Colorado Statesman

Saturday, May 7, 1910

Denver, Colorado

8 pages

Page 1
Page 1
Page 2
Page 2
Page 3
Page 3
Page 4
Page 4
Page 5
Page 5
Page 6
Page 6
Page 7
Page 7
Page 8
Page 8
Page text (machine-generated)
Watch Next Issue For Voting Instructions THE COLORADO STATESMAN THE JOURNAL OF THE WEST. LABOR SHALL BE FREE RAGE COUNTRY PARTY MUNICIPAL OWNERSHIP Of Water Plants are Branded as Financial Failures by the United States Census Bureau--A Burden to Tax Payers in the Operation and Keeping up Such a Plant. VOL. XVI. MUNICIPAL OWN Of Water Plants are Branded the United States Cent to Tax Payers in Keeping up Is municipal ownership of water systems a success? The answer to this question depends upon whether you are holding a political office in a city that owns its own water plant, or are in the position of a disinterested observer of conditions under municipal ownership. The politicians who are interested in water systems with few exeptions declare that they are gloriously successful. An impartial observer like the statisticians employed by the United States Census Bureau to make accurate reports on municipally operated enterprises declares they are not. The Census Bureau statisticians have no personal interest in the cities upon which they report. The latest bulletin of the Census Bureau contains reports on 158 cities that own their own water systems. Eighty of these cities are credited with populations of more than 50,000. Of the eighty having 50,000 or more inhabitants 48 are branded financial failures by the government's official report. They show deficits over the ordinary expenses of operation that would be borne by a private plant ranging anywhere from $7,751 to $1,807,-591. These deficits are exclusive of the cost of extensions and additions that must be made to every water system from year to year and which if they were included would increase the shortage materially. The following table shows the deficit reported by the Census Bureau for the largest of the cities: Amount of Deficit. New York. $ 255,600 Philadelphia. 1,807,591 St. Louis. 507,796 Baltimore. 287,240 Pittsburg, Pa. 543,882 Cleveland, O. 339,147 Buffalo 280,656 Detroit. 7,751 Cincinnati. 391,264 Washington, D. C. 678,843 Newark, N. J. 426,457 Minneapolis, Minn. 153,359 St. Paul, Minn. 219,113 Rochester, N. Y. 159,925 Kansas City. 177,868 Columbus, O. 148,152 Memphis, Tenn. 95,020 Syracuse, N. Y. 72,988 Portland, Ore. 74,417 Atlanta, Ga. 88,404 Richmond, Va. 50,557 Nashville, Tenn. 240,907 Dayton, O. 36,280 Municipal ownership has been in operation in these cities for varying periods ranging from seven years in Memphis, Tennessee, to 109 years in Philadelphia, which city shows the largest deficit in the list. If municipal ownership was a guarantee of successful and profitable operation of a public utility, surely it should have reached a high state of perfection in the time it has been on trial. The people of Denver have been told that the cities that operate their own water systems do so in a manner so successful that the systems produce sufficient revenue to pay all cost of operation and maintenance and provide all funds necessary for improvements, extensions and additions required from year to year by every water plant. These eclaims are not borne out by the Census Bureau reports which show that the cities that operate their own water systems have heavy bonded debts for the account of the water department. In many cases the interest on the bonded debt is paid out of the funds obtained through general taxation instead of out of the receipts of the water department. In this manner the political heads of the water system fool the people into believing that they are getting water at low rates, whereas if the truth was known they are paying a far higher rate than would be the case under private ownership. The following table shows the bonded indebtedness for the account of the water department in some of the largest cities: DENVER, COLORADO, SATURDAY, MAY 7 1910. State Hist & Nat Hist Society State House xt Issue ADO THE JOURNAL DENVER, COLORADO, Rochester, N. I. 3,750,000 Los Angeles, Cal. 4,606,300 The taxpayers must pay interest on these indebtednesses, pay for the cost of extensions and betterments of the system which are not included in the expenses in the first table, and make up any other deficit that may develop. The money must be forthcoming whether it comes from water rates or tax levies. No citizen in any city operating its own water plant can tell what his water actually costs him. Municipal funds are transferred from one fund to another so easily that the people cannot keep track of the expenditures. THE AMENDMENTS With the campaign about over except the counting of the votes about the only noise heard is from the "Reformers' ranks" in a wild endeavor to locate the numerous amendments to the city charter about which so much has been said recently. The action of the aldermen in endorsing a form of ballot locating the bunch of amendatory misfits, seems to be causing "Rush et al.," much uneasiness. There is some solace to the great body of voters in reading the Republican platform; they are relieved from the obscuring presence of the amendments. The Republican and Democratic leaders treat the water question as a great business proposition entirely outside the political arena. The water question belongs to all the people, as the "wet and dry" amendments. Both are questions to be decided not in the heat of a political campaign but in the calm quiet of your homes. The business men of Denver, (and we mean, the men who have made the city, and not the vociferous wind-jamers, whose strident tones are heard above the "voice of the turtle" of prosperity) are busy making it plain to the people what to do to make a bigger and better town. The idea is to keep these motley amendments where they will do the least harm and put the reins of government in the hands of business men. Then watch Denver grow. Then the colored man will get his share along with all the people. TEXAS AGAIN. There is always something doing down in Texas. If they are not landing the poor Negro, they are busy with the gun, faggot and rope. Last week Texas told the world that the story of "the black mamy" was the real genuine article and the city of Galveston would erect a mounment to her memory. It was not to be a tame, skimpy affair, but five hundred thousand dollars of fine marble, exquisite workmanship and cement should bear lasting testimony to the "black many" whose ample bosom nourished the sons and daughters of the southland. It's a beautiful theme upon which to contemplate, and we doubt not but that every Negro who reads the cheering news did not feel a pardonable pride in the color that never fades. But —! Have you heard from Coleman, Texas? What a wildly weird story of human depravity and hatred. Driven from home and employment. Yet Texas has the temerity to censure Russia. RACE PREJUDICE AT OBERLIN. Letters of Protest From All Over the Country Pouring Into College—College Officials Admit Discrimination—Institution Has Heretofore Been Known for Broadness. Oberlin, O., April 26.—Prejudice against Negroes has grown strong among the undergraduates of Oberlin College, and Negro students have been barred from the privileges of the literary, social and secret societies, and are even barred from the church choir. In the athletic teams it is the same. College boarding houses will no longer permit Negroes to eat at the tables with white students. Old alumni can hardly believe it, and indignation meetings are being held by graduates throughout the state. Letters of protest are pouring into the college town. Professors and college officers admit that race prejudice has become strong. Oberlin College, a Congregational institution, has up to this term always been a strong friend of the Negro. It was an "underground railroad" station during the Civil war. Many Negroes have settled in the town because of the friendly feeling toward them, and heretofore they have been received with open arms as students and enjoyed all the privileges of whites. NEGRO BABY GETS A $5,250 VERDICT. Lawyer Holds Her in His Arms and Shows Jury Scars Accident Caused. Edith V. Agee, an eighteen months old baby, got a verdict recently for $5,250 for a fractured skull, received while in the arms of her mother, a passenger on a Columbia & Puget Sound train, October 1, 1909. The mother, Mrs. Mary Agee, was awarded damages for lesser injuries in the sum of $1,500. The baby received all that was asked, while the mother asked for $2,200 and received $1,500. Edward Agee, the father of the child, is a negro barber at Coal Creek, a hamlet near Newcastle. The accident in which the damages were received happened while the train was standing near Black River Junction. An engine belonging to the Milwaukee railway backed into it at a fair rate of speed. The baby was hurled against the side off the car with such force that its skull was fractured, and it was only after careful surgical attention that it was nursed back to health. Walter S. Fulton, attorney for the plaintiff, took the little one in his arms and showed the jury the great scars on her head, while the baby smiled blandly at the strange faces before her. This is the first damage case in the King County Superior Court in some years in which the plaintiff has been awarded by the jury the full amount of damages claimed. RACE NEWS GATHERED FROM VARIOUS SOURCES Horace Hemsley, colored, aged 85, who died in Boston recently, had been a waiter for the past 50 years and is said to have left $100,000. The only colored drivers of teams at the Boston horse show each won first prize, Mr. G. W. White, driver of pair of heavies, and Mr John Thomas, driver of team of three heavies. Four of the Negro banks in Alabama received in deposits in one day $25,523.60 The ripple of prosperity is reaching the furthest banks and we wonder when it will strike these shores. Willie Hammerstein, manager of the Victoria Theatre, has offered Champion Jack Johnson booking for a two weeks' engagement at $3,000 a week, commencing the week of July 11. Well known theatrical manager must know something. Out of 300 applicants who appeared before the Board of Engineers in Philadelphia last week, for license to operate steam stationary engines in that city, Walter B. Johnson, who is only 21 years old led his white opponents in the examination and received the highest percentage. The two hundred Negro pupils of the Henrietta Evening Trade School of the Children's Aid Society have opened an exposition where women's hats and gowns, embroideries and other handiwork are displayed. The school is the only trade school in New York City conducted for the instruction of Negroes. Demonstrations will be given Wednesday and Thursday evenings. Havana, April 25—On motion of a Negro member the House of Representatives has adopted a resolution asking the President to inform the House how many Negroes had been dismissed from the army in the course of the last week, and the reasons for their dismissal. The Manassas, Va., Colored Industrial School has just announced the receipt of donations aggregating $50,000. This sum includes $18,000 from Andrew Carnegie, $12,000 from persons in New York City and the balance from persons NO.34 throughout the Northern, Central Southern states. This money the institution will devote to building purposes and other improvements. Montgomery, Ala., April 26. Something out of the ordinary happened in this city recently, something that indicates progress. A Negro by the name of Benjamin Hooks shot to death two white men, Robert W. Bean and Henry L. Brady, money lenders. It seems that these two white men went to Hooks' house and abused his wife while he was absent. Hooks heard from neighbors that his wife was being abused by two men and went to his house, got a shotgun and killed both of the white men. It is said that the two money-lending sharks had been charging the Negro and his family interest at the rate of 331.3 per cent. a month. Although they were shot down by Hooks, the sheriff and the citizens of Montgomery gave him protection. When the facts became known, public sentiment changed in favor of Hooks. There was no attempt at lynching, and the Negro will have a legal trial. New Orleans, La., April 26. The Negroes of New Orleans are disappointed over the fact that Charles C. Palfrey a white man, has been nominated by President Taft to take the position of Receivers of Public Monies in place of A. B. Kennedy, who has filled the position for a number of years. With the removal of Mr. Kennedy there remains but a single Negro holding a Presidential office in the State of Louisiana. The last of the Monicans in this case is the Hon. Walter L. Cohen, who still retains the position of Register of the Land Office. It is stated that Mr. Kennedy is to be given or has been a clerkship in some department. No reason is given out as to the grounds upon which Mr. Kennedy has been removed, who had the reputation of being a tiptop official, and no complaint so far as your correspondent can gather was lodged against the official conduct of his office. It is stated upon what seems to be good authority that Charles Palfrey, who has been appointed to take Mr. Kennedy's place, was a collegiate of President Taft at Yale University, and the President promised him sometime ago that he would take care of him in some position, hence the removal of the colored man, Mr. Kennedy. ```markdown ``` Phone 2449. C OZARK C MILLIARDS AND POOL PARLORS THE OZA BILLIARDS PARI THE OZARK CLUB BILLIARDS AND POOL PARLORS STRICTLY MEMBERSHIP CLUB THOMAS CLIN 1855 Arapahoe Street When y The Heads, Feet, Tails, Snouts, Ear other part of the hog MAS CLINGMAN, Ma 5 Arapahoe Street Phone Main 5 When you Wake eet, Tails, Snouts, Ears, Neckbones or Chitts other part of the hog except the squeal go t THOMAS CLINGMAN, Manager 1855 Arapahoe Street Phone Main 5154 When you Want The Heads, Feet, Tails, Snouts, Ears, Neckbones or Chitterlings or any other part of the hog except the squeal go to East's Market 2300-6 Larimer Street. Phone 1461 Main. THE TIVOLF UNION BREWING CO. Fanta DENVER, COLORADO DID YOU NEef Bro It's made right, None better ma This is a Strictly D YOU EVER THAT ef Bros.' Be made right, and tastes ne better made anywhere is a Strictly Colorado Pro 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. one Main 7413 Wines, Liquors and Cig THE NEWPORT SALOON DICK FRAZIER AND TOM LEWIS PROPRIETORS ▲ First-Class Resort For Gentlemen Broad Men and Wai Club lead, others follow. Home for and Club Men. A welcome to visit Railroad Men Cl We lead, others follow road and Club Men. A All the latest Magaz Railroad Men and Waiters' We lead, others follow. Home for Railroad and Club Men. A welcome to visitors All the latest Magazines and Papers will be found in the Library room. . . . . . FRANK BURNLEY, Manager 2149 Curtis Street Denver, Colo. Phone Main 8232 JOSEPH SOBOL EDWARD URDANK TELEPHONE CHAMPA 1231 The Monarch THE MONARCH LIQUOR CO. Liquor Co. DEALERS IN IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC WINES AND LIQUORS FAMILY TRADE A SPECIALTY 1516 COURT PLACE. DENVER, COLO. 2300-6 Larlmer Street. Phone Main 7413 1845 Arapahoe St. WM. EHMKE MANAGER 2132-2148 ARAPAHOE ST. e 2449. DENVER. NGMAN, Manager set Phone Main 5154 you Want Cars, Neckbones or Chitterlings or any except the squeal go to Market WILLIAMSON HAFFNER CO. ENGRAVERS-PRINTERS OUR CUTS TAULKS DENVER, COLO EVER TRY os.' Beer? and tastes right. ade anywhere and Colorado Production Wines, Liquors and Cigars and Waiters' Club allow. Home for Rail- A welcome to visitors Phone 2449. DENVER Phone 1461 Main. THE WORLD IN PARAGRAPHS BRIEF RECORD OF PASSING EVENTS IN THIS AND OTHER COUNTRIES. IN LATE DISPATCHES DOINGS AND HAPPENINGS THAT MARK THE PROG- RESS OF THE AGE. WESTERN. Wind did considerable damage in Kansas Sunday, many buildings being demolished. One or two fatalities occurred. Harvie Hughes killed Marguerita Matheson, a chorus girl, Tuesday at Bisbee, Ariz., and then sent a bullet into his own head. The interests of forty-seven rail roads west of Chicago and of their enginemen and firemen now hinge upon the selection of a third party. The trial of Gov. Haskell of Oklahoma and five business men of Muskogee in the Creek Indian town lot cases was called in the Federal Court at Tulsa Monday. Unallotted lands in four Indian reservations were opened to entry Monday. The reservations are the Standing Rock, in North and South Dakota, Cheyenne River, in South Dakota, Flat Head, in Montana, and Coeur d'Alene in Idaho. Amid excitement in the Cheyenne City Council, Mayor P. S. Cook, Republican, Tuesday night declared the seats of H. E. Gates, Democrat, and Henry Sweet, Republican, vacant, on the ground that these aldermen had removed from their wards. Dr. Frederick H. Milliner, experimental engineer of the Union Pacific has received orders to begin immediately the installation of his system of railway wireless telegraph on the Union Pacific. The first stations are to be at Sidney, Neb., and Cheyenne Wyo. In a wedding so quiet and devoid of any publicity as to excite comment, Mrs. Ruth Bryan-Leavitt, eldest daughter of William J. Bryan, was married Tuesday at Lincoln to Lieut. Reginald A. Owen of the Royal engineers corps of the British army, stationed in Jamaica. Harrassed by claim jumpers, who have threatened her life, Mrs. Leona M. Miller, divorced wife of a Los Angeles capitalist, and a one-time member of the social colony at Long Beach, is holding a gold claim in the Mojave desert, her daughter, six years of age, her only companion. GENERAL. Recent increases in wages on fifteen eastern railroads will benefit employees $44,700,000 per year. Fire consumed 35,000 barrels of oil at Martinsville, Ill., Monday night. The tank was struck by lightning. Indiana miners and operators settled their differences Tuesday night and the miners returned to work Wednesday. Present danger of a rate war on automobile insurance in Chicago was everted Tuesday by the continuance of a former agreement. John L. Beveridge, who served four terms as governor of Illinois, beginning in 1875 died Tuesday at his home in Hollywood, Calif. Forty thousand miners in the soft coal district around Pittsburg will go to work as a result of a settlement of the controversy there. While ten policemen surrounded his house in St. Louis in an effort to arrest him for wife beating, John Briscoe shot and killed his wife and himself. The will of Samuel L. Clemens (Mark Twain), filed for probate at Redding, Conn., Tuesday leaves the entire estate to the surviving daughter, Clara Lanachorne Clemens, wife of Ossip Gabrielowitch. The amount of the estate is not given. Returns received from sixty-seven counties show that Emmet O'Neal, local optionist, was nominated for governor of Alabama in the Democratic primary by a majority of 12,000 over his opponent, H. S. D. Mallory, Mallory ran on a state-wide prohibition platform. "That the farms of the United States are not producing half what they should because of a lack of practical education among the farmers" was the reason of the high cost of living offered by Secretary of Agriculture James Wilson in an address Tuesday night at the Farmers' Union. He was roundly applauded at the conclusion of his address, and presided during the rest of the session. William R. Hearst on Saturday began a libile suit against the New York Times for $100,000 for reporting Mayor Gaynor's speech at the Associated Press dinner in which the mayor's mention of Mr. Hearst was not complimentary. John H. Converse, of the Baldwin Locomotive Works, Philadelphia, one of the most prominent Presbyterian laymen in the United States, died suddenly at his home in Rosemont, near there Tuesday. Mr. Converse was sixty-nine years old. FOREIGN. The Buckwood brewery, Winnipeg, Man., was burned Monday. Loss $100.000. By the burning of the Rossmore hotel at Cornwall, Ont., Saturday morning, ten persons lost their lives. Theodore Roosevelt was warmly welcomed in the Danish capital Monday by both the court and the people. Monsignor Guglielmo Pifferi, who had been the sacrista or parish priest of the apostolic palace since the time of Plus IX., died in the arms of the pope Friday. The monsignor had served for fifty years under three popes. Commander Robert E. Peary Tuesday fulfilled one of the most important of the engagements which took him to England, taking luncheon as the guest of the Royal Societies' Club in its palatial home in St. James street, London. The most famous scientists of England and many scientists and explorers from abroad were present. A test that was carried out Sunday shows it is possible to diagnose heart troubles by telephone a distance of 100 miles. The experiment was conducted between Mr. Milne's house on the Isle of Wight, where the seismologist and four physicians, using an ordinary telephone, listened to the beating of a woman's heart in London. A stethoscope, held over the heart, in the familiar manner, was attached to a telephone by means of which sounds are magnified. SPORT. Sam Berger, Jeffries' manager, left Ben Lomond Sunday night for San Francisco, to be present at the posting of the $30,000 additional purse money, for the big fight. The money will be deposited with a San Francisco bank and later will be sent to Stakeholder Tim Sullivan of New York. The New York Senate Tuesday amended the Agnew bill prohibiting the publication of betting odds so as to make it apply solely to bookmaking on horse races. As introduced the bill was interpreted to include in its prohibition betting odds on boat races, football, baseball and amateur sports. Opposition to the Jeffries-Johnson prizefight, following the death of Tommy McCarthy, San Francisco pugilist, as the result of a fight with Owen Moran at San Francisco early Saturday morning, took form Sunday in a statewide movement of clergymen to prevent the holding of the championship fight July 4. Prizefighting was denounced from scores of pulpits and in many cases definite beginnings of a campaign to be taken up this week were made. Cutting his way through a mass of 20,000 cheering people, his white locks bared to the breeze and his shuffling feet keeping time to the strains of the "Star Spangled Banner," Edward Payson Weston on Monday brought to a triumphant end his ocean-to-ocean walk. He ascended the steps of the city hall at 3:10 p. m., completing the transcontinental journey of 3,583 miles in seventy-seven walking days, a feat without parallel in the annals of pedestrians. His original programme was to make it in ninety days. WASHINGTON. The contract for the Denver postoffice was awarded to the Heddon company of New York, who will use Colorado marble. The House has passed the bill to pay overtime claims of letter carriers previously passed by the Senate. The claims of Colorado beneficiaries aggregate $838. Governor Hughes was Monday confirmed by the Senate for Justice of the Supreme Court immediately after his nomination had been reported from the committee on the judiciary. A letter sent to the American consul at Managua, Nicaragua, and forwarded by him to Washington, reciting numerous atrocities and barbarities occurring in that republic. The Court of Claims Monday rendered a decision holding that a certain line of tax collections on legacies made as a result of legislation enacted to carry on the Spanish American war should be refunded. The decision means the return to the taxpayers of about $5,000,000. The House Monday passed a bill which, if not amended in the Senate, will permit the President to place army engineers in charge of any project, including those for recamation of arid lands. The Senate Monday amended and passed a bill which already had passed the House to create a Bureau of Mines in the Interior Department. In addition to carrying on mining work heretofore done by the Geological Survey, the bureau will investigate the causes of mine explosions. The Allen Drug Store Pure Drugs, Hot and Cold Drinks, Tollet Articles and Cigars. Prescriptions carefully compounded by a registered pharmacist. Prompt delivery to any part of the city. We are still at our old stand 1540-46 Welton Street With the largest stock and lowest prices, on Rugs, Carpets and Curtains MARTIN-BENIGHT & LATCHAM CARPET COMPANY 1540-46 Welton Street 2100 Arapahoe Street NOT We are still at 1540-46 W With the largest stock Rugs, Carpets MARTIN-BENIG CARPET 1540-46 W Dr. J. H. P. Westbrook Residence and Office 1023 Twenty-First St. Over Allen's Drug Store. Phone Main 1144. OFFICE HOURS: 2 to 5 p. m. and 7 to 9 p. m. Sundays and Other Times by Appointment. CREDIT ? YES PHONE MAIN 6316 T. H. Wearne PHONE MAIN 6316 Furniture CARPETS, STOVES AND WINDOW SHADES First Class Repairing and Upholstering 1449-55 Welton Street Phones, Office Main 5595. Residence, York 123. Hours: 9 to 11 a. m., 1 to 4, 7 to 8 p.m. Sundays: 10 to 11:30 a. m., 2 to 4 p.m. Dr. P. E. Spratlin Good Block-1557 Larimer St. Residence 2230 Clarkson St. Denver, Colorado. You Owe It to your own goods from your home merchant and stand by her business men. You can always find the amouncessees of representative business men these columnes—men who will stand back of every statement—men who will stand back of --- Phone—Main 3230 ICE our old stand Lton Street and lowest prices, on and Curtains T & LATCHAM COMPANY Lton Street THE GERMAN AMERICAN TRUST COMPANY Seventeenth and Lawrence Sts. DENVER Lawrence Sts. COLORADO Capital $300,000.00 Surplus $50,000.00 General Banking Savings Department, 4% Interest Paid, open Saturday Evenings from 6 to 8. Safe Deposit Vaults, the Strongest and Best in the West. Insurance of All Kinds. Collection of Foreign Estates. Real Estate Loans. Steamship Agency. A THE COLORED AMERICAN LOAN & REALTY CO. A. A. WALLER, Mgr. and Notary Public We will insure, rent, and care for your property. HERBERT'S 1519 CURTIS STREET Ice Cream, Ices, Candies --- DELICIOUS TABLE BEERS MBINE, VIENNA AND PILSENER Guaranteed Absolutely Pure. Delivered Daily to All Parts of the City. The Ph. Za TELEPH We Boost for Colorado Five Point NEW AND SECOND HAND FURNITURE, GENERAL HO 255 LIBERAL COUR JONES' R Ph. Zang Brewing Co. TELEPHONE GALLUP 395. for Colorado You Should Boost for Us Points Furniture Co. Dealer in CARPETS, RUGS AND STOVES GENERAL HOUSE FURNISHINGS 2559 Welton Street. GENERAL COURTESY EXTENDED TO ALL ES' RESTAURANT We Boost for Colorado You Should Boost for Us 2236 Larimer St. --- --- BOE & JOES BO DES THE FEDERAL MUSEUM OF ART Located at 873 Zuni street, Denver, Colo.; take Lawrence street car west and get off at West Eighth avenue, go due west through the Barnum shops eight blocks. This institution provides a home for homeless colored children and aged women and men of the race. We also care for children whose parents are in service and can't keep them, at a very small pitance. Any information can be had by writing a letter or postal to 873 Zuni street, or telephoning Main 7326. ```markdown ``` A Woman Carrying A Basket Denver, Colorado Superior Laundry ALL HAND WORK. J. W. CASEY, Proprietor. Talephone 2132. 1785 Lawrence St. One case of smallpox at Hudson. Gilcrest has organized a commercial club. Delta had a $20,000 fire Monday morning. A state bank has been organized at Crawford. Ranch hands are reported scarce around Parker. It is reported that La Jara will have another newspaper. The First National Bank of Eaton will double its capital. Winter wheat around Wiley is said to be looking extremely fine. Work on Fort Lupton's new waterworks was commenced Tuesday. The Farmers' State Bank of Center has been changed to a national bank. The Garfield county grand jury returned nearly a hundred indictments. The town of Colibran is taking steps to acquire and improve a public park. "Capt." William Thurston, a centenarian (colored) of Cripple Creek, is dead. A postoffice has been re-established at Holtwold with Mrs. J. L. Rector in charge. Irrigation projects under way in Routt county will reclaim 721,000 acres. Development will immediately start on a large tract of coal land near Axial. Fifteen thousand trees and shrubs were received at Fountain one day last week. The Monte Vista city fathers have ordered 30,000 linear feet of sidewalks laid this year. The first number of the Sentinel, Sligo's first newspaper has made its appearance. The upper Plateau valley will be beautified by 25,000 trees this season, all fruit-bearing. All machinists in the Missouri Pacific shops at Pueblo obeyed the order to strike Monday. John M. Wood of Colorado Springs was killed by a runaway near Fowler, Monday afternoon. Canon City papers report that that section will have the biggest fruit crop in its history. A party of surveyors working south from Brush refuse to divulge the object of their labors. Material has arrived for the connection of Pagosa Springs by telephone with the outside world. C. W. Bain and seven children have come down with the smallpox on Quartz creek, near Pitkin. W. H. Cotton of Thornburg killed eleven wolves in ten days, and W. B. Blythe secured five on Piceance creek. The thirteenth annual convention of the Otero County Sunday School Association will begin at Manzanola May 9th. Breckenridge, Como, Jefferson, Garo, Fairplay and Alma fans propose to organize a baseball league of their own. Greeley will have a public playground for the kids, and ground for that purpose has been leased for five years. Chicago is the name of a new town started out on the plains. Most of the settlers there are from the Illinois metropolis. Manzanola's new park will be opened to the public on the occasion of the Fourth of July celebration at that place. The four-year-old son of Mrs. Bud Lee of Chromo was severely burned by tumbling backward into a tub of boiling water. The Manitou telephone exchange will be consolidated with the Colorado Springs exchange, and operated from the latter city. Thirty-three business houses in Louisville have signed an agreement to close Wednesday afternoons during May, June, July and August. The sailors at the Fort Lyon Naval Hospital have organized a baseball team and have cleaned up several nines in the Arkansas valley. Andrew Carnegie has sent a check of $1,000 to aid the fund for an equestrian statue of Gen. W. J. Palmer, to be erected at Colorado Springs. Mrs. Julia Ann Joslyn, a member of a very old and interesting family of American colonists, died at Walsenburg last week at the age of eighty. Dogs stamped a herd of 700 cattle in a pasture near Galatea, and in their mad rush the cattle tore down a mile of fence and were scattered over a large territory. Mrs. Burtis, near Akron, experienced a peculiar accident the other day. As she was reaching up to prune a tree, the knife she held dropped and struck her wrist, severing an artery. She was hurried to town and the wound stitched together by a surgeon. Colorado postmasters appointed: Ignacio, La Plata county William R. Hall, vice H. Aspaas, removed; Olney Springs, Otero county, Opal Hanen, vice G. Conferd, resigned. At its first election since incorporation, the town of Hartman elected Frank H. Puntenney mayor last week. Holtwold will have a newspaper. The town board and several business men of Carbondale having gone over to Eagle and inspected the new water-works plans there, went home and decided they would like to have waterworks at Carbondale, too. WEEK'S EVENTS IN COLORADO Big Flow of Gas. Boulder.—Well No. 23 of the United Oil Company is giving off a heavy flow of gas, which is estimated to exceed half a million cubic feet daily. San Juan Man Found Dead. Durango.—S. H. Masters, aged 68, proprietor of a billiard parlor, was found dead in bed Tuesday morning. He had evidently committed suicide. James A. McClurg Dead. Denver.—James A. McClurg, prominent in business affairs of the state, died here Tuesday night. He was a son-in-law of David H. Moffat. Insane Woman and Gun. Gunnison.—A woman claiming to be Mrs. Sim Outcalt and believed to be crazy, on Monday shot Dan Jordan in the back. She was arrested. Jordan will recover. Lockout on the Slope. Cameo—Trouble in the mine of the Grand Junction Coal Mining Company here over at attempt of H. Bousfield, secretary of the miners' union, and Will Crawford, to unionize the mine, resulted in the lockout of fifty miners employed here. The miners want a check weighman installed. Primero Mine to Reopen. Trinidad—The Colorado Fuel & Iron Company is spending much money repairing the mine at Primero, which was the scene of a disastrous explosion late in January in which seventysx men lost their lives. Work on the wrecked mine has been pushed rapidly and it will soon be in operation again. School Bond Elections. Denver.—Several Colorado towns voted for or against school bond issues Tuesday. Silverton authorized an issue of $60,000; while at Montrose ($15,000) and Longmont ($25,000) the bonds were defeated. Trinidad will decide by a special election the question of issuing $100,000 bonds for a new high school building. Northern Mines Resuming. Frederick.—The Puritan mine, near here, which resumed work last week with non-union men, on Tuesday made an output of something over 100 tons of coal. Gradually the production of the other mines which have resumed work is increasing and inside of ten days the operators say they will be supplying the normal demand for this season. Masher Thrashed; Thrasher Acquitted Grand Junction.—Supporting the unwritten law giving a man the right to defend his wife's honor at all times, Tom Rogers was acquitted of assault on John West. Rogers claimed that West accosted his wife while passing her on the road, saying, "Come ride with me, Birdie." When Rogers heard of this he hunted for West and thrashed him. Public Lands for City Parks. Washington, D. C.-The House passed the bill granting towns in Colorado right to purchase public lands at $1.25 an acre for public park purposes as follows: Glenwood Springs, 640 acres; Rifle, 320; Grand Valley, 320; Meeker, 230; Steamboat Springs, 640; De Beque, 40; Collbran, 40; Montrose, 240; Olathe, 80; Gunnison, 320; Pitkin, 240; Durango, 640; Dolores, 160; La Veta, 640. The bill provides that the lands shall be used for park purposes only and shall not be sold by the towns or cities. Fatal Feud in Jackson County. Walden.—Pollitely hailing Alfred Law, a lawyer, and editor of the New Era, with the words, "Wait, Mr. Law," J. N. Davis, an old resident of the North Park, aimed a revolver at Law and shot him through the right lung. Tuesday. The wound may result fatally, as his physicians could not say whether Law could recover. He has a wife and two children. After shooting Law, Davis turned the revolver on himself and blew out his brains. It was the culmination of a long-standing quarrel between the two men, which was intensified by statements recently printed in the New Era by Law, reflecting on Davis. About a month ago Davis was displaced as engineer in the city water plant by A. N. Siebert. This enraged him. Soon afterward Siebert had trouble getting water into the standpipe and the town went dry. It was discovered that somebody had tampered with the valve in the pipe line. Law published a statement and editorial in which he declared that if Davis had not tampered with it, his friends made it look suspicious for him. These and other similar statements caused the tragedy. Big Tract to Be Developed. Denver. The state land board has practically decided to accept the proposition made by W. A. Colt calling for the reclamation of 75,000 acres of rich but at present dry land in Otero and Bent counties. The average price to be paid the state will be $10 an acre at the minimum. Melancholia Prompts Sulcide. Golden.—Martus Beere, well known Golden man, late Sunday night shot himself through the heart at his home during an attack of melancholia. STATE OF COLORADO, Insurance De- partment, OF STATEMENT, AND SYNOPSIS OF STATEMENT AND COPY OF CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORITY INTERNATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY of New York, N. Y. Assets 1,706,607.16 Liabilities 1,297,273.16 Capital 200,000.00 Surplus 200,323.17 SIZE OF COLORADO, Insurance Department. CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORITY FOR THE YEAR ENDING FEBRUARY 28,1911 Office of Commissioner of Insurance. Denver, Colo.. March 1, 1910. It is hereby certified that the Interna- tional organization under the laws of New York, whose principal office is located at New York, has complied with all the laws of this state so far as are applicable to said Company, and the said company is hereby authorized to transact business as an insurance company in accordance with the laws of this year of an applicable internation, within the said State of Colorado, subject to the several pro- visions and requirements of said laws, until the twenty-eighth day of April 2011, by our Lord nineteen hundred and eleven. In testimony whereof, I, W. L. Clay, Commissioner, of the State of Colorado, have hereunto set my hand and affixed my seal of office in the name of the day and year first above written. Published In The Colorado States- man by authority of the Commissioner of Insurance. W. L. CLAYTON. Commissioner. ALEX. W. GRANT. Deputy. STATE OF COLORADO. Insurance De- partment. SYNOPHS OF STATEMENT AND partnership SYNONYMS OF STATEMENT AND COPY OF CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORITY. UNION HEALTH AND ACCIDENT CALIFORNIA Denver, Colo., March 1. It is hereby ordered that the Union Health and accident Company, a corporation organized under the laws of Colorado, whose principal office is located at Denver, has compiled with the laws of this state the laws that are applicable to said company, and the said company is hereby authorized to transact business as an insurance company and ordinance corporation, within the said State of Colorado, subject to the several provisions and requirements of said laws, until the twenty-eighth day of February, 1991, our Lord nineteen years and eleven. In testimony whereof, I. W. L. Clayton, Commissioner of the City, have hereunto set my hand and affixed my seal of office, at the City, on the day and the above written. Published in The Colorado Statesman by authority of the Commissioner W. L. CLAYTON. Commissioner. ALEX. W. GRANT. Deputy. SYNOPSIS OF STATEMENT AND COPY OF CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORITY. THE LUMBERMEN'S INSURANCE MANAGEMENT, Elkridge, Pa. CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORITY FOR THE YEAR ENDING FEBRUARY 28TH, 1911 Office of Comptroller of Insurance, Denver, Colo., March 1, 1910. It is hereby certified that the Lumbermen's Insurance Company, a corporation organized under the laws of Pennsylvania, whose principal location is Denver, has complied with the laws of this state so far as the requirements of said laws are applicable to said company, and the said company is hereby authorized to transact business as an insurance company, accustomed to the charter or Article of Incorporation, within the said State of Colorado, subject to the several provisions and requirements of said laws, until the twenty-eighth day of February, 1910, by the said of our Lord hundred and eleven. In testimony whereof, I. W. L. Clayton, Commissioner of, have hereunto set my hand and affixed my seal of office, at the City, on the day and the day above written. (Sex) published in The Colorado States- man by authority of the Commissioner W. L. CLAYTON. Commissioner. ALEX. W. GRANT. Deputy. NOTICE OF STOCKHOLDERS' MEETING. Denver, Colo., April 16, 1910. To the Stockholders of the Western Loan and Investment Association: You are hereby notified that the annual meeting of the stockholders of the Western Loan and Investment association will be held on Tuesday, May 17, 1910, 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 transaction of any and all other business which may properly come before said association. L. C. CONNELL, President. JOSEPH D. D. RIVERS, Secretary NOTICE OF ADJUSTMENT DAY. The undersigned, having been appointed administrator of the estate of Joseph H. Stuart, in the State of Colorado, deceased, hereby gives notice that he will appear before the County Court of said City and County of Denver, in said County, on Monday, the 9th day of May, A. D. 1910, at the hour of 9 o'clock, the court of which will persons having claims against said estate are notified and requested to attend for the purpose of filing same claims in the county indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate payment to the undersigned. Dated at Denver, Colorado, this 6th day of April. A. B. B. E. WOODWARD, Administrator of the Estate of Joseph H. Stuart, Deceased On April 16, 2014, Colorado Statesman on April 16, 20, 20, May 7. WHY PAY MORE $ NO MORE 15. NO LESS The Only Exclusive MENS $15. SUIT Shop in Denver The Hand 1538 CHAMPA st Own A Watch! SEE MY 20 YEAR GUARANTEE WATCH. ELGIN OR WALTHAM MOVEMENT, WITH EITHER OPEN FACE OR HUNTING CASE. ONLY $11.50 EASY PAYMENTS. I REGULATE WATCHES FREE. IF YOURS ISN'T KEEPING TIME, BRING IT IN WHEN YOU NEED IT FIXED. I DO FIRST- CLASS WORK. ALSO HAVE A FINE LINE OF JEWELRY. 404 16TH ST. DENVER, COLO. FOR KODAK SUPPLIES. FINISHING AND ENGRAVING. TRY OUR PHOTO DEPARTMENT. A FEW BARGAINS IN SECOND-HAND KODAKS. Phone Main 8012. JES I. HANSEN Manufacturing Watch Maker and Jeweler Repairing a Specialty. Dealers in Watches, Clocks, Diamonds and Jewelry. 404 Sixteenth Street, Denver, Colorado. You Read the Other Fellow's Ad You are reading this one. That should convince you that advertising in these columns is a profitable proposition; that it will bring business to your store. The fact that the other fellow advertises is probably the reason he is getting more business than is falling to you. Would it not be well to give the other fellow a chance To Read Your Ad In These Columns The Buyers' Guide The firms whose names are represented in our advertising columns are worthy of the confidence of every person in the community who has money to spend. The fact that they advertise stamps them as enterprising, progressive men of business, a credit to our town, and deserving of support. Our advertising columns comprise a Buyers' Guide to fair dealing, good goods, honest prices. WHEN YOU WANT printing, you want good printing. That's the kind we do, and at the right prices. Give the home printer the same chance you would ask for the home merchant—trade at home. THE COLORADO STATESMAN JOS. D. D. RIVERS ..... Proprietor 1824 Curtis Street, Room 25. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: 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, only written 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. Author. No管理制度. 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 25 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. FOR PEACE AND PROSPERITY. IN THE approaching election the Republican city ticket represents the solid thought and purpose of the keenest, wisest and most conservative elements of our citizenship. It promises not only an economical and rational conduct of municipal affairs through the acts of competent boards and councils, but it looks to the adoption of policies which will promote the future welfare of the city and its citizens. The progress of the city does not depend upon the ability of its officials to spend money so much as it does upon their ability to plan and execute economical improvements and conserve the people's interests through the fair distribution of tax levies and the reasonable protection and extension of commercial and business interests., together with a fair regard for the personal liberties of all of its citizens. Throughout all the many administrations which the Republican party has given to Denver, it has never been sensational, never erratic, never incompetent. It still believes in that same wise and conservative brand of progress. It would give the firemen and policemen better pay and cut out enough of wastefulness and extravagance in other quarters to make other progressive reforms possible. It would carry on necessary public improvements without making the burden upon the taxpayer so immediately exacting as to place the city's welfare above that of its citizens. We believe that the time is ripe for Republican success, and that these promises will be well realized. The Colorado Statesman further believes that no radical effort to make Denver an absolutely dry town is well advised. As a city of wide and extensive commercial interests, as a railroad center, as the natural objective point of thousands of tourists and as the home of thousands of more of citizens whose diversified habits and beliefs cannot be guaged by drastic prohibition, we believe that the best interests of the city and its citizens will be conserved by a wise and strict enforcement of the license laws. THE DRAGON WITHIN the next one week you are liable to meet strange things and have strange experiences whenever you chance to go out upon the streets of Denver, and if you do not go into the street during that time, it will be well if you keep your doors locked and bolted if you would escape an invasion of a monstrous apparition right in your home, where you imagine yourself protected and secure. A dragon hatchery has been established in the central part of the city, and the great scaly, sharp-clawed, fiery-eyed monsters are being let loose to run at will throughout the city limits. If you see a morning or evening paper on your door-step with big red headlines on it, shake it well before you open it, for a dragon is apt to be concealed in its folded pages. Every time you turn the water spiggot for a supply of nature's sparkling liquid, have an ax or a hammer ready to hit the first slimy head that protrudes from the pipes that have heretofore supplied you with the purest of filtered beverages. For this is the fantastic, but hideous garb in which the over-ardent enemies of the Denver Union Water Company have dressed the new water franchise proposition, on which the people are to vote at the coming city election. Fire-brand oratory and redlettered journalism furnish the glare that flashes from the monster's eyes and the steam that hisses from its distended nostrils. It is intended to frighten you and to make you believe that an agent of the water company is calling on you in this form to make you sign a contract for the increase of your water charges. But the thing is counterfeit. It needs no King George to save you from its hideous clutches, for you have but to puncture it with a spear made out of a sensibly prepared sample ballot and it will explode and collapse with a gasp, and the falsehoods, malice, deceit, crooked comparisons of water rates and red fire with which it is inflated, will run out and waste themselves in the light of Truth. The common sense and intelligence of the people of Denver are being imposed upon and discounted by the professional prestidigitators and figure jugglers who are so anxious for a chance to secure a long engagement at the people's expense. The bewilderment of the people is the natural result at which they aim, for under such circumstances it means money in their pockets. For what a chaotic harvest of political legerdemain will prevail if they can but induce the people to destroy the peaceful conditions now existing. The bugbear arguments of fanatics or schemers should not weigh much against the practical judgment and foresight of an intelligent population. The property holders of Denver are already loaded down with the expenses of legitimate municipal obligations, and it would be folly for them to voluntarily subscribe to heavier burdens, from which they can easily and more reasonably escape. Under an extension of the water franchise, the average property holder in Denver will pay about $150 for a twenty years' water supply. Under any change advocated by the dragon makers, he is certain to be required to pay a total tax near to $500 for the same period. This is the true and ultimate meaning of municipal ownership. The claim is being made that Denver can be supplied with water cheaper than any city on the American continent, because it is so situated that a gravity system may be used in which it is necessary only to let the water run down hill. This claim is being made simply to fool the voters and mislead them for political purposes. Denver positively can not be supplied with water through a system depending exclusively upon gravity for pressure, as cheaply or as satisfactorily as by a combined gravity and pumping system. If Denver were so situated that it had an ample supply of water available within the city limits it could be supplied by an exclusive pumping system at a much lower cost than by either a direct gravity or a combined gravity and pumping system. Water, to be supplied under pressure, does not run down hill on top of the ground as the persons who argue for the economy of a gravity system aim to make the people believe. It must be conveyed in conduits so much more costly than a pumping plant that the cost of operation always is far higher than with a pumping plant furnishing the same quantity of water obtained near at hand that, in a gravity system, must be conveyed a great distance. The city of Buffalo, New York, furnishes a good example of the difference that would be presented in the cost of operation between a gravity and pumping system. That city obtains its water pressure from a pumping plant. The capacity of the plant, which is built under one roof, on the bank of the Niagara river, within 900 feet of the intake crib, is 202 million gallons daily. The plant cost $1,100,000. The plant cost $142,000. In 1908, the last year for which an official report is available, the total cost of operation of the pumping plant, including wages, fuel, repairs, etc., was $257,526, and the annual interest on the cost of the plant, at four per cent, $44,000, making a total expense of $301,526. To provide a gravity system for the city of Buffalo that would bring the same amount of water to the distributing system within the city that is now provided by the pumping plant, if the construction was the cheapest, would involve an expenditure of at least $10,000,000. The annual interest on such equipment would be, at four per cent., $400,000. This is exclusive of the distributing system within the city and exclusive of the cost of operation and maintenance of the conduit lines and head works. That this figure is conservative is proven by the experience of other cities, including Denver. The Massachusetts Metropolitan Water Commission a number of years ago was organized to provide a gravity water system for Boston and a number of small neighboring cities having a population, all told, of about 800,000. These cities consume jointly about twice as much water a year as Denver consumes, and about three-fourths as much as the city of Buffalo consumes. This gravity plant has cost, to date, $40,000,000. The reservoirs connected with it have about twice the capacity of Lake Cheesman. The water is conveyed thirty-five miles through four conduits, each of which distributes water at a different elevation. The four conduits are necessary because of the varying contours of the city and the inability to distribute water at the high points under such conditions as would make a safe pressure for the low points without the use of intermediate reservoirs to reduce the pressure. These cities, if the supply of water close at hand was fit for use, could be supplied by a pumping plant no more expensive to install and no more expensive to operate than the Buffalo plant. The interest on the cost of the gravity plant, at four per cent., is $1,600,000 a year, or five and one-third times the total charge for interest, operation, maintenance and repairs for a pumping plant adequate for their needs. Denver is situated just as Boston and the surrounding towns as to varying elevations, but presents greater difficulties to the distribution of water by gravity than is the case in the Massachusetts cities, for the high elevations occur at irregular intervals all around the outskirts. Denver now has four large conduits bringing water to the city from various distant sources of supply. The length of these conduits ranges from 12 to 23 miles. It has two other conduits bringing water from more adjacent supplies. The conduits from the distant sources have their beginnings at the highest points outside the foothills, at which it is practicable to construct reservoirs and filtration plants. The elevation, however, is not sufficient to furnish gravity pressure satisfactory for the highest points of the city. No greater elevation can be secured without going up into the canons of the streams from which the supply is secured and building reservoirs and filtration plants on sites where the cost would be prohibitive. The cost of installing and operating the pumping plants necessary to increase the pressure for the high service districts is so much lower than the added cost of additional conduit length and reservoir and filtration facilities in the mountains that it is far cheaper to operate and maintain the combined system than it would be to secure the much higher elevation necessary for an exclusively gravity plant. If a gravity plant would have been cheaper The Denver Union Water Company would have constructed it for the high service duty eight years ago when it built the Platte canon reservoir, the slow-sand filtration plant and the conduit to convey the supply from that plant to the city. The men connected with the company had, at that time, thirty-one years' experience in supplying water to Denver. That thirty-one years surely has taught them the most economical system. They could just as easily have selected a site up in the mountains, as at the mouth of the canon. The land for that site in the mountains would have been much cheaper. They would have selected it if the construction cost had not been prohibitive. The taxpayers will do well to consider this matter carefully before they accept the claim made by Messrs. Patterson and Rush that a gravity plant can be built for a song and will supply water almost free of cost. An exclusive gravity system to bring water to Denver will cost more money than any of the propositions for municipal ownership afford without providing for storage reservoirs, filtration plants or 500 miles of distributing mains within the city. The Right Kind of Reading Matter The home news; the doings of the people in this town; the gossip of our own community, that's the first kind of reading matter you want. It is more important, more interesting to you than that given by the paper or magazine from the outside world. It is the first reading matter you should buy. Each issue of this paper gives to you just what you will consider The Right Kind of Reading Matter Chance for Beggars. Drop Individuality. Begging must be profitable in Paris, judging from a recent advertisement in a Paris paper: "For Sale—Present holder retiring to the country, good situation for one-legged man; neighborhood of the Etolie; hours of work, 2 p. m. to 7 p. m.; receipts, from 8s. 6d. to 12s.; regular passersby, children and strangers; any infirmity would suit." Some women and some men remind one of springs coiled around themselves. Every accident they turn back to themselves, everything is a fancied slight, all activities center about their likes and dislikes. If they could forget their own inconsequence they would meet with greater happiness in life. THE BROADHURST CARTER SHOE CO. 823 Sixteenth St. We Are Denver Agents for the Nettleton Shoe FOR MEN $6, $7, and $8, Pair The Washington Market The Cash Store Where You Can Buy Good Meats and Groceries for the Same Prices You Pay Down Town Cash Discount Checks with Every Sale Nugget Soap, 2 bars for.....5c Water White Soap, 7 bars for.....25c Coffee, a good brand, per pound.....15c Toilet Paper, 2 rolls for.....15c Rice, No. 1, cracked, per lb.....5c Prunes, per pound.....5c Corn, 3 cans for.....25c Peas, 3 cans for.....25c Peaches, fancy, per can.....15c Ketchup, per bottle.....5 and 10c Picnic Hams, per pound.....16c A good, heavy Bacon, per pound.....22 1-2c Hamburger, fresh every day, per pound.....15c A good Sausage, bulk, per pound.....12 1-2c A good Sausage, link. per pound.....15c Smoked White Fish, per pound.....25c Fancy bloaters, 6 fish for.....25c BREAD, PIES, CAKES, GUM, CANDY, TOBACCO, COAL OIL, GASOLINE, CHEESE, FISH ON FRIDAY, POULTRY ON SATURDAY THE WASHINGTON MARKET, 2701 LARIMER STREET What's the Use? STREET DEMOCRACY. "Generally the gas man fits the meter to the shorn East side lamb" said the New York woman. "Gas bills are not half what they are on the West side, but lately something's wrong somewhere. I think it's my new neighbor across the little hall. She burns gas all the time. She cooks all day and keeps the gas lit up all night. We've also had a new reader of the wheels lately. I don't cook at all and go out to the theater nearly ever night of the world, leaving the flat in darkness, but this month my bill was just exactly the same as hers." What the Little Fellow Would Do He Were Very Rich. They were two ragged children standing on the curbstone watching the carriages as they drove up and stopped to let out their occupants. The street waifs were ragged and dirty, and no doubt hungry, for the basket they carried between them was empty, and the face of the younger of the two was tearstained. "They must be awful rich," he said to the girl at his side. "Jimmy," she answered, "d'ye know wot I'd do if I was rich as—as mud, like them? I'd jses set up straight in me carriage, an' if the folks didn't get out o' the way I'd run over 'em, so I wud." "I wouldn't," said Jimmy, slowly and solemnly. "If I was rich I wouldn't want no carriage, nor horses, nor nothin'. I'd go jest as fast as ever I cud to heven an' bring me mudder back agen." He finished with a sob, and the girl looked at him with an air of superior disdain. THE DENVER SAFE DEPOSIT CO. GEN J W DENVER DENVER, COLO. "You're silly," she said, but her voice was soft, and she took his hand in her's as they moved away. SPECIAL VALUES IN THE Hat Dept. STRENGTH OF VAULTS— Unequalled West of Chicago. SERVICE—Not attempted elsewhere. LOCATION—Opp. Denver Dry Goods Co. PRICES—Ah! "There's the rub." On $25.00 Save $12.50 On $10.00 Save $5.00 On $5.00 Save $250 Does This Interest You? The Denver Safe Deposit Company 1534 CALIFORNIA STREET. Phone Main 7050 22c for Children's and Misses' Straw Hats. This season's shapes, styles and colorings. All fine straws, the best 50c values. 22c for Boys' and Children's Fancy Caps in all the leading styles—regular 50c grades. 79c for Boys' Fine Felt Hats. The very best $1.50 values and the very latest blocks. 95c for Men's $1.50 Dress Hats. Stiff and soft are included, all the very latest styles. $1.69 for Men's $2 and $2.50 Dress Hats. Stiff and soft, every style and color that fashion demands. Notice next issue for Instructions How to Vote on the 17th of May. W. A. Watkins left last Wednesday for Chicago. Roy Butts, who has been on the sick list, is able to be about again. DITON FOREIGN SCHOLARSHIP FUND. Madame E. Azalia Hackley has $78.75 on hand as subscriptions from Denver to the Diton Foreign Scholarship. She asks that others who have promised will immediately forward their amounts to her at 1218 Poln. After several months' absence Mrs. F. G. Turner has returned to the city and feeling fine. Allen Jones, after spending several weeks in the city has returned to his home in Pueblo. Mrs. Clara Franklin arrived home last week from New York, where she has been visiting for several months. G. W. Allen of the Allen Pharmacy is able to be out after a sever attack of pneumonia. You will find full instructions in this paper, next issue, How to Vote, May 17th. J. W. Redfield and Robert Russ left last Saturday night with a private party for points in Virginia. Lee Blayburn left the city last Saturday for Des Moines, Ia., being called there on account of the illness of his father. Miss Clyde Garrett of St. Louis, Mo., is visiting her sister, Mrs. Muarice R. Orman, who is now residing at 2228 Washington St. The Grand United Order of Odd Fellows will hold their annual Thanksgiving sermon at Shorter A. M. E. church tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock. A large number of young people were guests of Miss Helen Buford last Saturday night, when dancing, cards and a general good time was the order. A May Queen Party will be given by the Church of the Redeemer, Thursday evening, May 19th, 1910, at Dania hall, 27th and Arapahoe Sts. Good music. Admission 25 cents. A. C. Lightbody of Kansas City was in the city a few days this week. While here he was the guest of his old schoolmate, William Bushnell, who showed him about the city. The Rocky Mountain Athletic base ball team with William O. Steam as manager, has had nothing but success so far this season. The boys are in fine form and nothing but those in the professional line can make them extend themselves on the diamond. E. P. Booze of Colorado Springs was among the callers at this office Monday. Mr. Booze has just recently returned from a trip through the South and the Pacific coast. He is again en route to the South on an important business trip. President Taft says: "Nothing is more foolish, nothing more utterly at variance with sound policy, than to enact a law which, by reason of conditions surrounding the community, is incapable of enforcement." Such would be the condition of a prohibitory law in Denver. "Queen of the Nile" is the title of a song just out, composed by R. G. Holley, one of Denver's leading musicians. It is bound to make a "hit" and will be in great demand. We congratulate Mr. Holley on his musical talent. The enforcement of a prohibition law has been little better than a farce in localities where such laws exist, and to vote for a city to become dry is to make it about as worthless as a dry climate farm without irrigation. The thousands of employees that would be affected in Denver by such a law is within itself sufficient reason why you should vote for a "wet" Denver. The annual sermon of Hiram Commandery, Knights Templars, was preached at the People's Presbyterian church last Sunday by Rev. J. A. Thos. Hazell, his subject being "Hiram Abill, the most unique character in the building of the Temple. That the Rev. was well versed on the subject was clearly demonstrated in his discourse. The Knights were escorted to and from the church by the Olympia band. DITON FOREIGN SCHOLARSHIP FUND. Madame E. Azalia Hackley has $78.75 on hand as subscriptions from Denver to the Diton Foreign Scholarship. She asks that others who have promised will immediately forward their amounts to her at 1218 Point Breeze Ave., Philadelphia, or Mrs. Octave Dishman. She hopes to have a total of one hundred dollars and expects to publish the full list in Eastern and Denver papers, as soon as possible. CARD OF THANKS. I wish to thank the Pythian Lodge No. 11 of Knights of Pythia's and Rocky Mountain Court No. 3, friends and Dr. Justina L. Ford for their kindness and faithful attention given me during the serious illness and death of my husband. May God ever bless them and keep them. Too much praise canon be given the A. M. Lawhorn Undertaking Co. for their excellent service. MRS. ELIZABETH OWENS, Wife. SCOTT'S CHAPEL NOTES. Mr. J. D. Rice arrived from Atlanta, Ga., last Sunday morning, where he is pursuing a course in theology. Mr. Rice will deliver his first sermon at Scott's Sunday evening. The Epworth League will render a special program just before the evening services. Miss Erma Anthony will read a paper on "Opportunity" in the League next Sunday. The Juniors have begun their practice for Children's Day. Dr. S. J. Wilson of Wisconsin will preach Sunday morning. Dr. Wilson is an orator of the first order. He will deliver a live temperance sermon. Mrs. Onie Wallace has been slightly indisposed on the account of change of climate. She is better at this writing. The Rally has been changed for the last Sunday in this month until the first Sunday in June. The church has been divided into five clubs named for the general officers and prominent men of the church. Mrs. Mary Evans and Mrs. Annie McPherson entertained the Ladies' Aid Society last Thursday. The Aid has added a number of new members to its roll and a splendid year is predicted. Dr. J. E. Mooreland, International Secretary of the Y. M. C. A., worshiped with us last Sunday morning. A Laughing Contest will be pulled off May 16th (Monday). Prizes will be awarded to the one laughing the cutest. Mrs. Annie Bobo is the manager. Dr. J. J. Cabbell will hold his first quarter the 11th and 12th of June. He writes that the District Conference has been changed from Bonner Springs to Manhattan, Kansas. Mrs. Thomas A. Cox is slightly indisposed with tonsilitis. The Woman's Home Missionary Society will meet at the Parsonage next Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Ann A. McPherson, the president, desires a full attendance of all the members as the annual election of officers will take place at this time. Mr. W. S. Evans will conduct the Sunday class next Sunday. A permanent leader has not as yet been appointed. Mr. Cornelius, the popular baritone soloist, will sing at the League next Sunday, also Misses Cox and Rice will render instrumental music for the occasion. You are invited to attend. Mr. Rice gave an interesting talk last Sunday evening to the League. He reports that he was greatly honored in Gammon. He held with credit no less than four important positions at Clark and Gammon. Mr. Joe Carter is very sick at his home on 28th and California. His mother, Mrs. Kirkpatrick arrived last Monday from Fort Smith, Ark. She will assist the family in caring for Mr. Carter. CAMPBELL CHAPEL NOTES. The great Baby Carnival and Musical Contest held Monday, May 2nd, proved to be one of the greatest entertainments of the season. There were ten babies enterd into the carnival. Six beautiful prizes were awarded. Charles Samuel Franklin, of Fort Logan, Colo., received first prize, a handsome gold ring. He had $5.10 and 126 votes. Beatrice Ida Gentry, second prize; some fine gold baby pins; 108 votes. Geraldine Lois Wilson, third prize, a beautiful bonnet; 104 votes. Gladys Spathes fourth prize, a lovely white dress; 99 votes. Murel Hamilton, fifth prize, which was a white dress, 84 votes. John Lewis received sixth and last prize, some baby pins, 49 votes. There were twelve contestants in the piano contest. The first prize was a $5 gold piece, received by Miss Hazel McVay of Boulder, Colo. The second prize was a dollar. PEOPLE'S PRESBYTE- RIAN CHURCH. Sermon Topics, May 8th. 11 a. m., "An Example of Hero-Worship." 8 p. m., "Sacred Concert by Y. P. S. C. E." J. A. THOS. HAZELL, S. T. S. Pastor. STOCKHOLDERS' MEETING. The annual meeting of the stockholders of the Negro Townsite and Land Company will be held June 7, 1910, 8 p. m., at the office of the company, 119 Twenty-third street, Denver, Colo., for the purpose of electing nine directors. O. T. JACKSON, Pres. TO THE YOUNG PEOPLE OF B. Y. P. U. Sunday is Mother's Day." We will honor that day by wearing a white carnation, the emblem of purity, love and affection to our mothers. The carnations will be donated by Mr. L. H. Harper at 6:30 p. m., Sunday. At Bethlehem Baptist Church. Furnished or unfurnished rooms for rent in a modern house, 2415 Court Place. Mrs. G. J. Morgan. For Rent—Modern furnished rooms at 2660 Lawrence St. For Rent—Furnished room for rent at 1849 Marion St. Hair cut, 15 cents; 1831 Arapahoe street. For Rent—Two unfurnished rooms for light housekeeping. Mrs. Branford 1258 Champa street. Nicely furnished and unfurnished rooms for rent. All modren, Louis, George, 2819 Glenarm Place. When the time for which you pay is up we stop the paper. You know what to do. PROF. WILL TAYLOR, SPECIALIST ON Hard corns. Soft Corns. Festered corns. Nervo-vascular corns. Vascular corns. Laminated corns. Fibrous corns. Calla sities spota. Bunions. Chilblain feet. Ingrowing nails. Call to see me in regard to your feet. 911 18th street. Phone Main 7402. Plea for Home Teaching. Modern parents devote less and less care and time to the education of their children, who are now sent earlier to school and kept there longer than was the custom in times past. Yet there are things, essential things, which parents alone can teach.—Vienna Zeltung. FORD'S HAIR POMADE THE OLD RELIABLE DRESSING FOR KINKY OR CURLY HAIR. IT'S USE MAKES STUBBORN, HARSH HAIR SOFTER, MORE PLIABLE AND GLOSSY, EASY TO COMB AND PUT UPIN ANY STYLE THE LENGTH WILL PERMIT. WRITE FOR TESTIMONIES, TELLING HOW THIS REMARKABLE REMEDY MAKES SHORT, KINKY HAIR GROW LONG AND WAYY. BEST POMADE ON THE MARKET FOR DANDRUFF, ITCHING OF THE SCALP AND FALLING OUT OF THE HAIR. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS, GET THE GENUINE, PUT UP IN 25* AND 50* BOTTLES WITH CHARLES FORD'S NAME ON EVERY PACKAGE. SOLD BY DRUGGISTS. IF YOUR DRUGGIST CANNOT SUPPLY YOU,WE WILL SEND IT TO YOU DIRECT AT THE FOLLOWING PRICES,SMALL SIZED BOTTLE,25¢ LARGE SIZED BOTTLE,50¢ THE OZONIZED OX MARROW CO. 216 LAKE ST.,DEPT. 30 CHICAGO,ILL. AGENTS WANTED. We Have Moved Into Our New Exclusive Carpet and Curtain Store No. 1640 to 1646 California Street—Next Door to Cooper & Powell We want you all to come and get your Rugs, Carpets, Oil Cloths, Linoleums; also Curtains and Shades at Less Price and of Better Quality than Anybody Else Will Offer You. LINOLEUM AND OIL CLOTH RUGS AND CURTAINS 50c Quality, per yd.....35c $30.00 Room Sizes.....$20.00 75c Quality, per yd.....45c $25.00 Room Sizes.....$17.50 90c Quality, per yd.....50c $20.00 Room Sizes.....$14.00 $1.25, Inlaid Colors, Through $2.50 Lace Curtains, per pr..$1.50 to the Back, as low as.....80c $1.50 Lace Curtains, per pr..$1.00 Come and see us. -Eberle Carpet Company 1646 CALIFORNIA STREET The Martin-Eberle 1640 TO 1646 CALI Martin-Eberle Carpet Com 1640 TO 1646 CALIFORNIA STREET The Martin-Eberle Carpet Company 1640 TO 1646 CALIFORNIA STREET Copyright 1910, by L. ADLER, BROS. & CO. del Co TREET. "When buying for men buy at a man's store." Just Stop and Think! There can be but one best—and we reserve this claim for "Adler - Rochester Clothes" Because they are perfect in style, quality and workmanship, and every garment is all wool and tailored to fit. $18.00 and Up You need not go bare-headed now. We have hats for everybody in qualities ranging from the three dollar grade to the finest beaver and nutria for six dollars. Visit our Hat Department. THE Johnson-Noel Co 1005 SIXTEENTH STREET. S & GARMEN 925-16TH ST. Special Sale of LADIES' TA Three special bargain lots of the black and all the popular and desir- day at unusually low prices. a manufacturer at a big price reduc- gments we have on hand we find mer goods are on the way, and we AT SMALL PROFITS must move t from $5.00 to $10.00 on your new Su- the greatest Suit values of the spring S & H GARMENT STORE 1925-16TH ST. — OPP. JOSLINS LADIES' TAILORED special bargain lots of this season's newest of the popular and desirable spring shades, g usually low prices. We bought 100 per at a big price reduction. They are here, have on hand we find ourselves crowded for are on the way, and we must make room. A PROFITS must move these Suits. If you have $10.00 on your new Suit, see us today; y Suit values of the spring season. You can & N MENT STORE ST. — OPP. JOSLINS 'S' TAILORED SUITS In lots of this season's newest garments, in and desirable spring shades, go on sale to prices. We bought 100 Suits from price reduction. They are here, and with the and we find ourselves crowded for space. Sum- y, and we must make room. A QUICK SALE must move these Suits. If you want to save your new Suit, see us today; you will find of the spring season. You can buy S&N CARMENT STORE 925-16TH ST. OPP. JOSLINS Special Sale of LADIES' TAILORED SUITS Three special bargain lots of this season's newest garments, in black and all the popular and desirable spring shades, go on sale today at unusually low prices. We bought 100 Suits from a manufacturer at a big price reduction. They are here, and with the garments we have on hand we find ourselves crowded for space. Summer goods are on the way, and we must make room. A QUICK SALE AT SMALL PROFITS must move these Suits. If you want to save from $5.00 to $10.00 on your new Suit, see us today; you will find the greatest Suit values of the spring season. You can buy Regular $20.00 Spring Suits for $14.95 Regular $22.50 and $25 Suits for $18.50 Regular $30 and $32.50 Suits for $22.50 Plenty of Cream Serges and light colors among them, and there is no charge for alterations $12.50 DRESS SALE Silk Dresses worth $15.00 and $16.75 go into this sale. There are taffeta silk dresses in black, dark and light colors, changeable shades, and the popular black and white shepherd checks. There are about 75 of them, and you will find a good range of colors. WHITE WAISTS $1.19 Fancy lace and embroidery trimmed styles, open back, the kind we sell regularly for $1.50; today and all week, choice, $1.19. SMITH & HILLER SEVENTH STREET THE CROCKERY CO. SILVERSMITH 925 SIXTEEN CARSON CRO SILVERSMITH & HILLER 925 SIXTEENTH STREET THE CARSON CROCKERY CO. Denver's Largest Exclusive China Store CORNER FIFTEENTH AND STOUT STREETS Did it ever occur to you that to buy china right, you must go to china store?—ours is that kind of a store. 100 piece English porcelain, underglaze decorations..... $8.75 100 piece floral decorations, $15 value at..... $9.95 Decorated dinner plates, each..... 10¢ Decorated cups and saucers..... 10¢ Hats RUGS AND CURTAINS $30.00 Room Sizes.....$20.00 $25.00 Room Sizes.....$17.50 $20.00 Room Sizes.....$14.00 $2.50 Lace Curtains, per pr.....$1.50 $1.50 Lace Curtains, per pr.....$1.00 them, and you will find a good range of colors. WHITE WAISTS $1.19 Fancy lace and embroidery trimmed styles, open back, the kind we sell regularly for $1.50; today and all week, choice, $1.19. Do You Know That The Colorado Statesman Is Prepared to Do All Kinds of Job Printing? Commercial, Fraternal, Church, Book and Stationery Jobs a Specialty Ball and Concert Programs, Bill and Letter Heads, 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 LBENVER UINEGIURT | b RELIABLE : PROMPT sng copnee, Hijo, old win eile rained BNR Say “GON wid Gotre Finca,” Denver CAN um CURED Gils, dhe stasencon treatment Werke for fren beguiet aa. deeke rena ACNS EAR COs eek EE SUPPLIES #5? 8: Wha Causa assy Prodacers Kseu- Nasa Rireet Danvers $33 HARNESS FOR $25 ere Hann eee er Concord Hames, Fred Moar thi La'imer Street, Denver Lowen priests tha. Fomatenciorasa Sesion ICR ae nie boyaaelaacnaiss + Hydrotite Roofing Per Sq. $1.81 A=ply, $1.81; 2-ply, 82.25; 3-ply, $2.09. moit AoeTigh-rade aaphaits, fone Beer Tae ache a hard, weather resist- Poth, sides Wit inst tor years, is fire Wit, Nicholls Cow 1900 Wasee Sty Box W. H. Nick igi TENT & AWNING CO: CANVAS GOODS. Corer A Stacker, Ait he) i Mower oN Bilt and i | Sweep Rake aAnk Soy chyreat ilanrateg Brntag Ase The Plattner Implement Co., “ALWAYS ON TOP" Get Under An ELATERITE ROOF Answers every roofing requirement. Reinforced by cement. Backed with felt, the body of other roofings. IF IT’S ELATERITE, IT’S RIGHT Manufactured Only by THE WESTERN ELATERITE ROOFING CO. 841 Equitable Bldg., Denver, Colo. BON |, LOOK GaaNvisit! stanincch extn: Jog mailed treo Cor 16th & Binke. Denver ka tink tovarent. “Yes,” says the man with the shaggy eyebrows, “we have a phonograph. We've got several Italian grand opera records, and last week I discovered a way to make their reproduction abso- lutely perfect..” “Indeed?” asks the man with the purple nose. “What ie 1t?” “T rub a little garlic on the record before it is played.” The Last Word. Determined to have the last word, the woman hunted through the dic: tionary and soon emerged triumphant with a list of three thousand framed from “Constantinople,” and received therefore one year’s subscription to the Joyful Home's big prize contest. Judge. Her Way. “If you would wear button shoes,” suggested her father, “they would mot come untied.” “I know it," replied she, “and if they 41a not come untied I could not ask a person whom I have in mind to tle them.” An Enterprising Age. “what are you affixing to these park benches?” “We have the opera glass privilege. Drop in a nickel and see the comet.”— Kansas City Journal. From the horny hand of tofl comes the richest harvest of content.—W. Stewart Royson. The Appetite Calls for more Toasties Let a saucer of this delightful food served with cream tell why. “The Memory Lingers” Pkgs. 10c, and 15e. Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich. “SWAP” LAND BILL REPORTED FA\ORABLY.— LANDS TO BE EXCLUDEU FROM FORESTS. PUBLIC PARKS FORGOLO. FAVORABLE REPORT ON BILL TO SELL LANDS TO TOWNS FOR PUBLIC PARKS. Washington—The Senate public lands committee Wednesday made # favorable report upon the bill which has passed the House granting au- thority to the secretary of the in- terior to sell lands to numerous Colo- rado cities and towns for public park purposes. ‘The committee also reported favor- ably the House bill authorizing states owning lands within national forests to exchange such lands for similar areas of other national forest lands of like value to be selected in com pact bodies which lands shall be ex- cluded from the national forests for the benefit of the state making the selection. ‘The House public lands committee Wednesday reported favorably the “Mondell bill authorizing states to con- vey to the United States lands owned py the states and needed in whole or in part for government reclamation purposes and permitting them to se lect an equal area of public lands in lieu of the lands relinquished. Also a bill applying the same provisions in reference to the Carey desert land act. Aldrich to the Rescue! Washington.—Through the forma: tion Wednesday of an organization which, its leaders claim, represents a clear majority of the entire Senate, and to be made up wholly of Regular Republicans, a movement was started to settle the question whether the Senate shall remain conservative, be- come radical or be thrown into politt- cal chaos as far as concerns any co- herent policy in regard to the admin- istration program. Senator Aldrich called the Regular Republicans togeth er and confronted them with a grim description of the possible political effect of their apparent defeat at the hands of the Insurgent Republicans and Democrats in the fight over the traffic agreement section of the ad ministration railroad bill. He asked nis associates whether they were ready to submit to domination by such a combination, Any such surrender, he warned them, meant the failure of the Taft policies and the downfall of conservative control not only in Congress but in the Republi can party generally. “Somebody Lied.” ‘Washington—In denial of a number of published stories giving what pur- ported to be estimates of the popula- tions of some of the cities of the Unit- ed States as shown by the new census, Director Durand of the census de clared emphatically that “no official announcement of the population of any city or state in the United States or of the United States as a whole will be made for some time to come,” and further, “that the fact that the returns from the enumerators have not been received emphasizes the impossibility of any official statement or even esti- mate being given at this time.” ‘Taft's Ununionlike Conduct. Cleveland.—Pres. Taft is in immi- nent danger of being expelled from the Steam Shoyvelers’ union for attend- ing a boycotted ball game. Charges will be filed Thursday at the head- quarters of the union. The charges will be presented by the Cleveland Building Trades Association, which inaugurated the boycott on account of alleged employment of non-union la- bor in building Cleveland’s new ball park. tiene Lay Black Eags. Norwich, N. Y.—By feeding his hens on a mixture composed largely of fine coal dust, a farmer of Oxford has pro- duced a breed of fowls that lay coal black eggs. Governor Will Not Interfere. - Omaha.—Governor James N. Gillett ‘of California, who passed through here Wednesday night, en route to Washington, said he would not inter fere with the Jeffries-Johnson fight. London.—Before a vast audience, the Royal Geographical Society Wed- nesday night presented Commander Robert E. Peary with the special gold medal of the society. Steel Corporation’s Benevolence. New York.—The United States Steel Corporation Wednesday announced that it had established a fund of $8, 000,000 for pension purposes and would consolidate this fund with the $4,000,000 fund heretofore created by Andrew Carnegie, to be administered for the benefit of employes. Goes East to Speculate. New York.—Robert Smith, a capital- ist from Denver, invested more than $1,000,000 in, Manhattan realty Wee nesday. COOKING IN SPANISH STYLE Some Recipes That May Be New and in Any Event Are Worth Remembering. To make Spanish spaghetti take one-half pound of ground steak that has been put through a mincer and cooked with a good-sized piece of but- ter in a skillet, add half can of to- matoes. Season with salt and cbill peppers. Add one-quarter pound of cheese cut fine, When thoroughly cooked add two handfuls of spaghett! which has been previously boiled. Stir all together and send to table hot. This can be served as a separate course. Stuffed and Baked Onions.—Use six medium sized onions. Take out the center with a scoop, parboil them for three minutes, then put them upside down on a cloth to drain. When drained fill the inside with forcement of bacon and sausage, mixed with the heart of the onion minced fine, also bread crumbs, pepper, salt, a pinch of mace and a spoonful of cream. Stuff the onions with this and sim- mer in the oven for an hour, basting frequently with melted butter. When done take the onions up care- fully so as not to break them, place them open end uppermost in a vege- table dish, add to the gravy in the baking pan the juice of half a lemon, four tablespoons of cream and @ little browned flour. Boil up and pour over the onions. Arrox Con Pollo (Chicken and Rice)—Put three tablespoonfuls of oil in a pan and when hot put in small pieces of chicken, which are to be cooked slowly in the oil for half an hour. By this time the pieces should be brown. Meanwhile, in another pan, fry also in oil, onions, garlic, tomatoes and red peppers, adding this mixture to the fowl, together with six to eight ounces of well-washed rice and one pint of stock. FOR THE BREAKFAST TABLE Variety of Dishes That Will Stimulate the Appetite Even of the Invalid. Chopped Apples and Nuts.—Wash, core and chop nice apples, fill the dishes, sprinkle with chopped nuts and sugar, and serve with cream. Oatmeal With Dates.—Add a table- spoonful of seeded and chopped dates to each dish of well-cooked oatmeal and serve with sugar and cream. Wheat Biscuits With Strawberries. —Pour a little hot water over a shredded wheat biscuit and drain; cover the top with canned or pre- served strawberries, and serve with cream. Wheat Biscuits With Peaches.—Pre- pare the biscuit as above, cover with canned or preserved peaches, and serve with cream. Sliced Oranges.—Peel the oranges and slice from the outside to center ‘n small pieces; sprinkle with sugar. | Baked Apples.—Wash cooking ap- ples, cut out the core, and fill the cen ter with sugar; place in a granite dish, pour in a little hot water, and bake; serve with cream. Graham Mush—Take boiling salted water, thicken with graham flour, steam 20 minutes, and serve with mill or cream. ‘Another Good Luncheon Dish. Sever the joints of a tender chicken and prepare as if for stewing. Let the pieces soak in a French dressing of olive ofl and lemon juice for half an hour. Heat three tablespoonfuls of butter In a frying pan, fry an onion in the butter until it 1s brown; drain the chicken and fry with the onion for ten minutes. Empty the contents of the frying pan into a larger pan and add a cupful of stock and one of strained tomato juice. Cook gently until the chicken is tender. Take the pieces from the gravy and leave in a strainer over hot water to keep warm. Return the gravy to the fire and add three-quarters of a cupful of rice which has been soaking in cold water for an hour or more. Cook until the rice is soft. Return the chicken to the pot and when thoroughly mixed and heated heap upon a platter and sprinkle with Parmesan cheese, Apple Dumpling. Make a rich baking powder crust such as is prepared for biscuit, then roll out pieces about six inches in diameter and one-half inch in thick ness. Tn the center of each put cored ap- ples or tart apples peeled and cut in small pieces, then gather the edges of the crust and pinch tightly to gether. Put the dumplings in a deep, well buttered pudding dish, sprinkle with sugar, cinnamon and pieces of butter, turn on boiling water enough to’ cover and bake for half an hour in a hot oven. For Soups and Gravies. An economical browning for soups, gravies, etc, may be made from the peelings and outer white skin of on- jons; put these into an old iron saucepan with brown sugar in the pro- portion of a tablespoonful of sugar to the peels of six onions; set the sauce- pan on the stove and let the contents gradually cook until they are a deep brown, pour off what liquid there is into a bottle and keep it closely corked. Bina Gaments A good china cement is made by mixing with a strong solution of gum arabic and water enough plaster ot paris to make a thick paste. This should be applied to the broken edge with camel's hair brush. = i d by W Me ew | FA] ‘Onore ry omen i 3 ‘When a woman speaks of her bk silent secret, suffering she Heald 3] rvs 7h, Smack of cont { s ism conti= NCI 7 Set PY Bec: H Pisani 4 where there are women who f | bear witness to the wonder- j) Se ipo fii] working, curing-power of Dr. || Fearmiviam |[iie | Pierce’s Favorite Prescription {| —— I] —which saves the suffering ses H] GHRONIG) |] From pain, and successfully I SS |) grapples with woman's weak- H SWirgpSS2S)] FIG] messes and stubborn ills. l Saietsass Hl IT MAKES WEAK WOTIEN STRONG = i IT MAKES SICK WOMEN WELL. Hick Pace. | fh, No woman's appeal was ever misdirected or her con ly, SSSSee, "| fidence misplaced when she wrote for advice, to RS the Won.o's Disransany Mupicat. Association, Dr. R-V. Pierce, President, Buffalo, N. Y. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets indie mild natural bowel movement once # day. (PERMANENTLY CURED. No Kidney Trouble In Three Years. Mrs. Catharine Kautz, 322 Center St, Findlay, O,, says: “Four years ago aay I became afiicted p) with kidney trouble, and rapidly ran sf down in health, I 9 suffered from back- A = ache and other kid- Po} ney disorders and ‘ st on was languid and ee weak. I doctored An, ‘ became Cow » with kidney trouble, and rapidly ran A down in health. I 9 suffered from back- 72447 — ache and other kid- MS ney disorders and pee Ze was languid and Ri wor weak. 1 doctored Zi.%..°" and used different remedies but became no better. Doan's Kidney Pills cured me and for three years I have been free from kidney trouble.” Remember the name—Doan's. For sale by all dealers. 60 cents a box Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. MORE TO THE POINT. * | So § 33 ij, =) Le Ip fi i awe Im ia i WW. Sk Bee ae bE ep )) Maetects Sot Yi TU i=! ‘a Mrs. Wise—I don’s see why that new millionaire is so popular. He can't even express himself. Mr. Wise—No, but he can pay the freight. Only Nine Left. Lee Wyman is an earnest advocate of some plan under which the say- ings of children shall be preserved for future generations to read. “The other day, for instance,” says Wyman, “my little boy was called be- fore the tribunal over which his fond mother presides. “You've broken one of the precious ten commandments,’ she said. “‘Did 1?" asked our boy carelessly like. “"Yes, my boy. I’ve said to you over and over the ten command: ments, said Mrs. Wyman, ‘and now you've broken one of them.’ “Dear, dear,’ my boy said, ‘there's only nine left now.’ “And Mrs. Wyman let it go at that.” as or About This Time. “Why do they. call them ocean liners?” she asked. “They're getting new terms every day,” he said without looking up from the sporting page. “I never heard it before, but an ocean liner is probably a hot one that isn’t fielded well and rolls into a puddle or something.” She made no answer, but when he had gone to business she ‘phoned the doctor about him. Deafness Cannot Be Cured bby Joeal applications, as they cannot reach the dis Drei tportbn of the tar ‘There is only one way to Sore abatneas, and that is by constitutional remedies Hreamess is caused by an lifamed condition of the Pecos fining of the, Eustachian Tube. When, this Rite is dnfamed you Mave. rumbling sound or im- Pirtect heating: ald when 1 s entirely ‘lowed, Deaf Rettig the revuits and unless the inflammation can De Pett out and this tube restored 1o its normal cond ER" Nearing: will be. destroyed forever; nine cases Eet'of ten wre caused ‘by Catarrh, which is nothing But an named condition of the mucous surfaces. va'wil give One Hundred Dollars for any caso of Deninest (Cased: by catarri) that eannot be cured Dy iiai's Gatarrh Cures Send foe etreulary, tree. Ty. CHENEY & COw Toledo, O. Sold by Drugeista, 73, ‘Take Halle Family Pils for constipation. = The Outlook. “You were very cold last evening,” phoned the young man to the girl he had called on, Then he added, anx- iously: “What is the outlook for to- night?” “Fair and warmer tonight,” came the answer promptly.—Judge. oie a lech nwaa.. Relleved By Murine Eye Remedy. 1 Murine ror your lye ‘roubles, You Wilt Dike Murine, It Soothes. 60¢ at Your Bruigelata, Write For ye Books, Free. Murine Bye Hemedy Co., Chicago. We are not in this world to do what we wish—but to be willing to do that which it 1s our duty to do—Charles Gounod. nq PERRY DAVIS! PATNKIDLER fa van oqnen, Of brevendon am well o8 Houma Of eure Mor bowel, ‘roubles, oakin sould, SSia"aha other 115." "Be ‘and 6S alee. Some of our first impressions were made by mother’s slipper. ‘Airs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup. rorehininen teetning. waftena tn gina, penices fe Rolsmationallayepulh cures windcolle. Seu bottle, Ryen a truthful man is occasionally gulifpiotiexs aeration: ee CA 0 iy 5 ie 900 Drors i || For Infants and Children, i gy OO ey . tay | fat ele T| Ki d Y p = EASTURIA The Kind You Have SS ae ee ey ‘ooo! Always Bought t || ALCOHOL=3 PER CENT Ww | TT eae: || similating the Food and Regula- | tng ating heFoodandResula- | Bears tho ° any STRNaeen onions Signature bi! Promotes Digestion Cheerful- 3 || ness and Rest.Contains neither of 1) || Opium,Morphine nor Mineral fs) || Nor NARC OTIC RW || Recipe ef Ole DrSAMUEL PITCHER bis || umn Seed = Bt || aex'Seena = pei. Akers” BS | Bee ndn % | Nn Med eet iia intron Beaver : Kis Sy | reer eet 5)] Aperfect Remedy for Constipa- . U Ris | (oe Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, $8 Ra Worms ‘Convulsions Feverislr r y 8 r <a OSS OF SLEEP. 8) ness and Loss F 0 st Fac Simile Signature off 0 Rt Lillian Thi Y Jas] THE Centaur Companys irty 6 ars ie NEW YORK. he) RR eee ey °: Sip keke tae ketal —————————— SGuaranteed under the Fooda ‘Exact Copy of Wrapper. ‘He OERTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORE OFT. ee Te Te a a as cool and white as a dairy. No smell, no smoke, no heat, no dust. No old-fashioned contrivances._The New Perfection is the latest practical, scientific cook-stove. It will cook the most elaborate dinner without heating the kitchen. Boils, bakes, or roasts better than any range. Ready in a second. Extinguishedinasecond. Fitted with Cabinet Top, with collapsible ey eh rests, towel rack, and every up-to-date on (ered 5 ae MY feature imaginable. You want it, be- Se ee case it will cook any dinner and not e * Sa heat the room. No heat, no smell, es # no smoke, no coal to bring in, no ashes. K to to carry out. It does away with the iy drudgery of cooking, and makes it = oS } jleasure. Women with the light touch NM ¥ so Ta be pastry especially appreciate it, be- 7 ee cause they can immediately have a AS Diy bee A. ye 4 quick fire, ay, by atag a handle. ————— No half-hour preparation. It not only a is less trouble than coal, but it costs. | be, 5 less. Absolutely no smell, no smoke}. ee yi Ts iene and it doesn't heat the kitchen. | ge. Py ey "The nickel finish, with the turquoi: pete bise ofthe enameled chimneys, makes y= the stove ornamental and attractive. i re Made with 1, 2 and 3 burners; the 2 ¥ and 3-burner stoves can be had with Cautionary rene Be sure { or without Cabinet. You vet thie stove see where; if not at Ralauity Berton | we eee Sotive Circular to the neared Rgency ofthe Continental Oil Company (incorporated) a nee ete ine ete Nr a Obviousty. A Denver man who visited the mu- séum at City Park recently tells of a farmer he saw there, The ruralist stepped in front of a portrait which showed a man sitting in a high-backed chair, There was a small white card on the picture reading: “A portrait of E. H. Smith, by him. self.” ‘The farmer read the card and then chuckled to himself. “Regular fools these city fellers are,” he said. “Anybody who looks at that picture ‘a know -Smith’s by himself. ‘They ain't no one in the paintin’ with him."—Cincinnat! Post. The Real Hero. “So Biggins has written a historical novel?” “Yes,” answered Miss Cayenne. “Who is the hero of the book?” “The man who has undertaken to publish it."—Washington Star. Poetical Truth. Man, thou pendulum betwixt a smile and tear.—Byron. The signature on a check is a sign of prosperity. Hoods Sarsaparilla Leads all other medicines in the cure of all spring ailments, humors, loss of appetite, that tired feeling, paleness and nervousness, Take it. Get It today, In usual lquld form ov tablets called Sarsatabs, 100 Doses $1. MOTHER GRAY’S SWEET POWDERS FOR GHILDREN, {Smntipatione’ hegun ete: Kesnalh Hroubias, Teething BON Wiel eh etn Colt Don'tacespt Mamplormaiied VILE Rania anpuubstiate. A. 3. OLMSTED, Le Roy, N. Ye HALLEY’S COMET Sc2‘eitu"acr'wonderrat ase Hronoeaical his power telescope, Ryedruwers Steet aio cme 100 OF a eee sid o Wor tba enenge ie WON. U. DENVER, NO. 19-1910. ees | aa eae sctgaimaeueres Dr. @, CONTRELL, Suits 005, 400 W. 234 U1. Newyecm = PARALYSIS 5°32 Werve Tabiets goog tt, Wrte for Proof. Advice Pres SeTeURRTaSe Read TG Palade, Be OUR COUNTRY LIBERTY·INDEPENDENCE OUR COUNTRY LIBERTY·INDEPENDENCE OUR COUNTRY LIBERTY·INDEPENDENCE OUR COUNTRY LIBERTY·INDEPENDENCE PRESIDENT TAFT ON PROHIBITION We submit without comment the judgment of President Taft on the question of Prohibition. In his book, "Four Aspects of Civic Duty," the chief executive of the greatest nation on earth, says: more utterly at variance such, by reason of con- ble of enforcement. Presented by sumptuary ers is prohibited under ment of the immediate the enforcement of the the result of agitation who are determined to In cases where the it is far better to regu- and the failure to enforce idea that laws are to of those affected; I such a loose theory is. w leads to a demoral- icity and Organization, "Nothing is more foolish, nothing more utterly at variance in sound policy, than to enact a law which, by reason of con- tions surrounding the community, is incapable of enforcement. "Such, for instance, are sometimes presented by sumptuary laws by which the sale of intoxicating liquors is prohibited under penalties in localities where public sentiment of the immediate community does not and will not sustain the enforcement of the law. In such cases the legislation usually is the result of agitation by the people in the country districts, who are determined to make their fellow citizens in the city better. In cases where the sale of liquor cannot be prohibited in fact, it is far better to regulate than to stamp it out. "By the enactment of a drastic law and the failure to enforce it there is injected into the public mind the idea that laws are to be obeyed or violated according to the will of those affected; I need not say how altogether pernicious such a loose theory is. The constant violation or neglect of any law leads to a demoralized view of all laws." Nathan A. Coe Director of Publicity and Organization, territory?" Yes NO X T AS SHOWN ABOVE OUR COUNTRY LIBERTY INDEPENDENCE TO VOTE AGAINST PROHIBITION MARK YOUR BALLOT AS SHOWN ABOVE OUR COUNTRY LIBERTY INDEPENDENCE OUR COUNTRY LIBERTY INDEPENDENCE OUR COUNTRY LIBERTY INDEPENDENCE We comm of Pre questi The United States Manufacturing & Merchants Association CURTIS M. HARRIS LYMAN'S Down Town Millinery Opposite D. & F.'s 1120 Sixteenth St. COPYRIGHT Purchase your Spare MILLIE NO while the prices are low. The or in Denver. Three floors full of pre Our prices are below competiti will convince. Purchase your Spring and Summer MILLINERY NOW while the prices are low. The only real Millinery Department Store in Denver. Three floors full of pretty things for your selection. Our prices are below competition. "Seeing is believing." A trial will convince. $7.50 Hats at $4.75 You can secure Building Laborers By calling PINN & WALTON, Phone Main 5038 at 1221 19th Street, Phone Champa 1259 at 2346 Larimer Street; Denver, Colorado. A. H. PINN M. B. --- PINN DAY OR NIGHT. PHONE MAIN 6243 A. M. LAWHORN UNDERTAKERS A first-class Mortuary establishment. First aid to the bereaved in the time of death of their loved ones. Prices below competitors. Polite service. Parlors 1921 Arapahoe St. LICENCED EMBALMER AN'S Millinery Co. ing and Summer NERY OW real Millinery Department Store y things for your selection. h. "Seeing is believing." A trial ding Laborers e Main 5038 at 1221 19th Street, Street; Denver, Colorado. [Name] WALTON J. R. CONTEE, PRESIDENT. R. E. HANDY, LICENSED EMBALMER. THE Douglass Undertaking Company Incorporated—Bonded to the City. Phone—Main 6123.