Colorado Statesman
Saturday, April 17, 1909
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
RACE COUNTRY PARTY
WASHING
Army of American Citizens March
Week. Delegation of Colored
with the President. United
gave a Concert in Con
Vernon Visits
WASHINGTON LETTER
Army of American Citizens Marched to the Executive Mansion last Week. Delegation of Colored Men from the South talks with the President. United States Contabulary Band gave a Concert in Convention Hall. Register Vernon Visits New York.
BY JAMES CUBERT CAMPBELL
Some statistician with a good and mature working imagination has figured out picturesquely, last week's march on the White House. He tells us that the army of American citizens which made its way to the Executive Mansion during last week, if thrown out in a single file line, would reach all way across the District—imagine this. In this great lineup, as there is in everything else in this country, there was a large sprinkling of colored citizens. Anciently all roads may have led to Rome, but during these times all roads for the office seeker lead to the White House and many of Africa's sons there are who may be found plodding it. Delegation after delegation of colored men, principally from the south, came last week to talk to the President. All seemed to be desirous of having a more definite knowledge of what his southern policy really is with respect to them. On Thursday Mississippi's colored sons, ten or fifteen strong, headed by Mr. C. W. Banks, Mr. I. T. Montgomery, and Mr. Wesley Crayton, made their way into the White House's inner court where they were received cordially by His Excollency. Whatever may have been their ideas of William Howard Taft and his policies before they went in, it is certain that they were well pleased, all of them when they came out. Speaking of their talk to the President, some of them expressed themselves as being very much pleased with what the President said to them. 'It is plainly evident, said one of the gentlemen, that the President has unbounded confidence and respect for the opinions and advice of Dr. Washington. Through out the entire conference with us Mr. Taft repeatedly referred to Dr. Washington in the most exalted terms, saying that the colored people of Mississippi and their marvelous progress along the lines of industry and commercial advancement had often been pointed out to him by Mr. Washington. The Mississippi delegation left Thursday night for New York and other points in the North. Another visit to the White House by a colored man which probably had more or less significance was that
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VOL. XV.
of Mr. Douglas Wetmore, of New York. Mr. Wetmore arrived in the city on Saturday and, in company with Representative Bennett of New York City and a white gentleman, whose name could not be learned called on the President in the afternoon. The purpose of this visit of Mr. Wetmore's could not be definitely ascertained, but it is rumored that he was there in the interest of his candidacy for the Liberian Commission. A vacancy on this commission was occasioned some days ago by the recognition of Hon. Robert C. Ogden, and it is presumed among politicians that Mr. Wetmore is seeking to be appointed in his stead.
In connection with Liberian Commission it has been reported from an authoritative source that the Commission would probably be able to start for their field of labor about the 15th instant. There is however, considerable speculation as to who the third Commissioner is to be as his name has not been made public yet. The Commission will proceed from here to Gibralter where they will board a United States gunboat and complete the travel in this manner.
The United States Constabulary Band, headed by Capt. Walter Lovering, a colored man of unusual musical ability, arrived at Fort Meyer during last week, and on Friday evening gave a concert in Convention hall in this city.
Hon. W. T. Vernon, Register of the Treasury, went to New York Sunday afternoon for a stay of three or four days. The visit of Mr. Vernon to Gotham at this time is said to be purely one of business.
Cheyenne, Wyo., April 14. The garrison at Fort Russell is to be increased to 3,000 men early next month by the arrival of the Ninth cavalry, colored, and two batteries of field artillery. Work on new buildings at the post is being rushed, but despite this proposed addition to the quarters it is probable the Negroes will be compelled to camp out the entire summer.
DENVER, COLORADO, SATURDAY, APRIL 17, 1909.
State Hist & Nat Hist Society
State House
tronizing Th
RADO
THE JOURNAL
DENVER, COLORADO,
RACE NEWS GATHERED FROM VARIOUS SOURCES
Birmingham, Ala., April 6.—A new bank has been organized in this city called the Prudential Savings Bank, with a capital stock of $25,000. Dr. U. G. Mason is chairman and Mr. W. W. Hadnott, secretary. The organization of this second bank in Birmingham shows that the Negroes of Alabama are wide awake and are making progress.
Chicago, April 4.—Edward Allen of this city, has been appointed to the position of manager of colored business for the North American Accident Insurance Company of Chicago. Mr. Allen was born in 1876 at 18 Page street, Chicago, and is a young man of Sterling qualities. He is also considered by the leading white insurance companies of today as the expert colored insurance man of the United States, having won several prizes.
Columbus, Ohio, April 8.—Probate Judge Samuel L. Black received a Black Hand warning today against issuing marriage licenses to blacks and whites. The messages came in the form of a rope with a note attached, left hanging on the knob of his office door. Dire vengeance is uttered. The courts have practically decided that Willis Marcand, colored, aged 34, in the real estate business can marry. Stella Cunningham, aged 21, a white waitress.
Birmingham, Ala., April 5. The Galilean Fishermen, a colored benevolent and secret society, of which Dr. C. C. Stewart is manager, with headquarters at 2305 Second avenue, has purchased 2,100 acres of rich farming land near Collinene, Lowndes County, for the purpose of establishing a large normal and industrial school for Negroes. The property was purchased for $30,000 from Enos R. Stewaet, of Birmingham, son of Judge Stewart, of Marion.
tay of
visit of
this one
14.—I is to
early of the
two
Work
is be-
pros it is
the com-
sum-
Roanoke, Va.,—The largest colored funeral ever held in Roanoke took place today over the body of Charles A. Robinson, a letter carrier in the Roanoke postoffice, and his two children, who lost their lives in a fire that destroyed a stable on the Robinson premises. Many prominent white citizens attended the services, and Postmaster L. G. Funkhcuses, from the pulpit paid the dead carrier high tribute. He said Robinson's record for efficiency on file in the department at Washington is 100 per cent, he not having received a single demerit in fifteen years' service.
Washington, April 6.—Dr. Geo. Sale, of Georgia, has been appointed a member of the commission which is shortly to go to Liberia to make an investigation of the conditions. Dr. Sale takes the place made vacant by Robert Ogden, of New York, although he does not succeed Mr. Ogden as chairman, that position going to W. Morgan Shuster, of the District of Columbia. The third member of the commission is Emmett J. Scott, of Alabama. The selection of Dr. Sale was announced today. He is superintendent of the Baptist Home Mission of Negro Schools.
Boston, Mass., April 6.—T. M. Gregory, '10, of Bordertown, N. J. Negro member of the Harvard debating team which won from Yale several days ago, is being congratulated by friends and admirers for his excellent work. The debate was held between the Harvard and Yale teams at Sanders' Theatre Cambridge. Harvard defended the negative side of the debate, the subject of which was "Resolved. That all corporations engaged in inter-state commerce be compelled to take out a Federal charter." The judges awarded the debate to Harvard for better resourcefulness of argument, for better command of the issue which were prominent in the discussion and for a more satisfactory remedy for all evils which are acknowledged to exist in the relations of corporations with State and Federal government.
ANOTHER NEGRO BURNED IN TEXAS
And so in Texas they have burnt another Negro. The press despatches tell us that one thousand savages stood by and watched while the flames swept over the hopeless, dcpraved, but brave
wretch who gave up his life to make a Texas holiday. It is wonderful to think of, strange, almost impossible to believe. This is Texas, this the twentieth century, and this was an assemblage of persons immensely flattered by being described as "civilized." And they burned at the stake a human being. One thousand persons, presumably with an admixture of women and children, stood by, watched the horror, gorged their savage instincts, sated their barbarous hates, fatted and regaled upon the sort of spectacle that pleased and edificed the wild and untamed Indian.
How discouraging it is! How hopeless it is—to think that we live in the same country with such people, to think—God forbid—that we may even have such people, to think—God forbid—that we may even have people about us. And yet, we—we poor hypocrites—are so good as to look with horror upon such foreign 'scum' as the Russians, the Turks, and to deplore the pillage and disorder that sometimes mark the affairs of their countries. We should hang our heads in shame. We have heard of no Russians burning a man to death at the stake. We have heard of no turbulent Turks straying so far from the dictates of mercy and humanity as to do such a deed.
Texas, Texas! Is no one to be punished for this crime against civilization and humanity?—Columbia, S. C., State.
EDITORS HAVE AN
EASY ROAD
There is no man in business today that has an easier time than an editor of a newspaper. All he has to do is to forecast the weather, answer questions about everything and everybody, be personally acquainted with every man, woman, child, cat and dog in the town, saw wood, beg for his subscription money, work night and day, be a social swell, abuse liquor praise the gambler, join clubs, subscribe to charity, wear diamonds and good clothes, overlook scandals, appraise babies, minister to the afflicted, pet the old maids and widows, tell them that they are handsome, take cursing and abuse and not resent it, set type, solicit adds and subscription, mold opinion, tell a girl that she is beautiful when she is uglier than home-made sin, sweep the office, be a ready stump speaker, speak in class meetings, take up the collection, praise the ministers, whether right or wrong, hold political meetings, organize literary societies, tell a fellow that he is a big man when he is a runt, and stand in with everybody by agreeing with everybody's opinion.—Portland Advocate.
NO. 30
WHAT THE NEGRO THINKS
There seems to be a growing conviction in the North that the solution of the race problem should be left to the South. Attending this settling conviction are the commercial and cowardly shirkings of the North of her responsibility as to how that problem is solved. Attending, also, that easing of the conscience of the North and the nation, is the utter disregard of what the Negro thinks about the settling of his status.
Therein the North does injustice to the Negro, and closes its eyes to Negro injustice. Therein the North may be sleeping over a sleeping volcano. Recognition of the fact that the Negro is not a negligible quantity in the solution of his own problem has recently come from a high and unexpected source, the president-elect of the University of South Carolina, Prof. C. S. Mitchell. Speaking before the Unitarian Club of Providence, on March 19th, he said:
"See what the Negro has done in forty years. At the time of the war the question was two-sided—what the North thought and what the South thought. Now it is triangular—what the North thinks, what the South thinks and what the Negro thinks."
Let also the timorous North recognize what the Negro thinks. The Negro knows he needs and is cultivating the friendship of his white Southern neighbors. By way of industrial school and industrial value, by way of moral and worth and economic wealth, he is committed to the working out of his own salvation. But working for industrial equality, he is not willing to wait for civil equality. Perhaps the most foolish statement put into the mouth of President Eliot during his Southern tour was that the Negro should wait five hundred or a thousand years before he would be qualified to hold office.
Now, the Negro does not think he should wait even five or ten years for such qualification. The Negro knows that, like his white neighbor, he has many men able to represent his race. The Negro does not think than he should form any such permanent political slave class in this Republic. He recognizes his inexperience and illiteracy, but he also sees the illiteracy and deprivacy of his white neighbors. He feels very keenly the unfitness of Southern whites to represent his citizenship. That mass of undismayed and progressing Southern Negroes want the friendship of their neighbors but they will accept in the end nothing less than justice from their neighbors.
Any abandonment by the North of the Negro to the caprices of Southern prejudice, and settlement of the Negro's affairs which does not reckon with what the Negro thinks as to that settlement, is a hazardous and temporary postponement of the issue. The Negro, too, is going to stand to be counted.—New York Age.
Nannie A. Jones, of Wichita, Kansas, has been awarded $400 damages. A suit was brought by her against the Wichita Amusement Park Company on the grounds that the company refused her admittance to the Wonderland Park because she was a Negro.
[Picture of a man with a long white beard and a white wig, wearing a black hat and a white shirt. The man is smiling and looking directly at the viewer. The background is black. The portrait is oval-shaped.]
GEN. BOOTH ON EIGHTIETH BIRTHDAY STARTS NEW PLAN
Veteran Founder of Salvation Army Launches Scheme for "University of Humanity" in the United States----All the World Celebrates Anniversary of His Birth.
New York.-Gen. William Booth, founder and commander-in-chief of the Salvation Army, celebrated his eight-leth birthday on Saturday, April 10, and the event was made the occasion of rejoicing all over the civilized world. The Army itself held big meetings in every city and town where it is established, and these were participated in by hundreds of thousands of other citizens who were glad to do honor to the distinguished philanthropist.
Gen. Booth himself presided over several monster mass meetings in London. His advanced age and the fact that he was operated on recently for cataract did not deter him from taking part in the celebrations held by his devoted soldiers.
University of Humanity Launched.
In America the day was marked especially by the launching of another of Gen. Booth's original schemes for social reform in the United States. At every post of the army was announced the beginning of work to found a University of Humanity, a great institution for the training of workers in social service. The university will be divided between New York and Chicago, and it is expected to begin with a fund of $1,000,000. The gathering of this fund is the work that the army now enters upon in commemoration of its famous leader's completion of his eightieth year.
As a much-needed stone in the great organizational structure that William Booth has been building during the past 47 years, this idea of a school for the systematic training of his workers has been in his mind for several years. On his last visit to the United States the general made his first tentative announcement of the plan. Since then he has worked out many of the details and he has just consented to the beginning of preliminary work in this country where the need for trained workers has been especially great.
Growth of Great System.
It is perhaps not generally realized that the whole intricate modern machinery of civilization for the uplifting of the submerged tenth, the vast system of charities now so essential a part of modern life, is to a very large extent an outgrowth of the Booth idea. He was the first to see that the unfortunate could best be reached by those who had suffered as they had, and that they must be reached by practical worldly help before they could be prepared to begin the cleaner life. It was the Salvation Army which first made a practical working success of this now familiar principle of so-called "missionary work."
This whole plan of campaign for raising the fallen began on a very simple scale in the poverty-stricken and crime-infested East end of London and under the impetus of William Booth's singular force of mind and personality and the momentum that it has gathered with almost miraculous rapidity it has developed into a truly astonishing organization.
Some of the departments of its work are: Prison-gate and Rescue, Inebriates' homes, Boys' and Girls' homes, Farm colonies, Emigration, Naval and Military homes, Maternity homes, nursing, Samaritan brigades, hospital and benevolent visitation, police court work and Indian school training.
No other religious organization in the world's history has branched out into so many departments of philanthropic effort and absorbed them as part of its religious duties.
Need of Trained Workers.
The scheme for a University of Humanity grew naturally out of the development of the 20 other departments. With a field as wide as the world itself the work of the Salvation Army is only limited by the number of workers that can be secured and its effectiveness by the understanding and earnestness of these workers. As uplift work has grown from local efforts to help a few into a great inclusive movement which must miss none, the problems of organization have grown greater. Charity has become a science and its application an art requiring the highest development of personal qualities of insight and altruism. There is thus pressing need for workers of quite exceptional qualification. These qualifications must first of all be inherent and must then be developed by experience and special training.
This is the new work planned by Gen. Booth. Those women, for instance, who are to go among the slums of the big cities must not only have the desire to help but must know how real helpfulness can best be secured. They must understand by a study of practical sociology something of the social forces that create this poverty and crime and wretchedness. They must understand the danger of the unwise charity that merely increases dependence and understand the value of better living conditions in raising the moral courage of those to whom fate has been unkind. They must be able not only to correct home conditions themselves but to impart their knowledge and to inspire with a desire for betterment.
Value of the Organization.
This will be but a small part of the university's training in social service as planned by the patriarchal evangelist, but it serves to show of what value such an organization will be.
Of the general's plan for the university he himself said recently: "I want to train men and women to deal with misfortune. I want them instructed to combat with the weaknesses and sins of the drunkard, the criminal, the pauper and the would-be suicide."
At 80 years of age the head of the Salvation Army, after more than half a century of almost unceasing activity, is as vigorous and untiring as at any time in his career. The inexhaustible vitality and intellectual and physical activity of this social reformer, philanthropist, preacher, author and traveler are marvelous. At fourscore he is traveling many thousands of miles
over the world every year, controlling the destinies of his more than 7,000 corps of Salvation soldiery with their 18,000 commissioned officers, distributed among every civilized country, preaching constantly to vast audiences and doing an amount of literary work that would be a facer to many a professional author with no other occupation.
William Booth was born on April 10, 1829, in Nottingham, England, and was trained for the Methodist ministry which he entered and became one of the strongest evangelistic forces in that church. He grew dissatisfied, however, at reaching only those with some religious training and conviction. He felt that there were thousands whose need was far greater and he gravitated to the East end of London where wretchedness of all kinds was the rule.
In a disused burial ground on Mile End road he pitched an old tent and the first Salvationist meeting was held in that tent in 1861. The fiery eloquence of the earnest young preacher caught the attention of a crowd of poor Whitechapelers and before that first meeting was over he had made several conversions, a performance that he has been repeating throughout the world for 47 years.
How He Started the Army.
This first meeting resulted in the formation of the Christian mission, from which it was the evangelist's custom to send his converts to the existing churches of the locality, but finding that they were not welcomed and were in danger of slipping back from sheer want of comradeship and oversight, he set about forming societies of the converted. These he found to be a potent agency for bringing in more, as the heedless East ender could be impressed by the words of a former "pal" when he would not listen to a minister. So was created the central idea of the Salvation Army.
The need of organization becomes apparent, but several methods were tried with little success before Gen. Booth hit upon the military idea and named his organization the Salvation Army. From that time on the movement grew amazingly and it has continued to grow without ceasing to this day.
Spread Over the World.
The movement began spreading to other countries of the world in 1881 when it first reached the United States through the influence of a silkweaver who had emigrated from Coventry, England, bringing with him the Salvation Army idea and a strong desire to continue in the work. It reached Australia in the same year through a milk dealer from Stepney, and soon afterwards the first Canadian corps was organized in a similar fashion.
Five years later, in 1886, the general made the first of many visits to the American branches of the army and he has seen them grow from a few small corps into a veritable army of tremendous influence and unsurpassed efficiency. His first great world-tour was made in 1891, when he visited South Africa, Australia and India. Since then he has visited the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and India four times, South Africa twice and Japan and the Holy Land each once.
During all these travels the actual executive responsibility for the government of the army has never been lifted from his shoulders. Even on shipboard he is an indefatigable worker, planning and writing through the days.
Gen. Booth Honored.
One of the most remarkable of the many tributes paid to the general by the great of the world was that of the mikado of Japan during the visit to that country. The mikado personally received the general with great warmth and he was accorded remarkable ovations in Yokohama, Tokyo, Sendai and Kyoto, a circumstance of strange import when it is realized that Japan is not a Christian country.
Another interesting distinction given Gen. Booth was the conferring on him of the degree of doctor of civil law by Oxford university. The significance of this honor will be better understood when it is stated those who received university honors with him at the time were Prince Arthur of Connaught, the prime minister of England, the lord chancellor, the speaker, Sir E. Grey, the archbishop of Armagh, Sir Evelyn Wood, the American ambassador, Mark Twain and Rudvard Kipling.
As a writer Gen. Booth is remarkable, both as a stylist, as a thinker and as a producer. He has written in all 21 volumes, besides innumerable articles for the army publications. His best known book is "In Darkest England and the Way Out," in which he outlined his scheme for social reform by means of colonization. "The Training of Children," "Love, Marriage and the Home," and his books on reform are among the others of the general's best known literary productions.
Writes of His Creed
Of his creed the general has written very beautifully. He says:
"The simplicity of our creed has been, as I believe it will remain, one of the principal helps to our unity. We stand for the old truths. The faith which can be interpreted in terms of duty, of unselfishness, of purity, of love to God and man, is the only faith we really care about. Whatever may be the case with the select minority, the consciousness of sin, the force of evil habit and the consciousness of sin and the influence of passion, are all vivid realities with the great masses of the population. To them we bring the promise of deliverance by Jesus Christ."
AGRICULTURAL BOARD MEETING
NEW PRESIDENT IS NOT YET AGREED UPON TO SUCCEED DOCTOR AYLESWORTH.
TWO NEW PROFESSORS
A. A. EDWARDS OF FORT COLLINS ELECTED PRESIDENT OF THE BOARD.
Denver.—A Republican special from Fort Collins Wednesday night says: Dr. Barton O. Aylesworth will remain president of the Colorado Agricultural College until the expiration of his term, August 31st, and possibly longer, at least until the new standing committee on faculty and courses of study to be appointed by A. A. Edwards, new president of the State Board of Agriculture, selects his successor. This committee will be asked to make a report May 15th, the next meeting of the board.
The selection of a successor to President Aylesworth is yet unsettled. There is still hope of securing James Wilson, secretary of agriculture, if the board feels that the matter can be left open until next fall. Failing this, Dr. W. M. Hays, assistant secretary of agriculture, is the strongest candidate for the place among the fifteen names in the possession of Franklin E. Brooks, chairman of the committee to secure a new president. Mr. Brooks reported at a meeting of the board tonight.
He said there were fifteen candidates, but the list had been cut down to seven possibilities. The strongest of these, he said, in their relative order are Doctor Hays, Eugene Davenport, dean of the agricultural department of the Illinois State University, and J. W. Waters, dean of the agricultural department of the University of Missouri.
Mr. Brooks said that Secretary Wilson had not said that he would not take the place, but told him on his recent visit to Washington, that he had better not consider his name. This is taken by Mr. Brooks as an indication that the secretary of agriculture might accept after September, when he acquires the honor of having been the member of the Cabinet longest in continuous service. Mr. Brooks then strongly recommended Doctor Hays, who he said, was willing to take the position, but who refused to be considered a candidate. He said Doctor Hays wouldn't come for less than $6,000 and if the place was offered to him he would take it. He told Mr. Brooks the work in Washington did not agree with him.
Under the new organization of the board there will be a new committee to consider Doctor Aylesworth's successor, but Mr. Brooks will be continued on it, consequently there is not likely to be any change in the situation.
President Edwards of the board said tonight that because of the great amount of work Mr. Brooks had done in this matter he would keep him on that committee. Edwards and Ammons will be on it.
Mr. Brooks recommended the appointment of G. Arthur Bell, assistant animal husbandry man in the bureau of animal industry at Washington, to take the place of Prof. W. L. Carlyle as dean of the agricultural department, and head of the horse breeding station. This is the position to which Prof. Carl W. Gay of the University of Pennsylvania was appointed by the old board at its June meeting. Mr. Brooks announced that Professor Gay had refused the place, probably because of the strife in the institution.
Professor Bell was recommended by Secretary Wilson. The board accepted the recommendation and filled the place by Mr. Bell's appointment. The board also endorsed the action of the old board in appointing Alvin Keyser of Nebraska to succeed Professor Olin as agronomist and ordered him to report for duty at once. When the board went into session this afternoon everything was harmonious. Immediately after the board was called to order a recess was taken to allow a caucus on the position of secretary to the board. The result was the election of Lathrop M. Taylor of Fort Collins as secretary in place of A. M. Hawley. Mr. Taylor has been with the college eighteen years and was secretary to President Aylesworth and to his predecessor, President Ellis.
In the organization of the new board Governor Shafroth presided and Capt. B. F. Rockafellow, president of the old board, who has backed President Aylesworth, nominated for head of the board A. A. Edwards of Fort Collins, who has been an opponent of President Aylesworth. The nomination was seconded by Governor Brush, who has also been an Aylesworth man. Senator Ammons, who has been in sympathy with the Carlyle faction, nominated for vice president, Gov. J. L. Brush, who was elected. George A. Webb of Fort Collins was elected treasurer. The board adjourned to May 15th.
The farmers living under the Holbrook canal north of La Junta have petitioned the county commissioners that an irrigation district be formed there. They want to buy the canal from the Holbrook heirs, build more reservoirs and enlarge the one already built from 15.00 to 20,000 acre-feet. The district will be bonded.
L. T. Davis will build the Davis reservoir east of Greeley. It will have a capacity of 4,500,000 cubic feet, draw water from the South Platte through the Fulton ditch and cost several thousands and dollars.
NO NEED TO TAKE CHANCES
There Is a Sure Way of Knowing Good Paint Material.
There is really no need whatever for any property owner to take chances in the selection of his paint materials. It doesn't cost a cent to learn how to be on the safe side. Certainly every property owner has enough at stake to find this out.
A complete painting guide, known as Houseowner's Painting Outfit No. 49, can be had free by writing National Lead Company, 1902 Trinity Building, New York. This company is the largest maker of pure white lead in the world. Its Dutch Boy Painter trademark is famous as a guarantee of purity and quality. The outfit includes a book of color schemes, for either interior or exterior painting, a book of specifications, and a simple little instrument, with directions for testing the purity of paint materials.
WHY. OF COURSE.
"Oh, Willie! You're going to fall!"
"Naw, I ain't! I'm tryin' a new fancy
style of skatin'-dat's all."
TOTAL LOSS OF HAIR
Seemed Imminent—Scalp Was Very Scaly and Hair Came Out by Handfuls—Scalp Now Clear and
New Hair Grown by Cuticura.
"About two years ago I was troubled with my head being scaly. Shortly after that I had an attack of typhoid fever and I was out of the hospital possibly two months when I first noticed the loss of hair, my scalp being still scaly. I started to use dandruff cures to no effect whatever. I had actually lost hope of saving any hair at all. I could brush it off my coat by the handful. I was afraid to comb it. But after using two cakes of Cuticura Soap and nearly a box of Cuticura Ointment, the change was surprising. My scalp is now clear and healthy as could be and my hair thicker than ever, whereas I had my mind made up to be bald. W. F. Steese, 5812 Broad St., Pittsburg, Penn., May 7 and 21, 1908."
Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props., Boston.
Her Answer.
An Atchison girl had a proposal of marriage Sunday night and asked a week to think it over. She went to all of her married sisters. One, who used to be a belle, had three children, did all her own work and hadn't been to the theater or out riding since she was married. Another, whose husband was a promising young man at the time she was married, was supporting him. A third didn't dare say her life was her own when her husband was around, and a fourth was divorced. After visiting them and hearing their woes, the heroine of this little tale went home, got pen, ink and paper and wrote an answer to the young man. You may think it was refusing him, but it wasn't. She said she could be ready in a month.—Atchison Globe.
Harris' Great Good Humor.
"No man ever maintained his life at a higher level of perpetual good humor," writes James W. Lee of Joel Chandler Harris in the Century. "The day before he died, when he was already beginning to pass into the dark valley of death, one of his sons came into the room and inquired: 'How are you this morning, father?' "Well," responded Mr. Harris, I am about the extent of a tenth of a gnat's eyebrow better."
Her Womanly Curlosity.
"I have put aside enough money," said the bachelor of 52, "to make it sure that I shall be decently buried without expense to the public." "Why," asked the malden who was verging on 35, "do you think you ought to have decent burial?"
SICK DOCTOR
Proper Food Put Him Right.
The food experience of a physician in his own case when worn and weak from sickness and when needing nourishment the worst way is valuable:
"An attack of grip, so severe it came near making an end of me, left my stomach in such condition I could not retain any ordinary food. I knew of course that I must have food nourishment or I could never recover.
"I began to take four tablespoonfuls of Grape-Nuts and cream three times a day and for 2 weeks this was almost my only food; it tasted so delicious that I enjoyed it immensely and my stomach handled it perfectly from the first mouthful. It was so nourishing I was quickly built back to normal health and strength.
"Grape-Nuts is of great value as food to sustain life during serious attacks in which the stomach is so deranged it cannot digest and assimilate other foods.
"I am convinced that were Grape-Nuts more widely used by physicians, it would save many lives that are otherwise lost from lack of nourishment." Absolutely the most perfect food in the world. Trial of Grape-Nuts 10 days proves. "There's a Reason." Look in pkg. for the little book, "The Road to Wellville." Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are accurate, true, and full of human interest.
DENVER DIRECTORY
$22 C. O. D.
You take no charge in buying a harness from us; even set wands to be as representable team harness complete and breechings. Concord sets 2-inch traces. For everywhere for $27.00. Send for free free free free in the U. S. The Fred Mueller Saddle & Harness Co., 1413-19 Larimer St., Denver, Colo.
BROWN PALACE HOTEL
Absolutely Proud-proof European Plan, $1.50 and Upward.
BON I. LOOK
Dealer in all kinds of MERCURY GUARANTEE PLAN MATERIAL mailed free. Cor. 16th and Blake, Denver.
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Call or write for appointment.
Examination Free.
DR. D. C. MATTHEWS,
929 17th St., Denver, Colo.
DO YOU REALIZE
That we are manufacuring for you, in Denver, best line of Farm Implements Made in States? Send for Catalogue and FREE Useful Souvenir.
THE PLATTNER IMPLEMENT CO., 15th & Wazee Sts., DENVER CO.
That we are manufacturing for you, in Denver, best line of Farm Implements Made in the United States? Send for Catalogue and FREE Useful Souvenir.
THE PLATINER IMPLEMENTO CO., 15th & Wazee Sts., DENVER COLO.
E. E. BURLINGAME & CO., ASSAY OFFICE AND CHEMICAL LABORATORY
Established in Colorado, 1866. Samples by mail or express will receive prompt and careful attention Gold & Silver Bullion Redefined and Assayed OR PURCHASED.
CONCENTRATION, AMALGAMATION AND
CYANIDE TESTS — 100 lbs. to carload lots.
Write for terms.
1736-1738 Lawrence St., Denver, Colo.
Mailed Free. Our New CATALOG Most Complete in Denver
Rugs, Linoleums, Portiers, Couch Covers; also Shades and Lace Curtains exclusively. Mall Orders flushed at Whelecule Prices.
HOLCOMB & HART L. & R. CO.
708 15th St., Denver Colo.
Our Pre-inventory Piano Sale is now on. This is the one big piano - selling event of the year, and if you hurry you may save as much as $150 to $250 on a piano; $250 to $300
on a
Pay cash or by the month, if you
like. Write at once for
full particu
ulars, stat-
ing which in
statement you
about what
price you want to pay and what
terms, and receive full details by
return mail. Instruments
sipped away on app-
proval. Write in the
Knight-Campbell Music Co.
1025-31 California St., Denver, Colo.
The West's Pioneer and Largest Music
House. Established 1874.
HOWARD E. BURTON, ASSAYER & CHEMIST
Specimen prices: Gold, silver, lead, $1; gold,
silver, $7c; gold, 50c; zinc or copper, $1;
argon, $10c; lead, $10c. Send on
application. Control and imprime work so
lited. Leadville, Colorado.
Pulp fed, good to choice. .5.25@5.00
Pulp fed, fair to good. .4.50@5.25
Pulp fed, fair to good. .4.50@5.25
Hav fed, fair to good. .4.00@5.10
Hav fed, medium to fair. .4.00@5.10
Hay fed, medium to fair. .4.50@5.10
**Cows and Heifers**
Pulp, fed, fair to choice. 4.25@4.75
Pulp, fed, fair to good. 3.50@4.20
Hay fed, good to choice. 4.00@4.85
Hay fed, fair to good. $3.50@4.00
Canners and stock cows. 2.00@2.25
Calves, veal, good to choice. 6.00@7.50
Calves, veal, fair to good. 5.00@7.50
Bulls. 2.75@3.75
Stags. 3.75@4.25
Grain.
Wheat, choice milling, per 100 lbs.,
$2.00. Rye, Colorado, bulk, per 100 lbs.,
10.00 Oats, bulk, Idaho No. 2, white,
$1.95. Oats, in sacks, $0.95. Noble oats,
oats, sacked, $1.90. Corn, in bulk,
$1.28. in sacks, $1.34. corn chop, sacked,
$1.35. Bran, Colorado, per 100 lbs.,
$1.35. Rolled oats, cwt, $1.78. Flaked
barley, cwt. $1.8.
**Hay.**
Upland, per ton. $14.50@15.50; second
bottom. $11.00@12.00; timothy.
$15.00@16.00; alfalfa. $11.50@12.50;
straw@$6.00@6.50; South Park wire
grass. $20.00@21.00.
**Dressed Poultry.**
Turkeys, fancy dry picked. 23
Turkeys, choice. 20 @21
Turkeys, medium 17 @18
Hens, fanny 16
Hens, choice 14
Hens, medium 12
Hens, culls 09 @10
Springs, lb. 22
Oaters 09
Ducks 16
Geees 13 @15
Live Poultry
Butter.
Eglin
Creameries, ox. Col. lb.
Creameries, ea. Felt. lb.
Creameries, 2d grade. lb.
Process and renovated. lb.
Packing stock
Eggs.
Eggs, case count= $5.62%.
Eggs, candled, case= $6.00.
H. L. KORTZ,
. Expert Watchmake, ..
. Jeweler and Optician .
Watches and Jewelery for Sale at Lowest Prices in the City.
All Work Guaranteed for Two Years.
Phone Main 5371.
805 FIFTEENTH STREET,
Denver. Colorado.
THE TIVOLL UNION BREWING CO.
MADISON, IL
Foli
DENVER, COLO
LUVSTRATORS
DESIGNERS
HALF-TONE,
ZINC WOOD &
COPPER-PLATE
ENGRAVERS
COMP WORK
THE DENVER
ENGRAVING CO.
DENVER
PHONE
782
1814 CURTIS STREET
GOOD
WORK
ON TIME
J. D. CRACO
N. M. CAMPIGLIA
J. D. CRACO
PHONE GALLUP 635
DIRECT IMPORTERB,
and Liquors for Medical Use Our Specialty.
WILLIAMSON
HAFFNER CO.
ENGRAVERS-PRINTERS
CUTS
CAULKS
DENVER, COLO.
Always Staunch And True
The Denver Republican has always avoided the fallacies and knaveries of yellow journalism, and its steadily increasing Circulation proves conclusively that its policy of telling the plain Truth without exaggeration or misrepresentation, standing fast for the Right, is heartily approved with growing force by the intelligent Public to which it appeals. To read it is a liberal Education, and the citizen who goes without it does a positive harm to himself, to his family, and to the community.
In no other way can the investment of 2½ cents per day for that is all The Republican costs any subscriber—bring such rich results in that Knowledge which is both Power and Pleasure. Information, instruction and entertainment fill its columns and it leaves a good taste in the mouth of the reader. It stands for Law and Order in the State—for Peace, Prosperity and Happiness in the Home. If you are not already enrolled among its splendid list of Patrons send on your subscription and give it a fair trial at 75 cents per month for Daily and Sunday.
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THE DENVER SAFE DEPOSIT CO.
DEN. J. W. DENVER
DENVER, COLO.
MOSES was the first journalist, because he wrote on the tablets of stone—but Noah went him one better and advertised. Noah built the ark and announced the day of sailing. He whooped 'er up lively and made great display. The non-believers scoffed at him and died in the wet water. Thus again did the man who advertised triumph.
The Denver Safe Deposit Co. cents boxes for $2.50 a year. Are you safe without one.
See's Great Future for Boston.
Judge Lloyd E. Chamberlain, president of the Massachusetts board of trade, in a speech recently declared that Boston could be made the leading commercial city of the world. "It is America's nearest seaport to Europe by 150 miles," he said, "and the possibility lies through the construction of an inland waterway from Abemarle, N. C., to Boston. To do this you must reopen and enlarge the Carroll-Alemarle canal, thus connecting the Chesapeake bay; reopen and enlarge the Delaware bay; reopen and enlarge the Delaware and Raritan canal, connecting with the Raritan bay. Then you may go across New York harbor, through Long Island sound, until you get to Narragansett bay. The last step is the construction of the Taunton river-Brocton Fore river-Quincy canal, and the problem is solved."
Houses Built of Meerschaum.
Houses Built of Meerschaum.
The town of Vallecas, Spain, is almost entirely built of meerschaum. Vallecas has on its outskirts great quarries of a meerschaum too coarse for pipe making, and a meerschaum-built town is the result—an ivory-white town that shines in the Spanish sun. In Morocco meerschaum is so plentiful that they use it, when soft and fresh, for soap. It gives a plentiful and cleansing lather. Ekdischehr, in Asla Minor, supplies the world's meerschaum. There are 2,000 mines, large and small, there, and 8,000 Kurd and Persian meerschaum miners work day and night in them. The meerschaum comes from the earth yellow, and turns white after ten days' bleaching in the sun.
Joseph H. Stuart
LAWYER
Practice in all courts. Examining
Abstract of Titles and Draw-
ing up Legal Instru-
ments Given Care-
ful Attention.
329 Kittredge Building
Phone: Olive 2294
Res.—527 26th street.
HERBERT'S
1519 CURTIS STREET
Ice Cream,
Ices, Candies
THE
Ward Auction Co
THE
The Old and Only.
1728-80 Arapahoe St.
Denver. Colorado.
Regular Sales every day in the week (except Sunday)
TELEPHONE 1675.
Furniture and bankrupt Stocks bought for cash or sold on commission.
Phones, Office Main 5595.
Residence, York 123.
Hours, 9 to 11 a. m. 1 to 4, 7 to 8 p. m.
Sundays, 10 to 11:30 a. m., 2 to 4 p. m.
Good Block-1557 Larimer St.
Residence 2280 Clarkson St
Denver, Colorado.
AN EPITOME OF LATE LIVE NEWS
CONDENSED RECORD OF THE PROGRESS OF EVENTS AT HOME AND ABROAD.
SAYINGS, DOINGS, ACHIEVE MENTS, SUFFERINGS, HOPES AND FEARS OF MANKIND.
WESTERN NEWS.
W. A. Harris, former United States senator for Kansas, has declined the position of president of the Colorado State Agricultural College. The Texas Legislature has passed the Robertson-FitzHugh bill to regulate the liquor traffic, the House concurring in the Senate amendments. Bishop John P. Carroll of the Catholic diocese at Helena, Mont., announces that the required fund of $500,000 for the erection of a cathedral at Helena has been raised. The highest price paid for cash wheat in St. Louis in thirty-one years was reported on the 14th inst., when sales of No. 2 red were made at $1.47 to $1.50. Governor Johnson of Minnesota has signed the anti-cigarette bill which makes it a misdemeanor to manufacture, sell or give away cigarettes or cigarette papers within the state.
Hogs reached the highest local market quotations since 1893 at the National stockyards in East St. Louis on the 13th inst. The best grades sold for $7.00 a hundred weight.
The Union National Bank of Oakland, Calif., closed its doors April 13th. There is due to depositors the sum of $538,000, which amount the bank officials are confident will be paid in full.
The official pathfinding car for the Glidden automobile tour, which starts from Detroit July 7th, left Detroit on the 12th inst. for Chicago, carrying D. H. Lewis of Buffalo, who will lay cut the tour.
More than 750 Des Moines, Ia., school children have signed a petition to Theodore Roosevelt asking him to change his mind and not kill defenses wild animals in Africa. Mrs. Elizabeth Baird, secretary of the Humane society, will send it to Mr. Roosevelt.
It has been given out by the district attorney's office at Muskogee, Okla., that the government has decided to abandon the prosecution of Gov. Chas. N. Haskell and six other prominent Oklahomans recently involved in the Muskogee town lot cases.
The District Court of Appeals at San Francisco has granted a new trial to Louis Glass, vice president of the Pacific States Telegraph & Telephone Company. Glass was the first man convicted in the bribery graft cases and was sentenced to five years in the penitentiary. He has been out on bail.
It is stated that an army balloon corps will be used during the maneuvers at Fort Des Moines Sept. 20th to 26th. The aeronaut drills will be under the direction of Captain Ouray and the equipment will include a dirigible balloon of latest model. Attacks upon an imaginary battleship will be made.
The Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company has applied to the Kansas railroad commission for permission to issue $73,000,000 common stock. The Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific railway also has asked permission to issue $220,000 refunding bonds to take up the Choctaw, Oklahoma & Gulf equipment trust bonds.
It is stated that an investigation conducted by the Des Moines Tubercular Association, at Des Moines, Ia., has resulted in the discovery that six out of every ten children examined are infected with tuberculosis. The majority of the cases are incipient, but in many the disease has progressed far. The association is considering establishing a children's tubercular camp this summer. It is proposed to isolate infected children to prevent further spread of the disease.
GENERAL NEWS
Former United States Senator M. C Butler died at Columbia, S. C., on the 14th inst.
The American League baseball season opened on the 12th inst. in Philadelphia and Washington.
The annual meeting of the State Fire Marshals' Association of America will be held at Louisville June 1st-3rd.
Judges Gray and Huffington in the United States Circuit Court at Philadelphia, have fixed June 1st next as the date when counsel representing the anthracite railroads and coal companies shall complete their testimony in the suit instituted against them by the government to dissolve the so-called coal trust.
A violent earthquake was experienced at Messina, Sicily, on the night of the 7th inst. It was accompanied by subterranean rumblings.
The Sultan of Turkey .as formed a new cabinet, appointing Tewfik Pasha grand vizier, Edhim Pasha minister of war, and confirming Zia Eddin Effendi as Sheik Ul Islam. The Socialists of Newark, N. J., are threatening to sue the Outlook for libel because of an article by Theodore Roosevelt criticising that party. The matter has been referred to the national committee.
Fire at Rochester, N. Y., on the 13th inst. destroyed property of the estimated value of $500,000.
A contingent of Indians and cowboys from the Dakota reservation has arrived in London to take part in the exhibitions next summer.
Harry Jansen of the Pastime Athletic Club, won a Marathon race at Celtic park, Long Island City on the 11th inst., in which seventeen amateurs competed. His time was 2:47:17.
The Pullman Manufacturing Company has 1,000 more men on its payrolls than at the low point last year. It has, however, 4,000 men less than at the high point prior to the financial depression.
It is reported at Gloucester, Mass., that President Taft and family will occupy a house at Manchester a part of the time during the coming summer, their arrival depending on the length of the present session.
Thomas A. Edison has been presented the Adelskold gold medal for his inventions in connection with the phonograph and the incandescent light by the Royal Academy at Stockholm. The medal is conferred only once in ten years.
Acting under orders from President Roosevelt, Victor D. Brenner of New York City, a sculptor-medallist, who designed the Roosevelt-Panama canal medals, has designed a head of President Lincoln, which will appear on the new pennies that are to be issued soon.
At the celebration of the eighteenth anniversary of the birth in New York of General William Booth, it was announced by Commissioner Thomas Estill of Chicago, that the founder of the Salvation Army is planning another trip throughout the United States and Canada next fall.
Turkish troops at Constantinople revolted on the 13th inst. and made a violent demonstration before the parliament building against the committee of union and progress. They were only appeased by the resignation of the grand vizier, Hilmi Pasha, and his cabinet, after which they cheered the Sultan.
The Cumard Steamship Company, like the German steamship lines, has suffered so heavily from the depression in the shipping trade that it will be unable to pay a dividend. The number of third-class passengers landed in the United States in 1908 was only 335,000, as compared with 1,116,000 in 1907.
The estimated loss by fire in the United States and Canada in the month of March, according to the compiler of the Journal of Commerce, aggregates $13,795,400, or about $3,000,000 less than for the corresponding month of last year. There were six fires causing an estimated loss of $200,000 or over in each instance.
The Alaska syndicate, composed of the Guggenheim interests and J. P. Morgan & Co., has bought the Bonanza mines in Alaska, said to be the richest copper deposits known. The price paid to the Alaska Copper and Coal Company is said to be nearly $3,000,000 less than that at which they were held before the recent depression in the copper trade.
At the seventh session of the International Railway Congress, held in Washington, D. C., in 1905, it was decided to hold the next session in Switzerland, provided the government of that country would give its consent. This formality having now been compiled with, it is officially announced that the next session will be held at Berne, Switzerland, Jluy 3-16-1910.
In the religious riot at Velardina, Mexico, thirty men were killed and many more injured. The parish priest led a procession for the annual burning of Judas, which had been prohibited by the authorities, and a thousand of his followers attacked the mayor and police who tried to stop them. Troops were called in and the priest arrested and placed in a hospital, being in a dying condition.
NEWS FROM WASHINGTON.
W. S. Hibbard of Denver has been appointed surveyor of mineral deposits and assigned to duty in the Denver land office.
President Taft has accepted an invitation to start the New York to Seattle automobile race for the Robert Guggenheim cup by pressing a button at the White House at noon on June 1st. When the signal is received in New York, Mayor McClellan of that city will fire a pistol to send the machines away on their long journey.
E. W. Merritt of the Chrome Iron Company, Denver, is in Washington seeking to have a duty of $4 per ton imposed upon chrome iron ores. The Chrome Iron Company is mining ores in Colorado and Wyoming from which the chrome iron is produced which is used in connection with the manufacture of armor plate. The ore is worth $10 to $20 per ton and is mined in competition with ores from Japan and Greece, which come in as ballast and are shipped as iron ore, paying a duty of 40 cents per ton.
The grassy slopes of the White House lawns were thronged with romping children for the Easter Monday egg rolling, a custom which has been handed down from generation to generation for scores of years. Under instructions from President Taft, children from all parts of Washington were permitted to run over every part of the spacious park in the rear of the executive mansion. President Taft has instructed Director North of the census bureau to disregard party lines in securing men for supervisors and other appointive places under the new census act.
W. H.
PHONE MAIN 3044.
The Pastime
SYL STEWART & RICHARD D
The Best Equipped
Resort in th
IT'8 80 DIFFERENT.
Pastime Club
ART & RICHARD D. PORTER, Props.
Equipped Pleasure
rt in the West
PHONE MAIN 3044. IT'S 80 DIFFERENT.
The Pastime Club
SYL STEWART & RICHARD D. PORTER, Props.
The Best Equipped Pleasure Resort in the West
ton H. U. Smith
Florist
GREENHOUSE S, 2961 LAWRENCE STREET.
Telephone Main 5386.
Thurston H. U Florist RESIDENCE AND GREENHOUSE S,
```markdown
```
Thurston H. U. Smith
RESIDENCE AND GREENHOUSE S. 2961 LAWRENCE STREET.
I use brains, tact and deliberation in the executing of wedding, party, dinner and reception decorations and in floral design and floral arrangements for funerals having had 18 years of experience in florist business.
Why don't you favor me with a trial order or a call.
THURSTON H. U. SMITH.
Specialties—Artistic Floral Designs for Lodges and Funerals; Cut Flowers for a token of your esteem to a sick friend; Palm Plants.
LARIMER CAR ONLY TO THIRTIETH ST.
RALPH COORS
C
DEN, COLORADO.
Know Dr. Dameron has reduced
his prices for all Dental Work?
h for $5.00; $10.00 Sets for $7.00; $15.00 Sets
s Only. $5.00 Gold Teeth, $4.00; Silver Fillings,
na, $1.00 up. Painless Extracting.
BANY DENTAL PARLORS.
ADOLPH C
GOLDEN, COL
MADE MAR
Do You Know Dr. I.
his pr
$7.00 Sets of Teeth for $5.00; $10.00
for $10.00; Gold Crowns Only. $5.00 Gold T
50c up. Gold and Platina, $1.00 up. Painter
ALBANY DENTAL PA
ADOLPH COORS
C
GOLDEN, COLORADO.
$7.00 Sets of Teeth for $5.00; $10.00 Sets for $7.00; $15.00 Sets for $10.00; Gold Crowns Only. $5.00 Gold Teeth, $4.00; Silver Fillings, 50c up. Gold and Platina, $1.00 up. Painless Extracting.
ALBANY DENTAL PARLORS.
Arapahoe Street opposite the Postoffice. DR. DAMERON, Proprietor.
Miss M. Cowden DR. J. H. P. WESTBRO
wden DR. J. H. P. WESTBROOK
Miss M. Cowden DR. J. H. P. WESTBROOK
Shampoo, cutting and curling.
Scalp treatment, hair tonics, hair
straightening, manicuring. Stage
wigs for rent; theatrical use and
masquerades.
Goods delivered out of the city.
All shades of hair matched by
sending a ssmple of hair; also
combings made up.
CHEAPEST SWITCHES 50 CENTS.
1219 21st St Denver, Colo
The more pride a man takes in his wife's good looks and the greater his unconsciousness of his own the better husband he makes.—Chicago Inter Ocean.
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1821 Arapahoe Street.
Peony
Hair Dressing Parlor.
Model Husbands.
Funeral Director
1525-1527 Cleveland Place,
Denver, Colo.
Denver, Colorado.
DR. DAMERON, Proprietor.
RESIDENCE 1505 E. 16TH AVE
PHONE YORK 4014.
OFFICE 917 21ST STREET PHONE MAIN 1144.
OFFICE HOURS—2 to 5 p. m.
and 7 to 9 p. m.
Sundays and other times by appointment.
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
BACK COUNTRY PARTY
One Year ..... $2.00
Six Months ..... 1.00
Three Months ..... 60
PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.
Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice in the city of Denver,
Colorado.
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.
Remittances should be made by Express Money Order, Postoffice Money Order, Registered Letter or Bank Draft. Postage stamps will be received the same as cash for the fractional part of a dollar. Only 1-cent and 2-cent stamps taken.
Reading notices, ten lines or less, 10 cents per line. Each additional line over ten lines, 5 cents per line.
Display advertising 50 cents per square. A square contains ten agate lines. No discounts allowed on less than three months' contract. Cash must accompany all orders from parties unknown to us. Further particulars on application.
LOOK WHO'S HERE!
THE DEVIL'S holidays are over, and he will be back on the job with new zest and vigor. But if we have not fortified ourselves during Lent against his wicked wiles, then we are hypocrites and sinners undeserving pardon. Our Easter rejoieings should not take the shape of wild hysteria. We should rejoice because we are more honest, more earnest and better. Let us pay our debts and keep up our subscriptions, and dare the Devil to do his worst.
LAPSE OF LITERARY GENIUS
DEVELOPMENT in the sciences is generally regarded as one of the avenues to the Negro which will hasten his recognition by the people in general and the world at large, as an indivisable part of that social brotherhood whose higher intelligence dominates the affairs of men and breaks down the barriers which ignorance and prejudice erect to perpetuate the social separation of races, elements and classes. Literature is the mirror in which the higher intelligence of people is reflected, and its numerous branches provide an almost limitless field for the demonstration of genius such as moves men to acknowledge the indestructable existence of a universal human brotherhood. We all remember that but a few years ago a number of our brighter literary lights were commanding the admiration and approbation of the nation's thought leaders and winning for themselves and their intellectual contemporaries as social recognition which no other qualifications had been able to achieve. When Paul Lawrence Dunbar's genius was recognized, it opened to him social and literary relations and associations which aroused to activity new influences of material benefit to his entire race, and Charles W. Chestnutt, the novelist, and other contemporaneous writers of note, added to the prestige which the Negro then began to enjoy. This was more than a passing fad, for it lived without abatement while the evidence of pure and undiminished genius was maintained. But our corps of brilliant passion painters was not rapidly augmented, as those of other races seem to be, and with the passing of these exceptional lights, that sympathetic affection which was knitting us into close relations with our fellows, has suffered discernably. We still have Du Bois, the logician, and Kelley Miller, the essayist and critic, but they lack the romantic qualities which appealed to all classes so urgently through the works of our disciples of fiction. The need for greater literary devotion on the part of the Negro is apparent. The careful schooling and training and the patient and deliberate application, which develop latent genius in other men and women and among other races, ought to be more generally appreciated by those who are responsible for the instilling of educational ideals and aspirations in the minds and hearts of our Negro youth.
PENAL REFORM IN GEORGIA.
NOTORIOUS as one of the most brutal and inhuman penal systems ever in vogue in the United States, the Georgia convict lease system died on the morning of the first of April. Following long and continuous censure from all parts of the Union, more especially from the North, which gave to the state a most unenviable reputation for substituting slavery for imprisonment, internal agitation took such shape under the direction of Hoke Smith, former Governor of Georgia, that a thorough legislative investigation of the system was made a little over a year ago, resulting in the enactment of a statute taking effect on April first, abolishing the iniquitous system from the Georgia criminal code. The practice was to lease out convicts to contractors for labor in mines, brick kilns, factories, lumber camps and other plants requiring crude labor, where private greed often demanded and collected its last ounce of human flesh and its final drop of human blood, for no other account was taken of the death of a convict than a report of the fact, and no state supervision of his care or treatment at the hands of contractors who thus bought his labor was ever made. These private slave pens made their own regulations and carried out their own forms of discipline, accompanied with armed guards, bail and chain, blood hounds and a system of personal treatment far more deplorable than slavery ever knew, because of the absence of any ownership interest in the helpless victim, and because the place of a dead convict could be easily filled. Georgia has had no state penetentiary for years, and because the great majority of her offenders were Negroes, her authorities seemed to feel justified in thus shifting their responsibilities and ignoring all consequences. What wonder that there was great rejoicing when convicts were led out of mines on April first, where they had not seen the light of day for years, or out of camps or factories where health breaking tasks and brutal taskmasters made life a daily torture? What wonder that, though convicted felons, they joined in singing "Praise God from whom all blessings flow?"
These convicts were sent back to the counties where they were convicted, and for their remaining terms will be employed on public works, such as road building, work on levees, etc., or until the state shall establish proper institutions for their reception and control. A great step upward in moral responsibility is thus taken by the state of Georgia, and most satisfactory evidence is thus given that the savagery of the South is slowly yielding before the march of enlightened human sentiment.
Development Traced from the First Atom
By PROF. ERNEST HAECKEL,
University of Jone, Prussia.
The theory of the origin of life is as follows, the same being applicable to all forms of known planetary life: The earth was thrown off by the sun, and Light is the source of all life. The crust having been formed, water promoted the activity of the carbon atoms—carbon being indispensable to any imaginable kind of existence. The carbon atoms combined by attraction into plasmic masses capable of growing or extending themselves. One small atomic mass overgrows and splits into two halves. From these monera, or single organisms, organic life, which is to culminate in man, is born upon the face of the earth. For long—millions of years, perhaps—the earth was covered with these simple pieces of life possessing elementary energy and elementary
consciousness. They were absolutely simple in their construction but possessed a nucleus or cell of living matter by which they reproduced themselves according to the process known as segregation, that is, cleaveage or simple division of the cell. These were known—indeed are still known—as protista (from the Greek protiston) that is to say, the very first
The protiston was the first ancestor of mankind, so you can just see the relative importance of a king or a duke, not only in regard to yourself, but when he is compared with that scheme of the universe which brought human kind into being. Like all simple life or atomic stuff, the protista are gregarious, that is to say that in their particular case, it is not conscious or politic gregariousness that makes them herd together. They herd solely by attraction, probably on a heat-principle, just as the atoms combine to form molecules, and so upward—also by attraction. Given the social union of many, the development and extension of the principle of life was naturally to follow just again as the growth of molecules and larger matter from atoms. Eventually the lowest form of worm—gastrula, they call it—came into existence. Then followed, in the course of long ages, the simple cord-like creepers, a trifle more complex in structure than the gastrula. Then appeared the small skull-less worm known as the lancelet, or the amphioxus, still more vigorous and more aggressive. After that came the skulled animal—the cranioton—with rudimentary headpieces; then the fish, and, in their turn, the lower vertebrae, like birds, then the higher, then the man-ape then the ape-man and ultimately the tribal male
The human embryo, when developing, goes through in succession every stage that animal life has known upon earth since it was in the protiston stage—that is, of course, in the direct line of descent from the protiston to man. In other words, at first there is the simple plasmic stuff in the female cell and the worm-like cell of the mate. The combination of the twain makes the growth develop in such a way that at a certain period, this embryo is like an eel, later like a fish, subsequently like a bird, then like a dog or a cat, afterward like a monkey and ultimately like a human baby. Our evolution in the course of being born is not less wonderful than the evolution of a butterfly in the various stages. All this progress starts, then, from a moneron, the single cell, which has elementary life and elementary consciousness.
"Good Fellows"
Lack
Initiative
By JOHN A. HOWLAND.
Cheerfulness of speech and demeanor on the part of the man who must work among his fellow mer long has been cited as one of the cardinal virtues. Volumes have been written and spoken upon the subject. But as in the case of so many other of the good things of life, these optimistic champions of cheerfulness occasionally exaggerate. They would have us believe that nowhere in social relationships is there need for a frown—for the expression of righteous wrath—for an explosion of anger based on a righteous indignation. So exaggerated is the position of these doctrinaires of cheerfulness that they would have us at all times at the dead level of "peace at any price," dispensing cheerfulness for the sake of cheerfulness.
Not long ago I was present in a small company of men connected with a large business when the subject of a successor to the head of an executive department of the house was up.
"Jones never will get the place," said some one with an air of finality that was concurred in by everybody. "Jones knows enough; he's all right in doing something he is set to do and is responsible for, personally. But he's too easy going ever to be put in charge of a bunch of men such as he would have to manage in that department."
I made some inquiries as to Jones' personality. Every man in the group was a personal friend of his. They had known him for years and could vouch for his honesty and innate good nature in every circumstance of life. But in attesting to this consummate cheerfulness and kindness of disposition they were reading him out of the list of possibilities for the most advantageous opening in his line of work. This virtue which they conceded in the man at once was a potential vice in the official. As an executive, it was the one handicap chargeable against him, yet out of my knowledge of business it was a weakness more to be considered than would be a disposition to a periodical outburst if ill-temper.
To-day one of the greatest dangers in the usefulness of the young man lies in the invitation so widely extended to him to become "a good fellow." He gets an exaggerated idea of this invitation in school. His fraternity invites him to its consideration.
This greatest handicap of perennial good nature in a man does not come from its expression on its own initiative. The type of man who would impose upon it steps in and makes largest demands upon this good fellowship as a cover to his shortcomings. Confession of weakness or of design is easy where the confessor expects no measure of penalty. If the transgressor discovers that he may count upon shelter behind some one, incapable of meting out justice to him, that shelter must be a standing invitation to still larger transgressions.
"Sure, I can fix that up for you," is one of the commonest of set speeches everywhere: "I know Jones well and he's a 'good fellow.' Don't worry about it—I can fix that up, easy."
P
Everywhere in the world the promise of preference is to men of character. Easy good nature never will pass inspection as significant of character in man. Rather it is indicative of a lack of character. Passively, it may not be an unmixed evil, but it does not get anywhere in the world of initiative.
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Fifth Anniv
Rice Lod
No. 39 I. B.
Will
TUESDAY EVENING
Dania Hall, 27th a
Fifth Anniversary Ball
OF--
Rice Lodge of Elks
No. 39 I. B. P. O. E. of W.
Will Be Held
TUESDAY EVENING, APRIL 27, 1909
--AT--
Dania Hall, 27th and Arapahoe Sts.
All kinds of refreshments as well as food will be served. Dancing from 8:30 until 2 a. m. Grand March at 11 p. m.
Admission 35c. Music by Harris Orchestra
L. Stephens, Chairman of Committee
L. Stephens, Chairman of Committee
The only exclusive wholesale and retail Crockery House in Denver
THE
CARSON
CROCKERY
CO
THE CARSON CROCKERY CO Prices always right. Remember the place, Fifteenth and Stout
DEVELOPMENT OF THE MAGNET.
!s Now an Indispensable Instrument in the Workshop.
The magnet that boys of yesterday used for a toy to-day as men they are employing as a useful instrument in their workshops. Within the last few years particularly, as W. Frank McClure points out, it is being adapted to handle many shapes of metal, all forms of iron and steel, from iron dust to scraps, or small junk to weights of 20,000 pounds. In fact, the world's largest magnet will lift as much as 40,000 pounds. The magnet is employed to break up imperfect castings, to hold sheets of metal in position while they are being riveted in the building of ships, to lift a "sow and pigs" at the furnaces, also as a gigantic broom to sweep both the large and small pieces of iron, and in numerous other ways.
A half dozen kegs of nails may be seen traveling through the air, held by magnetic lines of forces despite the wooden covering of the kegs. Even two or three men are sometimes lifted from the ground, their feet resting on a metal sheet which is firmly held by the magnet. The flat style of magnet is available for picking up metal sheets, from two to six at a time, one under the other, the number depending upon their thickness. These may be dropped by the magnet one at a time at the desire of the operator provided he is clever in adjusting the switch at precisely the right intervals.
NAST
NAST
The Popular Photograher,
Only Caters to First-class Trade.
Our Pictures speak for
Themselves.
W. A. Gatewood
Real Estate, Insurance,
Rentals
LOANS MONEY ON REAL ESTATE
BUYS AND SELLS REAL ESTATE.
Room 31, Good Block,
W. J. Addie
—Dealer in—
Choice old California Wines and Brandies from the Hermitage Vineyard; also Bottled Beer, Kentucky Whisky, Cigars and Tobacco :: :: :: ::
228 Sixteenth Street
Telephone: 2675
---
Best all wool serges, Panamas, fanc; strikes and novelty checks including green, electric blue, brown gray—up to and including size 46 in ladies, and sizes 14, 16 and 18 in men. A capture for cash, arranged in three bargain lots as follows: LOT 1—Ladies and Misses Suits to be duplicated for less than $15.00. Spring sale at Michaelson's—$7.05. LOT 2—Ladies and Misses Suits to be duplicated for less than $25.00. Spring sale at Michaelson's—$12.50. LOT 3—Ladies and Misses Suits to be duplicated for less than $35.00. Spring sale at Michaelson's—$20.00.
Madame Guthrie
Hats Remodeled in Latest Styles 1929 Curtis Denver, Colo
LOANS MONEY ON REAL ESTATE
BUYS AND SELLS REAL ESTATE.
Room 31, Good Block,
1557 Larimer Street.
SAM HESS
RAILROAD TAILOR. SUITS MADE
TO ORDER.
Give him a chance—let him prove
his ability.
Phone—Main 6526.
1408 Sixteenth Street, Denver, Colo
CITY NEWS
oo00
Joseph W. Taylor is able to get
+ @round.
Mrs. Pickett Myers is numbered
among the sick,
Miss Mary Shirley has been very ill
for several weeks.
Mrs. Simpson of 700 Twenty-ninth
street is confined to her bed,
R. J. Von Dickersohn left today for
Pueblo on business.
J. W. Rayford of 2133 Glenarm
Place is sick with pleurisy.
Basil Cook was struck by an auto
last week and was badly shaken up.
Capt. Silas Johnson, who was in-
jured a few days ago, is doing nicely.
Mrs. B. F. Givens of 2515 Curtis
street, is suffering with rheumatism.
Jack Williams, who met with an in-
jury in a railroad wreck, is on the
mend.
Furnished rooms for rent for light
housekeeping, at 2055 California
street.
Edward J. Sanderlin is down with
pneumonia, He has the sympathy of
his hosts of friends.
Shepard Shelton has been confined
to his house for several weeks with
locomotor ataxia.
Nicely furnished rooms for rent in
modern house; gentlemen preferred;
at 2041 Stout street.
Charles Sweeney had a severe hem-
orrhage Tuesday, but the Colorado
Statesman notes that he is improving.
Miss G. M. Striplin of 320 Twenty-
founth street has some beautiful bat-
eee pieces for sale cheap; her
own work.
Mrs. Jennie Palmer underwent an
operation at Mercy hospital last Fri-
day. At the present writing she is do-
ing nicely.
Mrs. Jane Vernell left the city this
week for California points. Her sis-
ter, Mrs. Lizzie Wallace, will leave
next week for Boise, Idaho.
Miss Mary Smith, a charming young
lady of Cheyenne, is in the city. She
was bridesmaid at the Clark-Bruce
nuptials Wednesday evening.
Ernest Howard, the popular carpen
ter, has been in the employ of Mr. and
Mrs, R. K, De Priest in repairing their
house at 2516 Lafayette street.
Miss Lulu Fisher, a very talented
young lady of Kansas City, Mo., is
proving quite an acquisition to Den-
yer’s musical and literary circles.
We have changed our name. The
pbone number is the same, Main 6128.
Douglas Undertaking Co., 1110 18th
street; formerly the A. M. Lawhorn
Co. J. R. Contee, manager.
The W. C, T. U., of which Mrs. L.
A. Froman is the capable president,
had charge of the program at the Eu-
reka Literary Society Tuesday night.
The exercises were excellent and
much enthusiasm was manifested.
The Colorado Statesman notes that
there has been a disposition on the
part of some busybody to “rap” the
manger of the Olympic skating rink.
It is a shame—talk about race pride!
Some of these people don’t know the
meaning of the term.
‘The entertainment given at the
Olympic Skating rink Monday evening
by the Ladies’ Guild of the Church of
the Redeemer was quite a success.
The “Doll Shop,” managed by Mrs.
_ Eliza Dishman, was well rendered, the
| participants going through their evo:
lutions yery creditably.
Rice Lodge of Elks No. 39 will give
its fifth anniversary ball Tuesday
evening, April 27, 1909, at Dania hall.
All kinds of refreshments will be
served. Dancing from 8:30 to 2:00 a.
m, Admission, 35 cents, Music by
Harris’ orchestra, L. Stephens, chair-
manof committee.
The Easter services at Shorter’s
A.M. B. church Sunday were well at:
tended and much enthusiasm was
manifested. Rey. A. M. Ward was at
his best and delivered an excellent
sermon, The church was beautifully
decorated with flowers. The music
was excellent, The rally was a decid-
ed success, $1,045.00 being raised, with
several clubs yet to report. Under the
able management of Mrs, Effie Wal-
don, superintendent of the Sunday
School, that department collected
$74.34, besides rendering an excellent
program,
SITUATION WANTED.
A regularly ordained Baptist minis-
ter, a graduate of the Virginia Union
University, Richmond, Va., desires a
charge in the Middle West, preferably
in the state of Colorado.
Can give best of references, Three
years’ experience in the pastorate.
Address the corresponding secretary
of the Gamma Kappa Chi Society of
the Virginia Union University, Rich-
mond, Va.
Mr, O. T. Jackson, Chairman Promot-
ing Committee of the Colorado Ne-
gro Township Company, Denver,
Colo.
Dear Sir—Your esteemed favor of
February 15th was duly received, 1
had fully intended to answer your
communication before this, but have
waited for some time to look this land
up for you. I feel that your proposed
colony proposition for your race is a
meritorious one, and I shall only be
too glad to co-operate with you and
aid you in anyway that I can to help
you carry out your scheme for the bet-
terment of your race of people; more
especially since I understand your
class of people and have always felt
that I would like to do something for
them. I shall be glad to have your
committee meet with me soon and-dis-
cuss this matter fully. I am,
Very truly yours,
(Signed) B. L. JEFFERSON.
A meeting of the subscribers and all
who may wish to subscribe to the cap-
Ital stock of a company to-establish a
Negro district and town in Colorado,
is called for April 19, 1909, at Short-
er’s church, 8 o'clock p. m.
The object of the meeting is to se-
lect a committee of subscribers to call
on Doctor Jefferson, register of the
State Land Board, and look up a loca-
tion, get prices of land, and the terms
on which the land can be secured. The
committee will make a report at a
subsequent meeting.
0. T. JACKSON,
Chairman Promoting Committee.
LOCAL NOTICES.
Hair cut, 15c, 1847 Blake street.
Four room house for rent. Apply at
this office, 1824 Curtis street, room 25.
Anyone wishing to purchase a beau:
titul home cheap, call at 1923 Clarkson
street. Easy terms.
. The life and works of Paul Law-
rence 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. Ad-
dress him a card and he will call and
show you the book,
Your subscription to the cleanest
family journal, published in Colorado
should be paid promptly. The Colo-
rado Statesman needs the money you
owe.
Bondurant will please you in cloth-
ing. Prices right.
NOTICE — A WONDER.
Prof. Will Taylor, corn, bunions,
and ingrowing nails, specialist.
Guaranteed cure. Painless, no cut-
ing. Phone, Main 8358, 911 Bight-
eenth street. Clip this advertise
ment, as it may not appear again.
NOTICE OF STOCKHOLDERS’
MEETING.
Denver, Colo., April 10, 1909.
To the Stockholders of the Western
Loan and Investment Association:
You are hereby notified that the an.
nual meeting of the stockholders of
the Western Loan and Investment As-
sociation will be held on Tuesday,
May 18, 1909, at the hour of 8 o'clock
p. m. of said day at room 25, Western
Newspaper Union building, 1824
Curtis street, Denver, Colorado, for
the election of officers and directors
of said association and for the trans
action of any and all other business
which may properly come before said
association.
L. C, CONNELL,
President.
JOSEPH D, D. RIVERS,
Secretary.
THE PEOPLES’ PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH, Twenty-Third and
Washington Avenues.
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.
Preaching, 11 o'clock a, m.
Rey. David Hall, D. D.
Young Peoples’ Christian Endeavor,
6:30 p m. to 7:30 p. m.
Evening Services, 8 p. m.
Prayer Meeting, every Friday even-
ing, each week.
ape Bs
For Sale—High grade second hand
ciothing. §S. A. Bondurant, 1077-1079
Broadway.
‘The divorce case of Ada E. White
ys. John Henry White in the District
Court came up for hearing before
Judge Allen on the motion of F, G.
‘Taggart, plaintiff's attorney, to strike
out, the seventh paragraph of the de-
fendant’s cross complaint. The court
after hearing the contents of the para-
graph, overruled the motion, The de-
cision’ gives the defendant the rigat
to prove the numerous beatings and
other indignities which he alleges in
said paragraph were inflicted upon his
wife, Ada E. White, by Emmett Web-
ster, who is named as co-respondent
in the charges of adultery brought by:
White in his cross-complaint against
his wife.
STATE OF COLORADO, Insurance De-
‘partment,
SYNOPSIS OF STATEMENT AND
COPY OF CERTIFICATE OF
AUTHORITY.
MECHANICS INSURANCE COM-
RTS ict oh etait te Bene aed
CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORITY FOR
THE YEAR ENDING FEBRUARY.
eee eres a
Office of Commissioner of Insurance,
Denver, Colo., March 1. 1909:
It is hereby ‘certified that the Me-
chanics Insurance Cllmpany. a corpora-
tion organized under the laws of Benn-
sylvania, whose principal office is to
cited at Philadelphia, has complied with
all the laws of this state xo far as the
requirements of said laws are ap-
Plicable to said company, and the said
company, is hereby authorized to tran-
sact business as an insurance company
in accordance with its Charter or Art
icles of Incorporation. within the said
State of Colorado, subject lo the sev-
cral provisions and. requirements of
said laws, until the twenty-eighthy day
of February. in the year of our Lord
nireteen hundred and ten.
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I. Ww.
L. Clayton, Commissioner of Insurance
of said State of Colorado, have here~
unto set_my hand and-affixed my seal
of office, at the City of Denver, the day
and year first above written.
W. L. CLAYTON,
Commissioner “of Insurance.
WILLIAM C, BLATR,
(Seal) Deputy.
Published in the Colorado Statesman
by authority of Commissioner of Insur-
ance.
W. L, CLAYTON,
‘Commissioner.
WILLIAM C, BLATR,
‘Deputy,
STATE OF COLORADO, Insurance De-
partment,
SYNOPSIS OF STATEMENT AND
COPY OF CERTIFICATE OF
‘AUTHORITY,
UNION HEALTH AND ACCIDENT
COMPANY of Denver, Colorado.
Assets. oe... cece ees ee sees # $141,160.81
Liabilities 2722022200 IIIS stoseiss,
Gapitar 2 .22.ITIITIIIT: 00{000:00
Surplus o-oo s so 2s rot. . 88,088.96
STATE OF COLORADO, insurance De-
partment,
CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORITY FOR
THE YEAR ENDING FEBRUARY
28TH, 1910,
Office of Commissioner of Insurance,
Denver. Colo., March 1, 1909.
It is hereby certified that the Union
Health and Accident Company, a corpo-
ration organized under the laws of Col-
orado, whose principal. office ‘is 1o-
cated’ at Denyer, has complied with
all the laws of this state xo far as the
requirements of “said laws ‘are’ ape
plicable to said company, and the sald
company is hereby authorized to. tran-
sact business as an insurance company
in accordance with its Charter or Art-
icles of Incorporation, within the sald
State of Colorado, subject to the sev-
eral provisions and requirements of
sald laws, until the twenty-eight day
of February. in the year of our Lord
nineteen hundred and ten.
IN “TESTIMONY WHEREOF, 1, W.
L. Clayton, Commissioner of Insurance
of said State of Colorado, have here-
unto set my hand and affixed my seal
of office, at the City of Denver, the day
and year first above written,
W. Ll, CLAYTON,
Commissioner ‘of Insurance.
WILLIAM C, BLATR,
(Seal) Deputy.
Published in the Colorado Statesman
by authority of Commissioner of Insur-
ance.
W. L, CLAYTON,
Commissioner.
WILLIAM C, BLAIR,
‘Deputy.
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Soe bottle regular sizefor - - - $.50
Three bottles “ ae Ate 1.40
Six ad ae - acl Siwy 2.50
‘Qne bottle, small, nt ER pS 2s
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Colorado state legislator recalls'a chapter in English history where |
| in 1674 Lord Shaftesbury in speaking of the lawmakers, said: q
j ‘The only thing we are obliged to them for 1s that they do nothing. |
gratis, but make every tax, as well chargeable to the court a burden- ,
/ some to the county and save no man’s neck but they break his purse. ,
‘About trust not a word did they speak, Flood’s market will give §
; you more meat or groceries for your money than any other house on q
earth. j
| "
|
) ’s Anti - T Market ;
‘Flood’s Anti - Trust Market |
;
| Telephone Main 7825 ;
4
4016-1017-1019 FIFTEENTH STREET, )
‘
i pL hg per nts oe) ei ei ae ae
THREE DISHES FOR DESSERT
oe
One of Them ~%,
a eo
The Newest, Snappiest Le 5
Models ever in this fair brs )> \ wv
city aon i AG i La) \ IN ANN
A , Wad AY
Clothing Dep't is iA\ Vi iy nl
the biggest im- 7 wll ||) \ | \4N \ \\\
provement to our #2 AVL “ ar
growing business Ht he \ iw
wishes to show ai SU \\ \. SiR
=r SAT IW MAY =
you / Lih \\ ose
Special { (_\) ane
Ler td yy
Values \ \ Wi | i VE
VL 3
Today (|.
MASA
P| V4 Wil i
WAGE YH jee
$20.06 | \\Wy | | =
Every suitofthem 1) 4 Lal Wa
worth at least a cs GCE
five dollar note le
more. COPYRICHT 1909 BY
ROBERTS-WICKS CO,
TRE
ONNSON- VW
1005 Sixteenth Street, Near Curtis Street
OPPOSITE TABOR GRAND OPERA HOUSE.
Walnut Custard Pie One of the Daintl-
est That Can Be Made—For
Apple Pie de Luxe.
Walnut Custard Pie—This Is a
favorite dish at one of the New York
hotels. Beat two eggs slightly, and a
scant half-cupful of sugar and a pmch
of salt, pour over this two cupfuls of
hot milk; mix well, strain and add
half a teaspoonful of vanilla and half
@ cupful of finely-ground English wal-
nuts. The nuts will rise to the top
aud form a tender crust to the custard.
Pecans and almonds may be used in
the same way.
Silver Custard.—Whites of three
eggs slightly beaten; two tablespoon-
fuls cold milk and two tablespoonfuls
of sugar, a few grains of salt, and halt
@ teaspoonful essence of lemn; mi
well and pour on one pint of hot milk;
bake in a small, deep pudding dish set
in a pan of hot water till firm (20 to 30
minutes). Serve with a soft custard
made of one pint of milk, yolks of
three eggs, half a cupful of sugar, a
few grains of salt and one teaspoonful
of vanilla, or it may be served with a
chocolate sauce for a change, made by
adding two squares of dissolved, un-
sweetened chocolate to the above soft
custard. Serve both ice cold.
Apple Pie De Luxe.—Into « deep pie
plate without undercrust slice five ap-
ples, add two tablespoonfuls of sugar,
a little cinnamon and bits of butter.
Bake with a rich top crust. In serving,
turn each piece npside down and lay
on whipped cream sweetened and
flavored.
Potato Sweets.
Boil and mash a large potato, place
while hot in large bowl, stir in as
much sugar as will make a dough of
the consistency of biscuit, flavor with
vanilla or any preferred flavoring, and
knead into it a cup of chopped nuts,
Bnglish walnuts or mixed, Mold into
a loaf and place in cool place. When
ready to serve slice down in squares,
cut into smail blocks, and serve. This
candy may be varied endlessly by dif-
ferent modes of treatment after the
“dough” or fondant is made; it may
be molded by the hands into bonbons
with or without the addition of
chopped nuts, dates, figs, etc. Bon-
bons may be ornamented with whole
walnuts and dates are delicious
stuffed with the candy. If colored
candy is desired the fondant may be
separated into parts and each colored
with fruit or vegetable colorings. In
this case of variety of flavors should
also be used.
fet et
Ss °
| April Sale ;
SSS |
riety I
Of Trunks, Bags and Suit +
co Cases at a Sacrifice at the +
- Welton Trunk ManufactoryCo. ]
ake 2253 WELTON STREET.
i OLD TRUNKS TAKEN IN EXCHANGE. REPAIRING DONE. 7
| ea 1405 PURPLE. eo 7
Escallopea Fish.
One pint of milk or cream, two
tablespoons butter, two tablespoons
flour, one cup bread crumbs moistened
with melted butter, three pounds of
any kind of white fish (I prefer the
center of a fairsized cod), a few
sprigs of parsley, a Httle red pep-
per and a small onion. Boil fish one-
half hour in salted water, remove skin
and bones, break apart with a silver
fork. Boil milk in double boiler ten
minutes with onion, put flour and but-
ter in a saucepan, cook up smooth,
adding the salt and pepper, then ad@
to boiling milk. Put into baking dish
a layer of sauce, then one of fish, and
lastly the bread crumbs. Bake one-
half hour.
anenpnia: ceitiniainae. 7
Pare thin and wash 12 potatoes;
cover with water, add salt and boil
until tender. Drain and set on back
of range for about ten minutes and
add piece of butter size of an egg.
When butter is melted mash them and
stir in a little at a time one-half cup
hot cream, then beat until light with
a fork. Arrange on a hot dish, form-
ing an oblong, high mound, hollowed
in the middle. Brush inside and out
with beaten yolk of egg and set in
even to brown. When done fill with
& ragout of mutton or duck or maca-
roni and oysters in cream sauce and
cae Z
ELLE ELLE EE EE EEE EEE IEL F
*
*
‘ 13 be
| Ladies Go to z
2
9 :
|Howland’s|:
z
| e 2 .
| For Spring Hats :
: Ld
Sixteenth St. Opp. Daniels & Fisher's -
| =
Fricasseed Potatoes.
One of the Hungarian ways of trans;
forming white potatoes is to fricusseé
them. A small onion is sliced, placed
in a sauce pan with one dessertspoon-
ful of butter, a dash of paprika and
salt, and fried a light brown. The po-
tatoes, cut in small squares, are then
poured into the sauce pan, and cov-
ered with boiling water. “When the
water has boiled away, the potatoes
are soft and mealy and tinted a gold-
en red from the butter and paprika.
They are just as good as they look.—
‘Woman's Home Companion.
Soro Fe bebe EEC EEEEEELEEE FE
Stuffed Sirloin.
Procure a pork loin roast. Do not
remove the tenderloin, but slit it and
stuff with dry dressing made of stale
crumbs highly seasoned with salt, pep-
per and sage. Roast in usual manner
and serve with potatoes roasted in
pan with same meat, brown gravy and
apple sauce.
Graham Cake.
One and one-half cups sugar, one
half cup lard, one cup raisins, one tea-
‘spoon each of cinnamon, allspice and
nutmeg, one-half teaspoon salt, one
and one-half cups sour milk, one tea-
spoon soda, and three cups graham
flour sifted twice. Bake in a slow
oven.
Bread Sauce for Fowl.
Boil half an onfon and a half cur
of fine white bread crumbs in one pint
of milk until the desired consistency
Remove the onion without breaking
it, add one tablespoonful of butter,
one-half teaspoonful of salt and a dash
of white pepper.
Nut Pick to Remove Covers.
A nut pick will be found a great
convenience in the kitchen for remoy-
ing the tops from mili bottles, remov-
ing broken corks from bottles and
warious other little #>
Charles L. Foster and Ed. Hamilton, Props. A First-Class Resort. Elegantly Furnished Our Reading Room Comprises all the Latest Papers, Books and Magazines
2149 Curtis St
Denver
For a good
A fresh
All you dry
JOE BERG
Curtis St. Phone Main
Denver, Colorado
For a good drink of whisky,
A fresh glass of beer
All you dry ones please come here
B BERGER Will Serve Y
2149 Curtis St. Phone Main 8232 Denver, Colorado
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.
7413 Wines, Liquor
E NEWPORT SALO
THE NEWPORT SALOON
DICK FRAZIER AND TOM LEWIS PROPRIETORS A First-Class Resort For Gentlemen
CHARLES H. BRINK
JEWELER
and see Brink for Diamonds, Watches
Jewelry. Repairing of Fine Watches
Jewelry a Specialty
CHARL J
Go and see Brin
Jewelry. Repai
Jewelry a Special
Go and see Brink for Diamonds, Watches and Jewelry. Repairing of Fine Watches and Jewelry a Specialty
Formerly with The Boyd Park Jewelry Co
WM. EH
East T
2132-2148
Telephone 2449
"Colu
Z
New
In a spe
DENVER'S LEADING
WM. EHMKE, Manager
Fast Turner Ha
2132-2148 ARAPAHOE STREET
phone 2449 DEN
Columbine
ZANG'S
New Table Beer
Is a special Brew for Family use
ER'S LEADING BRAND OF BOTTLED
WM. EHMKE, Manager
2132-2148 ARAPAHOE STREET
Telephone 2449 DENVER
"Columbine" ZANG'S
New Table Beer
Is a special Brew for Family use
DEVER'S LEADING BRAND OF BOTTLED BEER
Columbine Beer
Is guard
Try a Sample C
TE
The Ph.
Fresh Bear Delivered Daffy
L. L. McM
Fine line of Toilet
pure Drugs. Courtecd
use the freshest and p
fact our prescription
the city. Prices Rig
Prescriptions a Special
PHONE MAIN 49
Is guaranteed absolutely pure
Try a Sample Case and you will use no other
TELEPHONE 1285
The Ph. Zang Brewing Co.
Producers
Delivered Daily to all parts of the city
L. McMAHAN'S PRESCRIBE
PHARM
the line of Toilet Articles, Perfumes, Cigars, Etc.
Drugs. Courteous treatment. Remember we
are freshest and purest drugs in our prescript
our prescription department is as complete as
city. Prices Right.
Is guaranteed absolutely pure
Try a Sample Case and you will use no other
TELEPHONE 1285
The Ph. Zang Brewing Co.
Producers
Fresh Beer Delivered Daily to all parts of the city
Fine line of Toilet Articles, Perfumes, Cigars, Etc. Fresh pure Drugs. Courteous treatment. Remember we always use the freshest and purest drugs in our prescriptions; in fact our prescription department is as complete as any in the city. Prices Right.
GIVE ME A CALL L. L. McMAHAN, Proprietor.
DID YOU
Neef B
It's made ri
None better
This is a Stri
DID YOU EVER TRY
ef Bros.' Bee
is made right, and tastes right
one better made anywhere a
is a Strictly Colorado Prod
DID YOU EVER TRY
Neef Bros.' Beer?
It's made right, and tastes right. None better made anywhere and This is a Strictly Colorado Production BE SURE AN TRY IT.
Phone Main 7413
1845 Arapahoe St.
e Main 8232
ado
whisky,
er
se come here.
Serve You
streets.
Wines, Liquors and Cigars
SALOON
BRINK
s, Watches and
Watches and
404 16th St.
Manager
r Hall
STREET
DENVER
bine"
Beer
ly use
BOTTLED BEER
pure
will use no other
85
wing Co
the city
PRESCRIPTION
PHARMACY
es, Cigars, Etc. Fresh
Remember we always
our prescriptions; in
is complete as any in
Goods Delivered Free 1129 19TH ST.
ER TRY Beer? tastes right. anywhere andado Production
Denver, Colo
NEWS FROM THE CAPITAL New Statesmen Are Extremely Modest
Cabinet Surely Is "Possum Cabinet" Now
Cabinet Surely Is "Possum Cabinet" Now
Episcopal Cathedral's Open Air Altar
Teddy Only President Without Corns
Teddy Only President Without Corns
WASHINGTON.—Some of the autobiographies of new members in the congressional directory issued recently are refreshing.
Senator Wesley L. Jones of Washington, who, with Senator Burton of Ohio, was promoted from the house, pays a warm tribute to his wife, an unusual contribution to an official publication.
The sketch of Mr. Jones says he "was married to Minda Nelson at Enfield, Ill., in the fall of 1886, and whatever success he has attained is due to her earnest, faithful help and cheerful self-denial."
Mr. Jones also unfolds an unusual professional experience—"has never acted as attorney for any railroad, telegraph, or express company, or for any public service corporation."
The house of representatives of the Sixty-first congress embraces in its membership the champion legislator in American history, for Edward Thomas Taylor, representative-at-large from Colorado, says of his 12 years' service in the senate of his state:
"Has the reputation of having been the author of more important laws
T'S the "possum cabinet now." without doubt. The wit who invented that phrase, after President Taft's exploits in the south made the southern tree-climber a sort of national emblem, has received the backing of Webster on top of that of newspaper paragraphers.
A Washington man who has time on his hands looked in the dictionary the other day, and his eye fell upon the word "philander." The meaning given was "a South American opossum." Thus has fate worked to give to the secretary of state his final credentials for the office.
Other searchers since have examined Webster, with the following results, as regards cabinet members:
A BIG bronze sun dial, topping an open-air altar of white marble, is one of the relics and landmarks that are accumulating in the majestic grove of old oaks where soon will rise the great Episcopal cathedral of St. Peter and St. Paul. Already this solemn, wind-swept spot, dear to Protestants because of its deep religious associations, is becoming one of the show places of the national capital.
From the site chosen for the cathedral one's view overreaches all the domes, towers and spires of Washington city. Around the site a number of buildings and memorials have been built. First, there is the Peace Cross. The raising and consecration of this cross was the first service in the cathedral close. The principal address was delivered by President McKinley. A chapel has been constructed in the grounds and this is called the Little Sanctuary. It was a gift
IT IS very unromantic, but true, that the Washington business man who has acquired the finest autograph book in the last 50 years is the proprietor of a "corn doctor's" establishment. He showed his register of autographs to a congressional visitor who had dropped in to have his corns pared and treated.
The establishment started a short time before the death of Lincoln and among the early signatures in the book was an unquestionably authentic one of the emancipator, who, according to the proprietor of the place, was quite a regular attendant in the effort to have his corns suppressed.
He once told the chiropodist—who
and constitutional amendments than any person that ever sat in any legislature of any state of the union during the history of the government—over 40 general statutes and five separate constitutional amendments that were adopted by a vote of the people." While serving as postmaster at Caruthersville, Representative Crow of Missouri relates that "several times he called the attention of congress to the manner of weighing mails; congress finally revised the method, whereby it is estimated that a saving of $10,000,000 a year was affected." An interesting figure in the house is Delegate Cameron of Arizona, Republican. He defeated veteran Mark Smith last fall, whereupon the story went the rounds that this result was a part of a scheme to secure statehood
allaying the Republican opposition by the idea that two Republican senators would be chosen by the new state. But Mr. Cameron has a better claim to fame than any based on politics. He located and built the "Bright Angel" trail into the Grand canyon of Colorado and still maintains it. The baby of the house is Pallette Elvins of Missouri, who was sworn in on the day on which he completed his thirty-first year. Secretary Dickinson of the war department makes no reference to his politics in the sketch of himself. The one political fact stated in Secretary MacVeagh's biography is that he was a Democratic candidate for the United States senate in the '90's.
Franklin (MacVeagh)—"A substantial householder." Such the secretary of the treasury certainly is. Jacob (Dickinson)—"A supplanter." He supplanted Luke Wright. George (Von L. Meyer)—"A landholder; husbandman." This designation of the new secretary of the navy applies also to George W. Wickersham, the new attorney general. James (Wilson)—Same as Jacob. Mr. Wilson, however, has supplanted none but himself for the last 12 years
Frank (Hitchcock)—"Free." No reference to government franking privileges. Richard (Ballinger)—"Strong like a ruler; powerful"—as befits a secretary of the interior. Charles (Nagel)—"Manly; noblespirited." None has yet denied possession of that quality by the secretary of commerce and labor. Still other searchers hunted up the Christian names of the president and ex-president, and found that William means "protector" and Theodore "the gift of God."
from Mrs. Percy R. Pyne, and in it have been gathered memorials of the Church of England, the Church in the Wilderness and the Church of Mount Zion. The remains of Henry Y. Satterlee, first bishop of Washington, rest under the floor of this chapel. This altar and sun dial is called a "landmark," and was given by Mrs. Julia James to commemorate the freedom of the cathedral lands from debt and the consequent hallowing of the close. The altar is also somewhat of a genealogical monument of the donor, in the several panels around the sides of the marble piece being inscribed a large number of names, with the dates of birth, marriage and death, and the names of to whom married and the names of children begotten.
There is no telling when the cathedral will be built, but the building fund is growing, and the foundation stone of the cathedral was laid with an imposing and monster ceremony September 29, 1907. On that occasion addresses were delivered by President Roosevelt and the bishop of London. There were present 60 bishops, 200 members of the general convention of the Episcopal church and about 25,000 laymen. The foundation stone was brought from Bethlehem.
in those days didn't have a Latin name, but was called a corn specialist—that "his corns made him almost as much trouble as congress," a sentiment which ex-President Roosevelt might have echoed, but he never did because he didn't have any corns, and was, in fact, declared to be the only president since Lincoln who hasn't been a patron of this establishment. Anyhow, the register contains the autographs of Johnson, Grant, Hayes, Arthur, Cleveland, Harrison and McKinley. Garfeld wasn't president long enough to develop corns, though the expert opines that at the rate he was kicking people out during the short time he served as president, he would soon have required attention.
The book contains the autographs of thousands of cabinet ministers, senators, members of congress and other famous national characters. Casual inspection of it would almost enforce the generalization that corn and public service are seemingly inseparable.
1008 15th St., Denver, Colo.
Cutlery, Toilet Preparations, Manicure Articles, Perfumes, Etc.
Grinding of every description.
Wholesale and Retail.
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.
Y AND NIGHT. PHONE MAIN 3230.
TRELL'S PHARMACY
GOODS—WHISKEY, WINES, BEER, ETC., A SPECIALTY
Drugs, Hot and Cold Drinks, Toilet Articles and
Prescriptions carefully compounded by a Regis-
Pharmacist. Prompt delivery to any part of the City.
DR. W. J. COTTRELL & D. J. COTTRELL.
AHOE ST. DENVER, COLO.
THE
B.L. JAMES
M. & M. CO.
INTS, OILS, VARNISHES, GLASS.
ING, GRAINING, GLAZING, PAPER HANGING,
ATING AND HARD WOOD FINISHING.
WALL
PAPER
ARTISTS'
MATERIALS
23 ARAPAHOE ST. DENVER
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.
COTTRELL'S
BOTTLED GOODS—WHISKEY,
Pure Drugs, Hot and Col-
Cigars. Prescriptions care-
tered Pharmacist. Prompt
DR. W. J. COTTRELL
2100 ARAPAHOE ST.
THE
B.L. JAM
M. & M.
PAINTS. OILS. VARNISH.
PAINTING. GRAINING. GLAZING. PAPE.
DECORATING AND HARD WOOD FIRE
1517-23 ARAPAHOE ST. DEN
THE
B.L. JAMES
M. & M. CO.
PAINTS, OILS, VARNISHES, GLASS
PAINTING, GRAINING, GLAZING, PAPER HANGING,
DECORATING AND HARD WOOD FINISHING.
WALL
PAPER
1517-23 ARAPAHDE ST. DENVER
ARTISTS
MATERIALS
LADIES' AND GENT'S CLOTHING
. CLEANED AND REPAIRED ..
C. HILSMAN, THE TAI
A Full Line of New and Misfit Cloth
for Sale Cheap.
HILSMAN, THE TAILOR Full Line of New and Misfit Clothing for Sale Cheap.
A Full Line of New and Misfit Clothing for Sale Cheap.
[Name]
JAS F. CLARK
F. CLARK
192I Arapahoe St.
1914 Arapahoe St.
S
Denver, Colorado
Denver, Colo
Superior Laundry
ALL HAND WORK.
J. W. CASEY, Proprietor. Telephone 2132.
1735 Lawrence St.
DENVER'S FAVORITE PLEASURE RESORT.
PHONE 2275 MAIN
If You Have a Friend: Afflicted with
Eczema, Tell the Druggist About It.
If you have a friond suffering from
eczema, tell him about D. D. D.
Many eczema sufferers have tried
@ many useless remedies and spent
feo much money with doctors that they
Dractically despair. If they only knew
Bf the simplest home cure for eczema!
ie is nothing more than oll of winter-
green compound (as mixed in D. D. D.
rescription).
‘Used with glycerine, thymol and oth-
er healing ingredients in liquid. form,
this simple remedy penetrates the pores
of the skin, numbing and killing the
eczema germs while building up the
healthy tissue.
‘Ask your druggists for D, D, D. Pre-
scription.
FAIRLY WARNED.
4
See
1
sh
“See here, kid, if I ever catches you
cryin’ like dat big booby here, I'll dis-
own you and cut you off without a
penny, See!”
A CURE FOR FITS.
The Treatment is to Accomplish
What Science Has Been Strug-
gling to Attain for Centuries.
‘The intense interest that has veen mani-
fested throughout the country by the won-
derful cures that are being accomplished
a by epilepticide still continues. It is
really, surprising, the, vast number, of, peo-
ple who have already been cured of fits
and nervousness. In order that everybody
miny haye a chance to test. the medicine,
large trial bottles, valuable literature, His:
tory of Epilepsy ‘and testimonials, will be
sent by mail absolutely free to ‘all who
write to the Dr. May Laboratory, 548
Pearl Street, New York City.
Gantaie Gonuines she dudne:
“I have heard of the soul kiss and
kisses of other kinds, but never heard
of a man biting his wife as an evidence
of his affection for her;* remarked Jus-
tice O'Neill of Baltimore, Md., when
George Phoebus, aged 27, of East Bal-
timore street, endeavored to explain
the biting of his wife, for which of-
fense she had him arrested. Mrs.
Phoebus said her husband deliberate-
ly bit her on the cheek, and, though
the pain was excruciating, he said that
it was a “love bite.” The justice fined
him five dollars and gave him ten days
in jail.
His Record.
“Colonel,” asked the beantiful girl,
“did you ever ride a horse 90 miles in
three days?”
“No,” replied the veteran of two
wars, “but I once ran 20 miles in about
a utes, which I think was going
soWfae, considering the fact that the un-
derbrush was thick and I was in so
much of a hurry that I forgot to throw
away a knapsack that weighed nearly
50 pounds.”
Here's Relief.
If we must be afflicted with weak,
sore and inflamed eyes, it is consoling
to know there is such a ready relief
within our reach as Doctor Mitchell's
Eye Salve. One bottle usually effects
complete cure. Haye you ever tried
this wonderful remedy? All stores.
Brina Be canta,
For Strength of Character.
Strength of character consists of
two things—power of will, and power
of selfrestraint. It requires two
things, therefore, for its existence—
strong feelings and strong command
over them.—Frederick W. Robertson.
Use Allen's Foot-Ease.
It ig the only cure for Swollen, Smart-
ing, ‘Tired, “Aching, Hot, Sweathe Reet,
Corns and’Bunions: Ask for Allen's. Poot:
Ease, a powder to be shaken into ‘the
shoes. Cures while you wall. At all Druge
Eists and Shoo Stores, "%c.Don't. accept
Sny substitute, Sample sent itr. Age
Gress, “Alien 8. Olmsted, LeRoy, N.Y.
The Only Audience.
“Does anybody read real poetry now-
adays?”
“I presume the publishers glance at
it before sending it back.”
A Domentic Bye Remedy
Gompounded by” Bxperienced. Physicians.
Sontorms to Pare Pood and Drugs Laws
Wine Friends Wherever Used, Asie Drug:
gists for Murine Bye Remedy. ‘Try Mu:
Fine in Your yes, You Will Mice Murine,
Linguistic Resources.
“Is this story you are telling me of
hill-climbing, a true one?”
“Yes, it is on tho level.”
‘To have more of Health and more of
Life, take Garfield Tea! ‘This Natural laxa-
tive’ regulates liver, kidneys, stomach and
Dowels, corrects constipation, purities the
Blood! atid asadivates disease,
The world may owe you a living,
young man, but by the time you col-
lect it you will be ready to give the
undertaker a job.
In case of accident, cuts, wounds,
burns, scalds, sprains, bruises, ete., noth:
ing will so quickly ‘take away all paip
and soreness as Hamlins Wizard Oil.
Stealing away from bad company is
justifiable larceny.
ha >
ayy
laa
& PILLS: 4
Reh ig
x
. Parsee:
ba eae ts vA
| Dean
Ui LA I
AN etl
DEATH SLAIMS
FORMER JUSTICE OF COLORADO
SUPREME COURT DIES AT
FORT COLLINS,
FOR MANY YEARS PRIMINENT IN
PUBLIC AFFAIRS IN NORTH-
ERN COLORADO.
Denver—A Fort Collins dispatch
Thursday night says: Judge George
W. Bailey, former justice of the Su-
preme Court of Colorado, died in the
hospital here tonight at 7:10 from
diabetes.
‘At his bedside when the end came
were Mrs. Bailey, her sister, Mrs. W.
L, Strickler of Denver and Mrs. L. C.
Moore, a friend of the widow. Eugene
Bailey, a brother of the deceased jur-
ist, residing at Denver, and a brother-
inlaw, Clarence Jarbeau, also of Den-
yer, arrivec this afternoon.
The Judge knew none of those
around him. He had been unconscious
for three days. He entered the hos-
pital April 1st to undergo an operation
for a carbuncle on his neck. This
had healed when the serious kiduey
Wisease developed.
Judge Bailey was one of the best
known lawyers and jurists of Colorado
and was famed for his knowledg of 11-
rigation matters. He was born fa St.
Louis March 8, i856. When but a
child he accompanied his parents to
Minois. ‘Inere his father joined the
Union army and while the parent was
fighting tor his country, young George
worked in the coal mines, his meager
wages being devoted to the support of
his mother. Hé remained in the mines
until he was sixteen, when the family
moved to this county and the father
filed on a homestead.
A short time afterward young
George became a cowboy, following
that vocation in Dakota, where he
practiced rigid economy and assisted
his family to improve the homestead.
Returning to Colorado later he en-
gaged in various avocations, finally
entering the newspaper business in
Loveland, where he conducted the
| Register.
Tn 1882 he went to Grand Lake,
Colo., where he started the Grand Lake
Prospector, which paper he sold in 1884
and took up the study of law under
the late Supreme Court justice, C.
T. Caswell, with whom he later ‘sat
as an associate on the Supreme bench.
| Soon after being admitted to the har
he returned to Fort Collins, where he
became city attorney and for five years
was deputy district attorney. For sev-
eral years he served as counsel for the
commissioners of Larimer county and
also as an attorney for the Water Sup-
ply & Storage Company. He was elect-
ed judge of the County Court, which of-
fice he held for some time, and in Jan-
uary, 1905, on the consolidation of the
Court of Appeals and the Supreme
Court, he was appointed justice of the
Supreme Court, taking the oath of cf.
fice in April of that year.
While a resident of Grand Lake he
married April 17, 1883, Miss Belle Jar-
beau of that city. He is survived by a
widow and three sons, I. L. Bailey’ of
Fort Collins, George J. Bafley, a stu-
dent in the law department of the
State University, and Clarence H, Bail.
ey, who attends public school here.
Besides Eugene Batley, he had two oth-
er brothers, one living in Newton,
Colo., and the other in Red Bluff, Cal.
He was a thirty-second degree Mason,
a Royal Arch Mason, Shriner, member
vf the Knights Templar, Knights of
Pythias, Odd Fellows, Elks, Woodmen,
Knights of Maccabees, Eastern Star
and the Fraternal Ald Association.
The funeral will be contlucted by the
Masons.
Philippine Tariff Message.
Washington.—The President Thurs-
Jay sent to Congress a special mes-
sage in relation to the Philippine tar-
iff. The message transmits recom-
mendations by the secretary of war
for a revision of tho Philippine tariff
so as to permit as much customs reve-
nue as possible for the islands, and at
the same time extend to the islands
the principle of a protective tariff for
its industries.
Generally speaking, the bill submit-
ted by the President makes a slight
increase in the rates of duty now pro-
yided in the Philippine tariff, but its
framers say its tendency is to insure
as far as practicable the benefit of the
Philippine market for American man-
tures and products.
The bill makes some additions to
the free list, There will be an in-
crease in internal revenue duties by
which it s hoped to make up the loss
which the Philippine islands will sus-
tain by the operation of the free trade
provisions in the pending Payne tariff
eer
Boston.— The lengthy litigation
against relatives of the late Andrew
J. Davis, a wealthy Montana mine own.
er, by Mrs, Eva A, Ingersoll of Dobbs’
Ferry, N. Y., widow of the late Col,
Robert G. Ingersoll, ended Thursday
when Judge Putnam awarded Mrs. In-
gersoll $138,810, with interest and
costs. Following the death of Mr. Da-
vis certain of his relatives engaged
Colonel Ingersoll as counsel in an ef-
fort to break his will, agreeing to pay
him $100,000. After Colonel Ingersoll
died the Davis relatives refused to pay
‘hie: wd re oS xan om =
COLORADO ITEMS
A large delegation from Colorado
will attend the convention of the Na-
tional Retail Grocers, to be held in
Portland, Ore., June 2nd to 7th.
St. Paul's M. EB. church (South) of
Denver has raised the $50,000 building
fund required for the erection of a new
institutional church.
Over 96,000 apple, peach and plum
trees have been planted this spring in
‘the new Beaver Park section of Fre-
mont county, or nearly twice as many
as last year.
‘The National Safety Vault Company
has let a contract for the erection of a
$70,000 building in Denver, inside of
which will be constructed vaults cost-
ing $80,000,
‘The new Christian Science church at
Florence was dedicated on Easter Sun-
day. It is one of the finest church
buildings in the city and is entirely
free from debt.
The fifth annual exhibition of the
Colorado Kennel Club will be held at
the Auditorium in Denver April 29th
to May ist. It 1s expected that as
many as 400 dogs will be exhibited.
Mrs. Curfman, wife of Dr. G. W.
Curfman, past department commander
of the Grand Army of the Republic,
died at their home in Denver Easter
morning, after an illness of three
years,
Jesse L. Nusbaum, a Greeley boy
twenty-one years old, supervisor of the
manual training department in the Las
Vegas Normal school, has been ap-
pointed first assistant in the govern-
ment achaeological museum and school
at Santa Fe, N. M.
‘The new city administration of Trin-
ldad has appointed J. L. Boulden city
marshal to succeed Luke Egan, W. 0.
Nichols auditor to succeed H. E. Mul-
nix of Denver, and John Nigro chief
of the fire department, vice Robert
Dougherty, resigned.
| ‘The application of George E. Ber-
mont, J. O. Vandeherger, G. E. Gow-
ger, J. H. Lipseick, E. B, Beckett and
Samuel Erlich to organize the First
National Bank of Louisville, Colo.,
with $25,000 capital, has been ap-
proved by teh comptrolled of the cur-
reney.
J. F. Blalack was killed at the Cook
mine, Gilpin county, on the night of
the 12th inst. by a fall of rock. He was
working alone and the accident was
not discovered for some time. He was
thirty-eight years old, and leaves a
widow and two children at Dacona,
Colo. He had worked in Cripple Creek
and Telluride.
At_a postponed annual election of
the Society of Union Colony Pioneers,
held at Greeley, Henry T. West was
elected president for the fifteenth con-
secutive time; Mrs. Sophia Thomas
made secretary and J. A. Woodbury
was made secretary and J. A. Wood-
bury treasurer. The ten vice presidents
were re-elected. ‘There are about 200
members.
The directors of the newly-organize
Country Club of Fort Collins have de-
cided to purchase a tract of 256 acres
of state land two and a half miles
north of town for club purposes, if the
State Land Board appraises the tract
at a satisfactory figure. Golf iinks
and tennts courts are to be laid out
at once and bids will be received for
the erection of a club building.
Robert E. Winbourn of Fort Lupton,
who for the last three years has been
secretary for Congressman Bonynge,
has been appointed special agent in
the general land office and detailed to
make special reports in land contest
cases in Colorado, a position paying
$2,000 yearly. Mr. Winbourn is a grad-
uate of George Washington University
and a member of the Colorado bar,
Group No. 1 of the Arkansas Valley
Bankers’ Association has been organ-
ized at Rocky Ford, thirteen banks out
of twenty being represented, The fol-
lowing officers were elected: SG.
Scott of Las Animas, president; Chas.
W. Beerbohm of La Junta, secretary,
and Jno. R. Cunningham of Rocky Ford,
treasurer. The association will decide
on the character of chattel mortgages
to be taken on growing beet crops.
Las Animas county prisoners have
been set to work repairing roads in
Trinidad and Garcia plaza. The com-
missioners were induced to try the ex-
periment by the success of the state
in using convicts in construction of the
state highway. If the experiment
proves a success, a camp will prob-
ably be established and extensive work
carried on under direction of the sher-
iff and road supervisors,
After twenty years of almost con-
tinuous traveling in the South and
West as an evangelist of the Baptist
church, and while engaged in the es-
tablishment of a mission at Grand
Junction, Rey. Theodore A, Lemen,
HARDSHIPS OF ARMY LIFE.
Left Thousands of Veterans with Kid-
ney Trouble.
Tho experience of David W. Martin,
a retired merchant of Bolivar, Mo., is
just like thou-
sands of others,
Mr, Martin says:
“I think I have
a had kidney dis-
a ease ever since the
aN, war. During an en-
fees
y horse fell on me,
straining my back
he and injuring the
Chega les des crcl
sands of others.
Mr, Martin says:
“I think I have
a had kidney dis-
ae, ease ever since the
aN, war, During an en-
gagement my
y horse fell on me,
straining my back
and injuring the
kidneys. I have been told I had a
floating kidney. I had intense pain
in the back, headaches and dizzy
spells, and the action of the bladder
very irregular, About three years ago
I tried Doan’s Kidney Pills and inside
of a comparatively short time was en-
tirely rid of kidney trouble.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box
Foster-Milburn Co,, Buffalo, N. Y.
RATHER AN APT COMPARISON.
Humorous Thought That Occurred to
Jim When He First Occupied His
New White “Baid.”
‘The prize to-day goes to a Virginia
woman, who sends me this darky
story:
My colored girl not only keeps my
house in exquisite order, but is proud
of her own home and spends time and
money on {t. She purchased a white
enamel bed and I asked her if her hus-
band liked it.
“Yessum, Jim he like dat white bald
I done git—he like it all right. Las’
night I had done fix dat baid up wid
% sprald an’ I got new pillershams an’
{t look moughty clean an’ white. Jim
he ondress hese’t an’ git inter bald,
an’ he lle dere and doan say nuttin’
twell I hear him sayin’:
“Lizzie
“Well, I say, ‘whatcher wan’, Jim?
“Lizzie, does yo’ know what I
‘minds myse'f of in dis white baid?”
“No, Jim, { doan know what yo’
minds yo'se't of.”
“Jim he chockle and den he say:
“*s fly in a pan of milk!’"—New
York Telegraph.
WISE TO NIAGARA.
Omir
S ri i ibe i
need, GG
agit FO
HD “Yeas
Sy Ges
‘Teacher—Johnny, can you tell me
the most remarkable thing about Ni-
agara Falls?
Iqinny—Yessum; the price they
soak you for everything without going
to jail.
Artificial Wants.
Many a one, for the sake of finery
on the back, has gone with a hungry
belly and half-starved their families.
“Silk and satin, scarlet and velvets,”
as Poor Richard says, “put out the
kitchen fire.” These are not the nec-
essaries of life; they can scarcely be
called the conveniences; and yet only
because they look pretty, how many
want to have them! The artificial
wants of mankind thus become more
numerous than the natural; and as
Poor Dick says: “For one poor person,
there are a hundred indigent.”—Ben-
jamin. Franklin.
‘There ts more Catarrh in this section of the country
nan al ote daney pu covet, and unt the la
{ew years was supposed to be incurable, For m grea
thao Peary doers pronounced to teal diets ad
local. remedies, abd by “coustaatiy” falling
{S‘cure with local treatment, pronounced te incurable
Science has proven Catarm io be a constitutional di
fase and therefore requires constitutional treatinent
Hal's Catarm Cure, manutactured by ¥. J, Cheney
Co, Toledo, Ohio, is the only Constitutional eure o
Stops to a teaupoonfuls Ie ucts dlectiy- oa the blog
find mucous urinces ot the aystem.. ‘They offer on
Tundred-doliars for any caso it fails to cure. Sene
fbr crewars and teatimoninis,
“sidreet: F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio.
Silay rig Te
‘Tako Hall's Pamaily Pils for constipation.
A Fable, Perhaps.
‘When George Ade was coming from
New Orleans last winter he noticed,
among the race-track men on the train,
one tan-shoed sheet writer with the
largest feet he had ever seen.
‘And he furthermore testifies and af.
firms that the sheet writer, on risin#
in the morning, discovered that t¥
reporter had shined one shoe and’
suit-ease—Success Magazine.
Took an Antidote.
Percival came running to his grand
ma one day asking for a drink of wa
ter. “Quick, quick, grandma,” he said,
“give me a drink of water, quick!”
After he got his drink he said: “The
reason that I was in such a burry, 1
thought I swallowed a worm while eat
ing an apple and I wanted to drows
4t"—Delineator,
Important to Mothers.
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
In Use For Over 30 Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought.
Its Kind.
“This squib about people's hanging
on to straps in street cars—”"
“Oh, that’s a standing joke.”
Pettit’s Eye Salve for 250
relieves tired, overworked eyes, stops oe
aches, congested, inflamed or sore eyes. Al)
druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y
All men are born equal, but the av
erage woman thinks she is superior
' al AY Sf
A Western Electric |-||Pars3
Rural Telephone [7 i os
Will Help You Save Your Sick Horse I | ce 4
\! ies ‘
It will be your errand boy AX") | 71 | amie gl
in time of need. 4 =} ||) | ay
In cases of emergency you $4 4 ll Gar
can't afford to have the e q IhiGg¥g ]
io ee
can’t “understand, speak [ACTS] ———
Tonder.” Ourtelephones are Bhs} 44 ———— SJ
used to transact the impor-
tant business of this country and are reliable at all times.
The installation of a telephone may save valu-
able stock or a human life, and it will cost you and
your neighbors less than 20 bushels of wheat each
to have a complete, dependable telephone system
We have an experienced and trained staff of telephone engin-
cers at each branch house, who will give you advice free.
Get In touch with us. Our Free Bulletin No. 106 on‘‘How
Sp Se Build Rural Telephone Lines, describes the system to
FRE TReP clearly that a boy can Install and operate it. Write us a
\tcnearygp letter or postal, or put your name and address In the mar~
EORONGY Gin of this advertisement, cut it out and send It to our
eS nearest office. Our FREE BULLETINS will be sent immediately
COommany ~
Feriirn,, comes, Tanai lames leew le nett Son erento
Piet ites PR Rerseene paso mea
Fee" sinssapalis Baral Telephones « specialty Bale Bale Lake city
Nee ecto und Manstucharing Go, Montreal sot Wianloeg
oi .Can be handled very exalty,, Tho sick aco cured. and ait others in
Mee eas is aw None cg
OEE Maa, sites Sintec’ ac reinly oreo ster iat Tateay
‘ ieee Sesccristatanics etwas aczans eae
Yee | tasters Setar tor wnmuceregna ce
PNM issinsie eacitte: ales ot Tet
‘SPOHN MEDICAL CO,, Chemists and Bectericlognts, COBHEN, Inde, Us Be Me
PROBABLY HARDEST OF ALL.
Wifey’s Addition to List of Her House-
hold Duties of Course Was
Not Personal,
After dinner the other evening Mr.
and Mrs, Brown started to speak of
their respective duties, and soon an
argument as to whether the husband
or the wife had the hardest work to
perform was in full swing. First
Brown warbled, and then wifey sang.
“A wife,” argued the good lady, “has
to cook, wash dishes, clothe the kids,
scrub the floors, sweep the house,
make the beds, build the fires, carry
up coal, nail slats on the back fence,
dig—"
“Ts that all?” sarcastically inter-
rupted Mr. Brown.
“No,” was the prompt rejoinder of
Mrs. Brown. “In addition to those du-
ties every wife has to keep her hus-
band from making a fool of himself?”
—Philadelphia Telegraph.
Thought He Wanted Too Much.
“This quarter doesn't sound right,”
said the smart clerk, ringing the coin
on the counter.
“Huh!" growled the customer.
“What do you want for a quarter, any-
way? An opera solo with an orches-
tra accompaniment?”
Cured by Lydia E. Pink-
9
ham’s Vegetable Compound
Marton, N.J.—I feel that LydiaE.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has
ee iven_me new life.
ie f Gurored for ton
- Re years with serious
ge Temale troubles, in-
= = ey flammation, ulcer.
: FHA ation, indigestion,
Bee neryousness, an
ES fae could not’ sleep.
3 s Doctors gave me
bee eo up, as they said my
troubles were
“ chronic. I was in
despair, and did not.
Gespalr, and did not
pais Sree tr een ane
. Fe J suffered for ten
Ee Gee years with serious
|e Negee Female troubles, in-
i = ed flammation, ulcer-
: FA ation, indigestion,
Ge. neryousness, an
: Saal could not’ sleep.
fe s Doctors gave me
be ee up, as they said my
Glee troubles were
chronic, I was in
despair, anddid not
care whether! lived
or died, when I read about Lydia E.
Pinkhain’s Vegetable Compound; so t
began to take it, and am well again and
relieved of all ‘my suffering.” —Mrs.
GxorcE Jorpy, Box 40, Mariton, NJ.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
Pound, made from native roots and
herbs, contains no narcotics or harm.
ful drugs, and to-day holds the record
for the largest number of actual cures
of female diseases we know of, and
thousandsof voluntarytestimonialsare
on file in the Pinkham laboratory at
Lynn, Mass., from women who have
been cured from almost every form of
female complaints, inflammation, ul-
ceration, displacements, fibroidtumors,
irregularities, periodicpains, backache,
indigestion and nervous prostration.
Every suffering woman owes t to her-
self to give Lydia B. Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound a trial.
If you would like special advico
bout your case write a confidene
tial letter to Mrs. Pinkham, at
Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free,
and always helpful,
Water Raises Itself
Eusint Guy.chepest vars at Work.
BcSheyeaae wee
RIFE HYDRAULIC
RAM
Tuzou nea ntagoiog
Talses 90 fect. 30 days’
Eegigne Book 2
RIFE ENGINECO. __ Trinlty Mig. New Yor
PATENTS 2222
a ealeccsian Best renlen,
Tegmicte.risa} Thompson’s Eye Water
W. N. U., DENVER, NO. 16-1909.
=— Positively cured by
CARTERS these Little Pills.
IT TLE |costomDynperainntee
rt digestion and Too Heas
BAVER [ee A preter
Fy PILLS, |sca, “Drowsiness, Baa
EB Taste inthe South, Conte
= : liiae,"forriD Live
ey regulate the Bowls. ‘Purely Vemetal
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE,
Genuine Must B
GARTERS Fao-Simile Signature
Be (eewB oo
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES,
$3.00 SOS
5 WAS See
OI ' Mt
x I ay
c @( ¢ aN vy jy
OW FH YE
ah \\ On
aT seas rep IX yy
L
fe
‘Tho Reason I Mako and Sell More Men's $3.00
‘&. 398.50 Shoes Than Any Other Manufactures
at ese an ae
ig te eeu
ESSERE camnateas
See ro rarmey
See Aa ay aes
en aren aeetie aoe ee
{Siape, 2¢ etter, and wear longer than any otGer mabe
Siusniey ue stemistontnect amie:
Sea acta
CAUTION ! iisine Snd'reice namped 6h bottoms
COUN cece ran aces
ee ee
% This Trade-mark
2 \ ee Eliminates All
Pm ah Uncertainty
ze FA in he purchase of
BGRAA, paint materials,
os HD f is an absolute
fe panne nes
Ee ity and quality.
fan | a ee aan some one
aim protection, see
Ls that it is on the sid= of
‘every keg of white lead
i > you buy.
2 NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY
1062 Trinty Balding, New York
what Liver or Bowel medicine you
are using, stop it now. Get a 100
box—week's treatment—of CAS-
CARETS today from your druggist
and learn how easily, naturally and
delightfully your fiver can be mado
to work, and your bowels move every
day. There's new life in every box.
CASC/.RETS are nature's helper.
You will see the difference! a
CASCARETS toc a box for a weck'a
$s the pearls mifion bores eee
PICKER & BEARDSLEY
Commission Company
ST. LOUIS, MO.
Largest receivers of com
signed Wool west of the
Minalssippi River. Order
‘Wool bags and Twine now.
Write for Prices. Established 187%
Dr. McINTOSN celebrated
Natural Uterine Supporter
sistemas ey Ree
(ruggists in United ‘States mpd
Echoes feel shoparticae mati
THE HASTINGS & McINTOSH TRUSS CO.,
912 Walnuts, Philadelphia, Vee
manufacturers. of trusses and
mete Racktry tof ule Genuine
Hataped “Merntosht” sappurter,
we HAIR BAL:
tate td, mr tn at
es
Peg gie iar cis ore ee
Oe Rl oe oa
Phy ames Ocoee icenee bade,
Commercial, Fraternal, Church, Book and Stationery Jobs a Specialty
Ball and Concert Programs, Bill and Letter Heads, Calling Cards, Wedding Cards, Envelopes and Everything in the PrintingLine Turned Out in Neatest and Best 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
---
Coat and Dress
THE FASHION OF THE EASTERN WORLD IN THE 19TH CENTURY.
The design for the coat may be made up in black or colored velvet or velveteen; if colored, it should accord with the skirt with which it is worn. It is tight-fitting and open in front, the large Empire revers, turn-over collar and cuffs being of silk, braided. A double-breasted vest of striped silk connects the fronts. Hat of fine straw trimmed with velvet and a feather mount.
Materials required for the coat, 4½ yards velvet 31 inches wide, % yard striped silk, % yard silk for revers and collar.
Cashmere in a pretty shade of blue is employed for the home dress; the bodice has a very deep yoke of lace, and has folds carried over the shoulders; the left side is drawn up at the waist under the ends of right side, which are ornamented with buttons. The long tucked sleeves are finished with lace ruffles.
Materials required: 8 yards 46 inches wide, % yard lace, 2 yards lining.
WHITE NOW IN HIGH FAVOR
Color No Longer Regarded as Suitable to Youth Alone Is Sure to Be Much Worn.
A growing inclination to wear white is apparent. White was once regarded as the special privilege of youth. Now, with a clearer knowledge of the values of color and a better realization of the importance of surrounding, one indulges one's natural tastes. Perhaps the influence of the period under which fashion is passing has something to do with this, for the women who amused themselves at Trianon used white freely and without stint.
Be that as it may, white gowns, and white generally, will be more worn this coming season than ever. White cloth in a variety of makes, satin charmeuse, the cashmere and white serge, in an infinite variety of qualities and thicknesses, will come in for much attention from artists in dress.
As to the lingerie gown, its importance in the wardrobe cannot be questioned. It is one of the most useful things to have and, whether worn outside or indoors, permits so much individual taste and charm in contrast that it is quite indispensable.
DRESS FOR SMALL CHILD.
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Here is a dainty little dress in cream nun's veiling. The pretty-shaped opening at neck is edged with silk galloon; a set of pin tucks are made in centre of front below opening, and also round the foot of skirt; the armholes are edged by galloon. The little slip or blouse, which is separate, is in cream spotted silk, finished at the neck and elbow by a narrow frill. A colored sash is worn below waist. Materials required: 2 yards veiling 46 inches wide, $1\frac{1}{4}$ yard silk 36 inches wide, $1\frac{1}{2}$ yard galloon.
Return to Mahogany.
There is quite a return at present to the use of mahogany candlesticks for the bedrooms and living-room. They are even used on supper tables. The mahogany candlestick is old, with a high polish, and stands quite high on a flat base. The candles are used without shades. A pair of them is a good finish to a mahogany bookcase, also to a mahogany desk.
Cotton to Be Worn.
Gowns of coarse cotton not embroidered in a heavy crude darning stitch are to be worn in not only white, but colors. They are made over china or other soft silks or even thin cotton of glossy finish.
Combination Lingerie Both Comfortable and Suitable to the Present Fashion.
The work of making lingerie is very much lightened this season by combining three pieces in one. The slim as well as the stout woman approves of this plan. After a woman has worn the three-piece combination, which fastens down the front, is without belts, draw strings, plats or gathers, she cannot return with satisfaction to wearing the three separate pices.
The new garment is worn over the corset, which is placed over a thin lisle-thread skirt or a knee-length combination suit.
The latter is more acceptable than any other garment under the corset. The shirt cannot be kept down, and wrinkles around the edge of the corset, making a ridge that shows through the outer skirt.
Dressed in this fashion, a woman is more comfortable than she ever has been. Her underclothes are reduced to minimum weight, her waist line is natural and not made larger by strings, buttons and belts, and the lack of petticoats gives her greater freedom in walking.
Attractive Empire Combs
Empire combs have come back with the empire coiffures, and in Paris and London there has been a rage for the genuine combs of the period, very high prices being paid in many cases for the antiques. Even where the stones used are not real gems, the design and workmanship often give real value to these combs; but excellent reproductions have been made from many of the most attractive empire designs, and these will content the woman who does not care to spend a large sum upon an ornament which is likely to be but a passing fad. Dealers in antiques tell us, however, that they have sold a number of the genuine old combs, chiefly in dull gilt and pearls.-American Register, London.
Tight Sleeves and Low Collars.
Tight sleeves and Low Collars.
Women whose arms are either very full or very thin dislike the revelation of the sleeve that is guiltless of any fulness whatsoever. But for the woman who can wear the smaller sleeve nothing is more chic at present, for it gives a very narrow-shouldered, slender look to the most corpulent figure. Collars are less exaggerated than they were a year ago, and the shawl collars and collarless necks of the new coats are a boon to women who do their own tailoring. They are awfully good style and very easy to make.—Delineator.
Coral Linen Frocks
Coral linen is a good material for the foundation of a walking suit which is to be self-trimmed, soutached, outlined with eyelet or made severely plain. Black should be introduced in the trimming scheme, though not in a marked degree. A black hat is suitable for wear with a coral linen frock, providing the dress shows just the least particle of black, which is easily obtained in piped lines.
Fashion Is an Economy
For once we have stumbled on a fashion that is really an economy, for instead of having a high-necked gown for the theater and a semi-low necked gown for an informal dinner, a woman now needs but one dress for both occasions.
Why help pay big rent? We save you 20 per cent on uptown prices CLEMENTS TAILOR
1523 16TH ST. Near Blake
Silk and Messaline Dresses
At $19.75 Black, navy, wine, old rose, wistaria, taupe,
reseda, myrtle, brown and white offer a good
opportunity to select the color you want, at a
good saving in price. These garments are made
of extra good quality of taffeta and messaline silk, in princess and
empire styles, neatly trimmed, and were made to
retail for $25.00; on sale for $19.75
Offers the best values to be found in the city. Some new ones have been received and added to the lots; and many of the choicest styles are still to be had in some colors. Plenty of black, navy, green, gray and brown in each lot; in some lots you can find the fancy shades.
$13.75 FOR TAILORED SUITS WORTH $18.00 AND $20.00.
S&N
GARMENT STORE
925-16TH ST. OPP. JOSLINS
Douglass Undertaking Co. (Successors to the A. M. Lawhorn Co.)
J. R. Contee, Pres. R. E. Handy, Licenced Embalmer
Undertakers and Funeral Directors
Open Day and Night. Carriages Furnished for all Occasions. Up-to-Date Shippers
A LIMITED NUMBER OF STOCK FOR SALE
1110 Eighteenth St. Phone Main 6123
GOOD GLOVES
If you buy your Gloves at the Perini Store you have the best and pay no more.
MEN'S GLOVES
sp, spear-back English Cape Gloves, in the tan
des, extra quality; the pair.....
Fine French Gray Plque Suede Gloves—dark
des—white or self-stitched—a beautiful glove
address wear; the pair.....
o have everything else in Men's Gloves that is o
DERINI BRO
5TH STREET OPPOSITE
One-clasp, spear-back English Cape Gloves, in the tan
shades, extra quality; the pair..... $1.50
Men's Fine French Gray Plque Suede Gloves—dark or light
shades—white or self-stitched—a beautiful glove
for dressy wear; the pair..... $2.50
We also have everything else in Men's Gloves that is desirable.
Perini Bros.
16TH STREET
OPPOSITE POST-OFFICE
UMBRELLAS REPAIRED AND RECOVERED.
THEIR POSSIBILITIES IN THE WAY OF DESSERTS.
Are Most Delicious and Wholesome. When Properly Cooked—How to Retain Sweetness and Flavor of Fresh Fruit.
At this season, as the preserve closet stores are dwindling on the shelves, the housewife naturally turns to dried and evaporated fruits. Properly cooked, the dried fruits are delicious and wholesome. The only reason that their popularity
the housewife naturally turns to dried and evaporated fruits. Properly cooked, the dried fruits are delicious and wholesome. The only reason that their popularity
has ever waned has been due to bad cooking. All dried fruits-require long soaking to restore the lost juices, then slow cooking to develop the latent sweetness and fruit flavor. Prunes cooked in this way need no sugar at all, unless one has a phenomenally sweet tooth. Currants and raisins lend themselves to a great variety of wholesome dishes, the currant particularly being now recognized as a real health food. Carefully dried apples make a sauce almost as good as the fresh apples, to say nothing of delicious pies and cakes. Cherries, plums and pears properly treated may be used satisfactorily almost any way that fresh fruits are cooked.
Few housekeepers realize the possibilities of dried apricots as the basis of delicious desserts. Added to mincemeat or combined with other dried fruit their delicate acid flavor serves to bring out the rich flavor of other ingredients. They require long soaking—from ten to twenty hours—using plenty of sugar in the water in which they are soaked; if they are ripe and appetizing they are then ready for use, without any cooking whatever. Simply drain, boil the sirup down one half and pour over the fruit. If the fruit was put up a little green they may need some cooking; but it must be a gentle simmer, not a rapid boil, which toughens.
A nice combination of flavors is found by using equal quantities of prunes and apricots. Wash thoroughly and soak over night in water to cover. The next morning simmer until tender, then press through a colander. Sweeten to taste and cook a little longer. Serve as sauce or allow a tablespoonful gelatin to each pint of the cooked fruit. Soak the gelatin in cold water for half an hour, then dissolve in boiling water or over the tea kettle. Stir thoroughly in with the fruit, turn into a mold and set in a cool place to harden. Serve with cream.
Cherry Salad.
Two cups of canned cherries, one cup canned pineapple cut in small pieces, one cup white grapes, from which the seeds are removed, cut in quarter, and one-half cup English walnut kernels. Mix fruit and nuts together. Add mayonnaise dressing mixed with cream. Do not mix until before serving. This serves six or seven people.
Tapioca Salad.
Cook one cup of taploca until transparent. Remove seeds from half a pound of large white grapes and cut in halves; three large bananas, two oranges, one cup of pineapple, all cut in small pieces, and one cup of cherries. Add to this the cooked taploca, mix thoroughly, spread with shredded cocoanut and serve with whipped cream.
Dainty Orange Baskets.
Use large, well-formed oranges. Cut out two corners to make a handle to the basket, scoop out inside. Make a filling of tapioca cream flavored with the orange juice; let cream cool, fill the orange basket with the cream and top with whipped cream. Add either a maraschino cherry or a dot of red jelly to either side of handle.
Winter Chili Sauce.
One can of tomatoes, two large onions, one tablespoon of salt, one teaspoon of pepper or a pinch of cayenne, one cup of sugar, one-half cup of vinegar, one-half teaspoon each of the different spices. Let cook slowly about two hours. It is nice on beans or cold meats and can hardly be told from fresh tomatoes.
Apple Sauce Pie
Line a plate with plain paste. Cover bottom with pieces of bread spread with butter. Over this pour custard made of one egg, one tablespoon sugar, one-half teaspoonful cornstarch and one cup milk. Upon this spread apple sauce thickly and sprinkle with cinnamon, then bake until custard is thick.
Sardine Appetizer:
Have bread toasted crisp, hard crust removed. Beat together one teaspoonful of butter, one-half teaspoonful of mustard, a little cayenne pepper, one teaspoonful of Worcestershire sauce and a little lemon juice. Spread on toast, lay on sardines and set in oven a few minutes before serving.
Sandwich Ham.
After boiling a piece of ham the short, shank end is generally stringy and often wasted. If this is passed twice through a meat chopper and then mixed with a little sweet cream it makes ham which is excellent for sandwiches.
Time Savers.
When ready to core apples, if you do not own a corer, use a common wooden clothes pin—does the work just as well.