J. Wesley Conner, who for nearly 60 years was a steamboat captain on the Mississippi and other rivers, died at his home in New Albany, Ind. SALVATORE Bernard L. Levinthal, who for 15 years has been chief rabbi of the orthodox Jews of Philadelphia, has been elected chief rabbi of the entire body of orthodox Jews in the United States. Hill P. Wilson, for eight years assistant secretary of state for Kansas, has resigned to devote his attention to his mining interests. Congressman De Armond has been renominated by the democrats of the Sixth congressional district of Missouri making the ninth consecutive time he has received the nomination without opposition. The body of Russell Sage, the New York financier, was laid to rest at Troy, N. Y., with simple ceremonies. Don Pedro Monte has been elected president of Chile for a term of five years. H. C. Brokmeyer, former lieutenant governor of Missouri and acting governor in 1876-7, is dead in a St. Louis hospital after a lingering illness. He was a nephew of Prince Bismarck and a native of Minden, Prussia. Charles H. Whittaker, Sr., editor of the Clinton, Mo., Democrat, died recently at his home in Clinton aged 70 years. He had been in the newspaper business in Illinois and Missouri 52 years. President Palma, of Cuba, has pardoned Millie Brown and other Americans arrested on the Isle of Pines for maintaining a private telegraph line. Miscellaneous. The mayor of Hawana, Cuba, and all the aldermen have resigned in anticipation of a request for their resignations by President Palma. The month of July witnessed a series of heavy rains on the isthmus of Panama and the conditions at Colon are worse than ever before. The encampment of regulars and national guard at Chickamauga National park has been formally opened. The Pacific express on the New York Central railroad was wrecked at Chelsea, N. Y., the engine and express car going into the river and the balance of the train was piled up in a bad wreck, several persons being killed and a large number injured. The bank of Rush Springs, I. T., has closed its doors and a receiver has been appointed. The liabilities are suposed to be about $15,000 more than the assets. Two bombs were dropped from an elevated train in New York recently into a crowd of 200 members of the plumbers' unison, who were standing in the street below. Eight men were painfully injured. Twenty-five passengers were injured two probably fatally, by the derailment recently at Springfield, Mo., of a St. Louis & San Francisco passenger train. At a conference in Chicago in which every road interested was represented, it was decided to end the grain rate war from Missouri river points to Chicago on August 10. The will of the late Russell Sage has been filed for probate. After bequeathing $650,000 to blood relations, the document gives the residue of the estate, about $70,000,000, to the widow, who will distribute it in charity. Judge Landis, of the United States district court at Chicago, has handed down a decision declaring that John Alexander Dowle is not the owner of Zlon City and its industries, the court deciding that the money given to Dowle was a trust. A receiver was appointed and an election for a general overseer ordered to be held on the third Tuesday of September. Secretary of Agriculture Wilson has made public the regulations governing the inspection of meat products for interstate and foreign trade under the new law. They are very stringent throughout and are in line with the best authorities on the subject. The Standard Oil company has reduced the price of the higher grades of crude petroleum three cents and other grades two cents. The threatened strike of the United Brotherhood of Paper Makers has been averted by the employers granting their demands. A special federal grand jury has been called to meet in Chicago to investigate the Standard Oil company's methods of transporting its products. It is said by officials that new and important evidence has recently been discovered against the company. The federal grand jury at New York has returned three indictments against the American Sugar Refining company charging rebating. A large band of Pulajanes in the island of Leyte, P. I., recently attacked a column of troops and constabulary and were badly defeated. Joseph McCann the aeronaut who fell at the Salt Lake Palace owing to the failure of a parachute to work has since died. His home was near Des Moines, Ia. Two new flour mills have just been completed at Kansas City with a capacity of 4,500 barrels per day which gives the mills of that city a total capacity of 14,000 barrels of flour per day. The French embassy at Washington has been instructed to express the deep regrets of the French government at the killing of Lieut. Clarence England, on board the cruiser Chattanooga, by the crew of a French cruiser while at target practice. John C. Hately, receiver for the Zion City industries has issued an appeal to the moneyed believers in the Dowie doctrines to contribute for the relief of the destitute of the community, stating that many are underfed and insufficiently clothed. The crusier Washington, built at the yards of the New York Shipbuilding company in Camden, N. J., has been formally turned over to the government. A fire at Plattsburg, Mo., completely destroyed four brick buildings and four stocks of merchandise. The loss aggregates $50,000, covered by insurance. Traffic over the Mount Cenis railroad, interrupted by the recent cloudburst has been entirely re-established. The Hill trunk company's plant at Nashville, Tenn., has been gutted by fire. Mrs. Corey has been granted a divorce from her husband, the president of the United States Steel company, in the courts at Reno, Nev., on the grounds of desertion. The question of alimony was not brought up, as it was stated at the trial that a satisfactory financial settlement had been arrived at between the parties. Lieut. Clarence England, navigating officer of the United States cruiser Chattanooga, was killed on the bridge of his vessel while just outside the harbor at Chefoo, China, by a bullet fired from a French cruiser engaged in target practice. Suits have been filed by the government in the federal court at Salt Lake City, Utah, to recover 20,000 acres of valuable coal land alleged to have been acquired from the United States by gross frauds. Insurance Commissioner Wolf, of San Francisco, is preparing a report showing in detail the losses of each insurance company and the report is expected to show an aggregate insurance loss of more than $250,000,000. The Kansas state board of health has issued an order to the county health officers to see that every school house in their jurisdictions is properly fumigated before the school term begins. While a party of young ministers attending the State Baptist association at Pertle Springs, Mo., were bathing in the lake, Rev. S. E. Rogers, pastor of the De Kalb and Nelson, Mo., churches, attempted to swim across the lake and was drowned. Suit has been filed in the federal court at Muskogee, I. T., to restrain Tams Bixby, commissioner of the five civilized tribes, from re-opening the roll for the addition of the names of infants born since the regular enrollment. A warrant has been issued for Charles H. Everly, formerly teller of the St. Louis Union Trust company, who disappeared recently leaving a shortage in his accounts of $5,000. He had been considered an exemplary citizen and was prominent in church circles. Mayor Tom L. Johnson, of Cleveland, O., recently took drastic action against the Cleveland Electric Railway company. While tearing up the company's tracks he was served with an injunction by the court which he ignored until the work was finished. He was cited for contempt. Political discontent in Persia is again assuming an acute phase. Dr. Mary Michael Flack, a Kansas physician, has sued the Wells-Fargo Express company for $25,000 for the loss of 1,000 pages of manuscript said to contain the story of her life. A severe wind and electric storm recently swept over St. Louis destroying several frame houses. One man, a negro, was killed. A loaded excursion steamer was blown across the river at Alton, Ill., but the passengers were rescued. Plans are under way for merging the brick plants in Findlay, O., Kansas City, Kan., Chanute, Kan., West Superior, Wis., Zanesville, O., Rochester, N. Y., Kansas City, Mo., Philadelphia, Washington, Cleveland, Minneapolis and Omaha, into one company to be known as the Hydraulic Pressed Brick company of St. Louis. The new organization will have a capital of $10,000,000 and a capacity of 500,000,000 bricks a year. The Missouri republican state judicial convention at Jefferson City nominated Assistant Attorney General John Kennish and Judge James T. Neville, of Springfield, as justices of the supreme court for the long and short terms respectively. The biennial conclave of the Kappa Sigma fraternity was recently held on Lockout Mountain, Tenn. Several hundred delegates were in attendance from all sections of the United States. At the request of King Edward, William J. Bryan was received recently at Buckingham Palace in private audience. The arrival of Secretary Root at Rio de Janeiro was made the occasion for an enthusiastic reception by the assembled delegates to the Pan American congress and the Brazilian officials. ARGENTINE ROAD ARGENTINE ROAD NEW SCENIC LINE OPENED ABOVE SILVER PLUME. THE GOLDEN SPIKE DRIVEN Fifteen Miles of Railroad, Running to Top of McClellan Mountain—Reaches Fourteen Thousand Feet Altitude. Denver.—More scenic attractions have been made accessible from Denver by the practical completion of the Argentine Central railroad. The golden spike was driven Wednesday, at an altitude of 14,007 feet, by A. D. Parker, vice-president of the Colorado & Southern railroad. Mr. Parker went up in his private car, accompanied by J. H. Young, general superintendent of the Colorado & Southern; Edward J. Wilcox, president and practically the sole owner of the Argentine Central; W. H. Stillwell (formerly with the Rock Island railroad), general manager of the Argentine Central; Thomas Tonge, Colorado correspondent of the Mining Journal, London, and representatives of the Denver daily papers. A large delegation of the business men of Georgetown and Silver Plume also went by special train to attend the ceremony. The primary object of the building of the new line was to furnish transportation facilities to the extensive Waldorf group of mines. Having reached that group, it was obvious that the extension of the new road to the top of McClellan mountain would furnish an unsurpassed scenic attraction. The main line of the new railroad is fifteen miles long, with an additional two or three miles of switches. It is narrow gauge, being the same as that of the Colorado & Southern from Denver to Silver Plume, so that cars are interchangeable. Connecting with the Colorado & Southern at Silver Plume, altitude 9,170 feet, the new railroad, by a series of switchbacks, climbs the north side of Leavenworth mountain to an altitude of upward of 10,000 feet. It affords ever-changing birds-eye views of Silver Plume and Georgetown and ever-widening scope of the snowy range. It then passes along the south side of the same mountain, looking down into Leavenworth gulch. Nine miles from Silver Plume it reaches the Waldorf tunnel and mill, altitude 11,400 feet. Thence, by a series of switchbacks along the eastern face, it climbs to the top of McClellan mountain, altitude 14,007 feet. The view from the summit is probably unsurpassed in Colorado, including Mount Rosalie, Mount Evans, Gray's peak, Torrey's peak, and many others of the snowy range. Near the terminus of the road is a wonderful ice cave, consisting of an ancient mining tunnel and stopes, the place where lead-silver ore was first discovered in Colorado and in which the ice is eternal and in the most beautiful shapes. Practically the entire party visited this wonderful natural phenomenon, and was enthusiastic as to its weird beauty. The new road and its present equipment have cost considerably more than $300,000. Three engines, specially suited to local requirements, are already in use, and seven more have been ordered, as the freight and tourist passenger traffic will need that number. It is interesting to note that construction work was commenced August 1, 1905, and that the final spike was driven on August 1, 1906, the work never having ceased in the interval for lack of funds, the only stoppages being on account of weather during the winter months. It is said the probabilities are that the road will be extended, at no distant date to Rathbone, Montezuma, Keystone and Dillon, on the western slope. No trains will be run on Sunday, Mr. Wilcox, who is a former minister, objecting to traffic on the Sabbath. DRAMATIC MURDER CASE. Sensation in Trial of Mrs. Hutchinson at Buena Vista. Denver.—A News special from Buena Vista Wednesday tells this dramatic story of the trial of Mrs. Hutchinson for the murder of Mrs. Bode: The confession of Earl Hutchinson that he was criminally intimate with Mrs. Mary Bode, the rumored threat of C. F. Bode to kill Hutchinson should his testimony compromise the honor of his murdered wife and the guarding of Bode by his friends to prevent him carrying out his threat were the sensational developments to-day in the trial of Mrs. Grace Hutchinson Those who came to the Hutchinson murder trial looking for excitement got it to-day. The bombshell exploded just a few minutes before court adjourned. Harold Hutchinson, husband of the prisoner, was on the stand and the spectators sat with bated breath as the vital question—the one question—the answer to which the people had waited for days, was asked: "Did you maintain unlawful relations with Mrs. Bode?" "Yes," came the answer. "Were you with her in the barn during a certain night in May?" "Yes." That one little word was the spark. One could have heard a pin drop in the court room, and eyes shifted from the witness on the stand to C. F. Bode, husband of the dead woman, who stopped for an instant as though paralyzed. His face, naturally florid, became purple, and the muscles in his throat grew taut, while his hands twitched like those of a maniac. For one brief moment this lasted, and then, with a jump, he reached the door, and an instant later it slammed behind him, closing him from the view of the bewildered crowd. 19th and Arapahoe. We treat the boys right. Dennis Gibbons Coor's Celebrated Golden Beer On Draught . . 441 W. Colfax Av. Denver, Colo. J. T. JOHNSON. Minnesota Grain Belt Beer Also Western Agent for D. Carnegie Co. Swedish Porter, Gothenburg, Sweden. 1644 Larimer St. Denver, Colo. W. J. ADDIE Dealer in Choice old California wines and branches from the Hermitage Vineyard, also bottled beer, Kentucky whisky, cigars and tobacco. 225 16th street. Telephone 2677. CONCERNING OUR BOYS. Without Doubt the Boys Should Have Duties About the House Re- The teaching should not be all on the girls' side of the house. There are lessons the boys should learn, and learn thoroughly. In many homes where the mother is almost a nervous wreck from overwork, the boys are given nothing to do, and run about the streets out of sheer restlessness. They should not be allowed to lie in bed until called for breakfast, but should be among the first out of bed. Teach them that it is but fair to wait on themselves. Teach them to prepare vegetables, to cook simple foods, to wash dishes, to scour shelves, to black stoves, to make beds and sweep and dust, and put their belongings in order. Teach them that it is as much their duty to keep their rooms tidy as it is for the sister to look after hers. A slovenly, disorderly boy is every bit as bad as a slatternly girl, declares The Commoner. They should know how to handle a needle and thread; to sew on buttons; to mend rips and tears on the sewing machine; to replace the book taken from the book shelves; to fold and lay in its place the paper they read; to shake the rugs; to dust the furniture and do the "fetch and carry" work that every home must have done. Teach them to be considerate of others, not only as to burden-bearing, but in all work or worry. Boys should be taught to take the part of the weaker ones in all the battles of life. If the mother would begin with the boy when he is still in dresses, allowing him to do little kindnesses and setting him little tasks, thus saving herself many a step, he would hardly be ashamed to help her when he gets older. Compared with mother's weak arms, the boy's strength is magnificent. Do not wait until he is in his teens to begin the lessons for he will rebel hotly against."girls' work" then, no matter how much you may need him. But teach him that the home is as much his as it is that of his little sister, and that you look to him, even more than her, for its happiness, and, dear mothers, he will seldom fail you. TO LAUNDER MOURNING. An Expert Laundress Advises Black Starch and Salt and Vinegar in Rinsing Water. A good laundress is what is needed to solve a serious problem for the woman who wears mourning, particularly in the summer. Black goods not only look warm, but are warm, and the black lawns and sheer goods are avoided by most women because it is generally thought that they cannot be laundered with much success, says a contributor to the Brooklyn Eagle. A certain laundress who is well known among her clients as an authority on all matters of soap and water and starch, offers the following directions, which will bring the best results if attended to carefully: "Dissolve a heaping tablespoonful of black starch in two tablespoons of lukewarm water. Then pour a quart of boiling water over it, stirring constantly until it gets perfectly clear, but do not let it boil. "Wash the dress in a little soapsuds, just warm. Rinse it in two buckets of cold water, with one teacup of vinegar and a handful of salt. Dry the dress and then pour the black starch over it. Let the dress get a little bit dry, then roll it up, without sprinkling, and iron upon the wrong or under side, over a black cotton cloth. The dress will look as good as new." An easier way to solve the problem is not to wear pure black in summer. All white is considered by many as almost as deep mourning as black." Ground ginger used for plasters instead of mustard is just as good to "draw" and it never blisters. DENVER & RIO GRANDIER SCENIO BIKES WORLD Denver to Colorado Springs and Pueblo. Leave Denver 8:00 (Pullman accommodations only), 8:30, 9:30 a.m. 1:30, 3:50, 5:00, 7:00 8:00 and 9:40 p. m. Denver to Colorado (Pullman accommodation) 8:00 and 9:40 p. m. Denver to Palmer only. Leave Denver 8 Denver to Florence 8:00 and 9:40 p. m. Denver to Canon options only), 1:30, 8:30 a Denver to Salida a accommodations only), 8 Denver to Buena and 9:40 p. m. Denver to Glenwo Denver 8:00 (Pullman 8:00 p. m. Denver to Palmer Lake, Colorado Springs and Manitou, Sunday only. Leave Denver 8:20 a.m. Denver to Florence. Leave Denver 8:30 and 9:30 a.m., 1:30, 8:00 and 9:40 p.m. Denver to Canon City. Leave Denver 8:00 (Pullman accomodations only), 1:30, 8:30 and 9:30 a.m., 8:00 and 9:40 p.m. Denver to Salida and Leadville. Leave Denver 8:00 (Pullman accomodations only). 8:30 and 9:30 a.m. m, 8:00 and 9:40 p. m. Denver to Buena Vista. Leave Denver 8:30 and 9:30 a. m., 8:00 and 9:40 p. m. Denver to Glenwood Springs, Utah and Pacific Coast. Leave Denver 8:00 (Pullman accommodations only), 8:30 and 9:30 a. m. and 8:00 p. m. Denver to Aspen. Leave Denver 8:00 p. m. Denver to Aspen. Denver to Grand Junction. Leave Denver 8:00 (Pullman accommodations only), 8:30 and 9:30 a. m., 8:00 and 9:40 p. m. (via Marshall Pass). Denver to Grand modations only), 8:30 a Pass). Denver to Gunnis and Rico. Leave Den Denver to Alamos sa Springs, Durango, I p. m. Denver to Trinida Denver 7:00 p. m. Denver to Victor a Denver to Kansas and 5:00 p. m. Dining Cars, Pull tion Parlor Cars and m Open Observe Creek. Open Top observa- ing the Summer month The most complete ever established. Inquire of any R "The Scenic Limited." Lighted Pullman train Denver to Grand Junction. Leave Denver 8:00 (Pullman acc dations only), 8:30 and 9:30 a. m., 8:00 and 9:40 p. m. (via Mass ss). Denver to Gunnison, Montrose, Delta, Paonia, Ouray, Telle d Rico. Leave Denver 9:40 p. m. Denver to Alamosa, Wagon Wheel Gap, Creede, Santa Fe, N Springs, Durango, Parkington and Silverton. Leave Denver m. Denver to Trinidad, Elmoro, Walsenburg and La Veta. Denver 7:00 p. m. Denver to Victor and Cripple Creek. Leave Denver 5:00 p. Denver to Kansas City and St. Louis. Leave Denver 9:30 p. 5:00 p. m. Dining Cars, Pullman Standard and Tourist Sleepers, Obs Parlor Cars and modern day Coaches. Open End Observation Coaches between Denver and Creek. Open Top observation Cars, Seats Free, through the Canons of the Summer months. The most complete and satisfactory Colorado and Utah se er established. Inquire of any Rio Grande Agent for information rega the Scenic Limited"—The New daylight Solid Vestibuled, Elo ighted Pullman train through the Rocky Mountains. Denver to Gunnison, Montrose, Delta, Paonia, Ouray, Telluride and Rico. Leave Denver 9:40 p. m. Denver to Alamosa, Wagon Wheel Gap, Creede, Santa Fe, Pagosa Springs, Durango, Parkington and Silverton. Leave Denver 7:00 p. m. Denver to Trinidad, Elmoro, Walsenburg and La Veta. Leave Denver 7:00 p. m. Denver to Victor and Cripple Creek. Leave Denver 5:00 p. m. Denver to Kansas City and St. Louis. Leave Denver 9:30 a. m. and 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. Open Top observation Cars, Seats Free, through the Canons during the Summer months. The most complete and satisfactory Colorado and Utah service ever established. Inquire of any Rio Grande Agent for information regarding "The Scenic Limited"—The New daylight Solid Vestibuled, Electric Lighted Pulman train through the Rocky Mountains. Write for free illustrated pamphlets. No Le Than those in e rates to be as lo Chicago and back St. Louis and ba Omaha and back Boston and back ($47.50 vi New Haven and ($49.00 vi Springfield, Ill , The R No Lower Rate ON ANY LINE Than those in effect on the Burlington. We guarantee rates to be as low as the lowest. Chicago and back, $31.50—June 1, 2, 9 to 16. St. Louis and back, $26.50—June 1, 2, 9 to 16. Omaha and back, $19.00—June 1, 2, 9 to 16. Boston and back, $49.05—May 31 to June 9. ($47.50 via Wabash or Grand Trunk.) New Haven and back, $49.50—June 1 to 4. ($49.00 via Grand Trunk.) Springfield, Ill., and back, $27.55—May 31, June 1, 2. No Lower Rates Than those in effect on the Burlington. We guarantee our rates to be as low as the lowest. Chicago and back, $31.50—June 1, 2, 9 to 16. St. Louis and back, $26.50—June 1, 2, 9 to 16. Omaha and back, $19.00—June 1, 2, 9 to 16. Boston and back, $49.05—May 31 to June 9. ($47.50 via Wabash or Grand Trunk.) New Haven and back, $49.50—June 1 to 4. ($49 00 via Grand Trunk.) Springfield, Ill, and back, $27.55—May 31, June 1, 2. And hundreds of others. The Burlington is the Comfortable way. Burlington Route D, CRACO. N. M. CAMPIG 'Phone Main 4885. C. & C. LIQUOR CO., DIRECT IMPORTERS, Gines and Liquors for Medicinal Use Our Special 2205 CHAMPA STREET. ver, Colo C. & C Wines and Liquor Denver, Wines and Liquors for Medicinal Use Our Specialty. 2205 CHAMPA STREET. PHONE MAIN 4956 THE ID THE IDEAL DRUG STORE, DR. E. L. FAULKNER, MGR. 1863 ARAPAHOE STREET. New line of Rubber Sundries, Pat- candies, PRESCRIPTION Free D All the Leading The Bran "DAY New line of Rubber Goods, Stationary, Toilet Articles, Drugg Sundries, Patent and Proprietary Remedies, Fresh Candies, Ice Cream Soda—all flavors, Hot Drinks of all kinds. PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY COMPOUNDED. Free Delivery to any part of the City. All the Leading Brands of High Grade Cig The Brand That's Always Good 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. All the Leading Brands of High Grade Cigars. The Brand That's Always Good "BAXTER'S BULLHEAD 5 c CIGAR. The Baxter Cigar Co. Denver. J. D, CRACO. Local and Through Train Service The System. Polo. Leave Denver 8:00 m. 1:30, 3:50, 5:00, 7:00 Logs and Manitou, Sunday 8:30 and 9:30 a. m., 1:30, 8:00 (Pullman accomodated 9:40 p. m. Denver 8:00 (Pullman 000 and 9:40 p. m. 8:30 and 9:30 a. m., 8:00 and Pacific Coast. Leave 8:30 and 9:30 a. m. and p. m. Denver 8:00 (Pullman accomodated 9:40 p. m. (via Marshall Paonia, Ouray, Telluride Creede, Santa Fe, Pago-erton. Leave Denver 7:00 burg and La Veta. Leave Leave Denver 5:00 p. m. Leave Denver 9:30 a. m. Tourist Sleepers, Observa- een Denver and Cripple through the Canons dur- colorado and Utah service for information regarding Solid Vestibuled, Electric Mountains. Rio Grande System. S. K. HOOPER, General Passenger & Ticket Agent Denver, Colo. Rates INE ton. We guarantee our 9 to 16. 2, 9 to 16. 9 to 16. June 9. (Trunk.) 1 to 4. May 31, June 1, 2. J. F. VALLERY, General Agent 1039 17th Street. N. M. CAMPIGLIA Phone Main 4885. LIQUOR CO., ECT IMPORTERS, For Medicinal Use Our Specialty. CHAMPA STREET. OPEN TILL 2 O'CLOCK A. M. G STORE, MGR. Toilet Articles, Druggist Remedies, Fresh flavors, Hot als. COMPOUNDED. of the City. High Grade Cigars. always Good Colorado HIS ONE WEAK SPOT. Prominent Minnesota Merchant Cured to Stay Cured by Doan’s Kid- ney Pills, 0. C. Hayden, of 0. C. Hayden & Co. dry goods merchants, of Albert Lea, Minn., says: “I was so lame that I could hardly walk. ‘There was an unac- countable weakness of the back, and constant pain and aching. I could find no rest and was very uncomfortable at night. As my health was good in every other way, I could not understan4 al Were Rae sarc. eee eee. FR, There was an unac- countable weakness ei Me of the back, and e> SF constant pain and ‘ aching. I could find no rest and was wh very uncomfortable a at night. As my MP} vealth was good in DIG 7 every other way, 1 naw RTS could not understand this trouble. It was just as if all the strength had gone from my back. After suffering for some time I began using Doan’s Kidney Pills. The rem- edy acted at once upon the kidneys, and when normal action was restored, the trouble with my back disappeared, I have not had any return of it.” For sale by all dealers, 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. THE CAMERA FIEND. ‘Man Was Not Satisfied with Ordinare Amusement Like Taking Pictures, A well-known crimizal lawyer one day sauntered into a police court just as a case was called. It appeared that the defendant had no attorney, and the judge glanced about the room to see whom he might assign to the case. “I'll take it, judge,” the late comer sald, wishing to pass away the time. “By the way, what is the man charged with?” the attormey presently asked. “He's a camera fiend of the wors sort, Mr. Brown,” the judge sai¢ with a slight smile. “I expect to send him to the workhouse for about three months.” “What!” the lawyer shouted, indig- nantly. “Your honor must be joking. Send a man to the rock pile for three months for a little harmless amuse- ment like taking pictures?” “Well,” the judge said, mildly, “he don’t take pictures much—it’s the cameras he takes.” FOUR YEARS OF AGONY. Whole Foot Nothing But Proud Flesh —Had to Use Crutches—“Cuti- cura Remedies the Best on Earth.” “In the year 1899 the side of my right foot was cut off from the little toe down to the heel, and the physi- cian who had charge of me was try- ing to sew up the side of my foot, but with no success, At last my whole foot ‘and way up above my calf was nothing but proud flesh. I suffered un- told agonies for four years, and tried different physicians and all kinds of ointments. I could walk only with crutches. In two weeks afterwards I saw a change in my limb. Then I be gan using Cuticura Soap and Oint- ment often during the day, and kept it up for seven months, when my limb was healed up just the same as if I never had trouble. It is eight months now since I stopped using Cutiqura Remedies, the best on God's earth. I am working at the present day after five years of suffering The cost of Cuticura Ointment and Soap was only $6, but the doctors’ bills were more like $600. John M. Lloyd, 718 S. Arch Ave, Alliance, Ohio, June 27, 1905.” Sunday Rest in Italy. The question of Sunday rest is be ing agitated to a large extent in Italy, and a commission was named some time ago which recommended that as far as possible an uninterrupted rest of from 32 to 36 hours should be in- sured to all the working classes, and that in case of public services, the men who worked on Sundays should have one day off in the week by turns, domestic servants being entitled to a halt holiday a week. The law does not apply to fishermen, Avoid Government Service. ‘The students from the Italian unt versities and government school are no longer content to seek poorly paid government employment or to enter into the ranks of the overcrowded pro- fessions, but are seeking technica) instruction so that they may join in the new movement and make an ade- quate future for themselves. By following the directions, which are plainly printed on each package of Deflance Starch, Men's Collars and Cuffs can be made just as stiff as de- sired, with either gloss or domestic finish. Try it, 16 oz. for 10c, sold by all good grocers. Judge Lebbeus R. Wilfley, attorney general of the Philippine islands, has been appointed to the judgeship of the United States court in China, which is to replace in a large measure the present consular court. Judge Wilfley is from St. Louis. ‘The greatest cause of worry on froning day can be removed by using Defiance Starch, which will not stick to the iron, Sold everywhere, 16 oz for 10¢. Two Profitable Postal Systems. Next to Great Britain, Russia has the most profitable postal system, which nets over $20,000,000 a year. wich Oj] Fields of Africa. ‘The oil fields near Delagoa bay, in Africa, are expected to prove among the most productive in the world. Only the illiterate and the social elect can afford to treat the ian- guage recklessly. — Eleanor Hot Brainerd, SULPHUR SPRINGS IN GRAND COUNTY CHANGE HANDS. BIGIMPROVEMENTS PLANNED Three Hundred Thousand Dollars to Be Spent by New Owners.—New Bath Houses Will Be Built—Early | Oy pepe ieee Noes a er eto Excursion Announced. Denver.—Sulphur Springs on the Moffat road has been sold to a com- pany having J, B. Adams of this city and F, M. Owenby of Longmont as its sponsors. These gentlemen represent eastern men who have the money to make Sulphur Springs one of the great health resorts of the United States. ‘The price paid for the property is $110,- 000 and it is said that the company will make a total expenditure of $300; 000, ‘The Moffat road has already heey asked to name its terms for cazrying passengers to and from the resor: on a commutation basis. Frank Byers has owned the mineral Springs at Sulphur since the death of his father, the late William N. Byers, some years ago, He sold 1,180 acres of land with the springs to the new owners and will step out of its man. agement entirely, The new manage- ment has arranged to take an immense crowd over to Sulphur Springs August 11th and will have a very low rate in effect. The railroads of Colorado will be asked to co-operate and the Bur. lington has already put in a rate from points on its line and branches. The excursion will be in the nature of a grand opening of the new springs and will call residents of Denver to the scene of the new resort. The bath houses now in use are small and poor and will be replaced by palatial bath houses of the best type. The hotels will be improved, the railway will put in a new park near its depot and the new health resort will be heralded by extensive advertising as the greatest place for ailing people in the United States. The waters of the springs are considered by experts to be among the best in the country and only the fact that a railroad has not been running to the place until the past seven months, when the Moffat road reached there, has kept the resort back. Mr. Owenby is making extensive preparations for the great excursior to the springs on the 11th and the day is expected to mark such an awaken ing of Sulphur Springs as has not bee known in years in any town of the country. The land bought by the new company will be placed on sale at oncé and the proceeds of all except what is needed for the resort buildings will be put into the improvements, RECLAMATION SERVICE. Work on Twenty-Two Projects Now Under Way. . Washington.—The reclamation ser- vice has just passed its fourth birth- day, and that it is a vigorous infant is shown by a summary of the work ac- complished during its brief existence. Work is now under way on twen- ty-two projects and 13,600 acres of land have been actually irrigated. Up to July 1, 241 miles of main canal, 116 miles of distributing system, and 388 miles of ditches had been constructed, including dams, headworks, ete. Tun- nels having a total length of more than five and a half miles have been driven, including over two and a half miles of the great Gunnison tunnel in Colo- rado, More than 521 miles of tele- phone lines have been installed and are now in operation; 233 miles of wagon road, many miles of which were cut in solid rock in almost inaccessible canons; 110 bridges, and 300 office and other buildings have been con- structed, The works above mentioned have called for the excavation of 17,403,213 cubic yards of earth and rock, the lay- ing of 134,446 cubic yards of concrete, 124,901 square yards of rip-rap and paving; 42,947 lear feet of piling have been driven. There have been purchased 1,873 tons of iron and steel, 7,347,812 feet B, M, of lumber and 159,- 623 barrels of cement. The govern- ment cement mill at Roosevelt, Ari- zona, erected at a cost of more than $100,000, has turned out 43,000 barrels of cement, and Uncle Sam's saw mills have cut 2,889,000 feet B. M. of lumber from the government reserves. IOWA REPUBLICANS. State Convention Renominates Gov- ernor Cummins. Des Moines—The Republican state convention Wednesday renominated Governor A. B. Cummins for chief ex- ecutive on the first ballot, completed the nominations for state officers with but few contests, adopted a platform favoring “recoprocity inaugurated by Blaine and advocated by McKinley and Roosevelt.” and adjourned, All fears of a split in the convention with the consequent certainty of two Republican tickets in the field disap- peared when Governor Cummins’ strength developed in the district cau- cuses held in the morning, and the con- vention was as harmonious as any ever held by the Republicans of the state. Governor Cummins, as he claimed all along, had a majority of the dele- gates and the action of the state cen- tral committee in adding to the tem- porary organization some Perkins dele- fetes did not interfere with his control of the situation. Whole Town Removed. | Gregory, S. D.—The town of Dallas, ‘ten miles ‘west of this place, was put on wheels Tuesday and every house moved to Gregory, where the buildings are to-night in place and again ready for occupancy. There were about sev- enty-flve houses and 250 persons in Dallas, all of whom are now residents of Gregory. ‘The decision of the North- western road: to build-an extension to Gregory caused the move. "SAN FRANCISCO LOSSES. Aggregate Over One Hundred and Thirty-Two Mil.ion Dollars. New York.—State Superintendent of Insurance Otto Kelsey has made pub- lic the results of his investigation as to the losses of fire Insurance compa nies in the San Francisco disaster. All joint stock fire and inland maarine insurance companies transacting busl ness in the state were called on for sworn statement as to their losses {n California. The companies were asked for the gross amount of Insurance {n- volved in risks destroyed or damaged, the deduction for amount to be recov: ered from reinsurance, the deduction for estimated salvage, the total deduo tion and the net amount of loss as shown by the records June 30, 1906. The New York state compantes, forty- seven in number, show the gross amount of insurance involved as $41, 110,069; the reinsurance to be recoy- ‘ered, $10,834,795; the estimated sal- vage, $7,137,183, and the actual amount of loss $23,136,090. Returns from other joint stock fire and fire marine insurance companies, eighty-four in number, show the gross amount of insurance $80,423,704; rein- surance to be recovered, $22,180,167; estimated salvage, $11,358,425; actual amount of loss, $51,983,111. ‘The foreign companies, thirty-two in number, made these returns: Gross insurance involved, $101,302, 533; reinsurance to be recovered, $82,- 281,808; estimated salvage, $16,318, 859; actual loss, $57,701,856. The gross amount of Insurance {n- volved by all companies was $222,336, 207; the reinsurance, $65,246,771; sal- vage, $33,814,468, and actual loss, $183, 823,067. The company with the largest net loss is the Hartford Fire of Conneetl: cut, according to the report. Its loss ds $6.186.701. LOST MINING MEN, Manager and Foreman of Tempest Apex Mine Disappear. Denver—An Ouray special to the Republican Monday night says: This i: the fourth day since the disappear- ance of L. A. Thompson, general man- ager, and G. W. Mather, foreman of the Tempest-Apex mine, and there 1s no clue as to their whereabouts. At 2 o'clock this morning all the slide and rock in the recent cave-in was cleared away, but without a trace of the missing men, This work was com- menced last Friday morning, with three shifts of men working eight hours each on both sides of the caye- in. Deputy Mine Inspectors W. B. Cox and G. W. Schneider of Denver, Prest- dent Frank McLaughlin of the mining company and H. E, Procunfer of Chi- cago, arrived here last night. After a thorough search of the workings of the mine they acknowledged their defeat and have virtually given up hope of ever finding tne missing men. Work on what seems to be a hopeless task has been commenced on an old cave-in near the breast of the fifth level in the mine, which has an air- hole connecting it with an upraise from the lower tunnel. A tract of about ten acres of timber above the mine will again be searched in the morning. If the men were ‘struck by lightning, {t is Mkely thelr bodies willbe found in that locality. Nevertheless searching parties are still scouring the mountains and look ing over heretofore undiscovered coun- try in the hope of finding traces of Messrs Thompson and Mather. Lake City and the section bordering on the Cimarron district have been communi- cated with and people in and about those places are on the look-out. DIED OF HYDROPHOSIA, Cattle Bitten by Mad Coyote In Yuma County, Denver.—Bleven head of cattle, bit ten by a mad coyote, perished miser- ably upon a ranch in Yuma county a few days ago, according to a report made by Dr. Charles G. Lamb of the State Board of Veterinary Surgeons. The owner of the cattle, a prominent ranchman, was unable to account for the crazy antics of the animals, He could not figure out what disease had stricken them, and reported the mat ter to the State Board of Veterinary Surgeons with the result that Dr. Lamb went to investigate. Dr. Lamb, after making an examina. tion, declared that the animals wer: victims of hydrophobia, and inquiries ‘developed that in the vicinity of the range there had wandered a mad coyote. Cases of this kind are extremely rare in Colorado. Upon the records of the State Board of Veterinary Sur geons there are only two previous cases of cattle contracting hydrophobla from coyotes. Armenian and Tartar Outbreak. St. Petersburg.—As anticipated te these dispatches July 29th, the trian gular truce between Armentans, Tar tars and the Russian troops before Shusha was of the briefest nature. The display of white flags and the naming of representatives of the warring fac tions to arrange a lasting peace was but a prelude to the resumption of hos tilities yesterday upon a larger and bloodier scale. The fighting fs not cnly in full progress at Shusha {teclf (a town of 30,000 people, 180 miles to the southeast’ of Tiflis), the Tartar quarter of which apparently {s In flames, but {t has spread to the sur rounding country. Lawyer Dines Gives Bond. Denver.—Tyson S. Dines, the attor ney arrested at 10 o'clock Monday morning by Constable Ed. Phillips for horsewhipping John K, Mullen, prest dent of the Colorado Milling and Ele vator Company, walved preliminary examination before Justice of the Peace Carlon yesterday on a charge of assault with intent to kill, assault to do bodily harm and several lesser charges, and was bound over to the West Side Criminal Court. Intimate friends of Mr. Mullen said last night that there will be a civil feature to the case. Mr. Mullen will sue Mr. Dines for a large amount—some place it as high as $50,000, COLORADO NEWS ITEMS OER agg Ro ke cae ieee ceed Sen Twelfth district opened at Gunnison July 20th with a good attendance. Rural route No. 1 1s ordered estab- lished October Ist at Oiney, Otero county, Colorado, serving 320’ people and ninety-six houses. A. G. Teachout, proprietor of the Egerton House at Gunnison and one of the pioneers of Gunnison county, died July 31st after a short illness. The Denver Baseball Club of the Western League has dropped down to fourth place and still sliding. Pueblo seems to be securely anchored at the bottom, A Civil Service examination will be held August 15th at Leadville; August 18th at Grand Junction and Pueblo, for the positions of clerk and carrier in the postoffice service. Work of completing blast furnace F of the Minnequa plant at Pueblo will soon be started again, Work on this furnace was commenced about four years ago, but was stopped when the plant closed down, Lars Nelson, who died in Denyer re- cently of pneumonia, was one of the largest land owners and stock grow- ers of Park county, having lived on the Cottaze Grove ranch near Alma since 1873. G. P. Miller, employed on the Mer- ritt lease of the Reno property on Gold hill in the Cripple Creek district, was killed by an explosion on the morning of July 27th. ‘The accident was due to a missed shot. Dan McKinnie, who terrorized the guests at a party at the Bodkin home in Highland Lake some two weeks ago, assaulted Constable Coates, escaped and was captured, was sentenced to sixty days in jail at Greeley. Chester Seger, a seven-year-old child, was crushed under the wheels of an ice wagon in Denver a few days ago and died within two hours. He ¥as climbing on the wagon for ice and his clothing caught in a wheel. While L. R. Warren was attending the band concert at Colorado Springs on the night of the 30th ult. his home at 251 North Wahsatch avenue was robbed of $200 in diamonds and jew- elry, $60 in cash being overlooked. Tt is stated that the two hundred houses to be built at Riley gulch, near ‘Trinidad, for the men employed by the Carbon Coal and Coke Company, an auxiliary,of the American Smelting and Refining Company, will all be of brick. L. S. Barnes, an old soldier end a pioneer resident of Colorado, has been appointed superintendent of the state fish hatchery at Durango to take the place of W. E. Patrick, who recently was removed by the state game and fish commissioner. Fortimo Naveretto, the Mexican who shot the hat off another Mexican’s head at North Longmont, was bount over to the District Court. Naveretto is a brother of the Naveretto who stabbed to death Yenes Dais near the Longmont cemetery a year ago. ‘The geological survey has made an aflotment of money for and will soon commence the topographic survey of the Fort Collins, Livermore and Love: land quadrangles in Colorado and the initlal survey and triangulation of the Colorado Springs and Eaton quad: rangles, By appointment of the state game and fish commissioner Robert 0. ‘Throckmorton will be in Charge of the new fish hatchery in Hot Sulphur Springs, known as the Grand county hatehery, and Henry T. Dawson has been named superintendent of the Glenwood hatchery. ‘The annual session of the normal in- stitute of district No. 2, embracing Larimer, Weld and Boulder counties, convened at the Normal school July 30th, One hundred and thirty teach: ers were enrolled, an increase of near- ly thirty over the opening day of last year. The institute will be in session two weeks, and a total enrollment of 175 1s expected. With the exception of the letters “A-V," tattooed on his right arm, there was no identification marks upon the body of the tramp who was killed by « Rio Grande train at Fountain July “0th, ‘Phe head was mashed beyond recognition, and no papers or cards on the bedy served to identify the un- known victim, Members of the official board of the Vineent Methodist Episcopal Church of Spokane, Washington, have voted vnanimously to request Bishop War- ren, Who is to preside at the next ses. sion of the Columbia River conference, ‘o appoint Rev. Clarence O, Kimball, pastor of the First Methodist Church of Trinidad, Colorado, to the pastorate of the Vincent Church. Thomas McNeill, who was deported from Vietor and dumped on the Kan- sas plains two years ago, claims to have struck {t rich in the new gold fields of Nevada. In a letter to hts wife at Victor, he states he has opened up a five-foot vein in the Pike’s Peak Four claim, which carries values rang. ing from $800 to $800 to the ton and that there is plenty of ore in sight. A large 1orce of decorators, painters and plumbers 1s ‘putting the finishing tonchniias intasian. at the naw se ere SR RR DATES— ‘ July 1 to 10, inclusive. July 19 to 21, inclusive. RATE— One fare plus $2.00. To— Chicago, $31.50. St. Louis, $26.50, Kansas City, $19.00. And many other points in Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, Kansas and Nebraska. Full details from— _ G. W. MARTIN, {eye General Agent Rock Island Lines. 200 Seventeenth street, ETH DENVER. The Echert-Ellsworth Stores Co., Takes pleasure in directing your attention to the Exquisite richness of their Summer special. ties. THE ECHERT-ELLSWORTH CO. Men’s Furnishers Hatters 820 Sixteenth St. Denver, Colorado. VACATION RATES. yee | 4 EAST June 9 to16 and July 1to10. One fare plus $2 to Chicago, St. Louis, Kansas City, memphis and many other points, Limit _ October 31. WEST i | California and back $59; paily to’Sept, 30. Limit Oct, 31. Liberal stopovers. | J, P. HALL, | Gen. Agent A. 'l, & S. F. Ry,, | 901 17th St. venver, STE, | Seine fea” # PASTIME SOCIAL CLUB ws A RESORT FOR LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, —— eS Eee NEWLY FURNISHED. PHONE MAIN 8044 DICH FRAZIER, Manager. 1821 Arapahoe St Denver, Coloradoy FLOOD’S MARKET Denver, The Largest Anti-Trust Meat Market in the West. Restauranr, Hotel and Boarding House Business given Special Attention... . TEL. MAIN 3824. 1015-1017 15TH ST. BAEFEHH FETE + FF 4 —Ftt+++ +44 + +444 t+t4 4s St+++++¢ +++ +++ rosso t @2@3as Do You Know :; eee ee, =Dr. Dameron has reduced - CY} YY YY 1 © his prices for all Dental # 3 t CY ¥ Work? #8 # ee ew ¢ £7.00 Sets of Teeth for $5.00; $10 Sets for $7.00; $15 Sets for $10; Gold Crowns only. $5.00 Gold Teeth, 84.00; Silver Fillinys, soc up; Gold and = Platina, $1.00 up. Painless Extracting, ALBANY DENTAL PARLORS, + ~ Arapahoe street, opp. the P. O. DR. DAMERON, Prop. " PHEFH EEE HEHE ESE E FEE FESS ESE FE FEEE FESS ES EFSF OHH POH (s) QOR LSD EES ITE SS SB ER SERINE! J. W. Rammell, | Eat Macklem Bread WINES, LIQUORS & CIGARS| An? Save | Trouble 1 At all Grocers, PRONE Q203\MAIN ,. | Look for the la:ble “Macklem Breed 2257 Welton St Denver, Colo eargvaey sak Eat Macklem Bread | And Save Trouble. At all Grocers, Look for the la:ble “Macklem Bread on every loat sit S. H. HOBSON.........,...City. Editor 1824 Curtis St, Room 25. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: OS, Wearlssceoccessaserecht ee SROD Six Monthe s..cscsccscceceecsscss 1.00 Three Months csccscccccescssece | 280 PAYABLE IN ADVANCE, Remittances should be made by Ex- ‘Press Money Order, Postofiice Money Braer, Kegistered’ Letter or Banik Draft! Postage stamps will be re- ceived the same as cash for the frac- ional part of a dollar, Only 1-cent and 2-cent stamps taken. Reading notices, ten ines or less, 10 ‘cents per line. Each additional tine over ten lines, 6 cents per line. Display advertising rates, 25 cents per square. A square contains ten agate lines. No discounts allowed on jess than’ three months’ contract. Cash must accompany all orders from par- ties unknown to us. Further partic- ulars on application. It" oceasionally happens that papers gent to subscribers are lost or stolen. In case you do not receive any num- her when due, inform us by postal card and we will cheerfully forward & duplicate of the missing number. Communications to receive attention must be newsy, upon important sub- jects, plainly written only upon one side of the paper; must reach us ‘Tuesdays if possible, anyway not later than Wednesdays, and bear the signature of the author, No manu- script 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. BOOKER T. WASHINTON’S ADDRESS. Imanother part of this paper will be found extracts of Mr, Washington’s address at Kansas City. This is not to attract atten- tion to the nestor of Tuskegee for he already bears a National repu- tation and anything we might say would add but little to his fame but we speak of his address and call attention to his words in order that our readers may weigh his ad- vice, ponder over his statements and profit thereby. First. He em- phasizes the fact that he is not ashamed of being a Negro and he would not have his color changed even if it were possible by deyine decree, When the race has learned to honor their color and make it a badge of manhood and not shame two-thirds of tho race problem is settled. Second. He contended that the race was poor but it was not depraved and drew a wide distinction between poverty and depravity that ought tobe recognized by every one. One makes attainment possible the other impossible, Third. He spoke of the race's ability and eager- ness to learn, Any race that is teachable is hopeful of much good. If the race as a whole will but an- alyze these statement they will find no reason to dispair but will take courage. Mr. Washington is no carping critic or pessimist. He is full of cheer, hope, vigor and vital energy. He is an example of what he preaches and the people both white and colored everywhere hear him gladly and are ready to hear him again. His mess. age is never old, never dull, never tiresome, He indulges in no platitudes, no tinsel, no_ fine spun oratory, He preaches the gospel of work, of strenuous life, of open door, of manhood. A gos- pel that the race needs and must practice if it is to catch on and keep up in the race of the survival of the fittest. This is the reason Booker 'f. Washington's mes. sags is important. This is why the people hear him gladly and we print iton the first page and call attention to it in this article and ask you to read it thought- fully. SHOULD RECEIVE PUBLIC TENTION. Denver's colored citizens are to be congratulated on having the very best influences at work about them. Perhaps no city in the na. tion, certainly none in the West can compare with the excellent and exalted standard set for their inspiration and uplift as the press, pulpit and Peoples Sunday Alli. ance offers the citizens of Denver. The colored press of Denver seeks nothing but wholesome, clean and uplifting news. The CoLoravo SraresMaN for instance indulges in no muke-rakism scandal, yellow journalism or sensational news or puppy gossip but seeks to acquaint its large number of readers allover the state with the best news and, information of the Negro from ev- ery section of the world and the public shows its appreciation by increasing our subscription roll and reading force. Second. The pulpits of Denver are the best and strongest, brain- iest and purest, most progressive and practical of any city in the ration and the people ought to at- tend the churches and show thei loyalty by swelling the congrega- tions and giving heed to the ad. vice and meesages of power thal come from Denver pulpits. Third. The People Sunday Al. liance when it is divorced from politics is one of the best agen. cies among us for good. It deals with the secular things of race in. terest and never fails to give its members and visitors wholesome ideas and methods of expansior and growth. ‘The program last Sunday being a sample of many. Tn the absence of Gov. McDonal¢ who was to have spoken. Hon Frank 7. Johnson, District Judge, filled his pluce and spoke on mor. als, character and how to be good citizens. Judge Johnson was not present in the interest of politics but of good citizenship and_his words ought to be heeded. rhe Instrumental furnished by Miss Rhoda Johnson and music by Holley’s splendid orchestra and the solo by Mrs. Lillie Moore ac- companied by Mrs. Hayes furnish- eda session of good things it would be difficult to duplicate anywhere. The CoLorabo SvatEs- MAN is anxious that the colored citizens of Denyer and Colorado should profit by these grand agen- cies among us and hence without any attempt at self praise we cali upon eyery man and woman to recognize and appreciate these in- stitutions for public service and give them your loyal support. POLITICAL LINE-UP. We take a clipping from one of the daily papers as follows. “The political battle in Colorado this fall will be the hottest since 1900,” propesied an old war horse. as he sniffed the political air and there is hardly a person familiar with Colorado politics who does not agree with him. There are many more who say it will be the hottest fight, and the state has ever seen, for there is so much at stake. ‘The great prize is the sen- atorship—the great prize that has attracted Colorado statesmen for thirty years now. The fight over this place eclipses evena presiden- tial fight, and so it will be this year. In 1900 there was botha president and a senator to fight oyer, but Colorado was so surely Democratic then that there was but little question of the result. Now it is a concededly close state, any way you figure it. When one thinks of the multitude of public offices which men must be elected to fill this fall he | hard- ly wonders at the political activity that is shaking the state from cen- ter to circumference, ‘ake a con- servative estimate, just to astonish yourself with the figures. To begin with there is the United States senatorship, with a half dozen aspirants in each party and as many dark horses. ‘Then there is the state ticket with seven leading places, the two supreme court justiceships, three members of congress, the sixty-five members of the state senate, the five dis- trict judges in Denver and a dis- trict judge in each of the twelve or more judicial districts through- out the state. Hach of the coun- ties will choose full sets of county offices, and of the fifty and more counties there will be seven offi- ces to fill in each county, Add this all up, and then maltiply it by two, for each of the two great par- ties will have a possible winner named for each office, and the re- sult is that approximately 500 good political candidates will be trying to fill them. Plums? Pie? Why, there's nothing like it, and it is not the slightest exageration to say that for the 300 offices 5,000 men are waiting and anxious to fill them. This is saying nothing of the thousands of minor posi- tions that will be filled by appoin- tees of the men who are elected to office, So is it any wonder that the whole state turns loose to do its political duty in the fall cam- paign and election?” All of this is said in order to ask what is the colored yoter to do? How will he play his part? Where will he get his? The Cotoravo Sraresmay be- lieves in getting in on the ground floor. We believe in starting in time and ask our readers to. begin now to think itover. First, Dis- ‘cuss the situation over with your- self, with your family, at home, among your friends, at the club and make up your mind to have a part in it, Second. Look up now your precinct organization be a member of it, Attend the pre- ciuct caucus and primaries, help name the precint ticket, be one on the ticket and attend to your interest in naming delegates and selecting proper officers. The Co1- oRADO STATESMAN last spring took pains to givea series of articles on the A. B. ©. of polities, now is the time to put these instructions into practice. Self interest is first interest and first duty. An once of prevention is worth a pound of cure, and if you fail to do your part now don’t complain later on, We are showing our interest in your welfare by pointing out the way in time and if you will go to work now you will be a factor when the pot begins to boil and yon will havea hand on the machine in- stead of being dragyed behind the machine without your concent. Your value is estimated by your influence and your vote and the only way to be worth something is to control things at the primar- ies and in your ward then you will be heard when the clans assemble. Let this be done not only in Denyer but in every county in the state. WOMAN AND THE PROVERBS. The Arabian declares: “Words are women; deeds are men.” The Scotch say: “Honest men marry soon, wise men never.” In Fife they say: “The next best thing to no wife is a good wife.” The French adage: “A man of straw is worth a woman of gold.” ‘The Persian sage says that a wo man’s wisdom is under her heel.” The Perstan asserts that women and dragons are best out of the world. The German affirms that every daughter of Eve would rather be beautiful than good. eee. ee eee The German: “There are only two good women in the world—one dead and the other can't be found.” An old English saying: “If a man lose a woman and a farthing he will be sorry he lost the farthing.” ‘The Spanish rhyme “ias 1t: “Were 2 woman as little as she is good, a pea pod would make her a gown and @ hood.” The Corstcan says: “Just as a good and a bad horse both need the spur, a good and a bad woman both need the stick.” The Hindoo: “A man ts not obeyed by his wife in his own house, nor does she consider him her husband unless he beats her.” Another Hindoo pro verb says: “Drive out a woman's na- turé with a pitchfork and it will re turn again and again.” TO THE POINT. Money may be acquired by accident manners never. ‘The worst thing about eating is that It takes away one's appetite. For multitudes. of young people there fs no home, only a place to aleep in. The simplicity of those who advo cate it is, perhaps, the most remark- able thing about the simple life, The dark seriousness of death Is a Uirely effective background for the harleqninade of a wasted existence. The simple life does not need lentils or celiniar clothing; it needs those tarer things, gratitude and humbity. We often delude oursetyes with the idea that we are virtuous, when ft ceulity we are simply giving our ac gustomed follies a rest. If you wish for truth, you must give freedom: there must be neither evar Hon nor tyranny. It is human to d¢ sire liberty, and the yoked humac creature does not express his genuine opinions. 23 For You Skidoo. L~—-— [Re eR \ | Neca \ ae NP J Ree “f= Given by Rice Lodge No. 39, I. B. P. O. E. Denver's Tiesding Watertaiier! wil apa uo pains in making this the Grandest Picnic of the season. Bowl- ing, all kinds of amusement. Music and Dancing. All kinds of refreshments FROM I P. M. TO I G. M. 27 “NUFF” SAID. COMMITTEE OF ARRANGEMENTS. Johnnie Levell, Chairman; H. J. M. Brown, J. F. Clark, Pearl Mason,W. A. Rice, R. I. Moore, H, L. Shafer, F. L. King, W. R. Parker, C. H. Parker, J. F. Owens. Two Bits at the gate. keaGET TICKETS FROM THE COMMITTEE-“@it THE DENVER’S Begins this week. To realize tha importance of the price saving, it is only necessary to remem- ber that this is the grand final clearing out of Summer stocks. Every department. in the dig store is included. You are urgently invited to personally investigate the myriad helps to practical economy extended to our patrons in this yearly event. Early buyers will have best variety for selections. ee — : aR Oe Soa Lite TIENVER YIRY COODS (0. oN) cS: Regardless of cost or consequenees, and in order to avoid carrying this season’s goods over to next year we cut prices all over the house to about first cost figures, and pour all the profits into the pockets of our patrons. i The season for our early summer clean-up sale now has arrived and we propose to break all former bargain-giving records. We can not enumerate articles or prices here, because the house is full of startling values from top floor to basement. You must come and see them, and you'll find that your dollars do double duty here, while this great sacrifice sale is going on. Be among the first and get an early selection, ee Local Notices. Hair cut 15 cents, 1847 Blake street Nicely furnished room for rent at 2503 Curtis street; with or without board. For rent, nicely furnished rooms for gentlemen only, 1222 Bast 28th avenue, When you want to take an automobile ride callon C.F. West, at 17th and Stout streets; Phone Pink 1233. “ Purnished room for man and wife at Mrs, Julia Lee, 2247 Lincoln ave. Table board every day during Elk convention.‘ Odd Fellows union picnic—Rocky Mountain and Arapahoe Lodges, August 6th, at East Turner Hall | George & Adams has opened up a first-class Shining parlor at 1111-17th street where they solicit the patronage of the public. Special parlors for la- dies. W. J. Connation & So., 1125-17th St. diamond importers, jowelers and opti- cians. : Knights Templar Day at Bloomfield park, August 20th. Pienic sure, after- noon and evening. Admission 25c. Nicely furnished rooms for reat at 2515 Curtis street. All modern. Rice Lodge of Elks will give its big outing at Bloomfield park, Wednesday, August Sth, Mrs, M. Wilson will begin to serve meals tothe public Sunday, July Ist, Breakfast from 7 to 9:30 a.m. and din’ ner from 5:30 to7 p.m. Meals at 25 ets, 2221 Pennsylvania avenue. Phone Main 7384. . LADIES OR GENTLEMEN WANT- ED, everywhere; 83.00 a day selling our toilet goods, Write at once, Send 5 cents for catalogue. C. H. Brown Toilet Company, 5711 Wabash Ave, Chicago, mn. Keep off of this date, Thursday, Aug: ust 16th. Miss N.L, Brown, the ac- complished daughter of Rev. J. H. Brown of Ward’s Chapel, assisted by some of the best local talent, will give a recital at Campbell A.M. E. church 28rd and Lawrence streets, to which the public is cordially invited, Chas. E. Coleman, formerly of this city, has opened up an elegant club roomfat Omaha, Neb. for social and political purposes. B, W. Fiecps. R. V. N. Jounsons. Fields’ Investment Co. We have a number of houses to rent orsellinall parts of the city. Rents from 86,00 to 330,00. Sale prices from 8875 to 83,000. Anumber of choice lots. Come and look over our list, _. § 6218 Main. Phones: 7 Olive 853. 212 15th St. Half blk. from Court House USE Miller’s Favorite Baer i e | ® ie 4 , Veterinary Liniment FOR YOUR HORSE, For flesh wounds, galls of all kinds, sprains, bruises, scratches or grease heels, sweeney, weak. ness of joints, contraction of the muscles. swellings, tu- mors, and in the early stage of fistula, PREPARED ONLY BY FRANK P. MILLER, Pharmist,# 2644 Welton St. Cor. Wash. Ay, Denver. - Colorado f Has Pheasant Farm. Mrs, McMillan, wife of United States Senator McMillan, of Michigan, has a Pheasant farm at her summer home Mear Magnolia, Mass. She employs (me men servants to care for them, CITY NEWS. It's up to you for a good time next Wednesday at Bloomfield park. Wm. Hall of Boulder was in the city this week. George McCullough of the Denver club is off on his vacation. Mrs. Clara Jones of Omaha, is here the guest of Mrs. Thomas Clingman. Mrs. Sallie Keene left Wednesday for Chicago and the resorts of Wisconsin. Colorado Day will be observed at the People's Sunday Alliance to-morrow. Mrs. Ben Givens, 2515 Curtis St. met with an accident at Zion church last Sunday. Miss Tillie Randolph left Tuesday for an extended visit with friends in Philadelphia. Mrs. T. J. Penn of St. Louis, is stopping at Mrs. A. G. Fallings, 1919 Clarkson street. B yyyy and go to the Elks' big outing next Wednesday, August 8th. U 0 2 B 1 of the crowd. Mrs. David Turner left Tuesday for a short visit with relatives and friends in Kansas City, Kans. Rev. C. D. Douglass is at Colorado Springs for two weeks resting and for the benefit of his health. Harris' full orchestra will play at the Elks' picnic at Bloomfield Park next Wednesday, July 8th. Mrs. Isaac Drake and daughter Josephine of Kansas City, Kans., are visiting their uncle C. B. Hill. Mrs. G. A. McCullough and children left Wednesday for Valley Falls, Kans., to visit her mother and friends. Thomas M. Russell, wife and daughter, left for Canon City last week, where they will make their future home. Miss Bertha Harlan of Topeka, Kans., is in the city the guest of her sister Mrs. F. G. Turner of 2229 Clarkson St. Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Vaughan are in the city from Springfield, Mo. They are stopping at 2247 Lincoln avenue. C. A. Franklin has moved in his beautiful home at 28th and Lincoln avenue, which he recently purchased. Mrs. Bradley, wife of Judge Bradley of Kansas City, is in the city for a few days' vacation. She is the guest of Mrs. S. H. Tarbet, 1828 Downing avenue. If you want to enjoy yourself attend the Elks' big outing at Bloomfield park next Wednesday, August 8th. Mrs. J. Walker of Silverton returned home last week after a pleasant visit with her daughter, Mrs. A. G. Fallings. Mrs. Dennis Burns and Miss L. Cooper, cousins of John and U. S. Cooper of Parker, Colo. were in the city this week. Miss Mae Smith who has been the guest of her sister Mrs. Louis George left this week for her home in Kansas City. The picnic given at Bloomfield park Thursday by the Denver club boys, was one of the enjoyable features of the week. Bishop A. Grant, D. D. will preach at Shorter A. M. E. church tomorrow morning at eleven o'clock. Don't fail to hear him. Mrs. Violet Thompson mother of J. E. Porter, is taking a months vacation and is the guest of Mrs. A. G. Fallings, 1919 Clarkson St. Garett Banks after a short visit with is parents returned to Arkansas City, Kansas, Thursday, his wife will remain ere a few weeks longer. Mrs. G. W. Tolson and mother, Mrs. Robinson, has returned to Boulder after a week's visit in Denver the guest of Mrs. Lillie Lewis of 2425 Humboldt St. Mrs. Jos. D. D. Rivers and daughter Vivian arrived home last Sunday from a 5 weeks visit to Jefferson Barracks, Mo. Kansas City and Chicago. They report their stay a very pleasant one. Mrs. Stella Thomas and Ray Lewis, sister and son of Mrs. Wm. J. Crum- mer, arrived in the city Sunday from a visit to relatives and friends in Gales- burg, Ills. Mrs. Thomas continued her journey to Ogden Monday. The True Reformers organized another new fountain Tuesday night. Geo. S. Contee, Herron and B. W. Fields are the leading lights in the new organization. The choir of Zion church is prepairing a grand musical exhibition of local and visiting talent to be given August 21st at Zion church. It will be the musical event of the season. Mrs. Charles White entertained Tuesday afternoon in honor of Mrs. John M. Wright of Topeka, Kansas, and Mrs. Emma McAdoo. About 100 ladies called during the afternoon to greet the honored guests. During the hot weather no one can enjoy themselves better than in the open air so follow the crowd to the Elks annual outing at Bloomfield Park next Wednesday, August 8th. Admission 25 cents. The annual picnic given by the Women's Guild of the Church of Redeemer last week was the biggest financial success of any given this season and the women are jubilent over the fact that nearly $250 was a net balance after all expenses were paid. Mrs. G. W. Andrews, Messrs Porter and McGruder gave a formal course dinner in honor of the following visiting ladies: Mesdames John Wright, Garret, Bradley, Stewart, Jordon and Mr. and Mrs. John Davis. Miss Ethel Webster, a prominent society lady of St. Joe, Mo., and Miss Nannie M. Walton one of the best instructors in the St. Louis schools are guests of H. F. Smith and wife of 1873 Marion street. These ladies have received much social attention during their short stay in the city. That Denver is for ahead of the average city in up-to-date cafes is vouchered for by the many strangers in the city who have paid high compliments to some of our cafes and especially that of the Mecca Cafe at 1918 Lawrence St. conducted by Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Lacy. The good order, meals and excellent service has made it the most popular resort of its kind in the west. Through the efforts of St. Benedicts missionary society the Bishop has kindly allowed a priest to mass especially ior the colored people of Denver in Holy Ghost church the fourth Sunday of each month at eleven a.m. Non-Catholics as well as catholics are invited to attend the services at Holy Ghost church on Curtis street near 20th street. A Hot Time in the Old Town. Excursion to the Frontier days, Cheyenne, Wyo., August 15th and 16th via Union Pacific. The womans relay race, bucking and pitching contests, Indian squaw races, steer roping contests, wild horse races. Dances each night. Tickets on sale August 14, 15 and 16, good to return until August 20th. Also very low rates Thursday, August 16th; return same date. For rates, schedules and full particulars, see small bills, or ask J. C. Ferguson, Agent. "Lest ye forget" 'we are here to remind you that you have arrived at the 18th mile stone of life's journey." Such were the remarks addressed to Miss Bertha Larkins of 2507 Lafayette street, last Saturday night by Miss Clara Gilmore, who was the promoter of a surprise party of 18 young people, who called to help celebrate the 18th birthday anniversary of Miss Larkins, who was completely surprised. The evening was very enjoyably spent in games, music and dancing. After partaking of choice refreshments and wishing Miss Larkins many happy returns of the event, the jolly crowd dispersed to their respective homes. Lily Cadet Co., No.1 of this city, has caused no little amount of flattering comment for the splendid exhibition drilling at Temple Theatre in Colorado Springs last week. The company was in command of Drillmaster George A. Logan, who is responsible for the rapid advancement of the boys in military tactics. The maneuverings in the exhibition were perfect and brought forth a vigorous applause from the 500 people who witnessed it. The company will be presented with a loving cup by Pleasant Home Lodge of Colorado Springs. This youth military company is conceded generally to the best drilled in the West and when many of their senior brethren are loath to concede the fact, the Cadets are open for a challenge in order to sustain their reputation. OUT THEY GO Summe Final Price $ Good $12 to $20 Values. be carried over--f SEPERATE HIGHEST GRADE $3.65 Summer Suit Final Price $7.75 2 to $20 Values. Not a Negligee carried over--this price will do KEPERATE TROUSE Summer Suits Good $12 to $20 Values. Not a Negligee suit to be carried over--this price will do it. SEPERATE TROUSERS $5 to $7 Qualities. If you don't need them and now is the time don't need them this year you wnd now is the time to save mon If you don't need them this year you will next and now is the time to save money See Our windows For values THE Johnson-Noel G 1005 16TH ST. OPP. TABOR GRAND. Open 'til 10 p. m. Saturday THE Broad and Bar SHOE 823 Sixteenth Nearly Opposite The A. T After Inventory Broadhurst d Barnett SHOE CO. 23 Sixteenth Street Opposite The A. T. Lewis Dry Good Inventory Clearance OF ALL THE Broadhurst and Barnett SHOE CO. Nearly Opposite The A. T. Lewis Dry Goods Co. After Inventory Clearance Sale OF ALL SUMMER FOOTWEAR It is our intention and determination to close out, to the very last pair, all Oxfords. It makes no difference as to cost. We need the room for Fall goods, and we know of no other way so effective to move them as a ridiculously low price. We shut our eyes to the loss, consider it your gain. Come prepared to take advantage of big values for little money. your intention and determination to close out the pair, all Oxford. It makes no difference as used the room for Fall goods, and we know of it as effective to move them as a ridiculously low price eyes to the loss, consider it your gain. Co to take advantage of big values for little money It is our intention and determination to close out, to the very last pair, all Oxford. It makes no difference as to cost. We need the room for Fall goods, and we know of no other way so effective to move them as a ridiculously low price. We shut our eyes to the loss, consider it your gain. Come prepared to take advantage of big values for little money. MEN'S OXFORDS.—In Gunmetal, Patent Calf and Russian Calf for $2.65; regular $3.50 and $4.00 values. WOMEN'S $2.00 quality white Blucher Canvas Oxford for only $1.25 the pair. MEN'S OXFORDS—Your choice of the Nettleton makes, formerly selling at $5.00 and $6.00, for the ridiculously low price of $3.85. are bound to close out every of Summer Oxford in tan, whi patent or vici kid at about price. Boys'—we still have about pairs to select from at $1.85 $2.35 the pair. Regular $2 $3.00, $3.50 and $4.00 values. women's—$3.40 buys the ford that sold at $5.00 and $6.00 $2.85 buys the $3.50. $4.00 Misses' AND CHILDREN'S—we Mid-Summer Every pair of Women's and be sold withith the next 30 days new stock. Every shoe in this s and made by the best makers. $2.00 White Canvass Oxford, with All $5.00 Oxford go at ..... All $4.00 and $3.50 Oxford go at All $3.00 Oxford go at..... ALL CHILDREN'S SHOES Mid-Summer Shoe Sale Repair of Women's and Children's Summer Shoes within the next 30 days. We must have the. Every shoe in this sale is first-class in even by the best makers. Canvass Oxford, with leather heels, go at. Oxford go at and $3.50 Oxford go at. Oxford go at CHILDREN'S SHOES AT ALMOST HALF Mid-Summer Shoe Sale. Mid-Summer Shoe Sale. Every pair of Women's and Children's Summer Shoes must be sold within the next 30 days. We must have the room for new stock. Every shoe in this sale is first-class in every respect and made by the best makers. $2.00 White Canvass Oxfords, with leather heels, go at.....$1.35 All $5.00 Oxfords go at.....$3.85 All $4.00 and $3.50 Oxfords go at.....$2.85 All $3.00 Oxfords go at.....$2.35 Sale of Parasols. All Fine Parasols at a great re in assorted designs, regul at..... Umbrellas and Parasols Perin 16TH STREET Parasols at a great reduction. White Line sorted designs, regular price $2.50 to $3.50 umbrellas and Parasols Re-covered and repair Derini Bro 16TH STREET OPPOSITE PO Superior La ALL HAND WORK All Fine Parasols at a great reduction. White Linen Parasols in assorted designs, regular price $2.50 to $3.50, special at.....$1.95 Umbrellas and Parasols Re-covered and repaired! Perini Bros. 16TH STREET OPPOSITE POST-OFFICE SALUTATION TELEPHONE 2 1735 Lawrence St. ```markdown ``` See Our windows For values er Suits 67.75 Not a Negligee suit to his price will do it. TROUSERS A FEW FOR $2.90 $3.50 to $5.00 Values. this year you will next ne to save money thurst rnett CO. nth Street T. Lewis Dry Goods Co. Clearance Sale ALL ermination to close out, to the makes no difference as to cost. goods, and we know of no other as a ridiculously low price. We sider it your gain Come pre-values for little money. are bound to close out every pair of Summer Oxfords in tan, white, patent or vici kid at about half price. Boys'—we still have about 600 pairs to select from at $1.85 and $2.35 the pair. Regular $2.50, $3.00, $3.50 and $4.00 values. women's—$3.40 buys the Oxford that sold at $5.00 and $6.00. $2.85 buys the $3.50, $4.00 and many of the $5.00 Oxfords. duction. White Linen Parasols r price $2.50 to $3.50, special ..... $1.95 Re-covered and repaired.] i Bros. OPPOSITE POST-OFFICE Superior Laundry J. W. CASEY, PROP. TELEPHONE 2132 1735 Lawrence St. Denver Open 'til 10 p. m. Saturday ALL HAND WORK . ODD FELLOWS LODGES Rocky Mountain Arapahoe Five Superb Acts by Vaudeville Celebrities. Odd Fellows Union Summer Garden FESTIVAL East Turner Hall, Monday Aug. 6th Adult Admission 35c; Children Half Fare THE RHINE CAFE MRS. E. A. SCOTT, Proprietor. First-class Meals. Best in the City. Five Superb Acts by Vaudeville Celebrities. Odd Fellows Union Summer Garden East Turner Hall, Monday Aug. 6th Adult Admission 35c; Children Half Fare THE RHINE CAFE MRS. E. A. SCOTT, Proprietor. First-class Meals. Best in the City. PHOEE 7039 MAIN. 1129-1131 19th St. Denver, Col Denver, Colo. UNION PACIFIC THE OVERLAND ROUTE UNION PACIFIC OVERLAND G.A.R. ENCAMPMENT MINNAPOLIS AUG. 13 TO 18 Via Union Pacific. MINNAPOLIS AUG. 13 TO 18 Via Union Pacific. $18.15 Round Trip Tickets on sale to Minneapolis and St. Paul Aug. 11th, 12th and 13th. Return limit August 31st or to September 30th for 50 cents additional. Through Pullman service August 11th Denver to Minneapolis on train leaving Denver 4:35 p. m. Tickets on sale to Minneapolis and St. Paul Aug. 11th, 12th and 13th. Return limit August 31st or to September 30th for 50 cents additional. Through Pullman service August 11th Denver to Minneapolis on train leaving Denver 4:35 p. m. Ticket Office 941 17th St. J. C. FERGUSON, Denver, Colo. General Agent. MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILWAY Special Excursion Days East VIA VIA MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILWAY Through standard Pullman Sleeping Cars. Through Tourist Pullman Sleeping Cars. Through Free Reclining Chair Cars. All cars kept fresh and cool by electric fans. Write us and we will take pleasure in furnishing detailed informa mation, Best Train Schedules, Etc. H. C. POST, G. W. F. & P. A. J. H. GINET, C. T. A. 1700 Stout Street, Denver,'Colorado. Write us and we will take pleasure in furnishing detailed information, Best Train Schedules, Etc. H. C. POST, G. W. F. & P. A. J. H. GINET, C. T. A. 1700 Stout Street, Denver, Colorado. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION Department of the Interior, Land Or Hours: 9 to 11 a.m. 1 to 7, 8 to 8 p. Sunday, 10 to 11:30 a.m. 1 to 4, 5 to 4 p. Department of the Interior, Land Office at Denver, Colo., July 5, 1906. Notice is hereby given that the following-named settler has filed notice of his intention to make final proof in support of his claim, and that said proof will be made before register and receiver, United States Land Office, at Denver, Colorado, on August 29, 1906. viz: George Bullis, H. E. No. 20068, March 23, 1901, for the N. E. $ \frac{1}{4} $ Sec. 20. Tp. 3 S. R. 62 west of 6th P. M. PHONES: OFFICE, MAIN 5595. RESIDENCE, YORK 123. DR. P. E. SPRATLIN. 1023 19TH STREET He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon and cultivation of said land, viz: George G. Junk of Bennett, Colo.; Charles G. Holland of Bennett, Colo.; George C. Mack of Bennett, Colo.; Charles Prifford of Bennett, Colo. RESIDENCE, 2230 CLAAKSON ST Colorado. Denver. JOSEPH H. STUART LAWYER. C. D. FORD, Register. Colorado's Artist-Cowboy. Guy Parker, a cowboy who has never been outside the state of Colorado, is an artist of marked ability. Painters and connscisseurs agree that he has caught the indefinable something which many have vainly striven to reach. Next year he will devote to work in an eastern art school. Parker is able to ride anything with four legs and in exhibitions of reckless riding takes front rank. Guy Parker, a cowboy who has never been outside the state of Colorado, is an artist of marked ability. Painters and connoisseurs agree that he has caught the indefinable something which many have vainly striven to reach. Next year he will devote to work in an eastern art school. Parker is able to ride anything with four legs and in exhibitions of reckless riding takes front rank. PRACTICES IN ALL COURTS. Examining Abstracts of Titles and drawing up Legal Instruments given careful attention. Office, 829 Kittredge Bldg. 16th and Residence 2221 Pennsylvania Ave. Phone Olive 294. "Columbine" ZANG'S New Table Beer Is a special Brew 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 Daily to all parts of the city 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. Knopf, Manager] PHONES 190-189. 1633.39 Arapahoe St. Denver, Colorado MECCA CAFE AND CHILI PARLOR The Leading Colored Cafe in the West CAFE AND CHILI PA The Leading Colored Cafe in the West MECCA CAFE AND CHILI PARLOR CONDUCTED BY MR. AND MRS. D. W. LACY, Special Sunday Dinner from 12:30 to 3, 25 Meals Served at all Hours. Open U String Music Every Saturday and Sunday Even Sunday Dinner from 12:30 to 3, 25 ed at all Hours. Open U ing Music Every Saturday and Sunday Even ce Street. Phone R. J. H. 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 TELEGR THE N. 8 Imported and Done FAMILY TR 111 TELEPHONE MAIN 4271. N. & W. LIQUOR DEALERS IN Fed and Domestic Wines and L FAMILY TRADE OUR SPECIALTY 1118 BROADWAY. delivered. ROAD. SHERN RY. CO. COLORADO AND SOUTHERN SPECIAL EXCURSION THE N. & W. LIQUOR CO. DEALERS IN Imported and Domestic Wines and Liquors. FAMILY TRADE OUR SPECIALTY. 1118 BROADWAY. To City of Mexico. April 25th to May 5th June 25th to July 7th Sept. 3rd to 14th—O LIBERAL L Write for rate quotat and other southern points. Literature descriptiv "Get t Put a Dolla 25th to May 5th.—One fare for round trip. 25th to July 7th.—One fare plus $2 for round 3rd to 14th.—One fare for round trip. LIBERAL LIMITS AND STOPOVERS for rate quotations to Mexican, Cuban, Te southern points. feature descriptive of this territory sent on app T. E. FISHI Gen. Pass De et the Hal a Dollar in Your Po April 25th to May 5th,One fare for round trip. June 25th to July 7th-One fare plus $2 for round trip. Sept. 3rd to 14th-One fare for round trip. Write for rate quotations to Mexican, Cuban, Texas, Louisiana and other southern points. "Get the Habit" THE STORE THAT SAVES YOU A $ I NO MORE 250 NO LESS THE HENNING - EDDY SHOE CO. 820 15th Street, Half way Betw way Between Champa and Half way Between Champa and Stout. H. J, HESPER. All Goods Delivered "THE COLORADO ROAD." The COLORADO & SOUTHERN RY. CO. 0 to 3, 25 Cents. Open Until 2 a.m. Sunday Evenings. 4271. QUOR CO. es and Liquors. SPECIALTY. DRADO AND THERN URSIONS a round trip. b $2 for round trip. c trip. TOPOVERS. d, Cuban, Texas, Louisiana. y sent on application. T. E. FISHER. Gen. Pass. Agent. Denver, Colo. Habit" ur Pocket. mpa and Stout Phone Main 3785. J. H. WEICHHAND Denver, Colo. BLOODY MUTINY MUTINEERS CAPTURE RUSSIAN PORT OF SVEABORG. COMMANDER PUT TO DEATH Desperate Fighting All Night—Heavy Artillery Used—Gigantic Military Conspiracy Prematurely Sprung. Helsingfors.—Sveaborg at 1:40 a.m. Wednesday is entirely in the hands of the mutineers, who now have in their possession every kind of armament. Horrible scenes occurred during last night, when the fierce fighting was continued. The heaviest artillery was used during the conflict. Several officers were killed or wounded. The wounded were transported to Helsingfors. Colonel Nataroff was bayoneted. He begged for transportation to the hospital, promising forgiveness in exchange. Instead he was stoned and thrown into the water with a stone tied around his neck. A gigantic military conspiracy aiming at the simultaneous capture of Russia's three great sea fortresses, Cronstadt, Sebastopol and Sveaborg, arranged by the Revolutionary Military League, was prematurely sprung here last night by an attempt to arrest members of a company of sappers who had mutinied on account of the death of one of their comrades, alleged to have been due to ill treatment. The entire garrison of the fortress at Sveaborg flamed out instantly in revolt. All the artillerymen and sappers garrisoning the place were involved. Only four companies of infantrymen remained loyal. The mutineers selzed forty machine guns and practically all the quick fireers and artillery in the fortress, but even with this aid they were unable to hold the main fort against the loyal infantry. The fighting continued all night long. The heaviest firing was heard from 10 o'clock in the evening until 1 in the morning. Sveaborg is a strongly fortified town of Russian Finland, situated on the islands in the Gulf of Finland, immediately south of Helsingfors. The islands, which are connected by pontoons, from the site of a fortress which defends the harbor of Helsingfors and consists of numerous military works and batteries and a military arsenal. Sveaborg also has an excellent harbor. COUNTERFEITERS' PLATES. Found in Office of Well-Known Denver Physician. Denver.—Dr. James D. Eggleston, son of James Eggleston, president of the Pacific Express Company, was arrested Tuesday for having the means of counterfeiting United States money in his possession. A large number of photographic plates of paper currency, besides moulds and dies for counterfeiting silver money were found in his office in the Commonwealth building. The tip was given the United States secret service officers by Dr. Hartley O. Baker, formerly a partner of Eggleston's, who has been having trouble with Eggleston over the ownership of certain surgical instruments Eggleston intimates that the counterfeiting material was placed in his office by an enemy, and implies that it was Baker. Baker claims that Eggleston has been blackmailing him by charging that he made improper advances to Mrs. Eggleston. Eggleston and his wife intimate that Baker has been trying to break up their home. Baker talks freely; Eggleston remains strangely quiet. His attorney, Lucius W. Hoyt, had a slight encounter with Constable William J. Horner in Eggleston's office Tuesday afternoon while Horner was levying on Eggleston's instruments under a writ of replevin secured by Baker. Mrs. Eggleston is said to be prostrated. RECLAMATION SERVICE. Work on Twenty-Two Projects Now Under Way. Washington.—The reclamation service has just passed its fourth birthday, and that it is a vigorous infant is shown by a summary of the work accomplished during its brief existence. Work is now under way on twenty-two projects and 13,600 acres of land have actually irrigated. Up to July 1, 241 miles of main canal, 116 miles of distributing system, and 388 miles of ditches had been constructed, including dams, headworks, etc. Tunnels having a total length of more than five and a half miles have been driven, including over two and a half miles of the great Gunnison tunnel in Colorado. More than 521 miles of telephone lines have been installed and are now in operation; 233 miles of wagon road, many miles of which were cut in solid rock in almost inaccessible canons; 110 bridges, and 300 office and other buildings have been constructed. The works above mentioned have called for the excavation of 17,403,213 cubic yards of earth and rock, the laying of 134,446 cubic yards of concrete, 124,901 square yards of rip-rap and paving; 42,947 linear feet of pilling have been driven. There have been purchased 1,873 tons of iron and steel, 7,347,312 feet B. M. of lumber and 159,623 barrels of cement. The government cement mill at Roosevelt, Arizona, erected at a cost of more than $100,000, has turned out 43,000 barrels of cement, and Uncle Sam's saw mills have cut 2,889,000 feet B. M. of lumber from the government reserves. National Democratic Club. New York.—Justice McLean of the Supreme Court has signed an order authorizing the Democratic Club to change its name to that of the National Democratic Club. The petition of the club, on which the order was issued, declared it to be the purpose of the club to extend its operations to all sections of the country and to admit to membership citizens of all the state. United States Court Decides Against Dowie. Chicago.—Judge Landis of the United States District Court gave his decision Friday in the controversy between the adherents of John Alexander Dowlie and Wilbur Volvia over the property of Zion City. John C. Hately was appointed receiver of Zion. His bonds were placed at $25,000. The adjudication in the bankruptcy proceedings against Dowlie was set aside. The court holds that Zion City and its industries do not belong to Dowlie—that, while the contributors of the funds did not express a formal declaration of trust, a trust was created and Dowlie had no right to treat the property as his own. The court refused to appoint Alexander Granger receiver for the reason that Granger made a vow recognizing Dowle as "a messenger of the covant, the prophet foretold by Moses, and Elijah the restorer," to which vow "all family ties and obligations and all relations to human governments shall be held subordinate." The court said he was not obliged to repose confidence in a man so constituted that, living in this republic, he would serenely vow his readiness at all times to abandon his family and betray his country. The court ordered an election on the third Tuesday of September of a general overseer, all members of the church residing in Zion City, male and female, to have one vote. He announced that suitable provision would be made for Dowle on account of his services as trustee. The effect of the decision is to place the industrial affairs of Zion City in the hands of the court through the agency of Mr. Hately, while the church's spiritual matters will come under the supervision of the overseer to be elected in September. Claims against Dowie are now claims against the receiver. Mr. Hately is a member of the board of trade, a capitalist and is active in charitable and reform movements. As to the election, Judge Landis assured the litigants that he took the responsibility for its fairness on his own shoulders. Dowie was not in court, illness confining him to his hotel. A number of members of the church, who still cling to him, were present. RUSSELL SAGE'S WILL. Except Small Bequests Property Left to His Wife. New York—Except for a few small bequests to relatives, the fortune of Russell Sage is left to his widow. There is no charitable bequest in the will. There was nothing in the will to indicate the value of Mr. Sage's estate. Each of Mr. Sage's nephews and nieces is left $25,000. There is also a bequest of $16,000 to Mr. Sage's sister, Mrs. Chapin, now deceased. The section bequeathing the bulk of the estate of Mrs. Sage reads that she is to "have and to hold the same absolutely and forever." The executors of the will are Mrs. Sage, Dr. John P. Munn, for many years Mr. Sage's physician; and Charles W. Osborne, who has had charge of Mr. Sage's office in this city. The will contains a section forfeiting the bequest to any beneficiary who objects to the probate of the will or directly or indirectly contests it. Good Templars Election. Boston.—George F. Cotterill of Seattle was re-elected national grand chief templar at Saturday's session of the national lodge of the United States Independent Order of Good Templars. W. H. Clark of Wyoming was chosen national grand secretary, and A. A. Anderson of McKeesport, Pennsylvania, was elected national grand treasurer. Allie E. Parker of Providence was appointed national grand secretary. After the installation of officers Seattle was selected on the first ballot as the place for holding the convention of 1907. President's Son Coming. Laramie, Wyo.—Charles W. Dekay of this city has received a letter from his brother-in-law, Lleut. Emory S. Land of the United States navy, written from Washington, saying that Land would visit his parents at Gunnison, Colorado, next month, being accompanied West by Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., and George Roosevelt, son and nephew, respectively, of President Roosevelt, and that they would spend several weeks at Gunnison where Lieutenant Land's father is superintendent of the fish hatchery. The lieutenant is a graduate of the Naval Academy and a naval constructor, and has been visiting at the White House. Ticket Broker Released. Denver.—A supersedeas was granted by Justice Luther M. Goddard of the Supreme Court Saturday, releasing I. C. Well, a Pueblo ticket broker, from jail. Well was fined $700 by Judge Dixon for violating the injunction by which the judge put a stop to the sale of scalpers' railway tickets in Colorado. District Attorney White of Pueblo, in his private capacity as lawyer, represented Well. He claimed that Judge Dixon made the order requiring Well to pay the fine while in Denver and outside his district. The Well case will come up in its regular order in the Supreme Court, and in the meantime the ticket broker will have his liberty. Debs Uses Strong Language. St. Louis.—Eugene V. Debs, former presidential candidate on the Socialist ticket, Sunday in a speech at Riverside park, caused a stir among the workingmen of St. Louis and Illinois when he advised all workingmen of the United States to assist in the freeing of Charles Moyer, W. D. Haywood, and George H. Pettibone, the three Denver miners confined in jail in Idaho, at any cost, even if it took a revolution to do so. "More than a million workingmen in the United States will rise up and demand that these men be liberated," said Debs. "I will be at the head of this million to assist in liberating them, by bloodshed, if necessary, but peaceably, if possible." OZONIZED UX MARROW SO STRAIGHTENS KINKY or CURLY HAIR that it can be put up in any style desired consistent with its least. The Ozonized Ox Marrow Co. (None genuine without my signature) Charles Ford Great 76 Wabash Ave., Chicago, Ill. Agents wanted everywhere. I. N. ROGERB. C. A. ROGERB. I.N. Rogers & Son. UNDERTAKERS & EMBALMERS 1531 Champa St Denver, Cola L. Rushenberg & Co. IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS IN MUSICAL MERCHANDISE. TELEPHONE OLIVE 923 RES. PHONE BLUE 2157 HIGH CLASS VIOLIN REPAIRING. 629 Fifteenth St. Suit 210, Upstairs. Denver. Colo. Is the best place for good Razors, Shears Pocket knives, Comba, Brushea, Pomades and all toilet articles at 1008 15th Street Telephone 842 Black THE BEST ICE CREAM AND CANDIES AT CATERERS and CONFECTIONERS. PHONE 168. 1512 Curtis St. Denver, Cola. SPENCER COLD CURE. Paulins cure for Colds, Grippe, Acute Catarrh, Headache, Neuralgia and Fever. MINING EXCHANGE PHARMACY. Tel 991 1020-26 15th St. hirst Parlors J. L. PENNINGTON, Prop. Fine Wines, Liquors & Cigars TELEPHONE 816 MAIN. 1745 Curtia St. Denver, Cola MISS M. COWDEN Hair Dressing Parlor. Shampoo, Cutting and Curling. Scalp treatment, hair tonics, Hair Straightening, Manicuring. Stage Wigs for reut—Theatrical use and Masquerades. Goods delivered out of the city. All shades of hair matched by sending a sample of hair; also combings made up. Cheapest Switches 50 cents PHONE 1797 OLIVE. 1219 21st. St. Denver, Cola Private Residence Sales a Specialty Regular Sales Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays. Furniture and bankrupt Stocks bought for cash or sold on commission. ILLVSTRATORS DESIGNERS HALF-TONE, ZING WOOD & COPPER PLATE ENGRAVEDS CORO WORK THE DENVER ENGRAVING CO. DENVER PHONE 782 1814-CURTIS STREET GOOD WORK ON TIME 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 2½ 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 Patron, send on your subscription and give it a fair trial at 75 cents per month for Daily and Sunday. UNION PACIFIC OVERLAND ROUTE 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 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 ‘Will not make you nervous. “Ask your dealer or The | ‘When we ask for good eggs we mean eggs that are good physically not mor- ally. Siu thal Be bic ceih ota nee eISeser eee Peesiee eerie seer ee peace Nee ener jority. Fall term opens August 21st. EET ert nee ae ee Fane ene yee ees eas Oeet act cub eee: Se aera Sir $22 6.0.0. vou taxe no ar eu —— ery setware 1g <TD een A (Tg fie teu hare : 7 ora ceaine MM We Pee eaieeice acumen as ee See: ARN eater Bae Acai ‘Send This Ad é PAS CE For our carpio Tulng Mach. x pager aussie BEES See Bes, JM WILSON STDEK SADREES BROWN PALACE HOTEL sr! paced Blass slanlana Woe AMERICAN HOUSE BISS"%o wits SPR Ateetei innty SA Moke! IB Oxford Hotel Dinero EGP WORSE geeered nil fe aual vn euren CENTRAL Glin lege) 306 Enterprise Block, Denver. Dr. D. C. MATTHEWS oe EXPERT PAINLESS ffx DENTIST fefgeBW\ An rst-class | guaran fey Ye (Pi ssicer Por nese ib aay a9 Denver, Colo,, 929 17th St. Muu nirte, Set an Rae Bee ee iia: IRRIGATION OUTFITS WIND MILLS, GASOLINE ENGINES, Scales,Feed Grinders, Supplies Manufactured and Sold Direct by Fairbanks, Morse & Co., Denver YOUNG MEN WANTED for the NAVY ‘ages 17 to 35, must be able bodied, of food character and American citizens, either native born or naturalized. Ap- ply to Navy Reerulting Office, room 22 Pioneer building, Denver, or room 416 Postofiice building, Pueblo, Colorado, seen daa GANGS ® ally ete, eat REE Tice oes HotTime in the Old Town Excursion to the F ti D CELEBRATION CHEYENNE, WYO. August 15 and 16, 1906 VIA ts Woman's Relay Race. .. Bucking and Pitching Contests. Indian Squaw Races. ‘Steer Roping Contests. ‘iid Horse Races. .» Dances Each Night. i Tickets on sale August 14th, 15th and 416th, good to return until August 20th. Algo very low rates Thursday, August 15th, return same date. For rates, schedules and full particu- lars, see small bills, or ask J. ©, FERGUSON, General Agent. ‘Nothing Succeeds Like “EGG-0-SEE,” The man who preaches the best ser- mon; the man who tells the funniest stories; the man who keeps the best Store; or the man who makes the best goods soon finds that people come to him. Merit is the best advertisement in the world. People speak well of things they know are good. They pass the good word along. The best breakfast food is EGG-O- SEE, for it contains all the life-giving properties of nature's best food, which is wheat. EGG-O-SEE ts deeply in debt to the thousands of wives and mothors who use it in their homes, for these good women tell their neighbors about this great food. Children and aged persons alike are friends of EGG-0-SEE. Merit and common sense are the things that advertise HGG-0-SEE most. EGG-O-SEB is cheap. A 10- cent package contains ten liberal breakfasts. EGG-O-SEB {s sold every- where. Grocers must keep it if they want to keep their good customers, for good customers insist on buying EGG-0-SER. The fact that no preparation, no cooking 1s required, makes EGG-O- SEE yery popular. Open the package; put as much as you like in a dish; pour on milk or cream and eat. It is delicious. It is wholesome. It makes you strong. A lot of interesting facts about EGG-O-SEH have been published in book form entitled, “Back to Nature.” This book also has a course of phys- ice! culture—tfully illustrated. Any- one wishing this book will receive it free by addressing HGG-O-SEE Com- pany, 10 First St., Quincy, Ill. No One Wanted Box 13. In no other western European coun- try is superstition so prevalent as in Austria-Hungary. Quite recently the chamberlain’s office changed the num- ber of box 18 in the Imperial opera house and the Imperial Court theater to 12a, because the public objected to sitting in a box bearing this unlucky number. None of the rich subscribers who takes a box for the year wanted No. 18, and for single performances it was just as hard to dispose of. ‘This superstition reaches its height in medicine. Speaking at the health exhibition, Dr. Heinrich Grun declared that in many instances superstition, and especially local superstition, was an absolute menace to public health. In the Austrian hospitals one finds no block or pavilion 13, no ward 13, no staircase 13. Very few patients will consent to be operated upon on the thirteenth day of the month, and in this respect Friday, too, is consid- ered just as unlucky. At Carlsbad, Marienbad, Gastein and other famous Austrian cure resorts nobody wants to begin his cure on a Friday. DO YOU REMEMBER— An anticipated calamity that actual- ly came? A sycophant who turned out to be a real friend? A bad man who was really as bad as he was reputed? An actor that wasn’t thoroughly de- lighted with himself An absconding cashier who wasn't “a trusted employe?” A man who went wrong who wasn’t “a highly-respectéd citizen?” A woman criminal who was not “beautiful and apparently refined?” A horse that could trot as fast as the man who sold him to you said he could? Anybody who achieved sinlessness before starting a fusillade of stones at others? A successful man who used up nine- tenths of his time telling what he was going to do next A prize fighter that went through the throes of the championship without becoming demoralied? DIDN’T BELIEVE ‘That Coffee Was the Real Trouble. Some people flounder around and take everything that’s recommended but finally find that coffee is the reai cause of their troubles. An Oregon man says: “For 25 years I was troubled with my stomach. I was a steady coffee drinker, but didn’t suspect that as the cause. I took almost anything which someone else had been cured with but to no good, I was very bad last summer and could not work at times. “On Dec. 2, 1902, I was taken so bad the doctor said I could not live over 24 hours at the most, and I made all preparations to die. I could hardly eat anything, everything dis- tressed me, and I was weak and sick all over. When in that condition cof- fee was abandoned and I was put on Postum, the change in my feelings came quickly after the drink that was poisoning me was removed. “The pain and sickness fell away from me and I began to get well day by day, so I stuck to it until now I am well and strong again, can eat heartily, with no headache, heart trouble or the awful sickuess of the old coffee days. I drink all I wish of Postum without any harm and enjoy it immensely. “This seems like a strong story, but I would refer you to the First Nat'l Bank, the Trust Banking Com- pany, or any merchant of Grant's Pass, Ore., in regard to my standing, and I will send a sworn statement of this if you wish. You can also use my name.” Name given by Postum Co.,. Battle Creek, Mich. Still there are many who persist- ently fool themselves by saying “Cof- fee don’t hurt me.” A ten days’ trial of Postum in its place will tell tho truth and many times save life. “There's a reason.” Look for the little book, “The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs. MORE GAME WARDENS. Special Wardens Will Be Appointed to Protect Birds. Denver.—In an_ open letter State Game and Fish Commissioner J. M. Woodard announces that farmers and others interested in the preservation of birds that live on insects may apply to him for commissions as special war- dens to serve without salary. ‘The special wardens, however, have under the law, the same powers as the deputy game wardens. An induce- ment for them to keep a sharp lookout for violators of the law lies in the statute which provides that they shall reecive one-third of the fines collected from offenders, and in addition to this they will be allowed mileage to and from the place whence the prisoners are conveyed, and regular warden’s fees. It is anticipated in the office of the game and fish commissioner that there will be numerous applications for com- missions. ‘The special wardens will re- ecive instructions to arrest any and ali persons who are found shooting such birds as quail, blackbirds, pheasant, lark or robin. The fine for killing these birds is heavy. During the last month over 200 hunting licenses have been fssued in the office of the chief commissioner at the state capitol and many hundreds more at the offices of the county clerks throughout the state. The open season for doves began July lst and ends August 15th. A thirty-day open season for sage hens also began on the ist. ‘There are five chiet deputy game and fish commissioners in the state and ten deputies, all under salary. Mr. Woodard says that this force cannot cover the entire state, and go he will call for special wardens to protect the birds and animals of the type that is being killed out of season. W. F. Kendrick, owner of large ranches, who has raised hundreds of pheasants at his yards at 103 South Corona street, called at the office of the state game and fish commissioner recently and made complaint that many persons have been in the habit of shooting pheasants and other pro- tected birds from the various roads in the state. As a fancier of pheasants, Mr, Kendrick has placed numbers of the birds at his own expense upon va- rious farms, and ranches in Colorado but in many instances they have been killed off by pot hunters. Mr. Ken- drick raises the imported golden pheasant, the ring necks, the silver and the Reeves. He also raises the quail and the partridge, and this year will spend more than $1,000 for new pheasants. He says that if the pheasants are left alone by the hunters it will not be long before they will have increased so that it will be possible for the Leg- islature to declare an open season on them. Within a radius of twenty-five miles of Denver, he says, there may be found at least 1,000 ring-neck pheas- ants, the progeny of birds placed out by himself and the late Senator B. 0. Wolcott. In the state of Oregon is an open season of ten days per year on pheas- ants. The pheasants will clear a field of mice and will consume ali the larvae from wheat and barley. It 1s probably the most valuable of insect birds, says Mr. Kendrick. GREELEY ELECTRIC. Line to Crow Greek Seems to Be As. auredls Denyer.—A Republican special from Greeley Tuesday night says: Greeley business men and farmers are confi- dent that within a year an electric rail- road will be running between this city and the Crow creek district. Last night a large number of repre- sentative business men, wealthy farm- ers and stock raisers gathered here to meet J. I. Webb, a St. Louls banker and financier, who is interested in the project of providing Greeley with an electric road to Denver and into the fertile Crow creek country east of here. The meeting was enthusiastic and Mr. Webb was assured that should the road be built, the farmers and busi- ness men would lend their influence to it and patronize it to the fullest ex- tent, Last winter J. D. Houseman came to Greeley from St. Louis to look over this country, He saw its great future and saw also that an electric road to carry freight and passengers was need- ed by the outlying districts. Mr. House- man had lived in St. Louis fifteen years, where he has been fdentified with promoting successful electric roads throughout Missourl, one of which in St. Louis bears his name. This spring Houseman brought his family to Greeley and began working on the proposition of giving Greeley an electric road. Since last April he has had men at work surveying a route from Greeley to Crow creek and from Greeley to Denver. The surveys are now completed and the project is veady to be financed. Webb has financed several electric roads in Mis- souri and stands ready to undertake the Greeley proposition in case he is satisfied that this sectlon has re- sources enough to warrant the building of such a road. To-day Mr. Webb visited Pleasant valley and the Crow creek region and was greatly pleased with the outlook. He was impressed with the statements farmers made to him that the great problem which now confronted them was in getting their crops of beets, potatoes and grain to market and that they believed the solution of the ques- Won would be found in the establish- ment of an electric road in the farming districts. Mr. Webb also drove through the country from here to Den- yer and noted its needs. He is fa- miliar with all sections of the middle West and the West and says that the farming district in the vicinity of Greeley is among the best, if not the best he has seen. Mr. Webb has unlim- ited capital at his disposal to further the report which he favors. ‘The road from Greeley to Crow creek, twenty miles, will be built first, and it is believed that it will be ready to carry next year’s crops to market. aE ip TO RE SEF EE EES Been ; DSS) Ly D 8 § Cri DB : Lf G CG yi Ali, UFiSp, BFESSY } ENCORE ; eee? ee ummer USS Gere Bs | $a is iB i : ; are a delight to the refined woman every- : a where. In order to get this result see fa 4 that the material is good, that it is cut in fs i the latest fashion and use ; : 2 ‘ arg WN wa . Wh 1A) H NS in the laundry. All three things are im- * Af q ortant, but the last is absolutely neces- JN | |\\Qg P . ry. a sary. No matter how fine the material Ce \j or how daintily made, bad starch and ; ’ ) )\ \ #) poor laundry work will spoil the effect if \ and ruin the ‘clothes, DEFIANCE , WY \\ f STARCH is pure, will not rot the clothes y ' # nor cause them to crack. It sells at roc W) A a sixteen ounce package everywhere, Y | \ Other starches, much inferior, sell at roc in for twelve ounce package. Insist on ‘ie Se) getting DEFIANCE STARCH and be KY; op sure of results. NS \ AEN ANN ANY feo) 2 aes Sj Y ae GS aia) eriance arG GI SBP Gh Ew ae PME oS ompany, RNY ~~ Omaha, Nebrask The food which contains in itself every element necessary, in right Begportions, properly porceares by a physician and chemist ec makes the perfect food for man, is Persons whose diet is composed of most wholesome foods are com- pativall free from disease and are active-mentally and physically, ir. Price's Food being made from the whole grain of the wheat, if eaten daily, disposes to keep the bowels regular. Palatable—Nutritious—Easy of Digestion and Ready to Eat Can be served hot. Put In a hot oven for avew minutos; or cook In boiling milk to a mush. A Oc a packages For sate by | %y stsnature ®, Auayneuinment Grocers |" package 2.6. Sricet Dee ene Rete srt, the creator of Dr, Price's Cream ating Fewer, Delicious Flavoring Extracts, Ice Cream’ Sugar and Jelly Desserts, has never been compelled, weer hamalae stenteha Pose inett to chaste doy of hie"progucte, “They have aiwayé Eeaformed to their requirements, This is an absolute guarantee of their quality and purity, ‘Harriman Recents Overcharge. E. H. Harriman sent his $10,000 automobile to a repair shop in New York city in January, and when he got a bill for $1,797, refused to pay it, The owner of the repair shop re- fused to surrender the vehicle and Mr, Harriman proceeded to recover It by a writ of replevin. The men who are trying to collect this large sum will now have to sue for their money, Mr. Harriman evidently believes that the charge was made in accordance with his supposed ability to pay. Starch, like everything else, is be- ing constantly improved, the patent Starches put on the market 25 years ago are Very different and inferior to those of the present day. In the lat- est discovery—Defiance Starch—all in- furlous chemicals are omitted, while the addition of another ingredient, in- vented by us, gives to the Starch & strength and smoothness never ap- proached by other brands. Scotch Welcome Automobilists. Motor car reliability trials were held in Scotland recently, and the drivers Were astounded at their re- ception along the route. In every town and village the women and chil- dren lined the roadside and shouted enthwilastic welcomes. Sprays of lilac and other flowers were thrown inte the cars as they passed, and in- vitations to stop were given. International Cyclopedia. The medical faculty of the Paris university plans an international tech- nological encyclopedia. It is to be issued in ten languages, inciuding “speranto,” the world language. Rapid Increase in Population. In eight years the population ot Osaka, Japan, has increased from $11,800 to over 1,026,000. ‘The number of factories has increased by 991. A friend in need usually needs alt be can squeeze out of you. ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE 9. yes. Fist A Certain Cure for Tired, Hot, Aching Feat. aes Olmede DO NOT ACCEPT A SUBSTITUTE. on every box. Le Roy, N. Yo English Language in Antwerp. Nearly one-half of the shipping trat- fic to and from Antwerp is carried on under the British and American flags, and this has made Antwerp almost an English-speaking port. Free night schools for exclusive classes in Eng- lish, organized by the city anthori- ties, are attended by thousands of pupils, while special: attention {s paid to the study of English in all the grades of the day schools, public as well as private. This desire to pop- wlarize the English language {s not confined to Belgium, but has extended | to Germany as well, where schools of instruction have already been estab- Ushed at Munich and Nuremberg by the German government. Visits European Military Schools” Col. Charles P. Echols, of West Point, who has been on the continent visiting military schools, 1s now In England on the same mission. ‘The people who believe most strongly in luck are those who never have any. Eee >, - DODDS." ZEKEDNEY 2 1G PILLS <5 UR a ne ae eer, RSS ga SaaS ee OR IO, Sine eeey”, Sheer white goods, in fact, any fine wash goods when new, owe much of their attractiveness to the way they are laundered, this being done in a manner to enhance their textile beau- ty. Home laundering would be equal- ly satisfactory if proper attention was given to starching, the first essential being good Starch, which has sufficient strength to stiffen, without thickening the goods. Try Deflance Starch and yon will be pleasantly surprised at the improved appearance of your work. Boys will be boys, especially the gay old ones who have passed 60. For chitren werttng, nattenn the paren retest ‘amination, allays pals, cures wind coll." Ssca bottle. To sneer at success is the preroga- tive of failure. , EDUCATIONAL, The Greatest Boaraing College in the World University of Notre Dame NOTRE DAME, INDIANA re pieate Bie poles ion aes 18 Buildings 75 Professors 800 Students ea hata and Sesrmotons Ghesanttia wisleeey Sacre Gi mecyae gist epee oe La eee ‘TERMS: Board, Tuition, and Laundry, $400. Fee ee aera tee PATENT ATTORNEYS. DATEN T @ Trade Marks, De PATENTS UMalerecured: teats cer Ra eo “WN. U., DENVER, NO. 31, 1906. You Cannor all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con- ditions of the mucous membrane such as nasalcatarrh,uterinecatarrh caused by feminine ‘ills, sore throat, sore mouth or inflamed eyes by simply dosing the stomach. But you surely can cure these stubborn affections by local treatment with Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic which destroys the disease germs,checks discharges, stops pain, and heals the inflammation and soreness, Paxtine represents the most successful local treatment for feminine ills ever produced. ‘Thousands of women testify to this fact. 50 cents at druggists. Send for Free Trial Box ‘THE R. PAXTON CO., Boston, Mase, JOHN W. MORRIS ENSION wimirion be Successfully Prosccutes Cloimas Late Principal Examiner U.S. Pension Bares WINTER. Wheat, 60 bushels peracra, Cxtsloute end sainpies PMNE: alter Seed Caer W:k-LaCrowe, as aver ecioka to the jou DEFIANCE STARCH Of Aid to the Hostess NOTES ON THE FASHIONS SUGGESTIONS FOR NOVEL AND PLEASING ENTERTAINMENTS. Lawn and Porch Parties Pleasing Di- versions and Now Very Season- ablo—An Apron Shower— A Recipe Book. ‘A? Wloval Gete: Lawn and porch parties are now in season, and nothing is more enjoyable in the way of affairs for children; the ideas given here are also applicable to grown people. The hours most fa- vored are from three until six; and the refreshments served are ample to take the place of the evening meal, The invitations to a recent party were decorated with tiny blossoms scattered all over the page “Dresden” style, and requested each little guest to appear in costume representing a flower or to wear something indicative of a favor- {te blossom. In olden times it was considered lucky to wear one’s birth flower. If it was not obtainable fresh, the dried petals were sewed into a tiny silken bag and worn around the neck as a charm against evil spirits. Here is a list of the month flowers taken from an old English calendar: January—Snowdrop. Fe>ruary—Primrose. March—Violet. April—Daisy. May—Hawthorne. June—Rose. July—Poppy. Axgust—Water Illy. September—Morning glory. Occober—Hop vine. November—Chrysanthemum, December—Holly. Bach child received a spray of her own special flower, either real or arti- ficial, in the form of wreaths for the girls and boutonieres for the lads, After some lively dancing and march- ing to tne music of a street piano hired for the occasion, the children were gatherea on the verandah to guess “floral conundrums.” Various articles had been scattered about, each bearing a number; cards having corresponding numbers were given out with pencils, and each child was to try to think what flcwers the objects suggested. An Apron Shower, An “apron” shower given for a bride- elect proved to be a most enjoyable affair, and the little bride-to-be was so delighted with her supply of aprons that Madame Merri hopes that such sensible “showers” may fall upon many a “maiden fair.” ‘The hostess asked each guest to bring material for any kind of an apron, with their thimbles; the hours were trom two until five. On arriving, the girls were taken up stairs into a spacious room, which contained two sewing machines. There were two kitchen aprons; two of dainty white, made long to cover the best gown while preparing “Sunday night tea;” two work aprons with bibs and pock- ets; three of lawn, trimmed with ruf- fles and lace for serving “afternoon tea,” and one with sleeves, Amid mer- ry chatter and exchange of confidences so dear to girlish hearts, the hum of the machines and flying fingers, the hours passed so rapidly that when the hostess called “time” as the clock struck five it was impossible to realize that ten aprons had been made and piled into a basket made by a Hollanc peasant, and which henceforth was to be a market receptacle for the new housekeeper. A maid brought in a tray containing a plate of toasted crackers with glasses of iced chocolate, and tea for those who preferred it. A plate of ma- ple fudge (the usual aceompaniment to girls’ affairs) had been in cireula- tion during the afternoon; also a dish of salted “Jumbe” peanuts. Speaking about “showers” and “brides” reminds me of a recipe book that was brought in on a tray as the last course ef a luncheon given for a recent bride. This book was pur- chased already illustrated by pictures Skirts of the Day—Foulards in Style in Spite of Assertions to the Contrary, So much depends upon the individ- ual wearer of clothes as to how skirts should be made and lined. A tall, slender woman should wear an entire- ly different style of skirt from a stout woman, and yet the same model will do for both. It all depends upon how the skirt 1s hung and trimmed. For- tunately for the stout woman, fashion is now permitting and in fact com- manding there shall be more fullness at the back, and that it shall be gath- ered into a small space. And while the extra fullness has been banished from the hip, there must be enough material to prevent the strained, scant appearance that Is so exceedingly un- becoming and makes the stout woman look so much stouter. India silks and foulards have al- ways been most charming materials for summer wear, and that is one rea- son probably why they are always fashionable. They are economical gowns, too, for they wear well and ean 80 easily be frestened up with new yokes and trimmings. This year they are exceedingly smart, although it has been positively stated many times they are out of fashion. The more vivid colorings are the best to choose and ‘the plain rather than the figured. Trimmings of the same color of the new housekeeper at her various occupations. There was ample space under each picture for the recipes which were contributed by the guests. ‘They were sent to the hostess some days before the luncheon, and she had them put in the book by an expert “letterer;” then each contributor signed her own name. As far as pos- sible favorite dishes of the bride had been selected, and she said in her far away western home she was sure th> baok would bring to her more comfort and “home” thoughts than anything that could have been given her. MADAME MERRL A LITTLE BATHING DRESS. Knickers and Bodice Are Cut in One —Materinl Used May Be Drill, Serge or a Twill. For a garment of this description serge, holland, drill or red twill should be used. The knickers and bodice are cut in one like combinations. ‘The neck turns back with a sailor collar bound with striped material cut on the cross. The sleeves are also bound. A knot of ribbon finishes the (ae SF re ih | f [ iN os collar infront. The knickers are drawn in at the knees Dy means of elastic, which is threaded in the hems. The short circular skirt is bound with striped material, and the waist is set into a pointed band of the same. Materials requirec: ‘Three and one- half yards 46 inches wide, one yard striped material 28 inches wide. HOSIERY AND FOOTWEAR. Even the Most Conventional Women Are Taking to Light Stockings and Colored Shoes. Light stockings seem a little sporty to the uninitiated, yet it is a fact that women are gradually getting used to them, and even the most conservative are turning toward them, Ladies who have not ventured out for years in other than black hose are now invest- ing liberally in gray silk, gray cotton and gray lisle, and are buying shoes to match. ‘The feet look exceedingly neat encased in these gray shoes and stock- Ings; they seem somehow to be a part of the costume, which Is, of course, all gray. The pointed toe is again in style, and the dull finish is very much sought after this year. Wail Pawdan Formula for nail powder: One- half ounce of violet taleum powder, one-half ounce of pylverized boric acid, one-half ounce of powdered starch, 15 drops of tincture of carmine. Ap- ply first a little nail rouge, then put on the powder and polish with a chamois skin buffer. Only a slight rosy glow is necessary. in braid, lace or taffeta silk, but al- ways with some lace or lingerie on the ecru shade about the throat and the front of the waist, are charmingly harmonious and becoming, Pongee comes in also under this heading, but, as a rule, pongee is made up more on the coat and skirt style, while these others are included in the list of, so to speak, eligible materials for these most useful summer afternoon gowns. The Vital Air. Whatever you do, whatever special exercises you indulge in, never neg- lect your lungs; begin all your work with some good breathing exercises and end with several—so may purl- fied blood be sent to the parts exer- cised and you will increase in strength, health and endurance, increasing your length of days as well as the com- fort and happiness of your life. Breathe deeply and often, but of pure air; if you cannot go out into the air, then let your windows be open and the air will come to you. Flood your house with this precious, free to all fountain of youtlr, health, vigor and life itself. Same Color as the Skirt. Next to the one-piece costume which is most popular, there is the blouse, which harmonizes or matches the color of the skirt. So 4 » GARMENT.STORE Zhan eS omni Lada hoot a * During the month of August every summer garment must be sold. Prices in many cases are now one-half of for- mer regular prices . A good time to buy in a few more WAISTS, SKIRTS AND PETTICOATS, to help you through the season. We can not use space enough to quote prices, but here is the way reduetions are made. Waists will be from one-third to one-half off former prices. Skirts will be from one-fourth to one-half off former prices. Petticoats will be one-fourth off former prices. White: Suits will be one-third off former prices, Suits will be one-third off former prices. Cloth Jackets will be one-third off former prices. Cloth Coats will be one-third off former prices. Rain Coats will be one-third off former prices. Silk Coats will be one-third off former prices. Knit Underwear will be one-third off former prices. Ladies’ Hose will be one-third off former prices. Dressing Sacks will be one-third off former prices. Don’t miss this sale. Come and get some of the bar- gains. SILVERSMITH & HILLER 925 16th Street, Opposite Joslin’s Zs | flitih Jett Ite TIE TIT OI Finest hand work in the city. —eEEEEEEE———————— Sis SS COTTRELL’S PHARMACY, DR. W. J. COTTRELL, Prop. A Complete Line of Drugs and all Kinds of Tolet Articles, Statlonery, Ete. + « SODA FOUNTAIN IN CONNECTION . . ce ee Oe ee +. ICE CREAM AND ICES SERVED.. PHONE 9230 MAIN. 2100 Arapahoe Street. Denver, Colo WAIT A MINUTE! Where are you going? Anywhere on the Coast? To California? To Salt Lake? How do you Travel? First-class, of course, You like beautiful scenery, luxury, elegant meals on dining cars and all modern conveniences, dou't you? We relieve you of all fuss and feathers, regarding resorts, itinerary and the like. Ask or write Cae) * foes 17th and Californa Streets, Gal ulenting D Col icy enver, Colo, Sarna a C—O Denver’s Favorite Pleasure Resort. Whist, Pool, Chess, Checker and other pastime games, PHONE 2275 MAIN, 1859 Champa St. Denver, Colo a E it . CHARLATAN FLEECED DUPES 'N ALL PARTS OF COUNTRY. Large Fortune Garnered from the Credulous in Three Years—Love Powders and Magic Breast- plates in Demand. Nearly 200 witnesses, representing 37 states, appeared in the United States district court at Baltimore to testify for the government at the trial of “Dr.” Theodore White, charged with using the mails to defraud. There were present 17 pretty typewriters, who were kept busy by “Dr.” White in conducting the correspondence inci: dent to the immense business he had established concocting love powders, manufacturing magic breastplates and dispensing diplomas conferring the degree of Ph. D. on the graduates, who had established their title to that degree by paying for “Dr.” White's book, “Blessings For All Mankind.” ‘The tables in the court room were covered with exhibits, a panful of the love powder and some specimens of the breastplates being displayed there. Assistant District Attorney Soper made the opening statement to the jury. He said that “Dr.” White's spiritualistic and hypnotic mail order business had attained such propor. tions that his postage bill amounted to $1,000 a month, and that he had been obliged to purchase a horse and wagon to take his mail from the post office. Mr. Soper said that “Dr.” White had made a fortune during the three years he spent in the business. “You may get some idea of the magnitude of it,” said Mr. Soper, “when I tell you that in one month 2,400 people, from Maine to California, each sent this man a dollar and a lock of hair in order to obtain a ‘life reading.” And every reading was identical. The same reading was sent to every per son who sent a dollar, and a husband and his wife both of whom sent to ‘Dr.’ White for readings, were yery much disgusted when they each re ceived the same reading.” | Among the spiritualistic “stunts’ described in one of the pamphlets read by Mr. Soper was the following: “Place an egg before the fire and watch it without moving or uttering sound until nightfall. Then the egg will sweat blood, and when the spooky words ‘Abra cadabra’ are uttered a tempest will rise, and all the evil spir its which were ever heard of since the world Legan will appear.” The “Adam and Eve” charm was the one used to create love. Adam and Eve were represented by roots —Adam was one root and Eve wps the other. Mr. Soper read the directions for their use to the jury. The roots should be placed in running water, he said, and the words “Whom God hath Joined together let no man put asun: der” should be recited over them. Mr. Soper also, described the “an cient Egyptian breastplate,” contain: ing the powders and prayers, and charged with “magic solar fluid.” ‘Traits of Norway’s Queen, In a sketch of the new queen of Norway it is said that she is probably the slimmest woman in her dominion. Her waist measures but 17 inches and she is so ethereal in appearance that even in England, where the cult of thinness has as worshipers practical ly all the women of the kingdom and most of the men, she {s called rather too frail and delicate in appearance, Queen Maud was the tomboy member of King Edward's family. She was the baby of the family and its bright est member as well. It was she wha first nicknamed her brother, the late duke of Clarence, Collars and Gufts, a name which clung to him through life. She called her eldest sister, the duchess of Fife, now called the prin. cess royal, her royal Shyness, on ae- count of that retiring lady's almost morbid dislike of appearing in public, And it’ was this merry princess whe collected all the quoted sayings and doings of the royal family in a scrap. bool. and labeled it “Things We Never Did or Said.” ‘Wise Girl. Now, there was a certain girl, and she had three wooers. The first wooer said she was the whole world to him, but she frowned upon his suit. The second wooer said she was the sun, moon and star’ to him, but she bade him be on his way. “To me,” said the third, “you are @ young woman of agreeable man ners, with eyes that might be a lit tle bluer, with a nose that is a wee bit puggy, and with a few freckles, and an annoying habit of blurting out your thoughts.” She married the third wooer, Be. ing pressed for an explanation of her conduct, she said: “My goodness! I think I was sensible. I married the only one that had courage enough to tell me of my faults before marriage, instead of waiting to throw them up to me afterward.”—Life. —_____ Distinctly Flicihia He came hurriedly from the parlor to the piazza, “Who was that handsome young man who just left?” he asked. ‘The fair girl smiled and blushed. “That was Harry Parker, pa,” she said. “He has just proposed to me, and he tells me that his income {s $15,000 a year.” “Fifteen thousand a year at his ge? Great Scott, what is he? A learned lawyer, an eloquent divine?” said the old man, “No, father,” she answered, “He {g & professional baseball player.” DO YOU KNOW THAT The Colorado Statesman Is Now Prepared To Do All Kinds of Job Printing? Commereial, Fraternal. Chureh, Book and Stationery Jebs a Specialty a OpCceiailY | BALL AND CON. : CERT ' PROGRAMS, BILL AND LETTER HEADS, ; CALLING CARDS, WEDDING / CARDS, : | ENVELOPES | AND : ; EVERYTHING IN THE | PRINTING LINE : | TURNED OUT | IN : _ NEATEST STYLE : | PROMPTLY ON ‘ SHORT NOTICE. : We have supplied our office with job : press and type of : up-toedate style and : our work will be; on a par with the : Very Best: —— | Give Us a Trial ; and We will Give You : Satisfaction ‘ = PRICES AS REASONABLE AS 7 THOSE OF ANY JOB OFFICE 7 IN DENVER. 1824 CURTIS ed ROOM 25. 141444444444,