Colorado Statesman
Saturday, October 14, 1911
Denver, Colorado
Page text (machine-generated)
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THE COLORADO STATESMAN
THE JOURNAL OF THE WEST.
LABOR SHALL BE FREE
RACE COUNTRY PARTY
BAPTIST IN EARNEST
Intend to Make Pilgrimage to Washington Five Thousand Strong. Date has been Chosen. Says Small Committees have done Very Little Good.
VOL. XVIII.
BAPTIST
EA
Intend to Make Pilgrimage to Strong. Date has been Committee have done
Tuesday, May 7, 1912, has been selected by the colored Baptist of the country to make their march to Washington, D. C., 5,000 strong with a view of demanding fair play for the Negroes of the United States. The colored Baptists are really in earnest in the movement, and making preparations for the pilgrimage, at which time President Taft and the members of Congress will be visited.
The idea to march 5,000 Baptists to Washington in the interest of the Negro was born at the annual session of the New England Baptist Missionary convention, held last June at Providence, R. I., where a resolution was adopted authorizing the appointment of a committee of three to raise a subcommittee of 5,000. Since the convention in Providence the committee of three has been very active
One of the strong advocates of the movement is the Rev. A. Mark Harris, pastor of the Union Street Baptist church, Jersey City, N. J., who made the following statement:
Recent disgraceful happenings in these parts demonstrate conclusively that the Negro problem is no longer confined to the South. The burning of Zack Walker proves that in no place in all this broad land is the Negro safe when thugs and hoodlums go on the warpath. No one ever dreamed on thought of the possibility of such an act of savagery being committed in the old Quaker commonwealth of Pennsylvania, founded by William Penn on Brotherly Love. But it did happen, and on the Lord's Day.
The quiet of that Holy Day was broken by the multitudious howl of a bloodthirsty crowd of demons, disguised in the form of human beings, led on to their ghastly work by some of the so called best white citizens of Coatesville, and unless we rise up and vigorously protest against the commission of these barbaric deeds, the time will come when the dying groans of a Negro will be heard coming from the flames of his funeral pyre, on the very spot where Crispus Attucks fell, and the fair name of Massachusetts will become a stench in the nostrils of men.
Let no Negro idly say that there is no danger of a lynching taking
place in New York or Boston. I will tell you that the only thing lacking is some one brave enough to lead the crowd, and the world will be startled with the news of a 'Negro burned in Broadway,' and another about 'Negro Lynched on Boston Commons.' Washington, the capitol of the nation, has tried to 'Jim Crow' the Negro; Baltimore has its 'Jim Crow' streets Deleware has lynched Negroes; Pennsylvania is stifled with the smoke of a recent burning; New Jersey joined the ranks some years ago, when a minister preached a sermon which resulted in the lynching of a Negro; New York City has for years refused to serve colored men in certain places, and the wave sweeps on like the rushing of a mighty wave, leaving the dead and wounded in its wake.
Will we bare, our backs to the lash forever, and view in silence the murdering of our people? We answer. No. We shall go to Washington five thousand strong and memorialize the President, the members of the Senate and the House of Representatives in defense of our rights. We shall demand the abolishing of the 'Jim Crow' car law is respect to interstate passengers, and ask Congressmen to use their influence in their several states to abolish the segregation laws. We shall further demand that Congress abolish disfranchisement in the South by taking charge of the Federal elections, and fix the qualifications of the electors of such elections that Congress enact a law giving the Federal courts jurisdiction in all cases of lynching and mob violence on the ground that the state permitting such lawlessness is without a Republican form of government and is in a state of anarchy. If the men whom we have sent to the Senate and to Congress fail to do their full duty in bringing about these reforms, we shall meet them at the polls and defeat them.
Every race under the sun can get a hearing at Washington and have their demands granted but the Negro race. We have sent committees of ten, of twenty, of thirty and of fifty, but they have been looked upon as self appointed leaders, and ere the door had closed behind them, their appeal had found its way to the waste basket, and nothing was done. But when
DENVER. COLORADO. SATURDAY. OCTOBER 14 1911.
State Hist & Nat Hist Society
State House
ANIZING MERCER
ADO
THE JOURNAL
DENVER, COLORADO
five thousand of us shall march up to the White House, after holding a half hour prayer service in every church in the capitol city, there will be no question of leadership. The world will know that at last the race has decided to demand its rights, and will not take no for an answer. It is certain that no one who has red blood in their veins and a conscience will say that they are satisfied with the conditions in this country, of which we form no small part, and for which we have given our lives on the field of battle. There are those who contend that the white people of the South know best how to deal with the Negro, and that they are among his friends. If to be hung to a convenient limb and to be burned at the stake are acts of friendship, then may God deliver us from our friends.
Although this movement had its birth in a Baptist convention it is by no means confined to the Baptists alone. Indeed, it is a race movement and we therefore call on every man and woman of the race to write at once to the Senator and Congressman of their district, telling them of the movement and request them to meet our delegation of five thousand at the gates of the capitol, on the morning of May 7 next, and head the line of march up to the White House. It is confidently expected that every pastor, regardless of denomination will at once get in touch with headquarters and arrange for meetings to be held in their church. We have secured the services of some of the best orators in the race, and their voices will be heard from now until the close of the campaign.—New York Age.
ALBUQUERQUE NEWS.
John Norwood and family are recent arrivals from Liberia, Africa. Mr. Norwood went to Africa with a colony about six months ago. He has a slight touch of the African fever yet, but will remain here during the winter.
C. N Bryant was taken to the hospital last week, to be operated on for appendicitis. We trust for a speedy recovery.
Hon. Booker T. Washington passed through our city last week enroute to Phoenix, Ariz., where he will speak. He was met at the depot by local colored men for a short pleasant conversation. during his snort stay.
It is reported that T. K. Lawers of San Diego, California met with a serious accident, by falling and breaking his leg, and receiving other injuries.
The colored voters of our city are more united than ever before, and will remain so, if treachery does not appear in the conduct of those whom we honor with trust
to act as agent or delegate from our club.
Miss Beulah and Albert Dunlap of Prescott, Ariz., arrived last Monday and will make their home with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. Dunlap, who reside in this city.
Rev. W. H. Prince, the efficient presiding elder of this district stopped over for a few hours while enroute to his home in Los Vegas, shaking hands with friends.
Rev. J. J. Jackson, pastor of the A. M. E. church of this city is making an impression on his congregation, and the pews of the church are well filled every Sunday.
The first Republican state convention has just adjourned, putting into the field a strong ticket. There were colored delegates in the convention from Albuquerque, Roswell and Raton.
The newspapers of our city that spring into existence just on the eve of a campaign are a fine instrument to work a few dollars out of the poor candidates and it also helps to boost ones self if we so desire to use it for that purpose.
The thirty-second fair and our first State fair opens this morning and it promises to be the best tair ever. Many strangers are in the city among whom are: W. H. Kerr, Wm. Parsons, Wm. Hunt, Dan and Louis Anderson and wife and Wm. Robert of Santa Fe. Miss Clare Bell of Los Vegas, N. M., Ed Chapman Chas. Kavanale of Gallup, N. M. and many others.
SECRETARY MACVEAGH STANDS
BY COLORED ARCHITECT
The Hon. Ranklin MacVeagh, secretary of the treasury, has demonstrated anew his belief in a "square deal" for all under his jurisdiction, and has shown that he is willing to go out of his way to assist worth colored men to rise to the full measure of their opportunities. He has indicated this in a concrete fashion by cancelling the recent order of the department separating from the office the supervising architect three colored draughtsmen, who are drawing generous salaries, ranging from $1,800 to $2,000 per annum, and rendering service of a gilt edged character.
Women Lawyers Gaining Ground.
Women are now eligible for admission to the bar in all Federal courts, and in Maine, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Oregon, South Dakota, Washington and several other states.
—Law Notes.
Fell From Roof of Church.
Pell From Roof or Church
A mason named Littlejohn, residing in the Strathdon district of Aberdeenshire, Scotland, met his death recently in a remarkable manner. He climbed to the roof of a church in order to dislodge a swarm of bees, but suddenly overbalancing, he fell to the ground and was killed on the spot.
RACE NEWS GATHERED FROM VARIOUS SOURCES
Collector Charles W. Anderson has appointed Virgil H. Parks as a deputy collector in the Second Internal Revenue District of New York. Mr. Parks has a military record, having served as a trooper in the Ninth Cavalry and also as a member of the 24th Infantry.
Westchester, Pa., Oct. 10—Ef. forts of the commonwealth of Pennsylvania to secure a conviction in connection with the burning of Zack Walker, the Negro, at Coatesville failed again today when a jury acquitted Oscar Lampey, who was charged with being a member of the mob that lynched Walker. Lampey is the fifth dependent to be freed of a murder in connection with the lynching.
cavalry U. S. A., was captured by troopers whom he held at bay for half an hour. Andrew Fox, a private of the Tenth cavalry, and Sarah Washington, 19 years old, were killed by Carlisle. Beatrice Stuart, 18 years old, was shot and wounded so severely she is expected to die. All are Negroes. Carlisle was arrested this morning for failure to appear for morning fatigue duty. While detained in quarters Carlisle retained his rifle and ammunition. Fully armed, he left his quarters and approach-Fox, shot off the back of his head. Holding off pursuers, Carlisle fled to a building a mile away. There he encountered the two girls and shot them, later hiding in the buildings. Carlisle held off the
Vallejo, Cal., Sept. 25.—There will be opened a new colored industrial institute on November 1 in this city. C. H. Torrey, principal, and Miss M. M. Smith of Dallas, Tex., principal teacher. Mr. Torrey is connected with a large school in Oakland and has had six or eight years' experience. He will teach all branches of training. The institute will be a free school and six months will contitute a term.
Westbury, L. I., October 4.—The Queenan Brothers, breeders of poultry, won first prize on a Pekin drake at at the Mineola Fair a few days ago. The colored poultry raisers completed against a millionaire and other white duck breeders, getting the blue ribbon in the face of hot competition, some of the ducks on exhibition having won first prizes for their owners at Madison Square Garden last year.
Dumas, Ark., Sept. 27.—A mob of 100 men, overpowering those in charge, broke into the county jail here and took Charles Malpass, a white man, who married a colored woman, to a water tank and lynched him today. The lynching followed a battle late yesterday at the home of Malpass, in which Sheriff Preston, Deputy Sheriff Barney and two mulatto sons of Malpass were killed and Malpass wounded. The wife of Malpass and his younger son escaped during the fighting.
Burlington, Vt., Oct. 10.—After killing two persons and fatally wounding a third in a fight from Fort Ethan Allen today, Matthew Carlisle, a trooper of the Tenth
NO 5
cavalry U. S. A., was captured by troopers whom he held at bay for half an hour. Andrew Fox, a private of the Tenth cavalry, and Sarah Washington, 19 years old, were killed by Carlisle. Beatrice Stuart, 18 years old, was shot and wounded so severely she is expected to die. All are Negroes. Carlisle was arrested this morning for failure to appear for morning fatigue duty. While detained in quarters Carlisle retained his rifle and ammunition. Fully armed, he left his quarters and approach-Fox, shot off the back of his head. Holding off pursuers, Carlisle fled to a building a mile away. There he encountered the two girls and shot them, later hiding in the buildings. Carlisle held off the fort guard for some time by firing occasional shots from a window, but when a bullet entered his leg he surrendered.
At the government printing office the leaders of the bricklayers union are working overtime to keep a colored man John Moore, from plying his trade on a wall attached to the great printery. They are holding meetings and denouncing Public Printer Donnelly because he is man enough to regard his oath to observe the law as sacred, even though it requires him to stand up for a Negro workman, in defiance of the labor union and its narrow selfishness. It is stated that Moore has passed the civil service examination as a bricklayer, and that his appointment came in regular form after certification by the commission. The union people do not want to work with him, and are indicating their willingness to call off the fight against Moore and the public printer, if the Negro is reduced to a laborer at $2.00 a day. As a skilled trade-worker he is now getting $5.20 a day. At this writing Public Printer Donnelly is "standing pat," and allowing the union magnates to do the worrying. It seems that the monarchs of the labor fraternity have overlooked one very important fact; namely, that the government printing office belongs not to a private organization of mondescrip individuals known as a labor union, but to all the people of the nation—union and non-union, black and white. No private cabal can supersede the regularly-appointed officer of the government in administering the duties of his office. The government printing office is or ought to be—an "open shop."
A BRIEF RECORD OF PASSING
EVENTS IN THIS AND FOR-
EIGN COUNTRIES.
DOINGS AND HAPPENINGS THAT
MARK THE PROGRESS
OF THE AGE.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
WESTERN.
Postmaster General Hitchcock has
established the longest railway mail
route in the United States, between
San Francisco and Salt Lake, 992
miles,
J. 8. Horman, a wealthy citizen of
Fullerton, Neb., remarried his first
wife on the fifty-third anniversary of
their first wedding, after having been
married to two other women.
The eight hour law for women,
passed by the recent session of the
Washington Legislature, has been de-
clared constitutional by Superior
Judge John F. Main, at Seattle.
After hunting bear in Texas, ele-
phants in Africa, and various other
things in his own country, Col. Theo-
dore Roosevelt, it is intimated, may
go to Long Beach, Cal, to hunt
whales,
Woman Suffrage has been defeated
and the Initiative and Referendum
and Recall which includes the judi:
clary, have received a most emphatic
endorsement by the voters of Call:
fornia.
John R. Walsh, Chicago banker, has
been paroled and will be released
from the federal prison at Leaven-
worth, Kansas, The Pardon Board
acted favorably on the application and
its recommendation has been pre:
sented to Attorney General Wicker-
sham,
Six thousand working men, repre-
senting forty trades unions, marched
through the streets of Portland in a
demonstration to express the sympa:
thy of local labor organizations for
the McNamara brothers, who are fac-
ing trial on a charge of murder in
connection with the Times disaster
in Los Angeles, Cal.
“If nothing untoward happens,”
said President ‘Taft in his Seattle
speech, “you can count on the com-
pletion of the canal not later than the
first of July, 1913. It has only been
promised on the first of January, 1915,
and therefore, if it is mot ready until
then, you must not say that anybody
made a promise that it would be com-
pleted before.”
With the date for the drawing for
66,562 acres of government farm lands
in South Dakota set for October 24th,
the registration is now its height.
Every train into Dallas and Gregory
brings hundreds of landseekers and it
is esmated that by midnight of Octo-
ber 24th over 150,000 will have sworn
in their applications, ‘The registra-
tion started October 2nd.
Several prominent Salt Lake City
capitalists, headed by William Spry,
governor of Utah, have agreed in the
formation of a company to build the
Utah division of the Denver, North-
western & Pacific railroad (Moffat
road), from the Colorado state line
to Salt Lake City, Utah, and, in con-
junction with foreign interests, to con-
tinue the road westward by arrange-
ment with the present holders of Mot-
fat road stock.
WASHINGTON.
Provisions for the establishment of
a parcels post and the transportation
‘of mail by aeroplane has been made by
Postmaster General Hitchcock in his
annual estimates of postoffice depart:
ment expenditures, submitted to the
‘Treasury Department in Washington.
Apparently intoxication is coming to
be regarded as a much more serious
offense among officers of the army
and nayy, It was announced at the
War Department that President Taft
had confirmed the sentence of dismis-
sal in the case of four of the West
Point cadets recently convicted of in-
toxication,
FOREIGN.
Rear Admiral Boreddolino has been
made Italian governor of Tripoli fol
lowing the military occupation of the
city by the Italians.
A news agency dispatch from
Vienna says it is reported from Con:
stantinople that an Italian squadron
has bombarded and occupied Mity:
lene, capital of the island of Lesbos,
in the Grecian archipelago, belonging
to Turkey. ‘Tripoli has been bom
barded, her forts and other defenses
are in ruins and the Turks have
hoisted the white flag.
Great Britain's largest and best ar
mored battleship, King George V., was
launched successfully at Portsmouth.
Accompanied by his uncle, Alfonso,
the duke of Oporto, and hiding his
identity under the cloak of an incogni:
to, Manuel, the deposed king of Por-
tugal, whose love for a Parisienne cost
him a crown, is expected in San Se-
bastian, Spain, from Paris, The for.
mer monaich is on his way through
Spain to join the royal’sts in northern
Portugal to lead the remnant of his
following in a campaign to regain his
throne
SPORT.
The Agricultural College of Utah
swamped Colorado Aggies by a score
of 27 to 0. The game was one-sided
from the start, the visitors never be-
ing dangerous. They made their dis-
tance only once during the contest.
‘The closing games of the 1911
American League season have been
played, By virtue of its victory over
Cleveland, Chicago finished the sea-
son in fourth place, a fraction ahead of
Boston; Cleveland was third, Boston
fifth, New York sixth, Washington
seventh and St. Louis last,
Ad Wolgast, the champion light:
weight of the world, and Matt Wells,
the English champion, will meet in a
ten-round bout in New York October
28. Announcement of the bout, which
was arranged several days ago, but
called off because of an insufficient
guarantee for Wolgast, was re-made
by George McDonald, manager for
Wells.
In the minds of the baseball public
the coming duel between the Giants
and the Athletics for the world’s
championship has narrowed down to
@ question of pitchers. ‘This is the
opinion of Connie Mack, and McGraw
has agreed with him. Some have ar
guied that hitting will settle the cham:
pionship, but that is practically the
same thing, as the hitting will depen i
entirely upon the strength or the
weakness of the pitching.
| ‘The recent floods in the Black river
in Wisconsin wiped out the business
section of the town of Black River
Falls.
Willis Jackson, negro, under arrest
for an attack on a little girl, was
hanged to a telegraph pole by a mob
at Greenwich, S.C.
‘A discrepancy of over $2,288,271 be-
tween the material on hand and tha:
called for by the books of the Wash:
ington navy yard was shown by the
inventory just completed.
Quietness prevails in Chicago in
the strike of shop workers on the
Mlinois Central and other Harriman
railroads, according to the announce-
ments of railroad officials.
The Wall street news agencies re-
port that Henry C. Frick, the steel
magnate and, next to J. P. Morgan,
the most masterful personality in the
stecl trust, is about to retire from the
corporation, having sold most of his
stock.
More than 800 cases awaited the
consideration of the Supreme Court
of the Unitéd States when it opened
in Washington. ‘This was the largest
number that had faced the court on
beginning of a term in about twenty
years.
Exceeding the world’s record for a
cross-country aeroplane flight by 133
miles and speeding through the air at
times at the rate of seventy miles an
hour, C. P. Rodgers landed in Mar-
shall, Mo., on his air voyage from New
York to San Francisco. ‘The former
record, 1,265 miles, was made by Har-
ry Atwood in a recent flight from St.
Louis to New York. Rodgers had
flown 1,398 miles according to rail-
road mileage.
Out of the testimony given before
the United States Senate committee in
Milwaukee, which is investigating
charges that corruption contributed
to the election of Senator Isaac Steph:
enson was developed evidence that the
Stephenson campaign managers re-
garded the $107,793, admittedly ex-
pended for the campaign for nomina-
tion, as small compared to $150,000 or
$200,000 which might have been spent
for 2 campaign more systematically
conducted.
W. K. Chung, dean of Canton Chris-
tian college and president of the Can-
ton Board of Trade at Canton, China,
while speaking in Boston, declared
that his country is about to be en-
guifed in a civil war greater than any
since the dawn of civilization, Ho
says that the number of Christian
Chinese has doubled since the Boxer
war and that the 200,000 native Chris-
tions in China will be inereasd to 400,-
000 in 1920. The Christian Chinese
and the thousands of students grad-
uated from the Chinese colleges and
the universities of Europe and Ameri-
ca will form the nucleus that will give
the revolution birth.
Disastrous weather —_conditions
which prevailed throughout the coun-
try earlier in the growing season
abated in September and the condi
tion of most of the important unhar-
vested crops on October Ist showed
improvement. Corn was one-tenth of
one per cent. higher than it was on
September Ist; potatoes improved 3.)
per cent.; tobacco, 94 per cent.; flax,
L2 per cent.; apples, 3.6 per cent,;
rice declined 1.8 per cent. ‘The effect
of hot weather and drought through-
out the growing season was shown in
the official preliminary estimates of
the production of spring wheat, oats
and barley. These showed a loss in
production over last year's harvest of
an aggregate of 301,000,000 bushels,
‘The contempt proceedings against
President Gompers, Vice President
Mitchell and Secretary Morrison, of
the American Federation of Labor, for
alleged violation of an order of the
District of Columbia Supreme Court,
haye been begun anew.
‘The sinking of an unknown British
barkentine, said to have sailed from
Bridgeton, N. S., off the entrance to
the Bay of Fundy recently with all
on board, was reported in Boston by
Captain Goodwin of the fishing
schooner Good Luck. It is thought thir-
ty were lost.
STATE NEWS
Wontern Newspaper Union News Servier,
COMING EVENTS.
Nov. 2 to 4—Rocky Mountain 1otel
Men's Assoclation--Denver
EXHIBITS FOR NEW YORK SHOW.
Many Colorado Counties Will Compete
fer Princes.
Yor Prizes.
Denver.—Almost every county {1
the state is sending in exhibits for the
big New York |and Show and in the
exhibition rooms of the Chamber of
Commerce building, the people of Den-
ver will be given an opportunity to
see just how well Colorado is going
to show the other states of the Un-
ion and the provinces of Canada the
secrets of Colorado's success as an ag-
‘ricultural and horticultural state.
Professors of the State Agricultur-
al college will inspect the exhibits
‘brought to Denver, and determine
“which of them are good enough to en-
‘ter the New York show.
List of Exhibits.
| Weld County—Wheat, oats, sugar
‘beets and small grains.
Delta County—Apples, fruit and
grains.
Montrose—Apples, fruit, potatoes
and the like.
Mesa County—Apples, fruits, ete.
San Juan County—Grain, fruit and
a display of prehistoric corn, ‘This
corn is grown from kernels discovered
in the ruins of the Cliff Dwellers at
Mancos.
San Luis Valley—Grain, sugar beets
and grasses. Oats will be sent from
‘a field yielding 100 to 115 bushels
[per acre; also barley from this sec:
tion, which includes Conejos ‘and Ko
Grande counties.
Routt County—Wheat from here
will be entered in the prize-winning
contests, as will other grains. Wheat
runs sixty-seven pounds per bushel.
Carbondale—Potatoes.
Morgan County—Grains.
Great Western Sugar Company
Sugar beets.
‘American Beet Sugar Co.
San Luis Valley Sugar Co.
Prizes to Be Awarded.
‘The following is a list of the prizes
|for which the Colorado exhibits will
compete:
$1,000 cup for wheat, donated by
James J. Hill, chairman of the Great
Northern railway, for the best 100
pounds of wheat grown in the United
States in 1911.
$1,000 in gold for wheat, donated by
Sir Thomas Shaughnessy, president.
of the Canadian Pacific railway, for
the best 100 pounds of hard red whea:,
spring or winter, grown on either con-
tinent of America in 1911.
$1,000 cup for oats, donated by A.
J. Earling, president of the Chicago.
Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway, for
the best 100 pounds of oats raised in
the United States in 1911.
$1,000 cup for potatoes, donated by
A. E. Stillwell, president Kansas City,
Mexico & Orient Railway, for best ex-
hibit of marketable late potatoes
grown in 1911.
$1,500 cup for barley, donated by
Colonel Gustav Pabst of Milwaukee,
for the best bushel of barley grown in
the United States in 1911. Colonel
Pabst will also purchase all the crop
of the prize winner at a fancy price.
$1,000 cup for sugar beets, donated
by Horace Havemeyer, Jr., New York
City, for the best sugar beets grown
in the United States in 1911.
{$500 in gold for apples, donated by
Howard Elliott, president of the
Northern Pacific railway, for the best
twenty-five boxes of apples of ane
variety, or varieties, grown anywhere
in the world.
Women After Penitentiary Warden. |
Denyer.—The State Federation of
Woman's Clubs, by accepting and ap-
proving the report of the committee
on state institutions, stands in the po-
sition of making these charges against
Warden T. J. Tynan, of the state peni-
tentiary:
“That prisoners are not taught
trades as provided by the law.
“That paroled prisoners are fre-
quently sent away from the peniten-
tiary without being giv@ the money,
clothes and transportation to which
they are entitled by law.
“That the prison is under political
domination, and that the warden is
independent of the board of commis-
stoners.”
Warden Tynan makes this flat an-
swer:
“The report is unfair and untrue in
every particular, and I challenge the
committe to substantiate a single
one of the charges. The arts and
crafts, the trades, farming, poultry
raising, poultry incubation, scientific
hog, cattle and mule raising, are being
taught to the men in the penitentiary.
Btsides this, we have taught and are
teaching scientific cement and brick
work, and all of the building trades,
and in our schools 165 convicts are
being instructed in everything from
the alphabet to civil engineering.”
Hen aed! Aah on ie) Cnn Gaeniee
Denver.—The government is after
the Victor Fuel Company and the
American Fuel Company in the United
States Court, with no less a personage
than Attorney General Wickersham
behind the case. The government ac-
cuses the two fuel companies, which
are co-ordinate concerns, with having
gathered in 154 acres in Las Animas
county belonging to the government
by fraud, and the government wants
it. back.
LITTLE COLORADO ITEMS.
Small Happenings Occurring Over the
State Worth While.
an athletic club,
‘The first carload of potatoes has
been shipped from Gill
Jack Hendricks will manage the
Denver baseball club next year,
Five thousand people _ attended
Erie's first annual Biseuit Day.
Twenty cars of Grand valley fruit
have been sold to South American
commission houses,
Edwin Starkey of Greeley has been
appointed deputy insurance commis:
sioner of Colorado.
Everything is in readiness for the
Colorado Electric Show, which begins
in Denver October 17th.
Sioux City defeated Pueblo in the
final baseball game of the season in
Pueblo, by a score of 9 to 3
From all parts of the state exhibits
are being sent into Denver for the big
New York Land Show.
Colonel James Leonard, who has
been a familiar figure in Denver for
the last thirty years, Is dead.
‘The Colorado Springs park commis-
sion has decided to build a new scenic
‘road through the famous Garden of
the Gods.
‘The jury in the Fred Hargis case
at Grand Junction returned a verdict
of not guilty. He was, accused of cat-
“Ue stealing.
Northern Colorado is the scene of
‘more activity in railroad, ditch and
reservoir building this fall than ever
before in its history.
"A. L, AtHlerton, master mechanic of
the Tomboy mine, at Telluride, was
found dead in his home from a bullet
wound inflicted by his own hand.
Adams connty has been dubbed
“Surprise county’ on account of the
winning of several prizes for its ap-
ples at the Colorado State Fair.
Seven miners were injured when
sixty pounds of dynamite exploded in
the shaft house at the Lewis mine,
six miles southeast of Telluride.
Denver may lose the State Home
for Odd Fellows. Florence, Caiion
City, Fort Collins, Fort Morgan and
‘Boulder are contenders for the home
| The oil refining plant of the Colo-
‘rado United States Refining Com-
‘pany, in the Boulder oll fields, seven
miles from Boulder, has been put in
operation.
‘The explosion of a “missed” shot
in a mine of the Colorado Fuel and
Iron -Company at Tabasco near Trint-
‘dad, caused the death of Joe Bertek,
an Austrian miner.
Hotel men from all over Colorado,
Wyoming, Utah and New Mexico will
be in Denver November 2 to 4 for the
annual meeting of the Rocky Moun-
tain Hotel Men's Association.
‘The granite monument erected at a
cost of several thousand dollars at
‘Trinidad has been unvetled over the
graves of forty-five Polish miners who
met death in mine disasters in that
yunty within the past year.
Colorado ranks third in the Western
division and second in the Mountain
division in the value of livestock, ac
cording to the advance sheets on the
livestock industry issued by the
United States Census Bureau.
What is said to be the only ma-
hogany forest outside of tropical coun:
tries has been discovered in the Una-
weep cafion, twenty-five miles south
west of Grand Junction by John C.
<elly, a prospector.
Investigations into the books of the
Denver National Jewish Hospital for
Consumptives by President Grabfeld-
er, Directors May and Schoenberg and
‘Treasurer Altheimer indicate that the
total shortage of the laté Alfred Mul-
ler, as secretary, will approximate
$72,221.
Announcement by the Denver Cham-
ber of Commerce that it will give
$1,100 in cash, a $500 silver cup and
‘many other prizes for county exhibits
sent for display in the county exhipit
‘room of the Chamber of Commerce
Building, has stimulated interest
throughout the state, and many are
entering the contest.
Linguist and Nelson of Ouray,
known in mining camps everywhere
as the “terrible Swedes,” champion
double-handed rock drillers of the
state, have been matched with Struth-
ers and Carnboeau of Cripple Creek
for $500 a side, to contest for the
championship of the world in Gunni-
son granite in Victor on October 21st.
‘After saving his mother from drown-
ing, Decker Baker, aged twelve, son
of E. B. Baker of Crestone, sacrificed
his own life in trying to save his
father from a similar fate. When the
‘flood came, young Baker succeeded in
‘putting his mother upon a horse which
carried her to safety. When he went
back for his father a tree knocked the
Rare off tte feat and threw the boy.
DIAMONDS.
& . Why, ,
o> See Ze, =
2 aN 2: a &
SG i ae
= Cy AN
a ROE ame *
2 Pe pe
STERLING SILVERWARE
Boost Colerado Products Patronize Home liaeks
ZANG’S
COLUMBINE,
VIENNA AND
PILSENER
The Ph. Zang Brewing Co.
We Boost for oe Ste oh Boost for Us
A. BRADSHAW
eae eee Ree
iy SMe es ee os Corsets
ne ps 25 aa Tesi
es caesar PM ge % aS Gents’ Furnishings
ee Ea AT a
i HWE Zz 3 Millinery
7 ree ene Millinery season now here.
Nas cee At a, Everybody knows Bradshaw's
Pt ed pe Be |p Gain gall you good!) fata cfor
PL LN een ERY tess money than any place in
ire sity.
“yy a , We also have a complete
ee | rem line of Hoisery and Under-
Sa | Ain Te wear, including extra large
Bank eee es So size. We are in our own
FON ee MM building, have not rent to
Aievacmresueemmtienteer =e] pay.
AROUND THE CORNER
FROM THE OLD STAND 1443 -1447 Stout Si.
10th Avenue Hotel
__ dH. HEUER, PROPRIETOR ————_—__—_
RESTING PLACE FOR COLORED GENTS
MEALS AT ALL HOURS
Pool Room in Connection
Gorner West 10th and Osage, Near Burnham Shops
i Denver, Colorado
Who pays the high up-town rent?
Is it the tailor? No!
Just guess who it is---
The Customer
Give usa chance and we will give you the satisfac:
tion, Our Fall and Winter Styles are all in
Our prices are moderate. We do all sewing in our
shop.
Respectfully,
N. Ferry
1905 Curtis Street
Turn Over
a New Leaf
——=z———
By subscribing
for THIS PAPER
Hours: 10 to 11 a. m., 2 to 5 and 7 to 9
Pp. m. and by Appointment.
Dr. J, H. P, Westbrook
COR. 21ST AND ARAPAHOE STS
Night Phone Champa 570.
SHOE
REPAIRING
1023 Eighteenth St
WE HAVE THE BEST EQUIPPED OUTFIT INN THE WEST TO PRODUCE THE GOODS.
1
REPAIRING W
WALTER CAM
Phone Main 5277
THE DENV
WALL PA
1855 Arapahoe St.
When Y
THE HEADS, FEET, TAILS, S
CHITTERLINGS OR ANY
EXCEPT THE
East's
2300-6 LARIMER STREET
A. L.
REPAIRING WHILE YOU WAIT
CAMBERS
277 J. W.
E DENVER PAS
AND
ALL PAPER C
St. DE
en You W
EET, TAILS, SNOUTS, EARS,
NGS OR ANY OTHER PART O
EXCEPT THE SQUEAL, GO T
st's Mar
STREET
L. EU
Phone Main 5277 J. W. Beach, Mgr.
THE DENVER PASTE
AND
WALL PAPER CO.
1855 Arapahce St. DENVER, COLO
When You Want
THE HEADS, FEET, TAILS, SNOUTS, EARS, NECKBONES OR
CHITTERLINGS OR ANY OTHER PART OF THE HOG
EXCEPT THE SQUEAL, GO TO
East's Market
2300-6 LARIMER STREET PHONE 1461 MAIN
A. L. EUDY
Dealers in Groceries and School Supplies
2251 CLEVER
GENERAL LINE OF GROCERIES
BLES. OPEN ALL DAY ON SUN
NEIGHBORH
2251 CLEVELAND PLACE OF GROCERIES AND SALT DAY ON SUNDAYS. LET'S M BORHOOD
GENERAL LINE OF GROCERIES AND SALT MEATS, VEGETABLES. OPEN ALL DAY ON SUNDAYS. LET'S MAKE THIS YOUR
The above cuts show resoling from
heel to heel, entire new bottom and
heel ..... $175
SHOES MADE TO ORDER.
Tailor Made ..... $10 to $25
WE CAN FIT ANY KIND OF DE-
FORMED FOOT.
WHILE YOU WAIT
BERS
1023
EIGHTEENTH ST.
J. W. Beach, Mgr.
VER PASTE
AND
PAPER CO.
DENVER, COLO
ou Want
NOUTS, EARS, NECKBONES OR
OTHER PART OF THE HOG
SQUEAL, GO TO
Market
PHONE 1461 MAIN
EUDY
LAND PLACE
ES AND SALT MEATS, VEGETA-
DAYS. LET'S MAKE THIS YOUR
OOD STORE
AFRO-AMERICAN CULLINGS
Long, how long everybody knows, the pulpit among colored people in certain sections has been a very weak thing. The preachers have been, in the main, merely time servers, preaching to win applause on one side and to swell the "table" on the other. Especially in the south has this type of the minister flourished. Loud on Jesus in the records, he has been mighty soft on Jesus in the actual. Of right, the pulpit ought to be the standard of morality in our form of government. The preacher ought not to have any hesitancy in denouncing sin in high or low places. His rule of life should be the truth clear cut and clean under every condition and clime. All men in the sight of God should look alike to him. But, alas! we find no moral courage in the ministry today. The ministry is about as vacillating as any other class of men. We speak particularly of the preachers of our race for the reason we are not in a position to know about the white preacher. And our remarks of them are not general enough to cover the entire profession, but the great majority fall under our hammer of condemnation. The race and the church of God is suffering for a strong moral ministry with conviction and the courage to give expression to their views. The average negro preacher is about as much of a demagogue. No intellectual ideal. No convictions, no real Bible religion. The gospel they preach is uttered with a view of increasing the public collection. Another class of negro preachers which is a curse to the race, is the newspaper fiend. It is the hypocrite who shapes his sermon with a view of getting it in the press. Manly courage and unadulterated religion is left entirely out of the scope of the sermon, with view of conforming his remarks to suit the white press. Every opportunity this class of preachers have, they are in the daily newspaper office publishing a sermon they never uttered. Some expostulation on the immorality of the race, or condemnation of the negro crap shooters; as a rule these are the subjects this class of negro preachers discuss. You never hear of one of them denouncing the barbary of lynching, disfranchisement or any other public indignity heaped upon a patient and long suffering people. No, their one object is selfishness. Their one effort is to get some white man to say "he is a good nigger." The pulpit should rise above such cheap demogamy and without of fense to any man shell the woods with the gospel of Jesus Christ as taught by the Bible.—New York Age.
A prominent Baptist divine journeyed to Pittsburgh some months ago to attend some sort of an alliance, and from what we can learn he absorbed a great deal of practical information which he purposes to radiate among his fellow ministers. During all his previous ministerial life he had been using from one to two hours in delivering sermons just as hundreds of others have been doing. But in the great gathering that he attended he heard the greatest sermon of his life preached in less than forty minutes. He also met a gentleman who had traveled a thousand miles to make a three-minute speech, and that three-minute speech was worth one's going a thousand miles to hear. Now these things had a wonderful effect on our good brother. First, they forced him to think of that somewhat unfamiliar text which reads thus: "I have played the fool;" second, they caused him to embrace the resolution not to play the fool any more in the matter of long-winded sermons. From thenceforward he determined to deserve the title "reverend" instead of "neverend." Not only that, but he has put the brethren under his charge—he's a president or moderator or something of some association or convention—on notice that hereafter they must limit their sermons to thirty-five or forty minutes. This is a commendable reform—but not unmixed with danger. If all ministers were limited to forty minutes in which to deliver their sermons the great body of them would find their occupation gone forever. If a man has anything to say he can say it in thirty or forty minutes, while on the other hand if he has nothing to say he will need an hour or two in which to say it! However, here's hoping the suggested reform will become popular.—Dallas Express.
Business is the life of a nation. Religion, education, art, science and literature must feed upon the surplus created by business. First of all things we must have bread and without it we cannot build churches, schoolhouses and promote institutions of learning. Business is the fount that makes all brooks flow and while there may be eddies and counter currents in the tide of a nation, the steady, powerful swoop of the stream must ever be onward toward the sea of progress. When a nation dissipates its energies in factional strife and neglects its material welfare, government becomes scarcely more than a casket from which the soul has fled and in time the people will cry for bread. Hunger is a rude but a very successful teacher and many people learn only when its rod is upon their backs. Texas Freeman.
The Chicago Inter Ocean contained a very thoughtful and well-written sermon on the "History, Status and Possible Destiny of the American Negro." The sermon was very unique in many respects. In the first place it took the view that perhaps slavery was not as bad an institution as we have been taught to believe. But that it might have been a providential plan to introduce the African to western civilization and to prepare him through slavery and finally through freedom to partake and enjoy the highest and broadest social development.
After disposing of the possible interpretations of American slavery, and having named Toussaint L'Overture, Alexander Dumas, Fred Douglass and Dr. Booker T. Washington, he urges the negro race to be proud of its members and to endeavor individually to achieve and actualize the high and worthy example of the world's famous leaders. Rev. J. M. Hurst gave a very interesting narration of the present status of the colored citizen by showing his progress in education and letters, going so far as to name the number of colleges and other graduates, the number of negroes attending European universities, the books published, the newspapers edited and the magazines controlled by the race. He called attention that they had acquired since freedom something over $900,000,000 in personal and real property; and these facts show that no negro should be discouraged because of prejudice and discrimination by many of the American people.
Perhaps the most significant feature of this distinguished sermon was the possible disclosure of what might be termed the International Mission suggested by the presence of the negro in the midst of the American people. The author of the sermon was inclined to the view that it was the possible destiny of the American negro, who had attained the highest status in his race, to return after a time to Africa and bring the millions of the African race into possession of the intellectual, material and social wealth and power of western knowledge and culture. He paid a glowing tribute to the steadfast loyalty of the southern negro who had saved the southern people from the countless social and political problems which had been forced upon the other section of the country by wholesale and indiscriminate foreign immigration. This sermon speaks of the magnificent character of the speaker, breadth of view, and liberal culture of the minister, and an inspiration to the whole negro race.
The brilliant Will Anderson of the Cincinnati Pilot is original; he is happily original, and whether we will or no, leads us at the other end of his string of delightful phrases. In the latest issue of his paper we find the following addition to the never-ending discussion of the "problem:" The problem of what we are going to do with the negro is largely academic. It is a good subject for debate, for magazine articles and political fan-fare, but as yet we have not gotten down to bedrock and agreed that as a problem he ought to be solved in the individual conscience. In all things concerning him we collectively treat him as something in the aggregate, when, as a matter of honesty every white man should treat each negro according as that negro stands for himself. The negro has no trait exceptionally apart from any other race in America, and as an individual is likely to reflect the influence of environment just as do the units of every other race. The method of measurement is all wrong and as a result the solution goes awry among a mass of misconceptions. One of these misconceptions is the idea that negroes should not be employed where they come in close contact with white women. The urgency of this appeal sometimes becomes so fierce as to take the sound of a shriek. But it is really irresistibly laughable when put to test. Social equality will come out of it some say. The negro will force his attentions where not wanted, exclaim others. But noting the aspect of the negro porters on the Pullman cars toward white women passengers aboard, where very frequently the porter is in sole charge, gives us something to muse over at length. If ever there were an occasion to try the weakness of men, it is in this employment. Still it has been the exception to hear of one of these men being reprimanded for inattention or over-attention to a female passenger. Anyone who has spent much time on a Pullman knows that for sights to be seen and others not to be mentioned, nothing excels this carriage for the dissipation of ennui. In dishabille, with and without lingerie, temptingly plump and contemptibly lean, with streaming hair and a alabaster bosoms, very few white women hesitate to display their charms to the busy porter. And be is said in his favor, the porter maintains his equoise when many a conductor has disgracefully lost his job because he could not keep his head. Both conductor and porter represent the average of American intelligence among the laboring classes.
It's made right, and tastes right. None better made anywhere and This is a Strictly Colorado Production
2132-2148 Arapahoe St.
Phone 2449 Denver
The Great Professional Shoe Shiner of Denver. Located, 1844 Arapahoe. Also Hat Cleaning, Cigars, Tobacco, Candy and Soft Drinks. THE INVOLUNT UNION BREWING CO. Fanta DENVER, CO.
THE BEST ICE CREAM AND CANDIES AT
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CATERERS AND
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Phone: 163
1512 Curtis Street, Denver, Colo.
OFFICERS
P. Chiolero, Pres. and Manager
J. C. Chiolero, Vice-President
S. Chiolero, Treasurer
C. A. Grosso, Secy.
The
Chiolero
Importing Mercantile
& Investment
Company
(BRANCH)
OUR
ADVERTISING
COLUMNS
are read by the people because it gives them news of absorbing interest. People no longer go looking about for things they want—they go to their newspaper for information as to where such things may be found. This method saves time and trouble. If you want to bring your wares to the attention of this community, our advertising columns
Should
Contain Your
Ad
WILLIAMSON
HAFFNER CO.
ENGRAVERS-PRINTERS
DENVER, COLO
DELICATESSEN, WINES,
LIQUORS AND
CIGARS
Telephone Champa 1844
1859 ARAPAHOE ST.
Denver, Colo.
MUNICIPAL HALL
D. REASE
Phones, Office Main 5595.
Residence, York 123.
Hours: 9 to 11 a.m., 1 to 4, 7 to 8 p.m.
Sundays: 10 to 11:30 a.m., 2 to 4 p.m.
Dr. P. E. Spratlin
Good Block-1557 Larimer St.
Residence 2230 Clarkson St.
Denver, Colorado
DELTA FACULTAD DE
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LA FLOR DE CERES
HIGH GRADE
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UNION MADE
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
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MONTANA
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PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.
In second-class matter at the postoffice in the
implications of a personating nature that are not
from the columns of this paper.
It really happens that papers sent to subscribers are
not receive any number when due, inform us be
fully forward a duplicate of the missing number.
Actions to receive attention must be newsy, upon
written only upon one side of the paper; must re-
way, not later than Wednesdays, and bear the
manuscript returned, unless stamps are sent for it.
Us should be made by Express Money Order, or
Red Letter or Bank Draft. Postage stamps wi-
ler the fractional part of a dollar. Only 1-cent a
tices, ten lines or less, 10 cents per line. Eas-
cely cents per line.
Advertising 25 cents per square. A square contain-
s allowed on less than three months' contract. C
from parties unknown to us. Further particular
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Six Months ..... 1.00
Three Months ..... .60
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Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice in the city of Denver
Colorado.
All communications of a personating nature that are not complimentary
will be withheld from the columns of this paper.
It occasionally happens that papers sent to subscribers are lost or stolen.
In case you do not receive any number when due, inform us by postal card and
we will cheerfully forward a duplicate of the missing number.
Communications to receive attention must be newsy, upon important sub-
jects, plainly written only upon one side of the paper; must reach us Tuesdays,
if possible, anyway, not later than Wednesdays, and bear the signature of the
author. No manuscript returned, unless stamps are sent for postage.
Remittances should be made by Express Money Order, Postoffice Money
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same as cash for the fractional part of a dollar. Only 1-cent and 2-cent stamps
taken.
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Display advertising 25 cents per square. A square contains ten agate lines. No discounts allowed on less than three months' contract. Cash must accompany all orders from parties unknown to us. Further particulars on application.
President Taft has come and gone, and everywhere there are smiles and sunshine. The President's cheerfulness, like Colorado sunshine, is calculated to make folks feel good, and when folks feel good they generally smile. Colorado needed President Taft's pleasing presence to help the people better appreciate the more lavish store of their natural advantages, and President Taft needed Colorado's newly awakened assurances that the possibilities of harmony and good fellowship have not been ingloriously frittered away and sacrificerd. Now if Colorado will continue to do as much for President Taft as President Taft has done and is steadily willing to do for Colorado, the benefit will be adequate and reciprocal. The President is an earnest and sincere man, and his heart beats warmly toward all the people. He would have the Republicans of Colorado adopt his conciliatory and harmonizing spirit, and put their faith in the principles he so earnestly advocates and defends. Conciliation and harmony are the watchwords of Republican regeneration, and a faithful application of established party principles to the vital questions of the tariff and representative government, comprises the program of activities to which he would have the people of Colorado devote themselves. A great and good work is embraced in that program, because Colorado Republicans have been neglecting the true principles a party organization and social advancement. Sour distrust and self-sacrificing dissensions have had free and inexcusable sway, but the example of a Taft, who bears approval and attack with equal equanimity, is the talisman with which we should regain our rightful place. Let the reciprocal smile live and do its work, and let Republicanism once more stand for the good of all the people, and Colorado will remain in touch with the cheerful leader whom the whole country, more and more, admires and trusts.
CHRISTIANITY AND MOHAMMEDANISM.
humanity's Ship of Passage across the Sea pass and anchor. It is the sole reason on to explain the mystery of the Great Voyage ship. Each separate division of men has of them have stood the voyage for ages. And trust the ships built by their fathers, be safely through generations and have never fou
Religion is humanity's Ship of Passage across the Sea of Life. It is deck, sail, compass and anchor. It is the sole reason on which man confidently relies to explain the mystery of the Great Voyage. But there are more than one ship. Each separate division of men has built its own ship and some of them have stood the voyage for ages. And these divisions of men love and trust the ships built by their fathers, because they have carried them safely through generations and have never foundered. But all of these ships of passage, though designed for the same purpose, are not built alike. One is trim, sleek, powerful and speedy; another is massive, bulky and slow of progress. So the swifter ship speaks to the slower and says: "Come with us, for we sail fast and see more of the fulness of the earth and the greatness of life." And the slower ship replies: "No! Come with us if you will, for our voyage is calm and serene and full of beautiful contemplation of all things that pass." Then the swifter ship says: "We will sail about you and dazzle you with our superior power, and then if you will not come with us willingly, we shall take you in tow. We do not want your ship—It is unworthy, but we want the wealth in your hold and we seek to save the souls of your passengers. For this our guns shall menace you and our might debase you, until you abandon your hulk and come aboard. Let those who remain sink and perish with the wreck. Ours is the only safe ship and we sail the only true course."
The name of this fast sailing vessel is "Christianity," and the serene, slow-plodding one is called "Islam," the Mohammedan. Christianity was not designed for armed conquest, but her crew, blinded with power and the love of material gain, has long since abandoned her chart. Many peoples yet give their allegiance to Islam. Nay, more; they are declaring aloud that for their millions, Islam is the true example, and for the world the way of truth and light. The Sultan of Turkey is their chosen representative, and Arabia, Egypt and all North Africa swarm with his adherents, who pay him faithful and changeless homage. Their religion is their greatest social and economic force, but political exploitation and conquest are not supreme tenets of their faith.
And around these vast, devout but non-aggressive myriads of moslem adherents, the militant usurpers of Christian ethics are casting their brilliant lights in the false name of progress, despoiling and attaching their lands and taking over the control of their governments. Abandoning true Christian ideals and mandates, nevertheless even great prelates so far sanction the mad lust for increased power as to bless the mission of the Godless conquerers. The latest example of this program of exploitation is the conquest of Tripoli by the Italians. It is done in the name of civilization and Christian progress. It means more than the sincere, way-faring Christian stops to realize. It challenges a conflict of religions and to all Moslems must appear an arrogant and unjust attempt to annihilate their faith. There seems to be small wisdom in this hypocritical course of Christian advancement.
The world may not know what sullen passions may be crystalizing in the hearts of those who are numerically greater than all Christendom. For the time being, they may suffer patiently, but if human nature does not assert itself through the revolt of present generations, there is yet danger for the future; for out of the foundation of Christianity itself comes the inevitable law: "Behold, the meek shall inherit the earth."
JOS. D. D. RIVERS.
1824 Curtis Street, Room 25.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES;
RECIPROCITY AGAIN.
NOTES OF THE PEOPLE'S
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH.
Sermon Topics: Sunday, Oct. 15.
11 a. m.—"The Curse of Ignorance."
7 p. m.—"Why I Believe The Bible,"
Y. P. C. E. Rom. 15:4.
7:30 p. m.—"When The Unexpected
Happens; Then What?"
As we go to press news has been
received of the death of Miss Arizona
Hughes, niece of Mr. Lou Hughes and
cousin of Mr. and Mrs. Will Kinchloa.
On behalf of the members of this
church, the pastor extends heartfelt
sympathy to the bereaved family who
are substantial members of the People's.
The Guild had a splendid program last Tuesday night. After the routine work Mrs. Stella Maddox read a very instructive paper setting forth the appeal of Rev. D. Abeel for constructive work in Foreign Missions. Mrs. Clara Davis, an active member of the Missionary society and Miss G. Striplin, her daughter, both of whom were visitors, helpfully discussed the paper. Miss Fannie Edmonds, a graduate of one of our leading schools, was the hostess for the Guild. A healthy repast was quite an appetizer to the aftermath of the meeting. The Guild is under obligations to Miss Edmonds for her treat. The Woman's Missionary society had their sessions in the Chapel Friday night, ample arrangements were made for their missionary concert the first Sunday night in November.
Monday night promptly at 8:15 o'clock Mme Brown of Chicago, the Nightingale of the race, will sing in Recital Extraordinary at the People's church. Here is a coveted opportunity for lovers of the race to show their appreciation of this rising lady by their presence. The support of Denver public in the past is a pointer that you will be with us on this occasion. We therefore thank you in advance for your spirit of co-operation. The Guild will seve chicken sandwiches, coffee, cream, etc., at the close. The Mme. leaves Tuesday morning for Colorado Springs:
The Rev. Thos. Hazell, S. T. B. leaves next Tuesday to attend the Synod of Colorado in session at the First Presbyterian church of Greeley. There will be an adjourned meeting of the Presbytery of Denver in connection with the Synod. Matters pertaining to the Union Presbyterian church of Westminister will be considered. The Pastor will return to occupy his pulpit the following Sunday.
SCOTT M. E. CHURCH NOTES.
26th and Clarkson Streets.
The Rev. Dr. R. A. Randolph delivered one of his best messages last Sunday evening to a large congregation. Thanks.
The John Stewart celebration and rally will take place Sunday evening at 7:30 o'clock. The program will be made up entirely with local church talent. The following will appear on the program: W. S. Evans, Anna B. Dawson, Ada Castry, Misses Lela Rice and Irma Anthony. Mrs. Florstein Dooley will sing a solo, title, "John Stewart, Colored Missionary." The pastor will make a short address on the Life and Work of John Stewart. You are cordially invited to enjoy this spicy program.
The Quarterly Conference was largely attended. The reports showed progress along all lines. The full assessment of the district superintendent was raised with a few dollars to apply on the Steward's account. The officers and members have the sincere thanks of an appreciative pastor and superintendent. Rev. Thomas-Hazell preached a strong sermon Sunday afternoon to a very appreciative audience. The Ladies' Aid bazaar and Thankgiving dinner is being planned. Mesdames Burrell and Pash have been selected as the chairmans of the dinner committee.
Masters Henry Burrell and Wendell Wallace celebrated their third birthday party at the residence of Mrs. Louise Burrell last Friday afternoon. The following little fellows attended: Goldie McPherson, Annie L. Collier, Thomas W. Wallace, Clarence J. Collier, Marie Brown. It was an enjoyable affair, and the little fellows went home wishing that a birthday party could be given every day.
Mrs. Emma Anderson entertained the members of the Junior League Sunday afternoon.
Four babies were baptised last Sunday morning. They were: Masters C. J. Collier, LeRoy Wallace, Misses Sepha Dooley and Marie Brown. Mr. Lovett Clopton, who recently confessed a hope in Christ, was baptised. Mrs. Emma Anderson made the church a present of the baptised fount.
Recent additions to the church are: Mrs. Cora Charleston, Mrs. Ella Carter, Miss Mildred House, Mrs. Scott and Mr. Lovett Clopton. The membership of Scotts is growing very rapidly. The pastor will preach the last of the series of sermons on the book of the Acts of the Apostles next Sunday morning. The subject will be: "Visions and Obedience." These sermons have proved to be very interesting and highly enjoyable. Mrs. Ella Carter is very ill at her home on Twenty-Six avenue. We wish her a speedy recovery.
Too Valuable a Household Adjunct to Be Discarded Because of Possible Danger.
A can of gasoline in the kitchen for cleaning purposes will be found a great help if ordinary care is exercised against fire. To clean the gas stove, soak the jets in a little gasoline, and it will remove all dirt and do away with any odor from the gas range, or scrub the jets with a little brush dipped in gasoline.
To clean copper or aluminum cooking utensils soak a cloth in gasoline and rub on the outside of the vessel; this will remove all black or discoloration on the metal.
For grease marks or dirty spots on woodwork, a little gasoline applied with a cloth will remove at once.
If the drain in the sink becomes stopped up, remove all water from sink and pour in a pint or more gasoline and let it stand; this will cut the cause of stoppage in a little while.
Before blacking a stove or range, rub off the top with a cloth wet with gasoline and it will remove all dirt and grease and make the blacking stay on longer.
Laces, gloves and silks can be cleaned very successfully by washing in plenty of clean gasoline; there should be enough to cover the article you are washing. Change the gasoline as often as it becomes dark lookink; work quickly and hang in the sun to dry. Always remember when using gasoline to keep away from fire or flame of any kind.
BUTTERMILK SAUCE THE BEST
Adds to Flavor of Pudding in Far Greater Degree Than When Sweet Milk Is Used.
Buttermilk sauce for puddings or any dessert which lacks an acid, is far superior to sauce in which sweet milk is used. A delicious sauce is made of a cupful of boiling water and one cupful of sugar, one-half cupful of good buttermilk and butter the size of an egg. The same rule applies to custard with lemon flavoring.
This is a good way to clean buff or cream-colored window shades: Begin by taking off any trimmings there may be, washing them in hot soapy water, then rinsing them in borax water and pressing them on the wrong side. Next bake some flour in a dish in the oven; lay the blind flat on a table, dust it with a clean cloth then dip a piece of flannel in the flour and rub the blind evenly with it. Take fresh flour and flannel when soiled. Polish the blind with a clean, soft cloth, sew on the trimmings again and replace it in the window.
Brown Kidney Stew.
From a beef kidney cut off the outside meat in bits, rejecting tubes and purplish cores. Cover with cold water, heat slowly till steaming, drain, add cold water and heat a second time, and again a third time. To the drained kidneys add one cup brown sauce, season very highly with table sauce and catup and stand over hot water ten minutes.
Brown sauce to be used for kidneys. In saucepan brown one tablespoon butter until dark, but not burned; add one tablespoon flour; stir and brown again. Add gradually one cup stock (beef is best) or hot water and stir until smooth and thick. Season with salt and pepper and smother five minutes and pour over the kidney stew.
Fried Chicken.
Cut one or two small chickens in half and dredge with flour. Heat some lard until smoking hot, then lay in the chicken. After the first few minutes cook slowly, turning so it can brown on all sides. When done take up and place on a platter, pour off all the lard excepting one tablespoonful, place this over the five again and add a heaping tablespoonful of flour, stir until it is brown, then add slowly one cup of milk, some butter, pepper, and salt, and let cook five minutes; pour over the chicken and serve immediately.
Ginger Pears.
Peel, core, and cut in very thin slices. For eight pounds of sliced fruit, put into the kettle the juice of five lemons, one cup water, seven pounds sugar, one-half pound ginger root cut and scraped in thin slices. Let sugar dissolve before adding fruit. Cut peel of lemon in long, thin slices. Let fruit and lemon cook slowly for an hour, uncover, and put in jars.
Oil Pickles.
Slice, without peeling, medium-sized cucumbers to fill a gallon jar. Sprinkle between the well packed layers two-thirds of a cupful of salt and let stand three hours. Drain carefully and pack with an ounce of celery seed, two ounces of white mustard seed, and two onions chopped fine, equally distributed through the layers. Add a cup of good oil oil as you go and cover with good cold vinegar.
Grape Catsup.
Five pounds of ripe grapes picked from the stems, three pounds of sugar, one pint of vinegar; one tablespoonful each of cinnamon, pepper and cloves, one-half teaspoon of salt. Boll the grapes and strain to remove seeds and skins. Add the other ingredients and boll until thick.
To powder doughnuts, put half cup of pulverized sugar in paper sand, half a dozen doughnuts at a time, shake carefully.
A. E.
CURTIS M. HARRIS,
CIRCLE D. FLESTON
MAN, HOKLAS
Contractors and Builders
minds of carpenter work
ing. Store and office work
quality :: Phone Main
oe St. DENV
ries and Salt
is Every Day from the
L. M. GE
OPEN ALL DAY ON SUNDAY.
St., Cor. 24th & C
PHONE CHAMPA 331
n 1688 1431
S. CULLYFORD
Plumbing
and Hot Water H
COCHRAN, H
Contractors
All kinds of ca
jobbing. Store a
specialty ..
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.
Groceries an
Fresh Eggs Every I
MRS. L. M
OPEN ALL DAY
237 24th St., Cor
PHONE CH
Groceries and Salt Meats
Fresh Eggs Every Day from the Ranch
MRS. L. M. GEARY
OPEN ALL DAY ON SUNDAY.
237 24th St., Cor. 24th & Court Pl.
PHONE CHAMPA 331
Phone Main 1688
F. S. CUR
Plum
Steam and Hot
F. S. CULLYFORD
Plumbing Steam and Hot Water Heating
Res. York 2484
$5.00 CO
For Pe
WEIGHED ON CITY SCALE
SUNSHINE
Office and Yards
Main 848---N
DO COAL
For Per Ton, $
IN CITY SCALES FREE OF CHARGE
MACHINE COAL
and Yards -- 1947 1948---No Uptown
grocery Dept: C. E. WI
scent Groc
and Market
For Per Ton, $4.50 WEIGHED ON CITY SCALES FREE OF CHARGE TO YOU. SUNSHINE COAL CO. Office and Yards -- 1947 19th St. Main 848---No Uptown Office
C. O. FAERBER, Grocery Dept: Crescent and N
Crescent Grocery and Market
ALWAYS THE BEST
Orders Called F Watch Our Spec
s Called For and Deliver Our Specials on Satu
Orders Called For and Delivered Watch Our Specials on Saturdays
Phone York 1218
---
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.
OKLAS & CO.
and Builders
center work and
and office work a
Phone Main 1925
DENVER, COLO.
d Salt Meats
ay from the Ranch
I. GEARY
ON SUNDAY.
24th & Court Pl.
AMPA 331
1431 Broadway
LLYFORD
bing
Water Heating
517 Josephine St.
AL
Ton, $4.50
FREE OF CHARGE TO YOU.
COAL CO.
-- 1947 19th St.
Uptown Office
C. E. WILLIAMS, Meat Dept.
Grocery
market
THE BEST
or and Delivered
dels on Saturdays
2559 Humboldt St.
---
Mr. Homer Jackson is indisposed.
Mrs. Louise Brown has returned to Omaha.
Master Lawrence Vernon is among our sick.
M. C. Andrews of 1336 Broadway is confined to his bed again.
8:30. Everybody invited.
DANIEL REASE, Pres.
TROY BRANDEN, Sec.
The ladies of the Church of the Reeemer will give a Hallowe'en party Tuesday evening, October 31st at Dania hall. There will be a "shee and pillow case" masque and the one who has the best will receive a prize.
Mr. O. U. Bray of Pueblo paid us a short visit on last Sunday.
Wm. G. Campbell, an employee of the U. S. mint, is enjoying his vacation.
Miss Myrtle Brown of Kansas City, Kansas, is in the city to remain all winter.
Miss Harris has returned home after a very delightful sojourn in Cheyenne.
Mme. Brown at People's Presbyterian church Monday night. Don't fail to hear her.
Ray Crummer left Monday for Quindaro, Kansas, where he will attend Western University.
W. L. Kinchelow arrived in the city his week from Omaha, to spend a few days with his family.
The weather prophets declare that the coming winter will be a severe one. R. U. prepared for it?
The trial of J. J. Manuel, for the killing of Rev. Edwards, is set today in the West Side court.
Columbus Day was fittingly observed Thursday by our patriotic citizens. There was a parade in the afternoon.
Police Officer U. G. Baker is taking a thirty day vacation, he needs the rest as he is one of the most busy officers on the force.
Miss Phileomenia von Dickersohn is home from St. Anthony's hospital and is doing nicely since the operation.
Join the crowd to hear and cheer Mme. Brown Monday night at People's church.
Mrs. H. J. M. Brown of 1115 Inca street, who underwent an operation last week at St. Joseph's hospital, was able to return home today and is getting along nicely to the delight of her many friends.
The One Day Dry Cleaners of 2620 Welton street, will call for and deliver your work promptly. Give them a call when in need of any work of this nature. Phone Main 1800.
A visit, was paid to their grandmother, Mrs. R. J. von Dickersohn, 1864 Marion street by her grand children Little, Richard, Pauline and Fleomeing, Jr., von Dickersohn. The youngsters were accompanied by their mother, Mrs. Cora von Dickerson.
Mr. Miles, the chief on the Colorado Midland Special, who was operated on, is at home and is doing well. His daughter was summoned to his bedside, as it was thought that his days were about to end.
The Denver Gas Lamp & Mantle Company at 529 East 20th avenue carries one of the most complete lines of gas and electric goods in the city. E. E. Brooks, the accommodating and affable manager, will see that you are treated with courtesy.
Daniel Lee, who has been employed as head janitor at the City Hall for several years, died at his home Wednesday morning, October 11, after an illness of several months. Mr. Lee leaves many friends, both white and colored, to mourn his loss.
Rev. Thos. G. Brown, formerly pastor of the Church of the Redeemer, has accepted a call as rector of St. Phillip's church, San Antonio, Texas. He leaves the city the last of the month. The Colorado Statesman extends its best wishes for a successful ministerial career to the Reverend gentleman.
W. B. Craig and James Newsome of Chicago were visitors in the city this week. Mr. Newsome came to Colorado to settle the estate of his brother, John Newsome, who died at Caribon, Colo., a year ago.
The East End Literary Society meets every Friday evening at Bethlehem Bantist church, 2716 Larimer, at
---
8:30. Everybody invited
DANIEL REASE, Pres.
TROY BRANDEN, Sec.
The ladies of the Church of the Redeemer will give a Hallowe'en party Tuesday evening, October 31st at Dania hall. There will be a "sheet and pillow case" masque and the one who has the best will receive a prize. Also a prize will be given to the person selling the highest number of tickets.' Admission 25c. Good music.
The ladies of the Self Improvement club desire the Editor's views on Social Equality, as discussed in Dr. Du Bois criticism of Dr. Tompkin's address at the recent Negro congress, and as answered by Dr. Tompkins in last week's issue of the city papers. Mrs. Mildred Abernathy, president; Mrs. Eva Tompkins, secretary.
To miss the recital Monday night is to miss half of your life, so fall in line with Denver's best folks to hear the Nightingale of the Race.
For fresh groceries and meat, call at the Crescent Grocery and Market Co., 2559 Humboldt street, they carry only the best. C. E. Williams in the meat department always pleases his customers. Orders called for and delivered. Watch for their Saturday's special, and save money.
Mr. and Mrs. James Mackey, formerly of Denver, Colo., wish to announce the marriage of their daughter, Miss Vivian Mackey, to Ramond Myrle Dobbs of Colorado Springs, which was solemnized at the home of the bride's mother, Mrs. James Mackey of Denver, Colo., with Rev. R. H Harhert officiating, Sunday, Oct. 1, 1911. The happy young couple will make their home in San Diego, Cal.
One of the latest inventions by a member of the race is an electric ironing machine by Mrs. Bell of 1727 South Emerson street. The machine will be on exhibition at he Electric Show, which opened today at the Auditorium. It is one of the best inventions of its kind on the market and will, no doubt, be in great demand. Don't fail to see the demonstration of this machine during the Electric Show.
QUEEN CITY MUSICAL ASSOCIATION.
The chorus connected with the above is preparing for the first of their series of entertainments, which will take place November 28, at East Turner hall. Members desiring to participate in this event must attend at least nine rehearsals of the program. As this promises to be the greatest entertainment of the season, the public is respectfully requested to bear the date in mind. Heretson Watson, director.
SHORTER CHAPEL NOTES.
Rev. J. S. Payne, recently appointed presiding elder in the Kansas Conference, will preach at Shorter at 11 o'clock Sunday morning. The pastor will deliver his first, of a series of special Sunday evening sermons, on "Church Anity," at 7:30.
The annual election of the Sunday School Board last week resulted in the re-election of Mrs. Effie Walson as superintendent of the main school and Mrs. Fannie Brown superintendent of the primary department. The attendance at the school reached high-water mark last Sunday.
The official board is perfecting the church records just now, the pruning knife has not been spared altogether; the church has been called to meet in the regular annual meeting Friday evening, Oct. 20th. Only members of the church will be admitted.
The trustees have designated Sunray, Oct. 29, for all members and friends to make a special donation for the winter fuel, of not less than twenty-five cents, nor more than one dollar. All should rally to them.
Remember the "Disappointed Bride" or (love at first sight) Oct. 26.
Our first qr. meeting for this conf. year will be held Sunday, Nov. 5, we should make it a high day in Zion. Come then and worship with us, you will be made welcome.
REV. A. M. WARD, Pastor.
NOTICE.
The ministers of the Afro-American Ministers' association are hereby notified that resumption of its meetings will take place next Tuesday morning at 10:30 o'clock at the parsonage of Shorter's church. Matters touching the best interest of the association will be considered after the reports of the churches have been made. Arrangements for Thanksgiving program will also be a lively feature. In the absence of the president, the vice president will preside.
By order of the president.
J. A. THOS-HAZELL
THE ALLIANCE NOTES AND COMMENTS.
At a meeting of the People's Sunday Alliance, Rev. J. A. Thomas Hazell delivered a most excellent and forceful address on the subject of "The Negro's Contribution to Civilization." It was the essay which the Reverend read at the First InterRaces Congress, held in London, England, in July. In the London meeting only twenty minutes could be given to the address, but in the meeting of the Alliance more time could be given and the Rev. Thomas-Hazell availed himself of the freedom to the benefit of his hearers. He was introduced to the audience by Rev. Wallace of Scott M. E. church and the Alliance and its friends enjoyed the literary treat of the season. At the close of the address it was voted that the address become a part of the series of papers on Historical research now under preparation for the good of the people, through the Alliance. The items of interest were the report of the Harris cases and the announcement of the beginning of the series of papers of Historical research on Oct. 29th. The plan as announced sometime since is to have six essays on the general topic of "The Negro in the Light of History." For weeks and even months some of the essayists have been consulting library references and other available printed matter on this general subject under six different heads and they will, no doubt, bring out matters that will interest and encourage the young and plant the old deeper in the faith that the race is a part of God's creation. Detailed announcements will be made preceding each appearance which will occur on the last Sunday of the following months, October, November and December, 1911 and January, February and March, 1912. Able essayists, conscientious study, facts and authorities, are prime objects of the entire series
DON'T MISS HEARING ALL OF
DON'T MISS HEARING ALL OF THEM.
For rent, two nicely furnished rooms, for gentlemen only. Apply at 1050 Logan avenue.
For Rent—4-room brick with bath and nice summer kitchen. Apply at this office.
Furnished rooms for rent, 1272 Kalamath street. Call Ellsworth 1476.
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 located at 2208 Larimer street. Shave, 10c. Hair Cut, 25c; Children, 15c.
Five-room house for rent, 320 24th street. Apply at 1824 Curtis street, Room 25.
Grand entertainment given by the Show Girls in modern vaudeville at East Turner Hall, October 19th, for the benefit of Lincoln-Douglass Sanatorium Association. The hats for this entertainment will be furnished by Madam Esther Morris. Music by Ben Goodman's orchestra. The young lady receiving the largest number of votes for the best performance will be given a beautiful hat, donated by Madam Morris. Everybody invited.
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 preparation 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.
If You Have any Clothes to Clean, Dye or Press LET THE ONE DAY DRY CLEAN Do Your Work. We Clean Everything but a Guilt Work Called for and Delivered Prom
ONE DAY DRY CLEANERS
Work Called for and Delivered Promptly
Telephone Champa 1473 805 F
J. W. PERKINS, Proprietor
Residence 2629 Marion St.
2620 Welton St.
DIAMONDS
FORD'S HAIR POMADE
MAKES HARSH, KINNY OR CURLY HAIR
CLOSSY, SOFTER AND MORE PLABLE,
EASY TO COMB AND PUT UP IN ANY STYLE
THE LENGTH WILL PERMIT UNEXCEELED
FOR PREVENTING HAIR FROM TALKING OUT, DAMROUFF AND ITCHING
OF SCALE BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. GET THE GENUINE, PUT UP IN
25+ AND 50 BOTTLES WITH CHARLES FORD'S NAME ON
EVERY PACKAGE
```markdown
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Complete FROM FIFTY CENTS UP, AT THE
Eclipse Mfg. Co.
OPPOSITE AUDITORIUM.
3 GOOD MANTLES FOR 25c.
This firm will treat you white. Give
it a trial.
THE EDITOR.
THE TISHLER TAILORING ESTABLISHMENT
1031 17TH ST.
Room 1, Iron Building
Denver, Colo.
J. H. BIGGINS
Furniture Repairing and Upholstering. All work Cash.
PHONE MAIN 4610
2231 Washington St. Denver
SACK COAL AND KINDLING
526 23rd Street.
DENVER, COLO.
THE WORLD'S GREATEST REMEDY
SALVAR
FOR
RHEUMATISM
BLOOD POISON
And Diseases Peculiar to Women. Send for 100-Page "Salvar Book"—FREE.
The C. E. Gallagher Med. Co.
911 19th St. Denver, Colo.
THE FINEST OF WORK Our Specialty
Denver, Colo
Expert Watch Repairing Diamonds and Cut Glass 34 Years Experience
THE ZALL JEWELRY COMPANY
Watches, Clocks, Silverware, Etc.
805 Fifteenth Street. Denver, Colo.
T. H. JOHNSON, Proprietor.
Newly Built and Hot and
Newly Built and Newly Furnish Hot and Cold Baths
AHOE ST. DENV
Newly Built and Newly Furnished
Hot and Cold Baths
2130 ARAPAHOE ST. DENVER,
THE RETURN OF THE
SHOW GIRL
THE RETURN OF THE IOW GIRI
SHOW GIRLS
SHOW GIRLS
IN MODERN VAUDEVILLE AT
EAST TURNS
THURS., C
FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE LIFE
ASSOCIATION UNDER
THE WOMAN
MUSIC BY BEN GOO
Admission
Madame Esth
Will Furni
After the show the show give
votes for the best performance
MORRIS.
INSURE YOU
Against Every Acci
BEST TURNER HALL
HURS., OCT. 19,
BENEFIT OF THE LINCOLN-DOUGLASS SAN
ASSOCIATION UNDER THE AUSPICES OF
THE WOMAN'S LEAGUE
MUSIC BY BEN GOODMAN'S ORCHESTRA
mission 50 C
name Esther H. M.
Will Furnish the Hat
the show the show girl receiving the largest
the best performance will receive a hat from
IRE YOUR WA
best Every Accident, Every Side
EAST TURNHALL THURS., OCT. 19, '11 FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE LINCOLN-DOUGLASS SANATORIUM ASSOCIATION UNDER THE AUSPICES OF THE WOMAN'S LEAGUE MUSIC BY BEN GOODMAN'S ORCHESTRA
Madame Esther H. Morris Will Furnish the Hats After the show the show girl receiving the largest number of votes for the best performance will receive a hat from MADAM MORRIS.
INSURE YOUR WAGES
Against Every Accident, Every Sickness
LIBERAL POLICIES, LIBERAL COMPANY
43 YEARS OLD. $20,000,000.00 ASSETS.
Pacific Mutual
208 Colo
Walter Macphers
Lovers of
List
Mutual Insurance
208 Colorado Bldg.
alter Macpherson,District Man
ers of Good Mu
Listen!
Pacific Mutual Insurance Co.
208 Colorado Bldg.
Walter Macpherson,District Manager
Lovers of Good Music, Listen!
Mme. Anitta Iatti Brown of Chicago,
America's Greatest Coloratura Soprano
Soloist, en Route to the Pacific Coast,
Supported by a Chorus Club of 20 Voices,
Will Sing at
The People's Presbyterian Ch
8:15 O'clock, Monday Night, Oe
People's Presbyterian Church O'clock, Monday Night, Evening
The People's Presbyterian Church
8:15 O'clock, Monday Night, Oct. 16th
All Denver Is Invited to Hear
This Nightingale of the Race
Adults: 35 Cents
Children: 15 Cents
Adults: 35 Cents Children: 15 Cents
Adults: 35 Cents Children: 15 Cents
J. LESON
Architectural S
ALL KINDS OF META
SKYLIGHTS, CONDUCT
FURNACES. REPAI
ARCHITECTURAL Sheet Metal Works ALL KINDS OF METAL ROOFING, CORNICE YLIGHTS, CONDUCTORS, GUTTERS, ALS FURNACES. REPAIRING NEATLY DONE.
Architectural Sheet Metal Work
ALL KINDS OF METAL ROOFING, CORNICES,
SKYLIGHTS, CONDUCTORS, GUTTERS, ALSO
FURNACES. REPAIRING NEATLY DONE.
PHONE MAIN 1492
1113 Eighteenth St. Denver
C. S. KEYES
Dealer In
ALL KINDS OF
FUEL
Express and Moving
Phone Main 3281, 2708 Champa St.
---
FIREPROOF
Newly Furnished
Old Baths
DENVER, COLO.
N OF THE
GIRLS
NER HALL
OCT. 19, '11
DOLN-DOUGLASS SANATORIUM
THE AUSPICES OF
LEAGUE
MAN'S ORCHESTRA
50 Cents
Mr H. Morris
in the Hats
receiving the largest number of
I receive a hat from MADAM
UR WAGES
nt, Every Sickness
Insurance Co.
do Bldg.
,District Manager
Good Music,
en!
byterian Church Night, Oct. 16th
ren: 15 Cents
Met Metal Work
ROOFING, CORNICES,
BARS, GUTTERS, ALSO
G NEATLY DONE.
A. W. Lewis
Attorney and Counselor at Law
1941 Arapahoe St.
DENVER, COLORADO
STEAM HEAT
DENVER, COLO.
Denver. Colo
NATIONAL CAPITAL ATTAIRS
Romance in Various Indemnity Claims
Romance in Various Indemnity Claims
FEDERAL PIGEON HOLES
I'VE FOUND ENOUGH MATERIAL TO WRITE A DOZEN NOVELS
WASHINGTON.—Lovers of adventure and makers of romance have overlooked one of the richest of mines of imagination and fact that is stranger than fiction—the federal pigeonholes and dossiers in which the pathetic appeals of the eternal claimant are embalmed in red tape and buried for the curiosity of the future. Mark Twain's story of the interior of John Wilson McKinzie's claim for 60 barrels of beef contracted to be furnished to Sherman's army, which provisions decayed while the contractor was trying to catch up with Sherman on his famous "march to the sea," is no exaggeration of the stuff of which humor or romance are made to be found in the archives of Uncle Sam at Washington.
Thousands of claims are on file in the archives of the United States government. The famous French spoliation claims, growing out of the destruction or capture of American merchant craft plving between the Ameri-
Population Gains Faster Than Farms
CENSUS Director Durand has given out an important statement from the bureau of census containing additional figures and details of the agricultural statistics of continental United States collected April 15, 1910. During the ten years which followed the census of 1900 the population of the United States increased 21 per cent., but the number of farms did not keep pace with the increase in population. From 5,737,372, in 1900, the number grew to 6,340,357, an increase of 602,985, or 10.5 per cent. For the whole United States this is the lowest rate of increase which has been noted since the number of farms was first recorded in 1850. The increase in the total acreage devoted to agriculture was only 35,137,000 acres, or 4.2 per cent. The actual area in farms was 838,592,000 acres in 1900 and 873,729,000 acres in 1910.
Improved land, however, increased more rapidly than the total farm acreage or number of farms, the advance being from 414,499,000 acres in 1800 to 477,448,000 acres in 1910, a gain of 62,940,000 acres, or 15.2 per cent., in ten years. In striking contrast with the slow growth in the number and acreage of farms and the area of improved land during the ten years is the enormous rise which has come about in the value
Resignation of Officers Army Menace
Resignation of Officers Army Menace
THERE IS MY RESIGNATION IVE FOUND A BETTER JOB
THE navy department recently has been particularly unfortunate in the resignations of young officers who have just finished their education at West Point or Annapolis at government expense. In the last few weeks eight or ten midshipmen and ensigns have presented their resignations with reasons sufficient to cause the department to accept them. Both the war and navy departments are periodically confronted with this question.
The withdrawal of young officers from the service before they have given the government some return for their education is discouraged by both departments. A resignation is accepted only when it is believed there exists an impediment to the profitable retention of the young man. The navy suffers more than the army as to the
---
Watch Smugglers in the Philippines
THE manner in which the Moros carry on smuggling in the southern seas is systematic, according to information given to a Washington correspondent by Captain Geddes of the customs cutter, Skua. He states that the Moros have an unusually high tree on the Tawl Tawl group, from which they can see the const of Borneo and also see the smoke of his cutter when miles away from the spot.
"When everything is clear the smugglers make a dive for the little group of islands that dot the sea between there and Zamboanga, and almost always escape me even when I can sight them," says the captain, "as they know that my boat in the best of weather can only make seven knots, and with the tide against me in fine weather only two knots.
"There is at least $500,000 worth of textiles being smuggled from Borneo into the southern islands every year that with a good, fast boat I am sure could be almost all stopped. If it were not for my one-pounder on the foredeck I'd never land anything. As it is when we make a haul it is most al-
can coast, Holland and the Indies have been bandied about Washington, from capitol to White House to court of claims and back, for more than a century, but never paid in full. Of all the claims in American history these are the most associated with great events and great sacrifices.
These spoliations occurred during the trouble between this country and France at the close of the eighteenth century. There was no declared war between the two countries, but almost a state of war. There were two frigate actions, in which the American frigate under Truxon won both fights, but never a declaration of war. The whole number of American merchant vessels despolled by France was 2,290. The original estimate of their value was $20,000,000. Some $7,000,000 has been paid, but this is all. France was liable for these losses.
There are in this batch of British American pecuniary claims some that are based on grants of lands to Indians by the British government in colonial days. These are only some of the stories of adventure, great fortunes made and lost, captivity, deprivation and suffering, even or humor, figuring the story of the claimant laying his appeal before Uncle Sam at Washington.
WE'RE GROWIN' AT A PRETTY GOOD RATE - EH?
of farm property. Farm land, exclusive of buildings, which was valued at $13,058,008,000 in 1900, had more than doubled before 1910, being then returned as having a value of $28,386,770,000. The enormous increase here recorded of $15,328,762,000 represents an advance of 117.4 per cent. in the value of all land in farms.
Of the factors contributing to this increase in the average value of land the most important is doubtless that of advancing farm prices of agricultural products. This has increased the income-producing power of the farm and correspondingly influenced the selling price or value of farm land. It is probable also that in calculating the value of farm lands it has become customary to capitalize the income-producing power at a lower rate of interest than formerly. This might be true, despite the fact that interest rates in general have probably not fallen, because of the reduction in the risk of the farming business.
number of reasons which disqualify an officer, one especial disqualification being susceptibility to seasickness, which necessitates resignation of many young men. During the last year, it is said at the war department, very few cadets or second lieutenants have presented their resignations. Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood, chief of staff of the army, has refused to permit a lieutenant of the cavalry to get out of the army to engage in civil pursuits because he was about to be married. He, however, granted the young man a three months' leave of absence for his honeymoon. The lottery is a profitable scheme in Cuba and the returns to the war department show that last year the Cuban government received from this source $3,300,000 profit, which represents ten per cent. of the entire annual receipts from all sources.
But despite the revenue the Cuban government is seriously contemplating gradual abolition of the lottery in view of the enormous weight of evidence to show that it is impoverishing the laboring classes and creating great distress generally.
ways Chinese, as they can dump all their merchandise and drugs into the ocean before we can each them. Chinese? Oh, yes, lots of them. On an average at least 300 are captured and deported every year."
Captain Geddus has been skipper of the cutter Skua for the last eight years, three of which have been at Jolo and two at Palawan. During all this service he has often made as high as 2,500 miles a month cruising and has assisted in several good captures. He recommends a fast cutter and two motor boats as a great improvement over the present equipment, and states that with these the Borneo coast could be patrolled so thoroughly that smuggling would almost become a thing of the past.
GIVES VARIETY IN DESSERT
Almost Numberless Are the Possibilities When a Freezer Is Article of General Use.
Now that freezers are to be had at a price so reasonable that every one can afford to have one, no family should be without one, as the height of dessert excellence is reached in many frozen sweets impossible to procure in any but the largest city confectioneries. In fact, in most communities and in the rural districts it is even impossible to get a simple ice, the only thing available being ice cream, in perhaps vanilla and chocolate flavors. With a freezer at home a variety of creams as well as ices, frappes, etc., is possible, and one has the satisfaction of feeling that the best and cleanest materials go into them and they have a delicious "homey" flavor impossible to procure in creams or ice procured at the stores. Listed below are a number of tested recipes, and also hints to to the cream used in ice creams, and method of making the cream. If you want the rich, full-bodied delicacy known as Philadelphia ice cream, scald half the cream used. This portion of the cream will increase slightly in quantity when freezing, while the raw cream will almost double its bulk. Ice cream made from scalded cream is too rich for most tastes and unnecessarily costly, while, on the other hand, ice cream made from all raw cream is neither so smooth nor so rich as when half scalded cream is used. For freezing ice cream the ice should be smaller than walnuts and mixed with rock salt, two portions ice to one of salt. After cream it is frozen it can be kept hard by covering with larger pieces of ice over top of can, using half as much salt as when freezing cream. Be sure to keep waste hole in tub open during this time. Too large ice or too little salt while freezing means extra labor and butter, greasy cream, and too much salt makes coarse, watery cream. Water ice or frozen fruit will not freeze so readily as ice cream, therefore use larger proportion of ice and finer ice. Fresh fruits for flavoring should be mashed or cut fine a few hours before using and mixed with sufficient sugar to sweeten and draw out the flavor. All fruit flavors should be added to cream when partially frozen, to avoid any chance of curdling.
Chaudfroid of Salmon
Use for this one can of salmon or an equaf amount of cold boiled fish. Flake, removing skin and bones. Mix in a bowl a teaspoonful of flour, a teaspoonful each of mustard and salt, a few grains of cayenne, one egg lightly beaten, a tablespoonful and a half melted butter, three tablespoonfuls of vinegar and three-fourths of a cup of rich milk. Cook over hot water until the mixture thickens like a soft custard. Stir constantly at first and keep close watch to take from the fire as soon as thickened. Overcooking curdles. Add a tablespoonful of gelatin that has been softened in two tablespoonfuls of cold water, then dissolve over the teakettle. Add to the fish mixture and turn into one large mold or individual ones. When ready to serve turn out and garnish with lettuce, sliced cucumbers or pimentos as preferred. Serve with mayonnaise, French dressing or cucumber sauce.
Mutton and Eggs.
Put cooked mutton, free from sinew or fat, through the chopping machine. Mix with it pepper, salt, one tablespoonful of butter and one cupful of stock, put it on the fire in a saucepan to warm well, but not to boil. Have some very hot, well seasoned mashed potatoes ready, free from all lumps, and mixed with three tablespoonfuls of hot milk. Make a wall of these round the dish on which you are going to put your mutton. Poach three or four eggs, taking care they do not break. Put the mutton inside the potato wall and place the eggs neatly on the top of the mutton. Serve hot. This is a delightful change from ordinary mince.
Table Economies.
There is one little suggestion to make to the housekeeper. Never buy fruits, vegetables or meats that are out of season. This simple rule followed out carefully will keep down the expenses greatly. It is such a temptation to buy the first box of strawberries to be seen in the market, the first shad, the first asparagus, tomatoes done up in tissue paper that peep out so alluringly! Those same dainties later on will be had almost for the asking. Therefore form the habit of resisting all table delicacies that are out of season, and buy instead only those that are. You will save many dollars as the year runs on.
Bran for Matting.
Instead of salt water some housewives use bran for cleaning matting. A bag of cheesecloth is filled with bran; this is moistened from time to time and the matting scrubbed with it. After the bran wash the matting is wiped off with a fresh cloth dipped in salt water.
A Garden Hint
To keep the bugs and insects which infest your trees from killing the blossoms or leaves, wrap a piece of cotton around the center of the body, and cover the cotton with a piece of fly paper. This is invaluable. Try it. Use sticky side out.
To Clean Screens
To clean wire screens, dampen cotton cloth with kerosene, rub both sides; they look like new; also help to keep files away
SUGAR PRICE TO KEEP SOARING
SUGAR PRICE TO KEEP SOARING
CUBAN CROP IS 400,000 TONS
SHORT—OTHER COUNTRIES
BELOW NORMAL.
6,500,000 TONS USED
DUTY LAST YEAR ON IMPORTED
SUGAR AMOUNTED
TO $53,039,304.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
New York.—Before the sub-committee of the congressional committee, which has been investigating the operations of the sugar trusts interesting testimony will be given in the near future by experts who have been studying the conditions in this country and Europe. It will be the most important testimony the committee has heard.
The sub-committee will be informed that the price of sugar is certain to go higher. Verified statements showing that the Cuban sugar crop this year has failed, that the output in other countries is below normal, and that the jump in prices can be traced directly to a group in Europe, will be laid before the congressmen.
The United States, it will be shown, consumes each year 6,500,000 tons of sugar. A small part of this is manufactured into confections and is shipped abroad, but most of it is used by this country. Of this huge amount, only about 500,000 tons is produced in the United States. Last year $53,039,304 was paid in duty on imported sugar, which does not include what comes free from Porto Rico, Hawaii and the Philippines. This tax of more than 50 cents each person in the United States must pay for the sugar he uses.
Cuba produces annually 1,900,000 tons of sugar. This year the crop will be 400,000 tons short. All of this is shipped to the United States, but even that with what is produced here and what comes from the outlying possessions makes less than half of what is needed.
How a group of men in Europe fixes the price of sugar, and how this group ignores the sugar industry in the United States, will be shown. The men composing this group meet each month in Brussels and fix the prices for the next thirty days. They come from Holland, Germany, Belgium, France, Switzerland, Austria and Italy, which are called in sugar circles "convention countries." Buyers must go to them for sugar, especially Holland, which sends many shiploads from Java, one of her dependencies. To Cuba the United States gives a favored tariff, and all her sugar comes here, but much more is needed, and that must be bought from the "convention countries" at the prices fixed by the Brussels convention.
It will also be shown that sugar produced in Louisiana is less than is needed for the actual consumption in that state. The same condition obtains in Texas, where only half of the sugar needed is home grown. It will be shown that the trust has more than $350,000 worth of bone charcoal at its Williamsburg plant for whitening sugar in the refining process, and that lack of cane sugar prevents it from using it.
The experts will argue that the beet sugar industry in the United States should be fostered. It will be proposed to utilize a dream of a Florida man and drain the Everglades, converting them into huge sugar plantations as the most effective weapon with which to tight the men who control the price of sugar in the world.
MANCHURIA THRONE TOTTERS.
Rebels Defeat Troops; Government Rushes Army to Scene.
Hankow, China.-The Manchu dynasty is menaced with destruction.
In the most serious rebellion of recent years the revolutionists, who include among their numbers 8,000 mutinous Imperial troops, have captured the city of Wu Chang after a battle with the loyal troops. Hankow, across the river from Wu Chang, is in imminent danger.
John D. Weighs 196 Pounds.
Tarrytown, N. Y.—Statements about John D. Rockefeller's improved health are norne out by the announcement that he has gained twelve pounds during the last four months. Rockefeller now weighs 196 pounds.
Springs Gets Traveling Men.
Colorado, Springs.—This city has captured the next annual convention of the International Commercial Travelers' Association.
Turko-Italian War May End Soon.
Turkishian War May End Soon.
Berlin—The armistice between Italy and Turkey for which German diplomacy has been striving for some time, it is believed here, has practically been concluded, although not yet announced as official.
Melrose, Mont.—Snow, sleet and rain is being swept across Montana before a fierce gale. At Butte, traffic is stopped by the unprecedented snowfall.
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H. T. Kealing Gives Valuable Advice in Forceful Address.
CRITICAL PERIOD OF RACE
SAILING UPON TROUBLESOME WATERS IN UPWARD STRUGGLE—ILLUSTRATION ON RACE CO-OPERATION.
Little Rock, Ark.—One of the most forceful and enjoyable addresses heard at the recent National Negro Business league convention was delivered by Prof. H. T. Kealing, principal of Western university, Quindaro, Kan. Professor Kealing was heartily applauded when he said: "What the negro needs, in a constant increasing degree, is the help of his own kind. I don't care how much inspiration comes to us from other sources. Self-help, self-reliance and strength must come to us from seeing what our own people are doing and what they can do."
Mr. President, Ladies and Gentlemen: There is one thing that is not debated from this platform (except by Bishop Cottrell, who has just preceded me) and that is eloquence. Aside from the excellent and practical speeches which have been delivered to this convention by some of our race's best business men, successful bankers, prosperous farmers, capable editors and the like, you have just had a liberal dose of eloquence administered by our learned bishop, and I shall make no effort to follow in his oratorial footsteps, even if I could. I merely want to tell you, as briefly as I can what this Business league means to me, or what I think it means to the race, and what I think it means to the nation.
It has, first of all, discovered us to ourselves. For fourteen years I traveled all over the United States, surprising myself at every little town and hamlet by finding unheard of negroes who were successful in business and who were noted, in their respective communities, for their wealth, their enterprise, their public spirit and sterling character.
Influence of the National Negro Busi- ness League
When the National Negro Business league came into existence twelve years ago in the city of Boston, for the first time it brought together from the farm and plantation, from the carpenter's bench and workshop, from the store, the counting house and manufactory a number of successful members of our race for mutual help and inspiration, where they might give and get a great schooling in racial progress, where they might let each other know what progress of various kinds was being made by negroes in their several communities, and where, in this way, each delegate could go back home and let all know what the whole race was achieving. In this way great good has been accomplished, for the negro is beginning to find himself out, is beginning to know himself better, and to have more confidence in himself as well as more respect for his race.
Secondly, I want to say, this league has stimulated business enterprises that were already established, and created new business enterprises among members of our race that never would have come into existence but for the direct or indirect influence of this league.
Thirdly, it has stimulated the inventive genius of the negro, so that you have upon this platform today the model of a cotton-chopping machine (invented by L. D. Moore of Little Rock), which will scrape both sides of the row, chop it out and dirt it all at the same time, thus evidencing the activity of the negro's brain and vindicating the wise policy of this great association and its worthy founder, who says: "Put your brains to work as well as your hands," and so we have at this convention a negro cotton-chopper, scraper and dirter to make an eloquent speech to you, the design of which is to save so much cotton chopping by our women of the south.
On the plantations, in the homes, on the streets and railroads, and in the mines and factories of the southland we see abundant use and employment of the negro's brawn and muscle, but I tell you, gentlemen, whenever the negro reaches that stage of development that he puts his brain to work as well as his hands, there is no power on earth that can pull him down. A man passing through the country came upon a negro who was bareheaded and busily engaged on a rock pile—breaking rock for a living under a hot sun. "My friend," said the traveler, "aren't you afraid you will get brain fever working there on that rock pile, bareheaded, beneath the burning sun?" With his face all wet with perspiration, and a characteristic smile upon his countenance, the black man looked up and quickly replied: "Brain fever, boss? Do you suppose if I had any brains I would be working at this here job?" Now, my friends, what the negro wants to do is to learn, through this league, and through the lesson that is being so effectively taught by its president and founder, to put more brains into whatever he is doing, to put more brains into his farm work, more brains into his business, more brains into his home life, in order that he may draw therefrom the full measure and benefit of useful living
And then again, this league is showing the negro how he can take ad-
vantage of the opportunities that lie at his door. It is constantly illustrating to him in a concrete way how to use his humble circumstances as a stepping stone to rise above and better his condition. There's a way out of every difficulty, there's a way over every obstacle, if we are ingenious, watchful, industrious and patient enough to find the way. Just a few days ago I came to a river where they had an old-fashioned ferryboat. I noticed that whenever the captain wanted to cross the river to a point directly opposite on the other shore, he would always head his vessel upstream where, it would seem at first glance, he was going in a course that would lead him away from the place of his destination.
That little incident taught me a valuable lesson, for I pretty soon found out that by heading his boat upstream he finally got the full benefit of the current and was really enabled the more easily to reach the wharf on the other side. Had he turned his boat at right angles, he would have drifted with the current and would surely have been carried far below the point which he desired. And so it is in our individual as well as our racial life—if we would cross the river and reach the goal we must head our vessels upstream and not be afraid of the current of difficulties.
This National Negro Business league has not only justified its existence by revealing from year to year remarkable instances of self-help and business achievement, but if the negro race will only follow in the wake of its teaching, "it will take you where you're gwine"—as Doctor Washington so pleasingly puts it.
Some time ago, while down at Galveston, I was invited to go out fishing in a sailboat. Being very fond of both fishing and sailing (though not proficient in either) I readily accepted the invitation. I had hardly stepped into the boat before the wind was right astern and we went speeding out on the gulf from Galveston. After a most pleasant and successful day's outing, we began to make the journey homeward. My friend in charge of the boat soon found out that we would have to sail into Galveston harbor against the wind. Just as soon as the sails were hoisted, instead of pointing his boat toward Galveston, he headed her in a different direction and I wondered how we would be able to reach Galveston by following that course. The wind was strong and the sails were full. The waters leaped and dashed in fiendish glee as if they were eager to capsize our frail barque, but the boatsman, not the least bit perturbed, cried out his orders to the crew, and every once in a while I would hear him say: "Luffer! Luffer!"
Of course I did not understand what that meant, but I could soon see the progress which the boat was making, for I noticed we had reached a point nearly opposite to Galveston. Then after a series of "buffering," "tacking," "zigzagging" and the like, in due time we reached Galveston harbor, all safe and sound, without the slightest injury to boat-or passengers.
Our race is likewise "in a boat." We are sailing upon troublesome waters, for this is an critical period in our upward struggle. We have set our eyes upon and are determined to reach the homeward harbor of success; that is especially true of the members of this league. But notwithstanding the headwinds of opposition, or the rolling current of competition, or the frail barque of our limited resources, we have men aboard who are not afraid to "sail in" against difficulties, men aboard who understand the elements of real progress and, under that great captain of negro advancement and economic development, Booker T. Washington, who is the "luffer" of his people, we will reach the port in due time.
I want to say that this institution stands for the co-operation of the negro along a line that was never before attempted. I was a member of the defunct Afro-American council when it held meetings in various cities of this country in order to protest against wrongs and injustices perpetrated upon us, and in order to make big speeches and addresses and pass high-sounding resolutions, which never got before the public as we wanted. I finally became convinced that we were accomplishing but little if anything.
Then I saw another star rising above the horizon. It was the National Negro Business league. I saw they had gotten together negro farmers, merchants, bankers, inventors, teachers, doctors, lawyers, for the purpose of discussing matters of vital importance to the welfare of our race and nation. And I noticed that even the reporters listened attentively and reported accurately their utterances and what transpired daily in their meetings. The papers began to change their tone; they began to say: "The negro people are rising in the scale of civilization, not through the process of simply holding indignation metings, but by the irresistible power of self-help; they are not merely pleading for others to help them and grant them sympathy and compassion, but they, as a race, are striving in a practical way to help themselves!"
And indeed, my friends, self-help is the only kind of help that is capable of making us a people worthy of the world's respect and deserving of a place in the history of races. Outside help may cheer us, but that alone will never give us backbone, and no man can stand upon his feet and walk unless he has a backbone. We need and must have the sympathy and cooperation of each other; that, next to self-help, is the most important factor in the solution of our problem. And, in this connection, I am forcibly re-
minded of a little story they tell about the elephant and the partridge nest. It is said an elephant was out grazing one day and as he walked about in the tall grass he came upon a nest of young partridges. Inadvertently he stepped upon and crushed the mother bird. The story goes that when the elephant saw the mother bird was dead, and that there was no one to take her place, he became very sorry and in pity looked down upon the dead bird and said: "Poor thing; I have killed you; I didn't mean to do it; and poor little orphan birds without any mother, I am so sorry for you. Now that your mother is dead you will have no one to brood you, to nestle you under her wings; no one to feed you and teach you the shrill sweet notes of your kind. I really feel sorry for you, poor little orphan birds, and even if you have no mother to sit on you, I will take her place—I will sit on you, little birds, I will sit on you."
I can't believe that that kind of help did those birds any good. What those birds wanted was help from birds like themselves. And what the negro wants, in a constantly increasing degree, is the help of his own kind. I don't care how much inspiration comes to us from other sources, self-help, self-reliance and strength must come to us from seeing what our own people are doing and what they can do.
And now, then, in conclusion, I want to do what one of my friends asked me to do by way of illustration. I refer to R. L. Smith of Texas. I have used this illustration a hundred times to show our people the wonderful power of united effort and how little money is required to make a great race rich. It illustrates just what cooperation along race lines in business is going to do for us, even though we do not control the great money markets of the world. Let me show you how the members of our race can use their money for their own best benefit and at the same time help and inspire other business enterprises—possibly producing negro millionaires within a very short time.
Now here, for instance, are three men—Doctor Washington, Hon. J. C. Napier and myself—these three men representing the whole negro race (for the sake of illustration) so far as interchange of values is concerned. Now I owe Doctor Washington three dollars. (That is only supposition, however.) Doctor Washington owes Mr. Napier three dollars, and Mr. Napier owes me three dollars. (I am sorry that is not a reality.) Remember there are nine dollars owing in that debt, three parties involved, and let us say that there is only one dollar in the crowd and I have that dollar (which is a pretty big supposition). Only one dollar in circulation. Being anxious to pay my debt to Doctor Washington, I go to him like an honest man and give him that one dollar on account; that leaves two dollars which I still owe him. Then Doctor Washington hands the dollar over to Mr. Napier an account, leaving two dollars left on his indebtedness to Mr. Napier. Then Mr. Napier comes in and pays me one dollar on account, leaving a balance due me from Mr. Napier of two dollars.
Now I take that same dollar and go to Doctor Washington and I say to him: "Here is another dollar of the two dollars balance I owe you; this leaves only one dollar I owe you now." Doctor Washington goes to Mr. Napier and likewise cancels another dollar of his indebtedness, leaving one dollar still due. Mr. Napier gladly comes to me and hands that dollar over to me leaving a balance due by him to me of only one dollar. Now, as the matter stands, I owe Doctor Washington one dollar, Doctor Washington owes Mr. Napier one dollar, and Mr. Napier owes me one dollar. Now with that last dollar Mr. Napier gave me I pay off my entire indebtedness to Doctor Washington, who in turn cancels his indebtedness to Mr. Napier, and Mr. Napier comes to me (like a good financier that he is) and squares up his entire debt with that dollar.
So you see there has been nine dollars' worth of debts paid with that one dollar. How was it done? Simply by keeping that dollar traveling in a circle—as it ought to do among members of our race. Suppose, instead of taking that dollar to Doctor Washington, I had handed it to a man outside the circle, one who had no interest in the circle, my debt would not have been paid until I found another dollar, and likewise the debts of others would have still remained outstanding, but see what you can accomplish when you keep your dollars in proper circulation!
Now you put the negro grocer in that circle, and the negro shoemaker, and the negro furniture dealer, the negro dry goods merchant, the negro seamstress, the negro doctor—put all the business enterprises that humanity and civilization require in that circle, and keep a little money circulating therein, and I tell you that every time a dollar goes around it will lift each one of you a dollar out of debt.
I heartily congratulate you upon your strong and growing organization and bid you Godspeed in the good work which you are doing. Long may the Business league live and prosper, sad may it continue, in an ever-increasing degree, to perform its high mission of instilling confidence in ourselves and in each other, and, in a thoroughly practical and helpful way, win that respect for our race which it would be difficult to obtain in any other way than by showing what our race is actually achieving.
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RIO, N.Y.
Open-top Obervation cars through
the canons; seats free. For informa-
tion regarding train service, reserva-
tions, etc., call on
LOCAL RIO GRANDE AGENT
or addresses
Frank A. Wadleigh, General Passenger
Agent, Denver, Colo.
The
Newport Annex
Life and Lunch Room
Richard Frazier and Tom Lewis, Proprietors
SHORT ORDERS AT ALL HOURS.
ALL LIKE OUR
Service
BETWEEN
Springs, Cripple Creek,
and Trinidad
its frequency promptness and
accommodations.
TESTED TRACK DINING CARS.
BETWEEN
THE H LIQUOR
TOURIST
CARS
VER vla
GRANDE
a Francisco and
e chong-
F U C F A S T
SAN FRAN-
MAKE CITY
PACIFIC
Y.
DE AGENT
General Passenger
, Colo.
Phone, Main 7413.
Annex
ch Room
on Lewis, Props.
ALL HOURS.
DENVER, COLB.
Rice
Creek,
tness and
ING CARS.
COLORADO
AND
SOUTHERN
"Lyman Style Is Correct Style"
C
1845
One large lot of Trimmed Hats, up, will be sold on our first flor for.....
Another big assortment of Trim ues from $7.50; our first floor price.....
The
LYMAN MILLI COMPAN
lot of Trimmed Hats, worth from $6
be sold on our first floor $4.75
big assortment of Trimmed Hats, val-
n $7.50; our first floor $5.75
THE
AN MILLINERY
COMPANY
One large lot of Trimmed Hats, worth from $6 up, will be sold on our first floor $4.75 for......
Another big assortment of Trimmed Hats, values from $7.50; our first floor price $5.75
LYMAN MILLINERY COMPANY
AND SEE US
R NEW MANAGEMENT
RAGG'S OLD STAND
A Full Line of
CERIES AND MEATS
Goods - Prices Right
COME AND
UNDER NEW MAN
AT BRAGG'S OL
A Full Line o
GROCERIES AND
First Class Goods
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT AT BRAGG'S OLD STAND
A Full Line of
GROCERIES AND MEATS
First Class Goods - Prices Right
F. W. TURNER
Remember I Save You One Dollar
Put This Dollar in the
The Cincinnati Furnace and H
FURNACES CLEANED, FLOORS WAXED, K
WASHING CELLAR
LAWN CUTTING, CEMENT P
BEST WORK
JAS. TERRY. 1209 E. Thirteenth
I Save You One Dollar on Your Furnace.
Put This Dollar in the Bank.
Fi Furnace and House Cleaning Co.
D, FLOORS WAXED, KALSOMINING AND WHITE
WASHING CELLARS.
CUTTING, CEMENT PATCH WORK.
BK
QUICK SERVICE
1209 E. Thirteenth Ave. Phone York 4328
plete
Denver Gas Lamp and
Mantle Company
Remember I Save You One Dollar on Your Furnace.
Put This Dollar in the Bank.
The Cincinnati Furnace and House Cleaning Co.
FURNACES CLEANED, FLOORS WAXED, KALSOMINING AND WHITE-
WASHING CELLARS.
LAWN CUTTING, CEMENT PATCH WORK.
BEST WORK QUICK SERVICE
JAS. TERRY. 1209 E. Thirteenth Ave. Phone York 4328
Phone Main 8690 529 E. 20th Ave.
Car Passes Door at 20th Ave. and Cleveland Pl.
Formerly of 1426 Curtis Street.
Sabbath (Saturday) Open after Sundown. Open
evening except Friday until 10 o'clock.
TOBER SALE OF
Long Coats and Tailored Suits
22nd Ave. Car Passes Door at 20th
Formerly of 1426 Curtis
Store closed on Sabbath (Saturday) Open
every evening except Friday
OCTOBER SA
Ladies' Long Coats
Store closed on Sabbath (Saturday) Open after Sundown. Open every evening except Friday until 10 o'clock.
IS NOW ON
The continued warm weather during September selling of fall garments, orders placed early by us are piling in on us and we are crowded with fall and our limited space prevents us from showing advantage. In order to make room we are Ladies' Fall
Suits and Co
At About One-Fourth Off Reg
Suits for $9.95 to $15.00, worth $15.00
Cloth coats $8.75 to $24.75, worth $12.50
Blush coats $12.50 to $35.00, worth $15.00
warm weather during September has delayed the
events, orders placed early by us for October delivery
and we are crowded with fall and winter garments.
Price prevents us from showing all garments to best
order to make room we are selling hundreds of
Fits and Coats
Fourth Off Regular Prices
$9.95 to $15.00, worth $15.00 to 20.00
s $8.75 to $24.75, worth $12.50 to $35.00.
s $12.50 to $35.00, worth $15.00 to 45.00.
The continued warm weather during September has delayed the selling of fall garments, orders placed early by us for October delivery are piling in on us and we are crowded with fall and winter garments, and our limited space prevents us from showing all garments to best advantage. In order to make room we are selling hundreds of Ladies' Fall
Suits for $9.95 to $15.00, worth $15.00 to 20.00
Cloth coats $8.75 to $24.75, worth $12.50 to $35.00.
Plush coats $12.50 to $35.00, worth $15.00 to 45.00.
Caracule coats $8.75 to $29.75, worth $12.50 to $37.50.
S & N
GARMENT-STORE
925-16TH ST. - OPP. JOSLINS
The woman who appreciates style and quality for the right price will do well to visit our store. Bargain prices will prevail all over our three large floors and basement. As an example of our low prices on high grade Millinery, we quote the following items:
1120-1126 SIXTEENTH STREET
40c Complete
4 Mantles ..... 25c
Best and Most Economi-
cal Mantles 35 and 50c.
Opposite Daniels and Fisher's
2137 LARIMER STREET
TELEPHONE MAIN 6336
BACKDOOR ENTRANCE
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Gas and Electric Fixtures.
SUPPLIES OF ALL KINDS FOR GAS AND ELECTRIC LIGHTS.
E. E. BROOKS, Mgr.
Silversmith & Hiller
For the Hostess
Dainty Millinery
Dunty Mininery
A Hobby Luncheon.
A college girl described this affair to me, and I saw its possibilities even for those not in the hey-dey of youth, for who of us hasn't some hobby which we ride, either fast or slow, and in some instances "it" rides us. The guests were eight girls, all students at the same university, and all "next" to each other's whims and fancies. The centerpiece was a small hobby-horse ridden by a dolly dressed in cap and gown. At each place were small hobby horses with the name cards attached by ribbons in the class colors. No names were written, but all found their places by the clever drawing in pen and ink on the cards. For instance, the girl with musical ambitions found herself "Ten years hence with a hand organ and a monkey grinding out Home, Sweet Home." The stout girl (she called herself plump) was represented rolling down hill with the words, "I have lost one-eighth of a pound;" the maiden who was to be a teacher (in her own mind), was depicted as a fashionable society woman playing bridge; and the golf-girl found herself with Cupid peering out of her bag and the words, "A clever stroke" underneath. When all were seated the hostess asked each one to explain why her hobby was commendable, and she told them to look under their place plates, and there they found quaintly worded invitations asking them to meet her ten years from date and see how the hobby horses had been ridden. If impossible to be present, letters were to be sent to be read aloud. At the finish all joined hands and sang "Auld Lang Syne."
Around-the-World Tea.
A young ladies' Mission band got up the following very successful tea. A house represented each of these eight countries and several automobiles conveyed the guests to and fro: Greece, Italy, Germany, Russia, England, America, France and Japan. A five-minute paper about each country, with music, furnished amusement and the attendants were in costume. Flags of the country made the decoration with whatever characteristic article obtainable. A very small admission fee was collected by the courier as guests entered the auto and small fees were charged for refreshments, which were peculiar to the country as the menu shows: Greece, olives; Italy, spaghetti; Germany, kaffe kuchen; Japan, meshl (rice); France, vin di rouge (red punch); Russia, caviar canapes; England, plum pudding; America, ple.
With good committees this scheme may be enlarged upon and a most interesting entertainment evolved.
A New Word-Making Game.
A hostess entertaining in honor of a visiting guest passed cards bearing the last name of her friend. The company was told to make as many words from the letters composing the name as they could in twenty minutes. A prize was awarded for the longest and shortest lists. This proved a very pleasant introduction and served as
Dainty
CLOSELY fitting hat of coarse white straw flecked with black, turned up at the back with pink velvet, and trimmed on one side with a bunch of velvet apples and satn apple blossoms.
Morning hat of black Tegal trimmed with white silk
an ice-breaker, as the people were almost all entire strangers. This scheme is a good one for church socials, which are apt to be stiff if not conducted along the same lines as a private party.
An Indian Party.
Now that so many children have Indian suits, try this for a party: Put up one or two wigwams and send the invitations on paper arrows through which a feather is thrust. Have them delivered by the little Indian who is to be the host. Girls may be dressed as squaws.
There are Indian postcards, which would make very good place cards or souvenirs. For refreshments serve:
Corn Meal Mush With Milk.
Fish or Some Kind of Game.
Corn Muffins.
Indian Meal Pudding.
made in individual ramakins.
Make a contest of stringing beads and have a game of archery.
A "Red Hot" Social.
Try this the first real cold day and you are wondering how to warm up a church social which promises to be an爽 affair. Issue posters on scarlet cardboard, decorate with red cheese cloth, red shades, and train a good lusty chorus to sing, "A Hot Time." Dress the reception committee and waiters in red, have the admission "5 red cents." Serve "red hots" (wien-erwurst) uncased in hot rolls, pickles and coffee with doughnuts for sweets. MADAME MERRI
IN VOGUE
Skirts, especially on lingerie dresses, are showing more fullness. Double vellings are being used to give lonely descent effects.
Velour hats are proving strong favorites in early fall millinery.
The vogue for black and white alliances shows but little abatement.
The jumper design has been furiously revived for dressy shirtwaists.
Collarettes of black or white turtle are used to wear with afternoon gowns.
Extensive use is made of all kinds of laces, and even lace robes are coming to the front.
Blue and white combinations are to have a place in fashion, especially in wash fabrics.
Gowns of all-over lace—some of the exceedingly costly—have the highest approval in fashion.
Tulle and lace are largely used for fuchsia on evening gowns. These are edged with bead fringe.
White Crochet Button:
Small and large buttons made of white cotton thread coarsely crocheted are now in first fashion. They are placed on blouses, on one-piece frocks, on top wraps, in every size. They are used on blouses instead of pearl buttons and on white linen skirts.
Millinery
Mob cap of ivory net over ninon with lace frill tailing round the face The band round the crown and the rose in front are of exquisite she pink satin
A large black Togal hat lined with old gold and trimmed with beautiful shaded gold-colored feathers
THE 2 Strauthers
Tailoring for the Trade
Ladies' and Gent's Suits to Order
1816 CUI
$20 and Up
CURTIS ST
Ladies' and Gent's $20 and Up Suits to Order 100 Woolers Click From
1816 CURTIS STREET
THE CAPIT
CLUB
RT
manager. A SOCIAL C
MACK SMART Manager.
ST. DEMN's Market and Gr
Tesch's M
WHEN
LIVE
WE R
WHEN YOU WANT THE BEST
WE RENDER OUR OWN LARD.
WE STREET. PH
STREET PHO
2029 CHAMPA STREET W.
Eureka
W. O. SIMONDS
eka COAL 4
AS COKE $5.00 PER T
Eureka COAL 4.00 Per Ton GAS COKE $5.00 PER TON We Will Save You Money if You Leave Your Order Before Coal Prices Go Up.
Carson's Annual Fall Sale of
Dinner-
ware
Domestic
and Imported
Many sales permit of small profits. That's why our prices for complete dinnersets and Open Stock Dinnerware, are so low, they will astonish you. You can have the best from us, at prices you have been paying for the medium grades.
The CARSON CROCKERY CO. 732-36 15th St. DENVER'S LARGEST EXCLUSIVE CHINA STORE.
RUDOLPH BROTHERS
SANITARY GROCERY, BAKERY AND MEAT MARKET.
Imported and Domestic Table Delicacies. Fresh Fruits and Vegetables. Our Own Bakery. Finest Goods in the City.
2758-2760 Downing Avenue Phone York 320
J. R. CONTEE, PRESIDENT.
R. E. HANDY, LICENSED EMBALMER.
THE
Douglass
Undertaking
Company
1023 19th Street
Incorporated—Bonded to the City.
Phone—Main 6123.
A. H.
921 20TH. ST.
0 and Up 500 Woolers Click From TIS STREET PHONE CHAMPA 956.
THE
APITOL
CLUB
SOCIAL CLUB.
A SOCIAL CLUB.
PHONE CHAMPA 2540.
et and Grocery
OAL 4.00 Per Ton $5.00 PER TON
DENVER, COLO
PHONE YORK 1979.
PHONE MAIN 5964