Colorado Statesman

Saturday, August 6, 1910

Denver, Colorado

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THE COLORADO STATESMAN THE JOURNAL OF THE WEST. LABOR SHALL BE FREE RACE COUNTRY PARTY NEGRO NOT Says Dr. DuBois of the Reco Legislatures. Free School ment of themselves and t the Labors of the NEGRO RULE NOT SO BAD Says Dr. DuBois of the Record of the Race in Southern Legislatures. Free School System and enfranchisement of themselves and the poor whites result of the Labors of the one time Slaves. By Horace D. Slatter. Durham, N. C., July 26.—W. E. B. Du Bois, director of sociological research, looking into the progress of the American Negro, was the central figure in the last week's program of the National Religious Training School and Chautauqua here. Dr. Du Bois gave three lectures, the first on "The History of Education," and the other two on "The History of the Negro." His first lecture on "The History of the Negro" dealt with the record of Negroes in Egypt and in central and Northern Africa, which brought his narrative to the beginning of African slavery trade. up against the proposition of more land. They ran against the moral conscience of the nation; slave property became unsafe, because of the underground railway and this moral sense, for slaves could run away to the Northern states and to Canada. Finally slavery was overthrown. "Reconstruction with its subsequent criticism of the Negro resulted. I fear that too often, Negroes themselves yield to the criticism that is passed upon the giving of the ballot to them directly after the Civil War. It was absolutely necessary. It was not given to the ex-slaves because they thought they could use it properly, not because it was thought they In his second address, Dr. DuBois stated that the Negroes of today should consider it a privilege to help in the solution of the Negro problem as one of the world's great movements and not as having to do with something unpleasant. He called attention to the fact that the majority of the people of the world were colored, and that a belief in humanity must necessarily be a belief in the colored man. In the course of his remarks, Dr. DuBois said: "Back of slavery and the slave trade, lay of course several excuses. The first excuse was that slavery gave an excuse for the conversion of the heathen. But what was to be done, when the converted slaves wanted to enter the Christian church? The old English law said that no Christian could be held a slave. That took the excuse for slavery away, but another was soon found. "Just as soon as one evil goes on unattended to, with the hope that it will settle itself, another one will rise up in its place. Problems like slavery, that were four hundred years in the making, do not settle themselves. There came the attempt to establish a feudal system with black and white serfs at the bottom. The rise of the cotton industry spoiled that, and placed slavery on an economic basis, and consequently beyond the pale of criticism. "Then came certain hindrances. The history of the United States from the Missouri Compromise to the Civil War is the attempt of the slave states to get more land for the cultivation of cotton and the extension of slavery. They were ```markdown ``` VOL. XVI. ```markdown ``` up against the proposition of more land. They ran against the moral conscience of the nation; slave property became unsafe, because of the underground railway and this moral sense, for slaves could run away to the Northern states and to Canada. Finally slavery was overthrown. "Reconstruction with its subsequent criticism of the Negro resulted. I fear that too often, Negroes themselves yield to the criticism that is passed upon the giving of the ballot to them directly after the Civil War. It was absolutely necessary. It was not given to the ex-slaves because they thought they could use it properly; not because it was thought they were qualified for its best and highest use, but I submit that the best way to train a man to use the ballot is to let him use it. The ballot was the only way to guarantee to the Negro his freedom. The fourteenth and fifteenth amendments were absolutely necessary to guarantee the enforcement of the thirteenth. Too many attempts were made directly after emancipation to again subject the Negroes to slavery in everything except the name. "Moreover, the record of the Negroes in Southern legislatures was not so bad. True, they did some silly things, but they gave to the South some things that still remain. The first system of free public schools was given by this so-called carpet bag rule, with large Negro majorities in the legislatures. They gave the South its first Democratic government by opening the ballot to the Negroes and the poor whites. Hitherto the government in most of the Southern states was one of the aristocracy." "To be sure much stealing was done in the legislatures under Negro control. Some is done now. At that time stealing was going on all over the country, from St. Louis to Washington. One clique in Congress stole fifty millions in one deal, which besmirched even a Vice-President and a Cabinet Secretary. The South Carolina government was especially extravagant and did some silly things. The attempt was made to buy up a large tract of land and parcel it out to a large number of people. The bill did pass. In the end the result was that the state had some mighty poor land and some Southern people had a lot of money. "Negro government was overthrown in a manner with which you are perfectly familiar. In overthrowing this rule, the step was taken, not only to get rid of DENVER, COLORADO, SATURDAY, AUGUST 6 1910. the bad Negroes in office but all Negroes. That is the one fault of disfranchisement. It hinders the development of the whites, and keeps the state under the control of a few, who are free to loot the public if they desire. It tells the black man he has got to have extra advantages, and to the white man that they are not necessary. "It seems to me that the Negro ought to get very busy trying to solve all these problems. There are entirely too many people of darker hue in the world, for the problem of different races living together in peace and harmony to go unsolved. We people here in America have a splendid chance to anticipate that world wide solution that is bound to come. "It is unfair to ourselves not to protest when we feel ourselves being treated unjustly. It is unfair to our white neighbors. Nothing is doing the South more harm than to have a class of entirely unprotected citizens, a people who can be stepped on at will, a people who can be treated anyway, who can be literally walked over, without the right of redress; for after all, the greatest harm is going to be done to the man who does the walking over." COLORADO. RACE NEWS GATHERED FROM VARIOUS SOURCES New York, N. Y., July 27, 1910. —Kingsbridge terrace is agog over the selling of a $13,000 house and lot to John M. Royall, a colored real estate dealer. One of the finest on the terrace, the house was owned by Mrs. Sarah Christopher, who lived in it four years. It is a beautiful Queen Anne cottage. Munroe, La., July 27. Men whose identity the police have failed to establish broke into the jail here today and carried off Laura Porter, a Negro woman prisoner, keeper of a resort where several white men were reported to have been robbed. It is believed she was thrown into the Ouachita river and drowned. The woman had been warned to leave town many times prior to her recent arrest for larceny. --- Philadelphia, Pa., July 26. Rev. H. T. Johnson, for a number of years editor of the Christian Recorder, the organ of the A. M. E. church, died here Saturday after an illness lasting two years. The funeral took place at Bethel A. M. E. Church. The services were conducted by Bishop A. Grant, assisted by a number of ministers. Cambridge, Mass., July 27.—E. Smythe Jones, the Negro poet, who was arrested last week on a charge of vagrancy, after having walked from Natchez, Miss., to this city, in order to enter Harvard this fall, was discharged in the District Court today. Considerable interest has been taken in Jones by the authorities at Harvard, and they have given him employment as a janitor. While in jail here Jones wrote a poem entitled "Harvard Square, and dedicated it to the Judge who dismissed his case. COLOR LINE IN TRANSVAAL. From Cape Town, South Africa, comes the report that the color line has been drawn in the Transvaal mines and that white miners will be greatly benefited if the regulations proposed by the recent commission are carried out by the government. One suggestion is that only white men shall in the future receive blasting certificates, and that only competent white men shall be allowed to be in charge of boilers, engines and machinery. The ex- NO.47 isting rules draw no color line, and a number of colored men now hold certificates. Stringent regulations are proposed to safeguard the health of the men underground. All dusty rock must be damped, and no person suffering from tuberculosis or disease of the respiratory organs shall be permitted to work underground. Some suggestions, made with the idea of preventing accidents, lay down the principle that no incompetent or inexperienced man shall be allowed to take part in dangerous work. The hours of work underground are limited to eight a day, exclusive of the time occupied in reaching work and returning to the surface.—N. Y. Age. MANITOU NEWS. Manitou seems to be a "haven" for both Texas and Oklahoma tourists and in order to please their prejudice propensities, the home people here—never "overlook" a sight. It was quite amusing to note the many signs hung around on the walls, of the various business houses, "Colored trade not solicited," in the early part of the season, but, when the season was so late, the money began coming in here in "road-wagons," and not in "autos."—I can tell you the signs were taken down everywhere because "all money looks alike to a white man," when it is limiten. Mr. John Bates of Pueblo, is a frequent visitor in Manitou. Mr. and Mrs. John Wesley Lyons, of Denver spent a week in the resort. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Waddy of Cripple Creek were visitors here Sunday, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Weston. Mrs. C. P. Douglass is suffering with neuralgia. It is reported that Professor I. C. Fox is to erect a Female Seminary, in the near future, either in Kansas City or St. Louis. Mr. C. A. Washington, head waiter at the Cliff House continues lame, yet he is improving slowly. Many of us were seen at the great Barnum and Baily circus Tuesday. There are a great many young men who are working at the various hotels this season, who are attending the different colleges, both East and South in the winter. Always Staunch And True The Denver Republican has always avoided the fallacies and knaveries of yellow journalism, and its steadily increasing Circulation proves conclusively that its policy of telling the plain Truth without exaggeration or misrepresentation, standing fast for the Right, is heartily approved with growing force by the intelligent Public to which it appeals. To read it is a liberal Education, and the citizen who goes without it does a positive harm to himself, to his family, and to the community. In no other way can the investment of 2% cents per day for that is all The Republican costs any subscriber—bring such rich results in that Knowledge which is both Power and Pleasure. Information, instruction and entertainment fill its columns and it leaves a good taste in the mouth of the reader. It stands for Law and Order in the State—for Peace, Prosperity and Happiness in the Home. If you are not already enrolled among its splendid list of Patrons send on your subscription and give it a fair trial at 75 cents per month for Daily and Sunday. The WARD AUCTION COMPANY Sales Daily at 2 p.m. Office Furniture a Specialty. PRIVATE SALES AT ALL TIMES HAVE MOVED TO— 1723-39 GLENARM ST. PHONE MAIN 1675. Miss M. Cowden Hair Dressing Parlor Shampoo, cutting and curling. Scalp treatment, hair tonics, hair straightening, manicuring. Stage wigs for rent; theatrical use and masquerades. Goods delivered out of the city. All shades of hair matched by sending sample of hair; also combings made up. Cheapest Switches 50 Cents 1219 21st St. Denver, Colo H. L. KORTZ, .. Expert Watchmake,... .. Jeweler and Optician . Watches and Jewelery for Sale at Lowest Prices in the City. All Work Guaranteed for Two Years. Phone Main 5371. 905 FIFTEENTH STREET, Denver, Colorado. NAST The Popular Photograher, Only Caters to First-class Trade, Our Pictures speak for Themselves. THE WORLD IN PARAGRAPHS A BRIEF RECORD OF PASSING EVENTS IN THIS AND FOR- EIGN COUNTRIES. IN LATE DISPATCHES DOINGS AND HAPPENINGS THAT MARK THE PROGRESS WESTERN. Montana forest fires are reported to be as bad as ever, especially in the Flathead valley. Through passenger traffic on the Western Pacific in connection with the Denver & Rio Grande will be inaugurated August 22d. Joseph A. Wendling, alleged slayer of eight-year-old Alma Kellner in Louisville, Ky., has been captured in San Francisco, after a four-months' chase. He admits his identity but denies his guilt. For the eighth time in the history of the organization, Charles H. Moyer was elected president of the Western Federation of Miners by the convention being held in Denver. Charles E. Mahoney was re-elected vice president, and Secretary-Treasurer Ernest Mills was unanimously re-elected. Owing to the lack of a hay crop and the poor range, due to drought, cattle and sheepmen of the northwestern part of South Dakota will ship all available stock to market as soon as possible, and many have decided to sacrifice their small crops of grain in order to fatten the stock before shipping, believing this will pay better than shipping lean stock and harvesting a half crop. Negotiations between miners and coal operators of the southwestern territory, which have dragged along four months, at Kansas City, were brought to an end Monday. A general strike order will be issued immediately, according to George Manuel, secretary of the Missouri district, and 30,000 or more miners, who have not worked since the expiration of the old contract, April 1, will be formally on strike. POLITICAL The indications are that Kansas will have six insurgent congressmen in the next session, instead of the two in the last session. Congressman William Sulzer has announced himself as a candidate for the Democratic nomination for governor of New York. Gifford Pinchot, former chief forester under Theodore Roosevelt, has taken place upon the list of possible candidates for the Republican nomination for governor of New York, and Theodore Roosevelt was asked to support his candidacy. Kansas Democrats Tuesday nominated the following state ticket: For governor, George H. Hodges, Olathe; lieutenant governor, Lot Ravenscraft, Ashland; secretary of state, Ray L. Taylor, Wichita; state auditor, Jonathan S. Miller, Pittsburg; attorney general, T. F. Morrison, Chanute; state treasurer, B. M. Drelling, Hays; superintendent of instruction, D. M. Bowen, Pittsburg; superintendent of insurance, Northrup Moore, Kansas City; state printer, F. W. Boyd, Phillipsburg. Minnesota Democrats have nominated the following state ticket: Governor, John Lind; lieutenant governor, H. C. Tift, Long Prairie; secretary of state, Fred W. Johnson; clerk of the Supreme Court, Fred E. Wheaton, Minneapolis; attorney general, J. M. Freeman, Olivia; treasurer, Charles F. Lander, St. Cloud; railroad and warehouse commissioner, James C. Tracy, Rochester; auditor, T. J. Meaghan, Albert Lea; justices of Supreme Court, T. J. O'Brien, St. Paul; A. W. Snow of Winona; Phillip T. Brown of Luvrne; Calvin L. Brown of Morris. FOREIGN. The list of bank failures in Germany through excessive speculative operations has received a striking addition in the insolvency of the Niederdeutsche bank. The liabilities of the bank are placed at $12,500,000, while its capital is $3,000,000. Notwithstanding the extremely strained relations between the Vatican and the Spanish government, the recall of Marquis de Ojeda, the Spanish ambassador to the Vatican, has produced a great sensation in Rome. The Vatican in a semi-official communication says the recall of the ambassador proves that the programme of Premier Canalejas was not arranged with the hope of accord, but with a desire for fight and the communication adds, he will have it. The aeroplanist Tyck Monday at Brussels reached a height of 5,570 feet, a new record. Saturday Olies-lagers made a flight to a height of 4,991 feet in a monoplane. Dr. Hawley Harvey Crippen and Ethel Clare Leneve, his stenographer, who fled from London after the disappearance of Belle Elmore, the doctor's wife, were arrested at Farther Point, P. Q., Sunday aboard the Canadian Pacific liner Montrose, at the command of Inspector Dew of Scotland Yard. WASHINGTON. Owing to the prevalence of infantile paralysis in Washington and elsewhere throughout the country, a government investigation is to be made into the case of the disease. Attorney General Wickersham has decided that the $300,000 appropriation made by the last Congress to raise the battleship Maine is available for any work that may be necessary in that connection, thus removing all obstacles. By joint action the railroads of the United States Monday established a Bureau of Railway Economics in Washington. It is under the direction of Lagon G. McPherson, lecturer on transportation at the Johns Hopkins University. For the protection of deer in Alaska, the Department of Agriculture has issuer regulations limiting to eight the number of deer which may be killed by one person, suspending after the close of the present season until 1912 the sale of deer carcasses in southeastern Alaska and limiting the season in that part of Alaska from Aug. 15th to Nov. 11th. New regulations regarding the killing of walrus have also been formulated. President Taft has followed the recent cancellation of his Western and Southern engagements by announcing that his speeches of the future would be few and far between. He told a committee from Providence, R. I., that he could not reconsider the cancellation of his engagement to speak be fore the Atlantic Deep Waterways Association in that city in September. Mr. Taft said important matters of public business would claim his attention from now until the convening of Congress. SPORT. GENERAL Fifty-eight cases of infantile paralysis are reported at Mason City, Iowa; seventy-one cases at Springfield, Mass. The biennial grand encampment of the uniform rank Knights of Pythias and convention of the supreme lodge opened in Milwaukee Monday. Governor Mann of Virginia has appointed Former Gov. Claude A. Swanson of Chatham to succeed the late John W. Daniel in the United States Senate. Representatives of locomotive engineers on fifty-six railroad systems west of Chicago met there Monday to consider plans which may result in a general demand for higher wages. John G. Carlisle, former secretary of the treasury, who had been critically ill for the past two days, died in New York Saturday night of heart failure, accompanied by oedema of the lungs. After having confessed to the murder of Bessle Morrison, a 12-year-old daughter of Mrs. Mary Morrison, near Dady, Fla., two negroes were taken from the officers and lynched by a mob. The strike of conductors, trainmen and yardmen which began on the Grand Trunk and Central Vermont systems July 18, was officially called off Tuesday. Said to be an increase of 30 per cent in wages. Representatives of twenty-seven national banks met in New York and organized the National Currency Association of the City of New York for the purpose of providing for a more elastic issue of currency and to lessen the danger of future financial panics by providing means whereby the stronger banks may come to the aid of the weaker. Co-operation between the federal and state governments in the good roads movement was advocated by the speakers at the opening session of the third annual convention of the National Good Roads Congress at Niagara Falls, N. Y. B. F. Yoakum of the St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad and Congressman William Sulzer of New York favored the idea of the federal government loaning money to the states for good road building. Charges of graft which defrauded the Fraternal Order of Eagles—a society of 360,000 members in Canada and the United States—of thousands of dollars, were made Tuesday in connection with a suit for recovery of $5,000. Efforts to have the carpenters, electrical workers, bricklayers, plasterers, hoisting engineers and laborers join in the Chicago building trades strike were without success and contractors declare that the attempted general strike has sizzled. It is said that less than 1,000 men have responded to the strike call. Marriage Stopped by Killing. Denver.—Celebrations for a wedding that was to have taken place Saturday day came to a sudden stop Friday evening when the bridegroom-to-be, Thomas Scully, a ranch hand from near Quinby, Colo., was stabbed and killed by E. C. Jones, known as "Humpy" Jones. The killing took place in a little lunch car on Larimer street, in which Jones was employed, and was witnessed only by Annie Thurston, who declares that she and Scully were to have been married the next day. Interstate Fair to Be Representative. Interstate Fair to Be Representatives Denver.—The Inter-State Fair and Exposition which will open for two weeks at the Overland grounds in Denver on September 3, promises to be the most representative exposition of the West ever held in Colorado. The permium list has just been issued and not only every county in Colorado but counties from the adjoining states will display their progress. There are over $50,000 offered in premiums and agriculture is given the prominent place. The display of agriculture and horticulture will be the largest and most interesting ever shown in the West. All the space in the great exposition buildings has already been reserved and the exhibits will overflow the space into tents and temporary buildings. Standley Lake Project to Resume. Denver.—After weeks of negotiations between the conflicting interests that control the Denver Reservoir Irrigation Company, a definite settlement has been reached, and as a result work will be resumed at once on one of Colorado's greatest irrigation enterprises, which has been at a standstill for nearly two months on account of financial troubles arising largely through a contest for control of the company. By the terms of the settlement, the Maybee-Tibbetts Bond Company of Philadelphia agrees, to dispose of the $600,000 worth of receiver's certificates authorized by the District Court at 90 cents on the dollar, providing $585,000 for the work. Of this amount $50,000 is to be paid into the treasury of the company by August 15 and $100,000 on the first of each succeeding month until the entire amount is paid in. Lands Restored to Entry. Washington, D. C.—Thousands of acres of unappropriated land which was eliminated from national forests in Colorado and restored to the public domain by recent proclamation of President Taft are subject to settlement October 18th and to entry on November 17th. They include: White River National forest, 6,766 acres in Rio Blanco and Garfield counties, all of which is chiefly unappropriated; Battlement National forest, 16,562 acres in Mesa and Delta counties, about 86 per cent of which is unappropriated; Gunnison National forest, 11,195 acres in Delta, Gunnison and Montrose counties, all of which is chiefly unappropriated; Uncompahgre National forest, 45,489 acres in San Miguel and Montrose counties, about 45 per cent of which is unappropriated; Cochetopa National forest, 5,640 acres in Saguache county, all of which is chiefly unappropriated; San Isabel National forest, 9,965 acres in Saguache, Fremont, Custer, Las Animas and Huerfano counties, about two-thirds of which is unappropriated. All Kinds of Heroics. Georgetown.—One of the most daring rescues that was ever accomplished in Colorado occurred here late Sunday night when Miss Mabel Lynn, an actress well known throughout the country was saved from death by John Hart, George Layden, Harry Barmettler and Leon Rowan. Miss Lynn started for the top of Republican mountain at 5 o'clock in the afternoon for the purpose of viewing the statue of Madonna, which has long been an object of great interest to tourists, and which is a natural image of a woman garbed in the attire of Virgin Mary. She passed her objective and, while standing upon a rock a slide occurred, thousands of tons of rock and debris crashing down the hillside, but unfortunately only one large boulder caught her, striking her on the side. The woman was hurled through the air for fully fifty feet, where she became wedged between two rocks. Not having been rendered unconscious, Miss Lynn called for assistance. Despite the fact that she was 2,500 feet above the level of Georgetown, her cries of anguish could be distinctly heard all over town. The gentlemen named above formed a rescuing party and reached the young woman in a little over two hours' climbing. As the woman lay in the arms of her rescuers she suddenly revived and called for water. None being at hand, Layden broke a limb off a tree and from the leaves shook the water in the face of the injured woman. Dry Farm Wheat Averages $38\frac{1}{2}$. Fort Collins.—Henry Frey, living seven miles southwest of here, reports the record yield for this year for dry land wheat, his twenty-one acres of turkey red winter wheat yielding $38\frac{1}{2}$ bushels per acre. Elevator Accident Fatal Denver.—While trying to board an elevator on the third floor of the building at 1639 Arapahoe street, Clifford Dean, aged 27, was crushed to death. He was dead when Police Surgeon Mc Gillivray arrived. ```markdown ``` WM. EHMKE MANAGER East Turner Hall 2132-2148 ARAPAHOE ST. Phone 2449. DENVER. C OZARK CLUB MILLIARDS AND POOL PARLORS STRICTLY MEMBERSHIP CLUB MAS CLINGMAN, Ma 5 Arapahoe Street Phone Main When you Wear feet, Tails, Snouts, Ears, Neckbones or Chitts other part of the hog except the squeal go st's Mark or Street. Pho ZARK CLUB ARDS AND POOL PARLORS BY MEMBERSHIP CLUB CLINGMAN, Manager No Street Phone Main 5154 In you Want outs, Ears, Neckbones or Chitterlings or any the hog except the squeal go to Market Phone 1461 Main. THE OZA BILLIARDS PARK STRICTLY MEM THOMAS CLIN 1855 Arapahoe Street When you The Heads, Feet, Tails, Snouts, Ea other part of the hog East's THE OZARK CLUB BILLIARDS AND POOL PARLORS STRICTLY MEMBERSHIP CLUB THOMAS CLINGMAN, Manager 1855 Arapahoe Street Phone Main 5154 The Heads, Feet, Tails, Snouts, Ears, Neckbones or Chitterlings or any other part of the hog except the squeal go to 2300-6 Larimer Street. THE INCLINITY WONT BREWING CO. Fioli DENVER, CO. OU EVER TRY ros.' Beer? right, and tastes right. made anywhere and ctly Colorado Production DID YOU L Neef Bro It's made right None better ma This is a Strictly D YOU EVER THE of Bros.' Be made right, and tastes better made anywhere 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. Phone Main 7413 Wines, Liquors and Cig THE NEWPORT SALOON NEWPORT SALE NEWPORT SALOON DICK FRAZIER AND TOM LEWIS PROPRIETORS ▲ First-Class Resort For Gentlemen road Men and Waiters' Club ead, others follow. Home for Rail- and Club Men. A welcome to visitors Men and Waiters' Club follow. Home for Rail- Men. A welcome to visitors Railroad Men Cl We lead, others follow road and Club Men. A All the latest Magaz 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. .. .. .. JOSEPH SOBOL EDWARD URDANK TELEPHONE CHAMPA 1231 The Monarch THE MUNARCH LIQUOR CO. Liquor Co. DEALERS IN IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC WINES AND LIQUORS FAMILY TRADE A SPECIALTY 1516 COURT PLACE. DENVER, COLO. 1845 Arapahoe St. WILLIAMSON HAFFNER CO. ENGRAVERS-PRINTERS OUR CUTS TAILLE DENVER, COLO X+E+R CAPA ¢K+X+X+ ERs E+ KK+ KEK Xt XK v ArT rE rErEtE lA) 4 The Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute a ( , : : ( OFFERS SPECIAL FACILITIES FOR THE TRAIN- ) ( ING OF COLORED YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN ) ‘ Large and comfortable buildings, excellent instruction and modern > | equipment throughout every department, ‘Those young men and women ( SMotare not fully able to pay their way will Be given ‘opportunity, to} | Work-out™@ portion of thelr board, ‘which te $8.60 per month. | An en= (Trance foo of 410,00 is required, payable In Caan. tuition is tree. ) ; Apaiications from all parts ‘of the country are constantly belng re- (ceived for the services of young men and Women with thorough tFain- ing, and it ‘in impossible to supply this demand. ; ‘ Greater stress is being placed upon the study of agriculture, and a {thorough training Is guaranteed those who are willing to study and d work, ’ : THE FOLLOWING COURSES ARE OFFERED : J Phelps Hall Bible Training School, Dalry Husbandry and ) ; Dairying, Dairying, Truck Gardening, Fruit Growing, ; J Farming, Founding, ‘Electrical Engiveering. Briek-mason- ’ ; ry, Carpentry, Carpentry Repair, Wood Turning, Shoe- ‘ J Making, Blacksmithing, Wheelwrighting, — Floricultural, ) j Tailoring, Painting, Harhessmaking, Steain Engineering, ; ‘ Machine Shop Practice, Plumbing, Baw Milling, Millinery, ' : Mattressmaking and Basketry, Cooking, Nurse’ Training, ; ‘ Brememaking. { Write for clroular of information or catalogue. BOOKER T. WASH: ! { INGTON, Principal, Tuskegee Institute, Alabama. ’ ‘ (ov wari iva weeewiwerenériwiwirerierie+xdxexeei rer Mamma Neely’s Restaurant ive. > ee ee ee ee oe ee GOOD HOME COOKING Remade Kegular Reals 25¢e. Sunday Dinner 35e in © Short Orders at All Acurs cae? 1914 Arapahoe St. :: Denver, Col. Superior Laundry ALL HAND WORK. a. W. eae ei esc Talephone 2182. 1785 Lawrence St. Denver. ee ee le Own A Watch! By Se $11.50 Soe 7 For Sale Wass lots in parts of the City from $35 up. Terms so small you can pay out and not miss the money. Why not put some of that cigar money in a pair of lots, ® Colored Amer... ge Loan & Realy co, “4843 POPLIN Dr. J. H. P. Westbrook - ————————————: fs ee Residence and Office : 1023 Twenty-First St. : : Over Allen’s Drug Store. Z 7 Phone Main 1144. ; - OFFICE HOURS: 2 to 5 p. m. : and 7 to 9 p. m. > Sundays and Other Times by : Appointment. j SRN Oo eal Vga ee ee ee Phone Champa 2219 T. S. RECTOR Cigars and To- bacco, Ice Cream . and Soft Drinks ———— | 1916 Arapahoe St., Denver Braids, Puffs, Pomps MADE from combings. Old Braids cleaned and dyed. Scalp treatment a specialty :. % LADIES DESIRING HAIRDRESS- ING, SHAMPOOING, MAS- SAGING AND MAICUR. ING CALL ON MRS. JOE. THOMPSON Phone Main 8348 Res. 3321 Humboldt St. CREDIT PHONE 9 MAIN 4 6316 YES — T. H. Wearne Furniture CARPETS, STOVES AND WINDOW SHADES First Class Repairing and Upholstering 1449-55 Welton Street Phones, Office Main 5595. 3 Residence, York 123. Hours; 9 tolla.m.,1 104, 7to8p.m, ; Sundays: 10 to 11:30 a,m.,2to4p.m, Dr. P. E. Spratlin La Good Block-1557 Larimer St. Qo Residence 2230 Clarkson St. $ 8 Denver, - * Colorado. 3 boiled S DOCSOOSOSO SOOM) Domes cianncor Sena Soe Phone Main 7241 Money to Loan on Good Security. J. A. WHITTAKER & CO. REAL ESTATE City Property and Farm Lands City Property to Trade for Lands. Gar den tracts for Sale and Trade. TRADES A SPECIALTY. 918 Nineteenth St. Denver, Colo, COLORADO ITEMS Va en ee ee Canon City is also in the race for ‘the location of the Odd Fellows’ home. Fruit shipments from Palisade up to August Ist amounted to sixty-three carloads. ‘The thirteenth annual road race be: tween Basalt and Glenwood will be held August 14th. Bonds in the sum of $1,000,000 for the Florida Mesa project in La Plata county were voted Saturday. L. V. Carter of Greeley found a beet in his field having a root forty-seven inches long. This beets the record. William Babberger of Canon City calculates that his forty-five colonies of bees will net him $400 this year. Denver's school enrollment {s 27,730 and it cost $45.95 per year for each child’s education, Teachers number 963. A factory has been established at Windsor for the manufacture of beet toppers and dry land farming imple- ments. ‘The midsummer meeting of the Col- orado State Editorial Association will be held at Buena Vista August 19th and 20th. The 100 acres of beans around Gree- ley which were planted for canning purposes are yielding three to five tons per acre. Arthur Gogelin, aged 28, night mar- shal at Telluride, was killed Monday morning by Jesse Munn, a miner and bad man. ‘The town of Moffat, in the San Luis valley, has two newspapers—the Times and the News—while a few weeks ago it had none. J. O. V. Wise, a farmer near Long: mont, caught 125 bushels of xrasshop- pers in three days. (Not one at @ time, however.) Station No. 1 on the Dent-Fort Col- lins branch of the Union Pacific, 1o- cated northwest of La Salle, is to be known as Koenig. Howard C. Chapin, well known min- ing man, is in the hospital at Aspen to recover from injuries received when he was thrown from a horse. If weather conditions continue favor- able the Wyatt ranch of 2,600 acres, three miles east of Ault, will harvest a crop valued at $100,000. Mayor Houston of Greeley has Is- sued a circular warning druggists against the sale of Jamacia ginger and other hybrid brands of firewater. A girls’ Sunday School athletic league is being organized in Fort Cot- lins. Basket ball, volley ball and ten- nis will be played and taught to mem- bers. In District Court at Greeley the Union Pacific filed a condemnation suit to secure land for extension of its lines from Dacono to Fort Collins, thir- ty miles. An item showing the prosperity of Crested Butte is the fact that over three blocks of cement walks have been laid lately, with incident cross: ings. Alamosa is having a great deal of city improvement done, including the grading and filling of streets and the layg of many blocks of cement walks. Guy Armstrong, aged 19, was accl- dentally shot and killed by William Fedder near Proctor Sunday. An au- tomatic gun in unfamiliar hands was the cause. A movement {s on foot at Gunnison to buy land and equip a fair ground and several thousand dollars in sub- scriptions rewarded the first efforts of the boosters. Ninety-seven thousand one hundred people availed themselves of the priv- iliges afforded by Denver's public bathhouse during the first seven months of this year. Canon City authorities have finished the part of the new Royal Gorge-Park- dale road assigned to the city and the county will now finish it. Visitors can now see the Royal Gorge from the top. The Evening Herald and the Eyen- ing Telegraph at Colorado Springs Springs have been consolidated as the Herald-Telegraph. C, C. Hamlin and associates are said to be the new own- ers, ‘The body of Alfedolas Zerro, a sheep- herder, was found on Pinon mesa, thir- ty miles south of Grand Junction, where he had evidently been killed by the discharge of his rifle, which was found beside him. * ‘The interior department has with: Arawn 30,000 acres of public lands in western Colorado from homestead en- try and all other forms of disposition under the land laws. ‘This area is lu- sated in the vicinity of the Grand val- iey reclamation project and is thought to be susceptible of irrigation by that INSURGENCY IN IOWA CHARLES 8. WEST JOHN W. WEST WEST BROS. | CONFECTIONERY —and———_ | ICE CREAM PARLOR Baur’s Ice Cream Austin’s Candies ee oe is neat and clean. Prompt and courteous attention. The patronage of the public respectfully solicited. Ice cream will be sold in any quantity, to take home with you. # 2 2 = 2 All the latest Soda Fountain Drinks served. Also a fine grade of Cigars 2741 WELTON STREET Near Five Points Phone Champa 2188 Denver, Colorado SUMMINS AND DOLLIVER IN CON- TROL OF THE CONVEN- TION. WASH’GT’N STANDS PAT RENOMINATE FIVE PRESENT S8U- PREME COURT JUDGES.—OK- LAKOMA G.O.P, REGULAR. Des Moines, la.—Republican Iowa wrote herself vigorously “progressive” Wednesday, at a convention which was In uproar most of the time. The stand- pat delegates went down to defeat with their colors riveted to the mast. They fought in every committee where a fight was possible; insisted on roll calls, and battled every inch for their principles. Senators Cummins and Dolliver and the lusurgent delegation at Washing- ton were enthusiastically indorsed. President Taft received the most tepid of lukewarm indorsements. A sop to harmony was flung out in the in- dorsement of the administration of Governor Carroll. An attempt to use the “steam roller” to make the state central committee _ overwhelmingly “progressive” was called off presum- ably at the hint of Senator Cummins. Senator Cummins was temporary chairman; Senator Dolliver perma- nent chairman. The “progressive ma- fority ranged close to three hundred, on every question. The resolutions committee was “progressive”—six to five. REE I i i Si Se i i Si Se So Se So Se a SF Boost Colorado Products Patronize Home Industry ZANG’S DELICIOUS TABLE BEERS COLUMBINE, VIENNA AND PILSENER Guaranteed Absolutely Pure. Delivered Daily to All Parts of the City. The Ph. Zang Brewing Co. TELEPHONE GALLUP 395. We Boost for Colorado You Should Boost for Us Tacoma, Wash.—Insurgency found no place and was given no quarter in the state Republican convention held in the armory Wednesday. On the contrary, it was roundly scored by United States Senators Piles and Jones and Congressmen Will E. Humphrey and W. W. McCredie. ‘The platform declares for a senator from west of the Cascades to succeed Senator Piles, retiring, together with ‘an indorsement of Secretary R. A. Bal- linger of the Interior Department. The convention nominated the present five Supreme Court judges whose terms are expiring. Guthrie, Okla—Present figures indi- cate the adoption of the grandfather disfranchising clause by anywhere from 15,000 to 25,000 majority. Of the congressional nominees, five are standpatters. A dopoiod Sepelediepeed OTe TTTT TTT TeV EV ere eye Five Points Furniture Co. ee | ! NEW AND SECOND HAND FURNITURE : We are offering special prices on all | |e of our furniture. New line of Re- : a frigerators, Lawn Mowers and _ Ice ; > LAR Cream Freezers. 2 2 ee : ol ; ; Fes General House Furnishings; eS | es | WY NS 2559 WELTON STREET : Threatened Chinese Boycott. Washington.—A number of intima tions that the Chinese proposed to boy: cott American goods, in retaliation for the American policy toward Chinese immigrants have reached the Depart ment of Commerce unofficially, doubt less from Chinese quarters in San Francisco. The government has no official information concerning a boy cott. Chinese seeking to enter this coun try are receiving better treatment during their detention than ever be fore, but the law is being rigidly en: forced, resulting in a greater number of exclusions. Investigation of Gore Bribe. Muskogee, Okla. — Investigations of charges made in the United States Senate by Senator 'T. P. Gore that he and a member of the House of Rep- resentatives each had been offered a bribe of $25,000 to foster a scheme whereby the Indians of Oklahoma were to be deprived of $3,000,000, profits due them through the sale of coal and asphalt lands in this state, were be gun Thursday. The Allen Drug Store Pure Drugs, Hot and Cold Drinks, Toilet Articles and Cigars. Pre- scriptions carefully compounded by a registered pharmacist. Prompt delivery to any part of the city. The Only Colored Drug Store in the City G. A. ALLEN, Proprietor 2100 Arapahoe Street Phone—Main 3230 Re-elect K. of C. Denver Director. Quebec.—The delegates attending the convention of Knights of Colum- bus in this city Wednesday re-elected four directors whose terms had ex- pired, They were Joseph Mercier, Montreal; Victor J. Dorr, Augusta, Ga.; John H. Reddin, Denver, and W. D. Dwyer, St. Paul, Minn. laa ee ee el See Loe Bast ERED yp ig eee a ae NSE par timeone eh bere ah Sak My ae a cae ee Rare 2) see Re pare eh ee ae ! Eta einai ee gy ORSON Pings ah come pee ie ps Lae lee Ray ame Ote % : aace ars Vee. eae. Pie ees pee gee ‘’ ae) en eine Ga oe ieay 2 cere ae Re a iter Marte eee? PAPC eS Sa ua eS omni at se ee ie een ae PRT Rr ert ae Oh lak CSE a ego Poem ag er ero ie Bate Gruesome Find in California. Santa Rosa, Calif—The bones of three human beings, supposed to be those of Enoch Kendall, his wife Ura Kendall and their son Thomas A. Ken- dall, were: found Wednesday on the Starbuck ranch, north of Santa Rosa. A Jap ex-employe is suspected. 412 in Oklahoma. Muskogee, Okla. —- Wednesday marked the hottest day in Muskogee this season—106. In Lawton, 112. Japanese Losing in Formosa. Victoria, B. C.—Severe fighting wita heavy Japanese losses Is continuing in Formosa according to advices received by the Sazoru Wednesday. | Bla Construction Co. Falture. New York.—The Ferguson Contract- Ing Company, contractors for railroad ‘construction, went into the hands of a receiver Wednesday in bankruptcy proceedings. Liabilities are $660,000 and assets $640,110, besides several large claims which are in litigation. THE COLORED ORPHANAGE AND OLD FOLK’S HOME | Located at 878 Zuni street, Denver, Colo.; take Lawrence street car west ‘and get off at West Eighth avenue, go due west through the Barnum shops ‘sight blocks. ‘This institution provides a home for homeless colored children and aged women and men of the race. We also care for children whose par- ents are in service and can’t keep them, at a very small pitance. Any in- formation can be had by writing a letter or postal to 873 Zuni street, or telephoning Main 7226. Politico-Labor Party in New Mexico. Albuquerque—A Union Labor party was launched here Wednesday similar to that recently formed in Arizona. It will be political. THE COLORADO STATESMAN JOS. D. D. RIVERS ..... Proprietor 1824 Curtis Street, Room 25. One Year ..... $2.00 Six Months ..... 1.00 Three Months ..... .60 PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice in the city of Denver, Colorado. All communications of a personating nature that are not complimentary will be withheld from the columns of this paper. It occasionally happens that papers sent to subscribers are lost or stolen. In case you do not receive any number when due, inform us by postal card and we will cheerfully forward a duplicate of the missing number. Communications to receive attention must be newsy, upon important subjects, plainly written only upon one side of the paper; must reach us Tuesdays, if possible, anyway not later than Wednesdays, and bear the signature of the author. No manuscript returned, unless stamps are sent for postage. Remittances should be made by Express Money Order, Postoffice Money Order, Registered Letter or Bank Draft. Postage stamps will be received the same as cash for the fractional part of a dollar. Only 1-cent and 2-cent stamps taken. Reading notices, ten lines or less, 10 cents per line. Each additional line over ten lines, 5 cents per line. Display advertising 50 cents per square. A square contains ten agate lines. No discounts allowed on less than three months' contract. Cash must accompany all orders from parties unknown to us. Further particulars on application. THE COMING OF ROOSEVELT. The daily press seems very willing to give to the coming of ex-President Roosevelt to Denver on August 29, a color which the occasion does not warrant, for this portion of the daily press, in reality, is long-headed enough to know that an honest representation of the event will be damaging to the political policies which it has already espoused, and which it hopes to weld into partisan issues that shall help to continue the reign of Democracy in this politically distorted state. Mr. Roosevelt is not coming to Colorado as a partisan, for there is no political campaign in progress in which his interest has been aroused, or which calls for his services as a party adviser. While it is expected that he will make conservation of the nation's natural resources the subject of his address to be delivered here, it is also supposed that he will speak in the capacity of one who seeks to advise all the people upon a matter which does not deserve so much political significance as issue manufacturers are seeking to give it. Mr. Roosevelt has always been a consistent Republican and it need not be expected that he will deliberately seek to embarrass or break with an administration which he, above all others, is responsible for. Yet it may be expected that he will give such honest expression to his views upon the subject in hand as will make clear the policies devised by him to his successor, and about which there has been so much controversy. The interests of the West will not suffer at his hands, for he is no less wise today than he was when he was President, and when he had the implicit confidence of the people of this section of the country in common with others. Our settlers need have no cause to fear that he will advocate any new scheme to jeopardize their established or prospective interests wherever those interests are consistent with the rights of the people at large, and every attempt to cultivate this fear should be regarded as the illegitimate design of insinere partisans to create false issues among the people for selfish purposes. At the same time it may be believed that Mr. Roosevelt has no intention to lay aside his Republicanism, and local and state partisans may look to his coming as an inspiration to their wider activities in the endeavor to place themselves in closer touch with all the people upon matters involving true Republican principles, just as his known and accepted policies have placed him in confidential touch with them. He has taken ample time to acquaint himself with the trend of affairs in the country since his return from abroad, and, as a private citizenzn, he is too wise to become a voluntary critic and meddled in those great matters over which his power of direction has ceased and which he personally yielded to others for whose judgment he has evinced the utmost respect. SUPPRESS THIS PICTURE! Here is a moving picture described in the telegraphic dispatches of July 30, which the moral and Christian sentiment of America, so greatly aroused by a recent prize fight, will take no similar steps to suppress: Palestine, Tex., July 30.—“A serious riot occurred at Sloocum, Anderson county, a small town fifteen miles south of Palestine, late yesterday. Latest advices state that eighteen negroes were killed and several men badly wounded. “The trouble seems to have been precipitated in a controversy over a note a man named Alford had indorsed for a negro. The negro, when questioned as to the reason why he had not paid the note, cursed Alford and said no white man could ‘do’ him. Fighting between them began at once and, others being drawn into the affair, the trouble continued throughout Friday night. “Sheriff Black, with a large posse of citizens, heavily armed, has gone to Sloocum. The situation is reported as very serious, and the governor may be appealed to for militia. “Many citizens, not included in the posse, left Palestine today and will aid the whites. "The negroes, it is said, are organizing and there are 200 armed negroes at Dennison Springs, near Slocum, who are reported to have expressed their intention of 'cleaning out' the entire white community." Notice the distinction between "eighteen Negroes" and "several men." Notice also that the trouble began over an alleged ordinary commercial transaction. Then consider that the sheriff, "with a large posse of citizens, heavily armed," the militia and "many citizens not included in the posse" are all to be counted on the white side of this animal hunt. Do not overlook the words, "it is said in every reference to the Negroes. If the combined details as they come off the white correspondent's wire, unvarnished and uncolored, do not conjure up a picture worthy of the attention of Christendom, then may the Lord forgive us for praying for return to the savage conditions of our forefathers Can any reasonable person imagine that an honest commercial relation existed between the Negro and the white man who indorsed his note? Is it reasonable to presume that the difference between them was so serious that others were necessarily "drawn into th affair?" Is it at all sensible to believe that the Negroes organized and that two hundred of them at another town armed and made threats that would invite inevitable slaughter? An honest, impartial investigation would probably place the whole of the blame for the trouble upon the whites, but the published report in this case, as in all other similar cases, places the residents of a hitherto quiet and orderly Negro community before the world as outlaws, when they had previously been simple and peaceable enough for white men to bind them to unknown conditions by "indorsing their notes." The picture as painted, as black, as cowardly and as appalling as its adept authors make it, will bring no protest from the morally alert, who fear for the welfare of innocent childhood, but the truth about the matter will be quickly, systematically and effectually suppressed. Hot Weather Hints for Dumb Animal By P. EVAN JONES ORSES become greatly fatigued the second day of a hot spell, the third day always causes some heat prostrations or sunstrokes, and each successive day brings more in a greatly increased ratio. F 母 奶 The fatigue of the second day increases until the horse is completely prostrated, soon becoming insensible, and dying in an hour or two unless he receives very prompt attention. Panting, usually accompanied by profuse sweating, dilation of the nostrils, hanging of the head, drooping ears, slowing up, loss of animation and bloodshot eyes are the first symptoms of heat prostration. If the horse is forced along, he ceases to perspire, staggers and goes down. Don't overfeed. It is generally believed that horses which die from sunstroke are suffering from indigestion. To keep the stomach in good order the best of hay and oats should be used, and a double handful of dry bran should be mixed with each feed of oats. It is best to feed a little less in hot weather than the horse has been accustomed to. Don't overwork. It is the overworked horse that usually gets sunstruck. He is not able to do as much in hot as in mild or cold weather, and consequently should not be loaded as heavily, nor driven as fast nor as far. Don't neglect to water often. Horses should be watered every hour or so on a hot day. When a horse begins to pant and show signs of weariness he should be allowed to stop in the shade and rest for half an hour. See that the horse is provided with some protection for his head. A driver should no more think of leaving the barn on a hot day without a sponge than he would without a blanket in winter. When stopping to water the horses it takes but a moment to wipe off their faces and heads with the moist sponge, and it refreshes the animals wonderfully. Never let pass an opportunity to leave your horses standing in the shade. Make your stops periods of rest to your cowworker. If your horse is greatly overheated he should have some light covering thrown over him when left in the shade to prevent congestion. In this hot weather be careful as never before of letting the wheels get into a rut. If in spite of all precautions this happens, jump down and put your shoulder to the wheel. Others will fall in line to assist you and three or four can easily life a wheel out of a place from which it is practically impossible for a horse to pull it. Do not neglect the horse's feet in summer. Many seem to think that as there are no slippery pavements the way is easy. The heat generated in the shoe by constant friction with the heated pavement is transmitted through the protecting horn of the hoof to the sensitive inner parts and causes great distress. Take advantage of every opportunity to let the shoes cool off. PETER H. BURKE Never take "steaming" horses to the barn. Let them cool off the latter part of the way in, going very slowly. They should be sponged off, watered and rested before being fed. Certainly no thoughtful person in his right mind, most assuredly no well-bred student or fond graduate of our glorious American institutions of learning, will for one moment think of denying the civilizing, elevating, spiritualizing influence of the hazings, rushes and initiations of some of our frisky students. Pranks of Some of Our Frisky Students By ADOLPH G. VOGELER No callous, ignorant, prejudiced outside barbarian can ever learn to appreciate the wonderful, far-reaching results flowing from this reformatory work of our earnest student bodies exercised upon each other, supported by equally earnest faculties in their laudable efforts to raise the standard of citizenship. They improve morals, develop gentle manners, teach discipline, foster scholarship and learning, promote brotherhood, inclucate self-respect and respect for the rights of others and supreme respect for the law, insure peace, raise the social standard, engender friendship—oh, well, what's the use? No mortal mind can ever hope to formulate all the grand things welling out of these excesses indulged in by our American students in their ebullent enthusiasm and connived at, condoned and fostered by wickedly weak, cowardly or self-blinded authorities in their mad desire to outrival in student numbers. This state of things educates a set of selfish individuals who in subsequent years in business, in politics and in daily life may utilize their sharpened wits to ride roughshod over everything and everybody in their unrestrained lust for money, power and pleasure. The Chinese are the most honorable people in a business way that one could have dealing with, and they expect to receive the same square treatment. Sharp Practices Injure Nation By JAMES B. McARDLE of San Francisco Failure to do the right thing by the Chinese will inevitably cause them to turn away from the offending party and give their custom elsewhere. Not long ago they considered that they had been worsted in a cargo of lumber bought from a Seattle firm. The stipulation was that the timber should be creasoted. Instead of a thorough process of creasing only a surface coating was applied, which was a mere imitation of the true preservative treatment. The evil of such sharp practise was developed when another firm on the Pacific coast undertook to contract for a big amount of fir, which the Chinese wanted for railway purposes. This firm put in a very reasonable bid, but the business was given to a lumber concern in Australia, which had asked a great deal more money for the same stuff. The Australians had not tried to get the best of the Orientals; the Yankees had, and their proposals were not considered. It is a trifle rough that the shady transactions of one house should hurt an entire nation, but this is what has actually happened and what will continue to happen in our commercial relations with a people like the Chinese. ```markdown ``` CHEESE MACHINE HARDWARE AND SPORTING GOODS 1648 to 1654 Arapahoe Street, Denver REMODELING SALE The Carson Crockery Company CORNER 15TH AND STOUT STREETS Denver's Largest Exclusive China Store If it is a GENUINE BARGAIN you are after, you must come and see for yourself as we are offering China, Classware, Silverware, Etc., at prices that will astonish you. Think of such a price for 42-piece Cottage set, white and gold decorations at $2.00 Glass Tumblers, thin but strong per dozen.....45c Decorated Cups and Saucers, and decorated Dinner Plates at.....10c Silver Plated Ware, such as good Butter Dishes, Breakfast Sets, Sugar and Cream Sets at Half Price, and Lots of Other Good Bargains Copyright 1910, by L. ADLER. BROS. & CO. During July you can have any suit in the house for 25% less than the regular price. Come early while the assortment is good. BARKER COLARS 2 FOR 25 CENTS THE Johnson-Noel Co 1005 16th Street THE BROADHURST CARTER SHOE CO. 823 Sixteenth St. We Are Denver Agents for the Nettleton Shoe FOR MEN $6, $7, and $8, Pair --- THE COLORADO STATESMAN CARSON WILL BE PARK BACK COUNTRY PATH ```markdown ``` James Smith has filed on a 160-acre claim in Masters, Colorado. Mrs. Bettie Roy of Henderson, Ky., is visiting Mr. Bedford Hodge. Mrs. Richard Frazier is visiting Mrs. Cora Harris of Colorado Springs. E. J. Young of Omaha, Neb., is in the city the guest of Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Boyd. George Bills of Hendersen, Ky., is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Hillman. A. B. Burdine, an employee of Daniels & Fisher's is enjoying his vacation. J. M. Martenia will leave in a few days for the East to visit several months. Miss Lena Barnes, who has been sick for several days is improving slowly. Tommie Lewis left last week for Shreveport, La., on account of the illness of his sister. Mrs. Nora Eligan of Chicago is visiting her sister, Mrs. J. W. Perkins, 2629 Marion street. Miss C. Swaggen leaves next Tuesday for a month's visit in White Cloud, Kansas, and aKnas City, Mo. Mrs. Julia Whittaker received the sad news last week of the death of her mother, who died in Topeka Kansas. Mrs. J. W. Jackson and daughter and Mrs. Bruce returned home from their camping trip to Dome Rock last Thursday. Miss Carrie Barnes, who is one of the teachers in the Indianapolis public schools, is teaching in a summer school in New York City. Mrs. James DePriest, son and daughter of Salina, Kansas, are in the city the guest of Mr. and Mrs. R. K. DePriest, 2515 Lafayette street. The funeral of Mr. Chas. Harris was held Friday, July 28th, from A. M. Law horn, undertaking parlors. Interment Riverside. Mr. and Mrs. B. D. Holley are off on their vacation and left last Wednesday for La Junta, Pueblo, Colorado Springs and other Colorado points to spend their vacation. Attorney Sidney C. Tapp, a prominent attorney of the city, returned to Denver, Friday of last week. Mr. Tapp has been in Texas several months for his health. The picnic given by Bethlehem Church and Sunday School at Golden was a grand success in every particular. The committee wish to thank all who attended. Miss Bertha Tribus of Kansas City, Kansas, is a recent arrival in the city, the guest of her sister, Mrs. Walter Craig. They will spend a few weeks in Manitou and Colorado Springs. The funeral of the infant son of Mr. and Mrs. H. Reynolds was held from their home, 2828 California street, Wednesday afternoon. Interment Riverside. A. M. Lawhorn, undertaker in charge. The Rocky Mountain Athletic Association will soon enlarge the pool room on account of the great demand for this fascinating game. The several tables already in use are constantly occupied and many are deprived of showing their skill with the "stick." If you want to spend an enjoyable Sunday evening visit the West Bros. Ice Cream Parlors at 2741 Welton street, where you will hear all the latest songs and music by Prof. Holley and Wolfskill from 9 to 12; also music every Wednesday evening. Do not fail to patronize these deserving young men. The excursion and picnic given by the True Reformers to Tolland last Thursday was one of the largest ever given in Denver. It took seven coaches to carry the crowd of picnicers. The committee deserve praise for their work. --- Patrolman Isaac G. Gilmore, after suffering several months with heart disease and dropsy, died at his home, 3040 Lafayette street Monday night. Mr. Gilmore entered the police service in 1889 and was considered one of the best policemen of the force. He was a member of Centennial Lodge, No. 4, A. F. and A. M. and was one of the organizers of Hiram commandery No. 20, Knight Templars. The funeral was held from Campbell A. M. E. church, Thursday afternoon. He leaves a wife, two daughters and a host of friends in Denver, both white and colored to mourn his loss. The Colorado Statesman extends sympathy to the bereaved wife and children. Interment at Riverside cemetery. A. M. Lawhorn in charge. SCOTT'S CHAPEL NOTES. The young people of the church will give a drama Tuesday evening, August 22nd, titled "Done on Both Slides." This effort will be given for the benefit of the piano fund. Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Wilson will soon be occupying their beautiful new three story modern brick residence between 22nd and 23rd streets on Glenarm Place. The dwelling house where they are living at present will be rented. Two hearts were made happily last Saturday evening on 26th and Clarkson streets by the pastor Rev. J. N. Wallace. The contracting parties were Mr. Louis Jones and Miss Callie Howard. We wish them a pleasant sail over life's tumultuous sea. There will be a beautiful lawn social by the Ladies' Aid Society on the lawn of Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Clinkscale, 2508 Tremont Place, Thursday evening, August 18th, to help to raise the pastors traveling expenses to the District conference, which meets at Manhattan, Kansas, August 24-28. You are cordially invited to attend this unique affair. Mr. C. J. Collier's class lead in the collection last Wednesday evening. The collection was the largest since the present incumbent took charge. Mrs. Anna McPherson left for the East last Wednesday. She will visit relatives and friends in Louisville, Ky. Mrs. Anna Bobo will entertain the Junior League and church in a farewell social Friday evening, August 19th. Mrs. Bobo will attend the District conference and will probably make her future home in Kansas. She will be greatly missed by the members and friends of Scott's as she was a substantial church worker. It is hoped that the members and friends will show their appreciation for her faithfulness in the church and community by some small token of remembrance. The official board has planned a $500 rally for the last Sunday in October. We must repair the church and parsonage and make a payment on the principal of the church debt. We invite our friends to assist us. The church will be divided into ten clubs to consist of the lady church workers. The church is ripe for a revival. An effort will be made to pitch a revival effort beginning the first of September. We invite the co-operation of the sister churches in this effort to pitch a battle against sin and wickedness in our city. The Brotherhood has started on an era of good attendance. We trust that they will continue this revival of attendance. We thing that more of Scott's members ought to attend. The Rev. A. E. Reynolds gave a splendid address on "The Personal Touch" last Sunday afternoon. The subjects for Sunday morning are "The Spiritual Looking Glass" and "The Great Salvation." Short and interesting services for night and morning. A cordial invitation extended to all. NOTES OF THE PEOPLE'S PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. Sunday Topics, Aug 7th, 1910. 11 a. m. "Obliviousness to the Past." 8 p. m. "Programme under the Auspices of the Christian Endeavor." Christian Endeavor Programme. Gospel Songs, Selection-By the Congregation. Responsive Scripture Reading, John 15:9-16-By the Congregation and President. Invocation and Chanting of Lord's Prayer-By the Pastor and Congregation. Vocal Solo—"Selected"—Miss Fannie Wilson. Paper—"Tuberculosis"—Dr. E. L. Faulkner. Vocal Solo—"Selected"—Miss Gale na Andrews. Notices and Offertory. Notices and Offertory. Anthem—"Teach Me, O, Lord"—Choir. Mizpah-Y. P. S. C. E. The musicale programme last Sunday night was an especial feature. The appreciative audience was a most commendable aspect to the whole situation. The choir, organist, musical director and all other participants acquitted themselves most creditably. The strong eight-minute talk on "Church Music" by Rev. Thos. Brown, Rector of the Church of the Redeemer was a masterly effort. The Father was figuring on very "high key." We desire to remind the public that good music and good singing the lively items on our programme for Sunday services. Your presence is needed. Mutual benefit will be the resultant. Therefore, let everybody come to "The Family Church" at East 23rd avenue and Washington street. READ! MARK!! LEARN!!! AND INWARDLY DIGEST!!! If you are without a church home, COME! WE CAN HELY YOU. If you are looking for church work, COME! YOU CAN HELP US. BIG EMANCIPATION CELEBRATION Everybody should attend the big Emancipation celebration at Luna park September 22nd, 1910, given by the Masons of Colorado. See big program later. Several white persons interested in the industrial development of colored women have offered to put up a factory in New York City provided two hundred reliable colored women can be secured who will apply themselves to the dressmaking trade as cutters, fitters and seamtresses. Those interested in the movement desire to ascertain how much of a demand exist among colored women for the establishment of such a factory, and all desiring to register their names for the express purpose of securing employment are directed to secure a blank from Mrs. J. H. McMullan, 55 East 132d street. Your Needs. As you grow ready for it, some where or other you will find what is needful for you, in a book, or a friend or, best of all, in your own thoughts the eternal thought speaking in your thought.—George MacDonald. Best of All Timekeepers. Probably the best timekeeper in the world is the electric clock in the Berlin observatory. It is inclosed in an airtight glass cylinder and its deviation is practically nil. In Humanity's Concert The one thing you have to do is to make a clear-volced little instrument of yourself, which other people can depend upon entirely for the note wanted.—Ruskin. Honor and Wealth. John Quincy Adams (sixth president and son of John Adams) had barely enough money to keep himself in the most frugal comfort.—New York Press. Resist Beginnings. Should we reach the point at which some particular vice has become a sort of second nature to us, it will do no good to rail at fate or destiny. There is no fate for us, but such as we choose for ourselves. We have it in our power to make or mar ourselves. If we choose to make, rather than mar, our destiny, we have the secret, given long ago by one who knew: "Resist beginnings"—Baltimore Sun. Unpleasant Experience. A young woman who was walking on the cliff at Herne Bay had an unpleasant experience. There was a vivid flash, and she felt a severe pain in the head which made her scream. It was then found that her steel hat pin had been bent and twisted by the lightning. Preparation for Immortality. There is only one way to get ready for immortality, and that is to love this life, and live it as bravely and cheerfully and faithfully as we can—Van Dyke. Simple. Isn't It? When may two people be said to be half-witted?—when they have an understanding between them Except He Has Collateral. The trouble with credit is that when a man really needs it he can't get it.—Detroit Free Press. The Manly Part. The manly part is to do with might and main what you can do.—Emerson. Horse's Hearty Appetite. A healthy horse eats nine times its weight in food during a year. WELL WELL WELL Over one of the most scenic roads in Colorado, through South Platte Canon LABOR DAY KNIGHTS OF PYTHIA'S MONDAY SEPT 5. There will be Dancing, Fishing, Boating and all other sports of the season. The committee has spared no pains to make this an enjoyable outing Committee: H. Banks, Chairman, H. Jackson, S. C. Herndon, Jesse Scott, G. W. Davis and A. R. Butler Fare: Adults $1.25 Children 65c Train Leaves Union Depot at 8 a.m. Nicely furnished rooms for rent; all modern at 1525 East Thirtieth avenue. Wanted position as cornetist leader of brass band or first in orchestra. For particulars write J. H. Warden, 1266 Emerson street. Jefferson Park has lots of shade, cool spring water and running brooks. An ideal place for picnics and dancing. See A. G. Fallings, 2218 Clarkson. If you are going to buy property, do not do it until you have the title examined, so you may know if you are buying a good title or a lawsuit. Lawyer W. B. Townsend will tell you all about it at 209 Kittedge Building. Furnished rooms for rent in modern house, 2918 Welton street. Nicely furnished rooms for rent at 2409 Court Place. At last a place for picnics and outings has been secured. See A. J. FITZPATRICK, CARPENTER CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER. Estimates and plans for buildings furnished; job work a specialty. Office 918 19th St. Phone Main 7241. PROF. WILL TAYLOR, SPECIALIST ON Hard corns. Soft Corns. Festered corns. Nervo-vascular corns. Vascular corns. Laminated corns. Fibrous corns. Calla sites spota Bunions. Chilblain feet. Ingrowing nails. Call to see me in regard to your feet. 911 18th street. Phone Main 7402. An aim in life is the only fortune worth the finding, and it is not to be found in foreign lands, but in the heart itself—Robert Louis Stevenson. Says the Philosopher of Folly: "A lot of us have the courage to stand for our convictions, but, like stock actors, we make weak stands." Fortune is like a market, where many times if you wait a little the price will fall. Humor has justly been regarded as the finest perfection of poetic genius. —Carlyle. Bushido, in a word, is the popular literature of the mikado's realm. It includes country theatricals, tales of story tellers and musical compositions. It is not only a literature; it is an idea and an ideal. The word means loyalty, fidelity, devotion and it may be expressed in dozens of different ways. "Why be in the business of making trouble," asks a Georgia philosopher, "when it is obliging enough to meet you half-way and do all the work for you?" Fortune. The Philosopher of Folly. Fickle Fortune. Dally Thought. Bushido. Always on the Job. DAVIS HOTEL 520 WEST SEVENTEENTH ST. CHEYENNE, WYO. HERBERT'S 1519 CURTIS STREET Ice Cream, Ices, Candies Mrs. G. W. Anderson Pompadours and Switches Made to Order. All Kinds of Hair Goods For Sale. 2239 Wash. Ave., Denver 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 WAVY. 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. Modern Furnished Rooms. Best Meals Served in the City. Prompt and Courteous Service :: :: --- 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 WASHINGTON GOSSIP Chinese Take to Smoking Cigarettes Heads of Navy Are Annoyed By Women Heads of Navy Are Annoyed By Women Girl's Good Looks Are a Bar to Work Girl's Good Looks Are a Bar to Work Sad Red Men Must Ride on the Wagon AMERICAN CIGARETTES WASHINGTON. — America has taught the people of the Chinese empire to smoke cigarettes. In a report to this government on foreign trade by Consul General Charles Denby of Vienna, in which he described the class of foreign markets which may be created by American enterprise, and then supplied the consul general says: "One of the most conspicuous examples of such a market is the demand for cigarettes in China. Ten years ago the cigarette was an article used in China by a small number of people, chiefly foreigners. The field attracted the attention of a group of American manufacturers who examined it and decided to introduce the cigarette to the Chinese people by American methods. The result is that now the cigarette is popular throughout the empire." The international opium conference to be held at The Hague'next fall will have a very general representation of the powers, according to the latest information reaching the state department. In reporting to this government on opportunities in Malaysia for rubber- NAVY DPT LEMON JOHN HAY had a saying that the ideal diplomatic service—if any government ever succeeds in having one—will be composed exclusively of unmarried men. Mr. Hay had no experience in naval matters, or he might have included the navy in his maxim. There probably is no branch of the government service, the Washington Post says, where petticoat influence is so strong as in the navy. Ask any ex-secretary of the navy about it and he will tell you how the navy women in a thousand different ways, sometimes unconsciously and occasionally deliberately, annoy the navy department. He will tell you how they scheme to obtain desirable posts of duty for their husbands or sons and how they annoy the department with requests for a change of orders when their husbands are transferred from an easy job in Washington to sea duty on the Asiatic station or some other far-away tropical post. The recent row at the Boston navy yard, which cul- AFTER losing four positions within a year just because of her beauty, Mary Todd has left Washington and with try her fortune elsewhere. Miss Todd set out to be a stenographer. Her employer got mixed up in his dictation and included phrases that could not have been part of the correspondence. As a shopgirl the floorwalkers strolled too often near her counter. As a milliner she aroused the envy and feebulous of customers. Miss Todd has been living in Georgetown for a little more than a year. She came here from a small Pennsylvania town, well equipped to work, with money enough to wait until a reasonably good position was open to WATER WAGON POOR Lo has suffered many priva- tions at the hands of the national government in the process of civilizing him, but the hardest blow yet must be no more "fire water" sold on the ceded lands of Minnesota. Lo will take his seat on the water wagon at once. The order includes several counties and if carried out to the letter would even prevent the sale of liquor in St. Paul and Minneapolis, which stand on ceded lands. Under state laws the counties enforced in the order—Becker, Cass, Clay, Hubbard, Mahnomen, Norman, Beltrami, Itasca, Polk, Clear Water, Red Lake, Crow Wing, Wadene and Ottertail—have enjoyed the license system of the state and Lo, who dearly loves his fire water, has been able growing enterprises, Consul General James T. Dubois at Singapore, cited as follows an instance to show how the investing public is sometimes taken in in the exploitation of the rubber industry there: An estate was sold to promoters for $150,000. The syndicate got an old planter who knew the estate to put a flotation value on it. He named $250,000. The promoters were not satisfied. Another expert examined and reported. His price was $350,000. British and American gold was pouring into the country and the get-rich-quick spirit was born. Another expert was called in. He was told of the former valuations and that they were unsatisfactory. He valued the estate at $500,000. Just at this time, rubber took a big jump in the London and New York markets and another expert was asked to report and he placed the flotation price at $750,000 and the syndicate in order to have it in round numbers made it an even $800,000 and floated it at this price. People fought for the stock, the share issue was oversubscribed and many of them immediately sold at a good advance. All this was done within a few months without the slightest improvement on the property except the natural growth of the few hundred acres of Para plants which had recently been planted. Trained white supervisors on the rubber estates are in demand, the consul general reports, and there is a scarcity of labor and consequent high wages. minated in the court-martial of two officers, illustrates the prominent part women play in navy circles. Almost everybody knows of the mutual ill feeling existing between the navy women and the department. Every once in a while something happens to widen this breach. Only a few days ago Ensign Charles M. Austin, son of Representative Richard W. Austin of Tennessee, was deprived of an especially desirable berth by the navy department merely because he got married. He had been detached from the dispatch boat Dolphin at the Washington navy yard and ordered to Japan for duty as a student attacke at the American embassy at Tokyo for the purpose of studying the Japanese language. On the way to his new post of duty he stopped at his former home in Tennessee and was married to a girl he had known for many years. This was too much for the unromantic departmental authorities, who suddenly decided that a married ensign would not make as good a student of the Japanese language as a bachelor. Accordingly his orders were revoked and instead of spending his honeymoon in Tokyo he will have less interesting service at the naval training station on the Pacific coast. He will, however, have his wife. her. "Yes," she said, half-angry and half-amused, "I have been overwhelmed with offers of marriage as well as of employment. But these offers do not appeal to me. Most men forget that I have my own sweetheart, and if I were inclined to consider a second time it seems that mine should be the privilege of inviting his attentions without having them thrust upon me. "At first I did not take such things seriously, but since then I have known other girls who have shared the same fate, merely because they are more beautiful than their colleagues. "I have worked in offices where there were 17 girls, and by the end of the third week I was embarrassed by repeated offers of company, pleasures and the like by various men in the office. This gave rise to some bitter passes between some of the other girls and myself. "I hope to be married by the autumn of next year, but until then I wish to do something." to procure it without restriction. By the new order he will have to go dry. The provisions of the treaties by which the lands were ceded prohibit the introduction of intoxicating liquors in the whole northern part of the state, except by consent of congress or the president, but up to the present time the provisions have not been enforced owing to opposition from the white population, which vastly outnumbers the reds. Ocean vs. Bartender. "Do you remember where they stung us ten cents for beer on the pavilion at Brighton, where we sat at a table and looked at the ocean?" he asked. "Well, when you all went away I walked around to the bar and got one for five. A shame to charge you five cents more just to sit down and look at the ocean, isn't it?" "Oh, I don't know," she said. "I'd rather pay the extra five than have to stand by the bar and look at the bartender if he was anything like some I have seen."—New York Press. IS ALMOST HUMAN MACHINE THAT PRINTS, COUNTS AND DOES MANY THINGS. Uncle Sam Adapts Device That Will Save Money and Greatly Increase the Output of Bureau of Engraving and Printing. Government experts at the bureau of engraving and printing in Washington have invented a machine which can do almost anything but talk. This device will print United States notes and certificates, number them, seal them, separate them, count them and collate them into packages ready for distribution. It affords U.S. CAPITOL one of the most striking examples in the country of the substitution of machinery for manual work. In preparing United States notes and gold and silver certificates, the work of the bureau of engraving and printing hitherto has not included the final processes of printing the numeral, sealing the notes and separating the sheets into individual notes. This work has been done at the treasury department building, several blocks removed from the bureau of engraving and printing. There a large number of women have been doing this work by hand, a slow and laborious process, despite the dexterity which they exhibited after long practise. The new machine is the result of a series of experiments. When originally designed it did not appear practicable to seal and number the notes at one operation, and to trim them at the same time. Nor was it contemplated that the machine would separate and count the notes and turn them out into packages. The experiments continued until an entirely new style of trimming device has been designed and the separating, collating and counting feature added. Twelve of these machines are now installed in the bureau of engraving and printing, and three more will be added later. Under the old system only the printing and trimming operation were performed at the bureau of engraving and printing, while the four remaining processes on the products of each press were done at the department. It took two pressmen and six women operatives to complete the work on a single note, which work will now be done by one pressman and three women. The new process will result in the elimination of 135 employees, who formerly operated the 18 printing presses and 26 separating machines in the division of issue of the treasurers office, and the actual money saving will amount to about $138,000 a year. In addition thereto Secretary of the Treasury MacVeagh sees a farther saving to the government in the fact that the new machine promises to develop greater speed than the old ones, thereby materially increasing the output of the plant. As a result of the work of expert accountants in the office of the auditor of the postoffice department there has been a reduction of 77 persons in the force of that office. Not only will the new system of audit bring about economies in the expedition and accuracy of the audit, but it is estimated that it will save the government $117,000 a year and at the same time permit the removal of the money-order auditors from the Union building, where an annual rental of $7,500 a year is being paid, and the housing of the entire force in the postoffice department. There are received in the office of the auditor between 500 and 600 pounds of money orders daily. This means that it is necessary to compare in the neighborhood of half a million money orders daily with the statements rendered by the postmasters throughout the country. Under the old system of the visual check it was discovered that thousands of these orders were being checked as having been received in the office and properly drawn, when as a matter of fact, they had never reached the auditor's office. By the use of the adding machine each money order is now entered separately on the machine and it is impossible for an order to be checked unless it is on file. Congressman a Real Esperantist. Congressman Richard Bartholtt of St. Louis is an enthusiastic student of Esperanto, the international language. He took it up because of his intense interest in the peace movement, being convinced that such a medium of exchange would contribute largely thereto. Bartholtt declares he already is a graduate in the language and soon will be able to make speeches in Esperanto. There hangs on the wall of his private office in Washington a small blackboard on which are written Esperanto characters. This serves to keep the matter always in the congressman's mind. Woman Runs Trolley. Miss Alice B. White is a young woman, eighteen years of age, living in Grosswicks, N. J., who would like to be a motor woman. She is the daughter of a mechanic, now dead, who taught her how to run machines, and she has been allowed by a number of motormen to run their trolley cars, so feels fitted for the work. Daughters of Congressman Fish of New York Favorites in the Washington Smart Set. Washington hostesses unite in praise of Miss Janet Fish, second daughter of Representative Hamilton Fish of New York, who acted as hostess-in her father's home throughout the recent season. Miss Fish possesses tact, poise, youth and good looks and has taken her place as one of the leaders of Washington's smart set with the reputation of having entertained more society personages during the season than any one else. Miss Roselind Fish recently returned from California and is less known in Washington than her sister, Miss Janet and Miss Roselind both have the wholesome out-of-door look which is the charm of the athletic girl. The descendant of a family of public men, Miss Janet finds the atmosphere of politics congenial and takes interest in questions of public import. She was one of a small group of women, headed by Mrs. James Pinchot, who were frequent and interested listeners at the Ballinger-Pinchot hearings, and she was a visitor to the galleries of congress during exciting debates. Miss Fish belongs to the coterie which is endeavoring to make Washington society more distinctive, intellectual and artistic and more like that of the European capitals. These young persons count upon the newly organized Players' club to introduce just the right touch. MEDICAL SOCIETY AT CAPITAL Records Show That One Was Established There as Early as the Year 1817. About the year 1800 Dr. Frederick May, who went to the capital from Boston and settled on "Twenty Building hill," took up his residence on New Jersey avenue, Capitol hill. Dr. John Bullus was located on Seventh and L streets southeast. Tradition says he had a small drug store there. A Dr. Carroll was near the corner of Pennsylvania avenue and Twelfth street about the same time. Besides these were other physicians not in private practise. Among them Dr. William Thornton, who planned the capitol, and surgeons of the navy who attended the families of the officers and the small force then in the city; Dr. Edgar Cuttbush and Dr. John Harrison of the navy and Dr. Elisha Harrison of the army, who later established a drug store at Fourteenth street and the avenue. According to the researches of the late Dr. J. M. Toner there were nine physicians and two apothecaries in the city in 1815. Two years later, however, the twenty-second of September, 1817, sixteen physicians, including those of Georgetown, formed a medical society. This meeting was held at Tennison's tavern, which is still standing on Pennsylvania avenue east of Fifteenth street, in 1802, being known as Lovell's and afterward as the City hotel. Freedom of Mt. Vernon. Congressman Coudrey of St. Louis ought to win the applause of the women who are the managers of the estate and tomb of George Washington. It was Coudrey who introduced a bill to appropriate $35,000 to improve the channel of the Potomac river, construct a wharf and pay the mileage and per derm expenses of the Ladies' Mount Vernon association, and also to make the admission to the Mount Vernon grounds free of charge. At present every person who goes to Mount Vernon to visit the old Washington home is obliged to pay a fee, the collection of such fees paying a part of the expenses also of keeping the grounds in proper condition. Congressman Coudrey's idea is that the old home of George Washington ought to be open to the public and that the women who maintain it and care for it ought at least to have their expenses paid. Farmers and Automobiles. Several Washington bankers were discussing the automobile question. One of them broke the news that the Illinois Bankers' association had just resolved not to lend money on real estate if the ultimate purpose of the borrower was to buy an automobile. The financiers all agreed that such a rule would be excellent. "The automobile craze has become a good deal of a menace," said W. T. Galliher, of the American National bank. He added, with a twinkle in his eye: "The reason western money is not flowing into the eastern market the way it used to is that so many farmers are buying automobiles." Tribute to Susan B. Anthony. Tribute to Susan B. Anthony. Ida M. Tarbell is not a suffragist, but she pays a fine tribute to Susan B. Anthony and Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stanton in her book, "History of American Women." "There is no home in the land," she says, "that has not a better chance of happiness, no child which does not come into a better heritage, no woman who is not less narrow, no man who is not less bigoted, because of the impetus their struggles and sacrifice gave to the emancipation of the sex." Gun Wins Race With Armor. Rear-Admiral Bacon of the British navy believes that the race between the gun and the armor of a battleship, which has been going on for over half a century, has been decided, for the moment, in favor of the gun. RESTORED TO HEALTH. After Suffering With Kidney Disorders for Many Years. Mrs. John S. Way, 209 S. 8th St. Independence, Kans., says: "For a number of years I was a victim of disordered kidneys. My back ached sage of the kidney se constantly, the pascretions was irregular and my feet and ankles were badly swollen. Spots often appeared before my eyes and I became very nervous. After sage of the kidney se constantly, the passions was irregular and my feet and ankles were badly swollen. Spots often appeared before my eyes and I became very nervous. After using numerous remedies without relief I was completely cured by Doan's Kidney Pills. This seems remarkable when you consider my advanced age." Remember the name—Doan's. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Landlady—Mr. Hall Roome is about the meanest man I ever met. Mrs. Slowpay—What's the trouble? Landlady—Wants me to reduce the price of his board because he's lost two teeth. A Protection Against the Heat. When you begin to think it's a personal matter between you and the sun to see which is the hotter, buy yourself a glass or a bottle of Coca-Cola. It is cooling—relieves fatigue and quenches the thirst. Wholesome as the purest water and lots nicer to drink. At soda fountains and carbonated in bottles—5c everywhere. Send 2c stamp for booklet "The Truth About Coca-Cola" and the Coca-Cola Baseball Record Book for 1910. The latter contains the famous poem "Casey At The Bat," records, schedules for both leagues, and other valuable baseball information compiled by authorities. Address The Coca-Cola Co., Atlanta, Ga. ANNUAL LOSS IS ENORMOUS Two Hundred Million Dollars a Year Might Be Added to Wealth of Country. Computing that there are in the United States at least 300,000 indigent consumptives who should be cared for in charitable or semi-charitable sanatoria and hospitals, the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis estimates that the annual cost to the country for the treatment of these persons would be $50,000,000 at the rate of $1.669 per day per patient. At the lowest possible estimate the country loses $200,000,000 a year from the incapacity of these indigent victims of tuberculosis. This would mean a net saving of $150,000,000 a year to the United States if all victims of consumption who are too poor to afford proper treatment in expensive sanatoria were cared for at the expense of the municipality, county or state. And this annual gain does not include the enormous saving that would accrue from the lessened infection due to the segregation of the dangerous consumptives in institutions. Taking Father's Job. "Why should you beg? You are both young and strong." "That is right, but my father is old and weak and can no longer support me."—Meggendorfer Blaetter. Know How To Keep Cool? When Summer's sun and daily toil heat the blood to an uncomfortable degree, there is nothing so comforting and cooling as a glass of Iced Postum served with sugar and a little lemon. Surprising, too, how the food elements relieve fatigue and sustain one. The flavour is delicious—and Postum is really a food drink. POSTUM CEREAL CO., Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich. It's a wise child that knows its own fodder. Where ignorance is bliss, 'tis jolly to be nice.—Success Magazine. "The only news I have to tell you, wrote the Billville citizen, "is that the river has riz and drowned all yer cattle, an' yer uncle has broke jail; likewise the widder woman you was a goin' ter marry has runned off with a book agent. Outside of these here things, we air doin' well."—Atlanta Constitution. Sufficient. The boys are telling a pretty good story on Pat Cullen, the well-known Steamboat Springs stockman who was here with cattle early in the week. Some time ago Pat and Sagebrush Bill, a cowpuncher of Routt county, had a disagreement over some matter and got into a scuffle. For about ten minutes they kept it up when Sagebrush Bill, finding that he had about enough, exclaimed: "That's sufficient, Pat, "that's sufficient." "Be jabers," said Pat, "that's the very word I have been trying to think of for the past five minutes."—Denver Record-Stockman. Picking a Career. An amusing answer is told of an answer given by a London walt to a Salvation Army captain. The zealous officer had asked the boy what work he did to provide him with food, etc., and the reply was, "I pick strawberries in the summer, I pick hops in the autumn, I pick pockets in the winter, and oakum for the rest of the year. Don't Mention It. The politest man in Boston collided violently with another man on the street. The second man was angry. "My dear sir," said the polite one, with a bow, "I don't know which of us is to blame in this encounter. If I ran into you I beg your pardon; if you ran into me, don't mention it."—Success Magazine. The Fremont County fair at Canon City will be held September 15th to 17th. HOWARD E. BURTON, ASSAYER & CHEMIST LEADVILLE, COLORADO Spectimen prices: Gold silver, lead $1; gold, silver, 75c; gold, 59c; zinc or copper, $1. Application: Control and ampire work所 application. Reference: Carbonate National Bank THE COLORADO TENT & AWNING CO: CANVAS GOODS Write, for Catalog. 1042 Lawrence St. Denver, Colo. ROBT. S. GUTSHALL, Pres. This is the eleventh year of the Gatlin Institute in Denver. More than eleven thousand men and women of Colorado, Wyoming and New Mexico attend the Gatlin Treatment and were cured of Liquor Drinking. Any case is accepted for treatment under contract that a perfect and satisfactory cure is to be achieved. THREE DAYS or treatment shall cost nothing. With the Gatlin treatment there are no hypodermic injections, no poisonous drugs, no bad have to be given. The feature those who can not come to the Institute will fail in no case if simple directions are followed. For interesting books of particulars and colorful illustrations that secure sealed. Address, mentioning this paper. THE GATLIN INSTITUTE. 1425 Cleveland Place, Denver, Colo. Long Distance Telephone, Main 4009. REFERENCES: The United States National Bureau of Disease, Desk, Health Commissioner, City and County of Denver, or any responsible Denver business house. $50.00 Round Trip TO San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Diego, CALIFORNIA Portland, OREGON Tacoma, Seattle, WASHINGTON Vancouver, Victoria, BRITISH COLUMBIA From Main Line Colorado Points on the DENVER & RIO GRANDE R. R. "THE SCENIC LINE" AND $65.00 One Way Through Portland or Seattle. Tickets on sale daily to September 30th inclusive. Final return limit October 31st, 1910. Standard and Tourist Sleepers. Superb Dining Cars. (Service a la carte.) For full particulars call on your home agent or write S. K. HOOPER, Gen. Pass. and Ticket Agent, Denver, Colo. ```markdown ``` For Benefit of Women who Suffer from Female Ills Minneapolis, Minn.—"I was a great sufferer from female troubles which caused a weakness and broken down condition of the system. I read so much of what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound had done for other suffering women I felt sure it would help me, and I must say it did help me wonderfully. My pains all left me, within three months well women. A. B. grew stronger, and within three months I was a perfectly well woman. "I want this letter made public to show the benefit women may derive from Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound."—Mrs. JohnG. MOLDAN, 2115 Second St., North, Minneapolis, Minn. Thousands of unsolicited and genuine testimonials like the above prove the efficiency of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, which is made exclusively from roots and herbs. Women who suffer from those distressing ills peculiar to their sex should not lose sight of these facts or doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to restore their health. If you want special advice write to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. She will treat your letterastrictly confidential. For 20 years she has been helping sick women in this way, free of charge. Don't hesitate—write at once. The supply of talk always exceeds the demand. Dr. Pierre's Palletia, small, sugar-coated, easy to take as aandy, regulate and invigorate stomach liver and bowels. Do not gripe. WELL QUALIFIED. Squilbob—That fellow over there would make a splendid magazine poet. Squilbigan—A genius, eh? Squilbob—No, but he has dyspepsia so bad that he wouldn't get so hungry living. Mathematical Request Little Mary, seven years old, was saying her prayers. "And, God," she petitioned at the close, "make seven times six forty-eight." "Why, Mary, why did you say that?" asked her mother. "Cause that the way I wrote it in 'zamination in school today, and I want it to be right."—Lippincott's. Not His Fault. "Oratory is a gift, not an acquirement," said the proud politician, as he sat down after an hour's harangue. "I understand," said the matter-of-fact chairman. "We're not blamin' you. You done the best you could." A nagging wife makes her husband forget his other troubles. find delightful satisfaction in a bowl of toothsome When the children want lunch, this wholesome nourishing food is always ready to serve right from the package without cooking, and saves many steps for mother. Let the youngsters have Post Toasties—superb summer food. Postum Cereal Co., Limited. Battle Creek, Mich. NEW NEWS OF YESTERDAY by E. J. Edwards Brought Bankers to Time Brought Bankers to Time Lie Cemented the Friendship Lie Cemented the Friendship William Windom's Story of the Way In Which He Routed Financiers Who Were Selfish and Grasping. About a year before William Windom, who had been United States senator from Minnesota and secretary of the treasury in President Garfield's cabinet, returned to public life at the head of the treasury department in President Harrison's first cabinet in 1889, I met him in the office of a common friend. By chance the conversation turned upon some of the incidents associated with Mr. Windom's brief service in General Garfield's cabinet. "Senator," I said, "I have always been anxious to know how it happened that you hit upon the precise plan by which you confounded and put to rout many of the great banks and bankers of the United States in the late spring of 1881?" The senator laughed heartily, "Why," he said, "that plan was due entirely to one of those curious chances, these accidental discoveries, out of which sometimes great triumphs come. "You may remember that the congress which sat in the last months of President Hays's administration passed an act authorizing the secretary of the treasury to refund a very large issue of bonds which bore five per cent. interest with a new issue bearing only three and a half per cent. It was legislation that caused the bankers of the country to be very much put out. They wanted the refunding bonds to bear at least four per cent. interest and, if possible, four and a half per cent., and because they did not get what they wanted they began to surrender circulation in very large amounts, so large, in fact, that there was danger of a great stringency in the money market. As I now recall it, they surrendered about thirty millions of circulation in the course of four or five weeks, and the situation was made all the more serious by the apparent intention of the bankers to sell the government bonds which had been returned to them by the treasury when they surrendered circulation. Consequently, President Hayes, not desiring to have the money market greatly upset and the bonds probably depreciated, vetoed the refunding bill, and great was the joy of the bankers, who felt that they had won the victory. "A few weeks later, when I became secretary of the treasury, one of the important matters that speedily came before me was those five per cent. bonds. The government would soon have the option of redeeming them, yet I knew that this would not be expedient, and that meant, evidently, that we would have to continue paying interest on them at the rate of five per cent. "Well, one evening, as I was walking back and forth wondering what I could do in my dilemma, with con- Doctor Armitage Helped Cardinal Mc Closkey Refute Falsehood Concerning Site of St. Patrick's Cathedral. One of the world's noted modern cathedrals is St. Patrick's, in New York. Much has been written about it in the years that it has been built, but, if I mistake not, the story has hitherto remained unpublished of how a widespread life regarding its site led to the cementing of an intimate friendship between the first American cardinal, Rt. Rev. John McCloskey, and the late Rev. Dr. Armitage, who, during the many years that he was pastor of the New York city church where John D. Rockefeller worships, was regarded as the leading Baptist clergyman in the United States. I received the story from Dr. Armitage's own lips shortly after he had been plunged into grief by the death of the cardinal. "Cardinal McCloskey and I were on friendly terms before he was elevated to the cardinalate, and while he was still archbishop of New York," said Doctor Armitage. "At that time there was a widespread rumor to the effect that the site of St. Patrick's cathedral had been given free of cost by the city to the cathedral authorities by some trick of the Tammany Hall crowd. It was a rumor without the slightest foundation in fact, but it kept spreading, and many people believed it, to the great worry of the archbishop, who one day confessed his inability, apparently, to do anything to down the lie. At that time I got an idea and proceeded to explain it to the archbishop. "I was educated as a lawyer," I said and, in fact, I practised a year or two ago before I abandoned the bar for the pulpit. In my lawyer days I was regarded as quite skillful in searching real estate titles. Now, if you wish it, I will go to the office of the Gen. Mead's Real Character gress not in session, I suddenly recalled a remark by John Sherman, when he was senator, to the effect that the discretionary powers of the secretary of the treasury were much larger than was generally believed to be the fact. Immediately, I determined to find out whether or not I could exercise any discretionary powers with the five per cent. bonds. "The next day I hunted up the attorney general, Wayne MacVeagh, 'Mac,' I said, 'I wish you'd look into the law and tell me whether I can extend the five per cent. bonds at a less rate of interest than they now bear without any especial authority from congress.—In other words, whether I have any discretionary power in the matter?" MacVeagh saw the point at once, and a day or two thereafter told me that I sure, had the discretionary power. "The rest was easy. I caused it to be announced that I intended to begin paying off the five per cent. bonds at the rate of ten million dollars a month, and by lot, so that no one would know when he would be called upon to part with his holdings. And I added that if any holder of bonds was willing that Often Irritable and Swayed by Passion He could Be Courteous and Tender-Hearted on Occa- "As a member of the staff of Gen. George C. Meade, I came to know full well that at times—in fact, a great deal of the time—he displayed a most peppery disposition to all with whom he came in contact, so that many of the generals of the Army of the Potomas did not personally like their superior," once said to me the late Gen. George H. Sharpe, who, after the war, was more or less prominent for years in national politics in the east. "But I am going to tell you of a little incident that will give you some insight of the true Meade that lay underneath the coat of irritation that he so offer wore. "After the Army of the Potomac had taken up winter quarters along the banks of the James river in the latter part of 1864, there appeared at headquarters one day two Englishmen who were recognized authorities in British military circles. They carried a letter from Lord Lyons, then British minister at Washington. In it the minister explained that its bearers were friends of his, that they had come to this country for the special purpose of studying the movements of the Army of the Potomac, and that he—Lord Lyons—would take it as a high personal favor if such assistance as was reasonable and proper should be given to them in their study. "Gen. Grant received the two strangers very courteously, told them register of deeds, and search the title of the cathedral plot, and when I am through I am sure you will have all the proof needed that the ground was not given to you by the city through a Tammany trick." "The archbishop was greatly pleased at the idea. I went straightaway to work searching the title, and after several days I had a complete abstract of it as far back as it was necessary for me to go in order to refute the rumor that was causing the archbishop so much worry. "This was the true situation. There came a time when St. Peter's church, the first Catholic church to be established in New York city, got into serious financial straits. St. Patrick's church, then in the lower part of the city and the residence of the bishop, was in a most prosperous condition, and it was appealed to for help by St. Peter's. The assistance prayed for was given, and as a security for the money loaned, St. Peter's turned over to St. Patrick's a wild piece of land beyond the northernmost bounds of the city and seemingly of little value. This land had been given to St. Peter's by an old Irishman shortly before his death—and this land it was which was used years later as a site for St. Patrick's cathedral. "I shall never forget the pleasure and the sense of gratitude which Archbishop McCloskey expressed when I handed him in writing the results of my search. That abstract, which contained some facts with which he was familiar and others which were new to him, the archbishop used time after time to confute the troublesome rumor, he spoke to me of the service I had done him. It was a little thing for me to do for him, I know, but I have always been glad that I did it, for it cemented our friendship for each other, and that friendship is one of the fondest memories of my life." (Copyright 1910, by E. J. Edwards.) they should be extended at the rate of three per cent., and would permit such an agreement to be stamped upon the face of the bonds, why, then, the bonds would not be liable to immediate redemption. "Now, you know the banks must have government bonds in order to have circulation and the bankers, quick to see that I had them, fairly tumbled over one another in their eagerness to have their five per cent. bonds extended at three per cent., or at a rate one-half of one per cent. lower than they could have obtained had they not frightened President Hayes into vetoling the bill authorizing the treasury department to refund the five per cent. with three and a half per cent. bonds. "It was truly laughable, and, do you know, practically all of the five percent. bonds were refunded in this manner, and all because of that happy chance thought of mine. And as a finishing touch to the complete rout of the bankers, congress, at its next session, passed a law forbidding the banks to surrender currency in excess of three million dollars a month. The banks could no longer dump their circulation into the United States treasury in order to frighten the government into letting them have their way." (Copyright, 1910, by E. J. Edwards.) that he would be glad to do all that he could to help them, and then, after pondering a moment or two, turned to me. "‘Gen. Sharpe,’ he asked, quietly, 'is there any general close at hand who is on good terms with Gen. Meade?'" "I replied that no one could be on better terms with him than myself. At that Grant's face showed the inward relief he undoubtedly felt. 'Then,' he said, 'I wish you would escort these gentlemen to Gen. Meade's headquarters, and request him for me to give them such assistance as lies within his power.' "Arrived at Gen. Meade's headquarters, I requested the Englishmen to remain outside for a few moments, so that I might prepare Gen. Meade for their reception. Then I entered his tent and found him, as I was half afraid that I might, in a very irritable mood. Something—possibly something most trivial—had gone wrong, and when I told him what my errand was, he let loose and swore like a trooper. But at last he said: 'Gen. Sharpe, bring your friends to me in about 15 minutes, I will receive them.' "Promptly at the specified time I entered Gen. Meade's tent with the two visitors, and what do you suppose I saw? Gen. Meade garbed immaculately from head to foot in full dress uniform, never handsome in appearance, and the acme of dignified and impressive presence. And when I introduced the Englishmen he received them with the utmost graciousness and put them at their ease at once. And this was the same man who had been swayed by passion a short quarter of an hour before. "Well, for nearly an hour, Gen. Meade held those Englishmen in thrall while he discoursed on the strategy of the campaign. His courtesy, his thoughtfulness, his simplicity, his modesty, his patience at questions, completely captivated them, and when finally the interview was over and I rode away with them they could not sound his praises loud enough. You see, he gave those two men a glimpse of the Gen. George C. Meade that not many men of the Army of the Potomac got. But we of his staff knew right along that he had a tender heart, and our only regret was that, against his own good, he so often hid it behind those outbursts of irritability for which he has become famous in the personal history of our Civil War." (Copyright, 1910, by E. J. Edwards.) NEW WAY TO WASH CLOTHES An Ingenious Australian Cleaner Works on the Principle of a Coffee Percolator. The ingenuity of an Australian inventor has applied the principles of the steam coffee percolator to a washing machine, much to the delight of the housewife of the South Seas, says Vice-Consul Henry B. Baker in a report to the bureau of manufactures. The device has been exhibited in Melbourne and consists of a copper cone which is placed in the wash boiler. The steam forces the soapy water through the apex in the same way as in the coffee percolator and the process goes on until the linen is spotless. It is said to save hard work and wear on fine fabrics. "Have you ever loved before?" asked the coy maid. "Yes," yawned the worldly young man, "but—er—never before a chaperon, two small brothers and a pet bulldog." And then she suggested a trip down the old road to see the stars. The Fountain Head of Life Is The Stomach A man who has a weak and impaired stomach and who does not properly digest his food will soon find that his blood has become weak and impoverished, and that his whole body is improperly and insufficiently nourished. Dr. PIERGE'S GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY makes the stomach strong, promotes the flow of digestive juices, restores the lost appetite, makes assimilation perfect, invigorates the liver and purifies and enriches the blood. It is the great blood-maker, flesh-builder and restorative nerve tonic. It makes men strong in body, active in mind and cool in judgement. This "Discovery" is a pure, glyceric extract of American medical roots, absolutely free from alcohol and all injurious, habit-forming drugs. All its ingredients are printed on its wrappers. It has no relationship with secret nostrums. Its every ingredient is endorsed by the leaders in all the schools of medicine. Don't accept a secret nostrum as a substitute for this time-proven remedy of KNOWN COMPOSITION. ASK YOUR NEIGHBORS. They must know of many cures made by it during past 40 years, right in your own neighborhood. World's Dispensary Medical Association, Dr. R. V. Pierce, Pres., Buffalo, N. Y. The Rayo Lamp is a high grade lamp, sold at a low price. There are lamps that cost more, but there is no better lamp made at any price. Commissioned of solid brass which placed usually kept clean and ornament to any room in any house. There is nothing known to the art of lamp-making that can add to the value of the RAYO Lamp as a light-giving device. Every dealer everywhere. If not at yours, write for descriptive calendar to the nearest agency of the CONTINENTAL OIL COMPANY (Incorporated) USE THE BEST FAULTLESS STARCH FOR LAUNDRY WORK FOR SHIRTS COLLARS CUFFS AND FINE LINEN THEY ARE ONE AND A HALF. TICKETS J. B. H. Benham—The paper says that in Norway married people can travel for a fare and a half. Mrs. Benham—Married people aren't one, even in Norway, are they? SCRATCHED SO SHE COULD NOT SLEEP "I write to tell you how thankful I am for the wonderful Cuticura Remedies. My little niece had eczema for five years and when her mother died I took care of the child. It was all over her face and body, also on her head. She scratched so that she could not sleep nights. I used Cuticura Soap to wash her with and then applied Cuticura Ointment. I did not use quite half the Cuticura Soap and Ointment, together with Cuticura Resolvent, when you could see a change and they cured her nicely. Now she is eleven years old and has never been bothered with eczema since. My friends think it is just great the way the baby was cured by Cuticura. I send you a picture taken when she was about 18 months old. "She was taken with the eczema when two years old. She was covered with big sores and her mother had all the best doctors and tried all kinds of salves and medicines without effect until we used Cuticura Remedies. Mrs. H. Kiernan, 663 Quincy St., Brooklyn, N. Y., Sept. 27, 1809." A. Real Argument. They were talking about argument not in the abstract but as applying to domestic happiness. "What do you think is the most unanswerable argument you ever heard?" one bachelor asked a married man. "That's very easy," he replied. "When your wife says, 'If they can afford it we can,' there is no flaw in that—and never will be."—Youth's Companion. Important to Mothers Examine caretfully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought. Generosity. "I never deny my wife a wish." "Indeed?" "No: I let her wish. It doesn't cost anything."—Life. One often wonders why the woman members of a burlesque show require dressing rooms. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup. For children teaching, softens the gums, reduces inflammation, always pain, cures wind colic. Soa a bottle. Many a budding genius has developed into a blooming idiot. The Fountain Heal Is T A man who has a weak and impaired properly digest his food will soon find weak and impoverished, and that his w insufficiently nourished. Dr. PIERCE'S GOLDEN ME makes the stomach strong, p digestive juices, restores the assimilation perfect, invigor purifies and enriches the bloo Make the Liver Do its Duty Make the Liver Do its Duty Nine times in ten when the liver is right the stomach and bowels are right. CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS gently but firmly compel a lazy liver to do its duty. Cures Constipation, Indigestion, Sick Headache, and Distress after Eating. Small Pill, Small Dose, Small Price Genuine must bear Signature FREE Send postal for Free Package of Paxtine. Better and more economical than liquid antiseptics FOR ALL TOILET USES. PAXTINE TOILET ANTISEPTIC Gives one a sweet breath; clean, white, germ-free teeth—antiseptically clean mouth and throat—purifies the breath after smoking—dispels all disagreeable perspiration and body odors—much appreciated by dainty women. A quick remedy for sore eyes and catarrh. A little Pantine powder dissolved in a glass of hot water makes a delightful antiseptic solution, posseing extraordinary cleaning, germicidal and healing power, and absolutely harmless. Try a Sample. 50c. a large box as druggs or by mail. TOUCH BOX. Boston Mall. PANTINE Millions Say So When millions of people use for years a medicine it proves its merit. People who know CASCARETS" value buy over a million boxes a month. It's the biggest seller because it is the best bowel and liver medicine ever made. No matter what you're using, just try CASCARETS once—you'll See. CASCARETS Ioc. a box for a week's treatment all drugists. Biggest seller in the world. Million boxes a month. DAISY For king tal, convent, abbey Lasts All Season Mane cleanses hair spill or up over, will not soil injurious hair Ring Groomer secures feces. Of all deers, or can prepaid for 100 in ROLE SUPPLIER 150 De Kalk Ave. Brooklyn, New York Put a Gillette KNOWN THE WORLD OVER in your vacation outfit PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Cleanes and beautifies the hair. Promotes a luxurious growth. New York Falls to Gray Hair to its Youthful Color. Cures scalp disease & hair falling. 500, and 1,000 Drugs If afflicted with sore eyes, use Thompson's Eye Water PATENTS Watson E. Coleman, Wash ington, D.C. Books a free, Highest reference Best results W. N. U., DENVER, NO. 32-1910. End of Life The Stomach The stomach and who does not that his blood has become whole body is improperly and MEDICAL DISCOVERY promotes the flow of most appetite, makes tates the liver and It is the great blood-maker nerve tonic. It makes men mind and cool in judgement. o extract of American medical roots, jurious, habit-forming drugs. All its It has no relationship with secret used by the leaders in all the schools of am as a substitute for this time-proven OUR NEIGHBORS. They must know of years, right in your own neighborhood. Dr. R.V. Pierce, Pres., Buffalo, N.Y. S&H OUR ANNUAL SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE CARMENT STORE 925-16TH ST. - OPP. JOSLINS IS ON This doesn't mean a few garments; but every garment in stock is marked down for quick unloading. Below we give you some idea of the way we are offering our stock. WHITE DRESSES Dainty Lingerie Dresses, neatly trimmed with fine embroideries and laces, low and high neck styles, tunic or plaited skirts. $ 5.00 DRESSES FOR $2.50 $ 7.50 DRESSES FOR $3.00 $10.00 DRESSES FOR $7.95 $12.50 DRESSES FOR $8.50 $15.00 DRESSES FOR $9.95 Balance of the Stock 1-3 Off WASH SUITS Made of linen and pure linen, natural, white and light and medium blue are the colors; on sale now for $2.95, $3.95, $4.95 AND $6.95 Worth $5.00 to $12.50 $7.50 COAT SALE Full length, tan Bahama, Bengaline cloth, black shawl collar and cuffs, black and white shepherd check cloth Coats; regular $12.50 and $15.00 values. Sale on at Both Stores—925 Sixte SILVERSMITH & H The Washing THE CASH Sale on at Both Stores—925 Sixteenth St. and 615 Fifteenth St. SILVERSMITH & HILLER. Proprietors The Washington Market THE CASH MARKET It Pays to Pay Ca Save Your Disc It Pays to Pay Cash and Save Your Discount A Million Dollar Eye Eye THE BEST ICE CREAM AND CANDIES AT 1512 Curtis Street, Denver, Colo. Vacation Sale $2.95 For Boys' Wool Suits with Knickerbocker Pants. Handsome mixed grays, mixed blues, fancy colorings in many shades, all handsome patterns. All sizes. A great bargain. $5.25 For Boys' Suits that In- clude $6.50 to $10.00 Values. That is, computing values prices placed by all other stores. All we ask is that you look at these handsomest of handsome worsteds, browns, tans, etc., as well as blue套 claw claw suits, either in the Knickerbocker trouser or regular style. in fact, everything pertaining to Children's Furnishings. We have the most complete Children's Department in Denver. Michaelson's. COR. 15TH AND LARIMER STS. London's Theaters. The theaters of London will seat 60,932 people and 64,851 also can get into the music halls. CATERERS AND CONFECTIONERS Phone: 168. Taffeta and Messaline Silk Dresses all go at a uniform reduction of One-Third Off Regular Price $15.10 DRESSES FOR $ 9.95 $18.00 DRESSES FOR $12.00 $20.00 DRESSES FOR $13.65 $25.00 DRESSES FOR $16.65 All Fancy Net and Lace Dresses White or Colors at SPECIAL SKIRT BARGAIN About 200 Skirts, black volle and fine panama, navy volle and panama, and some fancy striped and checked worsted garments, also cream serges and mohairs; regular prices were $8.75 and $9.95; on sale for $6.95 Seventh St. and 615 Fifteenth St. HILLER, Proprietors ington Market MARKET Pay Cash and Discount Why should an intelligent person value their eyes so highly, and yet neglect to take the best care of their sight? Our only business is to care for eyesight. Always very reasonable in price. The Detamore Optical Co. 822 FIFTEENTH STREET For Mixing Concrete. For mixing concrete a spade have been invented with long, oval holes in the blade, the perforations allowing the finer cement to flow through and give the face a finer finish. The editor who gave up his seat to a lady on the train said he "was crowded out to make room for more interesting matter."—Judge To Destroy Gunpowder. The safest way to destroy black gunpowder is to throw it into water, thereby dissolving the saltpeter. Begin the morning by saying to thy self: "I shall meet the busybody, the ungrateful, arrogant, deceitful, envious, and unsocial. But I who have seen the nature of the good, that it is beautiful, and of the bad, that it is ugly, can be injured by none of them"—Marcus Aurellus. It Happens in Russia Things are done differently in Russia than in this country. A jockey was seen to pull his mount in a race on one of the tracks recently and one of the men who had bet on the horse promptly shot him. Three-year-old Loren was pulling baby's pink toes for amusement. Papa, who was holding baby, said: "Be careful, son, you might pull his toes off." To which Loren replied: "Oh, no, daddy, they won't come off; they've got nails in 'em." Noble Sportsman—Whatever it is I've shot, it makes a most unearthly row. Keeper—Yes; poor Bill ain't got a musical voice, 'as'e? But I heard him say he was going to take singing lesson. SILK DRESSES Editorial. Says Marcus: Firmly Fastened. The Best He Could Do. Hints For Hostess for Those Planning Seasonable Entertainments An Announcement Luncheon An unusually pretty luncheon was given for a recent bride. The floral decorations were entirely of bridal wreath and American beauty roses. The centerpiece was a large circle of bridal wreath, over which a beautiful double heart of American beauties was suspended. At each plate was a long stemmed "beauty" to which was attached a wee heart-shaped envelope containing the cards of the happy pair. Tall silver candlebras held pure white candles with American beauty shades. The favors were white satin heart-shaped boxes, with a hand-polished beauty rose and the monogram of the couple in gold. They were filled with heart-shaped bonbons. At the wedding all the attendants wore coronets of bridal wreath and carried beauty roses; the growns were all white. It was a most beautiful and stiking processional. An innovation in children's parties was certainly started by a mother of three, whose babies clearly loved company. She sent cards illustrated with "sunbonnet" babies asking a dozen children to come in their "rompers" from 3 to 5. On a bright Saturday afternoon the merry throng appeared to find a load of delightfully clean sand; a set of sand toys for each child and a pall and shovel. There was a low table, a tub of water with which to mix the sand to the right consistency for pies; spoons, cake tins, and shakers to sprinkle "sugar" and "salt." Oh joy, there was a dish of flour for leing. It was the jolliest, happiest party imaginable. Sandwiches, ice cream, cake (angel food) and lemonade were served and each child took home the sand toys for souvenirs, including the shovel and pall. At a party of the "Spinsters" club, the host passed little programs cut out of cardboard in shape of a cat; the heading was "Cats You Have Met," the following questions were written; the hostess reading the answers later. 5. A cat that will be a butterfly—Caterpillar. 6. A library cat—Catalogue. 7. A cat that asks questions—Catechism. 8. A cat's near relation—Catkin. 9. A cat that is good to eat—Catsup. 10. A horned cat—Cattle 10. A norried cat cat. 11. A cat that throws stones—Catapault. 12. A tree cat—Catalpa. 13. A water cat—Cataract. 14. A cat that flavors the grapes— Catawbia. 15. A cat that covers acres of ground- Catalysum. 16. A subterranean cat—Catacom- 17. A cat that, living, appears dead- Catalysop. A young woman who lived in the country, also near the shore of one of our great lakes, planned this happy day for her friends. She was entertaining a house party of four, then she issued charming cards bearing a "snap" shot of the house, with the following diversions; from ten to twelve, "tennis," "croquet," "archery;" luncheon al fresco at once; on the veranda until three; surf bathing and beach party with picnic supper at six. Lawn party with dancing at half after eight. The guests took in all or as many of the features as they could, all showing up at the party. The lawn was beautifully decorated with lanterns, fairy lamps and several electric headlights, making it a scene like fairy land. A few stringed instruments furnished the music. Refreshments consisting of watermelons, icees, fruits. Pretty Hatpins 11 A Sand Pile Party. A "Cat" Contest. 18. A cat prized as a gem - Catseye. 19. A cat with a cold - Catarrh. An Outdoor Fete. small cakes and bonbons were served on the porch from the dining room that opened out on it by a series of French doors. Automobiles met the trains and took city guests to the station. The men wore flannels and the girls short dainty wash frocks at the dance and all had a glorious time. Novel Table Decoration. At a dinner party there was a charming Jack Horner pie made of pink crepe paper, the top covered with pink carnations in the center of the table. Pink satin ribbon went to each place, held down by a wee white porcelain jardinere in which one pink illy stood erect and stately; beaming against these dainty favors were the place cards lettered in gold. There were nine guests and the effect of the circle of lilles was lovely. The tiny jardineres were filled with earth so the lilles did not fade. This idea may be carried out in any flower. With the dessert course, ribbons were pulled revealing a souvenir for each guest done up in pink paper. They were all characteristic of some fad of the guest and created much merriment. THE SCANTY NEW SKIRTS. A Woman Should Well Consider Her Lines Before Wearing One of These Deformities. The modern fashions with their scanty skirts and tied up look about the heels, does not make for grace and should be judiciously worn if one is not to appear ridiculous. A woman who dons one of these deformities should not only consider her lines but must go to a dressmaker who knows lines. Otherwise results are deplorable when not laughable. If you cannot afford to go to the best dressmakers never go in for exaggerations. Put thought into your toilet and remember that if women who are sensible will not refrain from being slaves of the passing mode with no thought of incongruity, women who are vain should. Go especially slow on the new skirt. Some are impossibly ugly; most are unbecoming, save to the beanpole type, as they cut us in two; and all give women a carriage that is a combination of slide and wriggle which makes the walk of the Chinese woman of fashion with her bound feet an athletic stride in contrast. FANCIES OF FASHION Chantilly lace, or the silk lace of Spanish shawls, is an effective fancy for straw hats. A French looking hat is a large leghorn trimmed with lavender orchids and finished with a knot of pale blue velvet. The use of black lace on white satin chiffon, etc., is general, and here one often finds the addition of the vivid color note in connection with black and white frocks. White chiffon or net covered with beads of silver, gold or the pure white. is being used as a lining to many of the handsome gowns or waists made of diaphanous materials. Among the smart buttons shown this spring are those of cut steel, set in colored stones. These buttons are mounted in mother-of-pearl rims, matching the stones in color. The craze for velling the frock appears to be as keen as ever, and nearly every smart dress is velled with chiffon or fine crepon. Royal blue, velled with black chiffon, is frequently to be seen. CIRTUS M. HARRIS CURTIS M. HARRIS, Funeral Director. LYM Down Town LYMAN'S n Town Milliner LYMAN'S Down Town Millinery Co. Opposite D. & F.'s 1120 Sixteenth St. Purchase your Spare MILLION NO while the prices are low. The o n Denver. Three-floors full of pu Our prices are below competi will convince. ase your Spring and Su MILLINERY NOW ices are low. The only real Millinery Depa Three-floors full of pretty things for your se es are below competition. "Seeing is believin 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 --- THE BL·JAMES M.& M. CO. PAINTS, OILS, VARNISHES, GLASS. PAINTING, GRAINING, GLAZING, PAPER MANGING, DECORATING AND HARD WOOD FINISHING. WALL PAPER 1517-23 ARAPAHOE ST. DENVER ARTISTS MATERIALS J. R. CONTEE, PRESIDENT. R. E. HANDY, LICENSED EM- BALMER. THE Douglass Undertaking Company 1023 19th Street Incorporated—Bonded to the City. Phone—Main 6123. 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. D. & F.'s ing and Summer NERY OW by real Millinery Department Store enty things for your selection. n. "Seeing is believing." A trial --- 3