Colorado Statesman
Saturday, September 23, 1911
Denver, Colorado
Page text (machine-generated)
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
THE JOURNAL OF THE WEST.
LABOR SHALL BE FREE
RAGE COUNTRY PARTY
Ethiopian First Convert
Problem of Negro Race May be Solved in but one way. Give him a Chance with other Races. Black Men have taken places of Trust and Danger.
VOL. XVIII.
Ethiopia First
Problem of Negro Race May
Give him a Chance with
have taken places o
A Negro was the first Gentile
convert to Christianity, according
to Rev. Charles F. Seitter, pastor
of the Cameron Methodist church,
who disputes the claim that one,
Capt. Cornelius, was the first con-
vert.
The Negro who was the first convert, Dr. Seitter told his congregation last Sunday morning, was the treasurer of the Ethiopians who was converted by Symean, also a Negro. Dr. Seitter's sermon dealt with his Ethiopian secretary of the treasury and his modern relatives, making a plea for the Negro today. He said, in part:
"Ethiopia's secretary of the treasury and his modern relatives." That was a distinguished group of men that stood at the head of the great church at Antioch, the Chicago of the East, in the first century. There was Lucins of Cyrene; Manaen, the foster-brother of Herod; Barnabas, the Demosthenes of the early preachers, and greatest of all, Saul of Tarsus, the profound theologian, the Christian statesman, the fearless ambassador, and the resistless evangelist.
Black Man First Convert
Black Man First Convert
Made In Tour To South
"There was another whom Luke considered strong enough to be mentioned along with these great men—his name was Symeon, called Niger because he was a colored gentleman. And you will remember that God called Phillip out of a great revival campaign in Samaria and told him to go south to the road that leads from Jerusalem to Gaza. When he arrived he saw a man reading Isaiah as he rode. God prompted him to speak to the reader, whom he found to be ready to receive Christ. That man was a black man and was treasurer of Ethiopia. Now it is commonly stated Capt. Cornelius was the first Gentile convert to Christianity of which we have record. Not so. This same colored secretary of the treasury has that honor. And the relatives of this colored gentleman at least relatives in color, have been doing business since that time. If we may believe the remarks of a distinguished colored citizen of our land it was a black man who was first to shed his blood in behalf of American Independence.
"From the rice swamps and cot
ton fields our dusky brothers responded 100,000 to the call of Lincoln for defenders of the Union. It was a black man that planted the Stars and Stripes on the Spanish fort July 4, in that was for humanity, the Spanish American war. It was black Harry Evans who, in the early days of Methodism in America, played so conspicuous a part, being liked as a preacher better than Bishop Asbury, whose servant and traveling companion he was. Taking it all in all, our gentlemen of color have not made so bad a showing, considering their chances.
"But the problem is what to do with the Negro. He is here. We brought him. He is here to stay, I reckon. Some have suggested segregation. Please tell us how. Some have suggested extermination. A certain senatorial aspirant, who recently announced himself as the 'white hope,' favors that programme apparently.
Settle Negro Question By
But, really, most of us are not ready to exterminate 11,000,000 of people. This colored brother of ours is a problem. We cannot transport, segregate or exterminate him. What can we do with him? Make a man of him. This many think impossible. But if he was the first Gentile convert; if he was of enough importance in the church at Antioch to be mentioned as one of its five most influential men; if he was the first to shed his blood in behalf of American liberty; if he showed conspicuous courage in that terrible struggle of the 60s; if he was the first to plant Old Glory on the Spanish fort; if, as a preacher, he was preferred before three bishops; if he was the first to successfully stitch a laceration in the human heart; if in our republic today there is no more distinguished citizen than Booker T. Washington, it would seem that the suggestion to make a man of him were not without promise of success, and it would save the republic. The Methodist Episcopal church with its 24 schools located in strategic points throughout the black belt of the South is working at this job. Eight thousand black young people were in our schools last year, being instructed in head, hand and heart. They are learn.
ing to be the leaders of their race, teachers, farmers, mechanics, Christian workers. Last year our Clark university held a farmers' institute, attended by 162 Negro farmers, 102 of whom owned their own farms. This university also held farmers' in 10 counties of Alabama and the superintendent addressed mass meeting in 38 counties. Both head and hand are being trained. But it has been discovered that heart training is also necessary, and so well has this been achieved that out of the 13,000 graduates that have gone out from our 24 schools not one has ever been arrested and charged with a crime for which he should have received punishment. The Negro has capacity for achieving manhood."—Denver Republican.
JOE GANS LEADER IN NUMBER OF VICTORIES BY KNOCKOUT.
Chicago, Sept. 21.—Critics have raved about the horrors imparted by a punch from the fist of a Sullivan, a Walcott, a Ketchel or a Fitzsimmons, but ( although this quartet of big fellows had the knock that concludes the show long before its regular time, they did not hurl over the final dose with the unceasing consistency of Joe Gans, the little fighter now dead.
A year ago the former champ, but then a physical wreck, was brought from the Arizona wilds to Baltimore in the express car of a fast mail train. He was on his way to Baltimore to die, and he wanted to draw his last breath in the presence of his relatives. His attendants on the train feared lest he should expire before he got to his home town. He was but the shadow of a man, tuberculosis having done its work, and his body had weakened until breath came in quick, short gasps. But he reached Baltimore alive and passed away there soon after his ar rival.
That ghastly object with hollow cheeks and sunken eyes had once been Joe Gans, the "old master" of the lightweights, and the champion knock-out of all time.
Fifty-Two Down for Count.
Gans put more men down for ten seconds than any other battler that ever waltzed into a ring. Fifty-two of 'em in all. A record that may stand for all time. Of course he had plenty of time in which to build up the morgue, for he was fighting eighteen years. And oftener than that old patriarch, Bob Fitzsimmons.
Many of Gans' knock-outs came during his early career, as is frequently the case. Nearly every boy who amounts to anything, barring those who are especially favored by nature, was a knockerout in the days of youth and inexperience where the first punch generally is a forecast of the end.
Gans, however, not only dropped his opponents in the starting stage, but he kept it up through the years, a fact that would tend to show that the great Negro was a methodical ringster and always had some certain blow in view after he had sized up the man in front of him.
Here is the Baltimoreman's record of "certaints" during his life in the ring: 1891-2-3-4, 8; 1895, 4; 1896, 5; 1897, 3; 1899, 2; 1900, 7; 1901, 5; 1902, 9; 1903, 3; 1904 and 1905, 0; 1906, 1; 1907, 2; 1908, 3.
While the Boston terror, Sam Langford, is battering everybody against the ropes, one will be surprised to learn that Samuel does not rank next to Gans as a cruel hitter. Tommy Ryan, and not Langford, had the next biggest list of dead ones attached to his catalogue. The ex-middleweight and welterweight champion tossed forty-four bodies upon the mat in his time. Langford's record is forty, and he comes third.
For the great length of his ring existence, Stanley Ketchel might be rated as the greatest man killer, but there are no figures from which to build an argument. There's no telling what he might have done had destiny shaped another course for him or if he had lived. Ketchel had thirty knuckouts in seven years.
Philadelphia Jack O'Brien, that wise boxed of Slowtown, who tried to turn back the hands of the clock recently and was given a severe beating for his lack of prudence, amassed thirty-eight decisive victories while in activity.
ALBUQ RQUE NEWS
Mis. Johnny Cornell left Saturday for Denver, where she will transact some important business. The 30th annual New Mexico Fair will be held Oct. 9-14, 1911. The crowds will be here, many are going to buy homes and locate in our city. The Choral Club is improving very fast, under the instructions of Prof. A. R. Murry. Rev. J. W. Rodgers, former pastor of the A. M. E. church of this city was transferred to the Colorado Annual Conference.
Rev. T. W. Jackson, formerly of Jacksonville, Fla., was appointed to pastor A. M. E. Grant chapel of this city for the ensuing year. We trust he may have a successful year. His initial sermon last Sunday pleased his large audience. Mrs. E. N. Reynolds gave a surprise party and house warming last week in honor of her mother, Mrs. H. E. Ellsworth at the latters new residence. Among those present were: Prof. J. B. Lott and wife, Mr. and Mrs. John Clars Mr. and Mrs. E. N. Reynolds, Mr. and Mrs. T. O. Mason, Misses Francis and Katie Ellsworth, Mrs. Rebecca Comby, Miss R. Lott, Mrs. J. W. Rodgers, Mrs. George Hutchison and Mr. Jeff Click. After refreshments were served short speeches were made by Prof. J. B. Lott and Mrs. Lott, Mrs. T. O. Mason and ye correspondent, which was much enjoyed by their hearers. At a suitable hour the jolly crowd departed for their homes, many leaving nice presents for the hostess.
The election of our first state and county officers is causing politics to warm up, considerable. This being our first opportunity to elect our own officers and we expect some very inteaesting happenings to take place. We trust that the Negro will use every effort to elect the straight Republican ticket, for the first legislature has the privilege of proposing new amendments to the constitution. We are in hopes that the legislature will be Republican.
RACE NEWS
New Orleans, La., Sept. 19. William Morris, a Negro, says a Pullman porter averages $100 a month in tips. He makes the assertion in a suit filed here yesterday in the United States circuit court. Morris is suing the Pullman company and the Southern Pacific railroad for $5,000 damages because of a railroad accident. At the time of the smashup, Morris, so says the petition, drew $40 a month as porter.
Washington, Sept. 10.—Major John R. Lynch, the ranking colored officer of the army, and the only man of his race holding a staff commission, retired today on account of age. He was appointed to pay corps at the outbreak of the Spanish War by President McKinley, serving in Cuba and the Phillipines with credit. Major Lych was born in Mississippi and served five terms in the House of Representatives. He also was an auditor of the Treasury from 1889 to 1893.
Richmond, Va., Sept. 12. Grand Master Griffin and the newly elected officers of the Grand Fountain, United Order of True Reformers, have entered into their work of rehabilitating the order with a spirit of optimism and a determination of purpose that has instilled in the members confidence and a feeling that before many months the order once more will be on solid footing. The members of the True Reformers are also encouraged by the friendly attitude of the Bureau of Insurance, which has made it known that the state official will do everything in their power to aid the new officials to improve conditions. An effort will soon be made by the order to pay off death claims.
Paris, Sept. 7.—Jack Johnson expects to retire from the ring unwhipped. Discussing his plans, he declared that after he had disposed of all the contenders for the title. He said: "There is absolutely no present prospect of anybody ever licking me. I am going to England next month to polish off Bombardier Wells. Then I am going with MeIntosh to Australia, where I will both Sam McVey and Sam Langford. That will clean up all of the men who think they have a chance with me. After that I will keep all of my theatrical engagements, which will cover another year. "At the end of that time I will come back to Paris, announce my retirement from the
NO 2
ring, and open a big gymnasium. I will pick half dozen of the next best men in the world then, and let them fight for the title in France, England, America and Australia. To make it interesting, I will buy a big championship belt, and will act as referee myself.
Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 11.—The Atlanta Mutual Insurance Association furnishes a most remarkable instance of racial co-operation and progress in the gigantic strides it has made in the last few years. Organized less than ten years ago with one branch office, two agents and $50.00 worth of insurance outstanding, it now operates in three States, namely: Georgia, Alabama and Kentucky; boasts of 85,000 satisfied policy holders; has placed more than a million dollars worth of insurance in colored homes, and employs more than 600 men and women. It has the distinction of being the first colored company admitted to do business in the State of Kentucky and the further distinction of having its president sign a bank check for the purchase of bonds for a larger amount than any colored man had ever before drawn. Approved business methods alone are used and the results are a high state of efficiency. The officers are: A. F. Herndon, President; E. W. Howell, Secretary, and T. K. Gibson, General Manager.
Pittsbury, Pa., Sept. 14.—Showing gross receipts of $187,753.77 for the fiscal year ending August 31, 1911, and at the same time reporting 309,559 letters written to various Baptist Sunday schools throughout the United States, Rev. R. H. Boyd, Secretary of the National Baptist Publishing Board of Nashville Tenn., concluded his two splendid reports this afternoon before the National Baptist Convention in session in this city. Dr. Boyd declared in his remarks before this convention, which is reputed to be the largest organized religious body in the world, that unless his people exercised more self-dependence, which will make them a progressive and industrious people, and help teach their posterity that "a well man needs no crutches," they were not going to make as rapid strides in the future as they had in the past. He spoke particularly from a denominational point of view, as he said he represented the future churches among two and one-half million Negro Baptists.
oe he
WASHING ssi
Creat Expense of White House Upkeep
Queer Features of the New Game Laws
Two “Widows” of Soldier File Claims
Army is Given Praise for Temperance
rey |
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$599°° ay ie
Y= ie
VE YA i
; i
eee than $50,000
was spent on the White House In
the last fiscal year by the government
in fuel, light and repairs, according to
the annual report of Col. Spencer
Cosby, The executive mansion ts the
principal! building of the department
of public buildings and grounds, and
is practically the only building of any
size that comes directly under the
head of the superintendent of public
buildings and grounds.
{nm the year repairs were made to
elevators, vestibule, and roof, and the
general appearance of the building
was kept up. To do this required the
services of about 100 men, A new sys.
tem of lightning protection was in.
stalled in July, 1910, the work being
done under contract. The old zinc
and lead rods were removed from the
roof and new copper cable was con-
mected to 100 points on the roof of the
house. The rods and points were
mechanically connected to the house.
A silver closet, with double steel
doors and a complete set of shelves
eon seme laws for 1911 as com-
piled by the Biological Survey of
the Department of Agriculture make
interesting and sometimes odd read-
ing. There {s a demand for the in-
formation they contain which it is
laborious to supply in a compendious
form. The volume of the game legis-
lation of 1911 so exceeded that of any
preceding year that even to note
changes in the laws is quite an under-
taking. All but eight of the states put
new game laws on the statute books
this year.
Delaware forbade the use of dogs
wearing bells or other nolse producing
devices in wild fowl shooting, North
Dakota the use of automobiles in
duck shooting, and Michigan the em-
ployment of guinea pigs in hunting
rabbits. New Hampshire has prohib-
ited “the cefentific collecting” of birds,
Tennessee 1s one of those southern
states that have come under the be-
nign influence of the Audubon soclety.
It has made the sale or shipment of
robins a misdemeanor, Michigan
seems to have removed all protection
of deer in several counties; the edi-
tors of “Game Laws for 1911” think
ft was not the design of the lawmak-
bert Ataue Sa
a B
th he I
1
T WO women, each claiming to be his
widow, and both lving in Los An-
geles, Cal, have filed claims through
for indemnity for the murder of Dr.
Arthur Livingston Wilson Foster, at
Alamo, Mexico, in June. One of the
women, Mrs. A. L. W. Foster, bas filed
her claim through Dr. Foster's step
father, Colonel Foster of Newark, N.
J. The other, Mrs, Elizabeth L. Woods,
has lodged her claim through her at-
torney, B. BE. Kirk, for $100,000.
Mrs. A, W. L. Foster claims she
was married to Dr. Foster shortly
after he graduated from Hahnemann
college, in Philadelphia, and that they
lived together until 1904, when they
went to California, There Dr. Foster
met Mrs. Woods and spent some time
with her, though he never sought a
divorce and was never legally married
to the woman. Later he returned
Te standard of temperance In the
army, for both officers and men,
is exceptionally high, and Is not ex-
ceeded in the other walks of life, un:
less in the church and among railroad
employes,” says Major General Fred:
erick D. Grant in a report to the War
Department. “While the soldier makes
a favorable showing In this connec:
tion, {n comparison with men in other
vocations, General Grant, as command:
er of the department of the east dur-
ing the last fiscal year, found never-
theless that the chief cause of court-
martial trials was Indulgence In alco-
holfc drinks. ‘There was a remark-
able decrease, be adds, in the number
of trials by military courts in the de-
partment last year as compared with
the previous 12 months.
‘Army surgeons are urging the war
department to act with greater
promptness in discharging soldiers for
physical disability, instead of trying
to patch up worthless men for duty
which they cannot properly perform.
‘Phe chief surgeon of the department
‘of the east has called attention to
some specific Instances where soldiers
transferred to recruiting depots with
and cupboards, was built in one end
of the storeroom on the ground floor.
A new telephone system was installed,
and the furniture throughout the
house was repainted or rubbed down
while the president was at Beverly.
Not the least part of the work of the
office of public buildings and grounds
was the part taken in social functions.
During the year the office worked on
four state dinners, ten small dinners,
four musicales, two dances, two ballg,
four garden parties, and the presi-
dent's silver wedding anniversary. At
each of these functions the office was
required to see that proper decora-
tions were in order and to provide ad-
ditional help to carry the affair to a
success.
Five hundred dollars -was paid for
telegraph connections between the
executive offices and the Capitol and
the public printing office. The monu-
ment and wharf at Wakefield, Va.. the
birthplace of George Washington, also
come under the head of public build-
ings and grounds, and a watchman !s
employed the year round to see that
the grounds are kept in repair. Re-
pairs tq the grounds during the year
cost silas. The house where Abra-
ham Lincoln died, in Tenth street, be-
tween E and F street northwest, also
{s kept up by the government, and
$182.34 was expended during the fiscal
\eemm hel raaetiae®
. Y Gate g OF
Yf saws
Yr:
{3 ai
ers and that a mistake crept into the
game code.
Vermont pleased the sportsmen
when {t barred claims of damages to
the crops of landowners who “post”
thetr property. Vermont also abol-
ished the alien license, and in West
Virginia and Delaware the resident
need no longer take out a license to
hunt any game, It is astonishing to
learn by inference that Massachusetts
expects to. number wild turkeys
among its game birds. They are grow-
ing very scarce, even in Virginia. Ne-
braska now allows boys under 18 to
hunt without a license {f accompanied
by parent or guardian. Idaho exempts
veterans of the Civil war from “ll
cense requirements.” A bear license
is now necessary in Wyoming. It bas
been the fashion to pay a Nberat boun-
Re raniuvcintarnelt:
home and Hved with his wife and two
danghters until he left for Ensenada,
Lower Calffornia,
On the trip that ended In his mur.
der, the Woods woman, it 1s under.
stood, followed him into Mexico and
was living with him near Alamo at
the time he and three other Amer.
feans were slain in a most heartless
manner, Until the time of the murder
and the filing of double claims Dr.
Foster's relatives in the east knew
nothing of the kind of life he was lead:
ing in the west.
‘The summary arrest and almost Im:
mediate killing of Dr. Foster and
three other Americans named Duphois,
Carroll and Patrick Brennan, has led
to a situation that presages a bitter
fight in Washington. Dr. Foster and
the three other Americans were tn
prison at Alamo and the doctor was
compelled to treat hu wounded
brought to that city. Among others he
dressed the wounds of Gen. Simon
Berthold, of the rebel army. Later he
was ordered shot by General Verga
‘and was killed while riding on horse
back to what he was told was another
prison. All four men were shot In
back and thrown Into a shallow hole
‘and covered with rubbish.
see (THE STANDARD
i Para) JOF TEMPERANCE
Rls A IN THE ARMY IS
| | NC
pe we
a view to their discharge had been
held under observation and treatment
for several months.
“One case,” he says, “diagnosed
‘neuritis’ remained 218 days; another
‘ununited fracture, 161 days; still an-
other ‘hammer toes,’ 128 days. When
it is recalled that these men were
probably on sick report at their posts
an average of 90 days before being
recommended for discharge, it {8 rea-
sonable to estimate that the govern-
ment lost by the present plan with
these cases alone the equivalent of
the services of an effective soldier for
more than an entire enlistment.
“The army {s neither an eleemoosy-
nary Institution nor a place for the
physically Inefficient, and such should
not be Kept in it to the exclusion of
fit soldiers.”
IN COLO. SPRINGS
TWO ENTIRE FAMILIES, EXCEPT
ING ONE, VICTIMS OF
FIEND WITH AX.
HUSBAND OF ONE MURDERED
WOMAN HELD ON Sus-
PICION.
Wontern Newspaper Union News Service
~ Cojorado Springs. — 1 wo families,
‘six persons, were murdered while
they slept in their homes in Colorado
“Springs. ‘The deed was cither that of
| vwsedonn or sit akan sat 88
crime is shrouded in the deepest mys-
‘tery and all theories are only guess
work, It is supposed the crime was
committed Sunday night and that for
several days the victims lay in the
charel houses. ‘The six victims of
the terrible crime, which was com-
mitted with an ax, are:
Mrs. Alice May Burnham, wife of A.
J. Burnham, cook at the Modern
Woodmen sanitarium; their two chil-
dren, Alice, aged six years, and John,
aegd three years; Henry F. Wayne, a
consumptive, until recently a -patient
at the Woodmen sanitarium; Mrs.
Henry F. Wayne, Wayne's wife of
three years, and their one-year-old
baby girl.
Mrs. Nettie Ruth, sister of Mrs,
Burnham, and Miss Anna Merritt, a
neighbor, discovered the bodies. Not
until the officers had investigated at
the Burnham house was it discovered
that a similar wholesale slaughter
had taken place in the Wayne cottage
next door,
Miss Merritt collapsed at sight of
the bodies and is suffering from a se-
vere heart attack,
A. J. Burnham, husband of one of
the murdered women, has been taken
into custody pending an investigation.
The police have no information now
to fix the crime on anyone.
Miss Merritt, who was a near friend
of Mrs. Burnham, called with Mrs.
Ruth at the Burnham house early in
the afternoon. Getting no response to
their knocks, Mrs. Ruth, it is said,
opened a rear door with the key of
her own house, Entering, they were
Staggered by an odor coming from a
front room, On investigation they
found Mrs. Burnham and her two
children lying on the bed in the front
room. ‘The bedclothing was saturated
with blood. :
Mrs, F. B, Campbell, one of the
neighbors, called the attention of }he
officers to the deserted appearance of
the Wayne cottage with its dravn
shades and Sergeant J. H. Springer
and Detective Tom Gavin forced an
entrance,
‘They found the three members of
the Wayne family dead in one bed,
their heads having been split with an
ax, as were those of the Burnham fam-
ily, while they slept.
‘That the murderer tried to set fire
to the Burnham home with a view to
destroying the bodies of the three yic-
tims became evident upon investiga-
tion.
A. J. Burnham, husband of Mrs.
Alice May Burnham, one of the wom-
en murdered, who is held on suspi-
cion, is in his forties. He came to Col-
orado several years ago from his for-
mer home in Michigan, it is thought,
for his health, Six years ago he was
married to Alice May Hill, then twen-
ty years old.
‘The position of the bodies in both
houses would indicate that the victims
had not a chance to make a strug-
gle. In the Burnham home, Mrs.
Burnham lay on the north side of the
bed with the little boy next to her.
Apparently the girl had gotten away
from her pillow, as her body lay slight-
ly across that of her mother and to-
wards the foot of the bed.
‘The circumstances at the Wayne
house were similar, even to the minut-
est detail. ‘The family occupied one
bed in the front room, and the mur-
derer, after completing his work,
carefully covered the bodies, even the
faces of his victims, with the bed-
clothes. So carefully was this detail
attended to at the Burnham home
that articles of underclothing, a little
‘coat belonging to the girl, and the
everyday clothing of the victims were
piled on the beds and were saturated
with their blood.
‘The district attorney's force Is
working with the sheriff's office and
police. Reports that Burnham had
confessed were disproved.
‘That a confession is not unexpected
was admitted, Meanwhile Burnham's
family relations are being investigated
and the wires are working between
here and the place from which young
Wayne and his girl wife came.
ty) bi See ee eer
Louisville, Ky.— Seven-year-old Al-
bert Kittler, badly burned by cinders
and nearly exhausted, was taken from
the “blind baggage” of a passenger
train here after tramping all the way
from St. Louis. He came in on a fast
train.
Postoffice Robbed of $10,000.
Sioux Falls, S. D.—A $10,000 pack-
age of currency mysteriously disap-
peared from the Sioux Falls postot
fice and has not yet been recovered.
TACTAL PRIDE
fs Urged by Booker T, Wash-
Ington,
PATRONIZE RACIAL TRADE
PLEADS WITH ORGANIZATION TO
TEACH MEMBERS OF RACE
SELF CONTROL.
crowd of 1,000 persons, the address be-
ing delivered in connection with the
encampment of ths colored Knights of
Pythias, He took the position that
the colored man should give the col-
ored man the preference in business,
Just as the white man gives the white
man the preference.
He urged the colored people to en-
courage thrift, industry and honesty
in thelr everyday life, and said that
while the colored people labor under
many handicaps and disadvantages in
this country they ought to turn these
handicaps to thelr own advantage and
work out the problems that confront
them.
| Mr. Wathington was introduced by
|B. G. Tirdrington, Indiana grand chan-
| cellor of the Knights of Pythias, who
| referred to him as the greatest living
| negro and the leader of the negro race.
| Mr. Washington safd in part:
“At the present time there are cer
tain functions which a fraternal or-
ganization can perform for the race at-
|ter a manner that no other body can
do, One of the functions of this organ-
ization 1s to teach pride of race, to
| teach our people to have faith in them-
| selves. No race of people can prosper
| unless that race {s proud of itself,
proud of {ts past and of {ts present.
|I have no sympathy or patience with
any black man of America who 1s
not proud of the fact that he is an
American negro, There are in some
| parts of the country, I am sorry to say,
| some colored people who are so weak
and shortsighted that they would pre-
|fer to be third-rate white people rath-
er than first-rate colored people. The
Knights of Pythias teach us by pre-
"cept and by example that there Is as
| much glory in being a first-class col-
|ored man as in being a first-class white
man.
“We are as a nation within a na-
tion in this country, There are more
| black people in the United States than
the entire population of Canada. The
number of black people in this country
is greater than the total population of
Norway, Sweden and Switzerland. The
number is greater than the entire pop-
ulation of Mexico, We should be proud
of our race. Just as the Englishman,
as the Frenchman, the German and the
Irishman are proud of their races, so
should we be proud of our race.
“We should be proud to belong to
| «race that has a struggle ahead, and
| which has a problem for every day in
| the year, History shows that when a
| race has no struggle and no problem
to solve {t finally disappears.
“Whenever you get two black men
and two white men together you have
a race problem.
“While we should be the last to
draw the color line, at the same time
we should see to {t that in every wise
and legitimate way our people are
taught to patronize racial enterprise.
If a colored man has a grocery store
he should receive his share of racial
patronage. It he has a shoe store he
should get some of our dollars, If a
colored man is a builder and contrac-
tor he should get a chance to build
some of our houses and churches. If
a colored man conducts a bank or
real estate concern he should get some
of our money.
“The trouble with our people is this:
‘There are shoe stores in every city
where, when a negro woman stops to
buy a pair of shoes, she cannot have
them tried on or fitted. They will not
permit her to be fitted in the store.
She must elther take them home or
they will be sent out to her and she
fits them on herself, Yet, if a colored
man opened a shoe store in that town
the colored people would pass his place
and go right back to the store where
the colored woman could not have her
shoes fitted.
“There are millinery stores where a
colored woman casimot have a hat
fitted. She must try it on at home.
Yet, if a colored milliner opened a
store in the nelghborhood, the colored
women would pass it by and go right
back to the store where they are not
allowed to try on a hat.
“Another part of the work of fra-
ternal organization in this generation
1s to teach our people how to-govern
themselves, to direct, to control them-
selves. This means the teaching of
the race to subordinate selfish and nar-
row ambitions in the interest of the
general welfare.
“Some people say that the negro
cannot govern negroes; that thoy will
not follow a leader or a foreman of
their own race. They say the colored
man must have a white boss. I say
this {s not true. The colored man does
not need a white boss at any time.
“It 1s a function of a fraternal or-
ganization to teach otr people to have
respect for racial workers, racial lead-
ership; to teach our people to hold up
the hands of those who have the re-
sponsibility of leadership and racial
guidance thrust upon them. This or-
ganization in the past has held up the
hands of its leaders, and 1 predict and
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NEW NEWS of YESTERDAY
First of Submarine Cables
First of Submarine Cables
Fate and a Noted Irish Actor
Colonel Colt's Invention That Ante dated That of Samuel Morse, but Was Dropped for Manufacture of Revolvers.
Not long ago I told the story of how General Zachary Taylor unconsciously made the revolver popular after its inventor, Samuel Colt, had failed to induce the army and the public to look kindly upon the new weapon. Colonel Colt always gave "Old Rough and Ready" full credit for making the revolver a commercial success, and to his intimate friends he sometimes declared that it was General Taylor, also, who perhaps kept him from being known to fame as the inventor of the transatlantic cable. One of the friends to whom he thus expressed himself was Marshall Jewell, who was a fellow townman of Colt's, in Grant's cabinet as postmaster-general, before that minister to Russia and twice governor of Connecticut, and, like Colt, for many years one of the leading manufacturers of Connecticut.
"When the country was going wild over the laying of the first Atlantic cable," said Governor Jewell, "and over the exchange of messages between Queen Victoria and President Buchanan, Colt told me that a number of years earlier—at about the time when Professor Morse was perfecting his telegraph system—he conceived the idea that it would be possible to lay a telegraph line upon the bed of a river or along the coast that would be successful, and he furthermore was of the opinion that there was nothing in science which stood in the way of laying a telegraph line upon the ocean bed from continent to continent.
"Now Sam Colt was a man who, when an idea occurred to him involving invention and experiment, never let it lapse unless he had tested it and found it wanting. So he had a good many talks with Professor Morse in the latter's little laboratory on the top floor of a building facing Washington Square, in New York, and he learned from Morse that the great obstacle that stood in the way of a submarine telegraph line was inability to secure an insulating medium.
"That statement was sufficient to set Sam Colt at work experimenting to see whether or not he could find some inexpensive material which would serve as an insulator to a telegraph wire under water. He made a good many experiments. Rubber was out of the question; it was too costly. But it occurred to him that cotton yarn was cheap and that if he soaked the yarn in beeswax, which is a non-
John Brougham's Reminiscences of the Way Fame and Fortune Missed Him and Fell to Others.
"What queer pranks destiny plays us!" said John Brougham one autumn evening in 1877. We were sitting in the New York study of the Irish actor and playwright whose name was widely known in England and America in connection with matters theatrical from 1840 until his death in 1850.
"I was thinking," Mr. Brougham continued, "how queerly the fates have allotted their gifts so far as I am concerned. There is the case of 'London Assurance,' for instance, which has been a favorite with English and American playgoers ever since its first production in Covent Garden in 1841 by Dion Boucicault. In the writing of that comedy I collaborated with Dion Boucicault, yet almost all of the money which came from its production went to Dion, and the play made his reputation as a playwright, while John Brougham remained insignificant all the time that it was being compared favorably with Sheridan's "The Rivals."
"Ah, yes, there is such a thing as luck in the world of the drama as well as in the world of business, and a later experience, and an even more striking one than this with 'London Assurance,' will serve to illustrate the point.
"Not long after my return to the United States after the close of the Civil war I was reading over for the fourth or fifth time Charles Dickens' 'Old Curliosity Shop'—a great favorite of mine—when the idea suddenly occurred to me that if just the right actress could be found it would be possible to write a play based on the novel in which the characters of Little Nell and the Marchioness could be taken by the same person. I realized that it would require a great deal of dramatic ability, a wonderful versatility, for any one to play Little Nell in one act and the Marchioness in another; but I kept the idea in mind, and later was told that a young girl who had not been in New York many years from California, where she had appeared on the stage as a mere child, would just fit the dual role both in physique and dramatic ability. It was proposed that I write a play for this
Chance Meeting of Enemies
conductor, and put it around a wire, protecting the whole with asphaltum, and then carried the wire thus insulated through a lead pipe, he would overcome the difficulty.
"This scheme of insulation worked perfectly in the laboratory; and Colt procuring a wire long enough to stretch from Fire Island to what is now Coney Island, N. Y., insulated it with his mixture, encased the whole in a lead pipe and sunk it beneath the waves. This was the first submarine telegraph cable laid; so far as transmission of electric signals was concerned it was successful, and Colt, after the Morse telegraph had been proved a commercial success a year or two later, determined to develop the submarine cable commercially, first by laying short ocean cables, and then a transatlantic one.
"But, 'curiously enough,' as Sam Colt used to put it to me, just when he was all but over the preliminary work, General Zachary Taylor, then fighting the Mexicans, sent in to him an order for a thousand revolvers—which Colt had ceased to make a number of years before because no one would buy the weapon—and Colt, seeing a splendid business chance in Taylor's order, at once set to work to fill it, the result being that a large demand soon grew up for the revolver. The meeting of this demand occupied all of Colonel Colt's time and energy, and as he saw a fortune rapidly growing out of the manufacture and sale of the weapon, he thought
How Isaiah Rhynders, Rabid Pro-Slavery Advocate, and William Lloyd Garrison, Leader of Abolitionists, Became Acquainted.
The present generation has forgotten Isaiah Rhynders. Yet in the antebellum days his name was a familiar one. It symbolized northern pro-slavery sentiment. Its bearer was regarded by the abolitionists as a sort of ogre, a man dominated by ferocity of political sentiment. He was, indeed, one of the most rabid of all the pro-slavery Democrats of the north, and as United States marshal for the southern district of New York, to which office he was appointed first by President Pierce, be bent his energies to running down fugitive slaves and returning them to their masters.
I met Marshal Rhynders in 1875. To my surprise, I saw a man of slender build, a man of most gentle demeanor,
young girl, in which she would appear alternately as Little Nell and the Marchioness, certain terms were mentioned to me, and I accepted the proposition and went to work.
"Well, in due time I fixed up the play, and when it was produced in 1867 it made one of the greatest successes of the American stage It made the fame of Charlotte Crabtree, better known as Lotta. It was the basis of the fortune she now possesses—and she deserves every penny of it, dear girl. But again John Brougham was obscure; nor had he more than a paltry return of money for his work. Would you have known, if I had not told you just now, that it was I who dramatized Little Nell and the Marchioness?"
The Irish actor-playwright smiled philosophically.
"Ah, me," he said, "I am not complaining. It is all fate, and I presume this will be my fate until the end." Three years later, at the age of 70, Brougham died, leaving the manuscript of a play upon which he had based great hopes, but which, by reason of his death, was never produced. (Copyright, 1911, by E. J. Edwards. All Rights Reserved.)
Discarded Girl Sought Death.
Discarded GIRL Sought Death.
While tramping across the great Central plain of Hungary recently several workmen made a pathetic discovery, finding a beautiful young girl lying in a newly dug grave. Happily life was not extinct, and the workmen carried her tenderly back to Gross Wardein, when a doctor soon restored animation. The girl then stated that she lived in a village some 200 miles away, but had tramped the whole distance, see her soldier lover. When she got to the barracks her sweetheart was ashamed of her because she was ragged and dust-stained and declined to speak to her. The broken-hearted girl attempted to tramp back home, but as she no money and had eaten nothing for three days, she decided to commit suicide and bury herself alive.
Humiliated Indian Tribe
When the Quakers came to Pennsylvania in 1682 the only Indians in the neighborhood were the Dela wares, who had just been terribly beaten by the Five Nations and forced into a treaty by which they submitted to be called women.
less and less of the submarine cable, finally dropping from his mind all his old plans in connection with it.
"Perhaps, had he held to those plans, they might have been successful. Sam Colt to the day of his death always held that they would have been successful; and he likewise always believed that Cyrus W. Field got his first idea of submarine telegraphy from the little cable that was laid by Colt in New York harbor back in 1843."
(Copyright, 1911, by E. J. Edwards. All Rights Reserved.)
Story of a $50 Bill.
A most charming Philadelphia woman came to New York for the day and her husband handed her a fifty-dollar bill for tips and small change, relates the New York Telegraph.
At the station in Philadelphia she left the Pullman to buy a periodical, leaving her bag carelessly on the seat. There was another woman occupying the adjacent chair. Upon her return the Philadelphia woman opened her bag and found no fifty-dollar bill.
She made no accusation, but when the other woman fell asleep she quietly opened her bag and abstracted the bill.
In New York they bowed amicably and parted. When the Philadelphia returned home her husband asked her if she had enjoyed the trip.
"Yes, but I spent all the money," she replied.
"All the money," said the husband.
"Why, I was worrying over the fact that you left your fifty-dollar bill on your dressing table."
with a bright and kindly expression in his eye, and a smile that told of his fondness for humor. Could this be the man who had been painted as a demon in human form not so very many years before?
As we sat talking reminiscently of the days when Rhynders was in the thick of events political, the door of the room-of the postmaster of New York opened and there entered a gentleman whose manner and features betokened the scholar, the man of cultivation and refinement. His height must have been something more than six feet. His dress was that of a man who knows how to dress well but not conspicuously.
At once saw that the postmaster was in some embarrassment. He looked furtively at Marshal Rhynders, then again at the newcomer, and then, evidently mustering his courage, he said:
"I am very glad of this opportunity to bring into acquaintance two men who have been known for many years to each other by name, but who, I presume, have never met personally. Marshal Rhynders, I take great pleasure in introducing you to my personal friend William Lloyd Garrison."
Mr. Garrison, the great leader of the Abolitionists, the first in all the north to agitate against slavery, and to teach opposition to the fugitive slave law, and Marshal Rhynders, typifying in his career and symbolizing in his name the more rabid pro-slavery party of the decade before the Civil war, stood facing one another for an instant. Mr. Garrison was penetrating the ex-United States marshal with his glance, while Rhynders, on the other hand, was studying the personality of the great anti-slavery leader. In a moment, however, they seemed to realize fully that the issues which had given them fame were of the past. Each extended his hand, they took seats side by side and a moment or two later the postmaster and I went out of the room unobserved, for those two men were engaged in intimate conversation.
Perhaps half an hour later William Lloyd Garrison came from the postmaster's room through the anteroom where he met us. His face was beaming. "I found Marshal Rhynders a most interesting and entertaining man," he said. "I am glad to have had the opportunity to meet and chat with him." Then he went away, and as he did so Marshal Rhynders stepped into the anteroom.
"Garrison is a great man and a good man," he said, earnestly, sincerely. "We became friends. I shall always remember the conversation I have just had with him, and I am glad to think that he may have obtained a different impression of me than he had in the days when slavery was a great issue."
(Copyright, 1911, by E. J. Edwards. All Rights Reserved.)
Not His Fault.
Little Augustus Johnson had learned some things about the face of a clock, but not quite all there is to know.
"What time is it, 'Gustus?' asked his employer one night to test him.
"It's jes' eight o'clock," said the boy, after a careful survey of the clock.
"No you're wrong," said his employer.
"It won't be eight for quite awhile yet, not for 20 minutes."
"Boe hands is pinting at eight, jes' as straight as dey can p'int," said the boy stubbornly.
"If dey ain't telling de trufe, I can't help it!"—Youth's Companion.
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STARTING SOMETHING.
PROGRESSIVENESS, as the modern eral, which represent the "away-ahead" thou want to get something new and startling
as the modern, descriptive "away-ahead" thoughts and new and startling out of the in these days. "Something the attention of an expectant excitement, has become so vast of society are being aba-
fishing themselves under a roaring. President Taft has been in which he expects to eluc-
bate character of all the men had to deal as President, future. In reality, the jaun-
nion as the endorsed head of the Nation. It is his full for the widest attention.
But every other man who pursual development is hitting every available means to attr-
tor and honor, the same men already started his coast-
the world's attention, and Jackage to finally clinch the n-
rement from the ring.
the progressives. Somewhat conceive it and properly
and in any field must lay out draw their following. The
d to the front. If you want present, just make up your
d start that thing for foll
PROGRESSIVENESS, as the modern, descriptive title for things in general, which represent the "away-ahead" thoughts and ideas of individuals who want to get something new and startling out of the ordinary conditions of life, is being over-worked in these days. "Something doing" is the announcement which commands the attention of an expectant people, and the desire for movement, action, excitement, has become so universal that all the old, modest customs and habits of society are being abandoned, and all who aspire to lead or command are finding themselves under actual obligation to "start something" and keep it going. President Taft has begun a great across-the-continent speaking tour, in which he expects to elucidate and make plain to the people the exact working character of all the important administrative policies with which he has had to deal as President, or with which he expects or hopes to deal in the future. In reality, the jaunt is the beginning of his own campaign for renomination as the endorsed head of the Republican party and the approved executive of the Nation. It is his own method of starting something which shall call for the widest attention of all people in the two years next approaching. But every other man who has an ambition and a plan to bring about universal development is hitting the Progressive highway just as hard and using every available means to attract attention and support. In other fields of endeavor and honor, the same methods are being employed. The daring aviator has already started his coast-to-coast aeroplane race, to command his share of the world's attention, and Jack Johnson is planning another round-the-world voyage to finally clinch the matter of his pugilistic supremacy before final retirement from the ring.
So it goes with all the progressives. Something new, outlined upon a program as big as you can conceive it and properly handle it, is the rule of action.
Those who would lead in any field must lay out and start the big works themselves and thereby draw their following. There is no more waiting to be sought out and shoved to the front. If you want anything more than ordinary in this world at present, just make up your mind that you have got to peel off your coat and start that thing for folks to look at.
natural resources was a suf it long ago, but now we hew however, that the principle oularly at the Nation's w people, has been laid asid in truth for that. We been thoroughly established at a public official is carel matter of saving the natura
CONSERVATION of natural resources was a subject of large prominence and general discussion not long ago, but now we hear little of it. We should not take it for granted, however, that the principle raised and so widely discussed, and aimed particularly at the Nation's wastefulness, through the neglect or oversight of its people, has been laid aside or forgotten.
It is too well founded in truth for that. We should better understand that the principle has been thoroughly established and generally accepted, for now the suspicion that a public official is careless of the public interest, present or future, in the matter of saving the natural resources of wealth and of thereby guarding the interests of future generations, is sufficient to bring down upon his head the wrath and condemnation of all the people. Public waste, either by neglect or carelessness, is looked upon as a sin against the welfare of the people and a wanton sacrifice of the advantages upon which their prosperity and progress depend.
And not only is the principle becoming fixed in public life, but it is being injected into every form of business enterprise to such an extent that expert managers and supervisors, who have learned how to diligently apply the principles of the conservation of relative forces for the improvement of business and an increased output, with relative profits, without waste of energy or increase of cost, are greatly in demand.
It is merely the expression of the principle of scientific saving. But it has a vast meaning to Nation and individual. Its immediate benefits will be plainly recognized, but the greater volume thereof will find its realization in richer and stronger generations to follow those which now inaugurate it. It is a wise and beautiful exemplification of loyalty to country and race. That is the most interesting part of it as we now observe it and study its natural and unalterable results.
The colored American is woefully wasteful in nearly all of his fixed habits; he is especially wasteful of his means and energies, his time and opportunities, which constitute his chief stock in trade. It is a common boast among us that we "live well." And we do live exceptionally well for a people who are classified as poor. As a race we are slaves to our appetites and to our passions for pleasure and display. Most of us eat more than is necessary to keep us well and strong, and then we waste much that ought to be saved and used. An orderly, limited diet is quite unknown to our ordinary wage-earners, who, as a rule, will "skimp" every other expense to overload their table or to "entertain." And our children are raised and tutored with these notions of unrestricted appetites and strained indulgences always before them. From the poorest of us, up, it is a racial weakness. In only a few households is the virtue and the necessity of saving, everlasting saving, consistently taught. We do not care for the future of the race if it costs us the sacrifice of good eating and good times. Our appetites and the false standards of society make the sacrifice seem impossible. And yet that is just what every other people have had to do—limit their appetites, conserve their powers, and save, save, save. That is what every race, that is making solid headway and permanent advancement, is doing now.
True race progress means a building up for the future generations by a saving of present means. There is no other way. Leaving our children to get along and to do as we have done, is for the race to stand still. Not all of us do this, but most of us do it. Our hope is in the conservation of the few and the reform of the many from wastefulness and foolish indulgence to simple, frugal living and the acquirement of property and riches.
WASTE.
AFRO-AMERICAN CULLINGS
The time is ripe, if ever it was, for every negro of respectability, energy and thrift, to own their own residence. If they already do not own one. The man who works six days in each week and without ceasing should at least put aside a percentage of each week's wages, so that in a reasonable time the nucleus will have been secured towards the first payment on a home.
We have from time to time written article after article upon this subject. We have pleaded with, threatened and abused whenever we thought it would do some good on this line, and we believe results have been attained for we have noticed that there is activity in the purchase of real estate by the colored people of this city. We mean by that the purchase of small places for homes, not as investments. If this is done in proportion to the numbers represented by the negroes in the population of this city, according to the advantages offered them in the field of labor, and with the remuneration equalized as it is today, there is no earthly reason why they should not purchase a home whenever they so desire.
Men may claim that the negro is full of idleness, that he is thriftless, and that he will not work regularly and stick to it. This certainly is untrue and when reduced to facts and figures it can be shown that the labor of the entire south is today handled by the negro and in many places he is clamoring for work and cannot get it. This is different here, for in South Carolina and especially adjacent to Charleston there is and has been sufficient work for all who may apply and with wages from thirty-three and one-third to fifty per cent better than a few years ago. Occasionally or at certain seasons some classes of labor might decrease or slacken up for a month or so, but taken as a whole, the year round, the laborer is truly worthy of his hire.
Then let the man who is at the head of a family consider these things, save his money and build him a home, however humble, for the protection of his family in the days when age and infirmity will cause him to cease from active labor.—Charleston (S. C.) Messenger.
Rev. H. H. Proctor, speaking on "Egypt and Its Light on the Relation of the Races" in Atlanta, said:
"Egypt is the gateway of Africa, the cradle of civilization and, the mother of the Holy Land, Calro, the center of Egyptian life, presents many contrasts between the new and the old world, but its chief interest is historic. Its pyramids constitute the earliest monuments to human industry. It is evident from a study of the great museum in Calro that a great people occupied this territory. They were great in agriculture, art, science and religion. It is also clear that blacks played a great part in this civilization. Among the evidences of this are the busts and pictures of kings seen in the museum. The kings and queens were of various colors. The features of the Sphinx are those of a negro and the colossal statue of Rameses II., excavated at Memphis, shows him to be of black origin. The Pharaoh before whom Moses pleaded was the son of Rameses I. and was, therefore of Negrition origin."
James Shelton, Indianapolis, member of the ways and means committee, called upon E. Lung, Chinman, for a subscription, says an exchange. Shelton told Lung that he would guarantee that he would wash 5,000 more shorts during the K. of P. encampment. Lung didn't believe it and replied, "Niggie ain't got 5,000 shirtee. Niggie only got one shirtee." Shelton insisted that 5,000 negroes represented at least 5,000 shirts and that Lung ought to subscribe for he would see that they would bring all their shirts to his laundry. The Chinman laughed and said: "I g'e you dollie, but niggie ain't got 5,000 shirtee. Niggie's shirtees are no good. They lose checkee. Don't you send 5,000 nigges here—sare my baby. Tell nigge no checkee no shirtee. Give dolle." Mr. Shelton accepted Lung's dollar and declared he would never try to induce a Chinman to subscribe to another negro enterprise as long as he lives."Dallas Express.
Dr. Booker T. Washington's appearance in the Alabama case at the White House was that of a patriotic citizen of Alabama, a defender of the civic privileges of his race and a foe to the reactionary forces that would delegate the negro to the bacground. Doctor Washington is in no sense a politician. He gives his opinion of public matters when an expression can do good. He does his duty as a wide-awake American should.—Texas Freeman.
Pessimism is not a word or term with which to conjure, if you would lift men up or prepare them to unlock for themselves those causes that contain the essentials of a useful, practical life. The man, woman or child who is pessimistic is foredoomed to failure.—Ex.
Inman E. Page, president of Langston university, Langton City, Okla. in his speech before the National Negro Business league at Little Rock, Ark. told what the negro was doing in education, and how he was being helped by the state. The institution started just thirteen years ago with 40 acres of land, without the mule, 40 students and four teachers. The state then appropriated $5,000 for the support of the school for two years. He recounted the success year by year, until at present it has 320 acres, 25 teachers, 673 students and the national government had given 100,000 acres of land for the endowment of a negro school.
The change in political parties did not make any change in the interest of the white people in the negro's progress, because just after the change the main building was destroyed by fire, and the legislature appropriated $100,000 for the erection of another building, which far surpassed the former one. "We are turning out teachers to teach the negro race, lawyers to plead for the negro, and doctors to cure the negro race," he said.
Other addresses were delivered by J. E. Johnson, cashier of the People's Bank and Trust company; John W. Simmons of Coweta. "The Negro in Oklahoma;" I. W. Young, M. D. Boley, R. W. Tolliver, D. D. Boley and R. Emmett Stewart, the negro lawyer. Stewart spoke of his lucrative practice, and asked for a stenographer at once, saying that he was in position to pay a salary of $100 a month.
Quite a large crowd of colored people and a considerable number of representative white people gathered in Bethel church in Atlanta to hear the address of W. T. Vernon, ex-register of the treasury, who is now connected with the interior department as supervisor of education. His present appointment was made some time ago by President Taft and comes as a reward for his able work in Kansas, where he is a leader. His address was an interesting and instructive one. He urged that there should be peace and a cordial understanding between the races here in the south, and that this was the first and most important requisite for progress. "This can be easily done, for the best white people are the real friends of the law-abiding colored citizens. I am the child of slave parents," he continued, "and we are here to stay, to live in this country, where we have been for the last three hundred years, and we mean to remain here. We must work out our destiny as other people have done, and must pay and must make sacrifices." He was introduced by Bishop J. S. Flipper of Arkansas, and the closing remarks were by the pastor, Dr. C. M. Tanner. Vernon came here from Hampton institute, and will go from here to Tuskegee, following the work of his department.
The census reports thus far issued show in regard to agricultural conditions in the south two things:
First, in both the South Atlantic and the south central states the value of farm lands and farm buildings has considerably more than doubled. They have increased in the South Atlantic states from $1,205,350,000 in 1900 to $2,476,152,000 in 1910, an increase of $1,269,802,000. In the south central states the increase has been even greater. The value of farm lands and buildings in 1900 was $2,072,672,000, and in 1910 it was $4,837,353,000, an increase of $2,764,681,000. Second, during this time the number of farms has steadily increased, showing that the plantations are breaking up and the era of the small farmer has arrived, while during the same period the number of negro land owners has increased much more rapidly than the number of white land owners. This certainly looks as if the negro was not going backward in the south, no matter how much the planters howl about negro labor.—New York Age.
When a backward race gets far enough advanced to attract widespread attention and command a healthy opposition, no better evidence of its progress is needed. When the negro was a slave he had no opposition because he was not in competition with the white man. But fifty years of freedom have brought him to the point where he is debated on in college, written about in the magazines and newspapers, discussed in politics, preached on from the pulpit, argued about in homes and even made the subject of drama. None but a rising people could command all this attention.—Ex.
Debt is an awful burden upon any human being, who has experienced it. Some of our people will get into it, seeing no way of getting out, then they will be harassed. Recently we saw several of these victims being formented and humiliated by these loan sharks, who make double their money loaned by practicing usury. Dealing with this system only means shame and disgrace to you in a long run. Try to economize and get er foot—Palestine Plaindealer.
$15 SALE OF LADIE'S FALL SUITS
We are going to sell the best Suits that can be had for the money, and make all alterations without extra charge.
and make all alterations within the. The cloths are serges, in black and navy, diagonal cloths, in black, navy, brown and wine, and fancy Scotch mixtures, in a variety of medium and dark colors. Jackets are lined with good satin, and the skirts are cut in the newest fall styles. There are braided trimmed and strictly plain tailored styles to choose from. We positively claim these are the best suits in Denver for the price, and other stores are asking $17.50 and $20.00 for no better.
Our $19.75 and $24.75
Tailored Suits are the value
best materials, perfectly tailored,
priced Suits to be had. Just now
and colors.
WE WANT TO SELL
YOU THIS NEW
And we are offering the best to be
Long Black Coats will range in价
cula Coats, black only, will range
Plush Coats will range in price
Cloth Coats, dark and medium o
to $25.00.
GARME
925-16TH ST.
SILVERSMITH
925 Sixte
Offered Suits are the value leaders. They are made of materials, perfectly tailored, and styles are copies of suits to be had. Just now we have a good assortment of suits.
WE WANT TO SELL YOU THIS NEW FALL COAT
are offering the best to be had for any price you wish. Black Coats will range in price from $8.75 to $35.00. Suits, black only, will range in price from $9.95 to $25.00. Coats will range in price from $15.00 to $35.00. Fashions, dark and medium colors, will range in price.
S & H
GARMENT STORE
925-16TH ST. — OPP JOSLING
LVERSMITH AND HILL
925 Sixteenth Street
Tailored Suits are the value leaders. They are made of the very best materials, perfectly tailored, and styles are copies of the highest priced Suits to be had. Just now we have a good assortment of sizes and colors.
WE WANT TO SELL YOU THIS NEW FALL COAT
And we are offering the best to be had for any price you wish to pay. Long Black Coats will range in price from $9.75 to $35.00. Long Caracula Coats, black only, will range in price from $9.95 to $25.00. Long Plush Coats will range in price from $15.00 to $35.00. Fancy mixed Cloth Coats, dark and medium colors, will range in price from $6.25 to $25.00.
S&H GARMENT STORE 925-16TH ST. OPP. JOSLINS
A.
CURTIS M. HARRIS,
Funeral Director.
When Y
THE HEADS, FEET, TAILS, S
CHITTERLINGS OR ANY
When You Wear HEADS, FEET, TAILS, SNOUTS, EARS, NECKBUTTERLINGS OR ANY OTHER PART OF THE
When You Want
THE HEADS, FEET, TAILS, SNOUTS, EARS, NECKBONES OR
CHITTERLINGS OR ANY OTHER PART OF THE HOG
EXCEPT THE SQUEAL, GO TO
East's Market
East's Market
2300-6 LARIMER STREET PHONE
Phone Main 1688 1431 Bro
F. S. CUR
Plum
Steam and Hot
F. S. CULLYFORD Plumbing am and Hot Water Heat
F. S. CULLYFORD
Plumbing Steam and Hot Water Heating
Res. York 2484 COCHRAN, H
CHRAN, HOKLAS &
COCHRAN, HOKLAS & CO.
Contractors and Builders All kinds of carpenter work and jobbing. Store and office work a specialty Phone Main 1925
1846 Arapahoe St.
---
FALL COAT
You had for any price you wish to pay.
Price from $9.75 to $35.00. Long Cara-
nion price from $9.95 to $25.00. Long
from $15.00 to $35.00. Fancy mixed
colors, will range in price from $6.25
FIT STORE
OPP JOSLING
AND HILLER
enth Street
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.
LICENCED EMBALMER
Parlors 1925 Arapahoe St.
ou Want
OUTS, EARS, NECKBONES OR
THER PART OF THE HOG
Market
PHONE 1461 MAIN
1431 Broadway
LYFORD
bing
Water Heating
517 Josephine St.
OKLAS & CO.
DENVER, COLO.
PHONE 1461 MAIN
A. Wilson, an old Pullman employe, is taking a 'short lay off.
Mrs. E. Pratt of 1835 Ogden has been seriously ill with tonsilitis.
Mrs. Maud Dean, of Ft. Smith, Ark., is in our midst for an indefinite stay.
Mrs. Callie Edwards, after a very pleasant three months' visit in our city returns to her home in St. Louis day, en route home she will stop Kansas City a few days on busin and pleasure combined.
The Railroad Men and Waiters C of 2149 Curtis street, has just be remodeled and is now up to date.
Mrs. Lottie Martin gave a supper Wednesday eve in honor of Mrs. Callie Edwards.
Mrs. E. Mattocks has returned home after a pleasant two months' visit with her mother in Nevada.
Miss Mabel Andrews left last week for Guthrie, Okla., where she is employed as a teacher.
Father Bray and wife left for Pueblo last Friday, where they will make their home.
James Hall of Boulder was the guest of his son, Frank and daughter, Mrs. Graves last Sunday.
E. D. Fountain returned home Thursday from a week's vacation in Manitou and Colorado Springs.
L. F. Fugitt, who is now a full-fledged ranchman, was in the city this week on business.
Mr. and Mrs. E. Rivers has purchased a beautiful modern seven-room home at 2336 Ogden street.
Evergreen Chapter conferred degrees upon several candidates last Tuesday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. S. Pullum left Monday to visit their daughter, Mrs. J. F. Higgins of Los Angeles, Cal.
Misses Elizebth Keith and Cella Rector of Little Rock, Ark., are guests of Mr. and Mrs W. R. Chapman of 2410 Humboldt street.
Mrs. C. Allen of Chicago, who has been visiting her brother, Louis George for a month, returned to her home last Friday.
Mrs. Callie Edwards of Kansas City and Mrs. O. T. Jackson took a trip over the Moffat road last Sunday as far as Arrow.
Miss Laura Scharhorne, after a pleasant visit of two months in Canada, visiting friends, is now again with the Denverites.
Mrs Sarah Bird, after a several
weeks visit with her son, James and
wife, returned to her Pueblo home
this week.
Mr. and Mrs. S. P. McBeth, of 2444
Marion street, has just had their
house remodeled, which is now modern in every respect.
Mrs. Della Williams and Byron Martin were married Tuesday evening of last week by Rev. Smith of Anitoch Baptist church.
Rev. A. M. Ward has returned from Kansas City and will conduct services tomorrow to the delight of his members and many friends.
Mrs. Amelia Watkins will leave the city in a few days for her old home, Fulton, Mo., and from there she will go to Chicago. Her stay is indefinite.
The East End Literary Society will meet every Friday evening at Bethlehem Church, 2716 Lawrence street. Everybody is most cordially welcome. Refreshments. Good program.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Cunningham, formerly of St. Louis, Mo., has gone to housekeeping at 2214 Glenarm Pl.
Mr. Wheeler Bohn of Ft. Smith, Ark., is visiting our city.
Miss Emma Smith, one of our worthy young ladies, was married to a Mr. Costley last Sunday at the residence of Mrs. A. Brookings, her mother, Rev. W. C. Williams officiated.
The Masonic Lodge No. 4, gave a very successful affair at Luna Park Thursday evening. There was a large crowd in attendance and an enjoyable evening was spent in different lines of amusement.
ORIGINAL IN FOOR CONDITION
Mrs. Callie Edwards, after a very pleasant three months' visit in our city, returns to her home in St. Louis today, en route home she will stop in Kansas City a few days on business and pleasure combined.
The Railroad Men and Waiters Club of 2149 Curtis street, has just been remodeled and is now up to date in every respect, which shows the enterprising spirit of the manager, Mr. Frank Burnley.
Mrs. C. S. Muse entertained in honor of Mrs. Callie Edwards last Sunday with a five-course dinner. Mrs. Edwards has been the recipient of much social attention during her stay in the city.
Rev. L. E. Brown conducted services both morning and evening at Shorter's last Sunday. The attendance was very good indeed, many visitors from the other churches being present. The solo by Mr. Buchanan was indeed a treat to all lovers of good music.
The Colorado Statesman was slightly in error in regard to Miss Cora Britton teaching in a public school. She is an instructor at the Colored Orphans' home, which is situated near Arvada. We gladly make the correction.
C. W. Miles underwent an operation at Mercy hospital last week for an intestinal trouble. Dr. A. L. Bennett, the well known surgeon, was in charge. Mr. Miles is getting as well as could be expected, considering the nature of his illness.
Mrs. Louisa Williams, mother of Mesdames J. C. Porter and S. E. Cook, left Thursday for Elmwood, Ill., her former home where she will remain for some time visiting relatives and friends.
Wayman Ward, one of our most progressive and intellectual young men will leave for Wilberforce College, next week, where he will take a course in theology. The Colorado Statesman predicts a bright future for this young man in his chosen field of labor.
Rev. A. E. Reynolds of Bethlehem Baptist Church, united Miss Mary Watson and Mr. Daniel Rease in marriage last Monday evening, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rose, 2805 Lawrence street. About fifty guests witnessed the ceremony. Many beautiful presents were received. They are residing at 1717 Pennsylvania avenue, where they will be pleased to greet their many friends.
W. M. and E. Strauther have engaged in the tailoring business and have in their employ Mr. D. D. Payne as cutter and fitter of ladies' and gents' high grade clothes. Ladies' and gents' clothes made to order. Old coats relied or made into the latest style. Cleaning, pressing and repairing a specialty. Call at 1816 Curtis street before you buy—500 woolens to pick from.
Fred L. Williams a clerk in the San Francisco postoffice, passed through our city Tuesday accompanying our old townman, T. B. Reynolds, to Lawrence, Kans., who is a very sick man. The Colorado Statesman and Mr. Reynolds' host of friends extend their sympathy to him in his affliction and hopes for his recovery. Mr. Williafs is on his annual vacation and after leaving Mr. Reynolds at his old home, he will continue his trip to Chicago and other Eastern points.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Russ of 2547 South Pennsylvania, entertained Sunday at a six-course dinner, complimentary to Mr. and Mrs. V. B. Walker. The hostess was charmingly gowned in Keceda green charmouse, veiled in black chiffon, inset with applique and finished with chantilly lace. Soft trailing white clamatic formed the decorations. The color scheme was green and white and was carried throughout the owner. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. V. B. Walker, Mr. and Mrs. O. Dishman, Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Ratley, Mr. and Mrs. N. J. Skillern, Mrs. C. C. Cary of Chicago, and Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Russ.
Mr. C. A. Nast, the photographer, who is probably the most widely known and most successful person in that particular line in the city, celebrated his fifty-fifth birthday last Sunday, at his home, 1217 Adams street. He makes a specialty of children's pictures and his great success is attributed to his arrableness in
dealing with his customers. Mr Nast's place of business is 1009 16th street, or the Scholtz Drug Co., and he is ACK highly recommended to anyone desiring up-to-date photography.
Rev. G. B. Dudley, evangelist, will hold revival meetings at Bethlehem Baptist Church, beginning Friday night, September 22nd. Everybody is invited to attend these meetings. A. E. Reynolds pastor.
DEATH OF JOHN W. BUSH.
After an illness of several months John W. Bush, one of our most respected and esteemed citizens, died at his late residence, 700 29th street, Thursday morning, September 21st, of a complication of diseases. He was born at Frankfort, Ky., forty years ago. After residing in Indianapolis for several years, he removed to Denver six years ago, where he had since resided. Besides being a faithful member of Shorter's A. M. E. Church, he belongs to the following fraternal organizations: Pythian Lodge No. 11, K. of P., and Odd Fellows. He leaves a widow and one son, Herman, to mourn his demise, besides a host of friends. The funeral services will be held from Shorter's tomorrow afternoon at 2 p. m. Interment will be at Riverside. The Douglass Undertaking firm has charge of the remains.
S
NOTES OF THE PEOPLE'S PRESS
BYTERIAN CHURCH.
Sermon Topics, Sunday, Sept. 24th.
11 a. m.—"The Greatest Weapon of the Church."
6. p. m.—"The Gospel in Songs." The public is hereby kindly reminded that the morning discourse will be one of the sermons delivered before the St. Paul Presbyterian congregation last summer in London. It was highly appreciated. The evening service will be a Sacred Concert. Apart from the solos an choruses by talented singers the congregation will take an active part in singing the old and familiar hymns. The occasion that necessitated the writing of these hymns will be explained by the pastor. We will not only be inspired, but also informed by such a service. There will be no special collection taken. Every worshippier will be asked to make a free-will offering. Please hear the bugle-call and respond accordingly.
Our services last Sunday morning were likely enriched by the solo of Mr. Buchanan. Miss Rhodie Anderson with much expression and vivacity accompanied the singer at the piano. We were glad to see so many friends and visitors at the services. You are invited to call again.
The return of many of our members who were out of the city on vacation during the summer months will substantially enable us to resume our work with revived vigor in all of the departments of the church. Among them are Mrs. Lucy Hull and daughter, Mrs. Marchbanks, Mrs. Maddox, etc.
The pastor and officers in the persons of Elders Sims and Campbell, attended Deuer Presbytery at Westminster College Tuesday. The business was exceedingly great. Matters of vital importance were transaction. Owing to some internal dissension, alleged to be due to too liberal a view as held by the Rev. W. S. Rudolph Ph.D., pastor of the Union Presbyterian Church of Westminster, the pastor and a portion of the membership with drew from Presbyterial oversight into an Independent Presbyterian Church. The Presbytery appointed a provisional session with Rev. W. G. Campbell, Ph.D., as moderator to carry on the work with the old stand-patters. The Presbytery adjourned to meet at Central Church next Monday, at which time, the Rev. J. A. Thos.-Hazell, chairman of Freedman work, will address Presbytery, specially on behalf of the People's Church. A corps of other speakers will be on the firing line. The pastor will also lecture Monday morning before the same body, on "The Objects and Work of the First Universal Congress" in London.
SCOTT M. E. CHURCH NOTES.
Dr. W. F. Waters of Sedalia, Mo. represented George R. Smith College at the District conference.
The pastor will occupy the pulpit both morning and evening Sunday. The morning topic will be "An Unknown God," and the evening topic will be "The Poor Man's Market." Come and hear these discourses, which will be food for the soul.
V
REVIVAL MEETINGS.
The Rev, J. D. Rice will deliver his farewell talk to Scott's Sunday evening. Every member and friend is urged to give fifty cents as a token of appreciation to Brother Rice next Sunday morning and evening. The Rev, Rice will leave next week for Gammon Theological Seminary.
Mr. Eli Burrell ran down to the Springs Sunday to attend the Sunday meeting of the conference and also many of the members of the Pueblo charge came and returned Sunday evening.
Master Wendell Wallace was on the sick list last week. Masters Thomas and LeRoy Wallace remained at home and were cared for by loving friends, Mrs. Louise Burrell and Mrs. Brown.
The church and parsonage have been shingled that he and his workman are specialists along their line of endeavor. Other repairs will begin soon. The church bonds are on sale. They may be had at five per cent interest in lots of five dollars. Comc and buy and thus help a needy cause.
A drama will soon be presented by the members of the Epworth League. A small admission will be charged. Mrs. Ada Castry is the efficient president.
Mrs. A. R. Morris of Muskogee, Oklahoma, is in the city visiting the Rev. C. W. Holmes and wife. She will visit the pastor and wife before she leaves for her home. Mrs. Morris is the wife of one of our pioneer ministers of the Lincoln conference.
Do not forget the Two Dollar Rally for the first Sunday in October. The second quarterly conference will be held on the second Sunday in October. Every officer is urged to begin to make out his report now. No blanks is our slogan.
The convention song has grown quite popular. Programs of the great St. Louis will be soon available at twenty-five cents a copy. Secure one in order to sing this great battle song.
12½c Outing Flannels, getting busy price for Saturday and Monday. Eddy's, 2625 Welton.
Cairo, Ill., Sept. 18.—After being run into his own yard by Jack Taylor with a knife, Lee Folds, colored, killed Taylor with a baseball bat, stricking him once on the head. Taylor, a dairyman, had permitted his stock to trespass upon premises adjoining occupied by Folds went to Taylor's house today to complain about the stock, when Taylor took after him with a knife. Folds was exonerated by the coroner's jury. Taylor had just been served with a warrant charging him with flourishing a pistol in a saloon last night when Folds approached him.
15c Ladies' Summer Ribbed Vests
to get quick action at Eddy's, 2625
Welton. 3 for 25c.
SPECIAL SUNDAY BILL AT WEST BROS.
FRIENDS ALL WANT IT.
Mrs. D. B. Simmons of Silex, Ark,
writes: "I tried one bottle of Ford's Hair
Pomade and found it to be the best pre-
paration I have ever used. It stopped
my hair from falling out and breaking
off and my hair is now as soft as it can
be and is longer than it has been for a
long time. My friends all want it.
Ford's Hair Pomade, the old, reliable
dressing for stubborn, curly hair makes
harsh hair more pliable, glossy and
easy to comb. Try it and Ford's Royal
White Skin Lotion, for the complexion.
For sale by druggists, accept no other,
see that it is Ford's and manufactured
by the Ozonized Ox Marrow Company,
Chicago, Ill.
2 packages, 5 envelopes at Eddy's,
2625 Welton, Saturday and Monday se.
ER PASTE
APER CO.
OOR CONDITION
J. W. Beach, Mgr.
DENVER, COLO.
INSURE YOUR WAGES
Against Every Accident, Every Sickness
LIBERAL POLICIES, LIBERAL COMPANY
43 YEARS OLD. $20,000,000.00 ASSETS.
Pacific Mutual Insurance C
208 Colorado Bldg.
Walter Macpherson, District Manager
Mutual Insurance
208 Colorado Bldg.
er Macpherson, District Man
BEST EQUIPPED OUTFIT INN THE WEST TO
GOODS.
Pacific Mutual Insurance Co. 208 Colorado Bldg.
Walter Macpherson, District Manager
The machine is operated by a man seated on a stool, working on a large machine with a complex mechanism. The machine is likely used for printing or other industrial purposes.
REPAIRING
1023 Eighteenth St
WE HAVE THE BEST EQUIPPED OUT
WE HAVE THE BEST EQUIPPED OUTFIT INN THE WEST TO PRODUCE THE
SHOE
REPAIRING WHILE YOU WAIT
ER CHAMBERS
L. EUI
A. L. EUDY
Dealers in Groceries and School Supplies 2251 CLEVELAND PLACE
GENERAL LINE OF GROCERIES
BLES. OPEN ALL DAY ON SUN
NEIGHBORH
J. LE
Architectural S
ALL KINDS OF META
SKYLIGHTS, CONDUCT
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IN ALL DAY ON SUNDAYS. LET'S MAKE T
HBORHOOD ST
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architectural Sheet Metal Wor
KINDS OF METAL ROOFING, CORNIC
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GENERAL LINE OF GROCERIES AND SALT MEATS, VEGETABLES. OPEN ALL DAY ON SUNDAYS. LET'S MAKE THIS YOUR
NEIGHBORHOOD STORE
Architectural Sheet Metal Work
ALL KINDS OF METAL ROOFING, CORNICES,
SKYLIGHTS, CONDUCTORS, GUTTERS, ALSO
FURNACES. REPAIRING NEATLY DONE.
1113 Eighteenth St.
FIREPROOF
PALMER
T. H. JOHNS
Newly Built and
Hot and C
PHONE MAIN 1492
Seventh St. Den
ST
PALMER HOTEL
T. H. JOHNSON, Proprietor.
Newly Built and Newly Furnish
Hot and Cold Baths
HOE ST. DEN
SHOE
Insurance Co.
rado Bldg.
n, District Manager
IT INN THE WEST TO PRODUCE THE
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FOOD STORE
TON
meet Metal Work
L. ROOFING, CORNICES,
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MAIN 1492 Denver. Colo.
STEAM HEAT
R HOTEL
ON, Proprietor.
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DENVER, COLO.
CONDENSATION OF FRESH NEWS
THE LATEST IMPORTANT DIS PATCHES PUT INTO SHORT, CRISP PARAGRAPHS.
STORY OF THE WEEK
STORY OF THE WEEK
SHOWING THE PROGRESS OF EVENTS IN OUR OWN AND FOREIGN LANDS.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
WESTERN.
There are 6,340,357 farms in the United States, 10.5 per cent more than ten years ago.
John Al Rosenbaum of Chicago was killed at Dewitt, Iowa, when his aeroplane fell from a height of fifty feet.
Robert G. Fowler, the transcontinental aviator, whose machine failed him at Colfax, Calif., has his machine ready for flight and has resumed his eastward journey.
The will of John Warne Gates has been filed for probate in Beaumont, Texas. The application for probate states that the estate will amount to more than $5,000,000.
There are over a thousand irrigated farms in Kansas, says a census bulletin. They cover almost 40,000 acres but the irrigation projects completed are capable of covering four times the area.
President William Howard Taft has definitely declined the invitation to lay the cornerstone of the President's summer home on Mt. Falcon, near Morrison, Colo., extended him by the Denver Real Estate Exchange.
An out-of-town friend of the House of Good Shepherd has offered $10,000 in cash toward the new home being erected in Denver for the institution, on the condition that a like amount be raised in Denver by the Sisters.
Kissing your wife, or husband, in public places in Kansas City, Kans., is illegal. The decree was issued by Judge Carlisle of the Municipal Court, when he fined Mr. and Mrs. Ben Spanos $100 each for kissing each other in Shawnee park.
Edmond H. Madison, representative from the Seventh Kansas district in Congress, died at the breakfast table at his home in Dodge City, Kans. Madison was attacked while eating breakfast with his wife. He did not utter a word after the first attack. A physician reached the house in a few minutes, but death had preceded him. The cause was given as heart disease. William J. Bryan, who owns a farm of 200 acres in the valley of the Lower Rio Grande near Mission, Tex., made such a success raising Bermuda onions and other products that he has turned his handsome new country residence over for the use of his superintendent and family and has had plans prepared for a more magnificent new home for himself. He will erect the house this fall at a cost of $25,000.
WASHINGTON.
A commissioner of education has been appointed by the Chinese government to be attached to the Chinese legation at Washington. John R. Walsh, the Chicago banker, will be paroled at Leavenworth immediately will be given his freedom and will be permitted to return to his family. This statement was made by an official of the Department of Justice in Washington. Thomas H. Carter of Montana, former United States senator, for years a notable and picturesque character in national politics, once chairman of the Republican National Committee and since last year chairman of the American section of the International Commission, died at his home in Washington.
FOREIGN.
The eruption of Mount Etna, which seemed to be calming down, has resumed its former activity. Lieut. R. A. Cammel, of the British aviation school at Farnborough, England, was killed while making a flight at Hendon. The eruption of Mt. Etna seems to be losing some of its activity and the earthquakes are less frequent but the immense flood of lava which nas spread down the mountain continues its destruction. There are five streams stretching for miles over the country. Traceable to the high price of the necessaries of life, riots broke out in Vienna and many persons were killed or wounded. Troops fired on the mob which had erected barricades in the streets. There was a fierce exchange of bullets and the soldiers were pelted with all sorts of missiles.
The long period of national anxiety attendant on the Moroccan negotiations is drawing toward a satisfactory conclusion. The French people have been slow in accepting the optimism that has prevailed in Berlin for several days and now sufficient reasons appeared for the conviction that the six months uncertainty is nearing an end.
The Russian premier, Peter A. Stolypin, died from the bullet wounds of an assassin during a gala performance at the municipal theater in Kiev.
SPORT.
WESTERN LEAGUE STANDING.
P. W. L. Pct.
Denver 148 99 49 .688
St. Joseph 144 80 64 .556
Pueblo 145 79 66 .546
Lincoln 145 77 68 .531
Sloux City 147 75 72 .510
Omaha 146 74 72 .507
Topeko 145 51 93 .354
Des Moines 144 46 97 .322
Jos. Mandot of New Orleans was
awarded the decision over Tommy
Kilbane of Cleveland after eight
rounds of fast fighting in Memphis,
Tenn.
Jimmy Barry, of Chicago, had an
easy time in defeating Jewey Smith
of England, in a 10-round bout in New
York. The men, both heavyweights,
fought in lively fashion.
Asowa, the first Japanese to play
on an American football team, so far
as known, will be given a place as a
regular member of the freshman team
of Leland Standford university in Cali-
fornia.
The Archbishop of Canterbury has interested himself in the campaign to prevent the scheduled Johnson-Wells fight in London, and has written the home office urging that action to suppress the contest be taken.
The fifth annual dog show of the Colorado Kennel Club will be held in the old Metropole stables at the corner of Cheyenne and Fifteenth streets, Denver, starting September 27th. The exhibition will continue four days.
GENERAL.
Complete official returns from the special elections shows Maine voted wet by 26 votes.
The wholesale price of refined sugar in Chicago now stands at $7\frac{1}{4}$ cents a pound, the highest price in 22 years.
The third aviator to start on the transcontinental race, C. P. Rogers, has started from New York to San Francisco.
Farmers are fleeing in boats from the lowlands near the Marmilton river, at Nevada, Mo., which is high than ever before.
Samuel H. Hyde, confessed slayer of his young wife and father-in-law, at Anderson, S. C., was convicted of murder in the first degree.
S. W. Merrill, a veteran of the Civil War, died at Carthage, Ill., aged 86. He was the father of Edmond Merrill, claim agent of the Colorado & Southern at Denver.
Paul Peck, the young Washington aviator, fell eighty feet into a creek while making an exhibition flight near Harrisburg, Pa. Peck's back was slightly injured.
A 12-year-old child was run over and instantly killed by Thomas A. Edison's automobile at Lauf, Bavaria, a short distance from Nuremburg, a special despatch to New York from Lauf says.
Two persons were killed and a third probably fatally injured when a street car leaped from the tracks and plunged over a hundred-foot hill in Kansas City. There were but the three passengers in the car.
Captain Paul Beck, of the United States army, is the aviator who will carry the first special delivery mall sack that has ever been transported through the air. He will make trips twice daily from Nassau boulevard, Long Island, to Brooklyn.
Although the statement is not official, it is said that members of the Bakery and Confectionery Makers' Union of America will be assessed 15 cents each per month for maintenance of the bakeries which the union will soon establish in opposition to the "bread trust" shops.
The increase in membership in Scottish Rite Masonic bodies during the last year has been the greatest in the history of the order, according to reports of the ninty-ninth annual session of the Supreme Council for the northern district of the United States at Saratoga, N. Y.
Chief of the Bureau of Chemistry in the Department of Agriculture, Dr. Harvey W. Wiley, will not be asked to resign by President Taft, despite recommendations to that effect made by the personnel board of the department and indorsed by Attorney General Wickersham.
C. P. Rodgers and J. J. Ward, the aviators who are flying to the Pacific coast from New York for the Hearst prize of $50,000, are companions in misfortune. Rodgers' flyer is a wreck at Middletown, where he landed after an initial flight of about 80 miles from the Sheepshead bay race track, and Ward is at Corning, about 280 miles from New York, with the engine of his machine so badly burned that it is useless.
Peter S. Grosscup, presiding judge of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals of the Seventh District, has announced to his associates that he would resign about October 1st and resume the practice of law in Chicago. The most notable case in which he acted was in the opinion of the Circuit Court in setting aside the $29,000,000 fine imposed by Judge Landis on the Standard Oil Company, which decision was prepared and read by Grosscup. Six men connected with the United Shoe Machinery Company have been indicted by the federal grand jury in Boston, for alleged violations of the Sherman anti-trust law. The indictments allege maintenance of unlawful combination in restraint of trade.
To date the Geological Survey has passed upon and recommended for entry under the Mondell 320 acre homestead act, 199,394,927 acres. Over 23,000 acres were passed upon in the month of August, and the work is being carried forward at about this rate each month.
COLORADO STATE NEWS
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
COMING EVENTS.
September 26—Sugar Beet Day—La Jara.
September 24-29—Las Animas County Fair—Trinidad.
September 28, 29, 30—Public Lands convention—Denver.
September 25-30—Mesa County Industrial and Fruit Association—Grand Junction.
September 28—Old Settlers' Reunion on Pie Fiee—Longmont.
September 28-30—Sedgwick County Fair—Julesburg.
September 28-30—San Luis Valley Fair—Alamosa.
October 6—12 and 7—El Paso County Fair—Calhan.
October 16-20—International Dry Farming Congress and International Congress of Farm Women—Colorado State
October 14-21—Second Annual Show Colorado Electric Club, Denver. Nov. 14-16—American Apple Congress, Denver.
District Court Convenes.
Hahn's Peak.-The September term of District Court convened at Hahn's Peak with an exceptionally light docket and only four or five criminal cases.
Entombed Miners Rescued
Leadville.—The three miners who were entombed by a cave-in in shaft No. 5 of the Morning Star mine were brought to the surface, after an imprisonment lasting fifty-seven hours.
Pueblo Adopts Commission Form.
Pueblo.-At a special election, by a vote of almost four to one, Pueblo adopted a city charter which was recently drafted. The city will now have the commission form of government.
Big Rattler Suicides.
Grand Junction.—A twenty-two-inch rattlesnake captured alive by H. A. Rich and Milton Gifford and placed in a large bottle, rather than be held captive, committed suicide by biting its body nearly in two several inches above its rattles.
Ouray Man Ends Life.
Ouray.—James Law, living at Portland, four miles north of here, took strychnine and sat down to await its effects. His wife became suspicious and questioned him, but he deceived her. Soon afterward he fell in a spasm, when she telephoned for a doctor, who tried to contract the effect of the poison, without avail, Law dying soon afterwards.
Big Swindler Still Bush.
Grand Junction.—R. V. Smith, who is charged with swindling Denver; grain dealers to the extent of $13,000, found a victim in E. R. Bowie. Smith wrote stating to Bowie that he had surplus oats to sell, and sold one carload. Smith presented freight receipts and bills of lading that are called false and was paid $800, eighty-five per cent. of the amount for the entire carload.
Presbyterian Church Splits.
Denver.—The threatened breach between the Presbytery of Denver and the Union Presbyterian church, which has existed for a year or more, culminated when at a meeting of the judicatory body the church formally withdrew from the Presbytery. Both the Presbytery and the church are adamant in their stands and a bitter controversy which may effect the whole Presbyterian organization in this city is feared.
Mother Kills Children and Self.
Cañon City.—While temporarily insane, Mrs. T. W. Garrett shot, and killed her six-year-old son and her four-year-old daughter Juanita, and then turned the weapon upon herself, putting a bullet through her heart. Her husband, returning a half hour later, found all three dead upon the floor. Neighbors had heard the shots, but had not tried to learn their origin. They had seen Mrs. Garrett drag her son from the back yard into the house and a few minutes later three shots were heard.
To Open Fairplay Lands.
Washington.—As a result of an investigation by the forest service at the request of Senator Guggenheim, it is believed a large area in the vicinity of Fairplay will soon be released from the Leadville national forest. Some time ago Senator Guggenheim took the matter up with the forest service, which ordered an examination of the lands with a view to their elimination from the reserve. The senator has private advices that the examination has been completed and the report, which is believed to be favorable, is en route to Washington. The result of the elimination of this area would be to open a new mining field in Colorado, for many years practically denied to prospectors because of its incorporation in the forest reserve. Colorado postal savings banks designated today are Burlington, Steamboat Springs, Magnolia, Hayden and Craig.
Coal Production Decreases.
The reports of State Coal Mine Inspector James Dalrymple show that there was a decrease of 1,454,632 in the number of tons of coal produced during the first six months of 1911, as compared with the first six months of 1910. On account of this falling off in production it is believed that prices of coal will advance rapidly with the first cold spell. The number of men employed during the period was 13,700, as compared with 14,768 for 1910.
LITTLE COLORADO ITEMS.
Small Happenings Occurrii or the State Worth While.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
Nine cars of cabbage have been shipped from Fort Lupton.
The first week's enrollment of the Alamosa schools showed 500 pupils. Greeley is to get the state meeting of the Undertakers' association in 1913. Charles Wiley, county treasurer of Gilpin county, died at the age of 43 years. The Presbyterian church of Windsor is arranging to open a free reading room.
The machinery for the Alamosa ice and cold storage plant has arrived and been installed. A meteor, gigantic in its proportions, was seen to fall near Fort Collins, recently. Fifteen hundred autos from out of town have visited Cañon City during the past summer. The annual meeting of the Colorado Library Association will be held in Denver November 27. Larimer county will receive additional support from the state funds for road improvement work. Authorities say the report that there will be a coal miners' strike in Las Animas county is untrue. L. M. Rich, a laborer, was run down by a Boulder interurban near Floomfield and instantly killed.
A general movement of Rio Blanco bounty cattle to Denver and Missouri river markets has begun.
Heavy frosts are reported in the vicinity of Meeker, and the deer are leaving the hills as a result.
Carl F. Hallin, aged fifty, was struck by a Rio Grande passenger train in Denver and instantly killed.
Experienced burglars made an organized attempt to work the entire town of Trinidad one night recently.
The ladies of Empire are planning their annual dance for the benefit of St. Joseph's hospital at Georgetown.
Fishing is reported at its best in all parts of the state, the weather and low water being favorable to large catches.
A direct long distance telephone line has been completed between Denver and El Paso, Texas, a distance of 750 miles.
Bitten by a centipede at her home in Pueblo, Mrs. S. E. James is in a serious condition, with two physicians attending her.
Rio Blanco county farmers will not find it necessary to take a vacation as has other portions of the state, on account of the drouth.
Claude O. Akers, while riding a motorcycle near Colorado Springs on the Pueblo road, collided with an automobile, and died two hour later.
Ranchmen in the vicinity of Salida are very much interested in establishment of a creamery at that place, and it is probably a movement now on foot will succeed.
Assistant Superintendent Hughes of the Department of Fisheries, Washington, D. C., planted half a million fish in Big Thompson river between Love-land and Estes Park.
Colorado College at Colorado Springs has changed its regular religious exercises by the introduction of a weekly vesper service to be held every Sunday afternoon.
The Santa Fe, Union Pacific, Colorado & Southern and Denver & Rio Grande are contemplating improvements in their Denver freight terminals, the entire cost to be $2,000,000.
It is reported that the promoters of the Estes National Park scheme, are again appearing before the commercial bodies of the northern towns to secure their co-operation in putting through their plans.
The Board of County Commissioners of Las Animas county has ordered steel sign posts placed on the highway that follows the Santa Fe Trail and also on the superb scenic highway to Raton pass and to Walsenburg and La Junta.
It was reported by fishermen that thousands of fish ranging from two to twenty inches in length are floating on the surface and washed upon the banks in the vicinity of the Halligan dam, several miles from Fort Collins.
Several counties in the state threaten to institute mandamus proceedings against State Treasurer Roady Kenehan and State Auditor Michael A. Leddy, to secure an aggregate of $40,000 which they claim was appropriated to them by the Seventeenth General Assembly for road building.
Peaches have been going out of Delta for ten days at the rate of fifty to sixty cars a day. Nearly 500 car loads have already left the county and between 200 and 300 cars are still to be shipped. At Paonia hundreds of boxes have gone to waste for want of packers.
Land companies in the East which make a business of bringing settlers to Colorado to locate on government land on what are considered misrepresentations, thus injuring the reputation of the state, are in disrepute with the United States Land Office. A Chicago concern, which is said to operate under three different names, is now being investigated by special land agents and postoffice inspectors. The Elks' convention closed at Ouray with a grand display of fireworks. The three days of the meeting were most successful.
DIAMONDS
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DEWARDS
GOLD
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COLUMBINE,
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JUMBINE,
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STERLING SILVERWARE
Boost Colorado Produits Patronize Home Industry
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The Ph. Zang Brewin
TELEPHONE GALLUP 395.
We Boost for Colorado You Should Be
Ph. Zang Brewing
TELEPHONE GALLUP 395.
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You Should B
BERT PLESE
MANAGER
EAST TURNER
2132-2148 Arap
Phone 2449
Mamma Neely's Re
GOOD HOME COOK
Regular Meals 25e. Sunday
Short 'Orders at All H
1914 Arapahoe St. :: D
LEE YOUNG
ries, Meats, Hay, Gr
FRESH VEGETABLES EVERY DAY
and Avenue and Milwaukee
Phone York 881
BRADSHA
MUSEUM OF THE ARTS
2132-2148 Arapahoe St.
Phone 2449 Denver
Mamma Neely's Restaurant
GOOD HOME COOKING
Regular Meals 25e. Sunday Dinner 35e
Short Orders at All Hours
1914 Arapahoe St. Denver, Col.
LEE YO
Groceries, Meats,
FRESH VEGETABL
Second Avenue and
Phone Yo
A. BRAD
LEE YOUNG
Groceries, Meats, Hay, Grain, Etc. FRESH VEGETABLES EVERY DAY
Second Avenue and Milwaukee Street Phone York 881
A. BRADSHAW
A. BRADSHAW
THE BANK
AROUND THE CORNER FROM THE OLD STAND 1443
THE CORNER
OLD STAND 1443-1447 Sto
AROUND THE CORNER FROM THE OLD STAND 1443-1447 Stout St.
PHONE MAIN 3762
J. T. TURNER, Proprietor ZANG'S SPECIAL BREW
FAMILY TRADE A SPECIALTY
Beer, Wines, Liquors and
605 and 2609 Arapahoe Street
Wincs, Liquors and C
Arapahoe Street
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T PLESSNER
MANAGER
TURNER HA
2148 Arapahoe St
449 Den
Neely's Restaurant
HOME COOKING
25c. Sunday Dinner 35
Orders at All Hours
Bee St. :: Denver, Col
OUNG
Hay, Grain, Etc
ES EVERY DAY
Milwaukee Street
k 881
SHAW
Corsets Gents' Furnishings
Millinery
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 Hoisery and Underwear, including extra large size. We are in our own building, have not rent to pay. 1447 Stout St. N 3762 LING WORK
ors and Cigars
Denver, Colorado
ORIGINAL IN POOR CONDITION
re ee fF 823
B ROADHURST Sixteenth St.
(CARTER) ————
NSHROECOY/ We Are Denver
<< Agents for the
NETTLETON SHOE
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| $6, $7 and $8, Pair
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. DENVER’S PRIDE
‘The purity of Capitol Beer is demonstrated by its superior flavor
and strength-giving qualities. It’s capital.
HAVE A CASE SENT HOME,
The Capitol Brewing Co.
Phone Champa 356. Delivered Anywhere.
The Prior Furniture Co.
1814 Curtis Street
We buy and sell new and second hand
Furniture, also repair work. Window
shades. Sewing Machines sold and
repaired a specialty.
Phone Champa 392 Cash or Credit
2 A ,
Railroad Men and Waiters
Cl
We lead, others follow. Home for Railroad and Club
Men. A welcome to visitors. All the latest magazines
and papers will be found in the Library room.
FRANK BURNLEY, Manager
2149 Curtis Street Denyer, Colo.
Phone Main 8232
THE ZOBEL BROTHERS’
1004 Nineteenth Street, Corner of Curtis
FINE WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS
COORS' CELEBRATED BEER ON TAP
DENVER COLORADO
Supply Your Home with the Celebrated
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Phone Gallup 245
THE BLACK MAMMY MEMORIAL
GEORGIA'S EVIDENCE OF APPRE-
CIATION OF THE OLD ANTE:
BELLUM NEGRO, IN PRACTICAL
FORM ABOUT TO BE IN MATE:
RIAL SHAPE IN ATHENS.
eee ce a
Of days when on her dear old face
there played an angel smile,
As in her blessed arms she held and
‘crooned to sleep “her chile."
‘The color of a lowly race shone with its
ebon glow,
And yet the “old black mammy’s soul
was white as driven snow:
Her totlworn hands were kind and true
through all her bonded years.
‘To mistiss and the little ones tn gladness
‘and {n tears;
And through war's wearing agency her
heart was free from guile,
And loyal to the bitter end to “Mistus’
and "her chile.”
Her ranks are waning year by year on
southern hill and plain,
‘And ‘when the last black mammy's gone
she'll never come again;
Yet somewhere on the radiant hills be-
Yond earth's woe and wile,
Hor dear old arma will fold again o' Mis-
tus and “her chile.”
God bless her—till her weary feet shall
touch the shining shore:
God keep her with his faithful ones at
reat forevermore!
Athens, Ga—In a few days it 1s
‘hoped there will be begun the first
work of actual building upon an in-
‘stitution which ts unique in its nature
and original in its naming—the Black
Mammy Memorial institute. There
have been news notes and coarse al-
lustons to the project in the public
press for the past several months,
but only recently has the institution
been really crystallized into what it
will actually be in its beginning.
As it is the plans are for an expen-
diture three or four times what the
author of the Idea believed he could
raise to put in it a year ago. Be-
ginning on hopes of raising a thou-
sand or twelve hundred dollars for
a modest building, the plan became
known and from every section of the
state, from Old Virginia and from the
southerners in the northern state and
from as ardent northerners came sug-
gestions and advices which expanded
the plans to somewhat meet the rec-
ognized fitness and the appreciated
offices which the “racial peace monu-
ment” should mean.
Instead of five acres of land twenty-
five have beon bought on an eminence
in full sight of the University of Geor-
gia and with a view out over the im-
mense tract embraced in the exten-
sion territory of the university and
state college of agriculture—all but in
sight of the homes of Grady, the
Cobbs, and Toombs and Hills—in
sight of the scenes frequented by hun-
dreds who made the Old South the
paradise of history and the elysium of
romance.
The charter of the association re-
yeals the object of the institution:
“To maintain a school to prepare col-
cored boys and young men and colored
girls and young women for the prac-
tical duties of life by training them
for domestic service and for service
in the arts and trades, and Itkewise
| sive them such academic training as
| wall best fit them for carrying out
the main objects of this school.”
There “is to be no capital stock and
there is no pecuniary gain to be
made.” The teachers are to be paid
“moderate salaries and the one who
has been instrumental in bringing the
great plan of the memorial institute
_to a desired consummation has been
giving his nights and holfdays and
vacation times to this labor of love
while he made a living teaching in the
elty schools of Athens.
The young negro teacher whose
work has brought to pass the prac-
tical memorial which shall not only
serve as a monument of stone but a
lying remembrance in active hearts
iene lives of a newer sort of trained
negro youth, fs himself a grandson
of the “old black mammy” of the days
that were. Mrs. John D. Moss, a
member of one of the wealthiest fam-
flies of the state, has taken a care to
find out something about this young
negro and she tells the story of his
struggle and his success, of his quiet
seven years of effort and thought In
the interest of the Institution which
he {s now to lead. <.
Sam F Harris was born in Athens
thirty-six years ago and his grand-
father, whose name he bears, was a
slave in a wealthy Georgia family.
who “hired out’ his time as a skilled
shoe maker and made considerable
money at this vocation. Young Sam
Harris was educated at the Athens
city schools and in the Atlanta unt:
versity. Coming back from college
he was in charge of the colored
schools at Gainesville when that sys-
tem was first organized, under Prof.
R. E. Park, now head of the English
department at the university—being
the first colored teacher ever paid a
salary in Gainesville. After a year
there he was made principal of the
colored high school in Athens and
has bad that position ever since.
Even in this place he soon added “in-
dustrial” to the high school’s name.
A meeting of some of the most
‘prominent edueators and business
‘and professional men in Athens was
held at the office of Judge John J.
Spedekiand in the interest of the
David ©. Barrow, chancellor of the
> clad Judge H. 8, West and
Judie J. J. Strickland, with Prof, Sam
Harris, Tho organisation applied for
‘and was granted a charter and addi:
‘tonal men were interested. A board
of trustees wan elected; W. T. Bryan,
Athens, president; John EB. Talmadge,
Sr, Athens; John D. Moss, Athens;
Robert F. Maddox of Atlanta, H. H.
Dean of Gainesville, and ©. J. Hood
of Commerce. Colored directors were
named and among them were the four
who first met and worked out a plan
with Harris for an industrial school;
David Hawkins, Simon Pope, A. T.
Chunn, Moses Milner, W. A. and M. G.
Gilham, L. Hunt, Jackson Spalding,
and F. 8. Harris.
It ts planned to build the Memortal
hall according to the adopted outline
by the architect—old southern style,
at a cost of $15,000. There will be
built also two domttories costing $10,-
000 each. The institution already
owns 25 acres of land in the suburbs
of Athens—enhanced since {t was pur-
chased and estimated-at a valuation
‘of $6,000. The south will be asked
to contribute to this fund of $25,000
to erect this working monument to
the most faithful worker the old
south ever knew. The responses It {s
confidently believed will make the
modest sum for initial buflding look
modest indeed.
‘The courses that are designed to
by taught include industrial and aca-
demic lines. Housekeeping, cooking,
sewing, nurse training, laundering,
dairying, poultry ralsing, agriculture,
carpentry, masonry, English or com-
mon school studies, Bible, hygiene,
chemistry, and morals. These courses,
the principal says, are designed to
meet the needs of those who will
make some phase of domestic or {n-
dustrial labor their life occupation,
not as teachers or leaders, but as in-
telligent industrial workers and citi
zens. It is that the masses, the aver-
age, everyday, common laborer may
have®an opportunity to fit himself for
real, useful living and service, this
line of education will be followed.
‘And the institution will serve not
only Georgia, but the country at
large.
GOVERNOR PRAISES RAGE
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OF ARKANSAS
TELLS DELEGATES TO BUSI-
NESS LEAGUE CONVENTION
THAT NEGROES ARE A RE-
MARKABLE PEOPLE.
Little Rock, Ark.—All the dele-
gates to the twelfth annual session of
the National Negro Business league
left this city with words of praise for
Governor Donaghey, who made a
notable address to the delegates at
‘Kempner’s theater. Governor Dona-
ghey was applauded often.
~~ He said in part:
“Some men might be embarrassed
to come here under such circum-
stances, but I am not in the least, be-
cause I know who I am talking to. I
am talking to people I was raised
with, I know them and understand
them, and they know me. There 4s
no trouble between us. Everything {s
all right. I know your strong points
and I know your weaknesses.
“[ am greatly pleased to welcome
you, You are a remarkable people—
remarkable more than for your color
or your plantation melodies. Behold
the astounding progress you have
made in 60 years.
“What are the prominent elements
in the solution of the race problem?
First, your unfailing good humor. The
Irish—-my own people—have this
quality, but not to so marked a de-
gree ag yours. It has carried and
is carrying you through your hard-
ships. You are said to be an Imita-
tive race, but you never sufctde or
suffer from nervous trouble. Another
distinguishing character of your race
is your loyalty and your devotion. No
race is go loyal and devoted as yours.”
THE NEW POSTMASTER.
Frank H. Hitchcock, tie postmaster
general, tells a story to illustrate that
sometimes mistakes are made in the
service of which he has charge. A
rural postmaster, it was found, never
answered any of the official communt-
cations and directions sent to him,
but he was always prompt in sending
in his monthly reports. Finally, an in-
spector was sent to his office to find
‘out what the trouble was.
“Here is a bunch of letters and doc:
uments,” the postmaster explained to
the inseytigator, “and I don’t know
what to do with them. They have on
them the initials ‘P. M.,’ and nobody
with those initials lives in this com-
munity.”
‘The inspector muttered something
about “heads of solid ivory” and said,
in emphatic language, that “P. M.”
stood for postmaster.”——Popular Maga-
zine.
HIS LULLABY.
“Good morning, Mr. Schnelderpop-
ski!” exclaimed the good lady of the
house as the new second-floor back
took his place at the breakfast table.
“Goot mor-r-rning!” replied the mu-
sician, bowing gallantly.
“['m so afraid you didn’t pass a
comfortable night,” pursued the host-
ess, sympathetically. “Can we do any-
thing for you?”
“Not koomfortable? Me?" ex:
claimed the long-haired one. “Ach, Ja,
I slec’ like ze humming bird! I was
oll rite, Joost before I go to bed |
practise mit mein feedle—"
“Oh, was that {t?” Interrupted the
hostess, with a look of glad relief
“fm so pleased. We thought you
ware ebifting the bed.”—Answere.
CHARLES 8, WEST JOHN W. WEST
WEST BROS.
;
Confectionery and Ice Cream Parlor
Baur’s Ice Cream Johnston’s Candies
Cafe in conection. We make a specialty of Fried Chicken, Steaks,
Chops and Everything good to eat. Try a meal
and be convinced.
All the latest Soda Fountain Drinks and Chili served at all hours.
Also a fine grade of Cigars.
ee |
2741 Welton Street
Near Five Points
PHONE CHAMPA 2188 DENVER, COLORADO
10th Avenue Hotel
SS een’) HEUER, PROPRIETOR
RESTING PLACE FOR COLORED GENTS
MEALS AT ALL HOURS
Gorner West 10th and Osage, Near Burnham Shops
Denver, Colorado
Who pays the high up-town rent?
Is it the tailor? No!
Just guess who it is-~
The Customer
Give us a chance and we will give you the satisfac.
tion, Our Spring and Summer Styles are all in.
Our prices are moderate. We do all sewing in our
shop.
Respectfully,
N. Ferry
1905 Curtis Street
POTS ee ee ae ee eee
4 .
¢ Standard Bottling Co. ;
4 Manufacturers of all Kinds ¥
3 Soda Water, Minera! Waters and 3
g Ginger Ale 3
4 ALSO NEEF’S LAGER BEER FOR FAMILY USE. 3
g PHONE 66. g
EXKKSKSSNANSNSNANANNANANSNANANNNAN NNSA NAAN NAAT
Neef Bros. Beer?
wweel DrOS. Deer:
It’s made right, and tastes right.
None better made anywhere and
This is a Strictly Colorado Production
————————
BE SURE AN TRY IT.
SAN AERN RISE NEN NTN rE rn arn ae
E 1712 LARIMER ST. TELEPHONE MAIN 3889 %
, . ’ . zg
; N. Weisman’s Loan Office 3
5 Money to Loan on * %
$ DIAMONDS, JEWERLY, WATCHES AND GUNS, CLOTHING, 3%
5 TRUNKS, VALISES, ETC. %
E Business Strictly Confidential. DENVER, COLO. ¥
4
LS SKSEESSSSSSNNSASSSSSSSSSNNNN SUSE SES NNN IN TINH N NNT
Hours: 10 to 11 a. m., 2'to 5 and 7 to9
Darn Oyen nana by Appointment.
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EE Ee SS eS SES EE ET EST Ge, eae OR
spent at home reacts in its benefits
oO ar with unceasing general profit.
Sent out of town it’s life is ended.
Kept with the home merchants it is a messenger of continuous
benefit. Business men should awake to the importance of keeping
this dollar at home and make a bid for it by judicious advertising.
_.. this. dollar at home and. Maks & Did TOR oy a eee
|
| Is Prepared to Do
All Kinds of
Printing?
ee
Commercial,
Fraternal,
Church, Book
and Station-
ery Jobs a
Specialty
——
Ball and Concert Pro
grams, Bill and Lette
Heads, Calling Cardo
Wedding Cards, Envel
opes and Everything in
the PrintingLine Turned
Out in Neatest and Best
Style Promptly on Shore
Notice.
We have supplied
our office with job
prese and type of
up-to-date atyte
and our work will
be on a par with
the
Very Best
Give Us a Trial
and We Will Give
You Satisfaction
PRIOR® AS REASONABLE
A®S THOSE OF ANY JOB
OFFICE IN DENVER
THE
1824 Curtis Streat
THE WORLD'S GREATEST
REMEDY
FOR
RHEUMATISM
BLOOD POISON
Bas iets behiac-oiwe
Pir teal Or ameale ca
hone
ae bed Siler ai
api at ietiveh ols
Mg
Y )
ta HAIR POMADE
SOR aA Aces HARSH. AINRY OR CURLY HAL
ioe GLOSSY SOFTER AND MORE PLIABLE,
INES [H easy roeon3 a pur up in any st
TE LENGTH PERMIT. UNEXCELLED
{OR PREVENTING HAIR ROME FALLING OUT, DANDRUFF AND CHING
(OF SCALE BEWARE OF IMITATIONS GET TE GEMOIME, PUT UP AN.
25e4ND Sie OOTTLES WT! CHARLES FORD'S NAME OM
EVERY PACHACE, oo oe
TRY FORD'S ROYAL WHITE
SKIN LOTION FOR THE COMPLEXION.
MAKES THE SKIN WHITER IMMEDIATELY
UPON APPLICATION. WILL NOT IRRITATE
THE MOST DELICATE SKIN. UNEXCELLED
FOR ECZEMA, SALT RHEUM, PIMPLES,
ROUGH SKIN AND FRECKLES.9 2° 9
SOLD BY ORUGGISTS. IF YC"% ORUGGIST CANNOT
Suppcy YOU. We WILL SEND ITT2 YOU QIRECT AT THE
Foulowawe Prices, sustt Sit OTE 25<LAGGE SED BOMME
$0. THE OZONIZED OX MARROW CO.
252 LAKE ST. DEPT. 280 CHICAGOML.
AGENTS wanteo
Furniture Repairing and Up-
holstering. All work Cash,
PHONE MAIN 4610
2281 Washington St Denver
asl
TISHLER TAILORING
ESTABLISHMENT
| Se
= eer | =
[a
fas Fa
tes ee
mee
a
Moment EE
le
) MDA YS
McCRAY
teeirigerators
have such a vigorous
circulation of cold air
that a damp cloth will dry out in
one of them es readily as tho? it
were placed in the sun on a
windy day.
| Open the door of a McCray
Refrigerator and fecl the dry,
cold air, as swee. and pure asa
; ee ;
‘mountain top breeze. |
| If you are thinking of buying a
‘refrigerator, it will pay you to
inspect the exclusive sanitary
features of the McCray. J
McCRAY
REWRIGERATORS — for Residences
Grocers, Plorixtn, Hotels.
Display Cases and Counters—COOLERS
For Markets and Stornge—DUILT-TO-
ORDER Work « Specialty,
0. 1, GAMMREL, Manager.
1523 Court Place, Denver.
Fort Rent—Two furnished rooms.
Men preferred. Apply 2218 Clarkson
street, Phone York 6121.
Three-room apartment for rent,
modern in every respect. Reasonable,
2802 Welton street.
Brickler’s New Barber Shop is lo-
‘cated at 2208 Larimer street. Shave,
40c. Hair Cut, 25c; Children, 150.
Five-room house for rent, 820 24th
street. Apply at 1824 Curtis street,
Room 25. f
Furnished rooms for rent, 1272 Kal-
amath street. Call Ellsworth 1476.
8 large ink tablets, extra quality,
smoothe paper at Eddy’s, 2625 Wel
ton, 10c.
Early Fall Hats
ee NO an LE 9
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Laer et i a Fis
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fence ote 2.7 Pisheggs 32
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SRE
}IREE hats, of distinctly different
types, aro pictured here, each
one of them an example of ex-
celiont millinery. ‘The alpine
shape, with folded oyercrown is a soft
braid in yellow with facing of black
velvet and wide collar of the same.
‘The tall pointed “mother goose” crown
fs flattened and brought down to the
brim at the left, where a bunch of
velvet cherries In the natural colors,
with twigs and foliage, provide a
touch of brilliant, color. It is a dash-
ing hat, with a hint of the “boyish” in
it, especially suited to some girls
‘The soft cap made of rather heavy
messaline, and trimmed with a big
wire bow of the silk, looks much like
a glorified bathing cap. It 1s a beau:
tiful piece of work and fllustrates the
season's trend toward simple effects,
arrived at through intricate and pains-
taking work on the part of the mil-
Miner.
It is very beautiful made of soft,
changeable taffetas in the rich color
combination which appear in this {ub-
ric, It needs no additional trimming,
although many models are shown in
this type with lace falling about the
face, and tiny flowers or bunches of
small velvet fruit, in one or two points
wee
INDIVIDUAL SETS OF CHINA
Can Be Bought Now Comparatively
Cheap—Expenditure 12 Consid-
k ered a Good One.
A shop here in town which I dis-
covered the other day 1s intended, to
my way of thinking, for the woman
who wishes individual china, Here
they import the plam white china in
the most delicate and beautiful
shapes I have ever seen and decorate
It to suft the customers’ deas, room,
{able decorations or anything the cus-
tomer chooses. And the best point 4s
that althongh this work is done beaw-
tiiully in old and colors which are
lasting and in patterns which are of
unusual beayty to say the least, the
charge is very reasonable.
For Instance a dinner get of fine
French china, consisting of one hun-
dred pleces (and the customer may
choose these to a certain extent—that
1s, one does not have to buy useless
covered dishes and soup tureens, but
may substitute other pieces) with a
delicate coin gold border and a gold
monogram of any style, sells for $50;
and when I compare it with the sets
usually: sold at ttiat price I only _won-
der why everybody who has $50 to
spend doesn’t order this china, For
there 1s nothing in better taste than
a simple fine gold-bordered china, and
the individuality of one's monogram
gdds greatly to its beauty.—Smart Set.
Crudities In Color.
Colors are still being blended and
crude bright effects continue to claim
our allegiance, though there are eyt-
dences of a coming change in this
direction. Meantime, however, one of
the most exclusive and refined of dress
designs offers an emerald green eve-
ning gown, semf-empire in style, with
green and blue jeweled motifs for
trimming and dark ced roses on the
corsage, which has a decolletage dra-
pery of pink net with a sash of the
samo net tasseled with brilliants and
colored beads. It sounds rather re-
markable, but it was done 50 har-
montously that {ts effect was distinct:
ly pleasing as well as chic,
Skirt Pads.
“Some, dressmakers frequently have
great difficulty in making skirts cut
with the raised waist line hang
straight in front at the line of the
normal waist.
At this point the skirt breaks and
13 apt to show an ugly wrinkle, espe-
‘qially when the wearer is seated.
“This can be avoided by making a
small oblong pad of the same material
as the skirt and inserting {t directly
In front. The pad is made four inches
long and two inches wide and s
placed lengthwise with the skirt, It
‘gen be tacked In place.
above the frill. It is suited to matrons
as well as maids and resembles the
corday (of pleasant memory) except
that it fs smaller—a veritable cap
The bonnetlike shape of velvet:
faced with silk, has a soft crown
shaped over a crinoline foundation.
Here again one sees the tushion of us-
ing the same materials for the body
of the hat and the trimming. The
wings are of velyet Ike the hat, lined
with silk lke its facing. They are
carefully made and finished with fine
silk braid.
‘There 1s nothing startlingly new in
this shape but it will be all the more
popular for that. For of many simi-
lar shapes, it is about the most artis:
te and becoming. The lift or upturn
at the back of the brim is a charac-
teristic of the season: which is being
featured by many designers here and
especially by one of the foremost in
Paris.
‘This shape is not becoming, as a
rule to older women. It looks best on
round faces; and then must possess a
truth of girlishness. The same brim-
lines, with a different crown and trim-
ming, however, have proven their
worth for older wearers.
JULIA BOTTOMLEY.
aa
; SHANTUNG DESIGN. |
Ss & >
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VA\\\\ au
W \ \. y|
a
For a between season’s dress, Shan-
tung {s a most useful material, as it ts
light in weight yet a little warmer
than muslin or lawn.
‘The dress we illustrate here is In
Japanese blue, trimmed with straps
of golden brown and black silk and
Dlaci’ buttons with simulated button:
holes.
‘The skirt is slightly fuli at the
waist, where it is gathered; points of
the fancy silk stand up from the waist
each side front. The deep collar
which {fs square at the back and point.
ed in front, {s bound with silk and or
namented with buttons, the sleeves be
ing trimmed to match
Golden brown straw hat, trimmed
with feathers of the same color as the
dress. .
Materials required: Seven yards
Shantung thirty-four inches wide, one
and one-quarter yard silk twenty two
inches wide, thirty buttons.
pre arora 9 eT
meee CARSON'S saanman
We are receiving advance shinments . "
of Fall and Holiday China, Cut Glass ckard hina
and Silverware, almost every day, and
It would be impossible to enumerate set
in detail the many pretty things we
have to offer. sy c
We have arranged a BARGAIN sl
SQUARE on the First Floor, the ae 4
prices are 10c,.15c, 25¢, 50c, 75¢ and Pm (3-7
$1.00 for your choice of any art cle on Me “a
the tables. We have endeavored to ; » s/
give such good values that the tables te Tay!
will be the talk of the town, ‘i 7 fa
A few minutes spent in looking over (Qe 3
our stock of pretty things suitable for <@aaiehu®
anyone in the family will be time well Ress. a
spent, and money in your pocket es
Denver's Largest Exclusive China Store
732736 FIFTEENTH STREET.
eR THE
4 CAPITOL
MACK SMART CLUB
manager eA SOCIAL CLUB.~
PHONE CHAMPA 2540.
921 20TH. ST. DENVER, COLO-
Prt SET ee Gn ee
ESy Pa Se
¥ bios SY Gor te
See eS i NA
ae Sar mecca ee aA. sas
Hh Cae eee et ars ne |
2 Go) % ae @.
wees i Eire a
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GASAWAY WALTON
AUTO SERVICE.
call Main 5038, Stand 19th & Market Sts. Special Rates for Parties and Balls.
CT ee ee Te en fees Lee A ee be EF erg ee Ty Se ale
% a
% 9 x
x oe oe x
M , u
‘ ‘
H re
« Restaurant ;:
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LS —————— *
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* exh —AND— ”
rs Lak vie lal
s GET ea SHORT ORDER 4
4 Ses %
c one « HOUSE x
i J %
i‘ ds 1, Noodles and Chop Suey at ‘
im fe First-Class in Every Respect ( x
x ht Private Rooms for Ladies, Best trade N :
‘ 2342 Larimer St Bs aries Denver, Colo %
PxdKdKt Xt Xd KtK} K+ Xt Xt A+NsxeXs K+ K+ E+K+K+X+KsX+X+ K+ X+Eh
2029 CHAMPA STREET PHONE MAIN 5964
W. O. SIMONDS
Eureka COAL A. —
GAS COKE $5.00 PER TON
We Will Save You Money if You Leave Your Order Before Coal
5 Prices Go Up. >
J. Re poniee: PRESIDENT, THE
<nidior icnete aw DIESE
— Undertaking
CEI « Hy
1033 19th Stragt...°ees es ee