Colorado Statesman
Saturday, February 15, 1908
Denver, Colorado
Page text (machine-generated)
The Business Men's Club will Give Its 2nd Grand Ball at East Turner Hall March 2nd
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
THE JOURNAL OF THE WEST.
LABOR SHALL BE FREE
RAGE COUNTRY PARTY
THE HANDICAP
"The Negroes' Handicap an Excuse or a Spur," is a Headline in the Seattle Republican. Followed with Comment of Influential Writers.
VOL. XIV,
THE HA
"The Negroes' Handicap an Excuse
Seattle Republican, Folk
Influential
To toil unceasing for years without recompense, save a place to sleep and enough to eat, would have a telling effect upon the mental and moral tone of any race. To be continually surrounded by an atmosphere pregnant with the thought of the littleness, of a certain class of persons, could not but leave mental impressions detrimental to that people.
Such was the condition of the Negro during slavery, such are some of the cruel results which have tenaciously pursued him ever since. The effort made during those days to instantly suppress the faintest indication of race union less rebellion follow is bearing fruit until this day. To have some one great binding issue, so plain that even the least can appreciate it, is the surest way to bring an effective rebuff to bear against time worn teachings.
Owing to the unfair conditions which govern the race it must be forcibly proven to the world that the Negro is the equal of any other known race. He, himself, knows this, but would not be so willing to demonstrate it, if it were not for the fact that his handicap pricks his very inmost soul carrying as it does with it, the knowledge that as a man he is considered below the standard.
His handicap then affords a meeting line. A habit is being formed. Let the people see the greatness of their strength in being united on one thing and they will the more willingly unite upon others.
Unity is the first essential in all civilized races. The Negroes' handicap is spurring them to, as a mass, realize that there must be principles for which their men as one man would die and there must be virtues for which their women would stake their very existence.
Were there no handicaps there would be no need of schools such as Booker T. Washington's and instead of an annual outpouring of educated and trained workmen we would have a horde of cheap politicians who in the hands of unscrupulous men would prove a disgrace to their race and a menace to the nation.
All men have reserve strength in them for which the needs of the ordinary day does not call, but just
as extreme heat refines gold so the Negroes' handicap is building up and rounding out the Negroes' capacity. The peculiar conditions of his handicap, although the most grinding and at times seemingly unendurable, isolate in such a manner that faults of short comings are seen and are gradually being eliminated; and, humiliate in such a manner as to render so sensitive the manhood and womanhood of the race that efforts and results thrice worthy of a much older and more advantageously circumstanced people are rapidly forthcoming.
[BY AURORA GROSE RESSELL.]
"The Handicap of the Negro as an Excuse," has been described by one as an ignoble vice, rooted in selfishness and as showing an incapacity for generosity and magnamity. The one who serves another is ready to disparge and slander him, or to join in any plot to work his harm and downfall.
This attitude to a great degree has handicapped the Negro in his efforts to rise in the world of usefulness, for the world in its estimate of persons, places and things is governed largely by the subjects and opinions of itself.
That the Negro is made to feel that he is a subject of envy and strife, and each effort is shrowded in darkness is becoming more and more prevalent. It is so in business, in the professions and even the common walks of life. He is orced to be the negative quantity because he must play the lesser part. Less pay for his labor than any other American citizen, his requirements ditto with his fellow citizen, the most generally rejected and subjected of any other citizen because of the closed avenues against him; the most generally hold up to ridicule by both pen and press of any other class or race of people, and yet he only asks for fair exchange.
If the above is a spur toward the Negro manhood of America what then shall be done with the hatred breeding speeches of Tillman and Vardaman, and the cruel books and plays of a Dixon, which is not a spur but a kick to the Negro manhood of America. There is no question as to the progress he is making notwithstanding, but would the masses
DENVER, COLORADO, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1908.
W. H.
A LATE PICTURE OF SECRETARY TAFT.
William Howard Taft, secretary of war and leading Republican presidential candidate, was born in Cincinnati Sept. 15, 1857. A graduate of Yale and Cincinnati Law school, he began work as a reporter. In 1887 he became judge of the superior court of Cincinnati; in 1890 he was appointed United States solicitor general; in 1892 he became United States circuit judge; in March, 1900, he went to the Phillippines, to organize the American government there; Feb. 1, 1904, he was appointed secretary of war. He has rendered conspicuous service in the Phillippines; in negotiations with Pope Leo; in Cuba; in Panama, and to American interests throughout the world.
not have advanced more rapidly, would not the standard of citizenship have been higher if it were not that he is handicapped in life; further than sunshine and happiness, it does not afford to him as to other men, a deserving chance.
He has arisen to distinctive classes through it all, and they are marked. The worthless, ignorant, semi-criminal sort form one—the self respecting and hard working class another, and of the two, which is the most predominant in the minds of the American people, and why? The answer is plain—The criminal class. And why? Not that he is such a disturbing element, but his self respecting and hard working brother more so.
Would the press, the schools and even the pulpits discuss him so generally if he were half so bad? Why not choose a better subject?
A LATE PICTURE OF
William Howard Taft, secretary of
tial candidate, was born in Cincinnati
Cincinnati Law school, he began work
of the superior court of Cincinnati; in
solicitor general; in 1892 he became
1900, he went to the Philippines, to or
Feb. 1, 1904, he was appointed secreta-
ous service in the Philippines; in nee-
Panama, and to American interests th
It was never wrong that made man right or great. It is the good one that we love and adore. Then why throw open the institutions of learning, where only light, law and order should dwell, and invite a mob rioter to instill into the youth of America a lower standard of manhood for the Negro to surmount?
Wherein does this elevate a people or spur him on to the goa', when he is made to feel that the
companion beside him is his enemy, earliest childhood to manhood: These are the conditions of to day.
The schools which are the nursery of all civilization are undergoing marked changes and where a few years ago in Harvard, a young Negro lad was chosen valedictorian of his class, we find the very least organization of such school, discussing whether a Negro should be a part of a base-ball team, and a colored doctor, who only a few years ago was physician in a Boston hospital, finds today such institution refusing admittance to a Negro, and this feeling is growing, notwithstanding the fact no Negro student ever disgraced Harvard, and that no body of students are more orderly or law abiding than the Negroes.
You are now left to decide wheth
OF SECRETARY TAFT.
In war and leading Republican presiden-
sept. 15, 1857. A graduate of Yale and
was a reporter. In 1887 he became judge
in 1890 he was appointed United States
United States circuit judge; in March,
organize the American government there;
try of war. He has rendered conspicu-
tations with Pope Leo; in Cuba; in
boughout the world.
er under such conditions where in intelligence and ambition reigns if such obstacles excuse a handicap toward a marked success.
Washington, February 3,—Richard Denton, a Negro, who was stabbed in the heart Saturday night, was placed on the operating table at the Emergency Hospital, his breast opened, the heart slightly raised and 18 stitches taken in it. He will recover.
JAPS HAS THEM GUESSING
JAPS HAS THEM GUESSING
Chicago, Feb. 3,—What is the secret of the gallstone.
The inquisitive little brown Jap knows it. No one else appears to be next.
Jap agents are buying gallstones from every packing house company of consequence in the United States. Price is not considered. It has run as high as $300 a pound.
What they use them for they will not tell.
It is possible the Jap has found in them one of the constituents of some new explosive—some monstrous power for wholesale death-dealing?
Close students of Japan believe this to be the case. Just now the Japs are interested in nothing so much as new implements and munitions of war.
The Japanese shipyards are working overtime in putting together new deep sea terrors. The Japanese submarines are said to have been perfected until they have attained a remarkable efficiency. Japan has vitually cornered the Whitehead torpedo suply.
What more natural than Japan is working with all the scientific knowledge at her command upon the invention of some new explosive of tremendous destructive power?
Today every country on the face of the earth, up-to-date and maintaining a standing army, is experimenting with new implements of war, explosives in particular. Mankilling is not yet sufficiently reduced to a science.
Every report of a new explosive is received by the war departments with the keenest anticipation. It is sufficient to set loose as warm of hurrying government agents, eager to obtain the first rights.
Wherefore there is the keenest interest not only commercially, but with the government, in this unique Japanese departure.
Three years ago the Japs first began purchasing gallstones. Then the price was low, $10 a pound. Gradually the packers, ever alert to business, boosted the price. The Japs met it calmly. Now the stones bring $300 a pound. Japanese exporters make the purchases. They laugh when questioned, and declare ignorance of what the stones are to be used for. The Japanese consul here declares it is an important trade secret which he dares not divulge.
Persistent experiment by packing house chemists has failed to reveal the peculiar composition of the stones. University chemists, enlisted in the experiments, are baffled. European scientists are equally at sea.
The packers are exasperated at the inability of their experts to discover the secret. They are offering premiums for solution.
NO. 21.
Gallstones are abnormal productions found in the intestines of comparatively few of the cattle killed. They are hard as flint, practically insoluble, and when broken and polished show that they are composed of layers of varying colors like an agate.
The annual supply from American packing houses probably will not exceed a few hundred pounds. They are gathered from so many cities that it is impossible to estimate the production with any degree of accuracy.
RACE NEWS
Gathered from Vartous Sources.
By the collapse of the house of Anthony Franklin, a colored man of Bedford City, Va., on Monday, the building was fired and destroyed, and his whole family, consisting of himself, wife and five children, were burned to death. The family were sitting up with the corpse of a child that had died on Sunday when the building fell in and imprisoned.
Senator Tillman has been in conference frequently with Postmaster General Meyer regarding Joshua E. Wilson, a colored man, who has been postmaster of colored man, who has been postmaster of Florence, S. C., for twenty years. Florence has now 20,800 inhabitants, and citizens of that city, through Senator Tillman, are seeking to have a white postmaster appointed. Mr. Wilson is one of the best postmasters in the service.
Moses was the first journalist, because he wrote on the tablets of stone—but Noah went himone better and advertised. Noah built the ark and announced the day for sailing. He whooped 'er up lively and made a great display. The non-believes scoffed at him and died in the wet water. Thus again did the man who advertised triumph. You can't keep a good man down, especially if he advertises.—Oskaloosa Herald.
Guthrie, Okla, Jan. 26. Oklahoma will have jim crow telephones as well as jim crow cars if the senate bill regulating telegraph and telephone companies, which passed the committee of the whole in the senate yesterday, becomes a law. Senator Clint Graham, of Marietta, author of the jim crow law, started the fireworks by offering an amendment requiring separate waiting rooms and telephone rooms for whites and Negroes at all public telephone offices in first-class cities. A substitute was finally adopted which gives the corporation commission discretionary powers in imposing this requirement upon the telephone companies.
NEWS OF THE WEEK
Most Important Happenings of the
Past Seven Days.
tnteresting Items Gathered From all
Parts of the World Condensed
Into Small Space for the Ben-
efit of Our Readers.
‘Congressional.
‘The house committee on naval af-
fairs has recommended that but two
Dattleships be constructed in place of
four as proposed by the department.
The house committee of postoffices
has agreed that no bills providing for
an increase of salaries in the postal
department will be recommended this
year.
Congressman Calderhead, of Kan-
sas, has resumed his seat in the
house after a long siege of illness.
Representative Miller, of Kansas,
has been re-elected a member of the
republican congressional campaign
committee.
The house has passed a resolution
ceding to the state of Kansas an acre
of ground in the Fort Riley reserva-
tion on which the old territorial capl-
tol building stands.
‘The minority currency bill, on which
the democrats are expected to unite
in opposition to the Aldrich bill, has
been introduced in the house by Rep-
resentative John Sharp Williams. It
contains many radical changes from
the republican measure.
‘The senate has passed the bill plac-
ing Gen. 0. 0. Howard on the retired
list of the army as a lentenant gen-
eral. Gen, Howard is the only officer
now living who commanded an army
during the civil war.
Senator Stone of Missouri has in-
troduced a joint resolution authoriz-
ing the president, to relinquish control
of the Philippine islands in 1913.
The senate committee on military
affairs has decided to recommend that
the government take over the confed-
erate cemetery at Springfield, Mo.
Miecellanenus.
et Se ete aa gee eT ee eee
affirmed a decision which in effect
held that proprietors of a Newport
dancing pavilion had a right to ex-
clude persons wearing the United
States navy uniform.
The bodies of King Carlos and
Crown Prince Luiz Philippe of Portu-
gal have been with great ceremony
placed in the sacred sepulchre of the
pantheon in the cathedral of San
Vincente.
Maj. Gen. Howard, the only Mving
federal officer who commanded an
army during the Civil war, has been
promoted to the grade of lieutenant
general.
A permanent injunction has been
granted prohibiting an organization of
negroes from calling themselves
“Elks” or using the emblems of that
order.
In a letter to W. D. Foulke, of Rich-
mond, Ind., President Roosevelt char-
acterizes as “false and malicious” the
statements that he has made use of
federal patronage to further the presi-
dential interests of Secretary Taft.
The battleship fleet has passed out
of the Strait of Magellan and is on the
Pacific ocean headed for Valparaiso
where it will sail close in, salute the
city and pass on.
‘Two masked men boarded a through
freight train on the Chicago & Alton
as it was leaving Chicago, held up the
conductor, brakeman and a stockman
and made good their escape.
A wireless station at Point Loma
near San Diego, Cal., picked up a wire-
less message being sent by the Con-
necticut off the coast of Cuba, and
also one from the wireless station at
Pensacoia, Florida.
Kaid Sir Harry Maclean, who has
been held captive by Raisuli, the
Moorish bandit, for the past seven
months, has arrived at Tangier under
escort.
Attorney General Hadley has filed a
motion for a rehearing of the case
involving the stock shippers’ law, re-
cently decided unconstitutional by the
supreme court of Missouri.
Judge James Hargis, the notorious
feudist of Breathitt county, Ky., was
recently shot dead by his own son
after a quarrel.
A receiver has been asked for the
National Hollow Brake Beam com-
pany of Chicago.
Mrs. G. G. Burton was recently
awarded $3,000 damages against I. F.
Dayhoff, former Kansas superintend-
ent of public instruction, at Topeka.
Dayhoff had attacked Mrs, Burton in
his paper, the Kansas Educator.
The president, by proclamation, has
added 350,471 acres to the Trinity for-
est reserve in California,
There were 17 strikes in Kansas
last year, involving 938 men, and a
loss in wages of $113,016.
The operating vice-presidents of a
Jarge number of railroads held a con
ference with President Roosevelt for
the purpose of securing delay in the
enforcement of certain laws about to
become operative. They were referred
to the interstate commerce commis:
sion.
The cruiser South Dakota built at
the Union Iron works in California has
been placed in commission.
With the swearing in of George P.
‘Wetmore as senator from Rhode Island
the membership of the senate is in-
creased to 92 for the first time in the
history of the country.
‘The five-year-old adopted son of Dr.
Eya Harding of Topeka was recently
burned to death while playing with
matches. 1
‘The Pittsburg, Pa., stock exchange
has opened for business after having
been closed three months on account
of the financial flurry.
Cas ahora te OTe Ea LT eae ee ee ee
him at Brookhaven, Miss., and hanged
him.
At Winnipeg, Man., a wedding on
Sunday in a Jewish synagogue was
stopped by policemen on the ground
that the law permits no work to be
done on the Sabbath.
Secretary Root and Ambassador Jus-
serand have signed a treaty providing
for the arbitration of any issue that
may arise between France and the
United States.
‘Trustees of the Marshall Field es-
tate have agreed to pay $1,000,000 back
taxes on property discovered belong-
ing to the estate that had not been
listed for taxation.
Emperor William has ordered the
public excluded from the royal theater
at Berlin six nights in February and
March so that “society nights” may
be held when tickets wil be allotted
subscribers according to their social
rank,
The vault in the bank of Sulphur
Springs, Ark. was blown up by four
men who secured $1,300 and escaped.
At a dance on the Pottawatomie
Indian reservation north of Topeka,
Kan., one member of tae tribe was
stabbed to death and four others dan-
gerously wounded.
Wild horses are so numerous and
are doing so much damage ou the for-
est reserves of Nevada that the
rangers have received orders to kill
them on sight.
An injunction proceeding to restrain
the supervisor of the village of Ca-
hokia, Ill, reveals the fact that the
office of supervisor of that settlement
was first created in 1722 and that the
village is still governed by laws given
it by Louis XIV of France.
‘The Missouri supreme court has de-
clared unconstitutional the law requir-
ing that free return transportation be
given to shippers of live stock with
each car load by the railroads of the
state.
A new world’s record at target prae-
tice has been made by the cruiser
Maryland at Magdalena Bay by scor-
ing, as a day's average, 8.43 hits per
minute while steaming in battle for-
mation at ten knots.
It is announced that Arthur Vorys
will remain in charge of Taft's politi-
cal campaign and that Hitchcock will
only assist Mr. Vorys,
In the Pennsylvania capitol graft
trials the names of ex-Goy. Penny-
packer and former Attorney General
Carson were brought into the ease
in some sensational testimony given
by Stanford B. Lewis, assistant to
Architect Huston.
A young man who formerly worked
in the Kansas City street department
and in other occupations throughout
the west has fallen heir to an English
title and valuable estates by the
death of his father, Sir Genile Cave-
Browne-Cave.
Warrensburg, Mo., voted “dry” re-
cently by a majority of 143 votes.
Ten men are dead as the result of
an explosion in a coal mine at Port
Hood, Nova Scotia.
| Charles W. Morse, the multimit-
lionaire- who disappeared from New
York recently, has arrived at Liver-
pool on the liner Campania,
Gov. Hoch has refused to accept the
bond of State Dairy Commissioner
Wilson, given by the United States
Fidelity and Guaranty company,
Which is fighting a suit by the state
relating to the First National bank
bond of $250,000.
‘The act of congress-of June 1, 1898,
prohibiting railroad companies from
discriminating against members of
labor organizations in the matter of
employment has been declared uncon-
stitutional by the United States su-
preme court.
The Northern Facifie Railroad com-
pany has been fined $100 at Helena,
Mont., for violating the 16-hour law
by compelling a crew to work 28 con-
secutive hours. The case will be ap-
pealed to test the law.
The British foreign office officially
denies that a squadron of war vessels
is to be sent to the Pacific,
|The president has nominated
George L. Grigsby to be United States
attorney for the district of Alaska.
The hospital ship Relief has been
placed in service at the Mare Island
navy yard at San Francisco.
A deer that made its appearance
upon the streets of Providence, R. L.,
was brought to bay in the lobby of a
theater and captured alive and un-
harmed,
Personal.
John W. Oliver, editor and prinel-
pal owner of the Yonkers Statesman,
died at his home Yonkers, N. Y., aged
John W. Oliver, editor and princt-
pal owner of the Yonkers Statesman,
died at his home Yonkers, N. Y., aged
92 years, He continued in active
charge of the newspaper up to three
days before he died.
John Mitchell, president of the
United Mine Works, declares there is
little possibility of labor organizauiun.
entering the political field in the com-
ing campaign,
Ex-Premler Franco, of Portugal,
who fled from Lisbon after the as-
sassination of King Carlos, has ar-
rived in Paris. His ultimate destina-
tion is Switzerland.
Frank H. Hitchcock, first assistant
postmaster general, is to retire from
the postal service to assist in the
management of the presidential cam-
paign of Secretary Taft.
Charles H. Danner of Fort Scott
has been chosen president of the
Kansas State Society of Labor.
Dr. W. H. Carruth has returned to
the Kansas university after six
months spent in Germany.
Albert M. Richards of Kansas has
Been appointed a special assistant to
the attorney general in the department
of justice to have charge of public
Jand cases.
MERCHANTS VISIT DENVER.
Guests of Colorado Manufacturers’ As-
sociation and Traffic Club.
Denver—A great number of mer-
chants from every section of Colorado
have been in Denver this week at the
invitation of the Colorado Manufactur-
ers’ Association. ‘Tuesday night they
| were given a reception at the Traitc
Club. Previous to gathering at the
club many of the visitora were enter-
tained at dinner by the C. S. Morey
Mercantile Company.
State Senator James B. Berger acted
as toastmaster at the Traffle Club cere-
monies, introducing as the first speak-
er Acting Mayor A. J. Spengel, who
welcomed the visitors and told several
amusing stories, He declared that
Denver could not get along without the
rest of the state, but that Colorado
could exist without Denver. So, he
said, the commercial bodies of Denver
were always boosting and helping the
whole state, All advertising done in
the name of Denver brought attention
and visitors to the rest of the state
|The interests of the city and state
were identical and all should work to-
gether for the good of the common
wealth.
|. President B. L. Scholtz of the Cham:
ber of Commerce spoke in a similar
yein, telling the visitors how glad he
was to welcome them on behalf of the
organization that he represented and
behalf of the whole city.
| Hon. Frank C. Goudy criticised the
financial system of the country.
Father William O’Ryan also spoke in
a happy vein, telling many of his in-
Amitable stories to illustrate the points
‘that he wished to call to the attention
of his hearers. Other speakers, both
from Denver and from abroad in the
state, added to the pleasure of the
‘evening, and refreshments were served
during the exercises,
Secretary Scott of the Mannfactur
ers’ Association organized the visitors
and their escorts for their raid on the
‘Dig factories at 9 o'clock. One large
party of forty started with the inten
‘tion of taking in all the factories on the
ist, while others in smaller parties
"were provided with escorts to direct
‘them to industries in which they are
“especially interested.
All the factories were decorated in
honor of the guests and there were
special guides at each plant to explain
‘the process, whether it was the mak-
Ing of ink, the blowing of glass or the
pegging out of shoes. Every industry
ead represénted by its largest plant,
keeping open house, and all the busi
ness men of the city joined in helping
to make the tour of the sightseers both
pleasant and profitable.
Souvenirs of the various industries
were given away at many of the plants,
and it is predicted that the visiting
merchants never again will forget the
fact nat Denver-made goods are not
‘only equally as good, but in most cases
‘better than the products of eastern
factories in the same line of business.
‘The guests of the manufacturers ex
pressed themselves as highly pleased
with their insight into the manner of
‘making the goods that they sell to
their customers throughout the state,
and it is believed that this social gath:
ering will result in a big, bops! for
Colorado-made goods Of all “Pesérip-
nk:
President's Plea For Higher Life.
Washington.—Interest in Wednes-
day's work of the fifth general conven-
tion of the Religious Educational as-
sociation centered in a reception and
an address to the delegates by Presi-
dent Roosevelt, in which he declared
that our material prosperity will avail
but little unless it is built upon the
superstructure of the higher moral
and spiritual life.
‘The delegates were received in the
east room of the White House, when
the President said to them:
“I doubt if there is any lesson more
essential to teach in an industrial dem-
ocracy like ours than the lesson that
any failure to train the average citi-
zens to a belief in the things of the
spirit, no less than the things of the
body, must in the long run entail mis-
fortune, shortcomings, possible disas-
ter upon the nation itself.
“It is eminently right that we Am-
ericans should be proud of our ma-
terial prosperity. It is eminently right
that we should pride ourselyes upon
a widely diffused and exceedingly prac-
tical system of education,
“I believe in both, but neither will
avail if something else is not added
to the nation. The material prosperity
is essential as a foundation but it is
only a foundation, and upon it must be
built the supers‘ructure of the higher
moral and spiritual life; for otherwise
in itself the material prosperity will
amount to little. So with education;
it is necessary that we should see
that the child is trained not merely in
reading and writing, not merely in the
elementary branches of learning
strictly so defined, but trained indus-
trially, trained adequately to meet the
ever increasing demands of the com-
plex growth of our industrialism,
trained agriculturally, trained in hand-
ierafts, trained to be more efficient
workers in every field of human activ-
ity. But they must be trained in more
than that, or the nation will ultimately
ecldnwnt
Work For Colorado Buildings.
Wakhington—Members of the Colo:
rado congressional delegation are ar-
ranging for a meeting to discuss the
possibilities of securing action on varl-
ous bills pending for federal buildings
in Colorado. It has not been decided
by house leaders whether there will
be a general omnibus public building
measure enacted at this session of
Congress. If it be decided that there
shall be such legislation, provision will
be made for but part of the many
buildings for which bills have been
introduced and there will have to be a
general sealing down of appropriations
and places.
Bills have been introduced for build-
ings in Colorado at Denver, Fort Col-
lins, Greeley, Durango, Grand June-
tion and Glenwood Springs, and for
additions to cost the limit at Colorado
Springs and Boulder, The meeting of
the Colorado delegation will be for the
purpose of agreeing on the course to
pursue should it become evident that
but a part of these buildines ean be
provided for in an omnibus bill, should
one be reported.
STRIKING MINERS THREATEN
VIOLENCE IN ALASKA MIN-
ING CAMP.
REGULARS ENROUTE
SOLDIERS TO BE CARRIED ONE
HUNDRED AND FIFTY-FIVE
MILES ON SLEDS,
Washington.—By direction of the
President, Acting Secretary Oliver to-
day ordered a company of infantry
from Fort Gibbon, Alaska, to Fair-
banks, in that territory, to preserve
order during the mining strike in that
section, ‘This action was taken upon
representations from the United States
Court in Alaska to the attorney gen-
eral that the presence of federal
troops was needed.
Attorney General Bonaparte
promptly brought the matter to the
attention of the President and by his
instruction afterward consulted with
Acting Secretary Oliver, who, through
General Bell, chief of staf, forwarded
the necessary orders for the movement
of the troops to the commander at
Fort Gibbon.
‘Telegrams from Fairbanks to the at-
torney general stated that open air
mass meetings are being held by the
striking miners and that threats of
violence have been made.
The marshal has been directed by
the attorney general to use all the
force at his command to arrest law
breakers and to prevent intimidation,
‘The military is expected to give the
marshal moral support and also to
take action should the disorder prove
too great for any force he may be able
to secure,
The striking miners have picketed
the trail between Valdez and Fair-
banks. Most of the newly arrived la.
borers are Russians.
The distance from Fort Gibbon to
Fairbanks is 155 miles, and the troops
will be carried by sleds over the route,
which is said to be a good one. If
there is urgent necessity for the pres-
ence of the soldiers at Fairbanks, they
can get there in four or five days, but
under ordinary conditions the | trip
takes six or seven days.
Fairbanks is_in the center of a min-
ing country with a population of seven
or eight thousand. Persons in Wash-
ington familiar with the conditions ex-|
isting at Fairbanks say the trouble is
the outcome of a strike a year or more
ago for higher wages and shorter
hours for the miners. This the opera-|
tors have resisted, and their determin-
ation to operate their mines independ-
ent of the Western Federation of
Miners, it is feared, has led to trouble.
Men Who Knew Lincoin,
Greeley, Colo.—E. P. House of Gree-
ley, who ¢uring the Civil war and for
several years previous, was a noted
special correspondent, knew well all
of the prominent men of his time, in-
cluding President Lincoln. After
quitting newspaper work, House had
a position in the War "Department,
which he held for eight years.
During his first year a8 correspond-
ent he gained the favor of President
Lincoln by calling his attention to the
bad location of the telegraph instru-
ments of the War Department, which
were near the public hallway, where
spies could hear the important mes-
sages passing between the generals in
the ficld and the department.
To convince the President that a
good operator, in league with the en-
emy, might easily get the messages
from the click of the instrument, House
‘1 peated several of them, The instru-
ments were promptly moved.
When Lincoln returned froin his visit
to Grant at Richmond, and while he
was being serenaded, House was on
hand and reached the front door of
the White House just as it was being
closed to keep out the crowd. In re-
lating the incident on Lincoln's birth-
day, House said:
“I went up stairs and began inter-
viewing the President, when he inter-
rupted me with, ‘From the appearance
of things, I presume I will have to
make a speech, and you can gather
from what I have to say all about the
trip.’ When the band ceased playing,
and loud eries went up for ‘Mr. Pres-
ident,’ ‘Lincoln,’ ‘Uncle Abe,’ etc. Mr.
Lincoln opened the window to the
left of the portico at which he was
standing, viewed the assembly and be-
gan to speak. I was permitted to stand
by his side, catch the words, and tele-
graph them to my papers.”
Today, House carries 2 notebook
containing a part of that speech
S. P. Birdsall, another Greeley pig-
heer was a member of the bodyguard
about the White House, and a favorite
with President Lincoln's little son, He
has a note written him by Lincoln, al-
lowing him the privilege of organizing
a colored troop.
Better Pay For Soldiers,
Washington —General Bell, chief of
staff, U. 8. A., Thursday recommended
in person to the House committee on
military affairs an Increased pay sched-
ule for enlisted men of the army, along
the lines laid down in the Dick-Capron
Dill, but differing somewhat in scale.
His recommendation contained four
distinct features:
Creation of the grade of warrant off-
cer, for the promotion of deserving
noncommissioned officers; _ readjust-
ment of initial rates to pay, that they
shall range from $15 to $42, as agains
the range of from $16 to $70 in the
navy; cash bonus of three months’ pay
for re-enlistment, ‘nd an increase. of
from $1 to $9 in pay for high attain.
ment in marksmanship, The corre.
sponding increase in the navy is from
$2 to $10. re
RACE AROUND THE WORLD,
Six Automobiles Start in Race From
e New York to Paris.
| New York—The six automobiles
contesting in the New York to Paris
. Tace started from Times square,
Forty-second street and Broadway, at
11:15 a. m, Wednesday, cheered by a
‘throng of ‘several thousand people.
Accompanied by more than 200 motors
of all descriptions, the racing ma-
chines made their way up Broadway
and Riverside drive to the city limits,
where they turned north on the road
| to Albany.
From that city the route to San
Francisco, which is the objective point
Of the first stage of the trip, lies across
New York state to Buffalo, thence
through Cleveland and Toledo to Chi-
cago, to Omaha, Cheyenne, Ogden,
Reno, Goldfield, San Luis Obispo and
San Francisco, Mayor McClellan was
to have given the word to start, but
was delayed and Colgate Hoyt of the
Automobile Club of America took his
place.
All traffic in the neighborhood of
Times square was stopped a half hour
before the start. Automobiles clogged
the intersecting streets and lined the
route for many blocks up Broadway.
No such aggregation of machines has
been seen in or about New York since
the last Vanderbilt cup race was run.
A band in the official grandstand
played the anthems of the nations as
the cars lined up for the start. A
pistol shot sent the contestants away
amid the cheering of the people and
the hoarse hooting of hundreds of au-
tomobile horns.
‘The contesting cars are the queerest
Jooking machines ever devised for
motoring purposes. With their heavy
equipment for stores and camp uten-
sils, several of them were a modern
representation of the old prairie
schooner, One resembled a hook and
ladder truck with long running boards
on either side, equipped with axes,
shovels, ropes, and a dozen other ar-
ticles,
Three French cars, one German, one
Italian and one American siarted in
the race. Three men constituted the
crews of the foreign machines, but
there were only two in the American
car. The three French cars are steered
by G. Bourcier Si. Chaffray, M. Godard
and M. Pons, the German car by Lieut.
Koeppen, of the Prussian army, the
Italian car by Antonio Scarfogiio and
the American car by Montague Roberts
Each machine carried the tlag of its
own nation and that of the United
States. They were plentifully decor-
ated with signs and placards so there
could be no mistaking their identity
wherever seen. The buildings sur-
rounding Times square were decorated
with flags and bunting and the start
was quite spectacular.
Estimates vary as to the length of
time the race will require. From six to
nine months, it is believed, will be
consumed.
All the drivers are confident of
reaching their destination through the
frozen flelds of Alaska and Siberia.
Steamers will transport the machines
from San Francisco to Valdez, Alaska,
and from Nome to East Cape, Siberia,
across Bering. strait
Saguache Mayor Dies in Denver.
Denyer—John Lawrence of Sagu-
ache, mayor of that town, a member
of the Sixteenth General Assembly, a
pioneer among pioneers, died ‘at
Mercy hospital, this city, Thursday of
a complication of diseases. He was
seventy-two years of age. He went to
the hospital three weeks ago complain-
ing of stomach trouble, which the phy-
siclans diagnosed as cancer.
When a lad Lawrence ran away from
home in Illinois, his parents having
died young, He found his way to the
territory now known as southwestern
Colorado and for years he lived among
the Indians. In after years his knowl-
edge of the language became useful
to him and as the white people began
to go in he became the interpreter. In
this capacity he fell in with Otto
Mears, the “Pathfinder of the San
Juan,” and other notable comrades of
the early days,
Mr. Lawrence lived In Saguache for
forty years. He did a great deal to-
ward building the town and the county.
He was a kind of perpetual mayor. He
was elected to the Legislature on two
different occasions and was county
judge, county assessor and superin-
tendent of schools. He was a Demo-
crat, although party lines hung lightly
on him,
His body-was sent to Saguache for
burial.
How American's Escaped,
Douglas, Ariz.—Reports of the ex-
plosion at the Santa Rosa mining
camp, eighteen miles south of here, in
Sonora, probably have been exagger-
ated. No one was injured when the
two separate charges of dynamite were
exploded Saturday evening, wrecking
the commissary and part of the board-
ing house. That all of the Americans
in the canip were not killed or maimed,
however, is due to the fact that the
explosion cecurred at a time when
they were grouped some distance away.
‘The work 1s believed to be that of Mex:
ican anarchists such as operated in
Cananea.
Rails For Moffat Road,
Denver.—For the purpose of extend-
ing the Moffat road into Routt county,
the Denver-Steamboat Construction
Company has ordered 9,000 tons of
steel rails from the Colorado Fuel &
Iron Company. The rails are to cost
in the neighborhood of $270,000. Track
laying is expected to begin about April
ist and will continue as fast as the
physical condition of the grade will
permit.
Desert Entry Extension,
Washington.— The House Fridas
passed the Mondell bill, granting an ex-
tension of time to desert land entry-
men who are unable to irrigate their
lands within the four years required
by the present law, the extension. not
to exceed three yells. ‘The bill ,also
prohibits ussignments of desert entries
to companies or corporations, but per-
mits assignments to individuals quall-
fled to make desert entries,
Syrop FFids
®Flixir#Senna
acts gently yet prompt-
ly onthe bowels, cleanses
the system effe ctu ally,
assists one in overcoming
habitual constipation
ermanently. To set its
heneheial effects buy”
the Ieee th i
CALIFORNIA
Fic Syrup Co.
é GOT IT.
ps ae
Y Cholly—Er—h'm
did you ever hear
Z rv your sister speal
of me, Willie?
RS AN Willie—Sure; 1
GAREY heard sis say dat
AY your head was
shaped like a
NI lemon,
ty >
Millions in Oats and Barley.
Nothing will pay you better for 1908
than to sow a plenty of big yielding oats
and barley with oats at 40¢ to 50c a bu,
(Salzer’s new Emperor William Oats av-
eraged 50 bu. per_acre more than any
other variety in 1907) would pay immense-
ly while Salzer’s Silver King Barley which
Proved itself the biguest vielder at the
Niseonsin “Agricultural Station during
1907 if you had planted 50 acres woul
have given you in 1907 just $3,500.00 on 50
acres. It is an cnormous yielder
JUST SEND THIS NOTICE AND 100
to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La
Crosse, Wis., and we will mail you the
only original seed catalog published in
America with samples of Emperor Wil-
jiam Oats, Silver King Barley, Billion Dol-
lar Grass ‘which produces 12 tons per acre.
Sainfoin the dry soil luxuriator, ete., ete.
and if you send lfc we add a package of
uw fair ‘eaeds navaw balore acca bawode
Satan Terrified. *
There is as great genius displayed
in advertising as in the higher
branches of literature. No problem
daunts the modern advertising man.
In the window of a little bookstore in
Eighth avenue, New York, was re-
cently heaped a great pile of Bibles,
marked very low—never before were
Bibles offered at such a bargain; an@
‘above them all, in big letters, was the
inscription: “Satan trembles wheri he
sees Bibles sold as low as thege’—
Woman's Home Companion.
Laundry work at home would be
much more satisfactory if the right
Starch were used. In order to get the
desired stiffness, it 1s usually neces»
sary 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 weare
ing quality of the goods. This trou-
ble can be entirely overcome by using
Defiance Starch, as {t can be applied
much more thinly because of its great
er strength than other makes.
Different.
The good die young, but this isn't
true of jokes.
cane Seaceasentiney
gaat PLAKATIY BHOMY QUEYINE gx top
SEAR cabisue ieee wad
The best swimmer is the first to
drown himself.—lItalian.
son Sn.
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(za DODDS ”
AS Tae
7 eA
Na PILLS Ey
Ma
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Hie
Ray eta
BSZ5 “Guarat
= | Positively cured by
CARTERS these Little Pills.
They also relieve Din
WUE sores
i ote A eae
FY PILLS, |sca,“Drowsineany Baa
Gi lea tougwe eainie the
They regulate the Dowels: ‘Purely Verciable.
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
aT
CARTERS) Sere, Se
IVER See (2k ODO:
| PILLS. Moo
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
SEED THAT'S FURE
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Heaaiue
PATENTS #2253353 325
H. J. HESPER. J. H. WEICHMAN.
TELEPHONE MAIN 4271.
THE N. & W. LIQUOR CO.
DEALERS IN
Imported and Domestic Wines and Liquors.
FAMILY TRADE OUR SPECIALTY.
1118 BROADWAY.
TRELL'S PHARMACY
FOODS—WHISKEY, WINES, BEER, ETC., A SPECIALTY.
drugs, hot an cold drinks, toilet articles and
Prescriptions carefully compounded by Reg-
Pharmist. Prompt delivery to any part of city.
D. J. COTTRELL.
COTTRELL'S PHARMACY
BOTTLED GOODS-WHISKEY, WINES, BEER, ETC., A SPECIALTY. Pure drugs, hot an cold drinks, toilet articles and cigars—Prescriptions carefully compounded by Registered Pharmist. Prompt delivery to any part of city.
WOOD'S MARKET Denver Anti-Trust Meat Market in the West. ESALE AND RETAIL Restaurant, Hotel and Boarding House Business Given Special Attention.
Largest Anti-Trust Meat Market in the West.
Restaurant, Hotel and Boarding House Businees Given Special Attention. Main 3824. 1015.1017 15th St THIRST PARLORS,
THIRST PARLORS,
J. L. PENNINGTON, Proprietor. Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars.
Know DR. DAMERON has reduced his prices for all Dental Work?
Of Teeth for $5.00; $10 Sets for $7.00; $15 Sets for Crowns only. $5.00 Gold Teeth, $4.00; Silver Do up; Gold and Platina, $1.00 up. Painless EXALBANY DENTAL PARLORS,
Opp. the P. O. DR. DAMERON, Prop
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 Extracting.
ALBANY DENTAL PARLORS,
Arapahoe street, Opp. the P. O.
DR. DAMERON, Prep
THE HINE CAFE
THE RHINE CAFE
Phone Main 7039. First-Class Meals Served.
Phone Main 7039. First-Class Meals Served. Dinner from 11:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
We please you tell Others. If you don't tell us. St. Denver, Colo. Columbine" ZANG'S
If We please you tell Others. If you don't tell us.
1129-31 19th St. Denver, Colo.
New Table Beer
Is a special Brew for Family use
DENVER'S LEADING BRAND OF BOTTLED BEER
Columbine Beer
Is guaranteed absolutely pure
Try a Sample Case and you will use no other
TELEPHONE 1285
The Ph. Zang Brewing Co.
Producers
Fresh Beer Delivered Daily to all parts of the city
All Goods Delivered.
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT
COTTRE
BOTTLED GOODS—W
Pure drugs, hot
cigars—Prescrip
istered Pharmist
£100 Arapahoe St.
FLOOD
Largest Anti-T
WHOLESA
Restaurant, H
G
Phone Main 3824.
THIRS
J. L.
Fine Win
1745 Curtis St.
Do You Know
$7.00 Sets of Teeth
$10; Gold Crowns
Fillings, 50o up; G
tracting.
Arapahoe street, Opp. th
T
RHI
T. I
First-C
If We please
1129-31 19th St.
Denver, Cola
PHONE MAIN 8280
Denver, Colorado
1015.1017 15th St
Telephone 816 Main.
Denver, Colo
Superior Laundry
ALL HAND WORK.
J. W. CASEY, Proprietor.
Telephone 2132.
1735 Lawrence St.
Denver
(Under New Management)
T. R. HERRON, Prop.ietor.
We guarantee Satisfaction.
TAFT PRAISES ROOSEVELT
GLOWING EULOGY OF THE PRESIDENT DELIVERED AT KANSAS CITY.
IMMENSE GATHERING
DECLARES THAT PRESIDENT
LEADS HIS PARTY AS
LINCOLN DID.
Kansas City.—William H. Taft, secretary of war, was given an ovation by 15,000 people in Convention hall Monday night, when he was the guest of honor and principal speaker at the most elaborate banquet ever attempted in this city, given by the Association of Young Republicans of Missouri and attended by 1,200 persons, many of whom came from Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma and distant Missouri cities. The demonstration accorded Secretary Taft when he entered the great banquet hall, and again when he rose to speak, has never been surpassed by the welcome given any public man in the history of this city. Each of the 1,200 banqueters paid $2.50 for the privilege of attending, but the balcones of the hall were free to the public, and long before the speaking began standing room in the hall was at a premium.
Secretary Taft's speech was a general defense of the Republican party and especially of the policies brought to the fore by the administration of Theodore Roosevelt. In eulogizing Lincoln, the speaker said that Lincoln was a party man, "as all men must be who expect to leave their individual impress upon the political character of the nation." Speaking of the recent panic and the President's late special message to Congress, the secretary said:
"The message contains an answer to the charges made that the administration is responsible for the industrial depression and the sharpness and emphasis with which this unfounded attack is met have heartened the great body of the people as a bugle call to renewed support of the administration.
"From beginning to end the message shows his earnest desire to protect the honest business man and the honest laborer, and to secure to them the possibility of living under the equal administration of the law."
Secretary Taft referred to abuses by corporations and declared that a conviction had seized the people that there were many engaged in the management of corporation wealth who regarded the statutes as dead letters and themselves as a privileged class. "We were passing into a regime of an irresponsible plutocracy," said he. "During the last four years there has been a great moral awakening. to this danger among the people and a popular demand that the law breakers—no matter how wealthy or how high or powerful their position—shall be made to suffer. Under the leadership of Theodore Roosevelt, the Republican party has not faltered in its determination to meet the requirements of this situation and to enact such legislation as may be necessary to bring to a close this period of illegal corporate immunity."
"There are those who have been members of the Republican party who differ with Mr. Roosevelt in respect to the proper course to be taken in stamping out these abuses of corporate wealth. The great bulk of the Republican party, however, stands solidly at his back in the work which he and the representatives of the party in Congress are doing."
In concluding, Secretary Taft said: "Vigorous action and measures to stamp out existing abuses and effect reforms are necessary to vindicate society as at present constituted. Otherwise we must yield to those who seek to introduce a new order of things on a socialistic basis.
"The Republican party follows the administration upon this social and moral reform—approves its attitude in favor of vested rights, of maintaining the power of the courts, of rendering more equal by legislation the basis of dealing between employer and employee, of strengthening the regulative power over corporations, and of prosecuting those lawbreakers who continue to defy public opinion. Roosevelt leads his party as Lincoln led his—as McKinley led his—to meet the new issues, to arm our present civilization, and fit it with a bold front to resist the attacks of Socialism, and to transmit to the coming generations unharmed the great institution of civil liberty inherited from our fathers."
To Kill Wild Horses
Reno, Nev.—The forestry department has issued orders to the rangers on the Toeylabe, Toquima and Monitor reserves in Lander county to kill on sight all wild horses found on the government domain. There are about 15,000 wild horses on the reserves. They are doing much damage to vegetation and attracting domestic animals to their herds. In the opinion of Attorney General Stoddard, the forestry department will be fully warranted in adopting measures looking to the extermination of the rapidly increasing herds.
Twenty Thousand Acres of Beets
Denver.—A Greeley dispatch says: Already arrangements have been made by the farmers and the sugar company for raising 20,000 acres of beets in this district this year. Heretofore it has been necessary to ship in labor during the beet season, but this will not be the case this year, and the 1,500 Russians, Japanese and Mexicans required to handle the beets are permanent residents. The sugar company predicts that in five years the beet crop of the district will be grown by Russians and Japanese to whom the farmers will rent their lands.
Important Provisions of Senator Burnham's Bill.
Washington.—Senator Burnham of New Hampshire Monday introduced in Congress a measure of distinct importance to rural interests throughout the United States. It is a bill to provide a rural delivery parcels post for merchandise and other articles actually mailed on rural delivery routes. The rural free delivery routes now number more than 38,000, and on them in excess of 15,000,000 people receive a daily postal service.
The measure introduced by Senator Burnham has the endorsement of the President and Postmaster General Meyer. It provides, in brief, for the establishment of a rural parcels post at special rates of postage for the delivery of foodstuffs, dry goods, drugs, books and other merchandise. The rate of postage shall be 5 cents for the first pound and 2 cents for each additional pound or fraction thereof, and on parcels weighing less than one pound, as follows:
Two ounces or less, 1 cent; over two ounces and under four ounces, 2 cents; over four and not exceeding eight ounces, 3 cents; over eight and not exceeding twelve ounces, 4 cents; and over twelve ounces and under one pound, 5 cents.
Two important limitations are placed on the use of the proposed parcel post by the following provisions:
"That nothing herein contained shall be taken as authorizing the acceptance or delivery at the special rates of postage herein provided of any parcel offered by any person acting as agent or representative upon commission or otherwise, or person not resident of such rural delivery route.
"That only such parcels shall be received or delivery at the special rates of postage herein provided as are offered by bona fide merchants or dealers whose places of business are on rural delivery routes, covered by this act, in the ordinary and regular course of their business and by residents on such routes in their individual capacity. The bill provides that the parcels carried shall not weigh more than eleven pounds or be more than three feet six inches in length. Perishable articles will be sent at the sender's risk and will not be accepted at any postoffice more than three hours before departure of the mail."
Senator Kean of New Jersey Monday introduced a measure presenting Postmaster General Meyer's plan for reducing the rate on parcels sent through the mails from 16 to 12 cents a pound and increasing the weight limit from four to eleven pounds.
Bands of Mountain Sheep.
Denver.—Trainmen on the Denver & Rio Grande report the recent appearance of two bands of mountain sheep on the cliffs just beyond the Royal gorge, near Spike Buck. The animals are roaming about on the rocks hundreds of feet above the tracks, their outlines sometimes silhouetted against the sky, but more often barely discernible against the irregular background of the cliffs. They pay no attention to the trains and as the saw forbids anyone to shoot at them, they have not become frightened at the appearance of a human being in the distance.
One band contains eight sheep, as near as they could be counted from the moving trains, and the other contains about fifteen. The train crews have come to watch for the agile animals in and about the Royal gorge, and there is seldom a day when they are disappointed. The precarious pasture they have found is apparently almost inaccessible for other animals and the feeding is proportionately good in consequence. If the elusive sheep do not move on to some other stamping grounds, they will doubtless become another of the sights which are pointed out along the Rio Grande lines.
Profitable Lamb Feeding.
Laramie, Wyo.—J. D. Towar, director of the experiment station of the University of Wyoming, has just received complete returns from a sale of eight lambs fattened on the experiment station farm here. The eight lambs averaged 129 pounds, bringing the station $8.57 net each. One of the lambs weighed 146 pounds and another was poor and small, the latter holding the average down as much as the larger lamb brought it up. The lambs were dropped last March, the sires being the imported bucks belonging to the experiment station, and the dams are grade ewes, bred on the Laramie plain. The eight were taken into the sheep pens at the station about the middle of December and were then fed a pound of grain each per day. Prof. Towar says the experiment was one that could have been conducted by any ranchman or flockmaster in the state.
Rushing Montezuma Canal.
Denver.—A Cortez, Colorado, dispatch says: Work on the Montezuma valley irrigating system is being pushed rapidly and a full supply of water is assured for this season. New camps of the contractors are being established over the valley and men are being added daily. The weather, which has not been favorable for this work, is now breaking. The frost has almost left the ground so that more progress may be made. This is one of the largest irrigating schemes in the West and means much for Colorado, as it waters one of the largest bodies of fruit and agricultural land in the state, there being 60,000 acres under its canals.
To Retire Volunteer Officers:
Washington.—Thomas F. Walsh of Colorado is taking an interest in proposed legislation pending before Congress to place on the retired list of the regular army surviving volunteer officers of the Civil War. Mr. Walsh held conferences with Senator Warren and Representative Hull, chairman of the senate and house military committees, respectively, and urged that a hearing be given and favorable report made upon the bills for this purpose now before their committees. Both Warren and Hull favor the proposed legislation, but doubt that it can be enacted at this session.
A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
LAWRENCE STEPHEN CAMPBEN Staple Groceries
CAMPBELL BROS.
Staple Groceries and Fresh Meats.
1864 Curtis Srreet, Cor. 19th.
THE BROOKLYN BROTHERS
THE Broadhurst and Barnett
SHOE CO.
823 SIXTEENTH ST.
ALL
THE
Fall and Winter
Shoes
Are here. We are show-
ing an endless variety at
$3.50 and Up
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 Stock
sought for cash or sold on com
mission.
---
Phone 3028 Main
Our Reading Room Comprize all the latest Papers, Books and Magazines.
Headquarters for Cooks, Walters and Railroad Porters.
2149 Curtis Street.
Phone Main 8232.
Denver. Colorado.
LL BROS.
and Fresh Meats.
"IT'S SO DIFFERENT"
THE PASTIME
SOCIAL CLUB.
The best Equipped Pleasuae Resort in the West.
Ping Pong Pool and Billiards.
Phone Main 3044
Lunch Served.
H. PINN, Prop.
1821 Arapahoe Street.
Denver. Colorado
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.
W. J. ADDIE,
DEALER IN
Choice old Califorina wines
and brandies from the Hermit-
age vineyard, also bottled beer,
Kentucky whisky, cigars and
tobacco.
228 16th St. Telephone 2675.
Always Staunch And True
The Denver Republican has always avoided the fallacies and knaveries of yellow journalism, and its steadily increasing Circulation proves conclusively that its policy of telling the plain Truth without exaggeration or misrepresentation, standing fast for the Right, is heartily approved with growing force by the intelligent Public to which it appeals.
To read it is a liberal Education, and the citizen who goes without it does a positive harm to himself, to his family, and to the community.
In no other way can the investment of 2½ cents per day for that is all The Republican costs any subscriber—bring such rich results in that Knowledge which is both Power and Pleasure. Information, instruction and entertainment fill its columns and it leaves a good taste in the mouth of the reader. It stands for Law and Order in the State—for Peace, Prosperity and Happiness in the Home. If you are not already enrolled among its splendid list of Patrons send on your subscription and give it a fair trial at 75 cents per month for Daily and Sunday.
---
Denver, Colorado
CS aS SA A LL RE A
HE COLORADO\ 87 < STATESMANL|
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JOS. D, D, RIVERS......,,Proprietor SH HOBSON vsv.sssssssOlty Bdltor
1824 Curtis Street. Room 25.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
One Year 2... eee e cece eee ce nese ee$2,00 Six MOMthS .....-eeeeeeeeseeseees 1.00
Thies Monthe vscecsssesessessese 60
PAYABLE IN ADVANGE,
Remittances should be made by Express Money Order, Postoffice Money
oraet Rusintored fetter ‘or Hank Bragts? Postage stampa will bec resoived the
Sime ag cash for the fractional part of & dollass™ Only Tecent and 2-cent stamps
Heading notices, ten lines or less, 10 cents per line, Bach additional tine
over‘ion lines cents per line.
Display advertising 60 cents per square. A aquare containa ten agate
ine Reza ndaante affomed’ on tebe" than “three-month contract. “Cash ‘must
LEnpany ‘ail orders trom parties unknown to ua Further particulars on ap"
Biieatibn.
‘All communications of a personating nature that are not complimentary will
be withicld'trom the columns of tits paper.
TE occistonally happens that papers sent to aubseribers are lost or stolen,
In cage’9s sug mot macelve: any. numer when die. inform ua by postal card. and
TycMity Giecttully Ferwata'a ‘duplicate OF the missing mumber.
Communtcations to recslve attention must be newsy, upon Important sub:
poesia Serltten aly upon one tide of the napert must reach'ug ‘ussaaye
ete Mey crete OPN, cae Tnee wednesaaya, und bone: the signature ef the
Mabel Ny indnuseeipe returned unless stamps are kent for postaee.
—“iniered as wecond-clasw matter wt the postofice Th the ety of Denver,
Cotorads,
A SUGGESTION.
ea good idea for Denver and Chi
ne of the holding of the national
1ce to the prohibition sentiments
ocking indeed tosee a fully reform
rgia falling from grace in Denye
ley corn met him here on his arr
nd joyful acquaintance, And just
/ when the abstainers of the Sou
If these two cities don't “go dry”
be surprising if they do so before
Wouldn't it be a good idea for Denver and Chicago both to “go
dry” during the time of the holding of the national conventions this
year, out of deference to the prohibition sentiments of the Southern
delegates?
Tt would be shocking indeed to see a fully reformed Democrat from
Mississippi or Georgia falling from grace in Denyer just because his
old friend Jobn Barley corn met him here on his arrival and proceeded
to renew his free and joyful acquaintance, And just think what will
happen to Chicago when the abstainers of the Southern Republican
fold strike town. If these two cities don't “go dry” before the conven-
tions, it would not be surprising if they do so before the close of _pro-
ceedings.
THE LURE OF THE STAGE,
We take no little pride in the suecess of our leading comedians
and other followers of the stage, for their work represents a certair
character of achievement which compares well with the work of whitc
men in the same profession. The standing of such teams as Williams
and Walker, Cole and Johnson, and such individual Thespians as
Ernest Hogan, 8. H. Dudley, Ada Overton Walker and their numer
ous but less prominont prototypes, demonstrates the fact that long,
hard, diligent work on the part of colored devotees of the stage will
win recognition. and a certain kind of public esteem, just as merit is
bound to do in most any other calling.
But our admiration for the stage and its few successful followers
is not of that unrestrained character which leads us to take seriously
the expressed ambition of some of our “actors” to make the stage a
platform upon which a certain phase of the race problem may be soly-
cd. ‘The enforced improvement of Negro plays in the past few years,
has led some stage people to believe that they had strong hold "upon
this solution of the race problem, and some of the most prominent rep-
resentatives preach the stage as a means of moral and material eleva-
tion. This may help the box receipts, but, to our mind, it isa kind
of presumpteous, misfit logic, which should not be allowed to permeate
the minds of our young people without being disputed.
The Negro loves the stage, because of its opportunity to satisfy
his unlimited craving for display and his childish lust for applause.
Just as the prize ring, of which we have heretofore spoken, urs young
sports and would-be pugilists looking for an easy living, so the paltry
tinsel of the stage is made to entice young boys and girls upon a career
of which they know nothing and for which, perhaps, they are not in
the least fitted. ‘The Negro show of the larger sort, started with loose
jointed minstrely. changed to the spectacular brand, grew into the
bawdy mixtures of men and women in specialty acts and finally reach-
ed the present improved musical comedy stage.
One who knows anything about the growth of the Negro “show
knows that the greatest immorality characterized the earlier combina-
tions, and he also knows that the improvement in their general char-
acter has followed the everchanging demand of the public for cleaner,
better things. But the white public in general, and the white news-
paper critics in particular, want the stage Negro to remain a legitimate
Negro; they do not enjoy his attempts to get away from his clement,
And the limitations which the white public, crities, managers and
theater owners put upon Negro shows leave little latitude for that
kind of improvement which will do the race any particular amount of
good, either morally, socially or financially. There is just one condi-
tion under which the Negro stage can aspire for a permanent place of
moral confidence. ‘That condition is being worked upon in Chicago,
where they have a theatre of their owp, booking talent of their own
and gradually improving instead of deteriorating in tone, ina manner
to gain the confidence of their own moral classes. There is no. other
way to make the Negro stage a real feature in the work of social im-
provement,
The entertainers of white audiences have about reached the limit
in the vaudeville acts and musical comedies of the present day, which
offer no trustworthy moral protection to young folks with stage aspira-
tions; but if our people can realize their moral responsibility, the fu-
ture may bring us our own theatres in which the legitimate talent of
the race may be nurtured in a way to bring it, as well as the people,
great respect and honor.
Yvette Gullbert, the famous Frene
xctress, 1s an excellent skater. In th
Bois de Boulogne, in Paris, there 1s a
fce rink where Mme. Gullbert’s skatin
{8 one of the principal attractions.
Talking about skating in New Yor)
one day, Mme. Guilbert said
“It is only through perseveranc
that one learns to skate well. I ar
sure no one ever suffered more thay
J in iearning to skate.
“I remember one day in my girl
‘004, the second or third time I ha:
ever been on the Ice, I was returnin)
home in a crowded omnibus, and :
Kind old man got up and offered m:
his seat. t
“I shook my head, and the old may
laughed a good deal when I said:
“‘No, thank you. I've been skating
‘end I'm tired of sitting down.”
Longing for Country Life.
A strange thing is the universal
onging of professional men and others
who have come to the city and have
prospered as they advance in life to
set back to the country. It is seldom
hat they do return, and when they
lo there is often disappointnent and
hings do not appear as ‘Ney did long
igo. The change {s in (he man him
self, but he thinks ft Is in the country.
Nevertheless, the desire to get back
© the old country place to end one's
jays 1s very general. Sir Walter Scott
refers to it and compares the course
af @ man through the word to that of
she hare which is started from her
‘air and after a fong chase and mak-
Dg a Jarge Circle ends by returning
to the nest from which she sturted.
samme
Cis Women Who Keep ~
the Play Houses Going
By OLGA NETHERSOLE,
The Actress,
————————
= After long and close observation I have come to the
43 conclusion that women are more essential to the suc-
A/a) cess of the theater than men are. In America, Eng-
ME Mae 2d and France it is the women who are absolutely
Aa responsible for keeping the theaters open, and is it
pee any wonder that artists seck to obtain plays that will
gD WH} interest them most, and is it any greater wonder that
A the modern dramatist is alive to this condition? I
- y r remember that the late Col. William E. Sinn, the well
~e,* | known Brooklyn manager, once said to me he estimat-
DP 7 ed that in the first-class theaters of the large eastern
ag G cities of the United States, women were responsible
POnIN 44 for at least 70 per cent. of the audiences.
a ad Victor Hugo divides theater audiences into three
Mamita thinkers who euiAua chasacterigation:
the women, who demand passion, and the mob, who demand action—and
insists that every great play must appeal to all three classes at once. Yet,
although all three of the necessary elements appear in the play, it should
have, to please the modern audiences, more action than passion and more
passion than characterization. And this leads us to the statement, omitted
by Victor Hugo, that the mob is more important than the women and the
women are more important than the thinkers, in the average theater au-
dience.
Indeed, a deeper consideration of the subject almost leads us to dis-
card the thinkers as a psychologic force and to obliterate the distinction
between the women and the mob. It is to an over-feminine “mob” that
the dramatist must first of all appeal; and this leads us to believe that
action with passion for its motive is the prime essential for a play.
For, nowadays at least, it is most essential that the drama should ap-
peal to a “mob” of women. Practically speaking, our matinee audiences
are composed entirely of women and our evening audiences are composed
chiefly of women and the men that they have brought with them. Very
few men go to the theater unattached; and these few are not important
enough from the theoretie standpoint, to alter the psychologic aspect of the
audience. ‘The influence of this fact upon the dramatist is very potent.
First of all, as [have said, it forces him to deal chiefly in action with pas-
sion for its motive. And this necessity accounts for the preponderance of
women characters over men in the large majority of the greatest modern
plays. Notice “Hedda Gabler,” notice “Magda” and “Camille;” notice
“Mrs. Tanqueray,” “Mrs. Ebbsmith,” “Iris? and “Letty’—to cite only
a few evamples.
‘The above fact may be noticed also in a more or less degree in all
ofsthe ten plays of my present repertoire. Artistes who, like myself, pro-
duce their own plays, must exercise a sharp regard for what the public
wants, and if it is the women who dominate the public taste, then it has
been my business policy to try and give the women the kind of drama
that pleases and satisfies them best.
not, perhaps, excite any more comment than the announcement of the
sailing of the fleet from Cape Cod bay to the winter drill grounds in the
Caribbean sea for drill purposes and target practice. ‘This transfer has,
however, brought world-wide attention to the fact that the United States
possesses one of the strongest and most powerful fighting units in the
world, and that in its possession this country has a fighting force that
must be taken into serious consideration by any country aiming to ques-
tion our rights as a nation and a world power.
‘The 16 battleships brought together for the first time have all been
built and commissioned within the last ten years, most of them within
‘a very short period, and it becomes absolutely necessary that a school be
formed for the instruction of the fleet commander, squadron commanders,
captains and officers, in order that the highest degree of efficiency may be
attained.
Ships and guns are of the very beat material and up-to-date con-
struction, and the personnel of the service, both officers and enlisted men,
cannot be excelled, and it is only proper that all be perfected up to the
point of extreme efficiency. ‘This cannot be better accomplished than by
the present cruise. ‘The fleet is for offensive purposes in time of war
and not for coast defense—that being left to the army. The Pacific has
been in the past and will be in the future the battleground, and it is only
proper that our most powerful fighting force should be in touch with
our western possessions acquired as the result of the war with Spain,
For offensive purposes we should then be in a position to strike a swift
and speedy blow such as was illustrated at Manila bay and Port Arthur.
Preparedness and efficiency count for the winning every time, and the
three months’ cruise to the Pacific will result, from the many experiences
acquired, in a more efficient fighting force. The extra expense to the
country for fuel, which is practically the only extra cost, is too small to
be considered when compared with the experience and knowledge to be
‘acquired. Young captains on the navy list have been selected to com-
mand in order that experience derived may be available to the service
for some years to come.
Enlistments and re-enlistments have been numerous, and the pre-
paratory work of the different ships at the several naval stations under, in
some cases, strenuous hurry orders, has tested the efficiency of these sta-
tions and doubtless has brought to light defects that admit of correction.
Benefit to the fleet is insured from the time of getting under way,
and if the stay of this force is prolonged, the needed increase of repair
stations and docking facilities on the Pacific coast will be more apparent.
As advertising is the life of the business world, so should our colors
be shown on this powerful fleet in the ports of the world, to emphasize
the fact that we are insuring ourselves against national disaster if war
should by chance be made upon us.
Pete Hatin SE I. eee
eee
i es a
re }
wD
Se rr
KA
Mirman
Makes for
Effcivury of Nany
By REAR ADHIRAL GEEEOE H. BUFFINTON,
should by chance be made upon us.
Preparedness is the aim of our na-
val administration as far as its resources 7
will go, and undoubtedly service re-
ports will show the fleet all to the ad-
vantage on its arrival on the far coast.
Leaving out the fact
that the perhaps tempor-
ary movement of our
powerful Atlantic battle-
ship fleet and fleet aux-
iliaries to the Pacific
shore may be only a
strategic movement in
advance of coming legis-
lation; the cruise should
ee
ee as ne ee a
WILL BE THE
Musical Treat to the Denver Public
Auspices of the Denver Division of U, O. True Reformers}
EAST TURNER HALL,
’
Thursday, February 27, ’08.
A Two Act Drama, “Tell Your Wife.”
The Azalia Hackley Choral Club.
Rev. W. L. Anderson, Deputy General of the Western Grand
Division of U. O, Vrue Reformers, will be present to give infor.
mution upon the work
CURTAIN GOES UP AT 8 O'CLOCK.
Committee of Arrangements, the Messengers of Fountains.
HB, Brown....-..2.0+++eseeeeeee++eee-Colo, Enterprise No. 1621
Mral Irene! Fife: ......0s2:-ssc4 sco seceet noe! Ra VullunNOabeD
J.R. Contee........++2++0+++++++-Borward 8rd in Denver No, 2656
A Mi) Lawliornose..+..scnteser ssp see einare seen semi tenleNcn 190)
Mirs( Mo Thomas......+.00..0.c0ssee0sesee +e eeee Denver Nones ol)
Allon Davis........2ceeecseeeeeeseesees+e++Columbine No, —
ALLEN DAVIS,
Chairman Committee,
No Postponement on account of the Weather.
Ticket, Adults 85 Cents; Children under 12, 15 Oents
A, ©, CASH,
Chief of Division,
(Ag
ae te ga a ps) ed ea
ey say 2 ar aN
Vi, Lib s (eae
Jee) Pea
és we fe ae 5 | ei Be
AE a se
“aR ce
bas SS A)
a as ey
SEERA OMe gare fata tt |
Denver Roller Skating Academy
EAST TURNER HALL.
Open Every Monday and Friday Nights from 9:00 to 12:00
Admission 15c. Skates 25c.
©. R. McFARLAND, Manacen,
yy j
at ee
; ey
ue Fd
oS
3 Saal
Weise. ee A Ae
as
a Ye /
JAS. FP. CLARK,
J. H, Carmack and Mrs. Carrie Will-
inms of Canon City were married Tues:
day by Rev. J. H. Thomas. For the
present they will reside in Canon City,
but in the spring they will move to Col-
orado Springs.
JOSEPH H, STUART
LAWYER.
Practice in all courts, Examining
abstract of title and drawing
up legal instruments given
careful attention.
329 Kittredge Bid. Phone Olive 294
+ Ree, 2562 Lincoln Av,
THE
TWO JIM’s
DENVER’S FAVORITE
PLEASURE RESORT.
Whist, Pool, Chess, Checkers and
Other Pastime Games.
PHONE 2275 MAIN
1859 Champa St. Denver, Colo,
Traffic on European Rivers.
A European river 40 feet wide han
dies as much freight as an ordinary
American railroad, while the Rhine
carries more busiuess to a block than
half the Hudson nver. Splendid tug-
boats, flue barges and handsome swift
steamers do the work, with anchored
chain boats to pull the big loads uP
the rapids.
Wrecking Old Ships.
Norwegians have a primitive way
of breaking up old, worn out wooden
ships. They take them to exposed.
rocky parts of the coast, and, after
Anchoring them, leave the breakers
of the next storm to smash them to
pleces. After the storm the floating
fragments are picked up and sold for
fire wood.
CITY NEWS.
L. E. Scott is down from Cripple Creek on business.
Mrs. J. L. Hurd of Chicago is visiting friends in the city.
H. J. Foster was on the ailing list a few days this week.
Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Falling entertained a few friends at cards Saturday night.
Miss Blanche Boone spent a few days in Cheyenne this week visiting her mother.
Miss Elizabeth McClelan left last Monday to visit with friends at Bonbrook, New Jersey.
Editor E. P. Booze and H. D. Earl of Colorado Springs, was in the city Wednesday on business.
Mr. and Mrs. Jno. Easley of 4114 Adams street have just completed a fine 7 room modern press brick house.
Robert Steadman who died last Sunday morning was buried last Tuesday from St. Leos church. Interment at Fairmont.
Dr. J. P. Douglass, M. B. Brooks, J. J. Jennings and J. H. D. Hill of Pueblo were among the callers at this office Wednesday.
Richard Frazier arrived home last Thursday from a stay of several weeks in Hot Springs, Ark. He reports a splendid time.
Mrs. R. B. Anderson of Leadville, is in the city in the interest of her health. She is stopping with Mrs. A. G. Fallings of 1919 Clarkson St.
Titus H. Alexander and Mary A. Tay
lor were united in marriage Tuesday
January 21 '08. They are at home 1028
Cook Ave., Goldfield, Nev.
Mrs. Mary Montgomery returned
home Sunday after spending three
months in Chicago visiting her daugh-
ter Mrs. Tennie Talbert.
Miss Tillie Randolph, one of Denver's
progressive young ladies arrived home
Monday after a lengthy visit among
friends in Philadelphia.
The Denver Roller Skating Academy
will have skating only Monday and Fri-
day nights, Wednesday night and Tues-
day afternoon being cut out.
Wm. Pettus who was arrested in Denver this week on a forgery charge is also a murderer of Lizzie Allen a colored woman of Richmond, Va., where the deed was committed, according to his own statement.
The Republican State Editors' Association was organized Wednesday, February 12th. E. P. Booze of the Western Enterprise of Colorado Springs, and Jos. D. D. Rivers of the Colorado Statesman, Denver, joined.
C. F. Hall, who less than a year ago was an amateur checker player is said to be fast approaching the professional rank. Wm. Crummer, who stands as one of Denver's best is said to be responsible for his advancement.
One of the most unique calenders that have come to our notice this year is one shown us by J. D Garner from Natchez City, Miss. sent to Mrs. Garner by Mrs. S. A. Banks, whose husband is president of the Bluff City Saving Bank. On the calendar is a picture taken from life representing a little colored girl of perhaps 6 years old doing her washing. Its a beauty well worth the study of art.
Rav. Dr. Alzamon Ira Lucas and Miss Clara Oberdoffer were united in the holy bonds of matrimony, at Cheyenne Wyo., Friday February 7, '08. The ceremony was performed by Rev. W. H. Barry at the Second Baptist church. Both the bride and groom are well and favorably known in Denver and on their arrival in the city they were greeted with hearty congratulations by their numerous friends. We extend to the happy couple or best wishes for uumlimited happiness and prosperity.
CHURCH NOTICE.
SUNDAY SERVICES.
SHORTER A. M. E.
Preaching by the pastor at 11 a.m.
Class meeting at 12:30.
Sunday school at 1 p. m. J. C. Porter,
Superintendent.
Allen C. E. League at 6:30. Miss Ger-
Rev. J. L. Harding will preach at 7:30 p. m.
Revival services are in progress and will continue through next week. All are made welcome.
REV. A. M. WARD, Pastor.
POLITIGAL SOCIAL
The social given at 1712 Curtis street, last Wednesday night by the Colorado Political club, drew a full house, in fact, standing room was at a premium. T. McAllister introduced the president, A. J. Fitzpatrick who presided over the meeting and after stating its object the meeting was opened by prayer by Rev. D. D. Cole, after which the preamble was read by the secretary, J. W. Levell. The original poem by Chas. D. Clem "Emancipation," was one of truth as well as poetry and was received with great applause. Instrumental solos by Mrs. J. H. P. Westbrook and Mrs. E. L. Faulkner and vocal solos by Mrs W. A. Jones and Ray Clark was a treat that was well worth listening to. Short and spicy addresses were made by Dr. T. Ernest McClain, Rev. Dr. Alzamon Ira Lucas, Dr. J. H. P. Westbrook and Rev. D. D. Cole.
It is generally conceded that this organization will weild more power in the approaching campaign than any political organization that has ever been launched in the state by Negroes. Besides the individual musical numbers the Progressive Concert Orchestra of ten pieces rendered some choice selections which
SPRING
It's thing parti upon
We have the Hats in all
Also Our own Special i
At
THE Johnson
1005 16TH ST.
Closing'
For the N
Our Entire Stock
Will be Sold
The Tindell Dr
SPRING HATS
We have the Stetson Soft and Derby Hats in all the latest styles.
Also Our own Special in all the Latest Blocks
At $3
THE
Johnson-Noel Co
1005 16TH ST.
OPP. TABOR GRAND.
Closing Out Sale
For the Next 10 Days Our Entire Stock Of Winter Goods Will be Sold Below Cost.
The Tindell Dry Goods Store.
THE A. M. LAWHORN & CO.
Undertakers and Funeral Directors.
J. R. CONTEE Pres. W.M. SPRAGUE,
R. E. HANDY. A. M. LAWHORN. LOUIS H
Licened Embalmer. Manager. Assi
CARRIAGES FURNISHED FOR ALL OCCASIONS
J. R. CONTEE Pres. WM. SPRAGUE, Sec. & Treas
---
trude Nichols, President.
2707 Welton St.
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT
1110 18th Street.
brought forth comments as being second to none in the city. At the conclusion of the program refreshments were served. It was an enthusiastic gathering and it is conceded that much good will be accomplished by the organization
There will be a grand chittling supper given in honor of Denver's sweet little girls. All young ladies of color that missed their supper on the evening of the banquet given in honor of Register W. T. Vernon will be admitted free. Remember this grand chance is only offered to young ladies of color. Unless you are a colored lady nothing doing. Supper will be served at Yips, February 33rd 1908.
SUNNY, President
HONEY, Secretary,
BUNNY, Treasurer.
Tomorrow afternoon at 4 ocloc'k the People's Sunday Alliance will render a special program at Zion Baptist church in commeration of the birthday of Fredrick Douglass. FRANKLIN H. BRYANT, Secretary.
Program Womens Day Rally Campbell A. M. E. church, Sunday Feb. 16th., afternoon and evening 3 p. m. and 7:30 p. m. Singing, Central Baptist choir; Invocation, Mrs. Jennie E. Young; Scripture Reading, Mrs. C. W. Holmes; Singing, Central Baptist choir; Short talks by city pastors. Evening 7:30. Selection by choir; Invocation, Mrs. Laura Johnson; Scripture Reading, Mrs. H. McIntyre; Select Reading, Mrs. M. Fallings; Paper, Mrs. Martha Riley.
Every Stetson bears the Stetson Name
The Stetson Hat
It's the man who looks into things carefully, the man who is particular, who always insists upon the Stetson.
Denver, Colo
PHONE MAIN 6123
Denver, Colo.
Fine line of Toilet Articles, Perfumes, Cigars, Etc Fresh pure Drugs. Courteous Treatment. Remember we always use the freshest and purest drugs in our prescriptions, in fact our prescription department is as complete as any in the city. Prices Right.
Prescriptions a Specialty Goods Delivered Free
Phone Main 4956. Cor. 19th and Arapahoe Sts, Denver, Colo
GIVE ME A CALL.
L. L. McMAHAN, Proprietor.
A GRAND CHARITY HALL
TO BE GIVEN
FEB. 20, '00
For the benefit of the Colored Orphans
Old Folk's Home.
BOURNER'S HALL
Corner of 27th and Arapahoe Sts.
ADMISSION 35 CENTS.
Dancing from nine till one a.m. Good Music in At
COMMITTEE:—Mrs. A. A. Ealy, Ch'm., Mrs. M.
Secy., Mrs. Lilly Lewis, Treas.; Mrs. James Travick,
Abernathy, Mrs. James Cooper, Mrs. Edward Miller, M.
Anderson, Mrs. Lawrence Stephen, Mrs. Laura Gu
Elvira Reynolds.
WHITE SWAN
TELEPHONE
1866
TELEPHONE
1866
LAUNDRY
Not in the Trust. We have Reduced the Price
OUR PRICE
1 Shirt Waist . . . 3
1 Shirt . . . 3
1 Apron . . . 3
1 Dress, Lady's . . . 3
1 Chemise . . . 3
1 Corset Cover . . . 3
1 Pair Drawers . . . 3
1 Night Dress . . . 3
1 Union Suit . . . 3
1 Under Shirt . . . 3
1 Shirt, Work . . . 3
1 Night Shirt . . . 3
Total . . . 36
PHONE MAIN
1866
2200 Blake St.
ROUGH DRY
12c to 35c per
Dozen
TRUST
1 Shirt Waist . . . 3
1 Shirt . . . 3
1 Apron . . . 3
1 Dress, Lady's . . . 3
1 Corset Cover . . . 3
1 Pair Drawers . . . 3
1 Night Dress . . . 3
1 Union Suit . . . 3
1 Under Shirt . . . 3
1 Shirt, Work . . . 3
1 Night Shirt . . . 3
Total . . .
Best collar and cuff work in the city. Send us all your fax
ing, Automobiles and wagons everywhere. We use soft art
We do no hospital work.
MURRAY AND EDWARDS, PROPS.
THE PULLMAN POOL RO
```markdown
```
A GRAND CHARITY BALL
FEB. 20, '08,
For the benefit of the Colored Orphans and Old Folk's Home.
BOURNER'S HALL.
Dancing from nine till one a. m. Good Music in Attendance COMMITTEE:—Mrs. A. A. Ealy, Ch'm., Mrs. Moral Keelon, Secy., Mrs. Lilly Lewis, Treas.; Mrs. James Travick, Mrs. James Abernathy, Mrs. James Cooper, Mrs. Edward Miller, Mrs. Raymond Anderson, Mrs. Lawrence Stephen, Mrs. Laura Gunnell, Mrs. Elvira Reynolds.
WHITE SWAN
TELEPHONE TELEPHONE
1866 1866
LAUNDRY
Not in the Trust. We have Reduced the Prices.
Best collar and cuff work in the city. Send us all your family washing
gowns everywhere. We use soft artesian winter.
We do no hospital work.
MURRAY AND EDWARDS, PROPS.
WILBUR MACY, MANAGER.
A Convenient Place to have Your Mail Dir
The Finest Equipped Pool and Club Rooms w
of the Mississippi River. Drop in and see
Just around the corner from the Union Dep
PHONE MAIN 6128
1628 Wazee St. Denver,
Have Your Mail Directed
Pool and Club Rooms west
r. Drop in and see us.
r from the Union Depot.
MAIN 6128
A Convenient Place to have Your Mail Directed The Finest Equipped Pool and Club Rooms west of the Mississippi River. Drop in and see us. Just around the corner from the Union Depot. PHONE MAIN 6128
For Rent, nice front room for gentleman at 1946 Pennsylvania avenue, Phone White 1905.
The big Leap Year surprise will be the musical treat given by the Denver Division of U. O. True Reformers, East Turner hall, Thursday, February 27th. Watch for our next ad.
ALLEN DAVIS, Chairman.
Nicely furnished room for gentleman. 2404 Glenarm Place, Phone Main 2781.
Ernest Howard, carpenter and all kinds of job work done at reasonable prices. Residence 353 Warren avenue. Phone 2129 Brown.
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.
Furnished room for rent to man and wife, with the use of the kitchen. Light and heat furnished, apply 1813 Clarkson street.
I have just received several extra copies of Dunbar's works bound in cloth, Price $1.75.
J. H. DONIPHAN,
2836 Stout Street.
To ticket sellers of the True Reformers Leap Year Musical Treat. The person selling the largest number of tickets over 200 will secure the 1st prize. The next largest the 2nd prize. By order of the committee in charge.
---
Local Notices.
Hair cut 15 cents, 1847 Blake street
Don't miss the Tindell Dry Goods stores' closing out sale—2707 Welton St.
The Elk's club. 1855 Arapahoe street. A popular and favorite resort. Thos. Clingman, proprietor.
Mrs. G. W. Anderson of 429 24th St. has all kinds of hair goods for sale Pompadours and switches made to order.
A grand musical entertainment will be given at Dania hall 27th and Arapahoe streets, Thursday, March 19th by the Progressive Concert Brass Band and Orchestra. Admission 15 cents.
A. J. Fitzpatrick, carpenter, contractor, general repairing, 2646 California.
Blankets, comforts, underwear, hoisery and etc., below cost at the Tindell Dry Goods store, 2707 Welton St.
Two furnished rooms for rent for ladies or gentlemen at 1050 Logan avenue.
I have just received several extra copies of Dunbar's works bound in cloth, Price $1.75.
J. H. DONIPHAN,
2836 Stout Street.
Denver, Colorado.
NOTICE
ALL KINDS OF NONSISCAL
ANECDOTES GO THEN.
"Jones of Belham" a Good Example of What Can Be Done in That Respect—New Version of the Fatted Calf.
People like nonsense after dinner. They like anecdotes. The best of anecdotes is that they need have nothing to do with the subject. I know a man who keeps about half a dozen anecdotes always in stock. He can make one or the other of them fit any particular toast. I heard him propose "The Army and Navy." He said that some people took a gloomy view of our national defenses. For himself, he was an optimist. It was always best to look at the bright side of everything.
"That reminds me," he said, "of my friend Jones—Jones of Belham. His motto is that there is always something to be thankful for. His wife is not of such a cheerful disposition. She is often annoyed at Jones' optimism. "One day they were dining at a restaurant, and they had placed before them a very tough piece of veal. It was an exceptionally tough piece of veal. " "There,' said Mrs. Jones, 'now I think it would puzzle even you to find anything to be thankful for in that piece of veal.' " "Not a bit of it,' said Jones, I was just at that very moment thinking how fortunate it was that we happened to meet it when it was young."
Some time afterward I was at another dinner. It was the dinner of a scientific society. This same man was present again, and he was put up to propose the toast of "Success to Aerial Navigation."
"This is a tremendous question to deal with," he said, "but we must make the best of things, and I hope you will bear with me while I try to make the best of it. It is such a tough subject that it reminds me of the piece of veal which was once placed before my friend Jones—Jones of Belham."
And out came the story of Jones of Belham again; and it was quite a hit. So much so that he followed it up with another.
Whereat the men of science gave encouraging cheers and said "Go on!" for "after dinner" makes the whole world knin, and it is just as safe to play with the lions of learning when they have been well fed as with any of the inferior animals.
"This calf, my friends,' said the preacher, 'was no ordinary calf. This calf, forsooth, was a fatted calf. And mark you, it was no ordinary fatted calf. This calf, my friends, had been fatted up for years, and years, and years.'"
Here is another dinner story: Two men, who had been dining so well that they could see twice as much as two ordinary men, were rather imprudently walking home by the canal bank. Very soon one of them fell into the water. This sobered him to some extent, and he began to yell out at the ton of his voice:
"Hi hi! Help, help! I can't swim! Help! I can't swim."
The other man, who had gone down on his knees on the bank and was trying to steady himself by holding tightly to a tuft of grass, surveyed his struggling friend with a glassy stare.
"I can't sh-wim, either," he said.
"but I don't make such a b-b-blooming fuss about it."
"Speeding Up."
It is idle to criticise at large the American business man's habit of overwork. But a single aspect of this rulous habit merits comment. The American business man does not want money itself. He wants to "get there." to "get there" for his own, his wife's sake, his family's sake. The full price of "getting there" he does not always calculate.
The man who works fast, many hours a day, six or seven days a week, is not merely paying in sheer energy to "get there." He eats too much, possibly drinks too much, does not take exercise, but he pays in more than physical detriment. He is doing more than ill-treating his body in such a way as he would never dream of ill-treating his automobile or his factory dynamo. Above everything else, the American business man is "getting there" at the expense of rounded development, at the expense of life itself and of its large and rich experiences.
Tree Dentistry.
Many methods are being tried for the preservation of old and historical trees in the east, some of which are intensely interesting. On the estate of John J. Little, at Bala, Pa., is a very old sycamore, the trunk of which had become decayed. The cavity was filled with stone and cement and around its base was then built an outer stone wall, so arranged that the water would drain away from the trunk of the tree.—Popular Mechanics.
One Exception.
"Our new show is fine," said the first actor; "there's plenty of snap and go in it; the acts are short and so are the intermissions; no long waits at all."
"Indeed?" inquired the other, sarcastically; "Lot even for salary?"
Mue. A.—The worst is deciding what to take.
Mue. B.—That's easy; I take all my dresses and leave my husband!— Translantic Tales.
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The Ozonized Ox Marrow Co.
(None genuine without my signature)
Charles Forrest
153 E. KINZIE ST., CHICAGO, IL.
Agents wanted everywhere.
THE BEST ICE CREAM AND
CANDIES AT
O. P. Baur & Co..
CATERERS and
CONFECTIONERS.
PHONE 168.
2512 Curtis St. Denver, Cube
Phones, Office Main 5595.
Residence, York 123.
Hours, 9 to 11 a. m. 1 to 4, 7 to 8 p. m.
Sundays, 10 to 11:30 a. m., 2 to 4 p. m.
Dr. P. E. Spratlin,
Good Block-1557 Larimer St.
Residence 2230 Clarkson St
Denver, Colorado,
Miss M. Cowden
Hair Dressing Parlor.
Shampoo, cutting and curling.
Scalp treatment, hair tonics, hair straightening, manicuring. Stage wigs for rent; theatrical use and masquerades.
Goods delivered out of the city.
All shades of hair matched by sending a sample of hair; also combings made up.
CHEAPEST SWITCHES 50 CENTS.
1219 21st St. Denver, Colo.
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.
J. W. Rummell,
WINES, LIQUORS & CIGAR.
PHONE 9432 MAIN.
2257 Welton St. Denver, Coli
IF YOU WISH TO Meet the Boys of the Shuffle and Hoe Call at Joe Bergers AT THE OLD CORNER 24th and Larimer Sts. Denver.
ILLUSTRATORS
DESIGNERS
HALF-TONE,
ZINC-WOOD &
COPPER-PATTE
ENGRAVING
CORP WORK
THE DENVER
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DENVER
PHONE
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ON TIME
1814 CURTIS STREET
VEGETABLES IN NEW GUISE.
Appetizing Ways of Preparing the Odds and Ends.
To serve cold turnips attractively, heat a cupful of soup or good stock; add a cupful of bread crumbs and simmer for five minutes. Add the mashed turnips, two or three tablespoonfuls of cream and the requisite amount of salt and pepper. When thoroughly hot turn in the beaten yolk of an egg; cook for a minute or two longer and serve quickly.
If some of the large stalks of celery have been left from dinner and the cook does not desire to make them into soup stew them until tender in slightly salted water; then drain them through a colander and chop fine. Add cream, melted butter, beaten egg, and salt to taste, and to each pint of the mixture one level teaspoonful of baking powder that has previously been sifted into a little flour. If the batter is not of proper consistency, a little more flour may be added, for the mixture must be thick enough to drop properly from the end of a spoon into the deep fat in which it should be fried.
Even the radishes left on the table may be served attractively if this formula is followed: Let them cook until tender in just enough boiling water to cover them. Keep the saucepan securely covered until the radishes are done; then uncover and reduce the liquor one-half. Add an equal quantity of milk, and, when at the point of boiling, stir in the necessary amount of flour and butter to thicken the sauce appropriately. If you have never tried this experiment in cooking radishes the result will be certain to prove a pleasing surprise.
WHEN CARPET BECOMES BARE
Devices by Which Its Usefulness May Be Prolonged.
In the case of a bare carpet three courses may be followed. A new one may be substituted, the old one being relegated to a room of less consequence; or a square may be put on top of the old; or a manipulation of the widths may be attempted, banishing the worn parts to obscure corners underneath rugs or pieces of furniture, where they will scarcely be seen and not trodden upon.
A word of advice may here be given about regulating the wear of stair carpet.
Each length of it should always be at least half a yard longer than actually required, to permit of changing the tread. In laying such a carpet for the first time have the surplus half yard at the top.
After the first time it is taken up, when relaying pull it over the step a few inches, and so on until the surplus half yard is all at the bottom; then the carpet could be reversed and this process repeated, with the result that some years will be added to the life of the carpet.
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
For clothes that fade, put one ounce sugar of lead in a pail of rainwater. Soak overnight.
A spoonful of vinegar put into the water in which meat or fowls are boiled makes them tender.
To clean decanters put a teaspoonful of salt in each decanter, moisten with vinegar, shake well to clean the inside of bottle, then rinse thoroughly with cold water.
When mixtures have been burned in granite ware half fill the utensil with cold water and add a little washing soda or soap powder. Heat slowly to the boiling point, then empty and wash as usual.
When a broom is beyond use for sweeping purposes it will be found excellent for scrubbing the kitchen floor. Go over the floor with the broom and hot suds, then mop with clear water. Never use a good broom for this purpose.
Salad Dressing.
One egg (do not beat), a teaspoon of salt, one teaspoon of mustard, three rounding teaspoons of flour, six teaspoons of sugar. Beat these all up together good, add three-fourths cup of vinegar (if very sharp make it a scant three-fourths cup), two-thirds cup of water. Put in small piece of butter. Keep stirring until it thickens. Don't let it boil. When cold add teaspoon of cream or milk. You can add more milk if you like it thinner.
Antiquity of Beer
The ancients had beer, but whether it was made from hops does not appear. It is known that the Egyptians made beer from barley, and Pliny writes of a beer that was made in Gaul and other parts of Europe from corn and water. Lager beer, or German beer, is probably of comparatively modern date—N. Y. American.
J. T. JOHNSON.
Minnesota Grain Belt Beer
Also Western Agent for D. Carnegie
& Co. Swedish Porter, Gothenburg,
Sweden.
1644 Larimer St. Denver, Cole
Look for the inable 'Macklem Breed'
on every leaf
THE LOVE AFFAIRS OF GEORGE WASHINGTON
Copyright 1924 by W. G. Chanman
MISS LUCY ORTHBES
MISS FRANCES ALEXANDER
BETJY PAUNTLEROY
MISS MARY PHILLIPE
MISS MARY CARY
We are so accustomed to pictures of George Washington in a rigid attitude, with sternly compressed lips and generally forbidding expression, that we forget he was ever young and a human being of flesh and blood like the rest of us.
Instead of being a cold-blooded prig Washington was magnetic in personality and a great social favorite. He was the finest horseman in Virginia, an exceedingly graceful dancer and a dandy in ruffles, gold lace, velvet, silk stockings and diamond buckles, who caused a flurry in feminine hearts whenever he appeared.
Young Washington was always falling in love, and after his engagement to Mrs. Custis was announced his mother wrote to a friend: "I have had a great deal of trouble with George, but it is all over now." His first attack of the heart occurred when he was 15 years old, and the object of his affections was Miss Frances Alexander, aged 17, whose father's plantation adjoined Mount Vernon. Imagine him pining and sighing and grating his teeth in despair, just like any young American lover in these days! It is amusing now, but at that time it was a very serious matter to George Washington! Not much is known of this courtship, and soon after he lost his heart to Miss Lucy Grymes, whom he often referred to afterward as his "Lowland Beauty."
About this time Washington wrote a letter to "Dear Sally," in which he said: "I am almost discouraged from writing to you as this is my fourth to you since I reed any from yourself. I hope you'll not make the Old Proverb good out of sight out of Mind as it's one of the greatest pleasures in living in Fairfax in often hearing from you and hope you'll not deny me.
"I pass the time much more agreebler than what I imagined I should as there's a very agreeable Young Lady Lives in the same house where I re-
MISS
LUCY
DRYMBS
MISS
MARY
PHILLIPIC
side (Miss Mary Cary) that in a great measure cheats my sorrow and dejectedness tho' not so as to draw my thoughts from your Parts. I could wish to be with you down there with all my heart but as it is a thing almost impractakable, I shall rest myself where I am with hopes of shortly having some minutes of your transactions."
So we find the susceptible George interested in three fair damsels at once: "Sally," the "Lowland Beauty" and Miss Mary Cary, which recalls the story of the man who could never shoot a bird, because just as he had aimed and was ready to shoot at one bird another bird flew in the way.
In 1753 Lucy Grymes, the Lowland Beauty, married Henry Lee and became the mother of "Lighthorse Harry," the Custer of the revolution.
One of Washington's most serious love affairs was with Miss Mary Cary, and there is no doubt that she was in love with him, but her father prevented the marriage by handing out the Alaskan negative.
Miss Cary afterwards married a young swell, Edward Ambler, who died young, and his pretty widow was often a guest at Mount Vernon after Washington's marriage. The Cary romance extended over several years, but in the meantime there were others. It is consoling to know that Washington was human enough to occasionally do something amateurish, and the thing he fell down on hardest was writing poetry. The following was composed when he was a major and about 20 years old. It was addressed to Miss Betsy Fauntleroy: "Oh, ye Gods why should my Poor Re-
sistless heart
Stand to oppose thy might and Power,
At last surrender to Cupid's feathered
Dart
And now lays bleeding every Hour
For her that's Pityless of my grief and
woes,
And will not on me pity take,
I'll sleep amongst my most inveterate
Foes
And with Gladness never wish to wake,
In deluding sleepings let my eyelids close
That in an enraptured Dream I may
In a soft lulling sleep and gentle repose
Possess those joys denied by Day."
There is a letter on record in which Washington asked Mr. Fauntleroy's permission to make a proposal of marriage to his daughter "in the hope of a revocation of a former cruel sentence." But the father's reply was unfavorable, as usual, and Miss Betsy afterwards married Thomas Adams of Williamsburg. It is a tradition of that town that after her rejected suitor became famous and visited Williamsburg as the guest of the people she watched the triumphant pageant from a window and when the great hero saw her he waved his sword and saluted her, whereupon the lady fainted away.
On another occasion he fell in love with Miss Mary Phillipse, the beautiful daughter of a wealthy Englishman who lived in a superb mansion on the Hudson near West Point. Washington promptly proposed, but was told that somebody else's coquette was already engaged to be married. Washington said afterward that he thought things might have resulted differently if he had waited "till the lady was in the mood." There was a tragic ending to this romance years after, when the haughty creature who had spurned the hand of the commander of the American forces was arrested as an English spy. She was thrown into prison and all of her property was confiscated.
Washington was too wise to turn into a woman hater merely because he had been thrown down three times in succession. He knew there were plenty of pretty fish in the aquarium and that it would be only a matter of time when he'd make a good catch. That time came just two years after he was jilted by Miss Phillipse, and it happened in this way: Col. Washington was on his way to Williamsburg on official business, and while crossing Williams ferry was accosted by a hospitable old gentleman, who
MISS FRANCAS
ALEXANDER
MISS MARY CARY
asked him to rest a while at his home in the neighborhood. The colonel answered that his pressing business would not permit the time. But, as an inducement, the old gentleman mentioned that among the guests at his house was the handsomest young widow in all Virginia! That changed matters. The young colonel smiled, hesitated, and then—well, then he decided that he had more time than he had supposed!
Upon reaching the house he was introduced to the fascinating widow, Mrs. Martha Parke Custis, and we can imagine the coy glances of this enticing young creature, for it was a case of love at first sight. And instead of getting away in a few hours as he had intended, old Bishop, the colonel's servant, held his horse in readiness for hours and hours. But his master didn't come. In fact his delighted host had little difficulty in persuading him to stay until the next day.
Washington had just returned from a brilliant campaign, was gallant, young and handsome, and the clever widow didn't lose any time bringing down her game! A few days later Col. Washington visited Mrs. Custis at her own beautiful home and this time he offered his heart and sword with success. It is quite evident that a propitious reception awaited him, for on the way to the house he asked a slave if Mrs. Custis was at home, and he said, "Yes, sah, I reckon you're the gen'leman what's 'spected.' They did not meet again till their marriage six months later.
At that time Martha Custis was 27 years old—just three months younger than her flance. She was short, had eyes that snapped, her manner was very gay, and she was thought by some to be the most beautiful woman in America. She was the wealthiest woman in the old dominion and the mother of four children, two of whom were living. The marriage took place at the house of the bride in January, 1759. The exact date is uncertain.
YIP RESTAURANT
Noodles, Chop Suey, Chili
Privare Dining Rooms
REGULAR DINNER 20 CENTS.
QUICK LUNCH.
Imported Tea for Sale.
1841 Arapahoe St. Tel. Main 6835
C. & C.
D.
Wines and Liquors
220
Denver,
Phone Main 6692
The Ent
Fine Wine
SPECIAL PR
2200-2 Larimer St.
Wines and Liquors for Medicinal Use Our Specialty. 2205 CHAMPA STREET.
THE BROA
BAN
BROADWAY PHARM BANTA BROS, Props.
THE BROADWAY PHARMACY BANTA BROS, Props. Corner 19th, Welton and Broadway.
Drugs, Toilet Article
GOODS DELIVERED
When you w
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Toilet Articles, Perfumes. Prescriptions a S
DELIVERED. PHONE
you want a fine
High Grade Cig
"Old Nobili
Drugs, Toilet Articles, Perfumes. Prescriptions a Specialty GOODS DELIVERED. PHONE MAIN 145 When you want a fine
3 for 25c. 10c and 2 for 25c 10 Sizes
The Baxt
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The Baxter Cigar Company,
2048 Railroad
1 Billiards Refres
Pool and Billiards
FIVE PO
Pool and Billiards Refreshments
FIVE POINTS SOCIAL CLUB DENVER, COLO. THOS. CLINGMAN, MGB.
Phone York 1710
FA CLAIBER'S
TONSORAL GEM
The Denver Barber's Supply C.
1008 FIFTEENTH STREET, DENVER, COLO.
When You Want The Heads, Feet, Tails, Snouts, Ears, Neckbones or Chitterlings or any other part of the hog except the squeal go to EAST'S MARKET 2300.6 Larimer St. Phone 1461 Main
J. D. ORACO
Phone Main 2048
Phone Main 4885.
LIQUOR CO.,
DIRECT IMPORTERS,
for Medicinal Use Our Specialty.
CHAMPA STREET.
Colorado.
Family Trade a Specialty
prise Liquor Co.
Cases, Liquors and Cigars
HAISNER, Manager.
CES TO PULLMAN PORTERS.
WM. EHMKE,
MANAGER
EAST TURNER HALL.
2132-2148 ARAPAHOE ST.
Tel. 2449. Denver.
DWAY PHARMACY
A BROS, Props.
Perfumes. Prescriptions a Specialty
PHONE MAIN 149
ant a fine
high Grade Cigar
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Refreshments
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family Trade a Specialty
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PORTERS.
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ARMACY
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Sure Enough.
Patience—I see it is said that the renting of wedding outfits is a large industry in France. I frequently happens that everything used is hired for the occasion.
Patrice—Wonder what they have to pay for hiring the rice and old shoes.—Yonkers Statesman.
Postoffices were first established in 1464.
Punctuation marks were first used in 1490.
His Difficulty.
"You wrong me," said Plodding Pete,
"when you say I ain't willin' to work.
I'm just dyin' to work."
"Then what's the trouble?"
"I'm too conscientious. Whenever I
git a job I'm so anxious to fill it well
dat I gits stage fright."
The British board of agriculture has
recently published some statistics
which show that England's foreign
food bill has doubled in amount during
the last twenty years. In 1886 it was
approximately $500,000,000. In 1906
the amount had grown to $1,000,000,
000.
Friend—Your little wife is a brilliantly handsome woman. I should
think you'd be jealous of her. Host
(confidentially)—To tell the truth,
Simkins, I am. I never invite anybody
here that any sane woman would take
a fancy to. London Illustrated Bits.
Marengo, the famous war charger of Napoleon, is said to have been the greatest horse known to modern history. The emperor rode Marengo for the last time in the battle of Mt. St. Jean, where the horse received his seventh wound. The steed died at the age of thirty-six.
$5.00 in Gold. Free.
Send us the names of your friends who want a piano, and if we secure an order as a result we will give you $5 in gold for your trouble. Send all the details you can and write plainly. The Knight-Campbell Music Co., 1625-31 California St., Denver, Colo.
A light of one candlepower is plainly visible at one mile, and a light of three candlepower at two miles.
The nourishment in three baked bananas, weighing one pound, is equal to that of twenty-six pounds of bread.
Though the British automobile trade is prosperous beyond precedent this year, the bicycle trade has been unusually depressed, chiefly because of the wet summer, and partly because the new Australian tariff amounts to a prohibition of exports to that colony.
Richard T. Crane, the millionaire philanthropist, has presented property valued at $50,000 to the Hull House, Chicago, as a tribute to his first wife, the mother of his seven children. It will be known as the Mary Crane Memorial day nursery.
Joseph H. Choate, former ambassador to Great Britain, will deliver the oration at the University of Pennsylvania annual celebration of Washington's birthday. Mr. Choate, who is now practicing law in New York, has not announced his subject, but it is presumed that he will speak on some important national subject.
The new immigration plan in the state of Sao Paulo, and more or less in Brazil in general, is to found colonies of people of one nationality. Hence the secretary of agriculture at Sao Paulo is making arrangements to establish several German colonies at once. At present the 1,500,000 Italians constitute the dominant nationality.
Last year the British postoffice telegraph was operated at a loss of over £1,000,000, although the receipts for the year were the largest ever known, reaching a total of $20,578,880. A review covering thirty-seven years is included in the return, and shows that the total loss on the service during that period has amounted to $71,359,135.
Gifford Pinchot, head of the forest service, is diligently working to the end of having forestry taught in the public schools, believing that by this means interest in the great subject of conservation of the forests can be promoted and that it will not be long, if children are taught to protect the timber supply, until a revolution in sentiment has been wrought and the results be manifest.
Denver Directory
THE
FAMOUS
J. H. WILSON STOCK SADDLES
Ask your dealer for them. Take no other.
STOVE REPAIRS of every known make of stove, furnace, refrigerator, phone. Phone 725.
Pullen, 1831 Lawrence, Denver.
BROWN PALACE HOTEL Absolutely Fire-proof
European Plan. $1.50 and Upward.
THE COLORADO SADDLERY CO
Factory 1801-9 Market St., Denver. Harness in every style. Saddles of every description. Ask your dealer for "the Smoothest Line in the West."
Electric Needle Specialist.
REMOVES FACIAL BLEMISHES,
superfluoous hair, moles, birthmarks, etc. 312
17th St. (opposite Frown Painter), Main. 3151
AGENTS WANTED
To secure Homesekers for the Gulf Coast of Texas, Flowing Artisan Carpenter, Birch, Cedarwood, The KIMBABA AGENCY CO. 909 17th St., Denver, Colo.
Seeds, Plants ROSES
BULBS, VINES.
ORNAMENTAL TREES
COLORADO GROWN—
Seeds, Plants
ROSES
BULB & VINES
SHRUPS, FRUIT AND
ORNAMENTAL TREES
JOYRORN
BEST ON EARTH
LOW PRICE. Free Catalog. Agents Wanted.
INTERNATIONAL NURSERIES
"The Big Growers." Denver, Colorado.
E. E. BURLINGAME & CO.,
ASSAY OFFICE AND CHEMICAL
LABORATORY
Established in Colorado,1866. Samples by mail or
express will receive prompt and careful attention
Gold & Silver Bulb
Relined, Melted and Assayed
ON CHEMICAL
Concentration Tests
100 lbs. of liquid lots.
Write for terms.
1736-1738 Lawrence St. Denver, Colo.
AS YET UNKNOWN TO FAME.
Can Any One Place This Quotation from Philosophy?
Louis Jones of the Grand opera house had the blues. His brother, a colored man, usually in good humor, had 'em, too. Neither knew just why he had 'em, but they had 'em just the same. They talked of the weather, the times and a dozen other gloomy subjects. There was nothing sunny in the soul of a patron or a barber. Finally both sighed in concert and a silence fell over the shop—yes, over a barber shop. The colored man was the first to speak. After several moments of silence he gave vent to another sigh and said:
"Well, as de old philosopah says: 'Ef yo' ain't got nothin,' now's yo' time.'"
Jones is still wondering who the philosopher was.—Indianapolis News.
It may be a blessed fortune for Socrates that Xantippe didn't keep a diary to be published 2,000 years after her death.
PURE FOOD.
No Food Commissioner of Any State Has Ever Attacked the Absolute Purity of Grape-Nuts.
Every analysis undertaken shows this food to be made strictly of Wheat and Barley, treated by our processes to partially transform the starch parts into a form of Sugar, and therefore much easier to digest.
Our claim that it is a "Food for Brain and Nerve Centres" is based upon the fact that certain parts of Wheat and Barley (which we use) contain Nature's brain and nerve-building ingredients, viz.: Phosphate of Potash, and the way we prepare the food makes it easy to digest and assimilate.
Dr. Geo. W. Carey in his book on "The Biochemical System of Medicine" says:
"When the medical profession fully understands the nature and range of the phosphate of potassium, insane asylums will no longer be needed.
"The gray matter of the brain is controlled entirely by the inorganic cell-salt, potassium phosphate.
"This salt unites with albumen, and by the addition of oxygen creates nerve-fluid, or the gray matter of the brain.
"Of course, there is a trace of other salts and other organic matter in nerve-fluid, but potassium phosphate is the chief factor, and has the power within itself to attract, by its own law of affinity, all things needed to manufacture the elixir of life. Therefore, when nervous symptoms arise, due to the fact that the nerve-fluid has been exhausted from any cause, the phosphate of potassium is the only true remedy, because nothing else can possibly supply the deficiency.
"The ills arising from too rapidly consuming the gray matter of the brain cannot be overestimated.
"Phosphate of Potash, is to my mind, the most wonderful curative agent ever discovered by man, and the blessings it has already conferred on the race are many. But 'what shall the harvest be' when physicians everywhere fully understand the part this wonderful salt plays in the processes of life? It will do as much as can be done through physiology to make a heaven on earth.
"Let the overworked business man take it and go home good-tempered. Let the weary wife, nerves unstrung from attending to sick children or entertaining company, take it and note how quickly the equilibrium will be restored and calm and reason assert her throne. No 'provings' are required here. We find this potassium salt largely predominates in nerve-fluid, and that a deficiency produces well-defined symptoms. The beginning and end of the matter is to supply the lacking principle, and in molecular form, exactly as nature furnishes it in vegetables, fruits and grain. To supply deficiencies—this is the only law of cure."
Please observe that Phosphate of Potash is not properly of the drug-shop variety but is best prepared by "Old Mother Nature" and stored in the grains ready for use by mankind. Those who have been helped to better health by the use of Grape-Nuts are legion.
"There's a Reason."
BRAIN POWER
Increased by Proper Feeding
A lady writer who not only has done good literary work, but reared a family, found in Grape-Nuts the ideal food for brain work and to develop healthy children. She writes:
"I am an enthusiastic proclalmer of Grape-Nuts as a regular diet. I formerly had no appetite in the morning and for 8 years while nursing my four children, had insufficient nourishment for them.
"Unable to eat breakfast I felt faint later, and would go to the pantry and eat cold chops, sausage, cookies, doughnuts or anything I happened to find. Being a writer, at times my head felt heavy and my brain asleep.
"When I read of Grape-Nuts I began eating it every morning, also gave it to the children, including my 10 months old baby, who soon grew 10 fat as a little pig, good natured and contented.
"I wrote evenings and feeling the need of sustained brain power, bega eating a small saucer of Grape-Nuts with milk, instead of my usual indi gestible hot pudding, pie, or cake for dessert at night.
"I grew plump, nerves strong, and when I wrote my brain was active and clear: indeed, the dull head pain never returned."
POSTUM CEREAL CO., Ltd.
Battle Creek Mich.
COLORADO NEWS ITEMS
COLORADO NEWS ITEMS
The towns of Mead and Nunn are taking steps to incorporate, having filed petitions at Greeley.
Shooting at coyotes from moving trains is one of the pastimes of passengers and trainmen on the Moffat road.
Over 200,000 pounds of flour were shipped from Lamar on the 7th inst., direct to Liverpool, England, by the Lamar Milling & Elevator Company.
Fort Collins is preparing to entertain the annual department of the Grand Army of the Republic, department of Colorado and Wyoming, next May.
The Colorado Fruit Commercial Association and the Grand Valley Fruit and Produce Association have formed a consolidation under the former name.
In order to secure a charter for a lodge of Elks, members of that order have just completed a census of Fort Morgan. They find the population to be 3,205.
The Bureau of Child and Animal Protection will try its hand at running the dog pound in Denver, money for the purpose being appropriated by the City Council.
In order to establish a headquarters for the western states the Salvation Army has appropriated $150,000 for the purchase or erection of a building in Denver.
The Associated Charities of Colorado Springs have found several hundred men out of employment and are endeavoring to influence the City Council to create public work for them.
J. C. Emerson, who had served as day marshal of Rifle ever since the town was incorporated, died on the 10th inst. of diabetes. He was thirty-eight years of age and leaves a family.
Work on the new Carnegie library building at Denver, which was stopped by the failure of the contractor, will soon be resumed by his bondsmen, who promise to finish the structure in good time.
The State Normal School has added one of the rarest and most expensive collections of humming birds in the world to its museum. It numbers 400 different species, gathered in South America especially for the school.
While sinking a hole for the foundation of the proposed Pueblo court house workmen uncovered a metal disc showing that by the United States Geological Survey in 1872 the elevation of Pueblo was placed at 4,690 feet.
The First State Bank of Nunn, Colorado, has incorporated with a capital of $10,000, with B. F. Clark of Fort Collins, president, Boyd Wolfe of Nunn, vice president, and John H. Leinr and Amos Entwistle of Nunn, directors.
The Salvation army contemplates the erection of a church at Greeley which will make the seventh in the city. It will cost $12,000, have three stories, and a part will be used as a rooming house and for storerooms.
President Aylesworth of the State Agricultural College will speak at the University of Colorado February 22d, on "The College Man in Politics," his address being the principal feature of the Washington's Birthday exercises at the university.
The Seventh Day Adventists of Colorado and neighboring states have arranged to hold their annual convention in Pueblo next September. The convention will continue for ten days and more than a thousand delegates are expected to attend.
Judge Garrigues of Greeley will conduct the first hearing on the question of the disposition of the state inheritance fund. Judge Garrigues has given notice that he will hear the State University demand against the inheritance fund on April 2, 1908. A new set of inheritance tax forms have been prepared for attorneys.
It is announced that the Pueblo Foundry Machine Company, better known as Lannon's foundry, will add to its present plant a cast steel manufactory at a cost of $75,000. The new plant will employ 100 men and will be the only one of its kind west of St. Louis. Besides turning out cast steel, a number of specialties will be manufactured.
"Bob" Womack, "the father of Cripple Creek," who made the first important discovery of gold in the district in the Gold King mine in Poverty Gulch, is now lying at his sister's home in Colorado Springs a helpless victim of paralysis. An effort is being made by the newspapers, backed by prominent citizens, to raise a fund for the purpose of caring for him during the rest of his life.
H. R. Smith, who carries the mail from Loveland to Drake, recently met with a serious runaway accident. A bolt worked loose, allowing a singletree to strike the heels of one of the horses. This caused them to run and Smith was thrown out. He was picked up by passing teamsters and taken home. His left thigh was dislocated and the right shoulder severely bruised, but no bones were broken.
the Pueblo postoffice officials have received information that the only rural route in the United States which doubles back on itself is to be established out of Pueblo, running east along the Arkansas river. The government has heretofore not established routes unless the carriers go one way and return another. The large number of people to be accommodated on the twelve-mile route caused the change in this case.
An examination has been announced to be held by the United States civil service commission at Denver, Grand Junction, Montrose, Pueblo and Trinidad, Colorado, for the position of railway mail clerk. Persons desiring to take this examination should write to Verner W. Campbell, secretary of the United States Civil Service Commission, Postoffice building, Denver, Colorado, for application blank and pamphlet of instruction.
The Farmers Institute at Longmont passed resolutions asking that the area of the Medicine Bow reservation be enlarged and endorsing the national forest reserve policy of the government. These resolutions were sent to the head of the government bureau of forestry and to each member of Congress from the state of Colorado as the wishes of the thousands of farmers living adjacent to Longmont, expressed through the Longmont Farmers' Institute.
THE TIME TEST.
That Is What Proves True Merit.
Doan's Kidney Pills bring the quickest of relief from backache and kidney troubles. Is that relief lasting? Let Mrs. James M. Long, of 113 Augusta St., Staunton, Va., tell you. On January 31st, 1903, Mrs. Long wrote: "Doan's Kidney Pills have cured me" (of pain in the back, urinary trou
ney troubles. Is that relief lasting? Let Mrs. James M. Long, of 113 Augusta St., Staunton, Va., tell you. On January 31st, 1803, Mrs. Long wrote: "Doan's Kidney Pills have cured me" (of pain in the back, urinary troubles, bearing down sensations, etc.) On June 20th, 1907, four and one-half years later, she said: "I haven't had kidney trouble since. I repeat my testimony."
Sold by all dearers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
ANOTHER NARROW-MINDED MAN.
De Quiz—What do you call good winter weather?
De Whiz—Weather cold enough to make a man's wife think her own fire-side a better place than a matinee.
SHE COULD NOT WALK
For Months—Burning Humor on Ankles
—Opiates Alone Brought Sleep
—Eczema Yielded to Cuticura.
"I had eczema for over two years. I had two physicians, but they only gave me relief for a short time and I cannot enumerate the ointments and lotions I used to no purpose. My ankles were one mass of sores. The itching and burning were so intense that I could not sleep. I could not walk for nearly four months. One day my husband said I had better try the Cuticura Remedies. After using them three times I had the best night's rest in months unless I took an opiate. I used one set of Cuticura Soap, Ointment, and Pills, and my ankles healed in a short time. It is now a year since I used Cuticura, and there has been no return of the eczema. Mrs. David Brown, Locke, Ark., May 18 and July 13, 1907."
Wasn't Skeptical.
"A scientist claims that rubber can be made from Indian corn," remarked the boarder who had been perusing the scientific notes in a patent-medicine almanac.
"I guess he's right," growled the scanty-haired bachelor at the pedal extremity of the mahogany. "The batter cakes we have this morning would seem to indicate as much."
STATE OF OHIU, CITY OF TOLEDO, 88.
JUCAH COUTY.
FRANK J. CHENY & CO., bakes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F. J. CHENY & CO., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State of OHIU. He said we are the largest ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of GATARAH that cannot be cured by the use of HALL'S CATARAH GURH.
FRANK J. CHENY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th of December, A. D. 1886.
A. W. GLEASON.
SEAL.
NOTARY PUBLIC.
Hall's Catarah Gurh is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. CHIENEY & CO, Toledo, O.
Sold by all Drugs
Take Hall & Family Pills for constipation.
The Prevailing Excuse.
The Prevailing Excuse.
"Jedge," said the prisoner, who had been caught with a chicken in a sack, "you oughter go easy with me."
"Why? You stole the hen."
"I admits it, jedge; I admits it," responded the prisoner. "But it's solemn truif dat hen jest seemed to be my affinity; yes, sah!"
Starch, like everything else, is being constantly improved, the patent Starches put on the market 25 years ago are very different and inferior to those of the present day. In the latest discovery—Defiance Starch—all injurious chemicals are omitted, while the addition of another ingredient, invented by us, gives to the Starch a strength and smoothness never approached by other brands.
Making things appear to prove what we want them to prove, is one way; having them prove what they do prove is another way.
The very wisest advice: take Garfield Tea whenever a laxative is indicated! Pleasant to the taste, simple, pure, mild, potent and health-giving. Made of Herbs—not drugs.
Above Reward.
Good counsel has no price.—French Proverb.
When Your Throat Feels Sore get a 25c box of Brown's Bronchial Troches. They give immediate relief. Contain nothing injurious.
Shortly after a man goes up against the matrimonial game his bump of hope becomes a dent.
FILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS. PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed to cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 5 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c.
The fox may lose his hair, but not his cunning—Dutch.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup. For children on teeth, softens the gums, reduces inflammation, alays pain, cures wind colds. Zola bottle.
A man's ideal woman is one kind of a pipe dream.
HELPFUL ADVICE
A
You won't tell your family doctor the whole story about your private illness—you are too modest. You need not be afraid to tell Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., the things you could not explain to the doctor. Your letter will be held in the strictest confidence. From her vast correspondence with sick women during the past thirty years she may have gained the very knowledge that will help your case. Such letters as the following, from grateful women, establish beyond a doubt the power of
LYDIA E.PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND
LYDIA E.PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND
to conquer all female diseases.
Mrs. Norman R. Barndt, of Allen town, Pa., writes:
"Ever since I was sixteen years of age I had suffered from an organic derangement and female weakness; in consequence I had dreadful headaches and was extremely nervous. My physician said I must go through an operation to get well. A friend told me about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and I took it and wrote you for advice, following your directions carefully, and thanks to you I am today a well woman, and I am telling all my friends of my experience."
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indigestion, dizziness, ornervous prostration.
FREE TO ALE
D.M. FERRY & CO'S
ILLUSTRATED
DESCRIPTIVE
PRICED
SEED ANNUAL
FOR 1908
Ferry's Seeds
Are the best known and
Ferry's Seeds are the best known and the most reliable seeds grown. Every package has behind it the reputation of a house whose business standards are the highest in the trade.
Ferry's 1008 Seed Annual will be mailed FREE to all applicants. It contains colored plates, many papers, and descriptions, prices and directions for plants to grow in your yard. and Flower Seeds. Invaluable to all, Seed for all.
If interested in poultry, write for our new booklet
20 Years with Poultry
Illustrated. Biminal of facts and up-to-date ideas for
the advanced poultry raise. FREEL!
GRO. H. LEE CO., Omaha, Nebr.
W. N. U., DENVER. NO. 7. 1908.
---
STIFF, YES?
WET AND DAMP CAUSE
COLD IN THE JOINTS
ST JACOBS OIL
Price 25c and 50c.
---
VERIL THE WORLD SHALL PAUSE BEFORE A DARING THOUGHT
During in thought, rapid in style and not a dull line in it. Friends
can be sent from it to you for $50 per day. Send $25 for Agents
influenced from it.
W.L.DOVGLAS
SHOES
$300
SHOES AT ALL
PRICES, FOR EVERY
MEMBER OF THE FAMILY,
MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN.
W.L. Douglas makes and sells more
men's $2.50, $3.00 and $3.50 shoes
than any other manufacturer in the
world, because they hold their
shape better, wear longer, and
are greater value than any other
shoes in the world to-day.
W.L. Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At
CAUTION. W.L. Douglas name and price is stamped on
Sold by the best shoe dealers everywhere. Shoes inlaid from factor
tated Catalog free to any address.
W.L. DO
W. I. UGLYSS SA and So Bill Edge Shoes Cannot Be Equivalent.
Sold by the 'test shoe deals everywhere.' Shoes made from leather on top, but bottom. 'Take No Substitutes.'
Sold by the 'test shoe deals everywhere.' Shoes made from leather on top, but bottom. 'Take No Substitutes.'
CARE OF THE KITCHEN.
Clean Walls Are an Essential to Sanitary Cooking.
It is not only important to know how to cook, but it is equally important to know where to cook. Cooking in a dirty kitchen can never produce good food. The idea is simply preposterous, yet kitchen walls are left for months—sometimes for years without cleansing.
In the first place the kitchen wall should have a light tint that the merest fleck of dirt can be seen; that the sheerest cobweb can be brushed away; that the tiniest water bug can be discerned. It is all folly expecting clean food in a kitchen with dirty walls.
Never put a wall coating on a kitchen wall that is mixed with hot water or that has glue in it, or sour milk in it if mixed with cold water. Glue walls made from horses' hoofs colored up with cheap colorings do not indicate good housekeeping. The glue is constantly flecking off, falling into the food and the idea of food flavored with glue made from horses' hoofs is not appetizing. Kitchen walls to be thoroughly satisfactory should be alabastined the same as every other wall in the house. They should be coated regularly in the spring and fall of each year with a light tint.
The care of the pantry requires constant attention. The walls should be brushed over every year, the dishes removed from the shelves which should be thoroughly wiped with hot water. If there are ant holes or any other insects in the pantries a thick putty of the wall coating can be made and all the ant holes, even small mice holes can be filled with it which will protect the pantry from the incursions of disagreeable insects and mice.
This Cold World of Business
The messenger boys paused outside the Army building, says the New York Sun. One of them was selecting a cigarette from a box.
"Gimme one," said the smokeless boy.
"Naw," said the other, "they cost money."
"I'll owe you a cent," said the first boy. "Come on, I'll pay you after."
"They cost more than a cent," said the boy with the cigarettes. "Nothin' doin'. Your credit ain't no good."
Important to Mothers
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Years.
The Kind You Have. Always Bought.
The Ruling Passion.
The young man asked the banker
For his fair and only child;
The banker nodded gravely,
And then he grimly smiled.
Amazed, the young man heard him
Reply in business phrase:
"I'll have to file your notice—
Come back in sixty days."
Give Defiance Starch a fair trial—
try it for both hot and cold starching,
and if you don't think you do better
work, in less time and at smaller cost,
return it and your grocer will give you
back your money.
Of course there is nothing new under
the sun, but almost any druggist
can give you something just as good.
TAKES OUT THE PAIN AT ONCE,REMOVESTHESTIFFNESS. PREVENTS ITS RETURN, TOO. FINE FOR BRUISES, SPRAINS AND SORENESS.
A. B.
D. M. FERRY & CO., Detroit, Mich.
?
San Antonio, Texas
Fresh Color
Species
Used
Exclusively.
Commercial,
Fraternal.
Chureh, Book
and
Stationery Jobs
a Specialty
BALL AND CON.
CERT
PROGRAMS,
BILL AND LETTER
HEADS,
CALLING CARDS,
) WEDDING
CARDS,
ENVELOPES
AND
EVERYTHING
IN THE
PRINTING LINE
TURNED OUT
IN
NEATEST STYLE
PROMPTLY
ON
8HORT NOTIOE.
We have supplied
our office with job
press and type of
up-tordate style and
our work will be
on a par with the
Very Best
———————————
Give Us a Trial
and
We will Give You
Satisfaction
ee)
PRICES AS REASONABLE AS
THOSE OF ANY JOB OFFICE
{tN DENVER.
The Cclorado
Statesman
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| Styles may come and styles may go
but the faithful shirt-waist remains to
gladden the feminine heart eternally.
Generally speaking Fashion 1s very
fickle, today delighting in one thing
|and in another phase of dress to-mor-
row. But when it comes to the utili-
tarian shirt-waist, she cannot get away
from it if she should try, and she is
wise enough not to try. Ideas as to
the make up of the shirt-waist change
| with the seasons, however, and my
lady is ever ready for new ideas in
this direction. For this reason we of.
ter in our larger illustration a group
of charming — shirt-waist patterns,
which range from the plain to the ele-
gant—from the one for common every
day wear to the creation in spotted net
j and filet guipure insertion suitable for
the dressy occasion.
| The smartly-simple blouse displayed
es the center at the top is of cream
nun’s veiling and is arranged, both at
| the back and in the front, in’a series
of box-pleats, while there is a doubly
frilled front of kilted and hemstitched
cambric, with pearl buttons studding
the center fold, and a trim little tle
bow at the neck beneath the linen col-
lar. Front and collar are detachable,
so that you can lend variety to the
blouse as desired by means of some
of the many other cravats and collars
which are always to be found
among the wardrobe accessories,
The one to the left while somewhat
similar in style is carried out in filet
net lined with net, the box-plaits,
which give such becoming width to
the shoulders, being at first held in
place by a series of French knots
worked in silk; while, then, the same
device appears on the dividing band
between those double and kilted frills,
whose fullness is so becoming and so
fashionable, and at the back their
place between the wider plaits is ta-
|Ken by a series of tiny tucks. The
puffs of the sleeves are caught in be
low the elbow with a close cuff.
‘The blouse on the right of the group
may be made of crepe de chine in
ivory, blue, turquoise, or brown, or
practically any of the new shades, as
taste may dictate. It is closely tucked
beneath a vandyked yoke of Val-
enciennes, outlined by narrow strap-
pings of crepe de chine and open-work
silk slitchings to match, a fold of the
colored fabric being used as an edg-
ing for the collar-band. The full
sleeves are drawn into deep cuffs,
which, like the yoke, are formed of
many overlapping rows of Valen-
clennes, and the yoke continues its
decorative career at the back,
And now for the climax of beauty
and elegance to be found displayed in
the lower part of the illustration. This
waist is of spotted net and filet
gulpure insertion, further adorned
with many shining drop ornaments in
either gold or silver—a pretty enough
blouse, this, for almost any occasion,
and one, too, which will submit to be-
ing worn beneath a heavy fur coat
without showing any signs of crushing.
‘As the eye will naturally wander
from the fascinations of the larger I
lustration to the beautiful evening
gown displayed in our smaller picture,
let us have a word about {t before
passing to other topics of our letter.
This model displays the long clinging
lines such as are so much in favor in
Paris. The long under-skirt is of sat-
in charmeuse in a lovely tone of shim-
mering green, like the tender leaves of
the hothouse lilies-of-the-valley, which
Hight our Bes tn all the flower shops
ys Ghompae To héighten, its, at-
tractions, the under-skirt is thickly
embroidered with large pearls, irl-
descent bugles and sequins, which
have @ most brilliant effect on the
CHARMING BLOL/SES
sheen of the satin, Over this beauti-
ful under-robe falls a tunic of finest
gauze, rather short in front, but hang-
ing low at the sides and back, and
edged all round with a deep lace in
vandyke points. It is slightly cut up
at the sides and held together by three
short bands and bows of silver tissue.
‘The square decolletage is outlined by
a band of jeweled embroidery with a
large motif in front, from which a
deep fringe of glittering jewels hangs
far below the waist. Similar fringes
adorn the shoulders, hanging over
loose sleeves of white tulle; and folds
of white tulle are drawn across the
bust above the jeweled embrofdery
and fringe. The dress may be gale
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An Evening Gown,
scribed as gorgeously simple, for noth-
ing could be more simple than its
nes or more gorgeous than its de-
tails.
Many new devices, or rather modifica-
tions of devices now in yogue, for
dressing the neck are being seen.
Some are worn by leaders of fashion
on this side the water, while others
have not left the land of their birth in
Paris.
For some time now the little velyet
ribbon wound around the neck has
been a feature of certain gowns of the
moJish woman's wardrobe, especially
when she wears a gown with a round
neck or at the top of a high collar.
Oue of the newest variations in this
is to have the ribbon wound around
the base of the throat, instead, as here-
tofore, tied high. In the new fashion,
which is, of course, suited to the
round necked gown, the ends cross and
are completed by a gold, silver or jet
tassel, tiny, of course, or by a bit of
fringe or some other ornament. The
accepted fashion in Paris is to have
the ends at the back, but with a neck
cut with a slight V in the front and
with short ends and ornaments the
fastening in front would be prettier,
The fashion originated, apparently,
from the wearing by Mme, Avril last
spring in La Savelli, with a second em-
pire frock of what the French call a
“suivez-mol,” and the English a “fol-
low me” of black velvet at the back
ot her neck, having extremely long
ends floating behind her, the whole in
black velvet.
These touches of vélvet, espectally
in black, when combined with lace or
filmy frocks, are fetching. Of course
one can match the color of one’s frock
or some of its trimmings,
Se & °
o
J
GARMENT STORE
S256" ST.» > OPP. JOSLINS ,
Odd lots of Ladies Ready-to-Wear Garments to close out regard
less of former regular prices. At the same time we are offering
good values in new spring Suits, Jackets, Skirts and Waists,
$750 CLOAK SALE || ANOTHER SKIRT
Take your pick of any Black | ~~ _. BARGAIN
or Colored Longeloth Cloak in || _ $7.50 for choice of a lot of
the house that sold up to $17.50. || Finest Chiffon and Worsted
Some of them are lined through. || Panama Cloth Skirts, and som:
out with satin, all are well tail || elegant Voile Skirts, that hav:
yred. A good assortment of || been $12.50. All good styles
large sizes in. the lot, in both || and one of the best Skirt Bar
loose and fitted back styles. gains we have ever offered,
re TAOS & ~ | WOOL WAISTS $1.25
'S $10.0C *hDe, ean
Se a aeee alar || «One lot of Brilliantine and al
bitin or Cloth, the regular |! Wool Albatross Waists, lon
315.00 kind on sale for $10.00. | sleeves; regular prices’ were
LONG KIMONOS $1.19 _ || $195 and $2.50, choice now $1.25
Hanoy Wlacel Me” Simones: | eA Osh R Ven AnmED RIM
trimmed with 24 inet, satin | ‘To close ont balance of our
band; regular price $2.00, now |! stock of Ladies Hoisery we of
91-10), eee is. | fer them at 4 regular price—2
SHORT KIMONOS 98c. __|| pairs for the price of one. Size
Fancy Cotton Eiderdown Ki- |] Sony.
monos, mostly light colors, trim- || JAP SILK UNDERWAISTS
med with 24 inch satin ‘band; || In pink, light blue and black:
regular price $1.50, now 98c. _|| regular $2.00 grade; here $1.50
DON'T FORGET--ANY FUR NECKPIECE IN STOCK AT HALF PRICE
: Lee Toe 925 16th S$
Silversmith & Hiller, 923, 16th st.
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1 i Ve 8
Q. J. GILMORE, Undertaker and Licened Embalmer No. 234
Carriages Furnished for all Occasions,
1921 Arapahoe St. Denver, Colo
Phone Main 7413 Wines, Liquors and Cigars
DICK FRAZIER axp TOM LEWIS
PROPRIETORS
A First-Class Resort
For Gentlemen
1845 Arapahoe’St. Denver, Colo
| hein
(A
: flat, a Aj
(Ea —
UZTV ITI Tee
Finest hand work in the city. 2317-19 Larimer Streot
Ba A i OI RSID ADDN ID ID Ba a a 2215.5 290 OID) IO
The Leading Educational Institution ;
: for Negroes in the West. ;
A Faoulty of Eighteen Thoroughly Equipped Teachers from
the Leading institutions in America, :
MAGNIFICENT BOILDINGS,
Steom Heated and Electric Lighted.
| DEPARTMENTS
Theological, Classical, Normal, Sub-normal, State Industrial, ;
- embracing courses in Architecture, Carpentry, Mechanical ;
- Drawing, Printing, Book-binding, Tailoring, Business Course, |
Dress.making, Millinery, Cooking, Laundrying and Farming, —
: Thorouge Discipline, Christian Influence
Careful Supervision.
Fine Military Band and Orchestra. 3
For full information write to :
PROF. SHELTON FRENCH, :
Acting President of Western University, :
Quindaro, Kansas, 3
Residence Phone No, 15 Office Phone No, 1428, :
EEEEFEEEFEFEFFEFEFEEF EE EEE EE FEE+E+E+EE+E+E+E+++444464,
Open Day and Night
"If the pasturage is*dry and the feed
poor, one stalk of corn in the sill is
worth more to the cows now than
the ear that the stalk can produce
will be worth next winter.
Phone Main 3725
Store the bilysteéds where they wii
not become contaminated by fou
odors. Feed thus affected is more
than apt to taint the milk and carry
the cowy flavor to the butter,
| GIVING FINISH TO TOWELS,
May Be Scalloped and Worked with
Solid Buttonhole Stitch.
‘The ends of the towels may be scal-
loped and worked with solid button-
hole stitch. There may be a design in
eyelet and French embroidery above
the scallop on one end and the scal-
lop with the initials on the other end.
Letters from four to six inches high
can be used on the towels. They
should be padded.
First, take short running stitches,
just inside the stamped outlines, fill
the space between the running stitch-
es with a layer of outline stitches set
close and even; into this layer of out-
line stitches work another layer, tak-
ing the stitches of the second layer
into the stitches of the first layer and
not into the material. Work a third
layer Into the stitches of the second
layer in the same manner.
Work across this padding close
satin stitch, setting the needle for the
satin stitch on the stamped outlines
of the letter; these outlines should
never be covered with the padding
stitches.
SAVE THE BREAD GRUSTS.
Dried and Run Through Meat Chopper
They Will Be Found Useful.
Take the bread crusts and place in a
pan in the oven, dry them thoroughly
and run through the meat chopper.
After they are finely ground sieve as
you would ordinary meal and put into
Jars for future use.
‘What a neat shelf a woman can have
in the pantry with jar foods! First
there are the bread crumbs, the jar
of navy beans, lima beans, dried corn,
spices, crumbled parsley, which has
been dried and crushed, sage, hominy,
etc. A large gallon crock is splendid
for holding salt, another for sugar, and
by buying large quantities of sugar
one gets more for the money. The
pantry should be the pride of the
kitchen and all neatly arranged. Noth-
ing makes a better bread bin than a
large lard can or a large stone jar,
The latter will prevent bread or cakes
from freezing in a cold room if they
are wrapped in a tablecloth and care
fully covered.
KEEP THE FLOOR POLISHED,
Simple Method That Takes Place of
Continual Work.
Hard wood floors are beginning to
look a little the worse for the win-
ter's wear. It's always a problem to
keep them looking well without a con-
tinual polishing performance, summer
or winter. A treatment which has
stood the test of experience is this:
First wash the floor well and let it
dry. Then go over it with a cloth
dipped from time to time in kerosene
oil, which both cleanses and pene-
trates the floor so that less of the
boiled oil {s required. ‘The boiled oil
finish should then be prepared. To make
this, take two quarts of boiled linseed
oll, put beeswax the size of half an
egg and boil together until melted and
thoroughly mixed. Care should be
taken in doing this, as both materials
are inflammable. While the oil is still
warm apply with a wide paint brush.
It is much easier than keeping up a
wax polish,
Raleln and: Coffee Bread.
Add to one cup scalded mflk one
third cupful shortening, a cupful sugar
and a half teaspoonful salt. Cool to
lukewarm, then beat in a yeast cake
dissolved in a quarter cup lukewarm
milk and enough sifted flour to make
a stiff batter. Cover and place where
it will keep warm over night. In the
morning blend a beaten egg with the
dough, add one-half cupful seeded rais-
ins and roll out the mixture in a sheet
three-quarters of an inch in thickness.
Put in a buttered dripping pan or a
deep pie plate, having in its center a
muffin ring or piece of stiff paper
pinned together to make a ring. Cover
and let rise until it doubles its orig-
inal bulk. Brush with melted butter,
sprinkle with powdered sugar and cin-
namon and bake in a moderate over
about half an hour. Eat hot with cof-
fee,
oumian:
Dissolve a third of a yeast cake in
a gill of warm milk and add two
teaspoonfuls of granulated sugar.
Have ready scalded a beer bottle with
a patent fastener or if you have not
this use an ordinary bottle and cork,
soaking the cork well for some hours
and wiring it on the bottle. Fill the
bottle three-quarters full of fresh,
blood-warm milk, or fresh milk heated
to blood warmth, and pour in the
yeast mixture. Shake hard for several
minutes, then put in the cork and
fasten it down securely. Set in a
warm place until the contents are
working and foamy, then lay in the
ice chest until wanted. One yeast
cake makes three bottles of koumiss,
so it 1s well to make several bottles
at one time.
Protect Clothes.
To prevent the universally liked
Gretchen apron from becoming soiled
and wet so quickly by coming in con-
tact with sink and washboard, stitch
a casing on wrong side at waist line,
insert tape, draw snugly and tle. Tack
tape securely in center of front to
keep it from slipping out when untied.
Stuffed Chicken Baked with Ham.
Order two two-pound — chickens.
Clean and stuff in the usual way. Rub
with salt and place one-half pound
ham cut in thin slices on the breasts
and tie it in place-with a string. Place
in a baking pan and bake in a moder-
ate oven until tender. Baste often with
butter and hot water mixed. When
done remove to a hot platter, surround
with the ham and pour over a gravy.