Colorado Statesman
Saturday, June 15, 1907
Denver, Colorado
Page text (machine-generated)
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
THE JOURNAL OF THE WEST.
LABOR SHALL BE FREE
RACE COUNTRY PARTY
WashingtonD.C.
The Race Question is the Most Popular Problem Before the American People. Its Discussion in Pulpit, Press and Platform Growing More Vigorous.
VOL. XIII,
Washing
The Race Question is the Most Po-
people. Its Discussion in
Growing Mo
Special to Colorado Statesman:
If any one had been disposed to
believe that the race question in
America was taking up considerably
less of the public time than formerly, events and opinions, as expressed in leading magazines and
in the debates and addresses of important conventions since the year
1907 was ushed in, must thoroughly have convinced him of his error.
Not only is the question just as prominent as ever but in some directions there are evidences of an awakening desire to at least seem to consider it with a tolerable kind of fairness, which should be abundant proof of its vigorous life, no less than a sign of its being advanced a degree or two on the docket of thought and opinion. Among the magazine articles which are particularly luminous and generally fair, are those of Mr. Ray Stannard Baker in recent issues of the American on "The Color Line"
These articles show a quite genuine desire to get at the truth at first hand. They show the real genesis of the Atlanta riots—the pressure and irritating influence of a vicious and unscrupulous news agency upon a depraved and prejudiced rabble. They show how largely the inoffensive, the dilligent and self-respecting, the intelligent and the thrifty Negro, exceeds, both in numbers and influence, those who are shiftless and discreditable.
The subject matter is strongly emphasized by photographic cuts of persons, homes and places of worship and business, which speak eloquently of high ideals in all those things which make life a benediction and the future a pleasurable anticipation.
Incidents expressive of the prejudice entertained against Negroes of all classes are frequently given and the admission is solemnly recorded, that the best class of whites deplored the same and through their committee, delegated to talk over the situation with a number of representative Negroes, said to the world that their prejudices were both foolish and unreasonable.
The fact that any number of white persons in a southern locality so far suppressed their inclinations and ignored their traditions is a most hopeful sign and a powerful argument in favor of the belief, that the question of race has in no sense lost its interest for the American people.
Among the eclesiastic utterances
---
of the period of which we now write, there is one which is most interesting and must be of much weight and influence.
Bishop H. V. Satterlee of the Episcopal diocese of Washington in a recent address to the convention of that denomination, has given voice to opinions which are both helpful and conflicting. The Bishop recognizes and approves the high ground advocated by the Apostles of the church in dealing with the barbarous Goths and Vandals; Lombards and Huns; Danes and Norsemen who flooded central and southern Europe, and says if the church is faithful to her mission, it will do as it has done to the end of time. He says further, "It is true that the early church never came into contact with the Negro and that she had to do with much stronger races of men, but that this is no excuse for inactivity in America and that all historic lessons point the other way and if it is true that the church has helped these other races in former times it should certainly help this weaker race and make it morally strong."
In this sweeping and manly generalization, the Bishop recognizes and subscribes to the doctrine of the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man which is most noble and generous, for in the days of the races whom we have just named it was the individual condition and worth of manhood which suggested and controlled his civic and social status. The races then were not segregated and legislated for separately in church and state as now. Thus in consideration of the Negro question, in its relation to the church, does the Bishop and other modern day eclesiasts prove themselves inconsistent and heretic from the faith and action of the early church.
The Bishop is duly mindful of the seriousness of the problem with which the church is confronted and says that if she is paralyzed with the consciousness of the political and social obstacles with which she will have to contend, she is no true descendent of the Apostolic church.
Stripped of all superfluous verbiage, the Bishop simply reaffirms the usual attitude, that the church probably feels itself too superior and consequently is so narrow that it will not permit itself to take the Negro by the hand in all true kindliness, and in the spirit
DENVER, COLORADO, SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1907.
of the Christ himself, who hesitated not to lift the poor and despised of mankind into the most perfect and harmonious relationship with himself.
The Bishop subscribes to the Thomas Nelson Page idea on this subject, which is indicated by the following "What we have to do is to stop interference with the natural operation of natural laws and leave each section to settle the question as suits itself."
It is not difficult to realize and appreciate the kind of settlement we should have from that direction and therewith the Bishop is thoroughly inconsistent for he would seem to advocate an adjustable standard or sort of sliding scale of church ethics which might be regulated by the latitude of the location.
After all it is not a question of religion, so much as it is one of broad and deep humanity—the ability to recognize and appreciate the fact that all humanity wherever found are equally the involuntary and mysterious expression of an Omnipotence, "Who, of one blood has made mankind to dwell together upon the face of the earth."
The clergy of whatever denomination, are sadly lacking in them most beautiful, as well as the most essential element in the character of that Divine Teacher, that Man of Sorrow, that loving Elder Brother, who do not feel impelled to extend an equal fullness of opportunity for the soul and body growth of all the sons of men.
The want of this vital, humanizing, christianizing force was cruelly shown in an incident witnessed by the writer a few days ago.
A crowded car, speeding department folks to office, took on an old colored washerwoman with her basket on her arm. When just within the door, the grip was loosed and the car leaped away so suddenly, that the old woman staggered forward halfway its length, and fell to her knees. White women and men seated on either side gazed with stolid faces and in some instances were so inhuman as to sniker, but none advanced to help her rise and she regained her feet with difficulty unassisted.
Has it not been written that "In asmuch as ye have done it unto one of these little ones, ye have done it unto me."
May we not, too, believe that the poor black washerwoman was also included in this tender pleading.
JOHN H. PAYNTER.
RACE LOSING ITS GRIP
For the past ten or fifteen years our race has not made much progress. We may not believe this, but few of our great race leaders have studied the question. We
must face oppositions on every side. The white race is working for its own welfare. We as a race are too independent. We must place value on ourselves and gradually work higher. The last few years we have failed to gain in population above the whites. Immigrants are taking the labor from us. One reason is that they can afford to work cheaper. The working class that comes from foreign countries are usually of a low degrading class. Friends, we need patience. It takes a great deal of patience to succeed. Look back to the days of our forefathers. We have no trials that are worthy to be compared to theirs. Our days are all sunshine compared to theirs. Just think of the bloody lashes. The majority of our people do not plan ahead and save for rainy days. Money burns in their pockets. It does seem true that some people think it comes easy, therefore go easy. One thing hurts some of our people when they get very fair positions. They get what is commonly called the big head. The sooner we stop trying to hide our faults, the sooner we will become aware of our weakness. Then, and then only is the time that we will begin to press onward and upward. Our race lacks a great deal in this one point.
They who have money like to have it known. They will scheme in all ways that are possible to tell it, show it, and tell how they got it. We are weak because we are not patient, nor bold and frank enough in business. Money is the root of all evil. Remember we are not the only race who have to overcome difficulties. Let this be the means of strengthening us.—Columbus World.
TOO LOUD AS A RACE
We, as a race, are not aware of the fact as we go about our daily routine we are noticed by that class which is above us. They discover our weak points, and from these we are judged. There is too much quarreling done over petty things. It is not the point that we quarrel more than those above us, but we are too loud, everything we do is made public. The higher class keep these things to themselves. We are below them, therefore we can not do and act as they. But we ought to grasp every opportunity in immitating them in those acts which are uplifting. Let us learn the true use of our money and how to carry on business. Let us learn to put ourselves on level with our means, live for something else besides fine clothes, houses, etc. These are only temporary things. We have something far higher than this to live for. Let us live for the betterment of the race. Finery does not make the
person. But a noble character, good reputation adds more than these. Let us work together, helping one another, lifting humanity and furthering God's cause.—Ex.
BE DECENT
Young man, why don't you be decent? Why not grow to manhood with honor and credit instead of a stain upon your character? It is just as easy. It is always easier to be a man than to be a rowdy. Cigaretts and gambling and whiskey have had many a wrestle with boys long before you came on the scene, and they have never yet been thrown. Don't get the idea into your head that you can turn the trick. If you don't want to be decent for yourself be decent out of respect for mother and father and others. There is one heart whose sorrows should appeal to you. There is one who has to bear the cross for your foolishness. You don't want your trail through this world stained with a mothers tears. The boy who turns a brazen face to a mothers grief never gets very far on the road to happiness. When he gets a little older you find his name on the police docket of various cities. A little later the dark shadows of stone walls loom up across his pathway.
Without honor, home or friends 'tis a sad picture, but it is painted every day in every town in this broad land. The pathway of the transgressor is one of rocks and thorns. When you bruise your feet the world will laugh at you, just as you laughed at your mother's appeals. There is only one system for a boy to follow. Be decent. It always pays dividends.—Ex.
WHITE RAPISTS
White Sulphur Springs, W. Va. May. 27.—Last night, near Marlington, two unidentified men held up an eloping couple from Marlinton, and after tying the man, Martin Gladwell, to a tree, assaulted the prospective bride. Miss Mary Bird, aged 18, daughter of a hotelkeeper at Marlinton. She is in a critical condition today.
There had been no objection to their marriage, except on account of age, but the young couple decided that parental objections should not count, and started with a horse and buggy for Lewisburg, county seat of the adjoining county, to secure the necessary license and be married. They had proceeded only a few miles when their horse was stopped by two men. One unhitched the horse while the other held the occupants of the buggy.
Supposing that their attempt at elopement had been discovered,
NO. 38.
and that nothing more serious than their return home would result, they offered no resistance. But after the horse had been removed from the harness, the men quickly tied Gladwell to a tree. Leaving the man gagged and helpless, they took the girl into the woods near the scene of the hold-up. After several hours of hard work Gladwell managed to loosen his hands and escape. He saw no signs of Miss Bird or her captors, and hastened back to Marlinton, although the crowd at first were determined to lynch them, but cooler counsel prevailed.
Miss Bird had to be carried to Marlinton, and her condition is serious. It is feared that the excitement of the night and the cruelties to which she was subjected may drive her into insanity. This is the second crime of the same nature which has occurred in the same section within a year, the former one having been committed at Ronceverte about a year ago.
RACE NEWS
Gathered from Various Sources.
A national bank for Negroes will be organized at Toledo, Ohio, with Toledo, New York, Cleveland and Washington capital. It will be the first Negro bank North of the Mason and Dixon line.
"The Wife of His Youth," the novel by C. W. Chestnut, the Negro novelist, has been dramatized and was presented at Oakland Music hall, Chicago, April 30, by a Negro company.
Harry Cummings, colored, was elected councilman at Baltimore, Md., in the district where the late Hiram Watty, white, was defeated at the last election by a Democrat. Mr. Cummings was elected by the largest vote of any Republican on the ticket.
Hillsboro, Ill., June 1.—A labor war is on in this city. E. E. Frey, who has the contract for paving the streets, is bound to complete the work in a stated time. Owing to the numerous rains the work has been very much delayed. A few days ago Frey enlisted all the laborers he could find in Hillsboro, and even then Frey was unable to secure sufficient men. He imported a number of Negroes from St. Louis. This infuriated the Hillsboro, laborers to such an extent that dire threats were made against the Negroes if they persisted in continuing work. Nineteen of the Negroes accepted the threats and quit work, returning to St. Louis. The remaining force of Negroes are still at work and there is grave fear of violence
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PACIFIC FLEET INADEQUATE
Naval Department Admits War with
| Japan Would Mean Loss of
: 'Hawall, Alaska and Gua:
rawa, oe ne
St. Louls.—“Japan intends bringing
about war with the United States at
the earliest possible moment,” js the
exact phrase used by Richmond P.
Hobson in an interview here, Mr.
Hobson is en route to. southwestern
cities to deliver a series of Rates
“Japanese officers are teaching 1ill-
tary science in important schools in
China, and under thelr guidance China
is founding arsenals and raising a:nles
in ecah of her provinces,” he gaid. “It
is natural for the Asiatic people, now
that they are on the theater of the
world, to believe the white and yellow
races are to have a Titanie strugsle
for supremacy. The contest naturally
will include a struggle for commerce,
and Japen wishes to control the great
market of China and have: the yellow
races control the commerce of the
Pacific.
“Because of our having neglected to
fortify our Pacific possessions, and
failed to build an adequate navy.
Japan could take our possessions cast-
ward without material resistance.
Therefore, it is important for the pco-
ple to realize that the Japanese gov-
ernment intends to bring. about war
with the United States at the earliest
possible moment.
“Not wishing to fly in the face of the
world’s opinion, Japan must create a
plausible pretext for war, and no mat-
ter how trifling it will be seized upon
for this purpose.”
Hobson believes the United States
should station its entire maval force
near Hawaii and the Philippines. He
Says permanent peace can be estab:
lishcd with Japan only by building a
greater navy.
Washington. — The So
is in a sad state of perplexity regard-
ing the naval situation on the Pacific
coast and in the Far East. The strate-
gists of the Navy Department are di-
vided on the important question of
whether or not additional warships
should be ordered to Pacific waters.
It is conceded that some battleships
are badly needed in that quarter and
the only reason they are not dis:
patched at once is the fear that sitch
action will have a disastrous Influence
on the Japanese question. While there
is nothing in the present relations be-
tween the two nations that threatens
to become a casus belli, there is ak
ways the possibility of a crisis being
precipitated by a hasty or imprudent
act inflaming the people of one coun-
ttry or the other.
Army and navy officers haye figured
on the possibility of what would hap-
pen in the event of war. Practically
all of them concede that at the first
blow the Phillipines would fall into
the hands of the Japanese, which
would be followed by the losing of
Guam, Hawaii and Alaska, “At the
same time the Pacific coast of this
country would be at the mercy of the
Jepanese fleet, provided the Mikado
decided to risk sending ft across the
seas to bombard and lay slege to the
coast towns of the slope.
All the Washington strategists have
resigned themselves to these losses
within a brief period after the com-
mencement of hostilities. Conse.
quently the desirability of increasing
the naval strength on the Pacific
coast and in the East is admitted by
every one. From what officials say ft
is believed that steps in this direction
would be taken-at once but for fear of
the effect of such action. It would
stimulate war talk and arouse the sus-
picions of the Japanese government.
‘The weakness of the American navy
in the Pacific will be realized when it
is stated that not a single battleship
flying the Stars and Stripes is to be
found between San Francisco and Ma-
nila. Three squadrons are maintained,
‘one im Chinese waters, one In the Phil-
ippines and one along the Pacific
coast, bul the most powerful craft in
the combined fleet is an armored
cruiser of less than 15,000 tons,
Glad He Didn't Kill Peabody.
Boise, Idaho.—Former Governor
Peabody and Harry Orchard met
face to face in the office of J. H. Haw-
ley a few minutes after the recess was
taken at noon. Orchard, while plainly
nervous from the strain of the morn-
ing’s examination, had recovered his
equanimity and was speaking to one
of the men who had accompanied him
from the court house, when the gov-
ernor entered, Orchard recognized him
at once. His face changed, and, as
Mr. Peabody approached the man who
had hunted him for a year seeking an
opportunity to Kill, Orchard's face
changed. He shrank back and trem-
bled. The former governor smilingly
held out his hand, saying:
“How aré you, Orchard?”
Orchard broke down completely, He
said:
“Iam ashamed to look at you, sit—
I am ashamed to speak*to you,”
‘The governor reassured him in a
few words, and Orchard replied:
“Tam thankful that I didn’t kill you,
and am spared the thought of that
crime.”
i Former. Queen.ia Dying.
Newport, R. I—-That Mrs, William
Astor, fornier queen of society, has but
a short time to live, was the opinion
expressed today by Col. John Jacob AS:
tor in announeing that his mother
would not visit Beachwood, her villa
in Bellevue avenue, and the Ciiffs this
season,
‘The breakdown was foreshadowed
when Mrs. Astor went to Paris at the
beginning of last summer. Sho yisited
the fashionable shops of the city, buy-
ing Javishly beautiful garments’ sult-
able for a girl of twenty, and conspieu-
ous because of thelr brilliant oplors
and radiant materials,
Upon her arrival in Boston, Mrs. AS:
tor became alarmingly ill, She planed
expensive dinners, receptions, grand
balls and supper’ parties, preparing
hundreds of invitations, which were
burned by the physicians in attend-
ance, z
ORCHARD OFF THE STAND.
vury Will Convict Haywood.
Boise, Idaho—Harry Orchard is off
the witness-stand, and a sigh of relief
went up from those in the court room
when he was released.
Both sides say they are satisfled
with his testimony. Senator Borah
gave out a statement in which he
sums up the results of Orchard's tes-
timony:
“It must be conceded,” said he, “that
Orchard’s testimony has close enough
resemblance to- the truth to justify the
apprehension of the defendants and
their extradition to Idaho. It is my
belief that Orchard is the most mar-
velous witness that has ever appeared
—considered from any point of view.
“When he stepped down he was, if
anything, in better form physically
than the minute he assumed the wit-
ness chair, notwithstanding he had
been submitted to a week of gruelling
Investigation that would fatigue an or-
dinary person to the point of collapse.
Whether he is telling the truth or ly-
ing it must be conceded that he has
told a remarkable story and has ex-
hibited powers of endurance and vigor
of mentality that is astonishing.
“There are some phases of the wit-
ness which I do not care to discuss.
‘To me he ig still the murderer of my
friend Frank Steunenberg. I am un-
able to reconcile in my mind any
change in the man whom I first sus-
pected on the night of December 30th.”
Attorney Richardson gave ont a
statement of his views on the results
of the cross-examination:
“When Orchard finished his direct
examination,” he said, “the popular
feeling was one of outrage and re-
yenge against the persons whom he
accused. I think this feeling is alto-
gether modified and changed. Whereas
Orchard, in his direct examination,
made himself out to be a monster, we
have shown him to be infinitely worse
than he portrayed himself under the
lead of the state’s attorney, but with
this condition, that the crimes to
which he has confessed it is shown
he himself is responsible for.
“The cross-examination has shown
that Orchard has a most remarkable
memory for the details of all the crimes
he mentions, but when it comes to
connect the defendants with his acts
his memory is treacherous and will
not permit him to fix time, place or
number of persons present at any of
the conferences he alleges took place.
He could not tell us within two or
three weeks or a month ofthe date of
these conversations, nor would he tell
us the places where they took place.
It was impossible to break him down
because he had nothing to conceal.
At no stage of the examination was
he trying to save himself.
“We are well satisfied with the re-
ults of the cross-examination and I
believe the Jury will hesitate a long
time before convicting anyone on such
a story as he tells.”
Richardson entered a vigorous pro-
test against a report to the effect that
the state was contemplating prosecu-
tions againstanumber of the witnesses
for the defense on the charge of per-
jury,
“The publication of such an article,
even before one of our witnesses has
been called,” he said, “is a palpable
attempt to scare them away, the pur-
pose being to injure the defense.”
It is possible that Judge Wood may
be called on to take some action with
reference to the offending paragraph.
Lande Restored td Entry.
Washington.—By order of the secre-
tary of the interior there will become
subject to settlement on September
30th and subject to entry October 30,
1907, about 2,980,000 acres of land in
Alaska. The land restored was with-
drawn June 30, 1903, for the proposed
Northern Bay national forest, and is
situated immediately on the north
shore of the North sound south of St.
Michael and about fifty or sixty miles
south of the Arctic circle, in the Ju
neau land district. Other restorations
have been made as follows:
About 250,240 acres temporarily with-
drawn for the proposed Deer Lodge
and Ruby Mountains national forest
and for an addition to the Helena na:
tional forest, Montana.
About 220,000 acres withdrawn for
an addition to the Madison forest, Mon.
tana,
About 39,640 acres withdrawn for for-
estry purposes near the Snowy Moun-
tains national forest, Montana.
About 69,680 acres withdrawn nea
the Las Animas national forest, Colo:
rado,
About 224,000 acres near Fruita, La
Sal and Uncompahgre national forests,
Colorado. :
About 35,200 acres near the Pike's
Peak forest, Colorado.
About 24,960 acres near the Holy
Cross forest, Colorado,
About 60,580 acres adjoining Crazy
Mountain forest, Montana,
About 20,320 acres near Bitter Root
forest, Montana,
He Wants Vindication.
Colorado Springs.—General L. ©.
Dana, past commander of the Grand
Army, Department of Colorado and
Wyoming, and prominent Republican
politician, filed suit in the District
Court against B. N. Maxwell for $5,000
damages. The suit is the outgrowth
of a controversy of the recent depart:
ment encampment,
Maxwell published a letter that
Dana declares was defamatory to his
character. The latter intimated that
post funds were used to boost Dana
for office, and that immunity from the
payment of dues was promised to
members of the post if they would
vote for Dana for post commander.
The letter also attacked Dana’s mill:
tary record, alleging that he rose
“step by step from a short-time pri-
vate, (100 days), spent at Jefferson
Barracks, Missouri, over men that had
worked their way, step by step, or
rather, chair by chair, and were entl-
tled to the commander's chair,”
| Maxwell is reputed to be a man of
considerable means, but Dana declares
that all he wants is “vindication.”
Maxwell, it is said, was given an op-
portunity to retract his article in the
newspaper, but ignored the demand
made upon him by Dana's attorneys,
and the matter is now in the courts.
Ont @D
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Memento for President Diaz.
‘With a simple but impressive cere-
mony President Diaz was presented
with the military painting portraying
the action of his command in the bat-
tle of Puebla against the French
forces tn the war of the invasion.
The painting, which was the work of
the artist Francisco de P, Mendoza, a
professor in the national school of fine
arts and of the military college, was
executed at the request of the goy-
ernors of 12 Mexican states, and was
Presented as a personal gift to the
chief magistrate. The painting repre-
sents Gen, Diaz in action in the glo-
rious battle which won fame for the
Mexican forces, and at the moment
when the forces under the direct
command of Gen. Diaz saved the day.
—Mexican Herald.
‘Tho extraordinary popularity of fine
white goods this summer makes the
choice of Starch a matter of great im-
portance. Defiance Starch, being free
trom all injurious chemicals, is the
only one which is safe to use on fine
labrics. Its great strength as a stiffener
makes half the usual quantity of Starch
necessary, with the result of perfect
Gnish, equal to that when the goods
were new.
‘The Business Instinct.
A party of tourists were visiting the
ancient landmarks of England, accord-
ing to a writer in the New Orleans
‘Times-Democrat, and their guide was
supplying them with valuable historic
tacts.
“This tower,” he remarked, “goes
back to William the Conqueror.”
“Why, what’s the matter?” inquired
one of his listeners. “Isn't it satisfac-
hors Te eS PSS
That an article may be good as well
&s cheap, and give entire satisfaction,
is proven by the extraqrdinary sale of
Defiance Starch, each package con-
taining one-third more Starch than
can be had of any other brand for the
same money.
"Amendment Not Accepted.
Mrs. Jagaway—I wish I knew where
my husband was.
‘Mrs. Kawler—You mean, I presume,
that you wish you knew where your
husband is?
Mrs. Jagaway—No, I don't. I know
where he is. He's up in his room,
sleeping off a headache.
The greatest cause of worry on
troning day can be removed by using
Defiance Starch, whigh will not stick
to the iron. Sold everywhere, 16 oz.
for 10c.
Stinav,
Bill—And is he of a forgiving na-
ture?
Jill—For giving? Say, you couldn't
wring a cent out of him with a mon-
key wrench!
A Good Charger.
Client—Didn't you make a mistake
In going into law instead of the army?
Lawyer—Why?
Client—By the way you charge,
‘there would be little left of the enemy.
No More Worry.
“Tt used to worry me when the bar
ber informed me that my hair was
getting a little thin on top.”
“But you got used to it, eh?”
“No. Now it worries me because he
doesn’t mention it. I must be getting
old.” : ;
No great excellence in any depart-
ment of life 1s achieved without effort
and training; attainment comes not by
accident. —Bremner.
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The horse can draw the [if
load without help, if you
reduce friction to almost rae
nothing by applying BP
ry
——— 3
|MicaAxlez if)
Grease [1 Jf
to the wheels. / 94
No other lubri- Ne fi
cant ever made NN {
wears so long {|
andsavessomuch fF i,
horse power. Nexttime / fA
try Mica Axte Grease. £9
Standard Oil Co. G
Teerperstet 5
DAISY FLY KILLER
ERT ie aienc is
Rsk PMA thing Gusincts
Bg LRN Ra os sear
FNS hua S
. Ho Be Kalb aves
| READERS String to Bay aay
ns ina ecvertscein
ii columns should insist upon having
what they ask for, refusing’ ell subst
ites or Yintations.
hiseeicancous ELECTROTYPES
INERRLAGU auwevlttncos, ew ace ee es
W. N. U. DENVER, NO. 24, 1907.
Under my heart nestle closer and tighter,
Out in the darkness the world rushes on
The bonds of the world shall grow slighter
and slighter
While we hold communion here; I and
my son.
Tenderest love brought thy body to be-
ing,
That will I foster in fullest control
But the father Omnipotent, all-wise, all-
seing
Breath ! on that body and gave it a
so
Flesh of my flesh, thou'rt the child of
Ambition,
In my Dream-charlot Pride holds the
palm
Thou, by my loving, relentless tuition,
Shalt fashion in stone all my castles of
Spain.
Yet, in my heart, hold I fear of that
morrow
To whose irresistible coming I yield.
Alas! must my loneliness, labor and sor-
Find th' ere the Reason for pain be revealed?
Child of the World, thy new Kingdom's before thee!
Long is the pathway that millions have trod.
Wilt thou reproach that in travail I bore thee.
And gave thee to men when I gave thee from God?
Margaret Horton Potter in Harper's Bazar.
Cocktails and Evening Dress.
The London Lancet says evening dress is a good substitute for the cocktail as an appetizer, but as long as evening clothes retail at $75. and cocktails at 15 cents, the suggestion wiii not be universally adopted.—Louisville Courier-Journal.
The Democratic Idea.
"The monarchs of to-day are wise in their generation," remarked the shade of Diogenez, as he carefully filled his lantern with the best automobile oil. "In olden times the kings used to keep fools; now they let the fools keep them."
Tong Haks of Korea.
The Tong Haks present the only virile patriotic faction in Korea. But it is a faction now threatening, now dispersed, now on the war path, now dissolved among the body of the people, now robbing and looting, now fighting, and now busied with theological arguments in a manner so impossible to western thought, motives and methods that it is almost impossible to characterize it.
It is the more difficult because the Tong Hak belief partakes of the nature of a religion and of piracy, of metaphysical discussion and of massacre, and also of patriotic resistance to official extortion.
THE BEST ICE CREAM AND CANDIES AT
O. P. Baur & Co.,
CATERERS and
CONFECTIONERS.
PHONE 168.
1512 Curtis St. Denver, Colo.
hirst Parlors
J. L. PENNINGTON, Prop.
Fine Wines, Liquors & Cigars
TELEPHONE 810 MAIN.
1748 Curtis St. Denver, Colo.
J. W. Rummell,
WINES, LIQUORS & CIGARS
PHONE 3432 MAIN.
2257 Welton St Denver, Colo.
THE
Ward Auction Co
The Old and Only.
1728-30 Arapahoe St.
Denver, Colorado.
Private Residence
Sales a Specialty
Regular Sales every day in
the week (except Sunday)
TELEPHONE 1675.
Furniture and bankrupt Stocks
bought for cash or sold on
commission.
Weiner's Saloon.
We treat the boys right.
The Inter-Ocean Investment and Brokerage Co.
AND COLLATERAL BANK.
1436 Curtis Street.
Loans negotiated, available securities handled, cash advances made on all kinds of collateral securities.
Real Estate Loans a special feature.
Business Strictly Confidential.
J. T. JOHNSON,
Minnesota Grain Belt Beer
Also Western Agent for D. Carnegie
Co. Swedish Porter, Gothenburg,
Sweden.
1644 Larimer St. Denver, Cola
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.
J. George Wright has been appointed commissioner to the Five Civilized Tribes in Indian territory to succeed Tams Bixby, resigned.
It is announced that when Secretary Root goes to Mexico it will be as the guest of the Mexican government.
Rev. John H. Swift, a minister of the Christian church at Winterset, Ia., has been sent to the federal prison at Leavenworth for using the mails to defraud.
Upon invitation of President Diaz, Secretary of State Root will visit Mexico the later part of the summer.
Frank H. Butler, who was charged with the murder of the Marvin bcy at Doven, Del., has been released from custody, for want of sufficient evidence against him.
A. E. Stilwell and a party of 90 capitalists who took a trip over the lines of the Orient railroad in Mexico, have returned.
Judge Thomas Ryan, of Kansas, assistant secretary of the interior, has had a relapse and is again confined to his home in Washington.
B. H. Fulton, of Marysville, has been elected grand commander of the Kansas Knights Templar.
Henri Martin, an American painter, has been awarded the medal of honor in the Paris salon.
Erskine Uhl, secretary of the international committee of the Y. M. C. A., died recently in a hospital in New York.
President Castro, ofmezuela, had recovered sufficiently to read his message at the recent opening of congress.
Former District Judge L. B. France, pioneer and noted lawyer, is dead in Denver.
Miss Julia Magruder, the novelist is dead after a protracted illness.
G. Otto Elerich, a business man of New York, and a woman companion were recently drowned in the Thames river near London.
Dr. Valle Burgee, the young dentist, who was thought to have been murdered in a cab in Coffeyville, Kan., has been discovered in the Twenty-sixth infantry regiment now on its way to the Philippines.
Miscellaneous.
Richard Croker, the former Tammany chief won the 1907 English derby with his Irish bred colt Orby, ridden by Johnny Reiff, an American jockey.
The cornerstone of the new agricultural hall at Ames, Iowa, was recently laid by Gov. Cummins.
The interstate commerce commission has decided that the reconsignment charge of two dollars a car at Kansas City on grain and flour shipments is not excessive, unjust or discriminatory.
On June 1 there were 37,741 rural mail routes in operation in the country.
The golden wedding of King Oscar and Queen Sophia was joyfully celebrated throughout Sweden recently.
Eight thousand tons of ice, the property of the Swift Packing company, were recently destroyed by fire at Omaha, Neb.
Blood poisoning caused by the prick of a brass pin recently resulted in the death of Augustus C. Halsey, of St. Louis.
The army transport, Sherman, from Manila has arrived at San Francisco bringing the nineteenth infantry from the Philippines.
The grand jury in the federal court at Portland, Ore., has returned indictments against 180 furniture manufacturers and jobbers in Oregon, Washington, Idaho and California for violation of the Sherman antitrust law.
A cloudburst nearly destroyed the village of Gradyville, Ky. Nearly all of the houses were washed away and 21 people are missing.
Attorneys for H. H. Tucker, head of the Uncle Sam Oil company, who was sent to jail for contempt of court by Federal Judge Hook, have gone to Washington to institute habeas corpus proceedings in the supreme court of the United States.
The Pennsylvania republicans, in a state convention at Harrisburg, indorsed Senator Knox as their candidate for the presidency in 1908.
Dorchester, Mass., the first town in the United States to establish a free school supported by popular tax, has celebrated its 277 anniversary.
The first tornado ever known in southeastern Iowa devastated a path a hundred feet wide and two miles long, six miles north of Ottumwa.
President Roosevelt laid the cornerstone of a new masonic temple in Washington and in doing so used the same implements that Washington used when he laid the cornerstone of the United States capitol in 1793.
Through the efforts of attorney General Jackson, all the saloons in Leavenworth, Kan., have been closed for the first time in 20 years.
Contracts for the construction of 6,000 steel cars have been placed by the United States Steel corporation aggregating in cost $6,500,000.
The latest report of Secretary Coburn, of the Kansas state board of agriculture, shows that 21 per cent of the wheat in that state has been plowed up or is worthless and that the conditions of the remaining area is 56.7 per cent or 27.3 per cent less than six weeks ago.
Colorado Statesman's Tenth Annual
In the course of his cross examination in the Haywood trial, Harry Orchard confessed that in addition to killing 18 persons he was also a bigamist. The Missouri attorney general has given an opinion to the state insurance department that the law prohibiting an insurance company, which pays any officer a greater salary than $50,000 a year, from doing business in the state, is valid.
PICNIC
It has been definitely decided by the president that he will embark at Keokuk, Ia., on October 2, for his trip down the Mississippi river.
The exceptions of the Standard Oil company to the bill of complaint of the United States have been overruled by the federal court at St. Paul.
The board of directors of the rivers and harbors congress have decided to hold the annual congress in Washington next December.
The rules of the civil service commission have been so amended as to prohibit all persons in the classified civil service from taking an active part in politics.
Four members of a fishing party were drowned by the capsizing of their boat in Wunder's Lake near Page, Neb.
Gov. Glenn, of North Carolina, announces that his state will vigorously fight the suits of the railroads attempting to set aside the new laws reducing freight and passenger rates.
Thursday, July
San Francisco Japanese have decided to send a special envoy to Tokio to urge a modification of the immigration pact made recently between Japan and the United States. Allentown, Pa., is investigating a concerted attempt by incendiaries to destroy the town.
H. H. Tucker, the indicted secretary of the Uncle Sam Oil Company, has been sentenced to three months imprisonment in the Topeka jail for contempt of court by United States Circuit Judge Hook. The act of contempt was a sensational affidavit filed by Tucker' alleging collusion between federal judges and the Standard Oil Company.
After having weathered storms for nearly 75 years, the old sloop of war St. Louis was recently sold at Philadelphia as junk for $4,210.
Will eclipse all other outing events to be offered the people of Denver and Surounding Country this season. The past is a criterion for the future, for the great popularity of our Annual Holiday is as wide as the state in which we live. The people will take a day off to enjoy themselves with us this year, as they have done in the past, and we will provide for them a better entertainment and a happier time. Bloomfield Park is
The Wabash railroad has been convicted in the federal court at Springfield, Ill., of violating the law regarding safety appliances on freight cars. The railroads of Missouri have decided to comply with the two cent fare law, but will abolish all low rate excursions.
DENVER'S IDEAL PICNICGROUNDS
The saloon element at Frontenac, Kansas, recently caused the arrest of two preachers on a charge of "boot-legging," and when they were released from jail they were badly beaten by a crowd of saloon sympathizers.
The Kansas City Transportation company has purchased two boats to carry freight between St. Louis and that city on the Missouri river.
A notable conference on the subject of trust prosecutions was held at the White house recently, participated in by the president, members of the cabinet and several officials from the department of justice. The Harriman-Alton deal was the principal topic of discussion.
It combines numerous advantages over any other place in the city or in the state. It embraces a large beautiful lake and a fine large grove. The tramway cars run direct to the park every fifteen minutes, day and night.
Harry Orchard, the principal witness for the state against W. D. Haywood, was placed on the stand at Boise, Idaho, and detailed many blood-curling crimes leading up to the murder of former Gov. Steuernberg, in all of which he charged the Western Federation of Miners executive committee were implicated.
Free Hammocks
The viceroy of Canton, China has reported to the Pekin government that the disorders at Lienchow and Pakhol have been suppressed and that all missionaries are safe.
The Day's Attractions Will Consist of Outdoor Sports, Boating and Other Recreations. Get Your Baskets Ready and Join Our Great Midsummer Diversion
An explosion of powder in a railroad camp at the foot of Lookout mountain in Tennessee, killed three trailmen, injured several others and caused considerable damage to surrounding property. A United States signal corps officer and two companions recently made a successful balloon trip from Washington to Harrisburg, Pa., in four hours and 37 minutes. The progressive party in Japan are asking explanations of the government regarding its inactivity in the San Francisco racial troubles.
In this cool and beautiful resort, where enjoyment, recreation and comforts are available to all. We will forget for a day the toils and worries of every-day surroundings, renew social acquaintances, recall again the happy privileges of other days, and all will be richly benefited by the new pleasures which we shall find.
The railroads of Nebraska have served written notice on the state authorities that they intend to attack the constitutionality of the two cent fare law. The Kansas brewery receivers have taken possession of 35 more saloons in Leavenworth said to be the property of various breweries of Missouri.
THE COLORADO STATESMAN, its staff, employees and friends will do everything to make the day the most enjoyable one of all the year.
Mrs. Mary Spaugh has been acquitted of complicity "in the killing of Sheriff Polk of Iron county, Mo., for which her two sons are now under sentence. The American Medical association at the recent session at Atlantic City, N. J., adopted a resolution favoring the establishment of a national department of health. At the democratic primaries in the new state of Oklahoma. C. N. Haskell was nominated for governor, Roy Hoffman and R. L. Owen for United States senators.
Come Early and Stay Late
THE COLORADO STATESMAN.
JOS. D. D. RIVERS.....Proprietor S. H. HOBSON.....City Editor
1824 Curtis Street, Room 25.
Remittances should be made by Express Money Order, Postoffice Money Order, Registered Letter or Bank Draft. Postage stamps will be received the same as cash for the fractional part of a dollar. Only 1-cent and 2-cent stamps taken.
Reading notices, ten lines or less, 10 cents per line. Each additional line over ten lines, 5 cents per line.
Display advertising 50 cents per square. A square contains ten agate lines. No discounts allowed on less than three months' contract. Cash must accompany all orders from parties unknown to us. Further particulars on application.
It occasionally happens that papers sent to subscribers are lost or stolen. In case you do not receive any number when due, inform us by postal card and we will cheerfully forward a duplicate of the missing number.
All communications of a personating nature that are not complimentary will be withheld from the columns of this paper.
Communications to receive attention must be newy, upon important subjects 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 manuscript returned, unless stamps are sent for postage.
Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice in the city of Denver, Colorado.
THROUGH THE HOROSCOPE.
THE DENVER POST recently gave us a general resume of the Negro problem in a rather extended comment upon the ideas and aspirations of our fellow-towsman, Mr. J. N. Walker, whose views upon the question of African emigration for American Negroes are quite well known. The Post writer seems to base his views of the race problem in America upon two fundamental theories, both quite common with the well-purposed white writer, who, in this case at least, reasons solely with his head because he has no considerable heart in the matter. The first is that the attitude assumed by the white people of this country toward the Negro is natural and therefore right; and the second is that the Negro reluctantly accepts the attitude with all of the sacrifice of independence and pride and other subjugating consequences entailed, in the hope that sometime, perhaps in a thousand years, he will become assimilated with, and finally lost in, the great body of the white race; in fact that some day he will be a white man.
Both of these conclusions are wrong. The attitude assumed by the American white people toward the Negro is not natural. It is partly the offspring of political influences and partly the result of erroneous notions of natural social tendencies. The enfranchisement of the Negro was not so great a mistake as has been the effort to hinder his development into an intellectual and responsible enfranchised citizen.
In the English and French dependencies of the West Indies, closely neighboring us, there are no such problems, no such tense racial conflict as those which exist here in the United States, and yet the races are but slightly more closely related socially than they are here. They do not intermarry more there than here, but the unhampered law of social selection accomplishes there, without friction or resentment, more than rabid legislation or hateful edicts of racial superiority have accomplished here. The secret of their success and their peace lies in the fact that the dominant people have encouraged the growth of social gradations among the Negroes by conceding fair and equal reward to intellectuality. There is a certain pride and restraint of race existing everywhere, which works naturally and sufficiently for the preservation of the primal stock, but it is never wisely re-inforced by radical and presumptive legal enactments. The Negro does not accept the attitude and the conditions assumed by the white American with the resignation presumed by the Post editor. The Negro in America has not given up, and will not give up, the hope of racial entity, but he is not yet sufficiently developed to realize what "the pride of independence" really is. He is going to the white man's school; he is bearing the ills that he has rather than fly to others that he knows not of. But the love of race is strong within him, and the faint dreams of the future that break in upon his wondering vision are not dreams of subservience to another race, however closely bound to that race he may now feel. The question of African or other emigration and the gradual institution of a new nation is easy to think of, but a mighty thing to compass. As yet the Negro hardly thinks of it, and his greatest men preach against it. They are wise. But their wisdom is not complete. The time is not yet. Mighty things are not compassed in a puny way. The question is a mighty one.
FOLLOWING THE COLOR LINE
IT is seldom that a white man gets close enough to the Negro to get a clear and reliable insight of his inner life, but Ray Stannard Baker, who is writing a remarkable series of articles for the American Magazine, is one white man who is doing that very thing. We have referred to one of his former articles, and we now have before us the June number of that magazine, in which he continues his treatment of the above subject. It is a study of the lower classes of the Negro as he has perceived those classes in and about Atlanta, and along with indictments which cannot be denied, and which Negroes do not seek to deny, are recited causes so deep and truthful that even Negroes wonder that white people have so long remained ignorant of them. The lazy, idle and vicious Negro is the result of conditions in the South which the white people generally overlook, visiting their deep impatience and displeasure upon the entire race rather than endeavoring to correct or cure the economic conditions which are largely the cause of trouble between the two races, and for which the white man more than the Negro is actually responsible.
The lower class Negro is born almost a stranger to ambition, and to his weak and undirected mind a greater premium is put upon laziness and vice than upon steady, virtuous effort. The doorways to vice, licensed by white men, and wherein white men make easy money off those who work only enough to satisfy their appetites and lower cravings, are wide open to these classes of Negroes, and therein their natural indolence finds encouragement. Although labor is in great demand and the South is largely dependent upon the Negro to do its work, the shiftless and unsteady classes increase rather than diminish, because higher wages enables them to more easily satisfy their wants and permits them to work less than formerly. The better classes of Negroes apply their earnings to the purchase of properties of their own and to the procuring of that education for their children which the South, in its public policy does not seem to adequately provide. Thus is much of the only present source of labor supply in the South diminished. The lure of the city, with its licensed vices, and the failure of the South to provide adequate facilities for the reasonable education of that class which eraves education, are two opposite causes, both detrimental to the better conditions of the South, so far as the labor field is concerned.
While Mr. Baker's articles deal wholly with conditions in the South, they are not without apt application in certain respects to conditions affecting the Negro in those northern cities or sections where his numbers have materially increased in late years. Certain political considerations which give license to indolence and viciousness have been truthfully charged with responsibility for increased crime. The weaknesses of the Negro are systematically preyed upon by white men in one way or another, while the results are charged indiscriminately against the Negro. It is simple and but truthful reasoning to argue that the stern opposition of the white people to the natural desires of the Negro to get far away from old conditions as soon as possible, and the savage injection of social fears, based upon impossible and unnatural conceptions of racial relations, into that determined opposition, are at the bottom of those conditions which, while they flay and scourge the Negro, must return to curse the white man, particularly the white man of the South.
New Theology is Gospel of the Humanity of God
By REV. REGINALD JOHN CAMPBELL,
Pastor City Temple Church, London.
HE new theology is not agnostic, but is the gospel of the humanity of God and of the Divinity of man. This is only incidentally a theological movement. It is far more a moral and spiritual movement. It is a religious quickening; it is rising spontaneously in every church in Christendom, and sooner or later it will call the whole civilized world back to God. It will put an end to the alienation from religion of the masses on the one hand and of the intellectual classes on the other. It is the gospel of the kingdom of God. I have been teaching these truths for years. I dislike the phrase "now theology" but
THE new theology is not agnostic, but is the gospel of the humanity of God and of the Divinity of man. This is only incidentally a theological movement. It is far more a moral and spiritual movement. It is a religious quickening; it is rising spontaneously in every church in Christendom, and sooner or later it will call the whole civilized world back to God. It will put an end to the alienation from religion of the masses on the one hand and of the intellectual classes on the other. It is the gospel of the kingdom of God. I have been teaching these truths for years. I dislike the phrase, "new theology," but must accept it because it has come to stay. Some of the arguments are as old, almost, as the hills. But its general adoption is coeval with the adoption of modern science. The great results we have from modern science to-day are comparatively new. Modern science of itself is scarcely 50 years old. Science is only the mind trying to understand the universe. As soon as religion becomes theology it must either be consistent with science or be foredoomed. For the universe explored by science is, after all, the very universe which calls the soul to prayer.
For want of a better phrase let us call the movement the new theology. But one can call it also the higher politics or the higher sociology. For it is one and the same thing. The social reform movement is the gospel of the humanity of God and the Divinity of man. Social reformers may not admit it, they may not know it. They may say the movements are parallel. But I believe they are one and the same.
The church has nothing to do with getting men into Heaven. Its real work is to get Heaven into this everyday world. Too long has the church been trying to save men from suffering in the world to come. Too little it has concerned itself with the root suffering in this world.
But social reformation, that is, the gospel of the kingdom of God, is surely and swiftly spreading. When men get up in the United States congress, in the English parliament, in the legislatures of the world, and discuss and plead the cause of the poor, the betterment of the unemployed, the sanitary housing of the masses, old age pensions, they may be called by the press and public socialists, labor leaders, not, but they are the true Christians; they are preaching, as well as I am, the gospel of the kingdom of God.
What is wanted in the world to-day is a general conference of the churches of all creeds, the sinking of those creeds, and the liberal discussion of our common aims. Each church now holds its own conference. At these they go over the same ground. These same questions discussed at conferences of Episcopalians, Methodists, Baptists, Presbyterians, all the other churches, are exactly the questions discussed in the legislatures, at meetings of social reformers, at street corner meetings, by press and pulpit and public. They are the questions of the hour, the day, the progress of Christianity and the betterment of the world.
How much closer we could get to the betterment of the condition of human affairs if the churches joined hands in unity of purpose with men of science, ethical teachers and social reformers. Instead of the puny work possible from a score of separate little bases we should have a greater, grander, overwhelming movement from a world's united base.
What influence have the sun and its spots upon the earth first, and upon other planets afterwards? This, to my mind, is the most important problem that faces us.
Sun Spots and
the Weather
By PROF. F. S. ARCHENHOLD,
Director Observatory of Treptow, Germany.
If a telescope of the new construction used at Treptow, but very much larger, together with a proper spectroscope and other apparatus, be erected either on the summit of Kilimanjaro, or the Kamerun mountains, both of which are at the equator, elevated more than 3,000 meters (9,000 feet), the solving of this very important problem must follow.
I have no doubt that the influence of the sunspots upon the earth is electrical and that in their influence lies the key to establishing a basis of really scientific meteorology. When we understand the relation of the sun spots to the earth, we shall be able to predict weather conditions with absolute certainty; we shall be in a position not only to warn the mariner of storms that will come within a few days, but we shall know in advance whether the seasons will be early or late, severe or mild, and thus be of real service to the farmer all the world over. All too little use is made of the "rainbow spectrum" in the study of these sun spots, and I hope to carry the investigations much further, both at Treptow and in the new observatory which I expect some day to erect in the Kamerun mountains.
Women Who Have Right to Propose
By MRS. DORE LYON.
President of Exclusive Electric Club, New York.
Women Who Have Right to Propose
By MRS. DORE LYON,
President of Exclusive Electic Club, New York.
I think it is properly proper for certain women to propose.
For example: In the case of a rich young woman. Perhaps a young man has been paying her attention for some time, and she has grown fond of him with out a formal declaration on his part. She might say to him: "Now, my dear, if you would care to marry me, I will obtain your parent's consent. I am able to support you in the style your tastes require, and you need not worry about a bank account." Or take the case of a professional young woman, who has a good income from her work. She might say, to the young man of her choice, who has not come to the proposing stage:
"My dear, I think we would be very happy together. I am quite able to take care of two, and could support a husband very nicely."
MIRA DENN
1900
The act of proposing carries with it the offer to take care of the young woman, whose hand he asks for. There is an underlying economic motive in such proposals. Then why should this not carry in the case of the young woman who proposes. The only girl who has no right to propose is the indolent, unskilled young woman, with no visible means of support. She has no right to ask a man to marry her to support her.
The
A.T. Lewis & Son
Dry Goods Co
Thank you for the
tip, Mr Swell
Dresser.
R. T. Outeau Hax
The Tip we Want to Give You is That
WELL DRESSED MEN BUY THEIR CLOTHES AT LEWIS.
We have good clothes—not cheap clothes. We sell only clothes that we know will satisfy. We want our customers to be "repeaters." We think we are talking to healthy men and we expect to sell you your suits for years to come.
Our suits are priced from $15.00 up to $35.00. Cheaper clothes are not worth while; more expensive clothes are needless.
The John Carson @ Bro.,
CROCKERY CO.
Liberal discounts on all lines including Dinner Ware, Fancy China and Cut Glass.
This Special Sale
is meeting a hearty response for all classes and to any who have a wedding present or graduating gift to purchase this is a rare opportunity.
New Address 734 15th St. Cor. Stout THE JOHN CARSON & BRO., CROCKERY CO.
THE
TWO JIMS'
SOCIAL CLUB
Denver's Favorite Pleasure Resort.
Whist, Pool, Chess, Checkoas and Other Pastime Games.
PHONE 2275 MAIN.
1859 Champa St Denver, Colo.
CITY NEWS.
Mrs. Bessie Turner is on the sick list.
F. M. Adkins was among the interesting callers at this office Monday.
Central Baptist church held its annual outing at Crystal Lake Tuesday.
Mrs. Howard Troutman and Mrs. Wm Stone left Wednesday for Tonapah, Nev.
The body of Oscar Harris, who died Thursday of last week was shipped to Champaign, Ills., for burial.
S. T. Denmon of Duluth, Minn., passed through the city last week enroute to Salt Lake City.
Wm. A. McCowan is on the sick list. "Capt." has a host of friends who hope to see him out soon.
Durham Campbell, one of this year's graduates has been added to the office force of Undertaker Gilmore.
Mrs. E. Reynolds left the city last Sunday for Los Angeles, Cal., where she will she will spend the summer.
Mrs. Wm. Crummer and son, Ray, left Tuesday for Ogden, Utah, to visit her sister, Mrs. Thompson, who is ill.
Mrs. H. J. Asbury nee Craig, is here from Tacoma, Wash., the guest of her sister, Mrs. Finley, 2319 Champa street.
Mrs. A. E. Sharp of 3329 Williams street, is on the sick list. An early recovery is hoped for her by her numerous friends.
Invitations are out announcing that Charles E. Hyman and Miss Rosetta Sides are to be married Wednesday, the 26th inst.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Murry are very proud of their 2-months old daughter and says that she is the finest baby in the city.
Miss Josephine Crockett a former young lady of our city was married to Mr. C. J. DeLogget, June 2nd at Oakland, California.
Benjamin W. Gilbert, son of William Gilbert, the rancher graduated from the mechanical engineering department at Tuskegee, May 30th.
We are pleased to announce that F. Pratt of 2343 Lawrence street, is recovering from a broken leg caused by falling from a street car.
Mrs. B. M. Murray and sister Mrs. Gertrude Britt received the sad news last Friday of the death of their brother, James Kibley of Fulton, Mo.
J. W. Ellison is enjoying a visit to his parents in Waco, Texas. He writes Lawrence Stephen that he is having the time of his life at his old "stomping ground."
W. L. Crockett died Friday of last week after an illness of several weeks. Funeral services were held Tuesday afternoon from Gilmore's undertaking establishment.
The annual banquet of the Intergraduate association was held last Monday night at 1712 Curtis street. It was in honor of the '07 graduates of Denver and the program was interesting and enjoyable.
Among the interesting numbers on the program of the People's Sunday Alliance last Sunday was a paper by A. G. Falling, eulogizing the late Julius W. Fields and an address by J. H. Stuart to the '07 graduates.
A very interesting program was rendered by the children at Zion Baptist church last Sunday. It was their day and they proved to the public that they were equal to the task of entertaining the large audience present.
The body of Daniel Ecton who died Friday of last week was shipped to Flemingsburg, Ky., for burial by Undertaker Gilmore. The remains were accompanied by the father of deceased, J. M. Ecton, who arrived here Sunday.
The District Conference and Sunday School convention of the Denver district convened in Cheyenne Wednesday for a three days' session. Among the Denver delegates who attended were Rev. W. W. S. Dyett, J. C. Porter, A. L. Davis, Miss Eva Jones, Miss Bernice Sanders, Mrs. Mary Wade.
J. C. Brown of Cairo, Ills., who spent last week in this city, left Saturday for Colorado Springs, where he will remain indefinitely. Mr. Brown is quite an enterprising young man and is one of the influential citizens of his home town.
Miss Mabel Bohannan, teacher at the Prairie View Texas Institute, stopped over Saturday and Sunday enroute to San Francisco to spend the summer with her mother. Mrs. Johnson. While here she was the guest of Mrs. L. A. Campbell.
The Progressive Musical Association brass band entertained a large crowd at Zion Baptist church Tuesday night. We are proud to say that Denver has a band that is a credit to the city. When is need of music of this nature don't for get them.
It is gratifying to note the number of homes being purchased by the colored people of Denver. We stopped in the other day to see the beautiful 5-room brick residence at 2339 Lawrence street, recently purchased by Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Hamilton who took pleasure in showing us through their modern home which is very elegantly furnished.
Thursday, July 18, '07 is the date of the COLORADO STATESMAN's 10th annual picnic, which will be held at Bloomfield Park, the famous and unsurpassed place for an outing. This announcement will be hailed with delight by all as these annual outings are never eclipsed for real enjoyment.
Rev. W. L. Taylor, Grand Master and President of the Savings Bank of the Grand Fountain, United Order True Reformers will lecture at Zion Baptist church Thursday, June 20th, under the auspices yf the True Reformers of Denver. All are invited. Admission free. Rev. Taylor will stop at 2027 Humboldt street.
The regular meeting of the Medical Association was held last Saturday night at the office of Dr. P. E. Spratlin, with all members present. The feature of meeting was an interesting paper by Dr. E. F. Canty on "The Relation of Pharmacy to the Medical profession." It revealed the fact that the Dr. was quite well versed with all which the topic of his paper indicated.
Invitations are out announcing that Dr. T. Ernest McClain of this city and Miss Fate Lou Stewart of Nashville, Tenn., are to be married in Nashville at high noon, Wednesday, June 26, 1907. Miss Stewart is a prominent teacher and is one of the leading lights in society circles while Mr. McClain is a dentist of much ability, at least his satisfactory work has gained for him such a reputation.
Children Day exercises at Shorter church last Sunday was very largely attended—in fact it was the largest attendance for such an occasion that this church has ever had. A feature of the occasion was the accurate training of the children which credit is due to Mrs. W. W. S. Dyett and both she and Supt. J. C. Porter are jubilant over the satisfactory manner in which the program was carried out.
Mr. George A. Smith and Miss Ida May Stewart were united in the holy bonds of matrimony at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Fisher, Wednesday, June 12th 1907. The bride is the daughter of Charles J. Stewart, one of the most prominent and highly respected citizens in the city. The happy couple received many presents, and have a host of friends who wish their matrimonial life a blissful one.
K. C. Minstrels.
Who does not know Charlie Nast, the baby photographer? Well few people know that he is a great comedian. In fact he makes the people laugh without saying a word. Just got to look at them that's all. The Knights of Columbus will give a minstrel performance at the Broadway theater Monday night, June 17th. Mr. Nast will be the ieterlocator and the whole show is under the management of Joe Newman.
The conference of the Fifth Episcopal District of the A. M. E. church, with Abraham Grant as Bishop will convene as follows:—Puget Sound Conference, August 22nd, Spokane, Wash.; California conference, September, 4th, Los Angeles, Cal.; Colorado Conference, Sept. 18, Shorter chapel, Denver; Kansas Conference, Sept. 25th Parsons, Kansas; North Missouri Conference, Oct. 2nd, St. Joseph, Mo.; Missouri Conference Oct. 9th St. Paul's, St. Louis, Mo.
Copyright, 1907, by
L. ADLER BROS. & CO.
Negilee Suits for the Races
Don't spoil a high priced suit at the track—We have a fine line at
$10 to $20
and such comfort, especially when they are topped off with a straw hat
THE
Johnson-Noel Co
1005 16TH ST.
OPP, TABOR GRAND.
LADIES GO TO HOWLAND'S FOR SAILOR HATS.
CAMPBE SUCCES
CAMPBELL BROS.
SUCCESSORS TO JOHN L. LARSON, Staple Groceries and Fres
Staple Groceries and Fresh Meats.
1864 Curtis Srreet, Cor. 19th.
THE MAY CO.
COPYRIGHT BY
A. B. KINGSHAM & CO. 1904
The Best Clothes In Town At $10, $20 And $25
A T either of these three prices we can give you the very best value in the city—the smartest patterns—the most becomming style and the largest assortment of fabrics.
It stands to reason that we, being the biggest store of our kind in the West, would be able to come nearer to giving you what you want at the price you want to pay than anyboby else.
---
16th STREET.
Phone 3028 Main.
OPP. DANIELS & FISHER'S LL BROS. SORS TO
and Fresh Meats.
Local Notices.
Hair cut 15 cents, 1847 Blake street
Nicely furnished rooms for rent, 2615 Welton street.
Furnished rooms for rent for gentlemen only in modern house at 2539 Lincoln avenue.
Furnished rooms for rent for gentlemen at 2425 Humboldt street.
Modern furnished rooms for rent at 2929 High street.
Ernest Howard, carpenter and all kinds of job work done at reasonable prices. Residence 553 Warren avenue. Phone 2129 Brown.
For rent furnished room at 1646 Pennsylvania Ave. for gentleman only. Call after 6 p. m.
For Rent—A nice front bed room 3029 Marion St. Modern house.
MRS. J. B. GIST,
The Life and Works of Paul Laurence Dunbar containing his complete poems and best short stories. J. H. Doniphan, agent, 2836 Stout street. Address him a card and he will call and show you the book.
Ladies Attention!
Mrs. M. A. Holly, who has spent some time in St. Louis perfecting herself in the scalp and hair treatment of Mrs. A. M. Pope, has come. She is now prepared to do the same work as is done in the originator's parlors. She is the sole agent for the famed preparation, "Poro." Address her at 2118 Arapahoe street, or Phone Olive 1984.
Denver, Colorado
FIRST, BIGGEST AND BEST
Picnic of the Season
GIVEN BY
Rice Lodge, No. 39, I. B. P 0. E. of W.
AT
BLOOMFIELD PARK.
JUNE 20, 1907.
ments of all Kind
Bowling. Lunch served on the
us. Refreshments.
Admission 25c
TYLOR, Chm. Committee.
On Car or transfer to Larimer St. going West
THE BURLINGTON CAFE
R. A. WARNOCK, Proprietor.
Her's Leading Colored Restaurant
Everything First-class. Everything in Season.
OPEN 5 A. M. TO 1 A. M.
ITE QUICK SERVICE THE BEST.
BE ONCE YOU'LL COME AGAIN.
1012 19th St., Denver.
Use Miller's Favorite
Veterinary Liniment for your Horse
flesh wounds, galls of all kinds, sprains,
ruises, scratches or grease heels, sweeney,
weakness of joints, contraction of the
muscles, swellings, tumors, and in
the early stage of fistula.
PREPARED ONLY BY
FRANK P. MILLER, Pharmist,
2644 Welton St. Cor. Wash. Av.
Phone Main 2306.
NVER, - - COLORADO.
THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1907.
Amusements of all Kind
Boating, Fishing, Bowling. Lunch served on the
grounds. Refreshments.
Harris' Orchestra Admission 25c
J. W. TAYLOR, Chm. Committee.
Take Lakewood and Golden Car or transfer to Larimer St. going West
THE BURLINGTON CAFE
R. A. WARNOCK, Proprietor.
Denver's Leading Colored Restaurant
Everything First-class. Everything in Season.
OPEN 5 A. M. TO 1 A. M.
POLITE QUICK SERVICE THE BEST.
IF YOU COME ONCE YOU'LL COME AGAIN.
64. 1012 19th St. Denver.
Use Miller's Favorite
Veterinary Liniment for your Horse
For flesh wounds, galls of all kinds, sprains, bruises, scratches or grease heels, sweeney, weakness of joints, contraction of the muscles, swellings, tumors, and in the early stage of fistula.
PREPARED ONLY BY
FRANK P. MILLER, Pharmist,
2644 Welton St. Cor. Wash. Av.
Phone Main 2306.
DENVER, - - COLORADO.
The Leader of Low Prices on all kinds of Dry Goods, Notions, Etc., for Lades and Gentlemen.
---
Z
THURSDAY, JUU
Amusements:
Boating, Fishing, Bowling
grounds. Re
Harris' Orchestra
J. W. TAYLOR,
Take Lakewood and Golden Car or
THE BU
R. A.
Denver's L
Everything F
POLITE QU
IF YOU COME ONCE
Phone Main 8164.
M. B.
Perless
THE Broadhurst and Barnett SHOE CO. 823 SIXTEENTH ST.
All the
Summer
OXFORDS
are here
We are showing an
endless variety at
$3.50 & $4.00 Pr.
---
PUBLIC
STENOGRAPHER
Miss Dora L. Holmes,
Room 31 Gook Blk. Denver.
The Tindell Dry Goods Store
Large Invoice of Goods Just Received from New York.
CALL AND INSPECT OUR GOODS
2707 Welton St. Denver, Colo.
NOTICE OF ADJUSTMENT DAY.
Estate of Ella Harris, Deceased.
The undersigned, having been appointed administrator of the estate of Ella Harris, late of the City and County of Denver, in the state of Colorado, deceased, hereby gives notice that he will appear before the County Court in said city and county of Denver, at the court house in Denver, in said county, on Monday, the 8th day of July, A. D. 1907, at the hour of 9:30 o'clock A. M., of said day, at which time all persons having claims against said estate are notified and requested to attend for the purpose of having the same adjusted. All persons indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate payment to the undersigned.
Dated at Denver, Colorado, this 7th day of June, A. D. 1907.
WILLIAM HARRIS,
Administrator of the Estate of Ella Harris Deceased.
Joseph H. Stuart, Attorney for Administrator.
CHURCH OF THE REDEEMER.
The third Sunday after Trinity (June 16th) will be the three hundredth anniversary of the first celebration of the Holy Communion in the English language on this continent.
A movement has been organized for a mens' thank offering for the blessings which the Catholic church of the English speaking people has brought to this nation.
By request of the Rt. Rev. Bishop Olmsted the offerings, next Sunday (16th) throughout the diocese of Colorado will be given to this fund.
The Episcopal church which is the rightful Catholic church of these United States, is striving earnestly to find the most excellent way to elevate and instruct the colored citizens of this country, and it is hoped that the men of the Redeemer wili respond liberally to this appeal. Services at 11 a. m. and 7:45 p. m.
FORD’S
Formerly known as
e
“QZONIZED OX MARROW”?
RAIGHTENS KINKY or CURL:
fee ere pena er Sree
ene Scecet force eee
SS eae Ute ett sonny
wats oe tORBA AED BNE tad
ker Kany or"euing "aly Weaigheas
Shown Greaves, Here ma teas Retr sate:
Bree art sects cael a eens
Eectinnoeraen cteclesy eevee’ tke
Seelee gee att Pousada atten sat
Sea Rena red aigeee tpallon etetia
Sean ge een epee ears Le ond
Risers cosh peeanuy Drea nun es talne
eres ee sand ad (Slt ooaecasy
Faas ad ai aOR EE OR
Beat: ere tasteeanes Va tee, Cleat
Pordranricrvcemaker shetalrsthaicity,
Rope ned Cuisppeepente ce nian:
Bonn se hut vacate Binh womade fs
sieeetay cna ean pall dente eis
Pa a aa i er a
Stapaate tua Seale yor areal te
Siete es oe clecee Beso Toe Bs bot
Bet seein We ay eoniang gt expres
Eebcariraiots Boxee When srr
Recta Bint Or Ste eaper Wee our
eee e atin plainly oo g
The Ozonized Ox Marrow Co.
(None genuine without my signature)
Chasbas Ford La
153 E, KINZIE ST., CHICAGO, ILL. ‘
Agents wanted overywhere. §
00S 0 OOOO O00 OOOO"
Miss M. Cowden
Hair Dressing Parlor.
| Shampoo, cutting and curling.
Scalp treatment, hair tonics, hair
straightening, manicuring. Stage
qwigs for rent; theatrical use and
imasquerades,
Goods delivered out of the city,
{All shades of hair matched hy
eae a ssmple of hair; also
mbings made up,
CHEAPEST SWITCHES 50 CENTS.
V21y QWst St. Denver, Sola
W. J. ADDIE,
Aeon
Choice old Califorina wines
and brandies from the Hermit-
eeeriisvard alan beeen
Sani cety mhisky cieerataatl
tobacco,
228 16th St. Telephone 2675.
Eat Macklem Bread
And Save Trouble.
At all Grocers.
Look for the la:ble “Macklem Bread”
on every loat.
WA » ad eaitlaed
a mas ~
Baa Ace
er
DENVER Da
wy
a6 es S
18}4- CURTIS STREET Lge
Always Staunch
And True
The Denver Republican has al-
ways avoided the fallacies and
knaveries of yellow journalism,
and its steadily increasing Circula-
tion proves conclusively that its
policy of telling the plain Truth
without exaggeration or misrepre-
sentation, 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 commu-
nity.
In no other way can the invest-
ment of 2% cents per day
-—for that is all The Republican
costs any subscriber—bring such
rich results in that Knowledge
which is both Power and Pleasure,
Information, instruction and en-
tertainment fill its columns and it
feaves 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.
Tf you are not already enrolled
among its splendid list of Patrons
send on your subscription and give
it a fair trial at 75 cents per month
for Daily and Sunday. $3
FIRST TIME IN TRYING ORDEAL
WITNESS BREAKS DOWN.
GLAD.DIDN’T KILL PEABODY
Haywood’s Counsel Givés, Inkling ot
Their Plans for Defense Against
‘Orakaria Gontedaion:
Boise, Idaho.—After withstanding
with marvelous strength of nerve and
muscle a week's examination that was
one prolonged confession of crime.
Harry Orchard broke down and for a
few moments wept like a child. His
unnerving came with a story of his
conversion and confession . and the
mention of King David, murderer, tho
Biblical figure which is supposed to be
Orchara’s Inter. guide.
The defense had given solemn tone
to the scene preceding the meeting be
tween Orchard and Detective McPar
land, to whom he confessed, by show:
ing that Orchard was first illegally
brought to the penitentiary and thrust
into almost solitary confinement. His
only cell neighbor was Bob Wetter, a
condemned murderer. Then came the
first McParland interview and the
story of David and Uriah.
Orchard faltered and tried to hold
back his tears, but he lost in the strug-
gle. The tears streamed from his eyes
and, reaching for his handkerchief, he
buried his face in his hands. ‘The
questions went on mereifessly as be
fore, but it was a full three minutes
before the answers were coming in the
old sure tones,
The defense, carrying the confession
forward, tried ty show that McParland
had played a disreputable part in the
‘Molly Maguires and that he had prom-
ised Orchard immunity.
The earlier part of the examination
as to the Steunenberg crime was
largely devoted to an effort to show
that Orchard had purposely been pub-
lic in his actions at Caldwell and had
sought to draw attention to himseif
and his crimes.
Orchard, just before the noon ad-
journment, in low and shaken tones,
told of his conversion. How, when in
the penitentiary he thought over
his past life he thought of putting him:
self out of the way and that he ought
to make a clean breast of it all. He
said he had come to feel that the grave
did not end it all, The story was told
to a hushed courtroom, the silence only
being broken by the drone of Orchard’s
voice.
Orchard also testified that he was a
Mason when he lived in Canada and
‘member of the Colborn lodge.
Has Not Been Spared.
Boise.—-The defense has not sparea
Orchard. His character as a criminal
has developed until almost every crime
in the calendar, big and little, has been
brought home to him. The most re
markable thing about the man is the
absolute nonchalance with which h»
admits to the commission of these
crimes. “Yon committed burglary?”
said Mr. Richardson.
“I do not know just what you mean
by burglary,” replied Orchard.
“[ mean that you broke open # rait
road depot and stole a trunk,” replied
the cross examiner,
“Oh, yes, 1 did that,” Orchard said,
without the slightest hesitation o:
change of tone,
The plot to kidnap the children of
Orchard’s former partner in the Her
cules mine prospect is looked upon by
the defense as a strong proof of the du:
plicity of the man. The claim of the
defense is that Simpkins discov
ered the plot and warned August /Paul-
son Paulson has been subpoenaed by
‘tho state. It was shown, however, by
the defense in cross-examination that
Paulson loaned Orchard $300 just be-
fore he left Wallace for Caldwell
shortly before the murder of Steunen:
berg.
The case for the defense, in contra:
diction of the connection of Haywood
‘with the actual murder or arrange
ments for the murder of Steunenberg,
is shown by the questions put so as to
bring out the evidence to show that
Orchard reached Wallace planning to
kidnap Paulson’s children. Failing in
that, he became poverty stricken anc
committed the burglary. Getting no
proceeds from this, he robbed a cash
register. These funds running out, he
borrowed $300 from the man who had
been his partner and who had become
rich from the proceeds of the mine, a
sixteenth share of which Orchard had
sold for a song, and then, envious of
the rien man, and angered at the
thought that Stounenberg had driven
him, in common with other union men,
from the state, he planned the enter
prise of vengeance, The defense as
serts that Simpkins was at Wallace at
the Ume, in line with his duties asa
member of the executive board of the
Western Federation, and that neither
there nor at Caldwell had he any direct
connection with Orchard’s plans.
The state will begin the corrobora-
tive testimony next week. About 160
witnesses will be there to giveevidence
in support of Orchard’s testimony. It
is understood also that certain docu
mentary evidence will be produced, but
the nature of this has been kept com-
plete secret.
Former Governor Peabody, who
reached Boise, takes the position that
he can not talk about the case until
after he has been on the stand. Ac
cording to: Orchard he was in danger of
assassination for a long time and was
hunted with bomb and pump-gun in
Denver and at his home in Canon City,
Colorado. The former governor of
Colorado is a big man, showing no evl-
dence that he stands in fear of any-
body. He admits that threatening let-
ters are not an unusual thing with him,
but he laughingly turns off any direct
answer to questions as to his opin-
fons of the many narrow escapes re-
lated by Orchard.
‘The case for the defense will be con-
ducted by Clarence Darrow of Chicago.
It was agreed between counsel for the
defense that Mr. Richardson should
have the star witness for cross-examin-
ation, and Mr. Darrow says that Mr,
Richardson will cross-examine some of
the other witnesses. The direct exam-
ination of the witnesses for the de-
fense will be by Darrow, who will hays
the closing argument.
_ A COMRADE TURNED our.
Decorates Graves of Old Soldiers and
Is Expelled From Home.
Monte Vista., Colo.—James H, Ma’!
den, an inmate of the Old Soldiers
end Sailors’ home at Monte Vista
and commander of the local G
A. R. post there, was expelled
from the home for deeoratin:
the graves of deceased comrades wit)
American flags. Commandant Aldrici
ected as prosecutor, judge and jury
Comrade Madden knew he was doom
lo expulsion before the hearing besa
and for that reason, after pleadin<
guilty to the two minor charges of (h~
five made against-him, he declined to
be examined by Commandant Aldrich
‘The inmates of the home are in {u!!
sympathy with Madden and hig expu!
sion may disrupt the institution, unless
the board of commissioners remov:s
Marich, who has been unpopular y:itt
the veterans for many months on ac
count of the martinet methods he has
adopted for the conduct of the hom
‘The home, so the old soldiers declare
is under rules and regulations such as
obtain in the army camps during act
ual war time.
If all the charges they make agains‘
tho management are true, the home |
nothing more or less than a militar
prison, and anyone who violates anv
rule—and there are hundreds of them
—ir. the slightest degree, intentionally
or unintentionally, practically stands
subject to expulsion at the hands 0!
Commandant Aldrich, who acts ag pros
jecutor, judge and jury. :
Commandant Aldrich, in a statement
after expelling Madden, said it was no"
a question of patriotism but of author
ity. These men can’t violate the rules
or question my authority in amy way
without being subject to suspension vt
expulsion. Iam boss of the home, an!
as long as 1 am in charge I propose (0
runitas I see fit.”
It had been Commandant Aldrich’s
intention to expel at least a score «‘
veterans from the home for placing the
Stars and Stripes over the graves of
comrades buried in the cemetery her
Cheap cotton flags had been placed
over the graves on Decoration Day, but
ordered removed the next day by A!
drich, who thought it was a waste of
moneg to allow God's sunshine to
bleach the flags, or to allow them to ‘ty
to the breezes in memory of the
parted heroes.
The action of the commandant
aroused the inmates of the home to
great indignation, and they promptly
raised money and sent to Denver: for
more flags. Aldrieh heard of this
move and ordered that the new fla:s
should not be placed in the cemetery
‘The old soldiers ignored his order, au
when he tried to keep them from enter
ing the cemetery by force, they
brushed him aside as if he had been 2
fy. This aroused Aldrich’s ire, and he
threatened to have every man who
took part in placing the flags expelled
from the home. Only hostile critieism
snd the fear of a walkout at the home
kept him from carrying out his, full
threat. Comrade Madden was then se-
lected as the “fall guy,” and expelled
after a trial that was nothing more
than a farce,
| MAY FIGHT IT OUT. the
Uncle Sam Will Stand Aside and
_ Watch Central America Fur Fly.
Mexico City—A cable dispatch says
the Salvadorean army has defeated
the invading force which cap-
tured Acajutla arfd has driven it back
to the coast. One of the soldiers of
the invading army was John Moisant,
a former resident of San Francisco, an
American citizen. He is reported to
have been captured by the forces of
President Figueroa,
The message follows:
“Revolutionary forces under Rivas
defeated in en attack on Son Sonata
today and driven back to Acatjutla.
John Moisani reported among the cap-
tured, FIGUEROA.”
It is reported on good authority that
troops are ready to invade Salvador
from three sides. ‘This information
says Generals Toledo and Alfara are
on the Honduran border ready to
strike and General Corea will enter the
country by way of Ampala.
Washinston—War between Nicara-
gua and San Salvador seems imminent,
notwitistanding the recent agreement
of peace between these two Central
American republics.
Acting on cable news that President
Zelaya has sent forces into San Salva-
dor for the purpose of inciting rebellion
and war, this government has ordered
the Yorktown and some small: r ves-
sels to proceed to the south again and
look after American and other national
interests.
‘The State Department seems to have
no doubt that war will be commenced,
as Minister Merry at San Salvador has
telegraphed that a Nicaraguan vessel
has actually landed troops at Acajutla
for “general revolutionary purposes.”
The Nicaraguan government has
been asked by the State Department
for the facts.
‘There is an undercurrent of feeling
in the State Department now that it
will perhaps be the better plan to let
the Nicaraguans and San Salvadoreans
fight it out, the department taking care
all the time of American and foreign
Thterests where European nations are
hot represented by a warship.
Boom in Colorado Lande,
A Chicago syndicate headed by Dr.
E. W. Lucas is going in heavily for
lands in eastern Colorado, especially
the state lands, which are being pur-
chased in large areas in the region
about Cheyenne Wells, where dry
farming flourishes.
Dr. Lucas is buying up several
thousand acres of land in the best dry
farming region and a Chicago syndi:
cate, heavily capitalized, is backing
him. The region about Cheyenne
Wells, almost deserted since the bulld-
ing of the Union Pacific put an end to
freighting across the plains, praett:
cally valueless even for grazing lands,
has suddenly come to be in great de-
mand since Campbell made practical
the dry farming process. The Chicago
syndicate, foreseeing a rush of farm:
ers to that region, which yields such
large returns for labor, is preparing to
mesh It by having the most desirable
of th state lands in a syndicate, —
THIRTEEN MARKED FOR DEATH.
Black Hand Casts Shadow Over Many
Prominent Homes in Trinidad.
Trinidad, Colo—Threatening death
to thirteen prominent men, a communi-
cation signed by John Nicolini, Tomaso
Packetti and Dion Picolini, whfeh was
received by the editor of a local paper,
has stricken terror into the hearts of
Trinidad people. The senders they
say are members of the Black Hand
and that they mean business. ‘They
claim to have committed numerous
murders,
‘The letter follows:
“Please publish this for the benefit
of society. My name ts Nicolini. I am
an Italian. I murdered Mr. Wilson of
Cedarhurst, a mining town twenty
miles north of here. I got only $70.
‘This will be the seventeenth man I
have killed since I left Italy. I am
well acquainted with Andy Shine, who
disappeared. You know heshowed a roll
of $1,600. I was standing there when
he showed it. Well, I have the money
now in my possession. You will please
find his body. There are several men
here whom I have determined to mur-
der before I leave the country. I will
give their names as follows: Judge
Mahin, Jesse G. Northeutt, O. L. Davis,
Jeffreys of the bank, Mayor Nichols,
Louis Kreiger, the sheriff; C. H. Rich-
ter, the saloon man; Mr. Quiltch, the
buggy and harness man; Joe Mulberry
of the Advertiser; Senators Frank
Woods and Casimero Barela, Walter
Dearden, the druggist. These men are
all on our blacklist and it is only a
matter of time until we will get them.
We live east of here, we are six strong
and are determined to rid the city of
these men.
“Signed by the committee of death.
“JOHN NICOLINI,
“TOMASO PACHETTI,
“DION PICOLINI.”
‘The dead body of Wilson was found
at Cedarhurst a week ago. Shine and
his family have completely disappeared
and all efforts of the authorities to find
them have failed, but information to-
day is to the effect that they have lo
cated at Cheyenne.
Senator Morgan Passes Away.
Washington.—United States Senator
John Tyler Morgan of Alabama, died
here at 11:15 p. m., June 11th.
Senator Morgan had been in bad
health for a number of years, but had
more or less regularly attended the
sessions of Congress. He suffered
from angina pectoris, which was the
cause of his death. ‘At his deathbed
were his daughters, Miss Mary Mor-
gan, and Nass Cornelia Morgan, both
of this city, and his secretary,’ J. 0.
Jones.
Mr. Morgan’s home in Alabama was
at Selma.
John Tyler Morgan was one of the
most distinguished members of the
United States Senate, and was so rec
ognized by all parties. He was born
June 20, 1824. He went to Alabama
when nine years of age,, receiving his
education there. He was admitted to
the bar in 1845, and began the prac:
tice of his profession. He rapidly
gained a high reputation as a lawyer
and a speaker. He was presidential
elector in 1860, voting for Brecken.
ridge, and in in 1861 was a delegate
to the Alabama convention which de-
clared for secession. He enlisted in
the Confederate army asa private in
{1861. In 1862 he raised a regiment,
‘of which he was made colonel, and in
1863 he was commissioned brigadier
general and commanded a division un-
der General Johnston. After the war
the resumed the practice of law at
‘Salem. He was prestdentlal elector op
the Democratic ticket in 1876 and in
1877 was elected to the United States
Senate. :
He was five times reelected, in 1882,
1888, 1894, 1900 and 1906. ‘In 1900
there was no opposing candidate and
he received the unanimous vote of the
Alabama Senate and House.
He was for many years recognized
as one of the ablest leaders af the
Democrats in the Senate, He was for
@ number of years a member of the
Senate committee on foreign relations
and for some years its chairman,
Recently he was chairman of the
committee on interoceanic canals and
Tayored the Nicaragua canal route in.
stead of the Panama, making one of
the most memorable fights in the Sen.
ate in favor of his contention. In No-
vember, 1903, he was removed from
the chairmanship of that committee.
Colorado Boy Among the Drowned.
Washington.—Six bright young mid-
shipmen, fresh from the academy at
Annapolis, all attached to the big bat-
tleship Minnesota, have been drowned.
The list of dead contains the name of
Philip H. Field of Denver, appointed
from Colorado on the recommendation
of Senator Patterson, and who was
graduated from the academy last year.
The conclusion was reached at the
Navy Department that either on ac
count of the lateness of the hour of the
return trip the Minnesota’s launch in
her haste had been driven hard into
the hevy sea that prevailed in Hamp-
ton Roads last night, or that the little
boat has been rug down by some
giant tramp steamers that make use
Toads as refuge in time of storm.
While the launch carried a good
sized party, no one has been found who
can say exactly how many occupants
the launch contained,
‘The men in the launch appeared to
be in high spirits after an evening of
dancing. How the launch, buoyed up
by so many airtight compartments,
could have been lost is yet a matter of
speculation. One theory is that it was
run into and cut in two by a passenger
yesesl, which may have passed éom-
pletely over the unfortunate launch.
Swear Orchard Did Not Buy Powder.
Boise, Idaho.—Depositions from the
Judson Powder Company of San Fran.
cisco will go far toward shattering the
testimony of Harry Orchard given by
him on the witness stand.
The witness for the prosecution
stated that he purchased ten pounds
of dynamite with whicheto blow up
the Bradley home from the San Fran-
‘eisco store of the Judson company.
The depositions secured by the de-
fense and taken from the records of
the powder company show that no ten.
pound lot of dynamite was sold any-
where-near the date fixed by Orchard
‘as the time he boughs the powder,
F aunt
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da 1 ,
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R ALL
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OPEN DAY AND NIGHT PHONE Mam 8280
COTTRELL’S PHARMACY
DR. W. J. COTTRELL,
Physician and Surgeon, Proprietor.
BOTTLED GOODS—WHISKEY , WINES, BEER, ETC., ASPECIALTY.
Pure drugs, hot an cold drinks, toilet’articles and
cigars—Prescriptions carefully compounded by Reg-
istered Phermist. Prompt delivery to any part of city.
‘ Asst. D. J. Correznn
2100 Arapahoe St. Denver, Colorada,
J.D, ORAOO. N. M. GAMPIGLIA,
"Phone Main 4885.
# C.& C. LIQUOR CO., w
DIRECT IMPORTERS,
Wines and Liquors for Medicinal Use Our Specialty.
2205 OHAMPA STREET.
Denver, - . = Colorade,
—————————E——>_—_—_—_———_———————— |
Do You Know DR. DAMERON has reduced his
prices for all Dental Work?
$7.00 Sets of Teeth for $5.00; $10 Sets for $7.00; $15 Sets for
$10; Gold Crowns only. $5.00 Gold Teeth, $4.00; Silver
Fillings, 50c up; Gold and Platina, $1.00 up. Painless Ex-
tracting. ALBANY DENTAL PARLORS,
Arapahoe street, Opp. the P. O. DR. DAMERON, Prop
ayant @s=THEe
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A RESORT FOR LADIES AND GENTLEMEN,
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KEWLY FURNISHED. PHONE MAIN 8046
DICH FRAZIER, Manages,
182) Arapahoe 8 Denver, Coloradeg
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FL.OOD’S MARKET Denver,
The Largest Anti-Trust Meat Market in the West.
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
Restaurant, Hotel and Boarding House
Business given Special Attention....
TEL. 3 AIN 3824, 1015-1017 15TH 8T
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Open Day and
Night.
Phone Main
3725,
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Undertaker
and Embalmer.
Carriages
furnished for all
Occasions.
1921 Arapahoe
Street,
Denver, Colo.
eceere cea am. 1 tod,Tio6y. m
Sunday, 10 to 12:30 a, m2 to 4 p.m.
PHONES: OFFicE, MAIN S598.
RESIDENCE. YORK i23.
DR. P. E. SPRATLIN,
1023 19TH STREET.
RESIDENCE, 2270 CLARKSON @T.
Denver, = - Colorado.
L. Rushenenberg & Co
Importers and Jobbers in
MUSICAL MERCHANDISE.
TELEPHONE oLive 922
RES PHONE BLUE ater
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020 FIFTEENTH sT.
SUIT 210 UPSTaiRS.
Denver, : - Colorado,
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For Fine Missouri Apple Jack
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OLD RELIABLE
| 24th and Larimer Sts.
Louisville Liquor
COMPANY.
Joseph Berger, Manager.
____ Phone Main 5818.
W. P. HORAN,
UNDERTAKER
PHONE 1368.
1627 Cleveland Place.
Denver, - - Colorado.
The Hindos have on their Hull, March 31st, a day on which they play pranks similar to those in vogue here on April 1st. They send persons with messages to fictitious individuals, or to those sure to be away from home, and enjoy a laugh at their disappointment.
It is published in Brazilian newspapers under a Hamburg date line that the Hamburg-American line and the Hamburg-South American Steamship Company have decided to jointly inaugurate a service between New York and Brazilian ports.
Acute Reasoning.
"Every trade has its tricks," said H. K. Adair, the western detective in Cedar Rapids. "My trade requires a lot of acute reasoning. It is like the dream diviner's.
"A young man went to a dream diviner in great excitement. He had dreamed of his dead sweetheart the night before, and there had been a figure five on each of her cheeks. Didn't that signify that he should play 55 in the lottery?
"Hold on,' said the diviner. 'Did the girl have her mouth open at the time?'
"Yes,' said the young man.
"Then play 505.""
Information in regard to several excellent weekly newspapers that are for sale can be obtained by writing to the Western Newspaper Union, Denver.
Denver Directory
$22 C. O.D.
You take no chance when buying a harness from us every set warranted to be presented. This double team harness complete with collars and breech-convoy style. 2-inch traces. C.O.F. everywhere for $27.00. Send for our free catalog of saddles and harness. Lowest prices in the U.S. The Fred Muller Saddle & Harness Co., 1413-19 Larimer St., Denver, Colo.
HAYWOOD TROUT FLIES—Ask your dealer for Guest Athletic Supplies, Tackle, The Whitney Sporting Goods Co., 505 17th St. Opp. Denver Club.
THE DENVER PAINT AND VARNISH CO.
Guest Athletic Line. 1520 Blake St. Denver.
THE INDEPENDENT GLASS COMPANY
Plate and Window Glass, 1520 Blake St. Denver.
BON I. LOOK Dealers in all kinds of mer-
chandise. Mammoth catalog
mailed free. Corner 16th and Blake. Denver.
THE FAMOUS J. H. WILSON STOCK SADDLES
Ask your dealer for them. Take no other.
AMERICAN HOUSE 2 blocks from
Union Depot
Best $2 a day hotel in the West. Ameri-
can plan.
BROWN PALACE HOTEL Absolutely
Fire-proof
European Plan. $1.50 and Upward.
STOVE REPAIRS of every known make
of stove, furnace or range. Geo. A.
Pullen. 1331 Lawrence. Denver. Phone 725.
FLORIST Floral designs for lodges and fun-
erals, home decor, and office décor
on short notice. TRUSTSTON R. U. SMITH.
Telephone Main 5386. 2961 Lawrence St.
THE COLORADO TENT AND AWNING CO
BLANKETS, COMFORTS
Largest canvas goods house in the West
Write for illustrated catalog.
ROBT. S. GUTSHALL. Prest.
1640 Lawrence St.
Denver, Colo.
E. E. BURLINGAME & CO.
ASSAY OFFICE AND CHEMICAL
LABORATORY
Established in Colorado, 1866. Samples by matter
express will receive prompt and careful attention
Gold & Silver Bullion
Refined, Melted and Assayed
OR PURCHASED.
Concentration Tests — 100 lbs. or car load lota
Write for terms.
1736-1738 Lawrence St. Denver, Colo.
Words and music sent FREE on receipt of your name and address with one or more persons thinking of buying a Plano, Organ or Talking Machine.
THE KNIGHT-LOCKE PIANO CO.,
513-521 Sixteenth St.,
Denver, Colo.
MATCHLESS
BALDWIN PIANOS
Grand Prix, Paris 1900
Grand Prix-St. Louis 1904
D. H. BALDWIN & CO.,
Manufacturers of the World's Greatest
Pianos
Five factories. Five separate makes of piano
Capital $1,800,000.00. Buy from the manufacturer
the dealers do. Address 1626 California St. Denver
PIANOS AND ORGANS
WAS
S225
NOW
S127
NOCK & GARSIDE
Manufacturers
of
Electric, Hydraulic,
Belt Power
Hand and Sidewalk
ELEVATORS
Phone 664
1850 Wasse St.
DENVER, COLO.
HOWARD E. BURTON, and Assayer
Specimen prices: Gold, silver lead, B1
gold, silver lead, gold, silver zinc or copper.
21. Cyanide tests. Mailing envelopes and
full price list sent on appl. control
and make work policies. Leadville, Co.
Reference. Carbonate National Bank
---
COLORADO NEWS ITEMS
Denver now boasts of a population of over 200,000.
Dr. B. Beshoar of Trinidad has taken unto himself a wife.
Normal diplomas were awarded to 202 graduates at Greeley.
Colorado Springs turned out forty-nine high school graduates.
Arvada Commercial Club is still after a 5 cent street car rate to Denver.
Ex-Governor Peabody and daughter are witnesses in the famous Haywood murder trial at Boise.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry T. West recently celebrated their 62nd wedding anniversary at Greeley.
Every teacher employed in the Boulder graded schools has been reappointed for next term.
Cripple Creek will celebrate the national holiday with a two-day jollification July 4th and 5th.
Denver and Greeley are to be connected by an electric line. Articles of importance have been filed.
A shaft is being sunk on the Rockwall coal vein in the vicinity of Florence by an independent company.
J. B. Bailey, a coal miner at Florence, fell dead the other night. He had been complaining of not feeling well for several days.
A horse( which ran away on one of the main streets of Grand Junction the other day, was badly injured by running into a bunch of tree stumps.
Mrs. Cynthia M. Marshall, wife of the money order clerk at the postoffice in Colorado Springs, died at the family residence, 412 East Huerano street.
A car containing bottled beer was broken into at Eaton and 170 bottles stolen. Today Sheriff Florence recovered all but thirty bottles. Tramps are suspected.
Major Otis Remick, a pioneer of Colorado Springs of the West, died at St. Francis hospital. He had been ill for several months, suffering from a general decline.
Gov. Buchtel has received the resignation of Senator M. E. Lewis of Fremont county. He has just been appointed postmaster of Florence and resigned before the expiration of his term.
John Corne, probation officer of Weld county for the last five years, resigned and P. Tisdel, known as Father Tisdel, who devotes his life to looking after the unfortunate in Weld county, was appointed to the vacancy.
Lucile Murtis, one of the most prominent graduates of the Trinidad High school this year, was thrown from a buggy and fatally injured at Berintville, Ia. She was prominent in the young society set and the sad news is received with great regret.
Instead of draining a slough on his land, as is usual, G. S. Allsebrook near Fort Lupton, will use the seepage, flood and waste waters, which fill the slough, for irrigation, by building a dam and erecting a pumping plant by which the water will be taken to 80 acres adjoining. The plant will cost $1,200.
State Dairy Commissioner Bishopp is testing the herd of 20 cows at the State Home for Dependent and Neglected Children for tuberculosis. The dairy cattle at each state institution are being put through a test of this kind, and the one at the Buena Vista state reformatory will come in next for inspection and examination.
Mrs. Zoa Gillespie, sixteen-year-old bride of John Gillespie, at Grand Junction, was committed by a jury in the Juvenile Court. Mrs. Rosetta Johnson alleged that one of her dresses had been taken by the girl when she went to Delta to get married. The girl said she merely meant to borrow the garment to be married in and then to return it.
Miss Flossie Moore, valedictorian of the 1907 class of the Florence high high school, graduates with a perfect record. She stands highest in scolarship and during the entire four years' course has never been absent or tardy. She is eighteen years old and is the daughter of former State Senator Frank Moore. She was born and reared in that section.
Mrs. David D. Kimmel, about 65 years old, of Florence, broke her right arm while shoveling dirt. Her foot slipped from the shovel, throwing her to the ground, breaking a small bone in the right wrist. Her husband, aged 74, fell from a scaffold a month ago and broke his right leg. They have been married nearly 40 years and these are the first misfortunes that have overtaken them.
Two irrigation cases were settled at Fort Collins in Judge Garrigues' Court, in which Larimer County No. 2 ditch is given the right to take water from the Poudre river through what is known as the old city ditch, and the Arthur ditch is allowed to change its point of diversion of the river water. These cases have been pending in the courts here for sixteen years.
Marro Gallina, an eight-year-old Italian boy, was instantly killed at the Huerfano mine in Remy canon, near Trinidad. The boy was taking a short cut to his home and while on a small bridegirl was caught by a string of mine cars and frightfully mangled. A six-year-old girl was the only witness to the accident. The trip rider in charge of the cars knew nothing of the accident until told by the little girl. He took the body to the home of the boy's parents.
In appears from investigation that much of the fruit thought to have been killed by the early May storms is alive and flourishing, and reports from around Grand Junction indicate that a large amount of apples and pears will be harvested this year, though the crop will not be full one. Peaches seem to have suffered the most from the freeze, and berries, grapes, plums and other small fruits, will produce only a fair crop. Late cherries are an exception to the latter group, and it is anticipated that this crop will show up well at the end of the season. The growers are not at all discouraged over the prospect and are keeping their trees in good shape by spraying, whether they will bear this year or not.
Minister's Methods Likely to 'Attract Large Congregation.
A resident of Hudson, Wis., was deploring the resignation of Senator Spooner.
"The senate can't afford to lose a mind like that," he said. "I know the man well. He practiced law in this town for 15 years or thereabouts. He won every case he set his hand to.
"It was no surprise to us Hudsonites to find that John C. Spooner was the finest legal mind in the senate. When he had a case on, we used to go in droves to hear him plead.
"I remember to this day a story that he once told in court in a case where he was showing how, with a good motive, one might still do a lot of harm.
"He said that two aged Scotch ministers sat talking one day over their church warden pines.
"Last Sawbath," said the younger of the two old men, 'only three folk cam' to my kirk, and, since it was an awfu' cauld, snawy, stormy mornin', I juist took them over to the manse, read a chapter, gied them a prayer, and then, to ward off the rheumatism, a guild stiff glass of the best whisky. "The other minister smiled. "Aweel," he said, 'ye will hae a fine congregation, my brither, the next stormy day."
CHOICE OF TWO EVILS.
Request That Was by No Means a Compliment for Papa.
A New York scientist, the father of a large and growing family, has his troubles. One evening his youngest was holding forth in her best style. The mother could do nothing with the child, so the man of science went to the rescue.
"I think I can quiet little Flora," he said. "There's no use humming to her in that silly way. What she wants is real music. The fact that I used to sing in the Glee club at Yale and sang well, too, may make a difference."
Accordingly, the professor took the child and, striding up and down the room, sang in his best manner. He had not finished the second verse of his song, when a ring was heard. The door was opened, and there stood a girl of 14, who said:
"I'm one of the family that's just moved into the flat next to yours. There's a sick person with us, and he say, if it's all the same to you, would you mind letting the baby cry instead of singing to it?"—Success.
The Human Shield.
The advent of Decoration day caused Admiral Dewey, at a recent dinner, to praise the bravery of the American troops during the civil war.
"Both sides alike were brave," he said. "North and south, soldiers and sailors. And the bravery of the raw recruit was a thing to be seen to be believed.
"There used to be circulated, though, a good story about a Connecticut recruit. This young man, after he had gotten initiated, fought heroically; but in his first engagement he was very nervous.
"A chum of his was in the line ahead of him, and when the bullets began to fly, the chum began to dogde.
"Thereupon the recruit shouted excitedly:
"Hey, Jim, don't duck. I'm behind ye."
An Artistic Idea.
"I don't mind paying for a picture if it's a good, natural likeness," said the rich man to the fashionable artist, to whom he was to sit for his portrait.
"O, it is quite characteristic and natural, I assure you," replied the artist. "I flatter myself that easy attitude with your hand in your pocket is quite a neat touch."
And so it proved when the bill came in.
What He Would Have Done.
Wilhelm—Well, old man, I haven't seen you for an age. And how do you find matrimony suits you?
Johann (sighing)—It's an expensive joy; if I had only known what I had to pay in milliners' bills—
Wilhelm—You would have remained single, eh?
Johann—No, I would have married the milliner—Lustige Blatter.
He that has the energy and will to
uproot a fault has also the energy,
and ought to will to plant a virtue in
its place.—Lacon.
AN OLD EDITOR
Found $2000 Worth of Food.
The editor of a paper out in Okla, said: "Yes, it is true when I got hold of Grape-Nuts food, it was worth more than a $2000 doctor bill to me, for it made me a well man. I have gained 25 pounds in weight, my strength has returned tenfold, my brain power has been given back to me, and that is an absolute essential, for I am an editor and have been for 35 years.
"My pen shall always be ready to speak a good word for this powerful nutritive food. I had of course often read the advertisements regarding GrapeNuts, but never thought to apply the food to my own use, until, in my extremity and sickness the thought came to me that it might fit my case. The statements in regard to the food are absolutely correct, as I have proven in my own case. One very fortunate thing about the food is that while it is the most scientifically made and highly nourishing, concentrated food I have ever known, it has so delicious a taste that it wins and holds friends." "There's a Reason." Read "The Road to Weilville," in pku.
9.00 DROPS
CASTORIA
ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT.
A Vegetable Preparation for Assimilating the Food and Regulating the Stomachs and Bowels of
INFANTS • CHILDREN
Promotes Digestion, Cheerfulness and Rest. Contains neither Opium, Morphine nor Mineral.
NOT NARCOTIC.
Recipe of Old Died SMALL PLUFFER
Pumpkin Seed
Al Squash
Rhodie Salts
Aloe Seed
Powderin
Elemens Salts
Wheat Seed
Cornstalk Sugar
Watergreen Flavor.
Aperfect Remedy for Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Worms, Convulsions, Feverishness and LOSS OF SLEEP.
Fac Simile Signature of
Charles H. Flutter
NEW YORK.
All months old
35 DOSES - 35 CENTS
Guaranteed under the Food and Exact Copy of Wrapper.
CASTORIA
The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paragoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of
Charles H. Flutter.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years
THE GENTAUR COMPANY, 77 MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY.
The Happy Experience of a New Castle, Pa., Woman.
Mrs. John Mansell, 614 So./ Jefferson St., New Castle, Pa., says: "For years I was running down with kidney trouble without knowing what it was, and finally got so bad I was given up. The urinary passages were painful, sometimes scanty and again very pro-
I was running down with kidney trouble without knowing what it was, and finally got so bad I was given up. The urinary passages were painful, sometimes scanty and again very profuse. My limbs, feet and ankles bloated dreadfully, and sometimes my whole body. My heart palpitated and I had smothering spells. A week's treatment with Doan's Kidney Pills helped me and a few boxes cured me. At 68 I am strong and well." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Wants the Rod Restored.
The Shanghai Times editor says: The jail has been well administered, but is fuller than it should be, due, I fear, to the abolition of the cague and bamboo. The ordinary criminal has no great objection to repeated short visits to the jail, but shrinks from a repetition of corporal punishment. Punishment with the bamboo is in vogue throughout China, and here only has it by special edict been abolished. We deprecate the Chinese authorities making this settlement a field for experiment, and will press for the reintroduction of this salutary method of punishment.
Laundry work at home would be much more satisfactory if the right Starch were used. In order to get the desired stiffness, it is usually necessary to use so much starch that the beauty and fineness of the fabric is hidden behind a paste of varying thickness, which not only destroys the appearance, but also affects the wearing quality of the goods. This trouble can be entirely overcome by using Defiance Starch, as it can be applied much more thinly because of its greater strength than other makes.
Senator Morgan a Model.
Senator John T. Morgan, of Alabama occasionally writes magazine articles which involve a great deal of research, but he uniformly refuses to accept pay for them. In the course of his career many railroad passes have been offered him, but he never accepted any either for himself or any member of his family. Though over 80 years old, he thinks nothing of working half the night. The senator never haunts the departments looking for jobs for constituents. Of moderate means when he entered the senate, he is now a poor man, having little or nothing but his salary.
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 beauty. Home laundering would be equally 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 Defiance Starch and you will be pleasantly surprised at the improved appearance of your work.
Mexican Province Advancing.
Yucatan, 50 years ago one of the poorest of the Mexican states, has become one of the richest. Merida, the capital, has well paved streets, well lighted and well cared for by a corps of "white wings." Well-built homes, some of them actual palaces, and all clean and newly painted, line the streets far into the country. A well-built system of mule cars extends all over the city.
Would Quit When He Was Done With All Things Earthly.
A rich man out in the suburbs who owns a large place has among the many people employed to keep it in shape an Irishman of whom he is particularly fond on account of his unconscious wit, says Harper's Weekly. This Irishman is something of a hard drinker, and, as his income is limited, he is more particular as regards the quantity than the quality of his liquids. The other day the employer, who had been awaiting a good opportunity, remarked in a kind tone, as the closing sentence of a friendly lecture:
"Now, Pat, how long do you think you can keep on drinking this cheap whiskey?"
To which Pat instantly replied:
"All my life, if it doesn't kill me."
ECZEMA COVERED BABY.
Worst Case Doctors Ever Saw—Suf
fered Untold Misery—Perfect
Cure_by Cuticura Remedies.
"My son, who is now twenty-two years of age, when four months old began to have eczema on his face, spreading quite rapidly until he was nearly covered. The eczema was something terrible, and the doctors said it was the worst case they ever saw. At times his whole body and face were covered, all but his feet. I used many kinds of patent medicines, to no avail. A friend teased me to try Cuticura. At last I decided to try Cuticura when my boy was three years and four months old, having had eczema all that time and suffering untold misery. I began to use all three of the Cuticura Remedies. He was better in two months; in six months he was well. Mrs. R. L. Risley, Piermont, N. H., Oct. 24, 1905."
Wonderful Engineering Work
The admirable accuracy of the work of civil engineers of the best class is shown in the wonderfully slight deviation of the great Simplon tunnel from the calculations of the men who planned it and executed the work. The tunnel is $12\frac{1}{2}$ miles long. It proved 31 inches longer than it was expected to be. When the two headings came together in the depths of the mountain their levels were less than $3\frac{1}{2}$ inches apart.
How's This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hail's Catarrh Care.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for the last 10 years and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations firm.
Halls Catarrh Care. Toledo, O.
Halls Catarrh Care. Toledo, O.
directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces or the system. Testimonial sent free. Price 75 cents per bottle. Send to: Halls Catarrh Care. Toledo, O.
Take Hail's Family Price for constipation.
Corroborative Evidence.
"Are you engaged?" asked the young man, thinking he had noted a lack of welcome. "Yes," replied the girl, "but for this evening only. There's my engagement ring now," she added, as the electric doorbell sounded
It Cures While You Walk.
Allen's Foot-Ease is a certain cure for hot, sweating, callous, and swollen, aching feet. Sold by all Druggists. Price 25c. Don't accept any substitute. Trial package FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
The Same Species.
"Did you ship that load of elephants' ears to the florist on the suburban express?"
"No; I thought it would be more in order to send them on the trunk line."
Mrs. Winklow's Soothing Syrup.
For children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25a bottle.
Discretion may be the better part of valor because it can run faster.
AFRAID OF PARALYSIS
A NERVOUS SUFFERER CURED BY DR. WILLIAMS' PINK PILLS.
The Medicine That Makes Rich, Red Blood and Performs Wonders as a Tonic for the Nerves.
Why are nervous people invariably pale people?
The answer to that question explains why a remedy that acts on the blood can cure nervous troubles.
It explains why Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People are also for nervous people.
It is because of the intimate relation between the red corpuscles in the blood and the health of the nerves. The nervous system receives its nourishment through the blood. Let the blood become thin, weak and colorless and the nerves are starved—the victim is started on the road that leads to nervous wreck. Nervous people are pale people—but the pallor comes first. Enrich the blood and the nerves are stimulated and toned up to do their part of the work of the body. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills make red blood and transform nervous, irritable, ailing people into strong, energetic, forceful men and women.
Mrs. Harriet E. Porter, of 20 Liberty avenue, South Medford, Mass., says: "I had never been well from childhood and a few years ago I began to have dizzy spells. At such times I could not walk straight. I was afraid of paralysis and was on the verge of nervous prostration. Then neuralgia set in and affected the side of my face. The pains in my forehead were excruciating and my heart pained so that my doctor feared neuralgia of the heart. I tried several different kinds of treatment but they did me no good. "One day my son brought me some of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and I found that they strengthened my nerves. I took several boxes and felt better in every way. There were no more dizzy attacks, the neuralgia left me and I have been a well woman ever since." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are invaluable in anemia, rheumatism, after-effects of the grip and fevers and in sick headaches, nervousness, neuralgia, and even partial paralysis and locomotor ataxia.
Our booklet "Nervous Disorders, a Method of Home Treatment" will be sent free on request to anyone interested. Write for it today.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by all druggists, or will be sent, postpaid, on receipt of price, 50 cents per box, six boxes for $2.50, by the Dr. Williams Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y.
SICK HEADACHE
CARTER'S
LITTLE
LIVER
PILLS.
Positively cured by these Little Pills. They also relieve Dizziness from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Heavy Eating. A perfect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue, Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
CARTERS
LITTLE
LIVER
PILLS.
Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature
Brewood
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
ECZEMA CURED
Eczema in its worst form, we will all other skin diseases. Cured by the application of that marvelous remedy HEISKELL'S OINTMENT
The best tonic soap for the skin is Heiskell's Mediinal Soap (25%). Tonerup the liver and blood. Ointment (40%). All drug-gists. Send for book of testimonials to JOHNSTON, HOLLOWAY & CO.
521 Commerce St., Philadelphia, Pa.
De STYLES
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A marked feature of the present
season is the novelties which are ap-
pearing in the realm of fashion, Con-
spicuous among these novelties may
be mentioned the Japanese outline of
‘the bodice, which is permitted to
stamp its popularity upon the blouse,
notably upon the lace blouse which
looks very well, indeed, under such
conditions. I would quote a capital
example made in a combination of
thick white guipure striped with lines
of black velvet ribbon over a fine lace
front, and destined to be worn with a
fine lace skirt bordered with coarse
lace—a very good dress altogether.
Besides this, 1 would observe the
addition to the lace blouse of more
ordinary detail, of braces of ribbon,
short wide sleeves of ribbon, and a
belt with sash ends of ribbon. Such
ribbon could be chine with a satin
border, This needs a slim figure for
its best success, and those who are
at all stout should trust themselves to
the simpler belts of ribbon, kid, or
leather, or striped galon. This last is
comparatively new, and is to be met
with the buckle covered to match.
‘The elastic belt continues to receive
it supporters, and shines beneath the
influence of gold and silver. It may
also be found faced with velvet,' and
only under one condition could I be
induced to recognize its plausible
charms.
But to proceed with my list of
trifles. I comment with joy on the
continued favor shown to the lawn
and linen collar, recognizing that the
former daily assumes a finer aspect
and is traced with finer stitching, »o
minute details of design seeming to
be too intricate to do it service. For
the prodigal, summer blouses are
made entirely of such luxuries as this
finely embroidered lawn, costing no
It is the recognized fact in Burope
that American women are the most
extensive wearers and the keenest
crities of the shirt-waist, and for this
reason they are constantly on the
alert for new designs in that partic-
ular article of apparel. The tailor-
made shirt-waist 1s, like all made-to-
measure garments, distinguishable
for its smartness of cut and fit, and
more and more are women appreciat-
Ing this fact. The two strong points
In favor of the shirt-waist are the mul-
Utude of shades and designs and
cloths in which it may be obtained,
and the comparative cheapness of this
Indispensable article of dress. Freshly
laundried, what looks fresher or more
attractive than a well-made, well-fitting
uhirt-waist. The shirt-wafst worn by
the lady to the right in our flustration
above is made in the gauze cashmere,
which, being pure wool, is absolutely
unshrinkable. Other good qualities of
the goods and which should ke sought
for in a garment of this kind are the
smooth, clean surfaces which are re-
tained even after much wear and many
A BEAUTFUL CGOWN
less than eight guineas; and perhaps
their charm is only discernible to the
expert, and nine women out of ten
would be as content with the linen ba-
tiste blouse, bearing hem-stitched
tucks intersected with small satin-
stitched spots, and to these latter I
confess I am much addicted, finding
they look equally well with glace
coats or cloth or serge.
‘There are some pretty new models
in glace coats, some taking the
straight Japanese outline and being
covered with silken braid, others be-
ing in the paletot shape with a belt at
the waist and an embroidered lawn
collar round the neck, and a few black
tassels on the front, and the sleeves
striking a decorative note. The most
extravagant form of the glace coat,
however, is embroidered all over with
floss silk, and bears a thickly netted
silken fringe all round it.
The three-quarter coats, fitting al-
most tightly, and bearing no fullness
in the basque, are suggestive of the
Directoire period with their large but-
tons and the sleeves full on the top,
but the absence of fulness on tho
skirt contradicts this impression to
some extent.
All the best of the new skirts are
cut on the cross, with a seam down
the center, and fitted tightly round the
hips, while their decoration is either
braid or flatly-stitched bands upon
the hem and above it. Besides this,
the trimming of the hour is embroid-
ery, and our taste for it grows apace.
Thaye just seen an advance sample
of summer millinery, entirely made of
embroidered batiste, this being work-
ed into the crown, and a mushroom-
shaped brim, and simply trimmed
with a scarf of colored crepe de chine.
T can look forward to meeting it again
with much pleasure,
washings and the happy knack of
neither creasing nor crushing. This
quality of cashmere comes in small
checks and other neat effects which
look so well with plain coat and skirt
costumes, and which like so many of
the shirt-waists, 1s made with or-
dinary collar band, although this may
be changed to: sult’ the individual
taste.
In the central figure of the illustra-
tion is displayed a waist made of cot-
ton material which is exceedingly
smart in its effect. It is of white body
ground, patterned with blue stripe.
Japleen is a new but very popular
material for shirt-walsts, in fact it is
80 durable and s0 desirable from ey-
ery standpoint of the shirt-waist re-
quirement that it is being more and
more used. Japleen is a material
made of Egyptian cotton and silk, and
has a pretty silky appearance which {t
retains to the last, One of these Jap-
Jeen waists 1s sketched in our illustra-
tion and is the one to the extreme
left. The shade is a delicate mauve
with a little starshaped spot in the
game color.
SS & ;
f
B
GARMENT STORE
925-16" ST. (= OPP. JOSLINS .
JUNE CLEARING SALE.
The bad weather during May makes
necessary unusus] reductions in prices to
unload our surplus stock of
Ladies Suits, Long Coats, Jackets,
Skirts, Waists and Petticoats.
The month of Juae, usually the best
profit making mont! of the Spring season,
will be instead a profit sacrificing month.
Our customers get tiie profit. Price reduc-
tion will be general throughout the stock.
The biggest cut in price will be in Ladies
Cloth Suits which will be sold for 4 to 4
off former prices,
Ladies Cloth Jackets and Coats } off
regular price.
Ladies Cloth Jackets and Coats 4 off
regular price.
All Waists and Skirts have been re-
duced at a reduction of 4 below former
regular prices.
i i i 925 16th St.
Silver smith & Hiller, 935, 16th st
aa THE CALOMET
a | SOCIAL CLUB.
ie ae LAWRENCE STEPHEN, Manager.
= as A FIRST-CLASS RESORT.
“ 4 ae
_ 7 ELEGANTLY FURNISHED.
a STE SOBRISEED,
y ee | Onr Reading Room Comprize all
, ee | or the latest Papers, Books
‘ ‘ and Magazines,
‘ S| Headquarters for Cooks, Waiters
and Railroad Porters.
2149 Curtis Sreet.
a Phone Main 8232.
LAWRENCE STEPHEN. Denver, - - Colorado.
cA
Ca <—
1841 ARAPAHOE PHONE 8/7.
Finest hand work in the city. 2317-19 Larimer Street
“Get the Habit”
Put a Dollar in Your Pocket.
] THD STORD THAT SAVES YOU A & |B
rs “WO MORE tp, | ‘
| 50
a 220 9 | $
ENNING= EDDY SHOE CO.
838 FIFTEENTH STREET. DENVER, COLO
The Best of All to our Readers, | Necsseaty; Hourslot olere.
pice ] sQJ] The belief that the hours of sleep
‘The next big thing will be the Masons areas Me ie ota Geena,
picnic at Bloomfield park, Tuesday July| foqq sense. If the human body does
2nd. ot need sleep for the upbulldiig of its
The Popular Photographer.
Only Caters to First-class Trade.
Our Pictures speak for
Themselves. .
16th & Curtis. In the Post Blk.
JOSEPH H. STUART
LAWYER.
Praotice in all courts. Examining
abstract of title and drawing
up legal instruments given
careful attention.
329 Kittredge Bid. Phone Olive 294
Res. 2562 Lincoln Avenue,
Necessary Hours of Sleep.
The belief that the hours of sleep
should be artificially restricted is prev-
alent. Yet it is contrary to ordinary
good sense. If the human body does
not need sleep for the upbullding of its
tissues it will not call for it. A rule
of health which can not be wrung is
to sleep, if possible, as long as any
inclination for it exists. The er-
roneous view on this subject is un-
doubtedly due to the fact that when
the mind and body are thoroughly
rested it {s often difficult to arouse the
mind from its comfortable lethargy.
On the other hand, the man who is un-
der a mental strain and sleeps only
five or six hours at night Is keen and
alert soon after awakening. But it is
an unhealthy activity. His nerves are
at a high tension. He is on edge, 80
to speak. Such a strain, long con-
tinued, results inevitably in a nervous
breakdown.
All things that are supposed to come
to him who waits are subject to
change without notice.
Chance for Philanthrovlete.
There is a plot for a summer novel
im this advertisement which recently
sppeared in the Lucknow (India)
Daily Telegraph. “Will any gentleman,
educated, European, marry (tmmedt
ately) = young lady to save her from
a hateful marriage?”
CRITICAL MOMENT.
When John Wanted the Ring It Was
in His Sock.
John Jenkinson would not have ex-
changed situations with the prime min-
ister, the prince of Wales or the drum
major of a brass band.
Felicia Wilkins had answered “Yes”
in a voice as soft and gentle as the
sigh of music in a dreamless sleep or
the murmuring wail of a caressing
breeze from lethean waters soothingly
fanning the whiskers of Father Time.
“Felicit Wilkins,” he exclaimed rap-
turously, as his left hand and arm
disappeared from sight with a rapid
yet sneaking motion toward the back
of the sofa on which they sat, and
the fingers of his right hand appear-
ed to be feeling for something in his
vest pocket, “you have made me the
happiest man in the world.”
The timid, upturned glance of her
liquid dark eyes, says Tit-Bits, and the
warm blush that overspread the happy
face of the lovely girl replied more
eloquently than words could have
done.”
“And you will forgive my presump-
tion, darling,” he continued, “4f, in an-
ticipation of your answer, I have ven-
tured to provide myself with—with—
a—with a—”
Jenkinson paused in some apparent
excitement, and his finger and thumb
nervously explored his vest pocket
without seeming to find anything.
“I—I must have lost it!” he gasped.
“Felicia, it was a ring! Ha! Perhaps
it is in some other pocket.”
Rising to his feet he thrust a
trembling hand into his trousers
pocket.
There was a hole in that pocket.
“John,” said Felicia, as she noted
with concern his ghastly face, on which
the light of a desperate resolve was
breaking, “don't grieve over ft. It will
turn up. You are excited. Is there any-
thing I can do—”
“Yes,” exclaimed John, in a hollow
voice, “Felicia, I think I know where
that ring is. If you would do me a
favor I shall never forget until the
last hour of my life, get me a shoe-
horn and leave me to myself for a few
moments.”
Talked Them Into Prison.
“About 30 years ago Henry Clay
Dean, the eccentric Missouri lawyer
and orator, was attending a term of
court at which I was defending a
man on a pretty serious charge,” said
Judge Risdon of Kirksville the other
day to a Kansas City Star writer.
“Two horse thieves that were in jail
sent for Dean, He took their case,
and after looking at it from all sides
concluded the best thing for them to
do was to plead guilty and take two
years each.
“His men balked at the {dea of
pleading guilty. He told them that
the penitentiary wasn’t a bad sort of
place; he had been all through it and
knew. ‘The warden—a personal friend
of mine—tis one of the kindest men
that ever lived,’ said Dean; ‘he never
makes you work when you are tired;
and when you are sick he always looks
after you lke a mother. You get
roast beef and brown bread every day.
and ple and turkey on Sunday. Why,
when Sill Jenkins—you boys know
Bill—used to run a little sawmill over
in the corner of Putnam county, they
sent him up for—er—borrowing corn.
‘When he went there he didn’t weigh
over a hundred and thirty pounds, reg-
ular skin and bones, and in six months
he weighed 300 pounds avoirdupois,
and was made captain of the guard—
just getting along fine; said he
wouldn't swap his job for any other
in Missouri and wrote his folks to
come down and live with hit. The
prison can't hurt anything but your
reputation and what does a fellow
who's been stealing care about repu-
tations, anyway?’
“The two horse thieves by this time
were dead anxious to plead guilty and
begin life in the pen. More than
that, all the other fellows in the jail
who had heard Dean's talk insisted on
pleading guilty and going along.”
Her Money Raising Scheme.
“Now, dear,” said the red-cheeked
man to his wife, “I am going to have
& little poker game Wednesday night.
My friend and his wife are expert
players, I don't want you to distract
me.”
“I won't,” said she. “I'll sit by a
little table ‘way off yonder and trim
my hat.”
“That's what you can do,” he assent-
ea; “sit ‘way off yonder and trim
your hat. Don't come and stand back
of me and say: ‘Oh, what a lovely
hand you've got! Where did you
get all those aces? Or: ‘My, but
all your cards are red, diamonds, only
that spade!’ Don't do that. You hear?
But, above all, please, if I should hap-
pen to win a pile of money, don't
feach out and grab a handful and run
off laughing about it. Don’t do that,
will you? That isn't funny. It isn't
funny at all.”
“Tl try not to,” she promised, “but
you know, dear, that ts the only way
can get any money out of you. Make
you let me have it before company.
And then,” after a moment of thought,
‘you borrow it back the minute they
leave.”
‘Wax Modele of Shins.
Paraffin wax models of all proposed
British battleships are used by the ad-
miralty for tests before the keels of
the ships are laid down, the miniature
ships being tied in a great tank. The
models are from 12 to 24 feet long, the
tank being 400 feet long and 20 feet
wide. The models are made of wax
ecause it is a material which does
jot absorb water or change its weight.
rations are easy and the parafin
be melted up and used agaim
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