Colorado Statesman
Saturday, July 15, 1911
Denver, Colorado
Page text (machine-generated)
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
THE JOURNAL OF THE WEST.
LABOR SHALL BE FREE
RACE COUNTRY PARTY
THE LAND OF EMIGRANTS
THE FOURTH ARTICLE IN THE SERIES CALLED "THE MAN FATHEST DOWN" BY BOOKER WASHINGTON.
VOL. XVII.
THE LA
EMIC
THE FOURTH ARTICLE IN
MAN FATHEST DOWN" BY
For my purpose it is convenient to divide the life of Naples into three classes. There is the life of the main avenues or boulevards, where one sees all that in Neapolitan life. The buildings are handsome, streets are filled with carriages, sidewalks are crowded with handsomely dressed people. Occasionally one sees a barefooted beggar asleep on the marble steps of some public building. Sometimes one sees, as I did, a woman toiling up the long street side by side with a donkey pulling a cart. There are a good many beggars, but even they are cheerful, and they hold out their hands to you with a roguish twinkle in their eyes that somehow charms the pennies out of your pocket.
Then their is the life of the narrower streets, which stretch out in an intricate network all over the older part of the city. Many of these streets contain the homes as well as the workshops of the artisan class. Others are filled with the petty traffic of hucksters and small tradesmen. In one street you may find a long row of pushcarts, with fish and vegetables, or strings of cheap meat dangling from cords, surrounded by a crowd, chaffering and gesticulating—Neapolitan bargain-hunters. In another street you will find, intermingled with the little shops, skilled artisans with their benches pushed half into the street, at work at their various tasks. Here you will see a wood carver at his open doorway, busily engaged in carving out an elegant bit of furniture, while in the back of the shop his wife is likely to be engaged in getting the midday meal. A little further along you may meet a goldsmith, a worker in iron or copper. One is making a piece of jewelry, the other is mending s kettle. In these streets one sees, in fact, all the old handicrafts carried on in much the same manner and apparently with the same skill that they were carried on three hundred years ago.
Finally, there are the narrower, darker, dirtier streets which are picturesque and into which no ordinary traveler ventures. This seldom-visited reigon was, however the one in which I was particularly interested, for I had come to Naples to see the people and to see the worst. In the neighborhood of the ho-
tel where I stayed there was a narrow winding street which led by a stone staircase from the main thoroughfare up the projecting hillside to one of those dark and obscene alleyways for which Naples, in spite of the improvements which have been made in recent years, is still noted. Near the foot of the stairs there was a bakery, and not far away was the office of the State Lottery. The little street to which I refer is chiefly inhabited by fishermen and casual laborers, who belong to the poorest classes of the city. They are the patrons also of the lottery and the bakery, for there is no part of Naples that is so poor that it does not support the luxury of a lottery; and, I might add, there are few places of business that are carried on in a filthier manner than these bakeries of the poorer classes.
I was passing this place late in the afternoon, when I was surprised to see a huckster—I think he was a fish vender—draw up his wagon at the foot of this stone staircase and begin unhitching his mule. I looked on with some curiosity, because I could not, for the life of me, make out where he was going to put that animal after he had unhitched him. Presently the mule, having been freed from the wagon, turned of his own notion and began clambering up the staircase. I was so interested that I followed.
A little way up the hill the staircase turned into a dark and dirty alleyway, which, however, was crowded with people. Most of them were sitting in their doorways or in the street; some were knitting, some were cooking over little charcoal braziers which were placed out in the street. One family had the table spread in the middle of the road and had just sat down very contentedly to their evening meal. The street was strewn with old bottles, dirty papers, and all manner of trash; at the same time it was filled with sprawling babies and with chickens, not to mention goats and other household appurtenances. The mule, however, was evidently familiar with the situation, and made his way along the street, without creating any surprise or disturbance, to his own home.
I visited several other streets during my stay in Naples which were, if possible, in a worse con-
DENVER. COLORADO, SATURDAY, JULY 15 1911.
dition than the one I have described. In a city where every one lives in the streets more than half the time, and where all the intimate business of life is carried on with a frankness and candor of which we in America have no conception, there is little difficulty in seeing how people live. I saw, for example, several cases in which the whole family, to the number of six or seven, live in a single room, on a dirt floor, without a single window. More than that, this one room, which was in the basement of a large tenement house, was not as large as the average one room Negro cabin in the South. In one of these one-room homes I visited there was a blacksmith shop in one part of the room, while the family ate and slept in the other part. The room was so small that I took the trouble to measure it, and found it 8 x 13 feet in size.
Many of these homes of the poorer classes are nothing better than dark and damp cellars. More than once I found in these dark holes sick children and invalid men and women living in a room in which no ray of light entered except through the open door. Sometimes there would be a little candle burning in front of a crucifix beside the bed of the invalid, but this flickering taper, lighting up some pale, wan face, only emphasized the dreary surroundings. It was a constant source of surprise to me that under such conditions these people could be so cheerful, friendly, and apparently contented.
I made some inquiry as to what sort of amusements they had. I found that one of the principle forms of amusement of this class of people is gambling. What seems stranger still, this vice is in Italy a Government monoply. The State, through its control of the lottery, adds to the other revenue which it extracts from the people not less than five million dollars a year, and this sum comes for the most part, from the very peorest part of the population.
From all that I can learn, public sentiment in Italy is rapidly being aroused to the evils which cling to the present system of dealing with the agricultural laborer and the poorer classes. But Italy has not done well by her lower classes in the past. She has oppressed them with heavy taxes; has maintained a land system that has worn out the soil at the same time that it has impovished the laborer; has left the agricultural laborer in ignorance, has failed to protect them from the rapacity of the large landowners; and has finally driven them to seek their fortunes in a foreign land.
In return, these emigrants have repaid their native country by vastly increasing her foreign commerce, by pouring back into Italy
the earnings they have made abroad, by themselves returning with new ideas and new ambitions and entering into the work of building up the country. These returned emigrants have brought back to the mother country improved farming machinery, new methods of labor, and new capital. Italian emigrants abroad not only contribute to their mother country a sum estimated at between five and six million dollars annually, but Italian emigration has awakened Italy to the value of her laboring classes, and in doing this has laid the foundation for the prosperity of the whole country. In fact, Italy is another illustration that the condition of the man at the bottom affects the life of every class above him. It is to the class lowest down that Italy largely owes what prosperity she has as yet attained. —Outlook.
THE UNIVERSAL RACES CONGRESS
With the object of discussing, "in the light of science and the modern conscience, the general relations subsisting between the people of the West and those of the East, between so-called colored people and so-called white people, with a view to encourage between them a fuller understanding, the most friendly feeling, and a heartier co-operation," as expressed in its call, there will be held at the University of London, England, the first Universal Races Congress from July 26th to 29th.
On the executive committee and among the presiding officers and speakers are the leaders of advanced thought of the races of the world, the Negro and the American Indian finding champions or rather, expositors in Sir Harry A. Johnson, England; T. Tengo Jabuva, South Africa; Pastor Majola Agbebi, South Africa; Dr. W. E. B. DuBois, U. S. A.; Frances Hoggan, England; Dr. Jean Baptiste de Lacarde, Brazil; and Dr. Chas, Alexander Eastman. U. S. A.
It is perhaps, too much to hope that any immediate results will arise from the Congress, that there will be any perceptible lessening of the tension between the "so-called white and the so-called colored races" so soon as these learned men shall have given to the world their views on the problem of the races, but there are grounds for the relief that this interchange of thought will be productive of good and will contribute to the breaking down of the attitue among children of a common parent.
New Teleprinting Apparatus.
An electrical teleprinting apparatus enables the Berlin police to print notices in 200 stations in the city and its suburbs simultaneously.
RACE NEWS GATHERED FROM VARIOUS SOURCES
Hampton Institute, Va., July 5. Between three and four hundred graduates of Hampton are expected here for the twelfth reunion, which will be held July 21. President Jesse H. Harris, of Boston, expects a record gathering of Hampton "grads."
Little Rock, Ark., July 3.—The citizens of this city are making extensive preparations for the twelfth annual session of the National Negro Business League, which convenes here Wednesday, August 16. To date $1,912 has been raised for the entertainment fund, $500 of which was subscribed by the Chamber of Commerce, and the balance by the Negro citizens.
The Negroes of Lexington, Ky. pay taxes on property valued at $774,735. The school tax rate of the State is 35 cents on each one hundred dollars. The school taxes therefore, paid by the Negroes of Lexington for the support of the schools amount to $2,7111 58. The State tax rate for public school purposes is 22 cents on each one hundred dollars, and the amount contributed by the Negroes of Lexington for the State school is $1,701.41, making a total of $4,415.99., which the Negroes of Lexington contribute to the cause of public education.
Rev. David F. Rivers, pastor of the Berean Baptist church, received a total vote of 435,629 in his contest for the European tour offered by the Washington Post. The lowest of the District winners received 556,082. A trifle over 10,000 more ballots would have mane Dr. Rivers a winner. As it was every organization in the city combined on him and at one time helped all competitors. It is difficult to convince many of Dr. Rivers' friends that he was not the victim of a "frame-up"—or that a combine was not worked up against him. The Post gathered up a barrel of Negro money on the deal.
Springfield, Mass. July 4.—In this city resides Alex Hughes, a Negro, who is one of the greatest positive forces for good in this city. For three years he has won the prizes offered by civic organizations to the owner of the best kept dooryard. In the office of the Massachusetts Mutual, where he works, he has won and retains the love and respect of his co-workers.
NO 44
He is active in church work, sends much of his money to Southern Negro educational institutions, carries his well-loved flowers to hospitals and gives them freely to bring a bit of joy to the sick, annexes uncared for plots of ground near his home and plants flowers on them, employs many of his evenings in catering to wealthy folks who want their guests served most efficiently.
Washington, July 5.—Among the successful candidates for appointment as midshipmen in the navy, who were designated last week by President Taft as candidates at large in the competition in which seventeen entered for the six vacancies was Daniel Armstrong, son of the late General Armstrong, the Civil War veteran, who founded the Hampton Institute for Colored and Indians at Hampton Va. Young Armstrong called at the White House just before President Taft left the city for Beverly, personally to thank him. By an interesting coincident while the President was chatting with Midshipman Armstrong, Booker T. Washington entered the room and was delighted to be presented to the son of his former patron. It was to general Armstrong at Hampton that Booker T. Washington, just escaped from slavery, made his way barefooted, and from him he received his first encouragement.
David Mitchell, a Pullman car porter, who saved the life of L. S. Berg, president of the New Orleans Mobile & Chicago Railroad, a few weeks ago, has been given a job for life. In the wreck, which occurred in northern Minnesota some months ago, Mrs. Berg was killed. Eight cars and the locomotive fell down an embankment, and Mr. Berg's private car and two pullmans were burned before relief trains could reach the scene of the wreck. "While there was much confusion and excitement among the passengers and the train crew," said a friend of Mr. Berg, "Mitchell, the porter on one of the Pullman cars which had tumbled down the embankment, never at any time lost his head. "He saved six or eight persons in the Pullman from burning to death, and when he was certain all the passengers in his car were safe he ran back to Mr. Berg's car, which by that time had been partly consumed by the flames. Mrs. Berg was dead, but the Negro succeeded in prying open a window and rescuing Mr. Berg."
LATEST NEWS
EPITOMIZED
OF MOST INTEREST
‘The last section of the Ninth United
States cavalry left the maneuvers camp
at San Antonio, Tex. for Fort D. A.
Russell, Wyoming,
A toronado swept a path of seven
miles north of Winona, Minn., caus-
Ing great damage to crops and farm
buildings.
‘Though light in many places a gen-
eral rain has fallen in Oklahoma.
‘The Cimmaron river is reported high-
er than it has been this year.
Mrs. James Skochne, a Bohemian,
and her three children, two girls, aged
six and four and a boy, aged two, of
Raymond, Wash., were burned to
death when their home was destroyed.
‘The Kansas Supreme Court upheld
the bloodhound as an agent of justice.
If the hound had been proven accurate
in following the trail of human foot
steps, that evidence was enough, said
the court, to convict.
Archie Coble and his seventeen-
year-old-bride, with their heads
mashed by an ax wielded by an un-
known murderer, were found dead in
their bed in their home at Rainier,
‘Wash, a town thirty miles from Ta.
coma,
Four members of the crew of the
wrecked steamer Sarta Rosa and
second mate, E. Hawson, of the Pa-
cific Coast Steamship Company, were
drowned in the surf while trying to
get a line ashore from that vessel,
which stranded near Point Arguello,
six miles south of Surf, Cal.
In the matter of location of Lead-
quarters for the new division of the
railway mail service which Is to be
made up of the states of Nebraska,
Colorado and Wyoming, Omaha has
beaten Denver and Cheyenne. This
announcement was made by the Post-
office Department.
Details have been brought of the
great storm on the Japanese coast
June 20th, by steamship from the Orl-
ent. Several hundred lives were lost
and many ships destroyed, A tidal
wave swept the port of Osaka, where
the water rose fivefeet and the Miye
Maru was washed ashore.
With hardly more than halt a doz-
en houses left standing in Au Sable
and Oscoda, with Alpena fighting a
disastrous fire and with forest fires
raging along the line of the Detroit
& Mackinac railroad, in Michigan.
from Au Sable to Sheboygan, and at
other points in the northern part of
the lower peninsula, heavy rain is
needed to prevent a possible loss of
life.
GENERAL.
The Portland express, of the New
Hayen railroad, jumped the rack and
the entire train tumbled over a thirty-
foot concrete viaduct into the street
below at Bridgeport, Conn., killing or
injuring 100 passengers, according to
the police reports.
No less than 63,000,000 barrels of
beer were sold in the United States
during the 12 months ending June 30th
last, or an increase over the previous
twelve months of 6.21 per cent, ac-
cording to the annual report of the
beer and whisky sales made public
today by the United States Brewers’
Association.
Fire which caused a loss of $500,080
destroyed the huge barns of the Ar-
thur Dixon Transfer Company, in Chi-
cago, burend to death 400 horses, im-
periled the lives of a score of men,
tied up the South Side Blevated rail-
way line and the State street surface
line for hours and threatened the busi-
ness district.
Deer hunting is permitted in thirty-
seven states; elk hunting is permitted
in Wyoming, Montana and Idaho; an
‘open season for moose is provided in
Maine and Minnesota; mountain sheep
may be hunted in Montana, Wyoming
and Idaho; mountain goats in Mon:
tana, Washington and Idaho. Antelope
are ‘now protected throughout the
United States, and caribou occur only
in Idaho and’ Minnesota, where they
are protected throughout the year.
Some states limit each hunter to one
head of each kind of big game, but In
the case of deer the limits are usually
more liberal. According to this re-
port, there are 2,000 deer in Oregon,
1,500 in Montana, 1,400 in Wyoming
and 700 in Colorado.
‘The largest fleet of American war
yessels ever assembled at a single
time is in Provincetown ’ rbor await.
ing the beginning of war maneuvers
along the Atlantic coast, July 15th.
‘The fleet already comprises thirty-five
vessels, battleships, cruisers, torpedo
‘boats, submarines, colliers and dis:
patch boats.
‘Thousands of Elks, in Atlantic City,
N. J. for their annual reunion, gath-
ered in the marine ballroom on the
pier when the people of Atlantic City
formally presented them the freedom
‘of the city.
FOREIGN,
In a political riot in Crottan, Mex.,
eight men were killed and at least fif-
teen were wounded, Trouble started
over the governor's race.
‘The condition of John W. Gates, why
18 {11 in Paris, is said to be unchanged
except as the duration of his illness
has weakened the patient.
Following a conference of President
de La Barra and Minister of Finance
Madero at the City of Mexico, an or-
der was issued to the national treas-
ury to pay to Gustavo Madero $320,000
gold to reimburse him for expenses
incurred during the revolution,
SPORT
WESTERN LEAGUE STANDING.
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Pueblo. SITTIN 44 20 [han
Lincoln. 22220028 44 31 bat
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The Florence baseball team was de-
feated by Salida in a loosely played
game, 17 to 6.
Arrangements are being made for a
Western Slope tennis tournament to
be held in Grand Junction soon.
Joe Carney, the Pacific coast pool
champion, won the 500-point pool
match from James Maturo, champion
of Colorado.
Official figures are lacking, but it is
the belief that the St, Louis IV and
the Million: Population Club are the
winning balloons in the elimination
race that started from Kansas City.
Edward A. Steininger, president of
the St. Louis National league basball
club, was appointed administrator of
the $400,000 estate of the late Stanley
M,. Robinson by Probate Judge Holt-
camp. Steininger must furnish $200,-
000 bond.
The training quarters for Frank
Gotch, world’s champion wrestler,
have been completed in Humboldt, Ia.
‘The quarters, which the champion has
christened “Riverside Camp,” will con-
sist of a large handball court, a regu-
lation wrestling platform and a dress-
ing room.
‘The managers of the South Dakota
Baseball Association have decided to
close the league schedule. The teams
have paid so far, but the invoking of
the law to stop Sunday games has
been the drawback. Redfield finished
in the lead and will get the pennant.
Aberdeen was second, Watertown
third, Faulkton fourth, Mitchell fifth,
Huron sixth.
WASHINGTON.
The United States Steel Corporation
anounces that the unfilled tonnage on
{ts books June 0th, totalled 3,361,058
tons.
Postmaster General Hitchcock says
applications from depositors to pur-
chase postal savings bonds July 1st ag-
gregated 42,000.
Chicago--A return of the death
dealing heat which has claimed 196
victims in Chicago, is predicted by
the weather forecaster.
‘The Grand Lodge of Elks at their
meeting in Atlantic City, N. J., elected
John Patrick Sullivan of New Orleans,
grand exalted ruler.
Comparatively cool weather is to
prevail throughout the country, ac-
cording to the general weekly forecast
issued by the weather bureau,
Director Joseph A. Holmes of the
Bureau of Mines, left Washington to
make a study of mine conditions in
Colorado, Utah, Montana and Alaska.
‘With the Supreme Court decision
still ringing in the ears the tobacco
trust received another jolt when Dr.
Harvey Wiley made the prediction
that within fifteen years smoking and
chewing tobacco in public will be
abandoned.
‘The amendments offered by Senator
Cummins of Iowa and the two offered
by Senator Simmons of North Carolina,
all seeking to increase the number of
Canadian manufactured articles that
shall be admitted free of duty, wer2
voted down. The voted stood 14 to 53.
"The loss of the battleship Maine
‘was caused by the explosion of her
three magazines. No such effect as
that produced upon the vessel could
have been caused by an explosion
from without. Such {s the opinion of
Gen. William H. Bixby, chief of en-
gineers, U. S. A.
"A sweeping Investigation of all ex-
‘press companies of the United States
has been ordered by the Interstate
Commerce Commission. It will be
one of the widest in scope ever under-
taken by the commission and will
not only be conducted as to rates, but
will Include practices, accounts | and
revenues of the various companies.
‘The defeat by a vote of 32 to 14 of
the first of Senator Cummins’ amend-
ments to the Canadian reciprocity
bill in the Senate made it clear that
the measure is scheduled to emerge
from the Senate without any change
from its original form, ‘The Senate
refused to attach to the bill Senator
Cummins’ proposal to give Canadian
fresh meats arid meat products free
access to the American markets.
Indictments against the “men high-
er up” in the labor slugging war have
been returned by the grand jury in
Chicago, throwing a bombshell into
the ranks of organized labor in that
clty.
Unauthorized “and concealed specu-
lations by James A. Pettit, president
‘of the Peavey Grain Company, whose
‘body was found in two feet of water
in Lake Michigan are authoritatively
estimated at $1,000,000 in a signed
statement given out by the F. H. Pea-
vey Company of Chicago,
STATE NEWS
Wentern Newspaper Union News Service,
Three Horses Are Killed.
Steamboat Springs.—Pete Lowe,
while on his way to Rock Springs,
Wyo., from Brown’s park, with a wag-
on and $100 worth of sheep hides, was
caught in a cloudburst, three horses
drowned and® the wool racks and
wagon destroyed, Mr, Lowe barely es
caped with his life and one horse.
Wechter Gets Respite.
Denver.—Acting automatically as a
stay of execution, a bill of exceptions
and an application for a writ of su-
persedeas, filed in the Supreme Court
by Attorney H. E. Luthe, will prevent
the carrying out of the death semtence
against Lewis Wechter, who shot and
Killed W. Clifford Burrowes, Feb. 11,
in the White House cafe.
‘To Utilize Underfiow.
Briggsdale.—Probably the most ex-
pensive irrigation pipe line and pump-
ing plant system ever established in
northern Colorado is being installed
by W. 8. Freeman, a Chicago attorney,
on his ranch, near Briggedale, at a
cost of $47,500. The water is to be
drawn from underflow streams and
seepage from Crow creek, and 4,000
acres will be irrigated.
Teller Co, Sheriff Vindicated.
Cripple Creek.—Henry Von Phul,
former sheriff of Teller county and his
brother Ben, were completely vind!-
cated when the jury, after hearing tho
testimony in the case brought by F.
D. Mosser, former city dog catcher,
found for the defendants. Mosser al-
leged he had received injuries while a
prisoner in the county jail and sued
for $65,000.
$20 Bounty for Wolves.
Axial—So numerous have becomes
wolves in the Axial basin country that
they are carrying on their depreda-
tions even in summer and stockmen
have held a meeting at Axial and
formed an organization which voted
to place a bounty of $20 upon wolves
killed on the south side of Bear river.
‘The county commissioners may levy &
tax to secure funds for payment of a
county bounty.
Lincoln County Fair.
Hugo—Directors of the Lincoln
county fair at an enthusiastic meet-
ing decided to hold the fourth annual
fair Sept. 28, 29 and 30, The officers
for the ensuing year are: C. M, Miles,
president; H. C. White, vice presi-
dent; F. BE. Ewing, secretary; A. S.
Johnson, treasurer, with fifteen vice
presidents, one for each voting pre-
cinct in the county, to boost the fair.
Recent rains assure a first-class exhib-
it of farm products. The corn crop
in the county bids fair to be the larg-
est in its history, especially south of
Hugo. Efforts will be made to make
this the biggest fair ever held in the
county.
‘Terrible Auto Accident.
Eldorado Springs.—Tossed down &
precipitous cliff, out of an automo-
bile, and then following the machine
as it took a sheer drop of seventy-five
feet and was finally dashed to pieces
on the rocks of the river bed 500 feet
below, Mrs. J. B. Baldwin of Denver
was so badly injured that she may
die. That she was not instantly
killed is due to the fact that her body
caught on a projecting ledge. By the
time the automobile, rolling down the
mountain side like a tumble-weed,
reached the bottom, its momentum
was so great that it bounced clear
across the bed of the creek, whica is
between thirty and forty feet wide,
and in the descent was so badly
smashed that parts of its machinery
were found a hundred feet apart. The
aceident occurred about midway be-
tween Eldorado Springs and Crags, on
the recently completed Crags boule
vard.
Se pte ea aie aoe
Denver.—Appropriations made Dy
the Highteenth General Assembly and
approved by the governor, leaving
aside those that were to be drawn
from the internal improvemtnt fund,
amounted to $3,890,210.85. ‘The state
treasurer's figures show the estimated
reyenue for the biennial period as $2
890,216.65, or practically $1,000,000 un-
der the appropriations, State Auditor
Leddy published a statement on July
1 placing the total revenue from all
fources at $4,406,000, which if cor
rect would meet every appropriation
made and also the appropriations for
roads and bridges. Mr. Leddy estt-
mated the revenue from the different
tax levies at $3,173,000 and the rev-
enues from corporation and other
fees, inheritance taxes, license fees
and the like at $1,293,000. ‘The rev-
enues for the last six months have
shown a falling off compared with
what they were two years ago, and
there is no sign of a revival.
Gandia’ ine Must Hann.
Kiowa.—For the murder of Felix
Peter Jackson, near Ramah, recently,
George King will be hanged and John
Fields, his eighteen-year-old accomp-
lice, must spend the rest of his life
at hard labor in the penitentiary. Aft:
er being out all night, the jury re-
turned a verdict and without the quiy-
er of a muscle or the slightest show
of emotion, King hear the verdict find-
ing him guilty of murder in the first
degree, and the sentence, to hang by
the neck until he was dead.
“LITTLE COLORADO ITEMS.
DIAMONDS
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STERLING SILVER-WARE
Small Happenings Occurring Over the
State Worth While.
has been for two years.
Mrs, Wm, Smith, a pioneer of Wind-
sor, after a long illness, 1s dead,
The Salida Commercial Club will
give its first annual banquet soon.
‘The Colorado Springs carnival takes
place July 31 to August 5, inclusive.
‘The contract for the new county
jail at Greeley has been let for $32,000.
‘The Fort Collins branch of the Un-
lon Pacific will begin business on July
16th.
A postal savings bank of the first
class will be established at Pueblo
soon,
Greeley has a cat that likes beer.
takes its drink each night and whines
tor more.
Conditions in northern Colorado and
Little Snake river valley arc better
than ever before.
Clyde Shropshire has been arrested
at Grand Junction on a charge of
cattle stealing.
‘The trial of Bob Harris for killing
Chief of Police Craig of Rocky Ford,
has been set for August 7.
Dan Cassidy, one of the motorcycle
riders at Lakeside park, Denver, was
badly hurt in an accident recently.
Pueblo is making preparations for
the entertainment of the State Asso-
ciation of Insurance Men July 26.
‘The Methodist church of Grand
Junction has raised $335 to educate
the “poor white trash” of the South.
‘The Boulder Business Girl's Club
will open up a large ice cream parlor
and donate the profits to the Boulder
band.
The Pueblo state fair and the Den-
ver inter-state fair have agreed to co-
operate in an effort to have better at-
tractions.
Several hundred miners will be put
at work by the Colorado Fuel & Iron
Company to fill large orders for coke
and coal, just received.
E. B. Burke, who was injured some
time ago in the Pinto mine at Cripple
Creek, has been awarded $6,000
damages.
‘The Senate passed the bill provid-
ing for the appointment of an addi-
tional federal judge for the district
of Colorado.
Martin Van Buren Kelsey, one of
the first settlers of the Platte valley,
and a resident since 1869, died at Fort
Lupton, aged 72.
‘The public playground at Montrose
| has been opened and 300 children are
| using the swings and teeter hoards
and played games.
Spontaneous combustion caused a
fire which threatened the Hillrose al-
falfa mill, but the blaze was extin-
guished with damage of $200.
John Herman, a rancher, aged fifty
of Salida, fell head first from a tree
eighteen feet above the ground. He
ran home and fell unconscious. He
was seriously hurt.
Richard B. Camp of Buffalo, N. ¥.,
who was found in the bath room of
his private suite at the Kaiserhof ho-
tcl in Denver, with his throat cut from
ear to ear, died.
Julian Gradell, for many years a
justice of the peace at Louisville, was
accidentally shot and killed at’ Log
Cabin, a little settlément about thirty
miles north of Fort Collins.
In a shooting scrape in the grocery
of Marcus Pretovitch, at Monarch, a
mining camp twenty miles from Sa
lida, an Austrian bystander, Ace Lop-
er, was twice shot and will probably
dle.
Driving his own engine from Delta
to Grand Junction, fifty-one miles, in
Jess than forty minutes, Enginer Wil-
liam Scholtz won a race with death
and arrived at the bedside of his wife
before she passed away.
Dexter T. Sapp, of Gunnison. the
newly elected commander of the De-
partment of Colorado and Wyoming,
of the G. A. R., has been appointed &
member of the board of trustees of
the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Home at
Monte Vista.
The Palisades orchardists who are
in controversy with the government
‘over the construction of a low line
canal in connection with the Gunnison
project have been given more time in
the negotiations going on.
‘After every arrangement had been
completed for the funeral of Thomas
Carr, Jr, who died in Chicago, July
3, the remains of another man sent
to Trinidad from Chicago, reached the
home ot Mrs. Thomas Carr, Sr.
Seventy-five citizens of Palisade,
armed with rifles and masked, sur-
rounded the resaurants owned by J.
M. and Charles Férguson, at Palisade,
and at the point of guns forced two
boys to deliver a message to the Fer
guson brothers, ordering them to close
up their business, take their families
and leave town within ten days, never
ee cet os tr inie’ Seach A cek on Mian Al
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East Turner Hall
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THE OZARK CLUB.
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a ee
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Groceries, Meats, Hay, Grain, Etc.
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Phone York 881
A. BRADSHAW
AROUND THE CORNER FROM THE OLD STAND 1443-1447 Stout St.
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Fresh Vegetables Every Day. All Kinds of Groceries and Salt Meats
Beer, Wines, Liquors and Cigars 2605 and 2609 Arapahoe Street DENVER, COLO.
Supply Your Home with the Celebrated Tivoli Beer
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Don't Worry----But Hurry Sept.4 Monday A Picnic AT BLOOMFIELD PARK $5 Worth of Fun for 25c in Money
YOU KNOW YOU ALWAYS GET THE BEST OF EVERYTHING WHEN YOU SEE THESE LETTERS
R. M. A. C. A.
The Rocky Mountain Athletic Ass'n
From 12 M (day) Until 2 A. M. Next Morning.
Transfer on any car. Cars run by special arrangement until 2 a. m. Don't make yourself late. You can get all you want to eat and drink at the Park.
ORCHESTRA OF NINE PIECES—BEST IN CITY.
BARBERS
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Millinery season now here. Everybody knows Bradshaw's can sell you good hats for less money than any place in city. We also have a complete line of Holsery and Underwear, including extra large size. We are in our own building, have not rent to pay.
ONE GOVERNMENT EMPLOYE
HAS A UNIQUE TRAD.
His Name Is Scollick and It Is His Business to Mount Skeletons in the National Museum in Washington.
J. W. Scollick of the National Museum in Washington is a craftsman
in a trade with probably the very smallest competition in the world. He is the official "bone man" of the government, or in other words the expert in charge of the work of cleaning.
in a trade with probably the very smallest competition in the world. He is the official "bone man" of the government, or in other words the expert in charge of the work of cleaning, articulating and mounting skeletons at the museum, a trade by itself and one requiring infinite patience and great technical skill.
The removal of the National Museum from the old to the new building has resulted in the division of skeletons being given larger quarters, and the display has been arranged so as to give it a prominence never before had. To employes of the museum and many visitors this division is known as the "boneyard."
Perhaps there is not the attraction in it for the average visitor that there is in the display of mounted animals and the big cases of ethnological groups, but it is one of the most remarkable collections in the whole museum. There is probably less known about the technique of assembling the skeletons than of preparing the exhibits in any other section. Mr. Scollick, who works on the upper floor of one of the small buildings back of the Smithsonian Institution, has been in charge of this work for years. The display now in the museum is largely his work, though some specimens have been acquired by purchase and exchange.
The exhibits range all the way from a full-grown elephant to a herring. Each of them represents weeks of technical skill apparently out of all proportion to the finished result. Though there is more labor in the work, the larger skeletons are the easier to handle. The collection includes elephants, rhinoceroses, horses, gorillas, the larger monkeys, all sorts of deer, man himself and many mammals. Every bone in these big skeletons has to be drilled and articulated with wires, springs and metal braces. Although these do not show, it is necessary that they be put in place with mathematical precision to give the natural appearance. And then, too, everything must be scientifically just so. It is this which makes the finished work apparently so easy, but in reality so difficult.
The smaller skeletons like lizards, small fish, bats and snakes are not held together by wires. Their own cartilage dried in place is used to hold them together. This is one of the many reasons why a skeleton that is dried and mounted is never boiled. Not only would the boiling make the bones fall apart, but it would drive in the grease and make the bones yellow, the one thing not desired. The meat is taken off the raw bones with a scraper and then the bones are carefully washed clean of grease with gasoline. Acids are not used at all except on rare occasions to remove a stain.
Great care must be exercised in the drying and bleaching of the bones. This cannot be done in a hot sun, because the hot sun will crack the bones, as it will seasoning wood. From a bone artist's viewpoint the best bleaching weather is a gray, drizzling day, when there is no danger of the sun getting in its damaging work. Sometimes the bones develop black streaks, but this can usually be remedied with the use of dilute ammonia.
From beginning to end the whole skeleton cleaning process is tiresome and is said to "get on the nerves" worse than any other form of specimen mounting carried on at the museum. Weeks of cleaning are required to prepare some of the small fish skeletons, some of which have to be mounted against glass to keep them properly assemble for display. The bat skeletons, with their long, delicate wings, are also mounted in this way.
Bone articulation and skeleton mounting is a craft about which the public knows little, and even when an expert in this line starts on a new specimen he has no idea how long it will be before the job is finished.
Our National Anthem.
The president of the Chicago board of education is much worked up over his belief that few people, young or old, know what the national anthem is. As a matter of fact no one, not even the complainant, knows what the national anthem is, because there is none authoritatively selected. He thinks "The Star-Spangled Banner" is. Others with just as much authority say it is "America," a third class declares it is "Hall Columbia," a few hold out for Mrs. Howe's "Battle Hymn," and the southerners make it "Dixle." But in sober fact, while we have a variety of claimants, we have no established national anthem. It is too bad that we are thus handicapped among nations, and none the less deplorable that the United States is so lacking in musical talent. Evidently Fame is in ambush for some one, but the old girl is as fickle as ever, or else we are going to seed.
Man Dead Whose Deft Fingers Once Counted Two Million Dollars in Ninety Seconds.
George W. Marlor, cashier and assistant treasurer of the United States subtreasury, a veteran of the Seventh regiment's Civil war roll and for 46 years attached to the Wall street stronghold of government funds, died a few days ago at his home at Roselle, N. J.
Mr. Marlor had handled billions of dollars of American money—probably more money than any man who ever lived in the United States—and his deft fingers held many records for speed in counting bills. Once he counted $2,000,000 in notes in 90 seconds. The $10,000,000 purchases of gold from the Bank of England, or the Bank of France, that sometimes come under his jurisdiction when the gold was brought to the assay office, were small routine matters to him and he handled them with as much ease and freedom as though they involved nothing more important than the purchase of a pound of tea. Let a counterfeit one dollar bill find its way into the realm of the financially elect and his trained hand and eye picked it out from its legitimate fellows with unerring accuracy. His sense of touch was so acute that he could tell the good from the bad instantly without looking at the face of the bills.
Mr. Marlor came from the Metropolitan bank to the government service. He had been a clerk in the bank up to 1865, when, on May 16, of that year, John A. Stewart, who was United States treasurer under the Lincoln administration, gave him a place at the subtreasury.
He began as a counter of money, and it was his work in this capacity that brought him before his superiors and the public as a remarkably accurate, fast and intelligent worker. An idea of the amount that had to be bounted and handled may be gained from the statement that it was necessary to count $282,000,000 when Mr. Terry was given the place of Mr. Fish.
FRENCH AMBASSADOR'S WIFE
Mme. Jusserand, Who Was an American Girl and Does Credit to Our Country.
One of the most courteous and successful hostesses in the diplomatic corps in Washington is Mme. Jusserand, wife of the French ambassador. She was an American girl, the daughter of G. T. Richards, a Boston banker, her malden name being Elsie Richards. Apparently American women are peculiarly adapted to fulfill the duties of an ambassador, for there have been many matrimonial alliances between young women of this country and foreign diplomats.
Before her husband was promoted to Washington, and while he was minister to Denmark, Mme. Jusserand presided over his legation in Copen-
WME
JUGGERAND
hagen with great success. An ambassadress necessarily has much influence with her husband and often shares with him official secrets of great importance. Naturally, to be successful in such a position a woman must possess cleverness, tact and a fine sense of humor. With these qualities and all others that are to be desired in a charming woman, Mme. Jusserand is abundantly blessed.
Was Saving Them.
Mrs. Champ Clark, wife of the speaker of the house, tells a story of her ancient cook, who took a liking to every article in her mistress' wardrobe. It was "Please give me this" and "Please give me that," until Mrs. Clark took a trip to St. Louis and laid in a generous supply of hoslery and underwear and outer garments for the old mammy. The gifts were received with gratitude, but presently the old cook was at her old tricks, asking for stockings, aprons and wrappers. "What did you do with all those things I brought you from St. Louis?" demanded Mrs. Clark.
"Why, missile," answered the woman. "I couldn't use them things. Not for nothing. I am saving them all to be burled in."
"Nick" is Some Joker.
An Ohio farmer who wrote that he owned nine cows and asked Representative Longworth to send him a government exterminator for files, received the following reply:
"Sorry, but I, too, am in quest of the same thing. I have no cows, but I have a bald head. Sometimes I wish I were a cow instead of a congressman."
M. C. COOK
FIRST-CLASS
Chili and Lunch
Parlor
Cakes - Pies - Ice Cream
2622 Welton St., Denver, Colo.
The Great Professional Shoe Shiner of Denver. Located, 1844 Arapahoe. Also Hat Cleaning, Cigars, Tobacco, Candy and Soft Drinks.
ERNEST HOWARD
Carpenter and Contractor
Job and Repair Work a Specialty
Res. 353 W. Warren Ave.
Phone South 1862
Shop 1021 Twenty-First St.
Phone Main 1144
CALL YORK 4555
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DENVER, COLO.
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Residence 2230 Clarkson St.
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THE SANE FOURTH IDEA.
IN the government archives in the state they keep the original draft of the Declaration the completed document, a photograph of lying certificates, a sign in big letters on a And every American who creeps into that land and reads the precious document with such himself, his patriotism and all the effervescion until he gets outside. By that time document reads, under the bewildering spell of back home and begins to think it all over, decision begin. Then the power of the orself over the commanding affrontery of the loyal citizen begins to whoop and yell and a thousand ways. The outburst keeps on where the idea of a "sane Fourth of July"
ment archives in the state department a
ternal draft of the Declaration of Independ
ment, a photograph of the author and
sign in big letters on a side panel com-
m on who creeps into that room and looks
ous document with suppressed awe, is
ism and all the effervescence of his rev
outside. By that time he has forgotten
the bewildering spell of the big sign, a
ins to think it all over does the natural
in the power of the original document
standing affrontery of the big sign, and
to whoop and yell and stamp and sho
The outburst keeps him from going
"sane Fourth of July" originates.
IN the government archives in the state department at Washington where they keep the original draft of the Declaration of Independence, along with the completed document, a photograph of the author and certain accompanying certificates, a sign in big letters on a side panel commands "SILENCE." And every American who creeps into that room and looks about, sees the sign and reads the precious document with suppressed awe, is required to contain himself, his patriotism and all the effervescence of his revolutionary imagination until he gets outside. By that time he has forgotten just how the document reads, under the bewildering spell of the big sign, and not until he gets back home and begins to think it all over does the natural reaction and recollection begin. Then the power of the original document begins to assert itself over the commanding affrontery of the big sign, and the good, sane and loyal citizen begins to whoop and yell and stamp and shoot and raise cain in a thousand ways. The outburst keeps him from going crazy, and that is where the idea of a "sane Fourth of July" originates.
THE GAUGE OF STATESMANSHIP.
AMERICAN statesmen measure up with a rule, and the annals of world diplomacy political direction which reflect great creed American far-sightedness. But statesmen measure in world diplomacy, for the importance are so varied and complicated that it no idle business to so map out and that there will be no future need for it errors into which stubborn and perversed. In fact, statesmanship is of wider application in domestic affairs than in its more infuriational character.
Every man who gains political success, but often men ride into office upon a way themselves dabbling ostentatiously with n and incomplete mental equipment make it a poor judge, and every statesman is required judge and pleader. It is easy, therefore, posed leader of his country to prove a miserable no other country in the west statesmen as does the United States.
Our representative form of government all its differing sectional, social and political with which any man of nerve or energy, may plunge into politics, fills the woods nature for wood-choppers or some other mental calibre.
These misfit statesmen are not contempt bob up in Congress and not a few have been tenuous office of United States senator. erroneousness of a man's political ambition of statesmanship in the United States is apparent to possess a considerable degree of affairs of ordinary internal interest, ann and become selfish class anarchists who contact with the ever-present and never-flees her pedestal when these men begin reputed foundations of their country's life of power uphold them, regardless of justice tinue to pass for statesmen. Senator Bax the greatest constitutional lawyers in Cov weight upon all matters of internal government oration in Washington he delivered the race question: "The race question ca Negro race, as long as they will permit with them, but we must surmount the dig go to the front door. The only way for a end of time is for the Negro race to live in.
In an age of great enlightenment and posed to be adjusting itself rapidly to trivialism from the lips of a statesman, who of prejudice to satisfy his own conceit as constituency.
statesmen measure up well with those on
terms of world diplomacy carry many ea-
which reflect great credit upon Ameri-
ndness. But statesmanship does not need
world diplomacy, for the internal affairs
varied and complicated that the wisest
access to so map out and direct the nation
no future need for it to double on its
stubborn and perverse leaders have uu-
hip is of wider application and more
than in its more infrequent and more
so gains political success is not a state,
into office upon a wave of political cir-
ing ostentationally with matters for which
dental equipment make them unfit. A goo-
very statesman is required to fulfill the
It is easy, therefore, for a would-be
country to prove a misfit and an incon-
sidered country in the world tries out so
the United States.
Aative form of government, so called, our
election, social and political ideals, and
of nerve or energy, regardless of ea-
politics, fills the woods with statesmen wu-
ppers or some other profession of pr
statesmen are not confined to our legi-
and not a few have been elevated to the
United States senator. There are many
man's political ambitions, but the one giv-
in the United States is the race question
a considerable degree of insight and a
internal interest, annihilate the true
class anarchists when they are broo-
ver-present and never-solved race que-
ues when these men begin their shameless
s of their country's liberties. But be-
dem, regardless of justice and national
statesmen. Senator Bailey of Texas is a
institutional lawyers in Congress and a m
atters of internal governmental relation
washington he delivered himself of the rea-
"The race question can be solved by ove-
ng as they will permit it. In fact, we
must surmount the difficulty of the Near-
er. The only way for the two races to
the Negro race to live in recognition of
great enlightenment and progress, whe
ing itself rapidly to truth without mys-
hips of a statesman, who only reiterates
sify his own conceit and selfishness a
AMERICAN statesmen measure up well with those of other countries, as a rule, and the annals of world diplomacy carry many examples of brilliant political direction which reflect great credit upon American intelligence and American far-sightedness. But statesmanship does not necessarily find its full measurement in world diplomacy, for the internal affairs of every country of importance are so varied and complicated that the wisest brains of the nation find it no idle business to so map out and direct the nation's political pathway that there will be no future need for it to double on its track and undo the errors into which stubborn and perverse leaders have unwittingly forced it. In fact, statesmanship is of wider application and more general importance in domestic affairs than in its more infrequent and more attractive international character.
Every man who gains political success is not a statesman by any means but often men ride into office upon a wave of political circumstance, and find themselves dabbling ostentatiously with matters for which their narrow vision and incomplete mental equipment make them unfit. A good lawyer may make a poor judge, and every statesman is required to fulfill the capacities of both judge and pleader. It is easy, therefore, for a would-be statesman or a supposed leader of his country to prove a misfit and an incongruous failure.
Perhaps no other country in the world tries out so many unwarranted statesmen as does the United States.
Our representative form of government, so called, our vast territory, with all its differing sectional, social and political ideals, and, about all, the ease with which any man of nerve or energy, regardless of education or intellect, may plunge into politics, fills the woods with statesmen who were equipped by nature for wood-choppers or some other profession of physical, rather than mental calibre.
These misfit statesmen are not confined to our legislatures; they often bob up in Congress and not a few have been elevated to the dignified and pretentious office of United States senator. There are many things to prove the erroneousness of a man's political ambitions, but the one great and final gauge of statesmanship in the United States is the race question. Legislators who appear to possess a considerable degree of insight and ability in matters and affairs of ordinary internal interest, annihilate the true representative idea and become selfish class anarchists when they are brought into inevitable contact with the ever-present and never-solved race question. Broad justice flees her pedestal when these men begin their shameless assaults upon the reputed foundations of their country's liberties. But because constituencies of power uphold them, regardless of justice and national honor, these men continue to pass for statesmen. Senator Bailey of Texas is reputed to be one of the greatest constitutional lawyers in Congress and a man of authority and weight upon all matters of internal governmental relationships, yet in a recent oration in Washington he delivered himself of the following opinion on the race question: "The race question can be solved by our being just to the Negro race, as long as they will permit it. In fact, we should be generous with them, but we must surmount the difficulty of the Negroes who want to go to the front door. The only way for the two races to live in peace to the end of time is for the Negro race to live in recognition of their inferiority."
In an age of great enlightenment and progress, when the world is supposed to be adjusting itself rapidly to truth without mystery, this passes for wisdom from the lips of a statesman, who only reiterates worn-out platitudes of prejudice to satisfy his own conceit and selfishness and that of a warped constituency.
Cause for Grief.
George, aged 3½, was very cross and his wails louder than usual one day made his mother ask impatiently, "George, what in the world makes you cry?" With an injured catch in his voice George replied, "You would cry, too, if you hit the crazy bone in your head as I did."
Still the Open Kettle.
One very seldom sees a washing machine in use in the south, says Frank P. Fogg in the National Magazine. The old-fashioned way of washing in the open air at the side of a brook or at the well and boiling the clothes in an iron kettle over a smoking open fire is still in vogue.
---
state department at Washington where declaration of Independence, along with of the author and certain accompany a side panel commands "SILENCE." that room and looks about, sees the sign suppressed awe, is required to contain evescence of his revolutionary imagination he has forgotten just how the docu- of the big sign, and not until he gets ever does the natural reaction and recol- original document begins to assert it the big sign, and the good, sane and stamp and shoot and raise cain in him from going crazy, and that is him from going crazy, and that is" originates.
well with those of other countries, as
tracy carry many examples of brilliant
credit upon American intelligence and
manship does not necessarily find its full
the internal affairs of every country owed
that the wisest brains of the nation
and direct the nation's political pathway
to double on its track and undo the
sele leaders have unwittingly forced it.
Application and more general importance
frequent and more attractive interna-
tion is not a statesman by any means,
save of political circumstance, and find
matters for which their narrow vision
on them unfit. A good lawyer may make
required to fulfill the capacities of both
pose, for a would-be statesman or a sup-
isfit and an incongruous failure.
world tries out so many unwarranted
ment, so called, our vast territory, with
political ideals, and, about all, the ease
way, regardless of education or intellect,
with statesmen who were equipped by
other profession of physical, rather than
confined to our legislatures; they often
been elevated to the dignified and pre-
sent. There are many things to prove the
nations, but the one great and final gauge
is the race question. Legislators who
are of insight and ability in matters and
annihilate the true representative idea
when they are brought into inevitable
per-solved race question. Broad justice
begin their shameless assaults upon the
liberties. But because constituencies
office and national honor, these men con-
dualley of Texas is reputed to be one of
Congress and a man of authority and
governmental relationships, yet in a reed
himself of the following opinion on
can be solved by our being just to the
fit it. In fact, we should be generous
difficulty of the Negroes who want to
for the two races to live in peace to the
in recognition of their inferiority."
and progress, when the world is sup-
truth without mystery, this passes for
who only reiterates worn-out platitudes
and selfishness and that of a warped
One very seldom sees a washing machine in use in the south, says Frank P. Fogg in the National Magazine. The old-fashioned way of washing in the open air at the side of a brook or at the well and boiling the clothes in an iron kettle over a smoking open fire is still in vogue.
UT THERE in the street is a horse that looks just like I feel. Do not imagine that he is a carriage horse, champing the bit and pawing the ground, or a saddle horse ready for a trot, for he is neither. He is a meek, subdued beast of burden, attached to a wagon filled with broken limestone. A laborer is standing thereon hurling the rocks to the street. The horse meanwhile waits, unmoved, unmovable.
When the wagon is unloaded the laborer will gather up the loose reins and drive slowly to the barns. A bag of oats, a manger full of hay, and a bed of straw in a narrow stall is
the reward of the dray horse will haul the stones, and wait system like myself. He dare pose. Of what use for him gallop down the street.
Even were it possible to feat were useless. He would ever a time when green field and a hillside meadow his be in, or a beech tree to shelter across? Did he ever look up How subdued he has become civilization! Poor laborer, blinded leading the blinded!
If the laborer were to do does not know that I, too, ha that I am breathlessly tired.
of the dray horse's labor. The morrow will be like today. He the stones, and wait to be driven home and rest. He is part of a myself. He dares not have an individuality or a personal pur- what use for him to shake the heavy yoke from his neck and on the street. were it possible to gallop hitched to a heavy stone wagon, the useless. He would be whipped for a runaway brute. Was there be when green fields were the pasture lands of this dray horse, side meadow his bed? Was there ever a brook for him to wade tree to shelter him? Was there ever a wide prairie to canter Did he ever look up to the sky or shake his mane or whinny? cued he has become! Poor dray horse, lost in the progress of! Poor laborer, driving the dray horse—beast driving beast, ending the blinded! Laborer were to look up to my window he would envy me. He now that I, too, have been driven all day, that my brain whirls, breathlessly tired, that I am a link in the endless chain. I have
the reward of the dray horse's labor. The morrow will be like today. He will haul the stones, and wait to be driven home and rest. He is part of a system like myself. He dares not have an individuality or a personal purpose. Of what use for him to shake the heavy yoke from his neck and gallop down the street.
Even were it possible to gallop hitched to a heavy stone wagon, the feat were useless. He would be whipped for a runaway brute. Was there ever a time when green fields were the pasture lands of this dray horse, and a hillside meadow his bed? Was there ever a brook for him to wade in, or a beech tree to shelter him? Was there ever a wide prairie to canter across? Did he ever look up to the sky or shake his mane or whinny? How subdued he has become! Poor dray horse, lost in the progress of civilization! Poor laborer, driving the dray horse—beast driving beast, blinded leading the blinded!
If the laborer were to look up to my window he would envy me. He does not know that I, too, have been driven all day, that my brain whirls, that I am breathlessly tired, that I am a link in the endless chain. I have
watched the laborer for many days and I think he has watched me as I have passed out of my house. I have fancied that he has resented my little better dress and seemingly easier tasks. And at night I have dragged myself to this window to watch my fellow dray horse in the street.
Would it be any comfort, Mr. Laborer and Mr. Dray Horse, to know that the person who looks down from the respectably curtained windows is as tired and subdued as you are; that this person wears a yoke and is hitched to responsibilities as heavy as the stone wagon?
There is a rumble of wheels in the street. The dray horse is dragging himself home. Well, at least there is the bag of oats, and a stall full of straw, and the laborer and I have a dinner and a bed coming to us.
"From Under the Flying Chaff"
By A. W. MACY
Author of
"Shortcut Philosophy"
To be a broker you first of your money.
People will not wait to their minds about you.
Young men with no bad good son-in-law material.
We give our bad habits vide no terminal facilities.
Now and then a man s except poor but dishonest p
be a broker you first speculate in stocks and then on what became money.
he will not wait to see the best that is in you before making up facts about you.
g men with no bad habits may not be spectacular, but they are on-law material.
give our bad habits a clear track and the right of way, but pro-erminal facilities.
and then a man succeeds in life who had nothing to start with or but dishonest parents.
To be a broker you first speculate in stocks and then on what became of your money.
People will not wait to see the best that is in you before making up their minds about you.
Young men with no bad habits may not be spectacular, but they are good son-in-law material.
We give our bad habits a clear track and the right of way, but provide no terminal facilities.
Now and then a man succeeds in life who had nothing to start with except poor but dishonest parents.
(Copyright, 1911, by Joseph B. Bowles.)
Pupils Make Their Own Drinking Cups By E. F. HATCH Chicago
And one of the guardi savings bank silenced critic common cup with an indign They get washed every morr
one of the guardians of the depositors at a Chicago trust and bank silenced criticism regarding the noxious condition of the cup with an indignant, "No such thing. These cups are clean washed every morning."
And one of the guardians of the depositors at a Chicago trust and savings bank silenced criticism regarding the noxious condition of the common cup with an indignant, "No such thing. These cups are clean. They get washed every morning."
Cubans Have Some Very Peculiar Ways By E. J. FOSDICK
the time specified. Always failure, and so it is not poss It's the way of his race,
specified. Always he will have a smile and an excuse for his and so it is not possible for you to become angry with him. The way of his race, and is to be accepted with Philosophy.
the time specified. Always he will have a smile and an excuse for his failure, and so it is not possible for you to become angry with him. It's the way of his race, and is to be accepted with Philosophy.
O
Mary
Work Horse Is Much Like Office Girl
By MAUD HEALY
Those who pursue pleasure seldom overtake it.
Sometimes Opportunity knocks at the back door.
The political woods are full of presidential impossibilities.
Ignorance is at a premium in heathen lands and jury boxes.
Always put off till tomorrow that which should never be done at all.
You can manifest your sympathy for the under dog by kicking the upper one.
Lovers' quarrels are only preliminary skirmishes; the real battles come later.
We have it on good authority that four guinea pigs have succumbed as a result of inoculation with germs taken from a public drinking cup, that 100 schools are supplied with bubbling drinking fountains, that the same sanitary condition will soon prevail in all the schools in the city, that pupils in some of the schools are taught to make their own paper drinking cups, that at least one large retail store has one sanitary fountain, albeit on its thirteenth floor. Yet in the public library the one only fountain now used in the building still has its chain-attached cup.
The Cubans are a people of kindly nature and yet they have some odd ways.
One of their distinguished traits is never to keep an engagement. It is almost useless to make an appointment with one.
A Cuban will solemnly promise to meet you at four o'clock, say, and in parting will reiterate his pledge to be prompt, but the chances are that you will not see him until a week later.
He knows when he tells you that he will not do so, and, also, if you have lived long in the country, he will know that you have not the remotest idea of his being there at
First Showing
First Showing
Of New Fall Goods. Come in and see showing you whether you are ready mid-summer house cleaning. See of 25c Misses' White Lace Hose.... Babies' White Sun Bonnets.... 25c Ladies' Beach Hats.... 65c Babies' one-strap Black Sandals $1.10 Children's three-strap Sandals
All Goods. Come in and see them. We will take great pleasure in
you whether you are ready to buy or not. Saturday we begin our
our house cleaning. See only a few specials below.
White Lace Hose.....15
White Sun Bonnets.....10
Beach Hats.....19
one-strap Black Sandals, sizes 2 to $ \frac{3}{2} $ .....50
men's three-strap Sandals, sizes $ \frac{4}{2} $ to 8.....75
Of New Fall Goods. Come in and see them. We will take great pleasure in showing you whether you are ready to buy or not. Saturday we begin our mid-summer house cleaning. See only a few specials below.
25c Misses' White Lace Hose 15c
Babies' White Sun Bonnets 10c
25c Ladies' Beach Hats 19c
65c Babies' one-strap Black Sandals, sizes 2 to 3½ 50c
$1.10 Children's three-strap Sandals, sizes 4½ to 8. 75c
WHITE CANVAS OXFORDS
All Children's and Misses' White Oxfords left; sold up to $1.25; sizes 7 to 13½; to close ..... 85c
DRESS GINGHAMS
DRESS GINGHAMS
Here is a great surprise for everybody up to 15c; big clean-up, while t
J. A. EDDY, 26
GASAWAY
AUTO
Call Main 5038. Stand 19th & Market
SLAUGHT
We have bought f
by Stevenson & Hazen
which is now on sale at
great surprise for everybody and a snap you can't overlook; worth 5c; big clean-up, while they last. 7½
EDDY, 2625 Welton Street
GASAWAY WALTON
AUTO SERVICE.
1938. Stand 19th & Market Sts. Special Rates for Parties and Balls.
SLAUGHTER SALE
We have bought the stock of goods owned byenson & Hazen at 2707 Welton street and now on sale at astonishing Low Prices
Here is a great surprise for everybody and a snap you can't overlook; worth up to 156; big clean-up, while they last ..... 7½c
J. A. EDDY, 2625 Welton Street
ELITE
BARBER SHOP.
BATHS
EAGLE
SOCIAL CLUB
Call Main 5038. Stand 19th & Market Sts. Special Rates for Parties and Balls.
SLAUGHTER SALE
We have bought the stock of goods owned by Stevenson & Hazen at 2707 Welton street which is now on sale at astonishing Low Prices
Now is the time to buy for the future as well as for the present.
Come and see for yourselves.
I. N. MOBERLY,
2707 Welton St. Denver
LKER. CHAS. CRONIN. BERT SMITH
Cars Stand at St. James Hotel, Curtis St.
M. L. WALKER. CH
Cars Stand at St.
DAY
Special rates to Dancing and T
tion for cars by day or wee
DAY OR NIGHT
rates to Dancing and Theatre Parties Prices on applica-cars by day or week. Taxicabs and Touring Cars
Special rates to Dancing and Theatre Parties Prices on application for cars by day or week. Taxicabs and Touring Cars
A. E.
CURTIS M. HARRIS,
Funeral Director.
Zion's An
Picnic and
n's Annual S. S. nic and Egg Hunt
Zion's Annual S. S. Picnic and Egg Hunt AT DOME ROCK Thursday, July 20th
Fare--Adults $1.00 Children 50c
Pierce Arrow, Thoma Flyer, Oldsmobole, Studabaker Garford Cars
Now is the time to buy for the future as well as for the present.
Come and see for yourselves.
I. N. MOBERLY.
2707 Welton St. Denver
Taxicab Service Co.
TELEPHONE
Champa 1292
$
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
St ee ee
9
$HOWD y DOVE
oer AR co ro een
MEET ME AT THE
(ey OLORADO _STATESMAN’S
(te. 15TH ANNUAL PICNIC
KZ BLOOMFIELD PARK,
WEDNESDAY, AUG., 16, 1911.
This will be the Social Event of the Season.
DON’T MISS IT.
Harry Cowell left Saturday for
Texas to remain. ’
Mrs. E. S. Andrews left this week
for Sedalia, Mo., to remain.
Albert Robinson, an employe at the
U. S. Mint, is taking his vacation,
Mrs. George Davis, who has been
very ill for several weeks, is improv-
ing.
Mrs. D. B. Holley returned this week
from an enjoyable visit to Colorado
Springs.
Mrs. A. Batiste entertained a few
friends at the White City in honor of
Dr. Jones of Chicago, last Thursday.
A. L. Froman is taking his annual
vacation. Mr, Froman is one of the
members of the fire department.
Miss Laura Sharhorn left last Sat-
urday for a two months’ visit to her
old home in Toronto, Canada.
Meet me at Dania hall, Twenty:
seventh and Arapahoe streets, Friday
evening, July 2ist. U. B. F. & S. M. T-
Admission 10c.
E, S. Andrews is off on a two weeks’
vacation He expects to visit Kansas
City and Chicago before returning to
work.
Mrs. L. Baker of Houston, Tex., is
the guest of Mr. and Mrs. E. M.
Reeves, 957 S. Clarkson, for the sum-
mer.
Albert Deland has returned from
the Pacific coast where he spent sev-
eral months very pleasantly, but says
that Denver looks good to him.
Say, look wise and be out to Cen-
tral Baptist church Wednesday ever
ing, July 19, Reception free to all U
B. F. & S. M. F.’s and Juveniles.
Mrs. B. G, Prioleau and mother, Mrs.
Mary Stafford, passed through the
city Friday of last week from Kansas
City, Kans. en route to Fort Russell,
Wyo.
‘The Mutual Laundry Co. opened for
business the first of the week. - This
is a worthy enterprise and should be
patronized by every Negro in Denver.
Mrs. W. A. Green accompanied Mr.
and Mrs. N. Skillern home from Colo-
rado Springs, where théy have been
enjoying a few days vacation.
Jesse Bowman of New London
Conn., arrived in the city Sunday to
visit his mother, Mrs. Dennis Burns
of 2825 South Acoma street.
Mr. and Mrs. A. Colston and family
are now living in their beautiful mod-
ern nine room home at 2327 Down-
ing avenue, which they recently
purchased.
Mr. and Mrs. George Parsons of
Santa Fe, N. M., are recent arrivals
in the city. Mr, Parson is with E. 8.
Andrews at the University club.
Mrs. Maude M. Bellups of Columbia,
Mo., is a visitor in our city, and is
the guest of her brother and family,
G. B. Richardson of 2542 Clarkson
street.
Mrs. M. B. Fields, who has been
very ill for several weeks at St. An-
thony’s hospital, is now at the resi-
dence of Mrs. Hamilton, 2937 Welton
street.
Mrs. W. H. Ramsey of New York,
SEEEEEE EHH ttt ed ttt tees
$
SS
MEET M
fuPRLY (
(Sey OLORAD
= eS
\ ey if 15TH A
Y Se 7
SN EY
37 BLOOMI
sister of R. L. Lewis, arrived in the
ety last Monday. Mr. and Mrs, Ram-
‘sey expect to make Denver their fu:
ture home,
‘The United Brother of Friendship.
Sisters of Mysterious Ten and Juven:
fies will hold thelr fourth annual con-
vention Wednesday at Dania hall, 27th
and Arapahoe streets.
Funeral services of Mrs, Minnie
Williams, who died at the county hos-
pital, was held from the Douglass Un-
dertaking Co's parlors, 1023 19th
street Monday, July 10th. Rev. Wal-
lace conducted the services. She was
laid to rest at Riverside. A daughter:
was left to mourn her loss.
Mrs, G, G. Ross has been on the sick
list for more than a week, necessitat-
ing the calling in of Dr. A. L. Ben-
net. Miss Vera Ward acted as organ
ist at Shorter’s last Sunday and it is
to be fondly hoped that Mrs. Ross will
soon be able to fill her accustomed
ee RN
Say, the grand officials of the U. B.
F, & S, M, T's will be pleased to see
you at Dania hall July 21.« Admission
10c.
Mr. C. Anderson, who has been cus:
todian at the Cass & Graham block,
corner 16th and Curtis streets, for
more than a quarter of a century, has
been pensioned by the owners of the
block. He is pensioned at $25 per
month. Mr. Anderson has been a
resident of Denver for a number of
years and during that time has ac-
cumulated some valuable real estate.
His many friends congratulate him on
his good fortune. ,
The Masonic picnic, held at Bloom-
field Park last Tuesday, was fully up
to its standard for a large gathering
and a royal good time. In fact, can be
put down as one of the best outings of
the season, and this was no more than
expected by everybody, as the follow:
ers of the square and cumpus never
fail to give the public their money's
worth.
Where are you going? To the musi-
cal and installation of the U. B. F. & S.
M. T. at Dania hall, July 21st. Admis-
sion 10c.
A MASS MEETING CALLED.
Under the auspices of the People’s
Sunday Alliance a special meeting of
the colored citizens of Denver is
called to meet Sunday afternoon at 4
o'clock, to consider and devise ways
and means of helping to secure a fair
and lawful trial of Robert Harris who
is arraigned for the killing of the
chief of police of Rocky Ford. No
other business except what pertains to
this case will be taken up. Every:
body should be concerned in this case
and should show their interest by
their presence and their advice and
help. It will be an open meeting and
all will be privileged to speak under
the broad rules of good decorum and
common courtesy.
Come and bring your neighbor and
friend. 2630 Welton street is the
place, 4 p. m. sharp is the time.
The Second Annual Picnic of the
Rocky Mountain Athletic association
was postponed to Labor Day, Monday,
Sept. 4, on account of rain.
The True Reformers have ar
ranged to take the old mothers and
fathers of the seven different churches
on their second annual excursion at
Toland, Thursday, August 17th, abso-
lutely free. The pastors of the various
churches will furnish Chief Cash with
a list of such worthy persons, and they
will be furnished with free transporta-
tion. The best of care will be taken
of them.
The Second Annual Picnic of the
Rocky Mountain Athletic association
was postponed to Labor Day, Monday,
Sent. 4, on account cf rain.
‘WHITE PEOPLE GIVE NEGROES A
CHANCE.
Macon county, Alabama, is that
county where Tuskegee Inatitute is 1o-
cated, where good eight months rural
public schools are carried on in near-
ly every school district. There are
fifty-five communities. ‘The white peo-
ple believe in giving the Negroes @
square deal in material, educational
and religious matters. Lots of
Negro farmers have recently moved
into this county and every one is sat-
isfied. There is no reason why an in-
dustrious farmer should fail to do
well in this section.
Lands are gradually advancing in
price but it is yet cheaper than can
be bought in any other section of the
South,
For further particulars write,
CLITON J. CALLOWAY, Real Es-
tate Dealer, Tuskegee Institute,
Ala.
SPECIAL SUNDAY BILL AT wii
BROS.
Sliced tomatoes ....-...:--++5++ 10
Baked white fish with potatoes . .25
Fricassee chicken with rice ...... .39
Lamb chops breaded with tomato
BAUCE ve eeeevers cecee esses sees 680
Fried spring chicken (half) ..... .40
Fresh Tomato Omelette ......... 25
Chicken cream with green pep-
pers and mushrooms ......... .80
Lettuce and tomato salad may-
onnaise dressing ...........-++ .20
String beans .........2-0.-seeees LO
Stewed tomatoes .........-s+-0+ 10
‘Asparagus on toast ......-....+. 20
Potatoes minced in cream ....... .10
Baur’s peach ice cream ......... -10
Baked apple dumplings South-
ern style ..eceeeeeeeceeeeseees LO
Cherry ple .....s.ceeeeeseeceee es 05
SCOTT M. E. CHURCH.
The funeral of Mrs, Minnie Wil-
liams was conducted from the under-
taking parlors of the Douglas Under-
taking company last Tuesday. Mrs.
Williams was a member of Scott's
She leaves a daughter and brother in
Way, Miss., to mourn her loss.
‘The sermon topics for Sunday will
be: “The Saving Name” and in the
evening “Forward!” There were
many visitors in the audience last
Sunday morning and evening.
The pastor has been honored with
a place on the St. Louis Missionary
program which meets in August. Sub-
ject, “The Place of the Ministry in
the ‘Uplift of a People.” A handsome
program of the four great missionary
and educational conventions meeting
in Baltimore, New Orleans, Atlanta
and St. Louis is being gotten out with
a cut of the speakers. All four of
the conventions will be represented
in the one program. The speeches
and other important data of this great
movement will be put in book form
after the adjournment of these great
meetings.
The Junior league has been re-or-
ganized under the supervision of Mrs.
Anna B. Dawson. It had its first
meeting Sunday afternoon with a good
attendance. Parents are invited to
co-operate in this grand work.
‘The subscriptions of the rally for
the roofing of the church continues
to grow. The membership has great-
ly boosted the amount during the past
Sabbath.
‘The live pigeon contest continues to
grow in interest. A suit of clothes
will be given away to the minister
whose representative sells the high:
est number over eighty tickets. An
old folks’ concert will be given in con:
nection with ‘the contest.
Mr. Elmer Troutman and Miss Eth-
el Crawley were united in the holy
bonds of wedlock at: 2743 Glenarm
pifice last week by the pastor. We
wish the young couple a prosperous
journey over life’s tumultuous sea.
Mrs. Lylesy secretary of the choir,
is confined to her bed with pneumo-
nia this week. She is resting easy at
this writing.
Mr. Cornelius Rice, the popular re-
cording steward left for Oakland, Cal.
for a visit to his sister and also to
rest up. Mr. Rice is a very popular
and ideal young man. ~
The pastor end his family had 2
very pleasant time with the family ot
Mr. Eli Burrell last week. They spent
the day and enjoyed a sumptuous din-
ner. Do that again.
Mrs. Anna B. Dawson has been
elected to serve the unexpired term
of the president, Mrs. M. E. Forney,
which left for Cleveland, Ohio, last
week with her sick brother. The aii
is planning a big chicken dinner in
connection with the trustee entertain
ment of the 27th,
‘The prayer meetings are the source
of spiritual life in the church. We in
vite our friends to attend every
Wednesday evening.
STATE OF COLORADO,
City and County of Denver. j ss,
In the County Court,
No. 45409,
M. Florence Cooke, Jr., Plaintiff,
vs.
Albert P. Cooke, Defendant.
The People of ‘the State of Colorado,
to the Defendant above named, greet-
ng:
You are hereby required to appear in
an action brought against you by the
above named piaintltt in ihe County
Court of the City and County of Den-
ver, State of Colorado, and answer the
complaint therein within thirty days
after ‘the service hereof If you. are
served within this State, or within fifty
days after the service hereof If served
personally, outside the Btate of Colo-
rado, or, if served by publication. with-
in sixty’ days from the date of the last
publication, or trial will be had the
same ax though you were present.
This is an action brought to dptaln
a decree of divorce on the ground of
extreme and repeated acts of cruelty,
and for non-support for more than oné
year last past and such other and fur-
ther relief as may seem to the Court
just and equitable from the complaint,
a copy of which is hereunto attached,
andy the evidence’ adduced” upon. the
trial.
Witness, Thomas L. Bonfils, Clerk of
the County Court in’ and for the sald
City and County of Denver at nis office
in ‘Denver, this 1st day of May, A. D.
112"and "the seal of said Court hére-
unto affixed,
THOMAS L, BONFILS,
Clerk of the County Court.
By K. P. MACE,
‘Deputy.
Nicely furnished rooms for rent at
2084" Arapahoe street. Telephone
Champa 1338.
Brickler’s New Barber Shop is lo-
cated at 2208 Larimer street. Shave,
1G. Hair Cut, 25¢; Children, 15.
FOR SALE—Cheap; a large-sized pio-
ture of Paul Laurence Dunbar. En-
quire at the Colorado Statesman office
Singing and Work.
A man who sings at his work should
remember that he isn't the only one
on the job who may be entitled to hap
piness.— Atchison Globe.
The Next Big Thing
THE
ELKS’ PICNIC
Bloomfield Park
AUGUST 4th
All Welcome
| 5 \
Ql? S
| f 5 easons
iy GARMENT STORE Sales
| 925-16" ST.:—- OPP. JOSLINS
Spring and Summer Garment
| MUST BE SOLD NOW
Leon we place on sale about 100 Dresses—Gingham Dresses—Lawn
Dresses—Linene Dresses—Lingerie Dresses—among them are every de-
locus color and plain white. Regular prices were $4.50, $5, $6.75 and $7.50—
Your Choice $2.50
65 Silk and Wool Dresses—silks are taffeta and foulards—Wool Dresses are
munsveiling and fine Panama. Regular prices were $12.50 to $15.00.
Your Choice Now $G-95
A 98c Salle Sonaite wearing apparel. Wash Skirts, made of Indian
Head muslin, in white and black; Wash Petticoats, made of best quality of
seersucker gingham; House Dresses, made of gingham and percale; White
Petticoats, deep flounces of lace or embroidery; White, Pink and Blue Lawn
Slips, lace trimmed; Lingerie Waists, Madras Waists, Black Lawn Waists,
Middy and Shirt Style Waists—the greatest lot of garments ever shown at the
price. Not a garment worth less than $1.50; many of them worth $2.00—
Choice Now 9 8c
ALL CREAM and OTHER CLOTH .
SUITS and COATS NOW Half Price
SILVERSMITH & HILLIER, 925 Sixteenth St.
THE
TISHLER TAILORING
ESTABLISHMENT
WW ja
ie V A SAD \| aC
ge ON
1 deleeet ED. aN
|| See 1
\y a ~ | )
\ oS” WY
NN Kees] Zi
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
‘AN THE FOLLOWING PRICES, SMALL SIZED
BOTTLE,25¢ LARGE SIZED BOTTLE,SO+
THE GZONITED OX MARROW.
246 LAKE ST.DEPT. 30 cue
Meu. AGENTS "WANTED.
en ea Se ee tort ea ee a ee
|
SE
fet Beautiful Cut Glass Fern Dish,
Ue Se Silver plated lining, value
> Seay Lay $5.00; Sale, complete $3.50
Matt Green Vase, 12 inches high, value $2.00;
Sale, each $1.00
Indian Bust, 18 inches high, Value $2.00;
Sale, each $1.00
China Sugar and Cream Sets, Value $1.50;
Sale, per pair 75c
Indian Masks, Value $1.00; Sale, each 50c
a
Denver’s Largest Exclusive China Store
732-36 Fifteenth Street
=
| eet
eS
Seed Ape
ae
mae)
es
us :
=
McCRAY
Refrigerators
have such a vigorous
circulation of cold air
that a damp cloth will dry out in
one of them as readily as tho’ it
were placed in the sun on a
windy day.
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McCRAY
REFRIGERATORS — for Residences,
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Display Cases and Counters—COOLERS
For Markets and Storage—DUILT-TO-
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0. 1. GAMBREL, Manager.
‘i528 Court Place, Denver.
a , ee Yee ee
S S i ]
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50 different styles of fancy Parasols in which embroidered linens
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han ever. All leathers and fra bics. $3.00 PAIR
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the CAPIT
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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.
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WASHINGTON GOSSIP
Good Faker in the Government Museum
WASHINGTON.—Fakes made while you wait! The government ought to be ashamed of itself, but instead of that it retains a man especially to perpetrate them. It is no near-faking either, the government work is exacting and when the duplicate specimens are completed there is no telling which is the original and which the imitation. There are probably few men of similar calling in the world, and fewer still who are as clever in that line.
The National museum has dug up a son of Wizard Jack Hendley, who in his day was the premier imitation man of the United States, and they now keep young Will Hendley busy all the time making something look like something else. It seems to be a peculiar gift, and is valuable in a museum.
He works chiefly in plaster, making casts of anything and coloring them
Senate No Longer a Rich Man's Club
NO longer is the United States senate the leading millionaires' club of America. The number of millionaires in the upper branch of congress has been decimated, and the time may not be far distant when the senate will become known as the poor man's club.
No less than $50,000,000 worth of senators has been ripped from the upper branch by an operation as simple as the one that left Adam without one of his ribs. The late Democratic cyclone had much to do with it. From present indications there will have to be formed an association for the conservation of our millionaires in the Senate unless it is to become the poor man's club.
The death of Stephen B. Elkins of West Virginia carried $15,000,000 out of the senate. The retirement of Nelson W. Aldrich of Rhode Island, carierd $10,000,000 away. Four million went with Eugene Hale of Malne, when he made way for Senator Johnson, elected by the Democratic legislature. Chauncey M. Depew of New York, director in 32 different railroads, walked off with $7,000,000. It was his own and he had a right to walk off
Uncle Sam May Lose Valuable Lands
Uncle Sam May Lose Valuable Lands
TALK ABOUT YOUR GOLD BRICKS
JUST as the government is sitting in for the biggest legal game it ever played the discovery is made that it is bound to lose and the Southern Pacific railroad to win $500,000,000 if the play goes on.
The stakes are a great area of California's richest oil lands. They were granted to the railroad with a clause in the grant expressly excepting all mineral lands save those containing coal and iron. Most of these lands were patented to the grantee more than sixty years ago.
The joker in the situation is a special staute of limitations, slipped through congress in an act of March 3, 1891, and perfected by another act of March 2, 1896. The effects of these acts, as construed by the United States Supreme court, is absolutely to bar proceedings by the government to annul a patent of land to a land-grant railroad after six years from the issuance of the pat- with respect to its railroad company ago, and as to the tion. The speci tions cannot affect The area of these railroads a the Southern Pac mous total of 26, cipality carved for est sections of the
Many Leave Treasury for Other Lines
THE unofficial function of the treasury department as a training school for business life outside has been demonstrated with striking force within the last two or three months. No less than five of the most useful employees of the treasury have recently been graduated into business life.
The recent selection of Charles P. Montgomery, chief of customs, to take charge of the customs affairs of the American Sugar Refining company, is a case in point. Mr. Montgomery is an older man than others to be mentioned, and had been longer in the service, but his prize in the business world appears to be none the less substantial.
Only a few weeks ago George K. Leete, a clerk in the office of Assistant Secretary A. Platt Andrew, was made private secretary to Elbert H. Gary, chairman of the executive committee of the United States Steel corporation. A week or two ago Lawrence O. Murray, controller of the currency, received an offer of the presidency of the First National bank of Pittsburg, and declining that position because
so they look like the original, and he seems able to reproduce a counterfeit of anything from a raw oyster to a stone idol. There are a good many tricks in the trade that have been handed down from father to son, such as reproducing the bloom of a peach or scraping an apple to get the vegetable wax that will make the surface of a plaster apple look like the original fruit.
There are always new problems coming up in the curious art of making something out of something else. One of the features of the big ethnologic collection that is now being installed in the hall of the new museum building is a series of groups. These include the various families of man. There are Patagonians, Hawaiians, Eskimos, all sorts of Indians, a family of Igorrotes and altogether about 20 groups. Each of them is shown engaged in some characteristic tribal work. The Eskimos are loading a seal on a sledge.
If there is anything the museum cannot get in the original, from a rare trilobite to a Corinthian fresco, it can turn Hendley loose with the original, and he will make an imitation that would fool an expert.
YES - THAT IS SENATOR GOLD-BONDS - HE'S A PODR MAN - ONLY WORTH A COUPLE OF MILLIONS with it, but the senate In the aggregate became just that much poorer. Then there was John Kean of New Jersey, who while scarcely in the class of Elkins, was worth $5,000,000. When he left, another five-million iron man bit the dust, so far as the senate was concerned. In the broad, sweet fields of private life wandered Nathan B. Scott of West Virginia, with his $4,000,000. With him, along the rose-bordered byway, went James P. Taliaferro of Florida with $3,000,000. Hughes of Colorado died, removing another $2,000,000.
There was $50,000,000 right at one clip. The men elected to replace these millionaires are virtually poor men, or at least, what the world considers poor in these days of big fortunes. Watson of West Virginia, who replaced Elkins, is about the only millionaire in the batch of baby members He is worth $2,000,000.
ent. Until these acts are repealed, the government has not a chance on earth to get back its lands.
Announcement has been made that within a few weeks the government will file suit as to these lands with Special Assistant Attorney General Townsend in charge. The oil men of California are thoroughly aroused and alarmed by the discovery of the joker. They are advised by some of the ablest lawyers that the suits can result only in confirming the railroad's title and so they are appealing to Washington with all the force they can command to hold off the litigation until the "joker" act can be repealed. This they believe congress will not hesitate to do, once it knows the inwardness and gravity of the situation.
Suits already have been instituted with respect to lands patented to the railroad company less than six years ago, and as to these there is no question. The special statute of limitations cannot affect these proceedings. The area of land bestowed upon these railroads and now claimed by the Southern Pacific reaches the enormous total of 26,177,518 acres, a principality carved from one of the richest sections of the country.
of his desire to complete a series of reforms he had instituted, the place was given to O. L. Telling, chief of the national bank examiners. S. Hazen Bond, who, appropriately enough, had charge of the bonding of government employees in the department, has left that position to go with one of the great surety companies. Edward P. Currier, until within a month private secretary to Assistant Secretary of the Treasury James F. Curtis, is now second secretary to Vice-President Frank A. Vanderlip of the National City bank of New York.
Assistant secretaries of the treasury appear to be always in demand in mercantile life, especially if their service has taught them familiarity with fiscal matters.
WEST
Confectionery and
Baur's Ice Cream
Cafe in conection. We make a
Chops and Everything
and be
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on. We make a specialty of Fried and Everything good to eat. Try a and be convinced.
Soda Fountain Drinks and Chili serve
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and be convinced.
All the latest Soda Fountain Drinks and Chili served at all hours.
Also a fine grade of Cigars.
2741 We
Near F
PHONE CHAMPA 2188
10th Ave
H. HEUER,
RESTING PLACE F
2741 Welton Street
Near Five Points
PA 2188 DENV
Avenue H
H. HEUER, PROPRIETOR
PLACE FOR COLORE
2741 Welton Street
Near Five Points
PHONE CHAMPA 2188 DENVER, COLORADO
RESTING PLACE FOR COLORED GENTS MEALS AT ALL HOURS Pool Room in Connection
Gorner West 10th and O
Denver,
N. FE
TAI
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Is it the t
Just guess
The C
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tion. Our Spring and S
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shop.
Respe
At 10th and Osage, Near Bur-
Denver, Colorado
. FERRY
TAILOR
Do pays the high up-town re-
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The Customer
a chance and we will give you the s
Our Spring and Summer Styles are
pecs are moderate. We do all sewing
Corner West 10th end Osage, Near Burnham Shops Denver, Colorado
N. FERRY TAILOR
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Is it the tailor? No!
Just guess who it is---
The Customer
Give us a chance and we will give you the satisfaction. Our Spring and Summer Styles are all in. Our prices are moderate. We do all sewing in our shop.
N. Ferry 1905 Curtis Street
Standard B
Manufacturers
Soda Water, Min
Gingo
ALSO NEEF'S LAGER B
PHO
DID YOU
Neef Bro
It's made right,
None better ma
This is a Strictly
Hard Bottling
Manufacturers of all Kinds
Water, Mineral Water
Ginger Ale
NEEF'S LAGER BEER FOR FAMILY
PHONE 66.
DO YOU EVER T
'Bros.' Be
made right, and tastes
better made anywhere
a Strictly Colorado P
Standard Bottling Co.
Manufacturers of all Kinds
Soda Water, Mineral Waters and
Ginger Ale
ALSO NEEF'S LAGER BEER FOR FAMILY USE.
PHONE 66.
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.
Established in 1890. Telephone 3673
Eagle Bottling Works
190.
gle Bottling Wor
Established in 1890. Telephone 3673
A. D. SIMMONS, Proprietor.
Manufacturers of Soda Water, Ginger Ale, Mineral Water,
Root and Birch Beer
2836 WELTON ST., DENVER.
1712 LARIMER ST. TELEPHONE MAIN
N. Weisman's Loan Office
Money to Loan on *
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TRUNKS, VALISES, ETC.
Business Strictly Confidential. DENVER, CO
ST. TELEPHON
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EWERLY, WATCHES AND GUNS,
TRUNKS, VALISES, ETC.
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---
CHARLES S. WEST
BROS.
H Ice Cream Parlor
Johnston's Candies
specialty of Fried Chicken, Steaks,
good to eat. Try a meal
convinced.
inks and Chili served at all hours.
Hilton Street
Live Points
DENVER, COLORADO
venue Hotel
PROPRIETOR
FOR COLORED GENTS
MESSAGE, Near Burnham Shops
Colorado
ERRY
TALOR
high up-town rent?
sailor? No!
who it is---
customer
will give you the satisfac-
summer Styles are all in.
We do all sewing in our
setfully,
Bottling Co.
of all Kinds
General Waters and
Bever Ale
BEER FOR FAMILY USE.
E 66.
EVER TRY
os.' Beer?
and tastes right.
de anywhere and
Colorado Production
Telephone 3673
ing Works
TELEPHONE MAIN 2889.
Loan on *
HES AND GUNS, CLOTHING,
LISES, ETC.
DENVER, COLO.
Hours: 10 to 11 a. m., 2 to 5 and 7 to 9
p. m. and by Appointment.
Dr. J. H. P. Westbrook
COR. 21ST AND ARAPAHOE STS
Day Phone Main 1144.
Night Phone Champa 570.
Respectfully,
JOHN W. WEST
Always Staunch And True
The Denver Republican has always avoided the fallacies and knaveries of yellow journalism, and its steadily increasing Circulation proves conclusively that its policy of telling the plain Truth without exaggeration or misrepresentation, standing fast for the Right, is heartily approved with growing force by the intelligent Public to which it appeals.
To read it is a liberal Education, and the citizen who goes without it does a positive harm to himself, to his family, and to the community.
In no other way can the investment of 2½ cents per day for that is all The Republican costs any subscriber—bring such rich results in that Knowledge which is both Power and Pleasure. Information, instruction and entertainment fill its columns and it leaves a good taste in the mouth of the reader. It stands for Law and Order in the State—for Peace, Prosperity and Happiness in the Home. If you are not already enrolled among its splendid list of Patrons send on your subscription and give it a fair trial at 75 cents per month for Daily and Sunday.
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WARD AUCTION
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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
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Janet's Surrender
By JANE OSBORN
"Take me to the Pratt's, please," Janet told the driver that never-to-beforgotten evening as she stepped into a cab at the Beach Harbor station. "The old house on the bluff," she added by way of explanation. "The old house, miss?" he inquired in surprise. "Yes," Janet assured him and then sank back into her seat with a feeling of resignation. The last lap of her journey was in progress. She had come and it was too late to go back. After having emphatically refused to join the Pratt house-party she had impulsively changed her mind and had come by herself to Beach Harbor.
"It's all over, now," she thought. "I know he'll propose and of course I'll have to accept. I can't hold him off any longer! She was picturing to herself the certain joy her arrival would bring to George Pratt—and his complete surprise after her abrupt refusal. Janet peered anxiously through the trees as they approached the house, but there wasn't even a light to cheer her. She hurried from the carriage to the deserted veranda, and pulled the door knocker impatiently. She was not expected, to be sure, but someone should be at home. Slowly through the darkness within she heard footsteps. A servant, the cook obviously, opened the door narrowly and regarded her with curiosity.
"Ohi!" she said in slow surprise as Janet asked whether any member of the Pratt family was at home. The luggage which the driver had left beside Janet seemed to afford her some enlightment, and seizing the bags in her strong hands she led the way upstairs.
"But I want to see Miss Pratt or Mrs. Pratt," said Janet impatiently.
Mrs. Pratt, said Janet helped "Oh, yes," said the servant with difficulty. "Oh, yes!" Apparently these words were the extent of her English vocabulary and Janet followed whither she was led.
Once left in the dimly-lighted bedroom Janet stood surprised and disappointed with a feeling that somehow it was all George's fault. Suddenly her eyes caught sight of a probable clue to her difficulties in the mirror over the dressing table.
"Notice!" was printed in large masculine letters on the back of a folded sheet of paper. Janet seized it and felt a telling tale blush as she recognized George's writing.
"Of course the cook can't explain," it began abruptly. "She's a duffer. Glad you came even for the finish. We've gone over to the other house for a dance. If you aren't too done up to dress now join us over there. It's through the woods to the right and along the beach to the first house. There wasn't room for us all over here so we rented another cottage."
Surely the message was from George, but how unlike the George that Janet knew. How had he found out that she had decided to come? If he did know how unlike him not to wait for her!
With the color rising in her cheeks Janet re-read the brief note.
"If I want to come!" she said to herself. "Whatever else can I do. I can't spend the evening in this deserted house. It's an outrage and I wish I had never decided to come."
Janet was fumbling nervously through her wardrobe which she had hurriedly packed that morning with special reference to Georg^ Pratt's taste. She pulled out a confusion of ribbons, silks and laces and as she hurried dressed she was laying deep plans. It was clear to her now that George had written that curt note with a purpose. He was no doubt trying to humiliate her by a pretense at indifference, hoping in that way to make some impression on her stubborn affections. But Janet had decided never to relent under this treatment, in fact she was convinced now that she would never relent. She would have a good time, too, she promised herself and just show George how little she cared for him.
A quarter of an hour later Janet was ready, and throwing a light evening wrap over her shoulders she started down the starlit beach towards the woods as George had described. Her imagination was working overtime as she pictured to herself the utter indifference she would show George upon her arrival at the other house. Her indignation made her forget her loneliness until she reached the grove with its heavy growth of trees and underbrush.
A far-off cry of an owl recalled her to the discomfort of her task. It occurred to her that the hour was late for a solitary stroll through the woods, that her little slippers were already half full of sand and that she was really decidedly timid. But it was part of her plan to reach the dance, and she plodded on. She tripped against an unexpected root in the path and put her hand out for the inhospitable aid of a tree trunk. Then a ruffle of her own gown caught on a twig in the path and the owl increased her discomfort by another wierd cry. Still Janet plodded on until she was again caught by a branch that had fallen in the way.
"I'm just not going another step," she suddenly told herself. "It would just serve them right if something dreadful happened to me and it was all their fault!"
A tear of self-pity dimmed her eyes and Janet turned about and made her way back to the open beach. Then with increasing fear of the darkness and a hundred imagined dangers she hurried back to the only available protection—the deserted Pratt veranda. Frantically she knocked at the old knocker, but she could hear only the hollow sound of its vibration through the unlighted house. Now the darkness of the house seemed even more terrifying than the darkness of the woods and the only thing to do was to avoid either evil by sitting on the veranda and waiting. Some one, if only the cook, would return before very long.
For hours Janet sat disconsolately alone. Her prettiest gown was ruined, she was sure, without even having been admired. She was tired and crest-fallen. At length she buried her head in her hands and began to cry. There was a morbid sort of comfort in this.
Suddenly through the trees she heard sounds of voices. At first there was comfort in any sort of change, but as the voices came towards her she was filled with terror. The party turned in at the driveway and as she watched them swinging up toward her she fancied the return of a band of bandits or pirates after a day's plunder. There were a dozen of them she could see and not one girl.
She could see them distinctly now and in a second more they would be upon her, and would see her tearful eyes and torn gown. Quickly she jumped and ran to the end of the veranda.
"Hello there!" sounded a voice that seemed brutal. "Who saw a ghost?" It was quite obvious that she had been seen in her flight and as the young men gathered on the veranda she knew that a search was in progress. Breathless she slipped behind a chair at the far end of the porch. Here she crouched. In a few minutes more the voices had passed into the house. Apparently the ghost had not been worth pursuing.
It came upon Janet in a flash and in part it explained the difficulty. Obviously, only the men of the party were being housed here, and the girls quite likely were safe and serene in the new house through the woods. The idea of again attempting the woodland path to reach them was impossible and the thought of being discovered here was quite as revolting. Perhaps the note in the room which she had read wasn't written for her after all, and that would explain. A sob came into her throat and she stopped.
"Oh, I don't want to explain it to myself, she said half aloud. "I want to have some one help me."
Then she heard subdued footsteps on the veranda. Perhaps it was the cook and perhaps it was— "George!" she whispered cautiously. "George!"
"Who's there?" came George's investigating voice.
"G-George?" she tried again to make sure.
In a second the alarmed young man had thrown aside the chair and was crouching beside her in the darkness.
"Janet!" he exclaimed. "Where in the world did you come from?"
"Oh, I've been so lonesome and frightened, and miserable. And you were so disagreeable and thoughtless to leave me all alone!"
"But, Janet, dear," said George tenderly, as he wrapped her cloak about her shoulders. "I didn't know you were coming; you know you wrote us you couldn't."
"But that horrid, stiff old note you left for me," said Janet.
"That wasn't for you; it was for Bob Winters, who said he might come down at the last minute. Come, dear; there was room here so the girls are at the other house. I'll take you to them through the woods."
"I won't go unless you promise to explain everything," said Janet, still unreasonable.
"I won't take you a step unless you promise to listen—not just to that, Janet, but to something else I've wanted to tell you for a long time. You know, Janet."
For a minute George waited. Then he felt Janet's hand reaching for his, and heard her laugh.
"I'm afraid of the woods, alone, George. So I suppose I'll have to promise."
Seek Treasure in Sea.
The bell of the British frigate Lutine, which sank off the Dutch coast in 1800 with a cargo of coin and specie valued at $6,000,000, is the bad news bell at Lloyd's. Whenever news is received that a ship is overdue or when definite news comes of the loss of a ship the bell is rung by the caller. At its tolling all transactions are suspended until the news it heralds is read.
Many attempts, some partially successful, have been made to recover the golden cargo, of the Lutine. About $500,000 of the sum has been found, the bulk of it in 1880. It was in one of these attempts that the bell was found. Only a short time ago the wreck was again located and search for the treasure is now being made.
Manhattan's Wonderful Growth. During the last five years New York city has put $447,000,000 into buildings, and the promise is for a larger amount in the next five years.
xx
MANY CANADIAN MINES DE
STROYED—PROPERTY LOSS
MILLIONS.
REPORTS ARE VAGUE
DEATH LIST IN MICHIGAN FOREST
FIRE SMALL—PROPERTY
LOSS UTILITY
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
Toronto, Ont.-In the Porcupine district the loss of life from fires is known to be several hundred and the property loss will reach several million dollars.
Only three of the eighty-four employees of the West Dome mine have been accounted for and 200 miners, muckers, etc., in the Dome mine have been suffocated.
The mines burned include the Dome, North Dome, Preston, East Dome, Vipond, Foley O'Brien, Philadelphia, United Porcupine, Standard Imperial, West Dome and Success.
Among the dead are Robert Weiss, manager of the West Dome, and his wife and child.
The Philadelphia mine's loss is about $50,000; United Porcupine's loss, $20,000; Eldorado Porcupine, all buildings destroyed; Standard, about $40,000; Imperial about $35,000; Success, probably destroyed; West mines, about $75,000.
All reports give but a vague idea of the loss of life and property in Porcupine camp, which probably will total millions of dollars and hundreds of lives.
In four short hours the fire swept from the Standard mines through to the shores of Porcupine lake, where it destroyed South Porcupine, Pottsville and part of Golden City, as well as many small buildings along the lake front.
There the entrapped miners, cut off from escape, were forced to take to the shafts for safety and, penned in by flames, perished. This was notably true at Dome and West Dome mines. At the Preston, East Dome, an untimbered shaft gave shelter and none perished. The streets of South Porcupine are strewn with dead persons, horses, dogs and cattle. Along the mine roads are the charred bodies of those overcome trying to escape. Of the staff of 300 at the Dome, but few were saved, and at the West Dome but three out of eighty-four employees are known to be alive. Along the highway between East Dome and South Porcupine, over a comparatively open section, were found six charred bodies.
The miners saw dense clouds of smoke to the southwest, where the fires were raging. They gave little heed. Later a small blaze started in Lake View, of the Porcupine townsite, but it passed almost unnoticed because of the recent frequency of bush fires. The dense smoke clouds began to roll over the Porcupine district. Then the miners became alarmed and the camps took on unusual activity. Messengers were sent out and soon returned with warnings that the fire was traveling through the forest at rapid speed and was licking up many townships. Soon the fire had covered an area of twenty-five miles in length and two miles in width and was licking up the base line of Tisdale, sweeping over the Standard and Imperial mines at Delore, the Philadelphia, Shaw, Eldorado and United Mines in southern Whitney.
Hundreds fled before the flames, but the dense clouds of smoke hung low over the land and made progress difficult. Many fell exhausted before the fire as it swept over South Porcupine. The frame buildings burned fiercely. Twenty minutes after the flames struck the outskirts the town was in ruins. All who escaped the flames made for the water, where all sorts of water craft—launches, canoes, scows and skiffs—were pressed into service. Women and children were first hurried into the small boats and started off for Pottsville and Golden City, where they were temporarily safe from the flames.
Detroit, Mich.—With food at their disposal and tents provided for shelter, the thousand or more homeless survivors of fire-swept Au Sable and Oscoda breathed easier.
The known dead remain three in number, with Samuel Rosenthal, a tailor, the only one identified. The bodies of the others are charred beyond recognition. The property loss is heavy.
Boy, Aged 10, Forges Checks.
Long Beach, Cal.-George Webster, aged 10, barefooted and freckle-faced, was arrested here on a charge of forgery. The police say he admitted passing three forged checks for a total of $12 during the last month. He had offered a fourth check.
Blddeford, Me.-Fire practically wiped out South Waterboro. Hotels, railroad station, all the stores and more than forty dwellings are in ruins.
SPECIAL ROUND-TRIP EXCURSION FARES TO CALIFORNIA POINTS AND THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST
From Main Line Colorado Points on the
The Denver
"The
$45.00 to San F
$60.00 to San Fra
one way via Portla
$45.00 to Portla
Victoria and Vanc
Tickets on sale
turn Limit Septem
Through Electr
Cars and Electrica
Denver and San F
For full particu
Agent, or address
The Denver & Rio Grande Rail
"The Scenic Line of the World"
$45.00 to San Francisco, Los Angeles and San D
0.00 to San Francisco, Los Angeles and San D
e way via Portland or Seattle.
$45.00 to Portland, Ore , Seattle and Tacoma, W
Victoria and Vancouver, B. C.
Tickets on sale June 10th to 22nd inc., 1911.
San Limit September 15th 1911.
Through Electric-Lighted Pullman Observation
Cars and Electric-Lighted Tourist Sleeping Car
Denver and San Francisco via Rio Grande—Western
For full particulars, reservations, etc., call on Ri
gent, or address
The Denver & Rio Grande Railroad, "The Scenic Line of the World"
$45.00 to San Francisco, Los Angeles and San Diego, Cal.
$60.00 to San Francisco, Los Angeles and San Diego, Cal., one way via Portland or Seattle.
$45.00 to Portland, Ore, Seattle and Tacoma, Wash., and Victoria and Vancouver, B. C.
Tickets on sale June 10th to 22nd inc., 1911. Final Return Limit September 15th 1911.
Through Electric-Lighted Pullman Observation Sleeping Cars and Electric-Lighted Tourist Sleeping Cars between Denver and San Francisco via Rio Grande—Western Pacific.
For full particulars, reservations, etc., call on Rio Grande Agent, or address
Denver
Private Dining Room.
The Newport A
Cafe and Lunch
Richard Frazier and Tom
SHORT ORDERS AT ALI
Arapahoe Street.
YOU WILL LIKE OUR
Train Servi
BETWEEN
Denver, Colorado Springs, Cripple C
Pueblo and Trinidad
Particularly on account of its frequency promptn
pleasing accommodations.
OCK SIGNALS. BALLASTED TRACK DINING
In Connection
There Are Also
Nicely
Furnished
Rooms
And the Old
Reliable
Newport Thirst
Parlors
1841-45 Arapahoe Street
YOU
Trai
Denver, Colo
Pue
Particularly on
BLOCK SIGNAL
In Connection
There Are Also
Nicely
Furnished
Rooms
And the Old
Reliable
Newport Thirst
Parlors
Private Dining Room. Phone, Main 7413.
The
Newport Annex
Cafe and Lunch Room
Richard Frazier and Tom Lewis, Props.
SHORT ORDERS AT ALL HOURS.
1841-45 Arapahoe Street. DENVER, COLB.
YOU WILL LIKE OUR Train Service
Denver, Colorado Springs, Cripple Creek, Dueblo and Trinidad
The Colorado and Southern Railway.
MONA
THE
MONARCH LIQUOR
COMPANY
MONARCH LIQUOR COMPANY
TELEPHONE
CHAMPA 1231
IMPORTED &
D. W. REEVES, Ma
FULL
Five Po
PHONE CHAMPA 4
IMPORTED & DOMESTIC WINES & LIC
W. REEVES, Manager. W. P. JONES,
FULL LINE OF CIGARS AND TOBACCO.
ive Points Barber S
2727 WELTON STREET.
ONE CHAMPA 471. DENV
D. W. REEVES, Manager. W. P. JONES, Proprietor. FULL LINE OF CIGARS AND TOBACCO.
DENVER & RIO GRANDER RR
SCENIO BIRK
WORLD
Rio Grande Railroad,
"Line of the World"
Los Angeles and San Diego, Cal.
Los Angeles and San Diego, Cal.,
Seattle.
Seattle and Tacoma, Wash., and
C.
h to 22nd inc., 1911. Final Re-
1911.
Pullman Observation Sleeping
Tourist Sleeping Cars between
via Rio Grande—Western Pacific.
Invations, etc., call on Rio Grande
Frank A. Wadleigh,
General Passenger Agent,
State Dining Room. Phone, Main 741
The
Newport Annex
Life and Lunch Room
Richard Frazier and Tom Lewis, Props.
SHORT ORDERS AT ALL HOURS.
DENVER, COL
ALL LIKE OUR
Service
BETWEEN
Springs, Cripple Creek,
and Trinidad
of its frequency promptness and
accomodations.
ASTED TRACK DINING CARS.
BETWEEN
THE
H LIQUOR
MPANY
ESTIC WINES & LIQUORS
W. P. JONES, Proprietor.
CIGARS AND TOBACCO.
Barber Shop
LTON STREET.
DENVER, COLO.
Denver, Colorado.
COLORADO
AND
SOUTHERN
1516
COURT PLACE
_ THE COLORADO STATESMAN’S
FIFTEENTH ANNUAL
===PICNIc= =
BLOOMFIELD PARK
Wednesday, August 16, 1911
This picnic will eclipse all other outing events to be offered the
people of Denver and Surrouning Country this year. The past
is a criterion for the future, for the great popularity of our An-
nual Holiday is as wide as the state in which we live. The peo-
ple will take a day off to enjoy themselves with us this year, as
they have done in the past, and we will provide for them a bet-
ter entertainment and a happier time.
Bloomfield Park Is Denver’s
Ideal Picnic Grounds
It combines numerous advantages over any other place in the
city or in the state. It embraces a large, beautiful lake and a
fine, large grove.
In this cool and beautiful resort, where enjoyment, recreation
are available to all, we will forget for a day the toils and worries
of every-day surroundings, renew social acquaintances, recall
again the happy privileges of other days, and all will be richly
benefitted by the new pleasures which we shall find.
The best music obtainable will help to make the day and even-
ing pass like a magic dream. Come yourself and bring your
friends and treat them to the beauties of this unequaled place.
The Day’s Attractions
Will Consist of
OUTDOOR SPORTS ;
BOATING i
BOWLING ALLEY
And Many Other Recreations
PRIVATE BOOTHS FOR
SPECIAL PARTIES
The COLORADO STATES.
MAN, its staff, employes and
friends will do everything to
make the day the most enjoya-
ble one of all the year.
ENTY-FIVE CTS.
ny Line--Five Minute Service
Y LATE