Colorado Statesman
Saturday, November 28, 1908
Denver, Colorado
Page text (machine-generated)
Money Saved by Patronizing Those Who Advertise in This Paper.
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
THE JOURNAL OF THE WEST.
LABOR SHALL BE FREE
RAGE COUNTRY PARTY
A TRIBUTE TO NEGROES
From the Pen of Mr. Merritt Moore, who Believes in Justice and Fair Play to all. Says the Social Equality Problem will Take Care of Itself.
VOL. XV.
A TRIB
TO N
From the Pen of Mr. Merritt
tice and Fair Play to all.
ity Problem will
In a high tribute to Negroes of Denver Mr. Merritt Moore had the following to say in a recent issue of the Rocky Mountain News: am glad to believe that every true American citizen believes down deep in his heart in justice and fair play. This applies to all classes of citizens, and to every nationality.
During the past two months I have been in close touch with the colored people of Dever have met them in their homes and on the street, have attended several of their churches, have met them in conference where questions of social, civic, state and national interests were involved: have met several of their professional men, lawyers, doctors, poets and lecturers, graduates of colleges, writers of ability and the like—and I can honestly say they have acquitted themselves in the main as well as any like number of white people would have done.
That they are handicapped because of the cruel and senseless prejudice against color goes without saying, and yet, in spite of this drawback, their achievements are really remarkable. With scarcely a dollar to begin with forty years ago, they are credited with having accumulated not less than $300,000,000 worth of property. In one town in Missouri 70 per cent of the colored people own their own homes and pay taxes upon them. In the same city during the winter of 1907-08, not a colored person applied for charity, and what was still further to their credit, not one was arrested for crime.
Calvin township, Berrien county Michigan, was settled up forty years ago by colored people who had just emerged from slavery. They constituted such a large majority of the people of that township that all the offices were held by colored men—such as supervisor, assessor, town clerk, justice of the peace and constable—all the business of the township was performed by colored men. For years it was the pride of the people of Calvin township to be the first to collect and forward its tax levy to the county treasurer, which it did for many years. These men large-
ly owned their farms, lived in good houses, kept their premises neat and tidy, and accumulated comfortable fortunes. Some of them were worth $50,000. These may be regarded as exceptional, but they can be paralleled in other localities, and prove the possibilities of the race.
I am fully satisfied that a more sympathetic acquaintance between the races is not only just and right, but that it is in every way desirable. There are many colored people whom we may feel honored to know and to count as our friends. Some might object to this for fear of its tendency toward social equality.
That question will take care of itself. There are multitudes of white men and woman whom no self-respecting person would recognize as an equal socially or otherwise. Character is a safe and sane standard by which we can discriminate between the worthy and the unworthy. The color of the skin does not determine the character, and therefore is not a safe guide to follow. A sober, industrious Negro, who is doing his best to earn an honest living, and is trying to add to his store of knowledge is certainly worthy of encouragement, and the man who would snub such a one is lacking in the essentials of true manhood himself.
I wonder if any one has ever realized what a help it is to have a word of encouragement from our friends when we undertake a difficult or untried task. How much more difficult the task becomes when our efforts are derided and we are told that we are sure to fail in our undertaking. Colored people are similarly affected by praise or blame. So long however as we hold ourselves aloof from them we cannot give the encouragement word, bestow upon them the kindly smile and the friendly recognition which means so much to the one who has heavy burdens to bear.
People hunger for sympathy as much as they do for food. This sympathy is an inspiration to him who bestows it and to him who receives it. We defraud ourselves when we withhold it.
DENVER, COLORADO, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1908.
I want to assure the colored people of Denver of my unqualified friendship, regardless of their political affiliations, for I am interested in the elevation and bet terment of the condition of the race as a whole. Some time I may supplement this article with one of a somewhat different character—one which will point out some faults in the character of the colored people, but none the less having for its purpose the benefit of the race.
WATCH AND PRAY
Our people have more real cause to do actual watching and praying than any other race, for it does seem that all nations on earth are combined against the Afro-Americans. Why this should be so, none save the God of Heaven knows. The white press of the country, with few exceptions, invariably holds the entire Negro race responsible for the short-comings and evil deeds done by the thriftness and thoughtless element of the race; when to tell the truth, the Negro who does the devilment is one who doesn't read, in many cases totally illiterate; in short, we cannot reach him either by the press nor the pulpit. This is a problem to be solved. We trust that some method may be put in force, by which this class of our people can be reached. If they will not be induced by persuasion to places of enlightment, to read instructions of the best Negro Journals, then some method by force, ought to be put into operation. No people can hope to rise high in the scales of intelligence, thrift, and responsibilities as long as they are surrounded by ignorance, indolence, and depravity.—Reformer.
AFRAID OF THE DEAD
Walter Jackson, a colored man who resides in Chicago, was given a job at $18.00 per week in that city the other day, and he went at his work feeling most pleasantly. Several hours later, when he had been herded up and his teeth had stopped chattering long enough to permit articulation, he resigned.
The John H. Drake Company advertised for a porter. The firm operates a big anatomical laboratory, and, among other specialties articulates skeletons for physicians and medical schools. This process necessitates the removal of the flesh from the skull and bones before they are wired together.
After Johnson had accepted his position, he was told to go to the fifth floor and 'clean up." He supposed this meant to sweep and scrub, and went about the task gayly, for $18 per is not so bad for
a colored man in these times. The first thing he stumbled upon was a bucket containing two Negro heads, and as he fell back in horror, he upset a long basket out of which rolled seven white heads. With a yell that woke up the entire West Side, Jackson promptly fell down two flights, jumped down two more, burst open a door and rolled into the street. For some time thereafter he was running in circles, until he was rounded up. "No, sah; no, sah!" he vociferated. "You kin pile al of Jawn D. Rockfeller's milyuns up on dat flo' and tell me ter he'p myse'f, and I ain't gwine near. Ah suttenly thought Ah had er swell job, but Ah gives it up!" Later in the day a stolid Swede secured the job.—Exchange.
RACE NEWS
GAYHERED FROM VARIOUS SOURCES
George Nichols a very progressive member of the race is conducting a coffee and tea store in St. Paul, he is meeting with great success.
Joseph J. Allen, one of the oldest letter carriers in St. Paul, Minn., died last week, this leaves twelve colored men in the post-office whose yearly salary amounts to $12,300.
The Negro farmers in the South own in their own right, and according to statistics, over 173,000 farms and are in charge of 746,000 farms including those which they control as tenants.
A colored daily newspaper will be started in Chattanooga, Tenn., to be known as "The Afro-American" under the management of Harvey Anderson, owner. We wish and prophesy for him success in his new undertaking.
Pittsburg, Pa., has a Negro mercantile company known as the United Shoe Co., and its entire capital stock is owned by 24 colored people. W. H. Simms is president and manager; J. A. Brenham treasurer, and W. A. Gibbs, stock keeper.
In Greenville, Miss., the leading city of the Delta County, the only book store and stationary business is owned and conducted by Granville Carter, a colored man.' His stock is as large as any of its kind anywhere in the state, and his customers are of the finest families of both races in the city and county.
Mr. Thomas J. Hilliard of the city of Baltimore, Md., conducts a
successful house-furnishing business that is over one hundred years old. It was established by his grandfather. Mr. Hilliard began as a boy, nearly half a century ago when he helped his mother to sell her wares. He is a prominent member of the local Negro Business League.
In Greenville, Miss., the leading city of the Delta county, the only book store and stationery business is owned and conducted by Granville Carter, a colored man. His stock is as large as any of its kind anywhere in the state, and his customers are of the finest families of both races in city and country.
Cleveland is about to acquire a new building which its owner, Mr. S. C. Green, says will be the finest of its kind owned and operated by Negroes anywhere between New York and Chicago. The dance hall will have the finest floor that money can buy. The building will be three stories high, will contain suites on the second and third floors, and will cost $40,000.
The majority of the Negroes in Georgia are tillers of the soil and very successful ones at that. According to the Georgia records, of the 224,300 farms in the State. Seventy-two Negroes own more than 1,000 acres each, 368 acres own between 500 and 1,000 acres each, 3,540 own between 175 and 270 acres each, 10,372 own between 100 and 175 acres each, 16,076 own between 20 and 50 acres each. This is a creditabe showing indeed.
Grand Rapids, Mich., Nov. 17. Judge Perkins, in the Kent Circuit Court today issued a mandamus directing the Grand Rapids Veterinary College to accept the entrance applications of Felix D. Booker and Wesley D. McCoy, colored students. They were refused admission at the opening of school this year, the color line being drawn against them Judge Perkins held that the college, being a public institution, had no right to discriminate.
Baltimore, Nov. 16th.—Nine of the State buildings and the Richmond city building at the James-town Exposition have been bought by the receivers from Cook & Co., for $30,500. The structures cost to build about $175,000. The receivers purchased them, that the portion of the exposition gounds on which they stand, which it is proposed to sell to the government for a naval training station, may not be incumbered. The State buildings are: The North Carolina, New York, Massachusetts, Illinois, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Vermont and Michigan.
When the colored race learns to
NO. 10
confide in the best in their race, they can expect the other races to trust and confide in them. When the race learns to patronize their own people in business, all things being equal, very soon they will have business concerns that will be able to furnish employment to their boys and girls. The colored race must learn that one Afro-American that is worth one million dollars is more valuable to the race than one million of their people who possess only one dollar. Portland Advocate.
French Gray, a colored man of Lathan, Alabama, who is said to be 103 years old, donated to the Dooley Normal and Industrial Institute at Daphne, Ala., 120 acres of land valued at more than $2,000 and said that he wanted it understood that in this he is helping his race. This institution seems to be making great success under the direction of Prof James Dooley, the founder, and now has fifty-one students. The trustees of this institution have been made administrators of Mr. Gray's remaining property, which consists of about 340 acres.
George W. Rowe of Dallas, Texas, is interesting his friends in a mining proposition in the Guanajuata gold fields in Mexico. The three mines include eighty acres and are the property of G. W. Carter, a wealthy colored man formerly of San Antonia, who is desirous of having his own race interested in what is expected to be a rich investment. Many whites and Mexicans have attempted to buy shares in these undeveloped mines, but it is desired that the company be strickly colored. Quite a number of prominent Texans already interested in these mines are Dr. J. S. Cameron. Lieut. Jeffers, L. W. Greenly, Geo. Winn, Dr. J. T. Walton, J. D. Lowery and others. Colored men with any money to invest can see Mr. Rowe.
Allensworth, Cal., is a new Negro town already surveyed. It is now being populated and built by a Negro company in honor of whose president, Col. Allensworth, the town is named. The site of the new city is on the main line of the Santa Fe railroad and seven miles west of the Southern Pacific at a point about half way between Los Angeles and San Francisco, and in one of the most fertile parts of the San Joaquin valley. The land possesses an inexhaustible water supply, and produces as good oranges, grapes, and sugar beets as can be raised in the state. Blackberries, sweet potatoes, onions, tomatoes and alfalfa grow luxuriantly there, and the country is rapidly becoming one of the greatest dairying sections of California.
BRIEF RECORD OF PASSING
EVENTS IN THIS AND
OTHER COUNTRIES,
DOINGS AND HAPPENINGS
THAT MARK THE PROG
RESS OF THE AGE.
The Leading Educational Institution
for Negroes in the West. :
A Faoulty of Eighteen Thoroughly Equipped Teachers from |
the Leading institutions in America.
MAGNIFICENT BUILDINGS, :
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.
For full information write to
PROF. SHELTON FRENCH,
Acting President of Western University,
Quindaro, Kansas.
Residence Phone No. 15 Office Phone No. 1423.
6 i lS orca ai as anil, 90 Pd dea Oe eet heel oor
WESTEHN NEWS.
Samuel Gompers was re-elected pres-
ident of the American Federation of
Labor at the Denver convention.
‘The insurance commissioner of Tex-
as, Thomas B. Love, has renewed his
campaign for a state rating commis
sion to fix fire insurance rates.
By majorities of 1,700, 600 and $75,
Jefferson, Sandusky and Clermont
counties, Ohio, voted dry November
23rd, knocking out 210 saloons. Hu-
ron county voted wet by 15.
Oll prospecting is to be carried on
vigorously at a point just across the
Colorado line in Utah, the nearest out-
fitting point to which is Dolores on the
Denver & Rio Grande railroad.
The “pay as you enter” system of
collecting fares has been introduced
successfully cn one of the street car
lines in Chicago In rush hours it is
said seventy-five persons a minute can
be loaded.
‘The commission on country life will
be at Cheyenne December 5th, where a
conference will be held with Goyernor
Brooks, the faculty of the state univer-
sity and all citizens of Wyoming who
wish to be present.
The First National bank of Fort
Scott, one of the oldest banks in the
state of Kansas, closed its doors ou the
20th inst. The bank had deposits of
$702,000. The closing followed a run
on the ban::, when depositors withdrew
$56,000.
Col, W. H. Zimmerman, aged seven:
_ty-two, of Brazil, Ind., died November
zérd at Macon, Ga., on a train, He was
colonel of the regiment in which Pres-
ident McKinley enlisted as a private
and issued the commission of licu\en-
ant to the young private.
President Roosevelt will not make a
display at the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific ex-
position of the trophies of his South Af
rican hunt next year. In reply to’a for-
mal request sent two weeks ago, Sec-
retary Loeb for the President has re-
plied that it will be impossible t¢com-
ply.
At the recent election an amendment
to the Minnesota constitution was sub-
mitted providing for the establishment
of a state fund for hatl and tornado in-
surance. A majority of all the votes
cast was necessary and this was not
secured, as muny citizens failed io vote
either way.
Adelina Guttilla, three years ld,
daughter of Dominico Guttilla, who has
been exhibited in many of the large
cities, and who was one of the won:
ders of the medical profession, died at
Springfield, O., a few days since o!
pneumonia, She was forty inches high
and weighed 140 pounds. She was con:
sidered the largest baby in the world
As a result of a war on “clubs,” ir
which liquor bas been sold on Sundays
and during the hours that saloons were
closed, 61 clubs were raided in St.
Louis and 832 menvarrested. When ar
raigned in police court most of the
| prisoners were discharged, their re
lease being giceted with cheering from
hundreds of spectators. ‘Vhe raids
were ordered by Fovernor Folk.
| That the Missouri Pacific bas de
jcided to double track its system from
Kansas City to Pueblo is the positive
announcement given out by Superin
tendent J. E, Snedeker in an interview
at Ottawa, Kas. This, he said, is part
of a plan of improvement which the
Missouri Pacific has determined on
and which provides for an expendl
ture of $10,000,000 a year for ten years
ip permanent work.
SSS Af SCONE ES ETS NEN as ENB SAD SOS PINAR. GES ONAL Va RA RA GTN OO ED SO A) SR TCS TDS
Fhurston A. U. Smith
ee a apg
Florist
RESIDENCE AND GREENHOUSES, 2961 LAWRENCE STREET.
ao Telephone Main 5386.
ye, Sa
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Fine line of Toilet Articles, Perfumes, Cigars, Eto.
Fresh pure Drugs. Courteous Treatment. Remember we
always use the freshest and parest drugs in our prescrip-
tions, 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.
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OPEN DAY AND NIGHT. PHONE MAGN 6128.
The A. M. Lawhorn & Co.
Undertakers and Funeral Directors
R. E. HANDY, A. M. LAWHLIORN,
Licensed Embalmer. Manager.
CARRIAGES FURNISHED FOR ALL OCCASZONS
UP-TO-DATE SHIPPERS,
1110 Eighteenth Street Denwer, Colorado.
GENERAL NEWS.
‘The Auto-Aero committee of the
Auto Club of France has decides to or-
ganize a grand prize for flying ma-
chines. It will be competed for in
1909 and its valie will be about $40,-
900.
Goyernor-elect Eben S. Draper of
Massachusetts reports his contribution
to the campaign at $8,800, which is a
larger sum than the salary he will re-
ceive for the term for which he was
elected.
President-elect Taft has engaged the
Terrie Cottage at Augusta, Georlgia,
for occupancy December 18th. The
cottage is adjacent to the Bar Air Ho-
tel, where the Taft family will take
their meals.
At Birmingham, Alabama, November
24th, Robert Stubbs of Birmingham
rode a motoreycle 100 miles in 1:47:44
on the Fair Grounds track, lowering
the 100-mils record held by Stanley
Kellogg of Philadelphia of 2:05:26.
At Portland, Maine, a new corpora-
tion has been formed with $20,000,000
capital to be known as the Atlantic,
Gulf & West Indies Steamship lines,
with Henry R. Mallory of New York as
President, and with substantial back-
ing by Boston bankers. ‘The lines to
be taken over by the new corporation
are those operating from New York
southwar?
D Y K Dr. Dameron has reduced
0 ou NOW iis prices for all Dental Work?
$7.00 Sets of Teeth for $5.00; $10.00 Sets for $7.00; $15.06 Sets
for $10.00; Gold Crowns Only. $5.00 Gold Teeth, $4.00; Silver Fillings,
60c up. Gold and Platina, $1.00 up. Painless Extracting.
ALBANY DENTAL PARLORS.
Arapahoe Street opposite the Postoffice, DR. DAMERON, Proprietor.
, WM. EHMKE, Manager
East Turner Hall
2132-2148 ARAPAHOE STREET
Telephone 2449 DENVER
| ‘The Independent Fertilizer Company
has been incorporated at ‘Trenton,
New Jersey, with a capital stock of
$50,000,000.
A dispatch from Vienna says that a
band of Servians, while crossing the
Bosnian frontier near Sevornik, was
repulsed by Austrian troops. ‘The Ser-
vians lost seventeen men killed and
the Austrians three killed.
‘Tho state of Louisiana has adopted
by popular yote the constitutional
amendment exempting from taxation
loans made by life insurance compe-
nies to their policyholders and loans
upon real estate mortgages.
On November 24th Goy. A. B, Cum-
nsins was elected by the Iowa Legisla-
ture United States senator, to succeed
the late William B. Allison, The vote
stood: Cummins 106, Porter (Demo-
crat) 35, Three Republicans did not
vote.
At the request of Mayor Harper, the
Los Angeles City Council unanimously
adopted and telegraphed to President
Roosevelt resolutions requesting him
to retain the United States battleship
fleet in Pacific waters, Similar reso
lutions were adopted by the San Diego
City Couneil and wired to the Presi-
dent.
In a notable speech in the House of
Lords, Field Marshal Lord Roberts de-
clared in favor of a larger army for
England, pointing out that Germany
could invade the country with compar-
ative ease. He said that the lack of
a sufficient military force would tend
to the loss of Great Britain's suprem-
acy at sea,
‘The executive committee of the Na-
tional Educational Association, at its
meeting in Winona, Wisconsin, se-
lectod Denver as the place for holding
the forty-seventh annual conyention.
The dates selected are July 5 to 9, 1909.
The presidents of the twenty-one de-
partments will meet in Chicago Janu-
ary Ist and £nd to formulate a pro-
gram,
‘The Democratic national committee
| received in all $620,644,77, and spent
$619,410.06 during the recent presiden-
| tial campaign, leaving a balance on
hand of $1,234,71. ‘This is over a mil-
lion dollars less than was expended
by the Republican national committee,
which reports contributions amounting
to $1,655,518.27.
A group of 150 girls, employes of the
Mercantile Corporation at Dayton,
Ohio, which has the contract for all
stamped enyelopes and wrappers for
the government, were posing for a
photograph on a scaffold, fifteen feet
above the ground, when the scaffold
gave way and all were precipitated to
the ground. A dozen were badly hurt
but none will die.
The American baseball team at
Tokio, Japan, followed up its first. vie-
tory over the Waseda university by
winning two more games the next day,
the first from the Waseda players, by
a score of 18 to 1, and the second from
the crack team of the Kelo university,
which was defeated by a score of 6 to
0. There was a great attendance at
the games and much enthusiasm.
NEWS FROM WASHINGTON,
Miss Ethel Rooseyct#t is to make her
official bow to society in the capitol
at a dance in the White House Decem-
ber 28th.
‘The St. Louis Southwestern Railway
is placing orders for thirty-one new
locomotives and thirty-five passenger
cars, the total outlay being $600,000.
Secretary of Agriculture Wilson has
ordered a quarantine against Michi-
gan cattle similar to the one enforced
in Pennsylvania and New York. The
federal government will pay owners
of destroyed cattle two-thirds of their
loss and the state of Michigan one-
third.
At the Savannah, Georgia, race
course November 25th, William H. Hil-
liard in a Lancia car, described as a
“little red Italian car,” won the first
international light car race ever held
in this country. In doing so the car
and driver set # high record of 52.56
miles an hour far 196 miles.
The Union Pocific rolling mills will
at once be put on a full force and run,
seven days in the week instead of four
days, as during the past months. The
Americaa Steel and Wire Company
has also added many additional men,
while the Empine mills, which employ
1,500 men, are now running on a full
schedule for the first time in a year.
Bids were opened Friday at the Treas-
ury Department for the construction of
a public building at Trinidad, Colo. The
bidders were Deeter & Wegel, Wichi-
ta, Kas., $65,163; W. O. Morrison, Den-
ver, $64,952; the Wadd-Sanger Con-
struction Company, Denver, $70,300;
George Hinchliff Company, Chicago,
$74,900.
We have already crossed the verge
of a timber famine so severe that its
blight will be felt in every hamlet in
the land,” said Theodore M. Kappen, a
real estate dealer of Minneapolis, at
Friday's tariff hearing. “In five years
every sawmill in Minneapolis will be
abandoned; yet this industry in its
prime employed 5,000 to 10,000 men.”
According to the director of the
United States Geological Survey, the
government 1s spending $40,000,000 in
the construction of irrigating systems.
Several hundred million dollars have
been expended by the government for
river improvement, and it is probable
that =s much, if not more, must be ex-
pended during the next decade,
‘A meteorite is reported to have fal-
len seven miles south of Muskogee,
Oklahoma, November 24th, striking the
barn of Frank Smith, killing two
horses and burying itself deep in the
ground.
Pinkhanr's Vegetable Compound,
LenaV. Henry, of Norristown, Ga.
writes toMrs. Pinkham:
“I suffered untold misery from fe-
male troubles. My doctor said an opera=
tion was the only chance I had, and I
dreaded it almost as much as death,
“One day I read how other women
had been cured by padi, BE. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound, and I decided to
try it. Before I had taken the first
bottle I was better, and now I am en-
tirely cured.
“Every woman suffering with an:
female trouble should take Lydia S
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ill
and has positively cured thousandsof
‘women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera~
tion, fbroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that bear-
iing-down feeling, fiatulency, indiges-
tion, dizziness or neryous prostration,
Why don’t you try it?
_ Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick
‘women to write her for advice.
She has guided thousands to
health. Address, Lynn, Mass,
i Not Always What They Seem.
Prof. and Mrs. Hadley were on @
train bound for New York, where
Yale's president was to speak before
a national convention. He made use
of the hour and 20 minutes he spent
in the train by rehearsing his speech
in a low voice, using his hands to em-
phasize certain passages.
‘A kindly matron who was sitting dt
rectly behind Mr. and Mrs. Hadley,
and who had been watching and lis-
tening, leaned forward and, tapping
Mrs. Hadley on the shoulder, said, feel-
ingly: “You have my sincere sym-
pathy, my poor woman; I have one
just like him at home.”—Success.
One of the Three.
“Well, there were only three boys
4n school to-day who could answer one
question that the teacher asked us,”
said a proud boy of eight.
“And I hope my boy was one of the
three,” said the proud mother.
“You bet I was,” answered Young
Hopeful, “and Sam Harris and Harry
Stone were the other two.”
“I am yery glad you proved yourself
#0 good a scholar, my son; it makes
your mother proud of you. What ques
tion did the teacher ask, Johnnie?”
“Who broke the glass in the back
window?”
Mr. Lapstlina’s Mean Joke.
“You have named the baby Tetan-
us?” exclaimed the horrified caller.
“Yes,” answered Mrs. Lapsling, “I
think that's what we'll call her. It's
the name my husband suggests.”
“But think how it will mortify her
when she grows to be a young woman!
Do you know what ‘tetanus’ means? It
means lockjaw.”
“You must be mistaken about that.
He says it means silent, quiet, re
served.”
They Don't Speak Now.
“You love long rambles in the coun:
try?” asked the girl in the white
sweater.
“Yes, indeed,” responded the young
man in the green hat with the purple
band and buckled shoes. “When I go
out in the country all nature seems to
smile.”
“Gracious! I don't blame her. It 1a
« wonder she don’t Jangh outright.”
NEW LIFE
Found in Change to Right Food.
After one suffers from acid dyspep.
sia, sour stor-ach, for months and then
finds the remedy is in getting the right
kind of food it is something to speak
out about.
AN, ¥, lady and her young son had
such am experience and she wants
others to know how to get relief. She
writes:
“For about fifteen months my little
boy and myself had suffered with sour
stomach. We were unable to retain
much of anything we ate,
“After suffering in this way for so
Jong I decided to consult a specialist
in stomach diseases. Instead of pre-
scribing drugs, he put us both on
Grape-Nuts and we began to improve
immediately.
“It was the key to a new life. I
found we had been eating too much
heavy food which we could not digest
In a few weeks after commencing
Grape-Nuts I was able to do my honse-
work. I wake in the morning with a
clear head and feel rested and have no
sour stomach. My boy sleeps well and
wakes with a laugh,
“We have regained our lost welght
and continue to eat Grape-Nuts for
both the morning and evening meals,
‘We are well and happy and owe it to
Grape-Nuts.” “There's a Reason,”
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Read “The Road to
Wellville,” in pkgs.
Ever read the above letter? A new
Gre genuine, true, and full of huss
faterest. .:
Not Interested in Baby.
Little Freddie was told by the nurse
one morning that the stork had visited
the house during the night and left
him a little baby sister, and asked it
he would like to see her.
“I don't care nothing about the
baby,” said Freddie, “but I'd like to
see the stork.”—Delineator.
‘A writer in a current magazine tells
us all about “How to know a mad dog.”
‘That's all right, for people who care to
know mad dogs, The average man
doesn’t,
Young America.
Marlow was three years old. One
ay his mother said to him: “Now,
Marlow, you may go outdoors to play
for a while, but if I see you crossing
the street to play with that naughty
little boy, Wille Burr, again, I'll give
you a hard, hard spanking.”
Half an hour later the mother looked
out after her boy and saw him playing
with Willie Burr, She raised the win-
dow and called, with forced gentle-
ness:
“Marlow, coms here to me.”
Marlow came, but as he did so, he
turned to his companion and said:
“You stay wight here, Willie. I'm
doin’ in to det spanked. I'll be wight
back.”
No Telling.
Eat, drink and be merry today.
That's sage advice.
For by tomorrow foodstuffs may
Advance in price.
Anybody Lost Any?
Cannot some wise one tell us
(To ease our wondering mind),
Who is it loses all the fault
That other people find?
—C. K, Shetterly.
An Error.
His father had found it necessary to
rather severely punish Robert, aged
five. The little chap came running te
me with resentment fn his heart.
“Auntie,” he sobbed, “did God make
you?”
“Yes, Robert,” I answered.
“And did He make ma?”
“Yes.”
“And did He make me?”
“Certainly, my boy.”
“And did He make pa, too?”
“Of course He did.”
“Well,” sobbed Robert sadly, “that’s:
when He made a mistake.”—The De-
Uneator.
In the Christmas Century.
In his discussion of “My Experiences.
With, and Views Upon, the Tariff” in
the Christmas Century, Mr. Carnegie
explains that his views upon the sub-
Ject—“which I still hold as firmly as
ever and have never changed’”—were
formed in the early seventies by Adam
Smith, “who was not the bigoted ‘free
trader’ he {s generally supposed to
have been, and by John Stuart Mill's
celebrated paragraph which sume up
the matter.” wv
‘eanlentiata Oninion.
Mr. Bilkins (looking up from the pa-
per)—“The eminent physician, Doctor
Greathead, says there is no exercise
so conducive to health in woman as
ordinary housework.”
Mrs. Bilkins—‘Huh! I'll bet he’s
married.”—New York Weekly.
fs $22.6.0.D. von tae no
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Neary eumeaier’at 1 Mammareae eee
BORE ot aedites aod ucitte gaia’ jae
Sua: data animes ite Rowe tts:
BROWN PALACE HOTEL ‘izelsist:
Me een tte eeu k Gotaek:
STOVE REPAIS cf, cuery, Known make
‘A. Pullen, 1831 Lawrence, Denver, Phone 75
BOW! LOOK: gestae’ eins, of, seme
eee ye ite pee Nee meena ont Nei tierme sad Aine.
WHOLESALE
Plumbing and Steam Goods
Talieta paiva ators cor Hea in resicisoes
marie ma bereits earn nese
feet Ware: mamsateee er and “et
Seer eee tng aaae He sates ase cral ves
Sey foe atte es eet
ihformation, “OPETCE. 118 WENKOOE Site
uN van COLOR ADS:
E. E. BURLINGAME & CO.,
ASSAY OFFICE sno CriSonaro
LABORATORY
Established in Colorado,1866, Samples by mailor
Gold & Silver Bulion Retined: Wetted ake Acsayed
CONCENTRATION, Awl camiatlON: uo
—i00 Ibs
CYANIDE TESTS Write for termes
1736-1738 Lawrence St., Denver, Colo.
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HOWARD E, BURTON, ASSAYER & CHEMIST
Speclmen prices: Gold, aliver, lead, $17, eol
sliver, 150} gold. Sie: nine OF coppar! ¥1.5cy
Snide’ testes Seallince aceisge at ii
Uae ethsted Peeing Cale
Kheference: Carbonate National Bank.
Rieter eee ERE ge eee
,
; New Jewelry Store |
, 607 Sixteenth St. ;
7 ona NO ES
jn
; Has just opened up !
; with all the latest |
; styles and up-to- |
} datelineofwatches, |
,; diamonds and sil- |
SP IGINENID: “Sse Bi!
a
lise eee cereerneinaerer
y Jewelry to order, and do Wateh |
, itepsatring.
ee
a '
, H. W. Wyman, Prop.
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| Pd, PANTS $222 SUITS S98" fe
2 re ee
THE TASEES TAs a te Gree
.. Expert Watchmake, ..
. Jeweler and Optician .
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Watches and Jewelery for Sale at
Lowest Prices in the City.
Al Work: Gaarantead tor Teo weare:
Phone Main 5371.
805 FIFTEENTH STREET,
Denver, - : Colorado.
PHONE GALLUP 635
C. & C.. Liquor Co
DIRECT IMPORTERR,
Aiines and Liquors for Medical
Use Our Specialty.
B114 Osage St. Denver, Colo.
Ladies Attention!
Mrs, M. A. Holly, who has
spent some time in St. Louis per-
fecting herself inthe ecalp and
hair treatment of Mrs, A. M. Pope,
has come. She is now prepared to
do the same work as is done in the
originutor’s parlors. She is the
sole ugent for the famed prepara
tion, *Poro.” Address her at 2118
Arapahoe street, or Phone Olive
J9S4
Always Siaunch
And True
The Denver Republican ‘has al-
ways avoided the fallacies and
knaveries of yellow journalism,
and its steadily increasing Circula-
tion proves conclusively that its
policy of telling the plain Truth
without exaggeration or misrepre-
sentation, standing fast for the
Right, is heartily approved with
growing force by the intelligent
Public to which it appeals.
To read it is a liberal Education,
and the citizen who goes without
it does a positive harm to himself,
to his family, and to the commu-
nity.
In no other way can the invest-
ment of 2% cents per day
—for that is all The Republican
costs any subscriber—bring such
rich results in that Knowledge
which is both Power and Pleasure.
Information, instruction and en-
tertainnient 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.
YIf 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. 7
TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND ACRES
NEAR WINDSOR, FORT COL-
LINS AND GREELEY,
FIVE HUNDRED THOUSAND DOL-
LARS TO BE SPENT ON TRANS-
MISSION LINES.
Denver—Two hundred thgusand
acres of land as fertile as any now
producing big crops of sugar beets and
potatoes, but which now lies above
ditches, will be reclaimed in the vi-
cinity of Windsor, Fort Collins and
Greeley when the Northern Colorado
Power Company conpletes its exten-
sion plans. The management an-
nounces it has completed arrange-
ments to spend $500,000 in the con-
struction of transmission lines in the
northern part of the state which will
supply power to pump water for an
immense acreage and make possible
the settlement of districts given over
to pasture or sage brush.
Windsor will be the center of a line
of 2,300 voltage and many pumping
lines will radiate from there. Thirty-
eight additionai miles of transmission
lines will be ready to raise water for
the irrigation season of 1909. The un-
derflow of vast capacity will be raised
/by electric pumps and distributed at
minimum cost. Fifteen pumping
plants have been contracted for near
Windsor. :
President W. J. Barker announced
that work was begun Monday on a new
substation at Windsor, which will give
the town a modern electric light and
power service. Current at 44,000 volts,
sixty cycles, three phase will be sup-
plied from the Louisville power plant
and transformed in the substation to
2,300 yolts and distributed throughout
the town to local transformers, where
it will be stepped down to 110 and 220
volts for light and power. The cost of
installation will be $25900. That will
be a portion of nearly $500,000 to be
spent in that vicinity in developing
the country’s resources.
‘Officiala of Forestry Service.
Denver.—Officers and employes for
the Second district of the United
States forestry service, this district,
having headquarters in Denver and
comprising the territory of Colorado,
southern Wyoming, South Dakota,
northwestern Minnesota, Nebraska,
southwestern Kansas and southeast.
ern Utah, have been announced as
follows:
Smith Riley, district forester; P. G.
Redington, assistant district forester.
Fred W, Morrell, chief, office opera-
tion; C. J. Stahl, assistant chief; R.
B. Mesnard, chief engineer; Nile Hu-
gel, engineer; Fred Lees, chief sec-
tion ot occupancy; C. F. Follen, claims
clerk; Miss Anna L, Riordan, settle-
ment clerk; G. W. Holland, uses clerk;
W. R. Fuchs, fiscal agent; F. C.
Thompson, W. A. McKenzie, Miss Alva
von der Linde and W. C. Stump, ac-
count clerks; J. W. Dilly, chief. sec
tion of maintenance; Miss Gertrude
L. Kimmel, file clerk; Mrs. Rosa C.
Pennebaker, assistant file clerk; Miss
Nettie M. Kimmel, mail clerk; C. B.
Gosorn, C. B. Noyes, I, I. Tayloe and
Mrs. Stella W. Munce, draftsmen.
J. W. Nelson, chief of office of graz:
ing; B. N. Kavanaugh, assistant chief;
Miss Anna P. Koshwitz, clerk.
C. L. Hill, chief office of products;
G. R. Ogier, assistant chief; W. 1.
Stockton, computing clerk.
A. K. Chittenden, chief, office of
silviculture; S$. L. Moore, assistant
chief; C, G. Bates, chief section of
silvics; W. D. Edmonston, assistant;
L. C, Miller, chief, section of planting;
G. S. Arnold, law officer; J. M. Cates,
assistant law officer; J. Bentley, Jr.,
R. W. Allen, G. P. Bard, R. G. Pierce,
H. B. Hoyroyd, A. L. Heim, T. Lyons
and J. A. Silsbee, forest assistants;
‘W. R. Ravey and H. S. Bushnell, land
examiners; G. H. Gustafson, H. Gre-
gory, William Darley and F. W. Blatt,
assistant land examiners; George P.
Gregg, W. R. McKinnon and J. S.
Baird, lumbermen; T. A. Curry and F.
Sherwin, Jr., expert miners.
Denver.—Only nine prosecutions out
of 7,424 inspections made by state pure
food officials will be shown by the
annual report of the state pure food
department, soon to be made to the
governor. Although the inspections
were made in groceries, drug stores,
meat markets, factories, saloons, bak-
eries, dairies, creameries, hotels and
private homes, it was only found nec-
essary to prosecute in the nine cases.
Groceries and drug stores came in for
the larger share of watching, 2,927
groceries and 1,685 drug stores having
been inspected. ‘The inspectons vis:
ited 118 towns of the state, making
several visits to some of these.
The Colorado Springs City Council
has ordered a special election January
19th of twenty-one taxpayers to con-
stitute a charter convention to draw
up a special charter for the elty’s goy-
ernment. This is in pursuance of the
recent charter election when the peo:
ple yoted for a charter convention by
more than 20 to 1.
A movement has been started to
erect a monument to Christopher Co
lumbpis in Denver. Adolfo Rossi, Ital-
jan Consul at Denver, is urging the
project among the Italian-born eltizens
of the state.
COLORADO NEWS
The United Brethren churches of
Colorado have taken action changing
all the Young People’s Christian Union
Societies to Christian Endeavor So
cieties.
One million dollars will be expended
during the coming year by the Den
-ver Gas & Electric Company, for ex
tensions of lighting and power and
fael plants.
‘The turnstile in the Colorado Mu-
seum of Natural History at the City
Park in Denver, registered 2,430 names
Sunday. The crowd was a record
breaking one.
To improve its stock at the Marine
hospital at Stanton, New Mexico, the
government has just purchased two
full blood Jersey bulls from C. E. Par-
fett of Golden.
‘The formal opening of the new Boul-
derado Hotel at Boulder has been set
for Christmas Day. The hotel will cost
about $160,000 and is designed to be
first-class In every respect.
‘The Greeley public library board
has accepted the new library building
from the contractors and begun put-
ting in books and furniture. The li-
brary cost $17,000, which was
raised by popular subscription.
The Empire Construction Company
of Greeley, with L. L. Stimson as en-
gineer, has begun building the North
Sterling reservoir. The reservoir is to
be completed in eighteen months and
will be the largest in Colorado.
In uw campaign lasting ten days the
Fort Collins Young Men’s Christian
Association secured 500 new members.
Then members of the canvassing
teams who had secured five or more
members were given a fine turkey
dinner.
Inheritance tax to the amount of $10,
992 will be paid the state from the es-
tate of the late Alice Hill, widow of
Senator N. P, Hill of Denver. The es-
tate amounted to $592,849.66. It is now
betng settled up and the state has de-
termined the amount of the tax.
The new plate glass insurance com-
pany organized by Boulder business
men starts out with practically ninety
per cent. of the plate glass insurance
of the city, The company is organ-
ized on the mutual plan and the busi:
ness is confined to Boutder alone.
‘The tax levy of Colorado City has
been fixed at 14 mills by the Council,
On the assessed valuation of $785,000
this will give a revenue of $10,990.
The city receives about $12,000 in
liquor licenses and $7,000 from other
sources, making a totai of about $30,
000 per year.
At chapel exercises at the Colorado
college in Colorado Springs $1,070 was
raised in fifteen minutes among the
faculty and students, with which to
send Harry B. Ewing, formerly a stu-
dent at the institution and secretary
of the college Y. M. C. A., to the for-
eign missionary field. He will go to
Japan and Korea and will probably re.
main there permanently at the expense
of Colorado college students.
Conductor T. J. Behegan was robbed
of $6 in change on the Forty-fourtli
avenue tramway line in Denver on the
night of November 21st by two young
| men who struck him on the head with
| a revolver when he showed fight
knocking him senseless. He rallied
and with the motorman gave chase to
the robsers, but they escaped. The
ae company has offered a re-
ward of $100 to any employe who cap:
tures a holdup. :
R. Suzuki, secretary of the Colorado
Japanese Association, of Denver, is
the organizer and one of the directors
of a farming company which will de-
vote its efforts to developing farm
lands for Japanese colonists in Colo:
rado. The company has just been in-
corporated with a capital stock of
$50,000 and Will engage In the general
farming busifiess. The offices of the
company are to be located at Fort
Lupton.
Bids for the construction of the new
Guggenheim law school building at
the State University Grounds at Boul.
der are now being called for and will
be received up to December 14th. The
contract will be awarded as soon there-
after ar possible and will provide for
the completion of the building by Sep-
tember 1, 1909. The building will cost
about $75,000. It will be three stories
: high, the first story of Fort Collins
Stone and the second and third of
Goldea gray brick.
Enough cash will be available from
the bond subscription of the Denver
Temple of Commerce building to start
work on the foundation on Janutry
Ist, the idea being to finish tho ten.
story structure by January, 1910. The
building will cost $400,000, adjoin the
Ideal building on Champa, with a front
age of 100 feet, and a depth of 125
feet. The Chamber of Commerce,
Traffic Club, Real Estate Exchange,
Rein TAS ee Eee oe
CONFESSION OF A WOMAN MUR-
* DERER CREATES MOST TRE-
MENDOUS SENSATION.
MADAME STEINHEIL ACCUSED OF
HAVING POISONED PRESI-
DENT FAURE.
Paris—The arrest of Mme. Stein-
heil Thursday night, following her
-confession that for months since the
murder of her painter husband and
Mme. Japy, who were found strangled
in the home of the artist on the morn-
ing of May 3ist, her attempts to find.
the assassins and the innumerable fan-
tastic clews furnished the police and
the newspapers, were only a desper-
ate farce to conceal the real author of
the crime, whom she knew, affords
Paris the biggest sensation it has had
for years.
The excitement produced from time
to time by the Humbert, Dreyfus and
Syyeton affairs pales into insignifi-
ance by comparison and the revela-
tions which crowded thick and fast
during the day, pointing to the possi-
ble exposure of a national scandal,
promise to attract world-wide atten-
tion.
Unprecedented. scenes were wit-
nessed at the palace of justice Thurs-
day while the woman was under ex-
amination, guards being required to
restrain the crowds from entering. On
the boulevards men fought for special
editions of newspapers containing ac-
counts of the case, while in the lob-
bies of Parliament the” Nationalists
created d hubbub by threatening to
call the government to account unless
orders were given immediately to
probe the scandal to the bottom.
Political opponents of the govern-
ment like Henri Rochefort, have been
trying to make political capital of the
affair by seeking to force an exposure
of the scandals connected with the
mysterious death of Felix Faure, presi-
dent of the republic, in 1899. Al-
though hushed up at the time, tt was
common knowledge among those be-
hind the scenes that Mme. Steinheil
was with M. Faure at the Elysee pal-
age when he died.
The Anti-Semite Libre Parole
charges Mme. Steinheil with hay-
ing poisoned President Faure. ‘The
newspapers recall that on the day of
the funeral a writer on the Libre
Parole who had seen the body, said:
“All the skill of the embalmers was
‘unable to preserve the corpse from the
dissolvent action of the subtle poison.”
Great Foolball Games,
Denver—Football held Denver and
the state in a mighty grip yesterday.
From early morning the streets were
throaged with college people—alumni,
students and just natural enthusiasts,
all intent on seeing the game at Broad.
way Park, where the sturdy warriors
of the University of Colorado closed
their intercollegiate season by defeat.
ing the School of Mines 15 to 0. At
Colorado Springs by a hard-earned vie:
tory of 6 to 4 over Colorado College,
the fighting eleven from the Univer
sity of Denver carried off all football
honors for the season of 1908, includ-
ing not only the intercollegiate cham-
pionship of Colorado, but also cham.
pionship of the inter-Rocky Mountain
region,
‘Dorande Wine the Marathon.
Madison Square Gardens, New York.
Dorando Pietri of Capri, Italy, de-
feated John J. Hayes of this city in the
renewal of the Marathon race at Madi-
son Square Garden Wegnesday night.
‘The distance was twenty-six miles 385
yards, the same as the Olympic Mara-
thon, which Hayes won at Shepherds
Bush, London, last summer, Dorando
then fell from exhaustion and was
helped across the line, but was disqual-
ified. He proved to be Hayes’ master
Wednesday night, as he held the lead
almost from start to finish, finally win-
ning by about fifty yards. Hayes was
in the lead five times during the race,
but only for a few seconds each time.
Dorando’s time was 2:44:20 2-5 and
Hayes’ 2:45:05 1-5.
Monument to Phil Sheridan.
Washington —With military pomp
and splendor an heroic statue of Gen-
eral Philip Henry Sheridan was un-
yelled in this city Wednesday. The
President of the United States and
members of the cabinet, the diplomatic
corps, justices of the Supreme Court of
the United States, Senators, Represen-
tatives in Congress, veterans of the
Civil war and many others prominent
in official life as well as a large con-
course of citizens were present, as well
as thousands of soldiers of the regular
army, the national guard and Civil war
veterans.
Prairie Oil Story a Fake.
‘Washington.—As the New York Sun
story entitled “Roosevelt and Prairie
Oli,” has seemed to deceive a num-
ber of people, the following statement
is made public from the White House
“The story is false in every partic-
ular, from beginning to end. Not only
is there no such report in the depart-
ment of justice and never has been,
but no such report was ever made. In
granting the franchise of the Prairie
Oil Company the President simply ap:
Proved the recommendation of Secre-
tary Hitchcock.”
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| Pianos Sold for Storage
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TiS aang cate rn aoa cea ea nove ean a
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$2.50 Downand $1.00 per Week
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Six months free music Ieasons given. with’ each piano’ aula
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Tenevas ils S2uppean, “Cotte it tsaay una eat ouch BE
Colubmine Music Co.
920 and 924 Fifteenth Street
CHARLES BUILDING, CORNER EIEEEENTH AND CURTIS
Qe DENVER
FEEL EAE TEE EERE EERE TTT EET
Maser, ETE EE EE ST IE ET ND
w# THIRST PARLORS,
2, L, PENNINGTON, Proprietor.
«*Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars.<
Telephone 816 Main.
1745 Curtis Ht. Denver, Colo
A Women’s Enterprising Company,
under the management of Mrs. Laura
Hill, 2456 Glenarm Place; phone, Pur-
ple 1890, Ladies’ and Children’s ready-
made Underwear; children’s Clothes
a specialty. Hairdressing, Manicur-
ing, Shampooing and Facial Massage.
Miss Geraldine Troutman.
Public Stenographer, All kinds of
stenographic work. Mrs. Dora Holmes
Payne,
DR. J. H. P. WESTBROOK
Residence—i505 B. 16th Ave.
Phone—York 4014.
Office—917 21st St.
Phone—Main 1144.
Office Hours—2 to 5 p. m. and 7 to
9 p.m.
Sunday and other time by appoint.
ment.
‘THE -
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 Stocke
bought for cash or sold on com.
miarion.
1519 CURTIS STREET
oe
Ice Cream,
Ices, Candies
‘ : i
Gf?
(bbb £3
Joseph H. Stuart
LAWYBR
Practice in all courts, Examining
Abstract of Titles and Draw-
ing up Legal Instru-
ful Attention.
329 Kittredge Building
Phone: Olive 2294
Res,— 2562 Lincoln Avenue.
WwW. J. Addie
—Dealer in—
Choice old California Wines
and Brandies from the Hermi-
tage Vineyard; also Bottled
| Beer, Kentucky Whisky, Cigars
and Tobacco 3: i: i: i:
228 Sixteenth Street
Telephone: 2675
|
Of. J. H.-P. WESTBROOK
| Physician and Surgeon
Bougs:—10 to lla.m. 8 te &
and 7 to8 p.m,
Bempar:—2 to 3 p. m. Other
times by appointment,
... PHONES .
Office, Main 1144. Residence, Main 6701
OFFice, 017 21ST ST
RES. 2020 WELTON ST,
BES.9020 WELTON ST,
Denver, - Colorado.
Miss M. Cowden
Hair Dressing Parlor.
Shampoo, cutting and curling.
Bcalp treatment, hair tonics, hair
straightening, manicuring. Stage
wigs for rent; theatrical use and
masquerades,
Goods delivezed out of the city.
All shades of huir matched hy
sending a ssmple of hair; also
‘combings made up,
CHEAPEST SWITCHES 50 CENTS.
191G Mor we Donver, Sola
Phones, Office Main 5595,
Residence, York 123.
Hours, 9 to lla.m. 1 to 4, Tto8 p.m
Sundays, 10 toll:30a.m., 2todp.m.
Dr. P. E. Spratlin,
Good Block-1557 Larimer St.
Residence 2230 Clarkson St
Denver. - - Colorado,
THE BEST ICE CREAM AND
Gaspma Aes
0. P. Baur @ Co.
CATERERS AND
CONFECTIONERS
Phone: 168.
1618 Gurtia 6t, ‘Denver Calo
y ~ LLVSTRATORS-
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THE COLORADO STATESMAN
LARGH
SQUILL BE
FREE
RACE
COUNTRY
2017
All communications of a personating nature that are not complimentary will be withheld from the columns of this paper.
It occasionally happens that papers sent to subscribers are lost or stolen. In case you do not receive any number when due, inform us by postal card and we will cheerfully forward a duplicate of the missing number.
Communications to receive attention must be newsy, upon important subjects, plainly written only upon one side of the paper; must reach us Tuesdays, if possible, anyway not later than Wednesdays, and bear the signature of the author. No manuscript returned, unless stamps are sent for postage.
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Reading notices, ten lines or less, 10 cents per line. Each additional line over ten lines, 5 cents per line.
Display advertising 50 cents per square. A square contains ten agate lines. No discounts allowed on less than three months' contract. Cash must accompany all orders from parties unknown to us. Further particulars on application.
Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice in the city of Denver, Colorado.
BATTLING NELSON was refused accommodations in Philadelphia's swellest hotel the other day, and his pride was awfully hurt. But "Bat" can console himself with the thought that Jack Johnson or Joe Gans would probably be just as promptly refused at the same hostelry without any intentional slight upon the profession. When Nelson goes to Baltimore he can feel assured that he will be met by no such snobbery as this when he puts his fist on the big book at the "Goldfield."
THE LIFE FORFEIT
TENNESSEE is fast forging to the front as a state whose record of violent and bloody crime is almost unapproachable. Her lynchings, her night rider crimes and her deadly political feuds have placed her almost beyond the mark made by her notorious sister, Kentucky. The vicious radicalism of so-called great men is responsible for the bloody records of many of the Southern states, and this is true of none more than of Tennessee. About a dozen years ago, E. W. Carmack was the fiery editor of a rabid newspaper published at Memphis, and his teachings were largely responsible for one of the most shocking lynchings that ever occurred in the South. His intolerance and hatred of the progressive Negro found almost constant expression in his newspaper, and in this manner he became prominent. He aspired to the office of United States Senator, and after one defeat reached that goal. He took his fire brands with him to Washington and fought the Negro with them whenever the opportunity presented. He was among those who attempted to grill Senator Foraker in the last session of Congress when the Ohio Senator made his famous and exhaustive fight in behalf of the Negro soldiers who were discharged from the army in disgrace, because of the Brownsville incident. He was bitter when Senator Tillman was passive. His term expired with the last Congress and he returned to rabid journalism in Tennessee. His drastic habits sought exercise in new political channels and he loomed up as a leader of the temperance reform elements. It is always strange how the morals of the most of these vigorous Southern leaders are mixed, for the moralist and the feudist are often one. Two weeks ago Senator Carmack was shot and killed in a pistol duel in the streets of Nashville, by another prominent Tennesseean whose father had been repeatedly attacked in the Carmack newspaper. The fate of many a Negro which he had approved, and which he had predicted for many more, became his own. But the temperance people of Tennessee, shocked by this tragic ending of a prominent life, are inconsolable. They will make the tragedy a political issue and will build a monument to Carmack's memory. These are the outlines of a picture of surging life in Tennessee—The Life Forfeit. In the back ground, however, there are thousands of inoffensive black citizens who are shedding no tears over Carmack's taking off.
THE COURT OF LAST DESPAIR
THROUGHOUT the recent campaign we argued earnestly and seriously against the elevation of Mr. Bryan to the presidency of the United States, on the ground that he would have the appointment of many new justices of the United States Supreme Court and of the circuit and district courts, wherein vacancies would occur during the next presidential term. We expressed the fear that a preponderance of Democratic justices presiding over these courts would make impossible a just interpretation of those unjust laws which the South, especially, is striving to make a permanent and decisive part of our national jurisprudence. It appears now that we might have saved our time and space on this score, so far as concerns the inference that Democratic failure would insure justice to the Negro, for the present United States Supreme Court Bench seems to be as deeply inoculated with the virus of race prejudice as any tribunal in a free country could possibly be. In less than one week after election, in deciding the case of Berea College against the State of Kentucky, the Supreme Court held that the states may legislate to prevent the co-education of the white and Negro races, thereby approving the law in this case which makes it a felony for any person to teach white and colored pupils in the same school in any part of Kentucky. No matter what local conditions may be, this decision virtually seals the poor and isolated Negro in his ignorance, so far as Kentucky is concerned, and practically throughout the South and possibly elsewhere. The Supreme Court, under any political color, influenced as it undoubtedly is by strong Southern sentiment, seems bent upon the judicial separation of the races in the United States, regardless of all constitutional endowments and qualifications of citizenship. The idea that one citizen has the same rights as another in a republic, and cannot by any special or invidious device be robbed of those rights, is now altogether fallacious in the United States.
A minority of what citizens in Mississippi may limit the rights of a black majority. But suppose that in the process of long improvement Negro intelligence should finally dominate one state in this union and should be unjust enough to legislate to perpetuate its own dominant power, would a white Supreme Court of any political color uphold such legislation as constitutional and just? But such a day cannot be foreseen. The races must get apart and stay apart because the Negro must always stay under. This is the law of a free people.
Deadlier Foe to Hunters Than Lions or Elephants
By BARON A. B. D'ALTOMONTE,
Hunter, and Former Commandant of Police of Congo Free State.
The most redoubtable dangers to the hunter in East Africa are not the ones due directly to hunting. It is not the assault of the wounded lion, not the destructive rush of the rhinoceros or the elephant, not the attack of the hippopotamus. Neither are the fangs of the crocodile to be feared. No, all these dangers, more or less exaggerated by African travelers, are avoidable and become almost nothing by the skill and cold blood of the brave hunter. Theodore Roosevelt is all of this. No, the real, the terrible, the unavoidable danger is the African fever. Very few white people can say that they have visited the center of Africa without having fallen ill with this terrible disease. Among thousands of explorers and hunters hardly any have been spared from it, and these for some special reasons or for an extraordinary physical con-
The most redoubtable dangers to the hunter in East Africa are not the ones due directly to hunting. It is not the assault of the wounded lion, not the destructive rush of the rhinoceros or the elephant, not the attack of the hippopotamus. Neither are the fangs of the crocodile to be feared. No, all these dangers, more or less exaggerated by African travelers, are avoidable and become almost nothing by the skill and cold blood of the brave hunter. Theodore Roosevelt is all of this. No, the real, the terrible, the unavoidable danger is the African fever. Very few white people can say that they have visited the center of Africa without having fallen ill with this terrible disease. Among thousands of explorers and hunters hardly any have been spared from it, and these for some special reasons or for an extraordinary physical constitution. Dr. Henry Drummond, one of the most intelligent African travelers, speaking of this, says:
"I never knew of a white man who lived in Central Africa three months without a dangerous attack of the fever."
The same is repeated by Maj. Charles Lemaire, the famous Belgian explorer, and by James Edward Alexander, Henry Rowley, C. D. Lamphugh and William Walter Fitzgerald—men that have crossed Africa several times and have explored East Africa. All agree to the fact that nobody, under normal conditions, can be spared from the fever.
Malarial fever is the one sad certainty which every African traveler must face. For six, seven or eight weeks he may escape, but its finger will surely fall upon him. It is preceded for some time, even for three or four weeks, by unaccountable irritability and weakness. On the march with his men, he has scarcely started when he sighs for the noonday rest. Putting it down to mere laziness, he goads himself on by draughts from his water bottle and totters forward a mile or two more.
Next, in the full excitement of an interesting hunt, he breaks down, and fails to shoot the splendid antelope he had at short range; then he finds himself skulking into the forest on the pretext of looking at a specimen, and when his porters and his companions are out of sight throws himself under a tree in utter limpness and despair. Roused by mere shame, he staggers along the trail, and as he nears the midday camp he puts on a spurt to conceal his defeat, which finishes him for the rest of the day. This goes on till the crash comes—first cold and pain, then heat and pain, then every kind of pain, then every degree of heat, then delirium, then the life and death struggle. He rises, if he does rise, a shadow, and slowly accumulates strength for the next attack, which, he knows too well, will not disappoint him.
No one has ever yet solved African fever. Its geographical distribution is unmapped, but generally it prevails over the whole east and west coasts, within the tropical limits; along all the river courses; on the shores of the inland lakes and in all low-lying and marshy districts. The higher plateaus are comparatively free from fever.
Andrew Carnegie says that the supply of iron ore, and consequently of steel, will be exhausted in 1940. James J. Hill foresees the end of iron ore production in 40 years. John Hays Hammond, until the first of this year the highest salaried expert in the world, makes the statement, predicted upon the known deposits of ore, that the culmination of our mining industry is to be reckoned in decades, and its declension, if not practical economic exhaustion, in generations. These three opinions are all official, as they were voiced at the gov-
America Facing Steel Famine
By WILLIAM DINWIDDIE.
The life of a steel building without repairs is calculated at 100 years. An iron clamp on the Brooklyn bridge, which was finished only in 1883, broke from the terrific strain three or four years ago. How are we to repair our towering skyscrapers, bridges, subways, piers with the passing of the production of iron? Will that celebrated word picture of Lord Macaulay, in which he describes a future traveler as standing on a broken arch of London bridge, in the midst of a vast solitude, sketching the ruins of St. Paul's, be fulfilled of New York?
A great geologist once said: "That nations that have coal and iron will rule the world." A modern nation rules and protects its colonies by means of its battleships, just as the Roman empire was held together centuries ago by means of its magnificent legions. How are we to build more battleships when our supply of iron is no more? This country has developed into a world power of the first importance, but in order to retain what it has gained in the surprisingly short time of a hundred years it must conserve its natural resources to the point of parsimony. That the exhaustion of the supply of our iron ore is no idle apprehension is proved by the actual figures of the latest trustworthy estimates of our present stock quoted by Mr. Carnegie. He says that there are "for the Lake Superior district about 1,500,000,000 tons; for the southern district (including Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee and Virginia), about 2,500,000,000 tons, and for the rest of the United States 5,000,000,000 to 7,000,000,000 tons, making an aggregate of about 10,000,000,000 tons.
"Our highest grade ore is that of the Lake Superior district, which yields about four-fifths of the current production. In 1905 its yield was over 33,000,000 tons, in 1906 some 38,000,000 tons, and in 1907 nearly 44,000,000 tons. By the end of the present decade it will average 50,000,-000 tons or more. Even without further increase the known supply will be exhausted before 1940."
If water transportation were to be substituted for rail transportation wherever possible, it would delay the fulfillment of this melancholy prophecy until perhaps concrete buildings, for which we have sufficient material to duplicate all the cities of the United States, have come into more general use, or until sufficient advance has been made in the study of metal alloying to stop the vast waste of inferior ores. We have seen that it takes practically an equal weight of metal to move 1,000 tons of heavy freight ten miles by rail. The same freight may be moved by water by means of 100 or 250 tons of metal, so that the substitution of water-carriage would reduce the consumption of iron by three-fourths to seven-eighths in this department, where more metal is used than in any other
Webre
Musical
Pianos
Pianola-
Pianos,
Edison and Victor Talking Machines sold on very easy payments.
The Largest Stock in Denver
THE DENVER MUSIC CO.,
1538-1540-1542-1544-1546 STOUT ST
Silk and Brocade and Gold Lace
Boxes a Specialty.
Any size Roll Film Developed
for 10 Cents
PHONE MAIN 4843.
J. GIBSON SMITH,
Work of Art, Artistic Picture Framing.
Branch Office Denver Camera Exchange
322-17th Street Opp. Brown Palace Hotel.
Denver, Colo.
Watch Inspector for the Burlington Route and Colo. @ Southern By.
A. M. WOOD
Watchmaker and Jeweler
IS YOUR TIME RIGHT? 913 SEVENTEENTH ST.
Phone Purple 1628 DENVER, COLORADO.
ALBERT KOPPER PHONE, 1149 MAIN.
PROPRIETOR
KOPPER'S HOTEL
EUROPEAN PLAN
1215 1218 Twentieth Street, Between Larimer and Lawrence
First-Class Furnished Rooms
By the Day, Week or Month. Denver, Colo.
PHONE,1149 MAIN.
ALBERT KOPPER
PROPRIETOR
TELEPHONE MAIN 1153.
D. CRONIN,
Fine Wines, Liquors Cigars and Tobacco.
Family Trade a Specialty
2060 Champa St. Denver, Colorado
A. J. STARK & CO
JEWELERS
709
&
711
16th
St.
People in all Walks of Life Wear
HENNING'S $2.50 SHOES
We Show a Larger Stock of
FANCY SHOES
Than any store west of New York City. If you can't find what you want any place else in
Go to HENNING'S $2.50 SHOE STORE 838 Fifteenth Street
Useful Household Utensil.
A roasting pan which automatically "bastes" meat while cooking by means of a percolator which collects the juices and sprays them over the met* has been patented.
Useful Household Utensil.
A roasting pan which automatically "bastes" meat while cooking by means of a percolator which collects the juices and sprays them over the met* has been patented.
Might Come to Texas.
"If you continue as you are doing now how in the world do you expect to get into heaven?"
"I don't expect to—not in the world."—Houston Post.
Mrs. Lee Blagburn is on the sick list
Miss Isabelle Butts left the city last Saturday for California.
Miss Ethel Glee of Kansas City is visiting friends in the city.
Our old friend, Plum Jackson, was a very interesting caller at this office Monday.
W. H. Duncan of Glenwood Springs, Colo., was in the city Tuesday on business. While here he paid this office a friendly call.
The Self Improvement club will give an oyster social December 1st at the residence of Mrs. R. I .Anderson, 527 Twenty-sixth street. Admission free.
B. C. Curtis left last Thursday morning for St. Louis and other eastern cities for a short recreation. He has a host of friends who wish him an enjoyable trip.
The Azalia Hackley Choral Club will present the cantata, Belshazzar, as a testimonial to Mr. Charles Clark at Zion Baptist church, next Tuesday night, December 1st. Don't miss it.
The Self Improvement club met Monday afternoon at the cosy residence of Mrs. Harry Barbee on the North Side, Mr. and Mrs. Barbee having recently gone to housekeeping were presented with numerous kitchen utensils. Light refreshments were served.
J. D. Garner has just returned to the city from a business trip to the principal cities of California. Mr. Garner says that the colored people in the different cities that he visited were doing well, yet they did not excel the people of his home city, beautiful Denver. "Queen City of the Rockies."
The Thanksgiving dinner at Shorter church under the auspices of the Ushers' club was well patronized. The club deserves and is receiving all kinds of praise from the public for the good charity deeds—that of giving every child in Denver under fifteen years who applied, a free dinner.
Miss Lizzie Edward entertained a few friends last week at the beautiful residence of Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Williams of 601 Lafayette street. The parlors as was also the table was very tastefully decorated with flowers, while the menu was of a variety of the best eatables in the market. The affair was in charge of Mrs. Minnie Paul, whose superb ability cannot be surpassed. It was an evening of bliss and will long so be remembered by those who enjoyed the hospitality of Miss Edward, the charming hostess.
We have many causes to be thankful for Thursday, the day of thanks, as we were beautifully remembered on that occasion. It was A. L. Rice of Florence, Colo., who remembered us with a twenty-one pound bird to help make out our Thanksgiving menu. It was not a rice bird, but a big turkey gobler and it will be some time before it is all gobbled up. Mr. Rice accept our many thanks for your kind remembrance. C. E. Griffith of 644 South High street also made us feel happy by a large fat hen from his big poultry yard and thus made the day a very bountiful one for us. C. E., we are under many obligations for your gift and may your fowls continue to lay the goal for your success.
Last Saturday afternoon from 2 to 6. Vivian Rivers celebrated her fourteenth birthday anniversary at the residence of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph D. D. Rivers, 225 West Eleventh avenue. About seventeen of her little friends were present and helped make the event one not soon to be forgotten on account of the very pleasant and enjoyable time. In fact it was a realm of mirth from start to finish. At the proper time the guests gathered around an extension table beautifully decorated with American Beauties, chrysanthemums and various other varieties of botany, and the glow of the lighted candelabras made the scene a spectacle of splendor, while the little ones enjoyed a repast of everything in
Remember
J. M. Johnson's Mighty Modern Minstrels AT East Turner Hall THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1908
Challenging Cake Walk and Fleet-foot Soft Shoe Buck and Wing Dancing, Open to all Comers
The Real Big Show of the Season, Featuring
HAPPY DICK THOMAS and THE MERRY HOWARDS
Jack, King and Queen of Fun Makers
Just a Few of the Big, Mighty Company
ETTA McDANIELS, NETTIE HOWARD, FAY GREY, IDA FITZPATRICK, HATTIE McDANIELS, MRS. R. G. HOLLEY, SUE HOWARD, HAPPY DICK THOMAS, OTIS McDANIELS, AL ROSE, ED. HOWARD, JAMES BROWN, SAMUEL McDANIELS, GEO. ELKINS, JAMES HICKMAN, ANDREW FREEMAN, AND MR. WOLFSCALE.
J. M. JOHNSON, Sole Prop.
EDWARD L. HOWARD, Stage Mgr.
BALL AFTER THE
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AUMISSION
the season's delicacies. Dancing and music was also a feature of the occasion. She was the recipient of many beautiful presents as a token of the high esteem in which she is held by all, and after wishing her the return of many more happy occasions they departed for their respective homes.
GOOD PROGRAM SUNDAY.
While every organization has its draw-backs, Sunday seemed to be one of the alliance "jonah" Sundays. But the mistakes have been remedied now and Sunday promises to be the day of all days. Roger H. Wolcott, brother of Hon. E. O. Wolcott, will address the Alliance on "Successful Dishonesty." The Harris' orchestra will render the following program which will be given promptly at 4 p. m.: (a) March, "Kansas City Spirit," Sorrentino; (b) Dance Mexican, "Dark Eyes," Moret; Selections from "Woodlang," Luder's and Overture, "Poet and Peasant," Von Suppe. The Alliance meets at 1712 Curtis street.
NOTICE.
A woman hung right here in Denver around her husband's neck, begging him to take her to J. M. Johnson's Mighty Modern Minstrels at East Turner hall, Thursday, December 3rd.
ALL STAR MINSTRELS.
The All Star minstrels which played to a full house at East Turner hall Thursday night of last week, has been the theme of laudable comment for the past week, and it is all from a standpoint of just merit. That they excelled even those with a reputation in the professional class goes without saying. Every character was a star and convinced the big audience of their superb entertaining qualities. The show was produced by Rice & Collins, with H. W. Hinkle as manager, Curtis M. Harris, stage manager, Wm. A. Rice, advance agent, and J. C. Harris, musical director. The performers were Messrs. Thos. Wilson, Eugene Montgomery, J. A. S. Brown, Charles Wilson, Jas. Hickman, Harry Gilmore, Wm. Hood, Nannie Nee, Sim Edwards, Jas. Grey, Wm. Burns, George Ray, Wing Jackson, Dewey the Dancing Kid, Curtis M. Harris and Leon Pryor. To give a personal mention of them is but to say that each performed far beyond the expectation of the admiring crowd. The young men has the heartiest congratulations of the COLORADO STATESMAN for their exquisite achievements in the amusement arena, as has also the promoters and managers of the affair. H. W. Hinkle, who has never been surpassed in managing successful entertainments, is due no small amount of credit for its financial success. Mr. Hinkle is like the late P. T. Barnum—a believer in printers' ink—or in other words advertising, for which he has our many thanks for his patronage in this respect to this paper.
Just received several copies of Dunbar's complete works. Send in your holiday orders. J. H. Doniphan, agent, 2836 Stout street.
EDWARD L. HOWARD, Stage Mgr.
THE SHOW UNT
Hair cut 15 cents, 1847 Blake street.
Furnished room for rent at 2421 Ogden.
FOR RENT—A barn and a small room. Phone, Main 8478.
For Sale—An eleven-room house. Apply at 1923 Clarkson street.
Two nicely furnished rooms for rent. Front and back rooms. Phone, 8478.
Two unfurnished rooms for rent. Apply 1258 Champa street.
Nicely furnished room for rent at 2946 Arapahoe street. Phone Purple 1614.
Just received several copies of Dunbar's complete works. Send in your holiday orders. J. H. Doniphan, agent, 2836 Stout street.
FOR RENT—Two modern furnished rooms at 1122 Cherry Creek Boulevard. C. C. Clark.
HARMON HOME FOR SALE
Lot 30x125 feet, 4-room frame partly furnished; price, $600; near two car lines; only cash offer considered. For particulars see J. H. Domiphan, 2836 Stout street.
Furnished rooms for rent in modern house. Apply 2929 High street. Phone Blue 2421.
Anyone wishing to purchase a beautiful home cheap, call at 1923 Clarkson street. Easy terms.
Nicely furnished rooms in a modern house. Mrs. R. M. Blakey, 2255 Arapahoe street.
The life and works of Paul Lawrence Dunbar containing his complete poems and best short stories. The book is sold only by subscription at the following prices: Morocco, $3.50; Half Morocco, $2.50; Cloth, $1.75. J. H. Doniphan, agent, 2836 Stout street. Address him a card and he will call and show you the book.
Once Bismarck was asked to write a sentiment in an album and found that the last contributor had penned the following: "I have lived long, and learned to forgive much." Bismarck wrote: "I have lived long, and learned that much has been forgiven me."
NAST
The Popular Photograher,
Only Caters to First-class Trade.
Our Pictures speak for Themselves.
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LOCAL NOTICES
The Better Sentiment
L 3 O'CLOCK
50 CENTS
BOHM-ALLEN
JEWELRY CO.
DENVER
COLO.
Michaelson's
For Men's Good Heavy Winter
Undearwer.
10c for Boys' and Girls' best
20c Hose.
10c for Misses' and Children's
35c Velvet House Slippers.
10c for Gilt Edge best 25c
Shoe Dressing.
15c for best 25c Silk Neck-
wear.
98c for Boys' and Girls' best
$1.50 Shoes.
And hundreds of other barga-
gins equally as attractive.
19c
For Boys' and Girls' 39c Wool
Fleeced Shirts and Drawers.
1510 Larimer Street
Straighten Your Hair
Dear SIRs,—I have used only one bottle of your pomade and now I would not be without it, for mold makes my hair soft and straight and it is so much better than normal. Mrs. W. F. WALKER, Sta. I- Hartman, Tenn.
Ford's Hair Pomade
(Formely known Ozonicred On Marrow)
Fifty years of success has proved its merits. The use of Ford's Hair Pomade makes subburn, harsh, kinky or curly-hair straight, soft and glossy and easy to comb, and arrange in a manner that is easy to maintain. Removes and prevents dandruff, invigorates the scalp, stops the hair from falling out or breaking off and gives it new life and vigor. So absolutely harmless, uses a spub splendid results. It is also the perfect child's perfume. Delicately perfumes its use, is a pleasure, as ladies of refinement everywhere declare.
Ford's Hair Pomade has its limitations. Don't be anything allowed to do just as lengthy. If you want the best results, buy the best Pomade—it will pay on. Look for this name
Nut Cakes.
Three pounds of sugar, half a pound of butter, one pound of finely-chopped almonds, grated rind of one lemon, three pounds of flour. Drop in pans, a teaspoonful for a cake, and bake in moderate oven.
SNUG AND WARM One of those new Auto-Style Coats will certainly protect you, and style that's just ahead of the next.
A FULL LINE OF CHOICE
OVERCOATS
$15 to $35
Better see them early while the lines are most complete.
THE
Johnson
1005 16TH ST.
CARSON CR
The only exclusive
retail house in De-
sale purchases ena-
which we always
customers. Our h
large and we ha
the prices rather t
goods and use the
gladly reserve any
ceipt of small c
spection solicited.
closest buyers.
THE CARSON C
Phone 8128
THE
Johnson-Noe
205 16TH ST.
OPP. TABOR C
CARSON CROCKERY
The only exclusive wholesale and retail house in Denver. Our wholesale purchases enables us to get price which we always share with our customers. Our holiday stock is the large and we have decided to treat the prices rather than carry over the goods and use the banks. We will gladly reserve any selection on receipt of small deposit. Early inspection solicited. Prices to suit the closest buyers.
THE CARSON CROCKERY CO.
Phone 8128 15th and Stout S
THE Johnson-Noel C 1005 16TH ST. OPP. TABOR GRAND.
CARSON CROCKERY CO.
The only exclusive wholesale and retail house in Denver. Our wholesale purchases enables us to get prices which we always share with our customers. Our holiday stock is too large and we have decided to trim the prices rather than carry over the goods and use the banks. We will gladly reserve any selection on receipt of small deposit. Early inspection solicited. Prices to suit the closest buyers. THE CARSON CROCKERY CO. Phone 8128 15th and Stout Sts.
Eye
8 inch. Cut Glass
THE
Cut Glass Bowls
Calumet Social Club
"FATTY" PINN, PROP.
A First-Class Resort.
ELEGANTLY FURNISHED.
Our Reading Room Comprise
all the latest Papers, Books
and Magazines.
MAURICE R. ORMAN.
MANAGER.
ALEXANDER DUKES.
MIXOLOGIST.
2149 CURTIS STREET.
PHONE MAIN 8232.
Denver. Colorado.
TELEPHONE 2978.
Jake Be
Nothing bu
312-318 Fifth
Opposite the
Wholesale and Retail Dealer
FINE WINES, LIQUORS AND C
Macklem
Colorado. "FATTY"
NE 2978.
"CAMP"
"JAKE"
"VALLE"
Jake Berkowitz
Nothing but the Best
312-318 Fifteenth Street
Opposite the Court House.
esale and Retail Dealer in
JES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS DENVER,
Wholesale and Retail Dealer in DELICATESEN. FINE WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS DENVER, COLORADO.
At All Grocers
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THE
CLIPPING HIGHT
1908 BY
ROBERTS
WICKER LO.
OFFICE, N.Y.
Noel Co.
OPP. TABOR GRAND.
ROCKERY CO.
we wholesale and
over. Our whole-
les us to get prices
share with our
holiday stock is too
be decided to trim
can carry over the
banks. We will
selection on re-
posit. Early in-
Prices to suit the
ROCKERY CO.
5th and Stout Sts.
Bowls $30ea.
HISTORY
"FATTY" PINN.
Kowitz
at the Best
enth Street
court House.
DELICATESSEN.
GARS. DENVER, COLORADO.
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"CAMP BIRD."
"JAKE'S BEST."
"VALLEJO CLUB."
When you want a fine High Grade Cigar
Smoke "Old Nobility"
3 for 25c. 10c and 2 for 25c 10 Sizes The Bxter Cigar Con Denver.
B xter Cigar Compa
Denver.
Main 2408 Railroad Bu
DID YOU EVER TRY
Beef Bros.' Bee
's made right, and tastes right
None better made anywhere and
is a Strictly Colorado Product
DID YOU
Neef Bro
It's made right,
None better m
This is a Strictly
It's made right, and tastes right. None better made anywhere and This is a Strictly Colorado Production BE SURE AN TRY IT.
M. B.
JAS F. CLARK
Superior Laure
ALL HAND WO
J. W. CASEY, Prop
Telephone 2133
1735 Lawrence St.
Main 2393
J. J. H
BOND'S PLACE.
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BOND'S PLACE.
Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars
1763 Curtis St
Phone Main 7413 Wines, Liquors
THE NEWPORT SALO
in 7413 Wines, Liquors
THE NEWPORT SALO
1763 Curtis St Denver, Colo
Phone Main 7413 Wines, Liquors and Cigars
THE NEWPORT SALOON
DICK FRAZIER AND TOM LEWIS PROPRIETORS A First-Class Resort For Gentlemen
LADIES' AND GENT'S CLOTHING . CLEANED AND REPAIRED . C. HILSMAN, THE TA
HILSMAN, THE TAIL
C. HILSMAN. THE TAILOR
A Full Line of New and Misfit Clothing for Sale Cheap.
Ahoe St. De
Campbell Bro
Staple Groceries
and Fresh Meats
54 Curtis Street, corner Nineteen
Campb
Staple
and Fre
1864 Curtis Street
1864 Curtis Street, corner Nineteenth
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Phone Main 2408
Telephone Main 2393
1914 Arapahoe St.
PHONE 3028 MAIN.
Company,
Railroad Building
R TRY
Beer?
astes right.
anywhere and
do Production
IT.
THE
WO JIM'S
SCIAL CLUB
VER'S FAVORITE
ASURE RESORT.
ool, Chess, Checkers and
other Pastime Games.
ONE 2275 MAIN
Impa St. Denver, Colo.
rior Laundry
L HAND WORK.
L. CASEY, Proprietor.
Telephone 2132.
Lawrence St. Denver
J. J. Bond, Prop
ACE.
Denver, Colo
Vines, Liquors and Cigars
SALOON
esort
en
Denver, Colo
E TAILOR
Bros.
eries
Meats
er Nineteenth
DENVER, COLORADO.
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Denver, Colo
COLORADO OFFICIAL ELECTION RETURNS
Following are the official returns, on the offices named, of the election in Colorado November 3d in the fifty-eight counties outside of Denver. These figures show that, unless radical changes are made in the Denver vote by the official canvass, the entire Democratic ticket is elected, from the presidential electors to the university regents and including the three congressmen. In many instances the vote will be extremely close; in others the Democratic candidates will go into office with comfortable majorities. With but one or two exceptions the Republican candidates came to Denver with a plurality. The Democratic landslide in Denver, however, was so great as to offset this lead and there is now no doubt as to the successful candidates.
Bryan's plurality in Denver on the face of the unofficial returns is 3,307. If this is not changed by the official canvass his plurality in Colorado will be 3,190.
Shafroth's plurality in Denver on the face of the unofficial returns is 7,452. If this is not changed by the official canvass his plurality in the entire state will be 115.
Taylor's plurality in Denver on the face of the unofficial returns is 7,679. If this is not changed by the official canvass his plurality in the entire state will be 5,233.
JUSTICES OF THE SUPREME COURT.
Six-year Term
Goddard, Musser, Hel
Rep. Dem. Re.
*Adams ..... 1,498 1,351 1,44
Arapahoe ..... 489 487 4
Archuleta ..... 299 173 4
Baca ..... 838 845 8
Bent ..... 838 845 8
Boulder ..... 4,844 5,754 4,8
Chaffee ..... 1,224 1,684 1,2
Cheyenne ..... 444 328 4
George Creek ..... 835 1,661 8
Conejos ..... 1,635 1,134 1,6
Costilla ..... 1,047 556 1,0
Custer ..... 502 550 1,0
Delta ..... 1,736 2,088 1,7
Bender ..... 1,736 2,088 1,7
Dolores ..... 64 180
Douglas ..... 783 619 7
Eagle ..... 530 828 7
Ebert ..... 964 168 10
El Paso ..... 7,302 6,752 7,7
Fremont ..... 3,063 3,207 3,6
Garfield ..... 1,534 1,886 1,5
Gilpin ..... 822 1,204 8
Grand ..... 495 168 10
Gunnison ..... 898 1,473 8
Hinsdale ..... 159 224 1
Huerfano ..... 3,074 757 1
Jefferson ..... 2,752 2,676 2,5
Kiowa ..... 470 408 1
Kit Carson ..... 974 750 9
Lake ..... 1,940 2,633 1,3
La Plata ..... 1,490 1,738 1,2
Limer ..... 4,509 3,620 4,4
Limer ..... 5,683 4,211 5,6
Lincoln ..... 778 590 7
Logan ..... 1,044 1,044 7
Mike ..... 3,041 2,652 3,1
Mineral ..... 218 477 3
Montezuma ..... 419 477 4
Montrose ..... 1,185 1,435 1,1
Morgan ..... 1,185 1,435 1,1
Olero ..... 3,192 3,607 3,6
Ouray ..... 541 1,074 5
Park ..... 472 701 4
Phillips ..... 514 404 4
Pike ..... 514 321 1,1
Prowers ..... 1,415 1,019 1,4
Pueblo ..... 7,143 8,314 7,3
Rio Blanco ..... 384 457 1,1
Rio Grande ..... 119 119 1,1
Rock ..... 1,136 1,368 1,1
Saguache ..... 818 818 8
San Juan ..... 551 782 5
San Miguel ..... 877 925 5
Sedgwick ..... 929 929 5
Snuntuit ..... 377 727 3
Teller ..... 2,991 4,321 3
Washington ..... 596 418 5
Weld ..... 5,620 4,614 5,5
Yuma ..... 1,032 1,182 1,0
Totals ..... 90,822 92,285 90,9
Musser's plurality, 2,462
Hill plurality, 2,462
White's plurality, 87
King's plurality, 1,244
*Vote on supreme judges not yet sent
The plurality of Missouri, Hill, Wh
the unofficial count are 7,670, 6,840, 6,9
ures are not changed by the official co
will be: Musser, 10,032; Hill, 7,200; Wh
*Vote on supreme judges not yet canvassed in Adams county.
The pluralities of Musser, Hill, White and Bailey in Denver on the face of the tie are not changed by the official count their pluralities in the entire state will be: Musser, 10.033; Hill, 7.200; White, 7.022, and Bailey, 4.847.
Henrylyn Tract Extended.
Denver.—Directors of the Henrylyn irrigation district have decided to extend the boundaries of the district to include Kiowa and Corona flats, on the line of the Burlington. This will make the Henrylyn district practically adjoin the Fort Morgan district, and will constitute, when the irrigation plans are carried out, the largest continuous body of irrigated land in Colorado—a distance of more than 100 miles, from Denver to a point twelve miles beyond Brush.
According to the Henrylyn people
---
Tenn. Hill. Maxwell White Bailey Dem. Rep. Dem. Rep. Dem. Dem.
199. 1,352 1,495 1,353 1,510 1,344
177. 485 484 481 488 487
172. 838 838 842 896 851
163. 5,618 4,837 5,619 4,900 5,678
163. 1,670 1,214 1,671 1,115 1,182
160. 329 440 324 444 429
149. 1,116 1,629 1,115 1,616 1,157
147. 555 1,044 555 1,046 557
147. 549 502 545 477 577
147. 2,027 1,733 2,040 1,778 2,096
132. 181 64 186 66 177
132. 181 776 620 782 625
131. 811 529 814 538 813
130. 739 974 784 838 838
106. 5,884 7,824 5,895 7,891 6,086
106. 3,122 3,044 3,193 2,677 3,610
104. 1,845 1,507 1,848 1,529 1,858
103. 1,508 1,492 1,494 1,494 1,508
108. 508 492 508 494
188. 1,455 879 1,454 877 1,472
188. 220 158 220 159 122
188. 751 90.81 750 750 856
187. 2,001 2,662 2,609 2,570 2,564
175. 401 450 472 470
170. 721 978 740 986 742
160. 2,589 9,147 9,602 1,957 1,618
167. 2,001 2,662 2,609 2,570 2,564
160. 419. 5,680 4,177 5,701 3,690
163. 561 771 571 797 550
163. 946 951 951 1,478 1,438
162. 2,755 3,100 2,700 3,137 2,750
120. 475 216 438 213 480
120. 437 442 438 452 496
148. 1,455 1,164 1,426 1,190 1,452
148. 3,474 3,107 3,663 3,229 3,173
140. 1,060 547 1,062 542 1,077
140. 798 468 795 464 1074
102. 391 502 385 384 399
102. 394 502 385 384 399
108. 986 1,408 1,985 1,436 1,001
160. 8,104 7,181 7,922 7,222 8,244
160. 452 377 455 386 459
124. 1,356 1,121 1,360 1,124 1,368
124. 805 832 807 821 814
146. 777 547 779 551 766
178. 914 870 920 885 822
163. 924 545 543 542 543
167. 728 364 370 368 834
14. 2,260 7,013 4,264 4,274 3,950
179. 430 575 414 593 417
179. 430 575 414 593 417
14. 1,184 1,016 1,167 1,037 1,176
182. 91,103 90,743 90,830 92,652 91,408
Counties. Dem. Rep.
Adams 1,239 1,291
Arapahoe 1,348 1,505
Boulder 5,623 4,973
Denver
Jefferson 2,611 2,597
Lakota 2,744 1,574
Lulmer 3,521 4,642
Logan 959 1,046
Morgan 1,189 1,720
Park 794 482
Phillips 395 514
Seattle 275 547
Washington 414 600
Weld 4,502 5,730
Yuma 1,167 1,042
Totals 26,616 28,682
Bonynge's plurality, 2,066.
Rucker's plurality in Denver on the face of the unofficial returns is 4,724. If this is not changed by the official canvass his plurality in the First district will be 2,655.
the dismissal of the suit of the Middle Park Land and Livestock Co., against the Intermountain Water Co., frees the water rights on Williams Fork and allows tae Henrylyn to proceed with its project of bringing the water from the other side of the range.
Omelich Wins by Two Votes.
St. Louis, Mo.—Jacob F. Omelich, Republican, defeated William Painter, Democrat, for the office of lieutenant governor of Missouri by the narrow margin of two votes, according to the official count.
For a good drink of whisky,
A fresh glass of beer
All you dry ones please come here.
JOE BERGER Will Serve You
AT
24th and Larimer Streets.
Scholl's Modern
Hand Laundry
1841 ARAPAHOE-PHONE 817
and work in the city.
2317-19 Larime
DAY AND NIGHT.
PHONE MAIN
COTTRELL'S PHARMACY
TLED GOODS—WHISKEY, WINES, BEER, ETC., A SPECIAL
Pure Drugs, Hot and Cold Drinks, Toilet Articles and
Cigars. Prescriptions carefully compounded by a Regis-
tered Pharmacist. Prompt delivery to any part of the City.
DR. W. J. COTTRELL & D. J. COTTRELL.
RAPAHOE ST.
DENVER, CO
PHONE MAIN 3725
Q. J. GILMORE, F. D.
UNDERTAKER and EMBALMER
(LICENSE NO. 334)
SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO SANITATION
AND DISINFECTION.
Carriages Furnished for all Occasions.
pahoe St.
Denver, C
When you Want
Heads, Feet, Tails, Snouts, Ears, Neckbones or Chitterlings or
other part of the hog except the squeal go to
Cast's Market
6 Larimer Street.
Phone 1461
Denver Barber's Supply
1008 FIFTEENTH STREET, DENVER, COLO.
MURRAY & EDWARDS, Proprietors.
THE PULLMAN POOL ROOM
WILBUR MACY, Manager.
Convenient Place to Have Your Mail Direct
Finest Equipped Pool and Club Rooms West of Mississippi R
Drop In and See Us.
Just Around the Corner from the Union Depot.
WAZEE STREET.
PHONE MAIN
DENVER, COLO.
"Columbine"
ZANG'S
New Table Beer
Is a special Brew for Family use
DENVER'S LEADING BRAND OF BOTTLED BEER
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT. PHONE MAIN 3230.
COTTRELL'S PHARMACY
BOTTLED GOODS—WHISKEY, WINES, BEER, ETC., A SPECIALTY
Pure Drugs, Hot and Cold Drinks, Toilet Articles and
Cigars. Prescriptions carefully compounded by a Regis-
tered Pharmacist. Prompt delivery to any part of the City.
DR. W. J. COTTRELL & D. J. COTTRELL.
2100 ARAPAHOE ST. DENVER, COLO.
Q. J. GILMORE, F. D. UNDERTAKER and EMBALMER (LICENSE NO. 334) SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO SANITATION AND DISINFECTION. Carriages Furnished for all Occasions.
The Heads, Feet, Tails, Snouts, Ears, Neckbones or Chitterlings or any.
other part of the hog except the squeal go to
The Denver Barber's Supply C.
1008 FIFTEENTH STREET, DENVER, COLO.
THE PULLMAN POOL ROOM
WILBUR MACY, Manager.
A Convenient Place to Have Your Mail Directed
The Finest Equipped Pool and Club Rooms West of Mississippi River.
Drop In and See Us.
Just Around the Corner from the Union Depot.
1628 WAZEE STREET. PHONE MAIN 6128.
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 per Delivered Daily to all parts of the city
The Ph. Zang Brewing Co. Producers Fresh Bear Delivered Daily to all parts of the city
Cerve You
2317-19 Larimer Stree
PHONE MAIN 3230.
ARMACY
ETC., A SPECIALTY
Set Articles and
ed by a Regis-
part of the City.
ATTRELL.
DENVER, COLO.
F. D.
BALMER
SANITATION
F. C.
occasions.
Denver, Colorado
Want
or Chitterlings or any.
neal go to
Market
Phone 1461 Main.
Supply CO.
INVER, COLO.
Detectors.
L ROOM
For Mail Directed
at of Mississippi River.
Station Depot.
PHONE MAIN 6128.
ine"
ing Co.
P
ti
¢ N
\ 4 ‘
I . . " a
,
Mr. William F. Vahiberg, Oklahoma
City, Okla., writes:
“One bottle of Peruna which I have
taken did more toward relieving me of
an aggravated case of catarrh of the
stomach, than years of treatment with
the best physicians.
“Thad given up hopes of relief, and
only tried Peruna as a lust resort.
“T shall continue using it, as I feel
satisfied it will effect an entire and
permanent cure.
“I most cheerfully recommend Peruna
to all who may read this.”
Peruna is usualy taken asa last re-
sort. Doctors have been tried and
failel. Other remedies have been used,
Sanitariums have been visited. Travel
has been resorted to.
At last Peruna is tried. Relief is
found.
‘This history is repeated over and
over again, every day in the year. It is
such results as this that gives Peruna
its unassaiiable hold upon the people.
We could say nothing that would add
force to such testimonials as the above.
That people who have had eatarrh and
have tried every other remedy avail-
able, find relief in Peruna, constitutes
the best argument that could be made.
ONE CALAMITY NOT FORESEEN.
And That, of Course, Was the One
That Actually Occurred.
‘Mrs. Silas Bennett was a philoso-
pher. On a certain dismal occasion
some of the neighboring women were
condoling with her. With commenda-
ble cheerfulness, says a writer in the
New York Times, she replied:
“T'vo raised four girls an’ three boys,
expectin’ every time they'd be twins
and red-headed like their Grandpa
Bennett, an’ yot they ain't.
“An’ I've worried consid’ble over
Maitvox breakin’ out in my big fam-
fly. So far, ‘tain't.
“Last summer, durin’ July an’ Au-
gust, an’ mebbe part of September, I
‘was real meloncholic, fearin’ I'd got
an appendix; but I guess I ain't,
“An’ through it all, it never occurred
fo me that I'd be the one to fall
through them rotten old meetin’ house
steps an’ break my leg in two places,
but I be.”—Youth’s Companion.
NO SKIN LEFT ON BODY.
For Six Months Baby Was Expected
to Die with Eczema—Now Well
—Doctor Said to Use Cuticura.
“Six months after birth my little girl
broke out with eczema and I had two
doctors in attendance. There was not
a particle of skin left on her body, the
blood oozed out just anywhere, and we
had to wrap her in silk and carry her
on a pillow for ten weeks, She was the
most terrible sight I ever saw, and for
six months I looked for her to die, I
used every known remedy to allevi-
ate her suffering, for it was terrible
to witness. Dr. C—— gave her up. Dr.
B— recommended the Cuticura
Remedies. She will soon be three
years old and has never had a sign
of the dread trouble since. We used
about eight cakes of Cuticura Soap
and three boxes of Cuticura Ointment.
James J. Smith, Durmid, Va., Oct. 14
(pad 22, 1906"
An Autocrat.
'" «po you think that the people ought
to rule?” asked the patriot.
“Don’t ask me,” answered the nerv-
ous man. “I’m prejudiced against the
idea. I'm a baseball umpire.”
Panorama Headaches.
Caused by constant shifting of the
gaze, as by moving picture shows, trav-
eling in rapidly moving conveyances,
and the like may be greatly relieved by
external application to the eyes of Dr.
Mitchell’s Eye Salve, It strengthens
the eyes and takes away that burning
sensation. Automobilists use Mitchell's
Bye Salve. For sale everywhere. 25.
Good Stunt.
“How do you preserve your teeth so
beautifully?”
“I never buy any tooth powder from
a dentist.”—Cleveland Leader.
_
fim D Y OS
Y- DODDS
( ae
ST ee NNN A
Mi TSO
Ning: ERE Se agi
Uy ee
Re Y
THE OTHER SIDE OF THE
SMELTER PROBLEM
The General Manager of the Smelting Company
Answers Recent Criticisms
| During the recent political campaign
the Denver Post made the American
Smelting & Refining Company its “par-
amount issue.” That publication has
been criticizing the company since the
election and on Noy. Sth published a
Jong statement against the conduct of
that company toward Colorado's min-
ing industry. Franklin Guiterman, gen-
eral superintendent of the company for
Colorado, has written the following
answer, which we reproduce in order
that our readers may understand both
sides of this controversy:
“Denver, Colo., Noy. 9, 1908.—(To
the Denver Post)—In the article of
Gen, Frank Hall in the Post of Nov. 8,
we have at last something tangible to
deal with, to which such brief answer
can be made as may be of interest to
the public. For the first time we have
an admission that the statements made
by the Post during the recent political
campaign were not true.
“Gen. Hall prefaces his article by
the declaration that an attempt should
be made to bring about more satisfac-
tory relations between the smelting
company and its patrons. The smelt
ing company is not and has not been
aware of the existence of any such
friction as is claimed by the Post. If
it were so, would the calculated dis-
semination of untruths by that paper
tend to bring about a better feeling?
“Gen. Hall says that the financial
convulsion beginning in October, 1907,
well nigh paralyzed the mining dis-
tricts. This is a true statement, but
was the American Smelting & Refining
Company responsible for such unfortu-
nate conditions?
“Why should the discontent (7?)
which followed the panic haye found
expression in furious diatribes against
the smelter if such a state of feeling
| were not fostered by those who had
their own private ends to serve in cre-
| ating such unjust sentiments?
“If Gen. Hall does not know it, he
could easily have ascertained that in
the dire situation which confronted the
Colorado ore producers, the smelting
company stepped right into the breach
by modifying the existing contracts in
favor of the producers as it had done
time and again previously, and still
further reduced treatment charges on
such other ores as could not be pro-
duced under previous terms, whether
under contract or not.
“Gen. Hall correctly states some un-
just things were said and done. He
might, in truth, have said a great
many, but where have we found any
correction of the unjust and slander-
ous statements?
“Gen. Hall says that if the capital
stock of the company were reduced,
the producer of ore would receive bet-
| ter rates and conveys the impression
that these charges are extortionate be-
cause of the necessity for the continua.
tion of dividends on closed plants. Can
Gen. Hall point to a single instance
where treatment charges have been
raised on account of the closure of any
plant in Colorado, which is practically
the only field where smelters have
been closed by the development of un-
fortunate mining conditions?
“Does not Gen. Hall know full well
that notwithstanding the closure of @
number of plants of the American
Smelting & Refining Company in Colo-
rado, smelting rates have been unin-
terruptedly reduced on all classes of
those ores whose value, by reason of
failing metal prices, became so low as
to necessitate such assistance? If he
does not, let him make inquiry of the
representative mining men of Colorado
in all mining districts. The policy of
the American Smelting & Refining
Company has been open, consistent
and helpful, and cam stand the most
searching investigation and criticism
of all fair minded men.
“In the matter of contracts, the ore
producers are and have been free
agents to make them or not. The sched-
ules are no different than they were
| when the smelters were in open com-
petition. Can a single instance be
given where a producer has been
forced to sign a contract? If it is true,
‘as lias been repeatedly stated by Gen.
Hall, that competing smelters now of-
fer better rates than the American
Smelting & Refining Company on some
classes of ores, does this not prove
conclusively that the American Smelt
ing & Refining Company has no mon-
opoly, and that the ore producer is not
at a disadvantage?
“At Cripple Creek there are now two
sampling companies and they mutually
agreed upon sampling charges years
ago. The American Smelting & Re-
fining Company has absolutely no con-
nection or interest in either concern.
In Clear Creek, Gilpin and Boulder
The Lion's Roar.
Tho dawn is the time when Hons
roar most. They occasionally give
tongue when actually hunting, often
after feeding. The sound varies with
the age and lung power of the animal,
and has many gradations, sometimes
sounding as though the pain of doing
lt at all hurt the throat; sometimes
the sound comes in great abrupt
coughs, and again one hears even
triumphant roars.—From “Two Di-
avas in Somaliland.”
Pere ap eee Nees ROR. ne POLE Oe SE neten
concerns have started sampling works
at Georgetown, Central City and Boul-
der, but have not ben able to continue
on account of lack of ore production.
The field is certainly an open one for
anybody desiring to engage In that
line of business.
“The statement has been made by
the undersigned that the American
Smelting & Refining Company is not
and has not been in politics. This is
absolutely true, In one county in the
state where the company has been bit-
terly assailed and most unjustly dis-
eriminated against in the matter of
tax assessments, it has felt constrained
to put a few facts before the public,
but it has never at any of its places of
operation proposed any person as a
candidate for any political office, nor
has it been politically active in any
way in the aid of any candidates for of-
fice.
“Senator Guggenheim has repeatedly
declared his connection with the Amer-
ican Smelting & Refining Company, ex-
ecutive and financial, has been severed.
As far as the undersigned knows, this
is also absolutely true.
“The Guggenheim Exploration Com-
pany has also nothing to do with the
American Smelting & Refining Com-
pany affairs, excepting in so far as any
ore produced by the former is smelted
at the latter's plants, The Guggenheim
Exploration company has spent many
hundreds of thousands of dollars in
Colorado in the prosecution of mining
enterprises. Gen, Hall suggests that
because of an unfavorable financial
outcome of these ventures in Colorado
the American Smelting & Refining
Company uas imposed additional
charges on the other mine operators
of the state. He wishes to know
whether it is unfair to make such a
suggestion, It is not only grossly un-
fair, it is outrageous and indecent. Can
Gen. Hall cite a single instance in war-
rant of his suggestion?
“Had Gen. Hall desired to do so, he
could have had all of the facts bearing
on smelting charges and ore conditions
before the publication of the Post ar-
ticles which seem to have been actu-
ated by political malice and sinister
motives rather than by a degire to pub-
lish the truth,
“Had he so desired he could have
made the fullest investigation and all
of the facts would haye been gladly
presented to him, for the American
Smelting & Refining Company has
nothing to conceal and nothing to mis:
represent.
“The, recent vilification in the Post
has not and cannot harm the smelting
company in the least, for it had already
suffered a severe blow in its Colorado
interests by the decadence of Colorado
mining camps. It has, however, great-
ly injured the state by directing forcl-
ble attention to the fact that the Amer-
ican Smelting & Refining Company has
been obliged to close a number of its
plants, and many inquiries which are
being now made as the result of those
untrue charges will reveal the fact that
the curtailment of the ore production
in Colorado is not and has not been
due to the levying of unjust and bur-
densome treatment charges, but to the
exhaustion of many minestwhich once
ranking as prolific producers of good
grade ore now are entirely depleted or
contain only mineral too low in-value
to be mined and smelted under govern-
ing metal prices. Finally, there is the
failure to discover new mining camps.
“In drawing the public’s attention to
this deplorable condition, the Post
must assume the full responsibility of
the result of its misguided course,
which can only reflect itself in driving
away from Colorado capital for mining
investments which otherwise might
have come here.
“As for the smelting company, it will
continue in the future the course which
has characterized its policy in the past,
namely to so act as to aid and stimy-
| late the mining industry of Colorado to
its utmost, and to retain that respect
and confidence of its patrons which {t
has secured by fair and just dealings.
With this declaration the undersigned
must beg to be relieved from further
newspaper controversy for which he
has neither time nor inclination. He
is most ready at all times, however, as
he always has been, to discuss in his
office with any ore shippers, business
of mutual interest.
“FRANKLIN GUITERMAN,
“General Manager Colorado Depart:
ment.”
Then and Now.
Her Grandsire, many years ago,
Came over in the steerage,
And with the money he acquired
She got into the peerage.
—Chicago News,
Many a man’s dog can give him les:
sons in fidelity and integrity,
‘Tobacco Grewing In Ireland.
Tobacco was successfully grown un-
der government supervision in Ireland
last year; but as the crop has not yet
been marketed, the financial result
will not be known for some time.
Japanese Timepieces.
Japan has 32 timepiece factories,
which turn out annually goods valued
at nearly $800,000, the latest figures
being 209,792 standing clocks, 441,755
hanging clocks and 25,360 watches.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
Gotoe more poodsbrihter and {aster 02a naa ane eee Cale Ae OTE tN ae ee toe, ,toocan doe
‘TO CURE A COUGH
Or Break a Cold in 24 Hours
Mix two ounces of Glycerine and a
half ounce of Virgin Oil of Pine com.
pound pure with a half pint of Straight
Whisky. Shake well and take a tea
spoonful every four hours.
The genuine Virgin Oil of Pine com-
pound pure is prepared only by The
Leach Chemical Co., Cincinnati, Ohio,
and is put up only in half-ounce vials,
each vial securely sealed in a round
wooden case to insure its freshness
and purity.
AND THE CAT LAUGHED,
i (i 5
iy
i)
> ae
ae a ee
Be Va
e
Dae
ae) <5
Nokes
She—John, dear, the doctor says I
need a change of climate.
Her Husband—all right, the weath-
er man says it will be colder to-
morrow. sei a
ONE KIDNEY GONE
But Cured After Doctors Said There
Was No Hope.
Sylvanus 0. Verrill, Milford, Me.,
says: “Five years ago a bad injury
bs paralyzed"me and
Z 2 affected my kid-
yy neys. My back hurt
A me terribly, and
oT 85 the urine was bad-
Vad, Oh ly disordered. Doc-
ee tors said my right
“A A kidney was practi-
ig (AA #7/ cally dead. They
Mf ZB" said t could never
Zo REET SCe, TO. Ene.
Z affected my kid-
yy neys. My back hurt
A me terribly, and
oP. 3 the urine was bad-
Piney ly disordered. Doc-
oe tors said my right
o uf > kidney was practi-
| OZ 77 cally dead. They
“Mg 72 said I could never
ee walk again Tread
of Doan’s Kidney Pills and began us-
ing them. One box made me stronger
and freer from pain. I kept on using
them and in three months was able to
get out on crutches, and the kidneys
were acting better. I improved rap-
idly, discarded the crutches and to
the wonder of my friends was soon
completely cured.”
Sold by all dealers. 60 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co,, Buffalo, N. Y.
Alwavs Exciting.
“I visited E. R. Thomas and found
him doing well after his motor acci-
dent,” said a member of the Automo-
bile Club of America. “Thomas, as
usual, railed against our bad roads.
“He said that a friend who lived in
the.country had been in to see him,
“The country is all right in the sum-
mer,” Thomas admitted, “but in the
fall and winter don't you find it dull?”
“Dull?” said the other. ‘No, in-
deed. Why, out our way some motor
car or other gets stuck in the mud
every night.’"—Philadelphia Bulle-
tin,
SATE oF Omto Crt oF T0:2D0, |
‘Lucas County. i
Fuank J. Cizxzr makes oath that ho 19 senio
porter of tno. of Bd. “Ghaer & Cox ots
wsinesa In “the ‘City. of ‘Toledo, County and. State
Soreaaid. and tat said firm wil! pay” the mum
ONE HUNDRED. DOLLATS” for exen’ aud every
fase of Carariit that eaanot be cured by the ue
iata’s Catamut Cone
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed In my presence,
thin" Ue day of December, A. Da, 1586.
—— A.W. GLEASON,
{sect ‘Noranr Peptic,
Haire Catarm Cure ts taken tnternally and act
aurelly upon ‘the oieed and mucous wartuce ot the
frotem: ‘Bend for testimonials: fre.
J. CHENEY & CO,, Toledo, 0.
Sold by all Drusitait, $s
‘Tako 2iall's Family Pils for constipation
A Terror to His Kind.
A certain congressman is the father
of a bright lad of ten, who persists, de-
spite the parental objection and de-
cree, in reading literature of the “half-
dime” variety.
“That's a nice way to be spending
your time,” said the father on one oc-
casion, “What's your ambition, any-
how?”
“Dad,” responded the youngster,
with a’smile, “I'd like to have people
tremble like aspen leaves at the mere
mention of my name."—Lippincott's.
Perfect Philosophy.
We -read of a certain Roman em-
peror who built a magnificent palace.
In digging the foundation the work-
men discovered a golden sarcophagus
ornamented with three circlets, on
which were inscribed: “I have expend-
ed; I have given; I have kept; I have
possessed; I do possess; I have lost;
Iam punished. What I formerly ex-
pended I have; what I gave away, I
have."—From the Gesta Romanorum,
Realism.
Stage Manager—I wish we could
work in a few more realistic touches
in this woodland scene. Now, how
would it be to have some one growl
Uke a bear?
Author—The very thing! We'll call
in the critics!—Harper's Weekly.
whe Real Blase.
First Amateur Fisherman—Where
1s really the best place to get the
best trout?
Second Ditto (confidentially)—In
any first-class fish market.—Baltimore
American,
The St. Anthony chapel car which
recently finished a long tour through
Wisconsin and Minnesota, has had a
prosperous week in Philadelphia.
Between being held up and blown
up, the average married man has a
strenuous time of it.
Cae eet
NS :
hy }
a
Re Joo Drops
i) =I 7 For Infants and Children,
© | BS iia The Kind You Have
p20 remem
fT canon core ways bought
We || ANegetable Preparation for As-
hS\g| similating the Food and Regula-
4 ting the Stomachs and. Bowls of Bears the ‘.
See ok An .
a imei) Cea Signature
ir|| Promotes Digestion,Cheerful-
ey | ness and Rest. Contains neither of
R? || Gpium, Morphine nor Mineral }
m) || Nor NARCOTIC
RS |) Aejpeo/ td DrSAMUELPTTEMER p
Ray || Aavehin Seed -
Rll FaekelloSets -
Me ||| paced e
| eee In
Mikel] Gantind Sugar
HY) Winkrgreen Favor:
4g & eon aaa PES,
1$5)| A perfect Remedy for Constipa- a |]
oil sorte ens ace $8
f3)| Worms Convulsions .Feverish-
RC ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. For Over
PU Fac Simile Signature of
Ri Bt fia. Th . Y
ES) sue cesrain Coma irty Tears
He NEW_YORK.
a At6monthsveld «|
Xs BS Balai —35 GENTS |
Guaranteed under the Foodan)
Exact Copy of Wrapper. {THe cenTaun company, new vonn orry.
Bnl2.1:S,OnuxS
CHRONIC CHEST COMPLAINTS
FJ of the most serious character have been permanently cured with Piso's [NG]
Req Cure. Coughs, colds, hoarseness, bronchitis and asthma quickly respond
Eq to its healing influence. If you have a cough or cold, if you are hoes [ed
or have difficulty with your breathing, get a bottle of Piso's Cure, Imme-
Hfp) iste benefit follows the frst doce. ‘Continued we generally brings cou
ESq] plc reli. For neal half century Piso's Cure has been demonatating
thatthe most advanced forms of cougls, colds and chronic cheat complains,
CAN BE CURED
PAMPERED.
Mrs. Newrich—Will your hounds fol-
low a fox?
Newrich—Why—er—I think they
would if the fox was dic:sed and
cooked. habs Let
An Intelligent Child.
A small boy was playing with the
scissors, and his kindly old grand
mother chided him.
“You musn't play with the scissors
dear. I know a little boy like you whe
was playing with a pair of scissors
just like that pair, and he put them in
his eye and put his eye out, and he
could never see anything after that.’
The child listened patiently, and
said, when she got through the nar
rative:
“What was the matter with bi
| other eye?”—Bystander.
ie ier sc einse: are ber ak
At auctions in London during the
last half of 1997 there were catalogued
for sale 19,742 skins of birds of para-
dise, nearly 115,000 white heron
plumes and a vast number of the
skins and plumes of many other birds
of beautiful plumage, including alba-
tross quills and the tails of the lyre
bird. fi eer Sete ea
Money Expended on Schools.
Last year New York city spent $33,-
000,000 on its public schools; Chicago,
$23,000,000; Boston more than $10,-
000,000; Philadelphia a little more
than $6,000,000. Though Philadelphia
4s the third city in population in the
United States, it stood thirty-fourth in
per capita expenditure on schools.
As Yale Sees It.
Tanke—It must be great to be a
Harvard man.
‘Styne—Why so?
“The streets up there are so crooked
that people can’t tell whether you're
walking straight or not."—Yale Reo
ord,
Pettit’s Eye Salve for 25c.
Relieves tired, congested, inflamed and
sore eyes, quickly stops eye aches. All
druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y.
It is more from carelessness about
truth than from intentional lying that
there is so much falsehood in the
world.—Dr. Johnson.
ee wea eet aah
or mare techn. eattne the gaa; resent
Te ee eee tener
How we dislike to accept a favor
from a person we dislike!
er B Seishin a ea ese a
free trial package, -A.S. Olmsted. La Huy, N.Y
Anacharsis: Laws catch flies and
Jet hornets go free.
Syrup shi
: yy rup FT iss
: Elixie?Senna
eanses the System Effect-
ually Deerels Cee
aclies due to Constipation;
Hele ae acts truly as
| Bet bli Child
ren-Young an .
Tek te Hengical Effects
Always buy the Genuine which
has the fll name of the Com
ee
CALIFORNIA
Hic Srrup Co.
by whom jtismanufactured printed on the
on iD BYALL LEADING CSS
- =— Positively cured by
CARTERS these Little Pills.
‘Thay slay selleve Dee
PTTLE | ysosieemrsrersns te
BIVER Ea ine. agentes sel
AY PILLS. |oc2. “Drowsinean Baa
Ei Taste inthe Month, Comt-
Sige, For Liviek.
They regulate the Howels: ‘Purely Vegetable:
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
r Genuine Must Bea
Ti
ie na
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
of this paper de-
Readers ‘sti
ISedisa sig colicaea uhwoalA uaa geen
having what they ask for, refusing all
subfitutes or imitations,
ad PARKER'S
Pec HAIR BALSAM
ESOP Ad esses meses sia
a a Repeats sate deer
Qe a cay Siesca hae log:
Pas ad reba'e taba bros
c For {amons and detirious
CANDY log wholesale tall
212 State Street, Chicago, Mt
TENTS sks
PATENTS ec
see asecuse | Thompson’s Eye Water
W. N. U.. DENVER, NO. 48, 1908,
Is Now Prepared To Do
All Kinds of Job Printing?
Commercial. Fraternal. Church, Book and Stationery Jobs a Specialty
BALL AND CONCERT PROGRAMS, BILL AND LETTER HEADS, OALLING CARDS, WEDDING CARDS, ENVELOPES AND EVERYTHING IN THE PRINTING LINE TURNED OUT IN NEATEST STYLE PROMPTLY ON SHORT NOTICE
We have supplied our office with job press and type of up-to-date style and our work will be on a par with the Very Best Give Us a Trial and We will Give You Satisfaction
PRICES AS REASONABLE AS
THOSE OF ANY JOB OFFICE
IN DENVER.
The Colorado
Statesman
1824 CURTIS STREET
ROOM 25.
IN VOGUE
HOODS AGAIN SEEN
REVIVAL OF A QUAINT AND PRETTY FASHION.
Charming Head Coverings, Discarded for More Than a Generation, Are
There was never anything created for woman's wear in which a pretty woman looked more piquant and bewitching than in a hood of becoming type, and we have too long overlooked the opportunities for dainty coquetry that lurk in the folds of the capuchon, but now, thanks to the motor, the hood is in fashion.
All of the famous Parisian milliners are catering to the new fad and turning out delectable models whose va-
riety and originality are surprising in view of the somewhat narrow limitations of line and idea.
Moreover the liking for hoods which started first with practical fur and cloth headgear for winter motoring and developed into coquettish and elaborate head covering for wear with evening dress in open or closed cars has spread far beyond its original field.
WEAR WAISTS OF CREPE.
Garment Stylish in Either White or Colored Goods.
Smart women are wearing good-looking waists of white and colored Japanese crepe, which washes as well as linen. This fabric is much in style. It has a little crinkle in it that is attractive, and it is a pleasant relief from the usual lingerie fabric.
Although white waists with coat suits are not quite as fashionable as colored ones, they will still be worn in the mornings in the house and for shopping and will look pretty, too.
The Japanese crepe waists are far preferable to those of muslin or linen. They give a new touch to the costume.
They are embroidered in Japanese designs of apple, chrysanthemum, wistaria and vines.
Some of them are trimmed with a tiny edge of cluny outlining half-inch flat tucks. There is a boned stock to match and a plaited cavat in front of the material edged with quarter-inch cluny lace.
These are not lined, although they are quite sheer. If a woman feels the cold in thin waists during the autumn and winter she should have china slips made of white and pastel colors to wear under them.
The Feather Turban
Some of the best shops are offering the pin-feather turban as a fashionable hat. Women insisted upon it, and it promises to be the smart thing. It is worn for street, for windy days and all kinds of occasions when a large hat is neither fit nor becoming. It is built in an oblong shape, but made wide at the sides by small birds and wings. It has no bandeau and comes well down over the hair. It is in smoked gray, iridescent blue and shaded peacock green. All iridescent effects are good in turbans, as on large hats. A fish-net veil is always worn with them. It is folded around the neck under the chin, securely pinned at back and then drawn up to top of turban, where it is again fastened and the ends securely tucked away.
Placing an Ostrich Feather.
The quilts of plumage do not show this season. Because of the fondness for marabou, the plumes now start off from a little bed of it. The marabou is made into a fluffy rosette and is laid all over the quill part of the feather. It is a good trick and one that should be followed.
Taffeta is used more often than any other material for the making of the modish evening hood, very soft taffeta of course, without crispness, though with a certain body which the big hood needs. Liberty satin, too, is used for lovely models, and occasionally one sees a model of transparent mousseline or net or lace over a silken foundation.
Silk velling, too, is a hood material, and one of the prettiest models was in voile de sole ciel, with a little puffing bordered by cords of ciel taffeta and a frill of lace framing the face while on the middle front just inside the lace frill was posed a garland of tiny pink roses and foliage. This same model we have seen in rose pink taffeta and in a delicate lilac taffeta.
A hood of this type should surely not be a difficult problem for clever brains and fingers, and for that matter a majority of the models are not particularly complicated in construction, requiring taste and ingenuity rather than expert workmanship.
A wide puff of cream net bordered on each side by a line of tiny roses or rosebuds and a single or double frill of lace make a good finish for one of the voluminous hoods of taffeta or liberty. Sometimes the frills are of silk musselline or chiffon rather than of lace, and perhaps the outer frill matches the hood in color while the frill next the hair and face is white. Narrow black lace and knots of black velvet trim one hood of straw colored silk, and velvet loops and bows finish the front of another silk model which has only a narrow bordering frill of lace around the face but a deep capelike frill of lace around the neck. A majority of the hoods have some sort of cape finish, more or less shallow, and some have long scarfs of the hood material cut in one with the body of the hood.
Two veils, one falling in front and one behind, are adjusted to most of the poke and coal scuttle motor bonnets, and the neutral and medium tints are usually chosen, the fashionable smoke and taupe grays being especially popular. Other small, close fitting bonnets have veils draped round them and falling at the back in two long scarfs, which may be adjusted and manipulated as the wearer may choose.
Half bonnet, half hood are certain motor toques in moussine de soie on the order of the taupe one pictured here, with wide, low draped crown, soft frills falling over the hair and long scarfs brought forward from sides and back.
Contrivance of Great Utility for the Hours of Night.
This novel little holder for a watch is intended for hanging upon the wall by the side of a bed, and into which a watch may be slipped at night-time, and be easily seen when required.
A piece of stout cardboard of the shape shown should be used for the
SIX
foundation, and in the center a circular hole cut to fit the watch it is intended for. The cardboard can be covered with any pretty piece of silk or brocade on which has been worked some pretty little floral design. It is entirely edged with cord, and there is a loop at the top by which it may be hung upon the wall. At the back of the circular space, cut in the center, is sewn a small pocket of wash leather, into which the watch may be placed; the lower sketch of the back view explains this.
Glove Fastenings for Dresses
The patent fasteners from wormout and discarded gloves may be utilized by cutting them from the gloves, leaving enough of the kid attached to be fastened on skirt bands and plackets. These can be sewed on by machine under a fly flap and they will last longer than buttons or hooks and eyes. These make ideal fasteners for belts.
S&N
GARMENT STORE
925-16TH ST. OPP, JOSLINS
A November Sale of Ready-to-Wear Garments
A November Sale of Ready-to-Wear Garments
All Ladies Suits Are Now on Sale at Prices Fully
One-Fourth Less Than They Were a Month ago
$15.00 and $17.50 Suits now on sale for.....$12.75
$20.00 and $22.50 Suits now on sale for.....16.75
$25.00 Suits now on sale for.....19.75
$30.00 and $35.00 Suits now on sale for.....25.00
Black, Navy, Green, Brown and Gray in the line and good assortment of sizes.
$9.95 for full satin lined black coats, 50 inches long, elaborately trimmed with soutache braid, went $13.75.
$12.50 for fine Kersey cloth Princess coats, 54 inches long, half lined with satin, neatly trimmed with satin straps, a good $17.50 garment.
See our Directoire, Princes, semi and tight-fitting Coats, at $15.00,
$20.00 and $22.50.
FURS, SKIRTS, SILK AND COTTON PETTICOATS AND WAISTS CAN BE BOUGHT HERE AT LOWER PRICES THAN ANYWHERE ELSE IN DENVER.
THE HOWLAND
FUR SALE
The Oldest and Largest Fur and
Millinery Store in Denver. You
Are Never Dissappointed When
You Buy Here. ∴ ∴ ∴
The Howland Millinery Co.
16th St. Opposite Daniels & Fisher
This is BETTER than Post coal and COSTS 45 cents Less PER TON
JOHN BURTON
107
The Best Equipped Pleasure Resort in the West
Jess Smith, Mgr.
1821 Arapahoe St., Denver, Colo.
FINE FURS
Fair Prices, Best Work, Fine Materials, Correct Styles. You can ask no more and we give you no less at the
Youmans Fur Co.,
422 Fifteenth St.
A Little Trouble to Make, But Delicious When Finished.
Four pounds of flour, three pints milk and water, one-half ounce of salt, 1¾ ounces fresh compressed yeast. Place the flour in the bread bowl and in it put the milk, water and salt. Mix with the liquid enough of the flour to make it a thin batter, next rub the yeast to powder between the hands and mix into batter. Cover the bowl closely and let it stand three-quarters of an hour. At the end of that time mix in the rest of the floor smoothly and let the dough thus made stand again closely covered 2½ hours until it is light and elastic. Then cut into pound pieces and each pound into 12 parts. Flatten these small pieces of dough in squares three-quarters of an inch thick, fold their corners to the center, pinch them to hold down and turn the little rolls thus made over on a board covered with a cloth. Let them stand ten minutes, turn up again on a baking sheet and put them into a hot oven to bake quickly for about 15 minutes. When half done brush them with milk, return to the oven and finish baking them. It is a little trouble but they are delicious when done.
The Home.
Cold cereals can be fried the same as mush; serve with gravy.
Nickel may be kept bright by being rubbed with wool saturated in ammonia.
Kid shoes may be kept soft and free from cracks by rubbing them once a week with a little pure glycerin or castor oil.
When brushing a room sweep toward the fireplace, otherwise the draft from the chimney draws the dust in that direction.
Table or any other linen that is stained with raw egg should be well soaked in cold water first, as the hot water would set the egg.
It is said that syrup or cream will not drop from a pitcher on the table-cloth if the nose of the pitcher is rubbed with butter.
Pickled Red Cabbage.
Take off the outside leaves of a nice red cabbage, cut in quarters, remove the stalks and cut it across in very thin slices. Lay these on a dish, strew them plentifully with salt and cover with another dish. Let them remain 24 hours, turn into a colander to drain, and if necessary wipe lightly with a cloth. Put them in a jar and boil up the vinegar and spices, and when cold pour over the cabbage. Tie down with bladder and keep in a dry, cool place. It will be fit for use in a week or two. For one head of cabbage I take one quart vinegar, one half ounce ginger root, one ounce whole black pepper and, if you like, a dash of cayenne. The pickle will be much more crisp if the frost has touched the leaves.
Almond Delight Ple.
Make a rich pastry and fill with the following mixture: Blanch and chop fine one cupful of almonds. Put one cupful of granulated sugar moistened with one teaspoonful of water into a frying pan. Place over a slow fire until melted, then add the chopped almonds stirring briskly until the mixture turns a golden brown. Turn this out on the crust in the pan and spread quickly before it cools. Beat three eggs, add two tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar and one and one-half cupfuls of milk, pour over the almonds and bake in a hot oven at first. Cover with a meringue of the white of egg and two tablespoonfuls of sugar.
Chestnuts with Apples in Salad.
Chestnuts with Apples in Salad.
The chestnuts in market now make a delicious salad with apples and celery. The domestic kind will do, but are more work than the large imported ones. Score shells of the nuts and scald them so that the shell and skin will come off easily. Then boil in salted water until they are tender. If the large chestnuts are employed cut them in three pieces; use the small ones whole. Mix the nuts with an equal quantity of diced apples and celery and dress with mayonnaise. The chestnuts and apples are tasty without the celery. Either the apples or nuts are delicious alone, as a salad.
French Soup.
To one quart of milk add, when boiling, about five boiled Irish potatoes, rubbed through a sieve, by which a paste is made, when the milk and potatoes have boiled up once add three well beaten eggs and a piece of butter the size of an egg. If it boils after the eggs are added it is apt to curdle; stir it round till it is well mixed, and serve it up.
Apples and Onions.
There is a new luncheon dish which calls for fried apples and onions served with bacon. The apples are sliced round, without peeling, and the peeled onion is added, thinly sliced. These are fried together. The bacon is fried to a crisp brown and served with the others.
Smooth Jelly.
To prevent the gritty substance forming in grape jelly, preserves, etc., to one gallon of the fruit when hot add one teaspoonful of soda when a green scum arises which you skim off and it does away with all grit.
Tripe a la Lyons
Cut into strips a pound of boiled tripe. Fry in butter with two large onions sliced, pepper, salt and minced parsley to season. When brown add a tablespoonful of vinegar. Serve with lynnaise potatoes.