Colorado Statesman
Saturday, June 8, 1912
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
ELECTION AND AP- POINTMENTS
VOL. XVIII. ELECTION POINT
However little we may appreciate it, we must congratulate the Citizen's Party upon their victory, the magnificence of which is unparalleled in Denver's political history. While it is difficult to reconcile ourselves in advance to the probability of an administration composed of men of all political persuasions, representing diversified notions of Government from anarchy to Democracy, crystallizing their efforts into harmonious and successful action; we must wish them well for Denver's sake.
By some strange conception or mysterious influence many Negroes were persuaded to vote the Citizen's ticket. Hoping that in same way they might be renumerated for their support and service, we made the best of a bad situation.
Mr. Arnold pledged his administration to the people irrespective of party, race or faction. All the positions worth while have been practically awarded, and we representing approximately one twentieth of Denver's population, are the possessors of the proverbial "sack."
Yet our last act should be to inveigh against a situation which we ourselves have created or help to create.
Four years ago we helped to elevate to power the Democratic party whose accession meant the summary removal of all colored officeholders including five colored clerks, which positions had been created by the Republican party. This consideration alone from the Republicans should have solidified the Negro support in the last election upon that party. That the element supporting the citizens ticket and crying "Arnold" the loudest was unquestionably antagonistic to Negro interest and elevation, was an oft repeated prophecy of your humble servant. The 5000 applications for the 1500 positions, those being elevated to power, are certainly ample testimonials to the truth of the above prophecy.
We seem to have lost the only prominent position left to us—the License Inspectorship which the colored "Arnolites" claim was assured them. The only consolation which seems to cheer the colored "Citizen's Brigade" is common to us all: viz the relegation to the po-
litical junk heap of such odius negrophobist as "Crowbar" Geo. Collins whose favorite pastime was discriminating against Negroes at the public Auditorium; "Bathhouse" John Torpey who used his position at the Public Bathhouse to humiliate Negroes at every given opportunity, and several others of their ilk.
The present situation brings home lessons which we should have long since learned: First, there is no reason and very little excuse for shooting off on tangents in pursuit of strange political saviors. In Colorado particularly we have the Republican party from whom we can reasonably expect consideration. It matters not whether this recognition is commensurate with our support since it is certainly more than we can secure elsewhere.
In politics especially, we need never expect more than we demand. If we support candidates or tickets where we can demand nothing, nothing is what we must expect.
Under our system of government, politics has become such a potent factor in its conduct that it is as absolutely essential with us as other races, to carefully and cautiously analyze candidates and policies, determine how they affect us and then cast our ballot to our best advantage. If we do this we will be casting our lot nearby a unit as the same conditions that affect one, affects nearly all. In unity only can we develop the force necessary to accomplish the desired results.
Let us benefit by our unfortunate experiences and earnestly endeavor to devise ways and means to improve our political condition. It is only by concerted action and pulling together that we can demand respect and recognition.
Only when we shall have develled a more practical faculty for organization and learned to recognize clean and competent leadership will we be conceded the consideration to which we are justly entitle.
So Similar.
"Yes," said Nagget, "a woman usually treats her husband as the average servant treats bric-a-brac." "Go ahead," said the wise Mrs. Nagget. "What's the answer?" "Why, the more he's worth the more she tries to break him up."—Catholic Standard and Times.
DENVER, COLORADO, SATURDAY. JUNE 8 1912.
State Hist & Nut Hist Biosci
State House
HANTS WE
ADC
THE JOURNAL
DENVER, COLORAD
INTERVIEW BY
PHILIP B. STEWART
Fighting Phil. Stewart, of Colorado Springs, has started the state talking since his hat hit the ring. In a recent interview given to the Gazette of that city he employs this language, which will sound like a strange tongue to the people who have been fooled so often by politicans and political promises: "We must get away from these platitudes," he remarked. "By this I mean that whenever we go before the people commending or condemning a proposition before them we must be sure of our ground and then our campaign can be made invulnerable. The people are looking to the logic of things these days and platitudes and promises do not possess the hallucination they did in days gone by."
And back of this statement he is placing the hard cash and his time and carnestness. A corps of trained investigators are looking up every phase of the laws to be initiated or to be voted upon by the people this fall. If "jokers" appear in the bills as placed before the people for their signatures or their votes, he proposes to show up these delinquencies. And it is already hinted that sensations will follow some of the disclosures to be made in the drafting of one or two now circulated for signatures.
Every detail of state management is being gone into thoroughly with the admonition that no expense is to be spared in procuring the positive and irrefutable facts. The machines will not "put anything over" during this campaign. The question of the reapportionment of the legislative districts of the state, so that the inequalities of the past may be done away with, is attracting Mr. Stewart's attention, as he regards this as one of the vital issues before the people, indirectly involving legislative decisions, because, under the present apportionment the machine has arranged it so that the senators and representatives from one or two of the cities of the state practically control the legislation for the entire commonwealth
The data already compiled would fill a large library, and the work has only well begun. The requirements of eveay state institution, the condition of state finances, and every feature involving efficiency in state government is being gone into carefully, so that the time comes he will be loaded for a fire of facts that will set the people thinking.
Such a course is unusual in the history of Colorado politics, but is one of the Stewart characteristics.
He is calm and mild-mannered on subjects with which he may not be familiar, but the method he possesses of going ahead when he knows he is right will electrify the people of the state during the com-campaign.
Before another month has passed, his representatives will have covered every county in the state familiarizing themselves with the requirements, conditions and causes for complaint. With an array of facts of this character he will go armed for the fight in every section of the state.
Hundreds of letters and telegrams are pouring into headquarters in the Gazette Building at Colorado Springs encouraging him to keep the fight going, and some of these carry the assurance that Colorado will smash the machines the same as Denver did, and elect him Governor by a majority without parallel in the history of Colorado politics.
NINTH CAVALRY
WINS POST BASEBALL
CHAMPIONSHIP
Cheyenne, Wyo., June 5.—In one of the fastest games of ball ever witnessed on the Fort Russell grounds, the Ninth cavalry team, for many years champion of the army, defeated the Eleventh infantry team with which it was tied for the first time in the Fort Russell league. Each had won five and lost one game, the colored men having defeated all teams except the infantry.
The Eleventh started with two runs in the first and the Ninth tied the score in the third. The eleventh forged ahead three runs in the fourth and the Ninth tied up the game again in the seventh. With the opening of the ninth the cavalry was one run to the good, but the infantry tied the score in their half.
The colored men came right back and with one on, McClair poked out a home run. Final score: Infantry, 7; Cavalry 9. Hits: Infantry, 10; Cavalry, 14. Over 2,000 people witnessed the game. The cavalry team wins the post championship and a large sum of money.
150 NEGRO CHIDDREN
Baltimore, Md., May 29:—Cardinal Gibbons preached to a large congregation at St. Barnabas Catholic Church Sunday afternoon, following the confirmation of 150 children. His Eminence advised his hearers to practice in their daily lives the Golden Rule and to shun those evils that are prevalent in a large city. Rev. Rev. Charles R. Uncles was among the priests within the altar. Rev. C. A. Evers is partor of the church.
RACE NEWS
GATHERED FROM VARIOUS SOURCES
The educational foundation by John D. Rockefeller, endowed with $30,000,000, recently appropriated $35,000 for Hampton, Tuskegee and Spellman at Atlanta, Ga., and $9,000 to be used for supervisors of Negro rural schools in Kentucky North Carolina and Virginia. Nearly $1,000,000 was given away. The South benefited largely.
Washington, D. C., is rejoicing this week over its new $100,000 Y. M. C. A. building. Julius Rosenwald gave $25,000; John D. Rockefeller gave $25,000; the colored residents of Washington subscribed $27,000, of which they paid $24,000. The white Y. M. C. A. paid the balance. W. Sydney Pittman was the architect. The building was put up by Negroes.
Minneapolis, May 24—By a vote of 557 to 38 more than was necessary to elect, the general conference of the Methodist Episcopal church today elected as bishop W. P. Thirkield president of Howard University, at Washington, D. C. He was the eighth and last of bishops or general superintendents to be named by the present conference.
The eighth biennial meeting of the National Association of Colored Women will convene at Hampton Institute, Va., July 23-27, 1912. Miss Elizabeth C. Carter of New Bedford, Miss., is president. The women who will meet in Hampton, Va., will come from the North, South, East and West and will tell what their clubs have done during the past two years to lift humanity and make the world better. It is expected this will be the largest meeting held.
---
The Negroes of Oklahoma have recently organized old line Life Insurance Company with headquarters at Muskogee; and have deposited with the State Insurance Commissioner bonded securities to the amount of $100,000. Mr. R. Emmett Stewart, a prominent attorney of Muskogee, is the president of the company. Dr. W. P. Brown of Greenville, Mississippi, is owner of the majority of the stock of the company and will doubtless become the resident company in the near future.
Kansas City, Mo, May 28.—An effort was made by Bishop W. H Heard, who at the last general conference pledged himself to go to
NO 39
West Africa and remain there for twelve years, to be recalled home only on the ground of ill health. The effort was a persistent one both in the Episcopal Committee and in the General Conference, but the consensus of opinion was that the bishop's appearance and energy did not warrant the step which he desired. By way of augmenting the funds of the missionary department it was decided, after much discussion, to give the department 8 percent of the dollar money to be equally divided between the home and foreign work. This it is supposed will add to the funds of the department about $20,000.
Gary, Ind., May 27.—By stopping the Chicago New York limited train on the Pennsylvania Railroad before it reached a burning bridge, Miss Edna Johnson, a 16 year old colored girl probably saved many persons from death. Miss Johnson was crossing the bridge which spans the Calamet river at the outskirts of the city. She discovered it on fire and in the distance she saw the smoke of a rapidly approaching locomotive. Hastening down the road she stood in the middle of the tracks and waved a basket she was carrying, and the engine driver brought his train to a dead stop within a few feet of her. The flames were extinguished by the trainmen, and when the train resumed its journey she was showered with silver coins for her bravery.
---
One of the most notable instances of business progress and success is the Hygenic Manufacturing Company of Kansas City, Kansas. It is one of the largest manufacturing concerns in the United States, owned and controlled exclusively by Negroes. The principal owner and manager is Mr. Anthony Overton, North 3rd Street. They manufacture a baking powder, food and toilel extracts of various kinds. Mr. Overton employs several persons. Besides traveling on the road himself he has three or four other salesmen covering Oklahoma, Texas and parts of the South and Southeast as far as Georgia and Florida, selling his products at wholesale to merchants only. He started business about twelve years ago with less than one thousand; but today Mr. Overton has a rating in Dun's and Bradstreet's directories of $30,000 to $40,000.
4 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.
Splendid harvesting prospects in
Texas has brought about cheaper
prices for wheat.
Philip O. Parmalee, a Wright avia-
tor, was killed recently when his bi-
plane fell from a great height at North
Yakima, Washington,
Abraham Ruef, the convicted politi-
cal boss of San Francisco, who is
serving a fourteen-year sentence, hay-
Ing given a bribe to one of the bood-
ing supervisors during the incumbency
of Mayor Schmitz, has been disbarred
by the Supreme Court.
Luther Burbank says that five men
are kept busy night and day now at
his establishment at Santa Rosa, Cal.,
packing and forwarding spineless cac-
tus plants to Mexico, India Palestine,
Australia, Italy, Africa and many oth‘
er countries,
Three heavy explosions recently
shook the downtown districts of San
Francisco. The first and second ex-
plosions were located at Tom Cor-
bett’s pool room and saloon at Fourth
&nd Stevenson streets. The third oc-
curred ten minutes later.
A conference between officials of
the Reclamation Service and railroad
men was held in Chicago to devise
plans to induce residents of the Hast
to settle in the West. A national bu-
reau for the dissemination of facts re-
garding Western lands was suggested.
Positive assurances have been re-
ceived in Eagt Las Vegas that the ma.
jority of the members of the New Mex.
ico Legislature would refuse to act on
any prize fight legislation now before
that body. Promoters of the Flynn,
Johnson fight now feel sure there will
be no interruption.
The Lovin bill to permit twenty.
five-round boxing contests with five:
ounce gloves passed the Arizona Sen:
ate and was sent to the House. The
vote on the measure stood 13 to 4
Under the terms of the bill, all con:
tests must be held before regularly or
ganized clubs, which will be taxed $25!
per year,
WASHINGTON.
The appropriation for the Denver
mint has been reduced from $149,000 to
$129,000.
Senator Warren of the appropria-
tions committee predicts that Con-
gress will remain in session all sum-
mer and autumn,
‘The three-year homestead Dill has
Deon examined by the secretary of the
interior, and sent to the White House
for the President's signature,
The War Department has been au-
thorizel to honor the application of the
Cuban government for 5,000 rifles and
1,000,000 rounds of ammunition,
By the decisive vote of 45 to 11 the
Senate passed the House bill extend-
ing the eight-hour principle to con
tracts involving labor on government
work A penalty of $5 is provided for
each violation of this provision.
Good cheer has come to the scores
of “college widows” at Annapolis in
the tidings that the midshipmen may
now marry immediately upon gradua-
tion and that Cupid is no longer
barred by the stern rule of the Navy
Department,
The House judiciary committee in
executive session decided to undertake
a preliminary investigation of the
“beef trust.” The committee agreed to
report the Edwards resolution calling
for the investigation but before do-
ing so a private inquiry will be made.
‘The committee does not Rurpose now
to call any of the men interested in
the packing industry.
Provision for President Taft's tariff
board was eliminated when the sun-
dry civil appropriation bill was re
ported to the House. ‘The annual ap-
propriation of $25,000 for the Presi-
dent's traveling expenses was allowed,
but the total appropriation was cut to
4 little more than $109,000,000, making
heavy reduction in provisions, Pana-
ma canal, public buildings and other
projects. Extravagances was charged
in the building |f the Panama canal.
‘The committee made a reduction of
$193,000 in the appropriation for fort
cations on the canal. Appropriations
for public buildings were cut from ap-
proximately $21,500,000 to $8,052,517.
In uncontested delegates, Roosevelt
has a representation of 429, all of
whom are either instructed, pledged
or favorable to his nomination, In
auncontested delegates Taft has 271,
who are favorable, Instructed or
pledged to him.
Congress is about ready to investi-
gate another “trust,” and in conse:
quence some of the big men in the
packing industry, who recently were
acquitted in criminal proceedings in
Chicago, probably will be summoned
to Washington to tell why the price of
beef and other meats has gone up.
FOREIGN.
It 1s estimated that 110,000 men are
idle along the Thames and Medway
rivers, England. These include dock-
ers, carmen, seamen, firemen.
The “movies” haye invaded Vesu-
vius, A cinematograph operator de-
scended into the crater and took pic-
tures of the descent and the vapor.
‘That “General” William Booth, the
head of the Salvation Army, who re-
cently underwent an operation for the
removal of a cataract from his left
eye in London, will henceforth be totai-
1) bling in his physician's report.
An open notg directed to the Madero
government and to the United States
in which it was pointed out that the
rebel authorities might be unable to
protect foreigners, in Mexico, has beea
published in both Spanish and English,
A Vienna woman who possesses tho
peculiar power of locating springs of
water, naphtha springs and deposits of
gold and silver, has accepted an offer
from an American to go to America
to seek potash flelds. The diviner will
be paid an enormous fee,
SPORT.
WESTPRN LEAGUE STANDING.
ae Won. Lost. Pet.
SU JOREPH vo eeeeeeeee go” EY NBG
Bes Moles 200s BBE
Blougelyy ice a
Omitan s.r BBE
Renver vecccvcceccretak Ht Bao
Wiellla III BG
Lineal costes ae a
Rope SI PBS
Tommy Ryan has taken charge of
Jim Flynn, who has begun training for
kis fight with Johnson on July 4 at
East Las Vegas, N. M.
Champion Ad Wolgast and Young
Jack O'Brien fought a fast six-round
bout in Philadelphia and the advan-
tage, if any, was with the champion.
The Cafion City and Pueblo teams
of the Rocky Mountain League have
had their franchise transferred to
Raton, N. M., and Trinidad, Colo., re-
spectively and played their first games
under the new arrangement.
Promoter Charles O'Malley of ths
Fiynn-Johnson bout in Las Vegas, has
received a message from Al Palzer
stating that he would be at the ring-
side on July 4 to challenge the winner.
Falzer agrees to be prepared to post &
forfeit of $20,000 to fight any time
after the Fourth of July.
GENERAL.
G. F. Staples, a farmer of Angola, N.
¥., shot his wife, mother-inlaw, Mrs,
Brown, and then himself.
Mrs, William Moore of Burlington
township, near Marshall, Mich., is the
mother of twenty-six children.
‘The price of gasoline is on the up-
ward trend. It is now 16 cents a gal
lon with prospects of another advance
of one cent.
Senator George S. Nixon of Nevada
is in a critical condition at a Wash-
ington hospital and his death ts con-
sidered a matter of hours,
Municipal Judge Hugh R, Stewart
of Chicago has been appointed to take
charge of a special court for violators
of the automobile speed ordinance,
Postmaster General Hitchcock has
accepted the proposal of the Oceanic
Steamship Company for carrying the
mails from Sen Franeliseo to Australia.
Captain Rostron, commander of the
steainship Carpathia, came ashore re-
cently at the invitation of Mrs, John
Jacob Astor, for a luncheon at the As-
tor home on Fifth avenue in New
York.
Margaret Elizabeth Sangster, poet
and author, died at her home in Maple-
wood, N. J., recently, She was seven.
ty-four, and pursued an active liter-
ary career for more than half a cen-
tury,
By an aye and nay vote of 446 to
369, the Methodist conference voted
to leave unchanged paragraph 260 in
the church discipline, which prohibits
dancing, card playing and kindred
amusements.
Captain Rostron of the Carpathia,
which saved the survivors of the Ti-
tanic, has been presented with $10,000,
a fund subseribed by the American
people, Mrs, George Widener of Phil-
adelphia gave $2,500 to the fund,
At the beginning of business June 1
the condition of the United States
treasury was: Working balance in
treasury offices, $61,114,529, In banks
and Philippine treasury, $35,181,295.
‘Yotal balance in general fund, $126,
242,203.
Existence of a chain of resorts man-
aged by white women and peopled
with white girls, which depend upon
Chinese in various cities for their pat-
ronage, Was one of the startling dis-
closures made recently in a police in-
wxestigation In Chicago.
‘The production of phosphate rock in
the United States continues to in-
crease steadily. According to Frank B.
Van Horn, of the United States Geo-
logical Survey, in an advance chapter
from “Mineral Resources” for 1911, the
production last year was 3,053,279
tons, valued at $11,900,693. This is an
increase over the production for 1910
of 398,291 tons, at an increased value
of nearly a million dollars.
‘The first serious strike New York
hotels have experienced occurred when
the waiters walked out of the Waldorf-
Astoria, the Gotham, the Breslin and
Rector’s in the midst of the evening
dinner hours, leaving hundreds of pa-
trons in the lurch.
The Brotherhood of Locomotive En-
gineers have adopted a pension plan
for members of the order. Pensions
will be allowed only for total disability
or on retirement at the age of sixty,
the amounts being graded from $40
to $60 a month.
GATHERED FROM
All Parts of the State
Wesiera Nevsmaver Union Newaeerviog’
COMING EVENTS IN COLORADO.
July A—Independence Day Celebration
plateviien Greeley: Busblon Ment.
dad, Walssnborge Ouray, DUERHES,
Fort ‘Collin Longmont, Loveland:
Emer: Warden
July 17-19—Risetrical Contractors’ Ar
July 18-19—Gunnison County Cattle
Gi Lest Resoclations Guanleels,
Aug, 6-8 — International Couneh
Siighta’ of “Gorembos Colormee
Borie
sept 3e"Convention National Assoeia-
Hon stale Game wardens Denver
Sept, 18, 19, 20.-San Luis Valley Falr
Pt lamnosa,
Rio Blanco Wants Auto Highway.
Meeker.—The keenest possible inter.
est is now being evidenced by the peo-
ple of this section in the contest be-
tween Meeker and the southern por-
ton of the Western Slope for the rout-
ing of the transcontinental automobile
highway.
Aqged Farmer Is Drowned.
Grand Junction.—Robert Flemming,
aged fifty, a ranchman living in Pla-
teau cafion, while repairing a bridge
over Plateau creek, fell into the
stream and was drowned, His body
was recovered three miles below his
home.
Baby Drowns in irrigating Ditch.
Johnstown.—Eddie Prott, the two-
year-old son of Peter Prott, living four
miles southeast of here, was drowned
in an irrigating ditch in front of his
home. He wandered out of the yard
with his mother in pursuit, and fall-
ing into the stream, drowned before
her eyes.
Woman 60 Does Farm Work.
Greeley.—Besides looking after an
invalid husband, Mrs. A. F. Schull,
aged sixty, has plowed, planted and
will cultivate their forty-acre farm,
twenty miles east of here. Mrs. Schull
dresses in male attire while at work
in the fields and it is said is a com-
petent farmer. Her husband, who 4s
unable to walk, assists in light house:
work duties.
Tmobroving Sanitarium
Colorado Springs —Atter consider
able delay, work has been started on
improvements at the Modern Wood-
men sanitarium. The work will cost
ebout $300,000 and half of this amount
will probably be spent within the next
year. An administration building, mew
receiving hospital, diet kitchen and
several colonies of tents will be added.
To Use Bonds for Schools.
Denyer.—State Treasurer Roady
Kenehan has announced that he wai
use the $2,115,000 bond issue voted by
the people at the last general election,
as an investment for school funds if
those entitled) to receive the ‘bonds
will exchange them for cash so they
will give the school fund a net inter-
est of four per cent.
The bonds benr interest at three
per cent, ‘The state school funds can-
not be invested for less than four per
cent. The state treasurer-will pay the
holders the full cash value less the
amount necessary to make up one per
cent difference in interest.
The state exceutive officials met re
cently and voted to have the bonds
rinted.
Biekmboat SoringsCrataRaliroad:
Steamboat Springs.—Gne of the
richest mineral sections of the West
is to be tapped by an extension of the
Moffat road from Steamboat Springs
to Craig in Routt county. The new
road will be forty miles in length and
will draw traffic and develop more
than 1,200 square miles of rich coal
lands and vast areas adaptable to any
kind of agricultural] development, The
project will cost) $1,000,000,
The articles of incorporation of the
building company are being prepared
for filing with the secretary of state.
\ group of Bear valley capitalists are
financing the road. They commenced
the survey four months age when the
Denver, Northwestern & Pacific com-
pany seemed to be on the verge of a
receivership. %
In opening up Routt county, the pro-
posed line, it is claimed, will be of
more direct benefit than is the Mof-
fat road, since the new line penetrates
turther into the aetually productive
section, The line will follow the
course of the Bear river.
According to John J. Argo, engl-
neer for the incorporators of the new
company, no one connected with the
Denver, Northwestern & Pacific is af-
‘fillated with the men who have pro-
‘moted the scheme, but it is considered
logical that the line will ultimately b~
‘purchased by the Moffat interests.
A traffic arrangement for it will
have to be made with the Moffats to
‘ingure an outlet, The Bear valley fi-
‘nanciers have had to dicker with the
Moffat interests for a large part of
their right-of-way.
According to Argo the grading work
will be commenced this summer and
will be finished by January 1, 1913.
During the summer of 1913 the laying
of the rails will be completed.
C. F. & |. Co to Re-organize.
Denver.—Instead of asking for a re-
newal of its charter of corporate extst-
ence which expires next October, the
Colorado Fuel & Iron Company, it is
reported, will form a new corporation
cepitalized at $100,000,000, divided
equally between stocks and bonds, to
take over its assets.
LITTLE GOLORADO ITEMS.
Small Happenings Occurring Over the
State Worth While.
Fort Lupton,
There has been organized at Colo-
rado Springs a Young Men’s Demo:
cratic Club,
On June 18 Guy Buckles of Omaha
will fight Howard Baker of Boulder at
Cripple Creek.
The President has appointed Hila
New postmaster at Delta and Frank
Silonton at Victor.
Six Grand Junction youths were
fined $300 for using an automobile
four hours without leave.
Colorado Woman's college boasts
an enrollment of 108 students in the
third year of its existence,
Last month was the wettest May for
Colorado Springs since 1874. The total
precipitation was 2.49 inches,
Dr. ©, A. Stewart of Denver has de-
parted on an automobile tour from
Denver to New York and Boston,
‘The government has appropriated
350,000 for the commencement of the
federal building at Grand Junction.
Five full grown bears were killed
and two cubs captured by a party of
Alamosa big game hunters recently.
Gov, Shafroth announces he will not
call an extra session of the Legisla-
ture to re-enact House bill No. 200.
The Hotchkiss Fair Association
‘gave a barbecue on June 7 in place of
‘the spring races which were called off.
T. A. Arneal of Cripple Creek was
elected president at the annual con-
ference of the barbers’ union in Den-
‘ver.
Gilerest has deeded free to the Ger-
man Baptist church ground on which
a chureh building will be erected to
cost $5,000.
J. H. J. Ramsey of Cripple Creek has
been arrested, charged with embez-
‘ing money from the Cripple Creek
National bank, .
In Grand Junction the health com-
missioner is arresting every one who
permits unscreened offal heaps on
their premises
William Menagh, a ranchman ltving
near Greeley, lost his house by fire
twenty-four hours after his insurance
policy had expired.
Business men in the Hudson district
wil grubstake twenty prospectors and
send them into undeveloped mineral
districts of Colorado.
Every dandelion plant in Fort Mor-
gan wil be cause for information if
sill growing after the new anti-dande-
lion ordinance becomes a law.
A bill is now before Congress allow-
1g $200,000 for the Denver postoffice,
completing the appropriation of $2,
100,000 for site and building.
‘The jury in the case of Fred Piel,
charged with killing George Kesler at
Greeley last October, returned a ver-
dict of voluntary manslaughter.
J. W. Tunison, a farmer of Gribble
park, forty-five miles southwest of
Cafion City killed George Amstey, a
neighbor, in a fight over water rights.
The first excursion has been run
aver the new Colorado-Kansas rail-
road to the Turkey Creek district,
twenty-flve miles northwest of Pueblo.
It fs reported that oil has been
struck at Cross Hill, near,Steamboat
Springs, and that the flow from the
} well is filling the basin in front of the
derrick.
Farmers of Weld county are rejoic-
ing over ten hours of rain which fell
recently. ‘It came at a time when it
was most needed by the newly-planted
beet ‘crop.
‘Twenty-five horses have already ar-
rived at the fairgrounds race track
At Montrose for the spring race meet
of the Western Slope Fair Association,
which takes place June 13 and 14,
State Treasurer Roady Kenehan is
the donor of a gold medal which he
will award this year for the first time
to the student at the State yniversity
taking the highest rank in geology.
A heavy rain has fallen throughout
northwestern Colorado, following a
heavy windstorm, blowing down tele
phone poles, uprooting threes and un-
roofing the recently completed hotel
at Oak Creek. ;
Water in the Nederland reservoir of
the Central Colorado Power Company
has reached the 100-foot mark for the
{rst time, making approximately three
hundred million cubic feet of water
now impounded.
Directors of the Colorado State Fair
Association at Pueblo are preparing
to appeal to the courts to force State
Auditor Michael Leddy to turn over
the appropriation made for the foir
association by the last General As-
sembly.
‘Twenty-five thousand head of cattle
and 200,000 head of sheep will be
shipped out \of Dolores; Montezuma
eG & ll :
a . oe a | a
Curtis 27) Sane LF
Park © Ao é RY Aa be =f
Floral Su a
a f A ee i)
Company a Sy,
—_ ees PONG |
FLORAL DESIGNS §°3 S''K-e “Sel
GHOIGE PLANTS AND GUT FLOWERS S&xRANRS “RC
GREENHOUSES: Thirty-Fourth and Curtis Streets é
TELEPHONE, MAIN 1511 DENVER, COLG
Tesch’s Market & Grocery
WHEN YOU WANT THE BEST
LIVE CHICKENS
Spring Lamb and Fresh Vegetables
WE RENDER OUR OWN LARD
2601 Lafayette Street Phone York 1979
2735 Welton St. Main 6363
The Central Bottling & Distributing Co.
Agents for the famous
CAPITOL BEER---IT’S CAPITAL
‘Try a case, 2 doz. pints for $1.10, delivered promptly; empties called for.
Family Liquors, Wines, and Cordials
Genuine Goods at Popular Prices
A glass of good wine will improve your Sunday dinner, and aid digestion.
The Champa Pharmacy
Twenticth and Champa,
Is the place to got your
DRUGS, CHEMICALS AND PATENT MEDICINES
WH SERVE HOT DRINES.
Prescriptions Our Specialty.
Phone us and we will deliver the goods to all parts of the city.
JAMES E. THRALL, PROPR.
PHONE MAIN 2426.
THE HEADS, FEET, TAILS, SNOUTS, EARS, NECKBONES OR
CHITTERLINGS OR ANY OTHER PART OF THE HOG
EXCEPT THE SQUEAL, GO TO
23006 LARIMER STREET PHONE 1461 MAIN ,
a
spent at home reacts in its benefits
A oO GAT’ with unceasing general profit.
Sent out of town it’s life is ended.
Kept with the home merchants it is a messenger of continuous
benefit. Busiriess men should awake to the importance of keeping
this dollar at home and make a bid for it by judicious advertising,
tS Cobar at home and make a bid for it by judicious advertising.
The Purpose of an
Advertisement
is to serve your needs.
It will help sell your
goods—talk to the
people you want to
reach. An advertise-
ment in this paper
is a reference guide
to those whose wants
are worth supplying.
THE HIGH
COST OF
LIVING
has not affected our job
printing prices. We're still
doing commercial work
of all kinds at prices sat- |
isfactory to you.
AFRO-AMERICAN CULLINGS
Heroism {s always sublime and no
finer illustration of that was ever wit-
nessed on this earth than was exhib-
{ted by hundreds of men and women
who were on the ill-fated ship, Titanic.
‘There were the musicians who, mak-
ing no effect to saye themselves, con-
tinued playing to revive the spirits of
others until thelr Instruments were
filled with water and their music was
hushed forever. They played “rag-
time,” military music, waltz music—
anything to keep up the courage of
the passengers. The conduct of the
men in giving the life boats to wom-
en and children, rather than take
them themselves was great, Among
the steerage passengers—that {s, “the
common people”—there were far dif-
ferent scenes. There was praying
and weeping. Men trampled down
women and children in order to save
themselves. Why this difference in
conduct in the presence of death? An-
other heroic figure that loomed sub-
lime was that of the captain. Amid
scenes of confusion and imminent
death he remained calm, resolute, ef-
ficient to the last. After seeing that
all the women and children had been
provided for, he relaxed the discipline,
commended the men for having done
their duty so faithfully and then did
the only proper thing to be done—
committed suicide. If theer are de-
grees in greatness in a scene where
greatness was the rule, the palm for
that quality must be awarded to Phil-
Up, the wireless operator. This man
clung to his machine and continued
to send C. D. Q. and S. O. 8. messages
till the last. He was not deterred by
the fact that hundreds of men were
rushing by him each trying to save
ali, Tt was in vain that the captain
relieved him of further duty. The op-
erator seemed oblivious of everything
save that high sense of duty. Seeing
that he would not quit, his assistant
thoroughly fastened a life belt on him
—this was subsequently stolen from
the devoted operator. This hero was
1.ter on found strapped to a piece of
floating timber, and dead.
‘The most compact and powerful
of the negro churches is the African
Methodist Episcopal church. Its mem-
bership has grown from 42 members
in 1787 to 200,000 members in 1876
and 494,777 members in 1906. It is
governed by a board of bishops, fifteen
to eighteen in number, over whom the
senior bishop, at present the Rt. Rev.
Henry M. Turner, presides.
‘The church has 7,000 local organiza-
tions, with property worth over $11,
000,000. It raises about $2,000,000 a
year; of this about $800,000 goes to
pastors, $200,000 to bishops and pre-
siding elders, and the other million
to schools, missions and general ex-
penses,
There are two publication houses,
weekly papers and a quarterly maga-
zine and some publication of books.
The church supports over forty
schools, of which the largest and old-
est {s Wilberforce university, in Ohio.
‘The church, however, is chiefly note-
worthy on account of its board of
Dishops. These bishops are elected
for life by a general conference meet-
ing every four years. The member-
ship of the general conference con-
sists of ministerial and lay delegates;
the clerical delegates are elected from
the annual conferences, one for every
thirty ministers. Two lay delegates
for each annual conference are select-
ed by the representatives of the offi-
clal church boards in the conference.
Thus we have a peculiar case of ne-
gro government, with elaborate ma-
chinery and the experience of a hun-
dred years. How has it succeeded?
Its financial and numerical success
thas been remarkable, as has been
shown. Moreover, the bishops elect-
ed form a remarkable series of per-
sonalities. Together the assembled
bishops are perhaps the most striking
‘body of negroes in the world in per-
sonal appearance: men of massive
physique, clear-cut faces and undoubt-
ed Intelligence.
‘The negro race cannot afford to in-
duige in the luxuries and extrava-
gance that the very rich of other na-
tionalities do, and hope to overtake
them in accumulating wealth, power
and influence. They have had centu-
ries for accumulation. They can. in-
dulge in luxuries of all kinds, wear
extra fine clothing, have all of the lat-
est styles of the expensive fabrics;
engage in all kinds of amusements;
eat the richest and costliest diet, be in
expensive operas and constantly trav-
el extensively, and still have an abund-
ance of money and other resources to
draw upon, but when the negro tries
this for a little while he 1s “satiated.”
‘Wisdom and common sense would say
to the negro “Live within you means
and not up to the limit of your
means.”
It matters little how fine the mate-
lal or costly the goods may be-ff a
suit of clothes do not fit a man he will
look bad with that sult on. And the
more attractive the material, the more
undesirable attention will the, misft
attract. Better by far ts it to have
clothes of most ordinary material and
have them to fit.
Now what 1s true of clothes is in-
creasingly true of degrees. In fact, a
‘man makes of himself a legitimate
object for ridicule when he attempts
to wear a degree which is entirely too
large for his mental attainments. Yet
how many negro preachers there are
who are wearing the degree of D. D.,
which, to them, {s an intelectual mis-
fit,
Now {t 1s known, or ought to be
known, that no man can rightfully lay
claim to such unless he be a ripe
scholar and shall have, by the writing
of a thesis or a book, made some orig-
{nal and recognized contribution to
the realm of theological thought. But
how alarming {s the deficiency in
scholarship, to say nothing of the oth-
er necessary qualifications. And when
will negro preachers learn that,
though they may valse enough money
tq buy the coveted degree, they can-
not possibly raise enough money to
buy the brains necessary to make the
degree a fit?
The breaking of the levees of the
Mississippi has called forth negro
heroism more than once. The special
mention given to the colored men
who stopped the breaking levee at
Greenville, Miss., 1s evidence of the
heroism of the negro under special
and exceptional circumstances to
which the entire history of the coun-
try bears record. This single instance
gains prominence because of the
number which participated and may
not be cited as the only instance of ex-
ceptional devotion to the best inter-
ests of the locality. The instances
of sacrifice may be multiplied many
times and doubtless will when the
story of the rising waters of the Mis-
sissippi is fully told. It is to be re-
marked that the negro has never been
backward in rendering whole-hearted
service to the south and its people.
During the last war when the ‘white
men were at the front fighting valor-
ously for a hopeless cause the negro
was tolling at home to feed the army
which fought for his continued en-
slavement and not a single breach of
trust! has been charged to him.
‘Through the years of freedom to the
present the attempt to cast every slur
imaginable upon him has been met
with a patience and fortitude une-
qualed fn the annals of the world.
The negro has proved his case, has
vindicated the inherent nobleness of
his character and is just now groom-
ing for a great place in American life.
All he wants is a chance—a man’s
chance.
_ Two striking cases of negro heroism
came to our attention this month. A
dispatch from Greenville, Miss., saya
that a human dike composed of sev-
eral hundred colored men kept the
levee from being destroyed for an hour
and a half until the sand bags arrived,
One of the men killed in the Jed
mine, near Bluefield, W. Va., was Ted
Swaley. A local daily paper says:
“This name may not mean much to
some people, but to the miners who re-
call the explosion at Farm on the first
of last August {it will mean a great
deal. Ted Swaley was the hero of
that explosion. Alone he worked his
way through the confined workings of
that new mine, and, crawling on his
hands and knees, crept to where six
snconacious men lay dying for need of
help. One by one he rolled them on
‘his back and dragged them to the
‘bucket at the foot of the shaft, and
then went to the surface with them.
Assisted by John Moore, also colored,
who carried a safety lamp, Swaley
went back four times into the depths
of the mine, and it was due to his
courage and bravery that six men
were taken out, five of whom came
out alive. Swaley continued at min-
Ing, because it was the only trade he
knew."—The Crisis.
We must not make the ‘titles “Pro-
fessor” and “Doctor” too common.
Every man who has seen inside of a
school room as a teacher for a few
months or who has preached a few
times and thinks he {s “It” should not
be called Doctor or Professor. These
honorary titles will soon become
meaningless {f so used.
Ripeness of scholarship, real depth
of knowledge and mastery of certain
subjects, broadness of research and
wideness of experience along the in:
tellectual lines are the things that
really entitle men to such honors as
Doctor and Professor.
‘We are constantly meeting men
bearing these titles who are by no
means able to measure up to what
the titles signify. Giving such men
these titles is like putting good and
fine labels on spurious articles in jars,
cans, boxes, etc. They don't tell the
truth. The pure food law makes {t a
penal offense to do this. Isn't {t about
as bad to put these false labels on
men?
Leguminotherapy 1s the latest scien-
tific diet, and the name of it {s suff
clent to'give a healthy person indiges-
tion. It is the name of a vegetable
diet by which the exact relations of
each vegetable to the human system
are determined. They will have to
change the name ff they earnestly de
sire the diet to become popular. Green
peas, string beans, carrots, onions and
the like, may not be good for some
people, or one of them may not be,
but to have to tell them to legumin-
otherapily {s out of the question. Life
te to6 short-—Noew York Abe.
NEGRO EDUCATOR
TOURS THE WEST
(By GHORGH F. KING.).
Los Angeles, Cal—Special—Never
before in the history of this section of
the country has there been such @&
keen and substantial interest in negro
education manifested on the part of
the represeniative people of both
Taces as was evinced by the eloquent
young educator, Dr. James B. Shepard,
president of the National Religious
Training school, Durham, N. C., dur-
ing his recent tour through the west.
He has the distinction of being the sec-
ond civilian to address the famous
Ninth cavalry; the late Bishop Grant
being the first. This notable stop at
Fort D. A. Russell, Wyoming, was
quite an event in the annals of this
well known military center. The
largest auditorium in the town was
packed to hear him speak to the cav-
alry on “Life.” Chaplain and Mrs.
Prioleau, Lieut. B. O. Davis and wife,
and Bandmaster Wade H. Hammond
were among the prominent ones who
gave the young educator a significant
reception. At Chicago, Des Moines,
Denver, Salt Lake City, and San Fran-
cisco this apostle of a religious edu-
cation for the negro and the harness-
ing of his emotions to the extent that
he will become a well rounded citi-
zen, was accorded an ovation, and the
“Shepard idea” has made him the
cynosure for the eyes of the progress-
ive Westerners,
He arrived here accompanied by his
field secretary, Professor Charles Alex-
ander, and during his stay of five days
he stimulated the most pronounced ac-
tivity and appreciation for the educa-
tion of the negro than the most en-
thusiastic friend of the negro had @x-
pected. He addressed about 2,000 peo-
ple in the Pasadena Presbyterian
church, which is the richest church in
southern California. A fine type of
citizenship greeted him wherever he
spoke, and was entertained by social
events of an uplifting status. In de-
livering a sermon to the influential
congregation of the South Park Pres-
byterian church, this city, he was very
forceful and eloquent. He especially
emphasized the fact that the proper
education of the negro race in Amer-
ica was that of the heart as well as
the head, and that missionaries should
be taught to redeem the dark conti-
nent as well as to do social settlement
work in the large cities of our own
country. At the educational mass
meeting in the Wesley M. E. church
(white) be was again accorded an
unique ovation. Distinguished men
of both races were present and con-
conspicuous among them were Dr. S.
Hecht, rabbi of the Temple B'nai
Brith; Dr. Dana W. Bartlett, Mr. D.
B. Luther, general secretary of the Y.
M, ©. A.; Mr. J. L, Edmonds, editor
and publisher; Col. Allen Allensworth,
founder of the negro community at Al-
lensworth, Cal. Upon this occasion
he proved conclusively that religious
training was the most essential phase
of education for the lowly masses.
Rabbi Hecht, Colonel Allensworth and
others favorably commented in a brief
speech upon the scope and effective-
ness of Dr. Shepard’s plans and work.
He addressed the Colored Y. M, C. A.
and caused much enthusiasm.
The prominent Afro-Americans of
this city accepted every opportunity to
give due homage to the character and
most excellent work of Dr, Shepard
One of the most brilliant social events
that has ever taken place among the
Afro-Americans .here was the banquet
tendered Dr. Shepard by 50 of the lead-
ing business and professional men, Mr.
Robert Owens, the wealthiest negro in
the state, and Dr. McCoy were fore-
most in promoting the social events
and tendering the educator every hos-
pitality they were capable of accord-
ing him.
TOO MUCH TO GO THROUGH.
A lawyer picked his way to the edge
of the subway excavation and called
down to Michael Finnerty:
“Who's wantin’ me?” inquired a
large, rawboned voice.
“I am,” said the lawyer. “Mr. Fin-
nerty, did you come from Castlebar,
County Mayo?”
“I did.”
“And was your mother named Mary
and your father Owen?”
“They was.”
“Then, Mr. Finnerty,” said the law-
yer, “it is my duty to inform you that
your Aunt Kate has died in the old
country, leaving you an estate of $20,
000 in cash,”
‘There was a pause and a commotion
down below.
“Mr. Finnerty,” called the lawyer,
‘craning his neck over the trench, “are
you coming?”
“In wan minute,” sald Mr, Finnerty.
“I just stopped to lick the foreman!”
For six monthe Mr, Finnerty, in a
high hat and with hard shoes on his
feet, lived a Ife of elegant ease, try-
ing to cure himself of a great thirst.
Then he went back to his job at one-
seventy-five a day, It was there in
the excavation that the lawyer found
him the second time,
“Mr, Finnerty,” he said, “I've more
news for you. It is your Uncle Ter-
ence who's dead now in the old coun-
try; and he has left you another twen-
ty thousand.”
“I don't think I can take it,” sald
Mr, Finnerty, leaning wearily on his
pick. “I'm not as strong as I wance
was; and I'm doubtin’ if I could go
through all that again and live!"
NO COLOR-LINE IN MERIT
GENERAL LAND OFFICE AN EL DO-
RADO FOR WORTHY COLORED
WORKERS.
Washington, D, C.—The formal ob-
Servance of the one hundredth anni-
versary of the establishment of the
general land office, a highly important
bureau of the department of interlor,
brings it conspicuously into popular
Notice, not only because of Its valued
functions as the “real estate director”
of the United States government, but
Decause of the good things its chief
official and his sponsors have done for
the uplift of the worthy negroes shel-
tered benath its wing.
The sky under which colored men
live is often so dark and lowering,
and the rewards of merit are so mea
ger, that many of the race have come
to believe that justice to them from
members of another race {s not to be
expected. As an antidote to this
frame of mind, {t is pleasant to relate
the record of Hon. Fred Dennett, com-
missioner of general land office, in
Washington. There are seventeen
classified employes of the colored race
in the land office, and during the four
years of Mr, Dennett's incumbency,
ten of these have received promotions.
Charles E. Cheatham, of North Car-
Olina, an expert stenographer, who en-
tered the service in 1908, has been
promoted through all the grades from
$900 to $1,000, and fs now in the office
of the secretary of the interfor at a
selary of $1,620 per annum; L. M. Her-
shew, of Georgia, who had been a file
clerk for a number of years, at $1,400,
has been promoted to $1,600 and as.
signed ‘o examine desert land claims.
Other notable promotions are W. W.
Coliran, of Mississippi, $1,000 to $1-
200; James A, Davis, of Tennessee,
$1,000 to $1,200; David W. Utz, of Ala-
bama, $900 to $1,000; Charles L. Webb,
Of Illinois, $900 to $1,000; Samuel H.
Webb, of Virginia, $720 to $900; Benja-
min S. Stewart, of the District of Co-
lumbia, $720 to $840, and Gabriel
Fletcher, of Maryland, $600 to $720.
In addition to these promotions, Ed-
ward H. Hunter, of North Carolina,
who resigned to enter the ministry,
and is a candidate for one of the gen-
eral offices of the A. M. B. church, was
given the position of law examiner at
$1,600, the first colored man who ever
held such a position in the classified
service, and Sampson H. Brent was
classified as a skilled laborer at $660.
While this 1s not a promotion in sal-
ary, {t is°a promotion in grade and
tenure,
Commisstoner Dennett makes the
merit system of promotions mean
what the term implies, namely; that
those who show capacity for and per-
formance of assigned tasks are re-
warded according to ability and per-
formance. The pigmentation of the
skin and ethnological alignment are
not factors which enter into the es-
timate of qualifications for advancé-
ment. He has a fixed, unvarying-
standard of justice, and applies it to
all, having no thought as to race, po-
sition or substance. He {s calm and
undemonstrative, indulging in neither
professions nor flatteries nor patroniz-
ings when dealing with members of
the colored race.
‘A colored clerk who had been pro-
moted to a high grade, went to Mr.
Dennett to thank him for his promo-
tion. The commissioner's reply to the
clerk’s expression of gratitude was:
“You owe me no thanks. I had you
assigned to a line of work that would
show what you could do. You made
good, and that’s all there is to it.”
”
“BLACK PERIL” INQUIRY
COLOR QUESTION CALLS FORTH
A PROMISE OF PREMIER BO-
THA TO APPOINT A COMMIS-
SION TO STUDY THE SUBJECT.
Capt Town, Union of South Africa —
The color question was brought prom-
inently to the front by the promise of
the premier, Gen. Louis Botha, made
im parliament, to appoint a commis.
sion to inquire into the “black peril”
problem. The question has been in-
creasingly attracting attention in
South Africa in consequence of the
frequent asaults made upon white
women.
THE SPECIALIST.
The eminent specialist looked the
patient over.
“Yes,” he sald, “what you need is a
gradual gain in muscular tissues. Go
at it slowly. Commence by lifting a
ten-pound weight. Add to this from
time to time until you can raise fifty
pounds with comparative ease. Then
come to me again.”
‘The patient hesitated.
“I guess,” he said, “you aint’ get-
tin’ me quite right.”
‘The specialist frowned.
“what do you mean by that?” he
demanded.
The patient still hesitated.
“Why, you see,” he sald, “I'm the
feller that carries th’ trunks down-
stairs an’ heaves ‘em Into th’ transfer
company’s baggage wagon!”
THE PARSON'S HOPE.
“And how {s your mother?” inquired
the parson, who was making a paro-
chial call at the home of one of his
wealthy parishioners.
“She is in her room, up-stairs. She
Is very ill,” replied his hostess.
“You don’t say so!” exclaimed the
clergyman, whose tact was not always
reliable.
“Well 1 sincerely hope that she will
soon be down and out.”—Judge.
TOO MUCH RACE PREJUDICE
PREACHED BY SOME
NEGROES
ee ere ae eee tree coe ae a ae et
fs, to put it mildly, a most damnable
occupation. And yet it is a fact, an
awful fact, that the dorminant polltt
cal leaders, in the south today, fo1
the most part, have gained thelr as
cendancy through and by such per
micious teaching. As we have said
before, we now repeat that “if the
devil has any legitimate children on
‘earth it 1s they who preach the doc
trine of race prejudice and, by so do
ing, they serve well and truly thelr
father.”
Race prejudice retards progress—
Individually and collectively—is _hos-
tile to the quality and character of our
civillzation—is an assasinator of the
spirit of Christ—and damns the soul
in this world and in the world to
come, For the mental and spiritual
attainments, {t 1g more to be feared
and dreaded than are the diseases of
smallpox, consumption and yellow
fever for the body.
But—and we do hate to have to
confess it—there are many, very
many negroes who, while denouncing
most blatantly this evil practice in
white people are nevertheless as
guilty as, or even more guilty than the
most bombastic jump-jack white poll-
ticlan seeking public office and hor
ing, in the absence of mental or moral
qualifications, or both, to attain the
desired end by imflaming the baser
passions of the white people ‘against
the negroes, And the negroes thus
guilty are not politicians. For negro
politicians in the south are either non-
entities or historial relics’ of days
that were. No, the negroes thus gail-
ty are heralds of the cross—ministers
of the gospel whose duty it 1s, or
ougat to be, to preach “The father-
hood of God and the brotherhood of
man"—“Loye ye one another’—
“Peace. on earth, good will towards
men"—and the like
How often do we hear these so-
called race leaders, in distinctively
negro gatherings, when no white peo-
ple are present, or are expected to be,
deliver themselves of such pernicious
ly insidious statements as these: “All
the groceries I buy are bought at a
hegro grocery store.” “Every suit of
clothes 1 wear 1s made by a negro
tailor.” “I read only negro newspa-
pers.” “No literature {s allowed in my
Sunday school and no hymn books or
Bibles are used in my church except
those produced by and in our negro
publishing house.”
Let us in soberness reason just a
little together: Leaving out of con-
sideration, for the moment, the re-
ligious phase of the question of race
prejudice, let your imagination assert
itself and suppose with us that the
white people, as a whole, should carry
their race prejudice as far as these
so-called negro race leaders would
have the negro race to carry Its race
prejudice as a whole—in other words,
suppose white people should go to
equal extremes and take advantage of
thelr advantages over the negroes, Is
any prophet needed to tell what dire
consequences would ensue?
If white men would be shaved only
by white men what would many of
our negro barbers do? If white men
should decide to wear no clothes ex-
cept those made or cleaned by white
men, how many negro tailors or ne-
gro pressing clubs would go out of the
business to re-engage in it no more
forever? Were white women to de-
cide to wear no garments except those
made by white women, how many
worthy negro seamstresses dependent
upon their labor for a lyelihood
would at once become unable to be
self-supporting? Were white people
to decide to rent farm lands to or buy
farm products from white farmers
only, what would negro farmers do?
If—but why continue? Is it not evi-
dent to the thoughtful negro that
white people as a whole, can the bet-
ter play this game of race prejudice
which these unwise leaders of the
negro race are striving to have the
negro race, as a whole, play? And yet
while we must admit that the white
/man—especlally the southern white
man—has carried, and is carrying,
“his race prejudice too far, yet we
‘humbly thank God that even the
southern white man has not carried It
as far as the unwise negro leader
would have the negro to carry It—
Southern Ploughman.
1 BATHROOM NOVELTIES,
| Every year something new appears
In the way of bathroom accessories.
Decidedly new this spring are glass
‘twisted towel rods with nickel-plated
‘brackets in colonial design. The twist-
ed glass prevents the towels from slip-
ping off the rods, as so often happens
with plain glass rods.
Another new fixture, which will be
found useful in a small bathroom
where it is impossible to have a sta-
onary washstand, is a basin and soap
holder of rather heavy wire, white en-
ameled. This holder is made to span
the bathtub from one side to the other
by means of a heavy wire extending
out on each side. Both ends of this
wire are nickel plated and made very
strong where they clasp the sides of
the tub. The whole arrangement has
an extension feature which enables
It to fit any width bathtub.
A white enameled manicure table
with glass top over oak, will be found
convenlent for elther dressing room
or bathroom. This table is finished
with nickel rims, At one end {s a quar-
ter circle drawer, in which may be
‘kept the various mantcure instru:
ments.
A Big Gift to the Public
THE DENVER
REPUBLICAN
DELIVERED TO SUBSCRIBERS AT
SIXTY CENTS A MONTH.
A reduction of more than 20 per
cent on former rates.
At this price THE REPUBLI-
OAN is the cheapest and best pa-
per published in Denver.
Neither money nor labor will be
spared to make THE REPUBLI-
CAN, as it has always been in the
past, the best and most reliable pa-
per in the West.
THE REPUBLIOAN’S news
service has no equal, The Assoo-
iated Press, supplemented by the
splendid New York Herald news
service, gives our readers every
morning all the news gathered from
every part of the world.
THE ILLUSTRATED SUN-
DAY MAGAZINE section of
THE REPUBLICAN contains
stories by the leading authors and
humorists of the day and many
pages of photographs of great in-
terest.
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TION TODAY
Please fill out and forward this
blank.
Tue Repusiioan Pusisuine Oo,
Denver, Coto.,
Send to my address until I order
it discontinued, Taz Denver Re-
puBLioaN, Daily and Sunday.
Name.......0.sceesesseere
Address......2sceecescesees
serpy rEVNTS A MONTH
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4 :
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WARD AUCTION
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> Sales Daily at 2 p.m. Office Fur- 3
; niture a Specialty. :
7 = ;
; PRIVATE SALES AT ALL TIMES -
a |
| HAVE MOVED TO—
} 9 1723-39 GLENARM ST.-3e
E PHONE MAIN 1675. ;
PEO DOS OO Pe OO
Myo ee ee he ee Sk Se
|
Miss M. Cowden
Hair Dressing Parlor |
$ Shampoo, cutting and curling.
Scalp treatment, hair tonics,
hair straightening, manicuring.
Stage wigs for rent; theatrical
ee ete
Goods delivered out of heh)
} city. All shades of hair matched §
| by sending sample of halr; also ;
| combings made up.
Cheapest Switches 50 Cents
1219 21st St. Denver, Colo.
Hobie icin dom at
‘THB BEST ICH CREAM AND
GANDIDS AT
0.P.BAUR 2 CO.
CATERERS AND
CONFECTIONERS
Phone: 168.
1513 Curtis Street, Denver, Cole.
eet
Pp. m. and by Appointment.
Dr. J. H. P, Westbrook
COR. 21ST AND ARAPAHOE 8TS
Day Phone Main 1144.
Night Phone Champa 570.
| DO IT NOW #333 |
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
JOS. D. D. RIVERS.....Proprietor
1824 Curtis Street, Room 25.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
One Year ..... $2.00
Six Months ..... 1.00
Three Months ..... 60
Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice in the city of Denver, Colorado.
All communications of a personating nature that are not complimentary will be withheld from the columns of this paper.
It occasionally happens that papers sent to subscribers are lost or stolen. In case you do not receive any number when due, inform us by postal card and we will cheerfully forward a duplicate of the missing number.
Communications to receive attention must be newsy, upon important subjects, plainly written only upon one side of the paper; must reach us Tuesdays, if possible, anyway, not later than Wednesdays, and bear the signature of the author. No manuscript returned, unless stamps are sent for postage.
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THEY'RE OFF.
We reserve our comment upon the political events of this week until we have had time to give proper consideration to the men and issues that have now been brought to the front. There is a fight ahead this fall which calls for some keen generalship, and we wish to do our full duty to the colors under which we sail.
WHO IS WHO?
The surest way for Republican politicians to divide the colored vote is to arbitrarily set up a dictator over them. No individual can speak for the colored voters without an organization behind him of honest merit and strength, authorizing him to be its mouthpiece and the people's representative. A dictator in Colorado would be about as pleasant a thing as a dictator in Hayti is known to be. If the politicians want to set the colored people by the ears, let them continue to ignore the complaints that arise from sound and sensible political organizations.
One Great Need for Many Large Cities By J. R. PRICE, M. D., Chicago
WANTED-A NEW DEAL
The politicians of Colorado are shuffling the cards for the annual game of Old Sledge. It is a multi-handed game and we all have our legs crossed under the table and are watching with expectation the deft manipulation of the slippery pack. There are some old-time experts in the game and we are a little anxious about the face value of the allotment that shall be thrown down in front of the Negro. Heretofore we have had too many spot cards in our assortment and have caught the Joker all too often. We are a little inclined to think that it is not altogether chance that has thrown the short end of the deck our way, and we are watching, with no little disquietude and suspicion, the swift movement of the dealers' little finger. All we ask is a square deal and a straight deck, sleeves rolled high and all movements above board. The Negro proposes to play his own hand this year and wants his cards dealt to no pretentious substitute. In the past the politicians have had a good thing of it with the Negro, although our portion of the stakes has been just as valuable as that of any other participant in the game.
It is not unnatural, therefore, that we are calling the hand of the man behind the deck and demanding a new deal. We prefer to play on the Republican side of the game, but we want the cards that belong to us. We don't want a short deal. We don't want to be considered the last man in the game. We don't want our hand played by any cringing servant of the politicians. We don't want any sleight-of-hand performances by which the colored man may be hoodwinked out of his honest share of the stakes. For the colored man is not in politics for the sole purpose of saving his own life nor for the purpose of insuring the life of others more capable of taking care of themselves.
Value of Cement Mortar as Iron Saver
By JOHN R. HOWLAND
ELIMINATING THE NEGRO
The political force which the Negro might exercise in the United States has never been developed along the lines which would tend toward his greatest good, because of reasons which the groping intelligence of the Negro has not given him ability to master. The long continued dominance of the so-called race issue in the South has served to keep the white people of that section in unrelenting political enmity to him, and has deprived him almost entirely of participation in political affairs of every description. The unnecessarily bitter aspect of this proscription practiced in the South and kept at the point of highest tension by politicians who have thus found a way to perpetuate their own personal rule, has created the feeling among the unrestricted Negro voters of the North that the liberties of the race everywhere in the nation were in danger, and for this reason they have voted just as solidly and persistently for interests which seemed to be in opposition to the growth of national power among their Southern persecuters.
The white people of the South and the black people of the North have thus devoted themselves to single political ideas, with results differing only in the superior relationships of one over the other. The white South has sacrificed that higher political development which is common to other sections of the country, and has remained in the rear of other sections industrially and commercially. The Negroes of the North have deprived themselves of all wider political experience because of the supposed necessity for clinging to one unchanging line of battle. Out of this long sustained condition is growing the belief that the Negro case is a useless and unnecessary source of political controversy between the white people of the nation. While politicians, both North and South, have been the chief beneficiaries in the maintenance of this unnatural condition of stress and passion, and the idea that the development and substitution of a new system, whereby the Negro, or race question, shall be ignored politically, is slowly taking root among the white people of both political parties, North and South.
Habit of Obeying Dictates of Honor and Duty
By DR. CHARLES W. ELIOT
The outward forms of justice do not keep the white people from ruling, wherever they will, because of their superior intelligence and experience. Other than political interests will preserve in their hands complete control. This is the new idea. And it is shared by the leading advocates of the oncoming regime in both of the great political parties. The necessity for the development of new and independent thought on the part of the Negro is becoming greater and greater. Upon his ability to grow and to adjust himself to changing conditions must rest his security from being shifted from one dependency to another.
THEY'RE PICTURES
THE SEASONS
MASTERPIECES
38.
Our furnishing goods department is more complete this season than ever before.
Teach the Value of Many Neglected Weeds
STRAW AND PANAMA HATS
By H. LOWATER, Chicago
WAS the spring time ever linked in your mind with sulphur and medical teas? What a course of "doctoring". the youngsters used to get, not only in the spring but at other times! Most of those old but prized recipes had been hand
All the Latest Shapes and Styles.
ed down from one generation to another. They consisted largely of roots, barks, herbs and the like that could be found in the fence corners, along the roadside or in mother's garden, and were gathered when in certain stages of growth. Has the use of these old-fashioned medicines gone not to return? No.
MASTERPIECES!
We had it all "framed up" with the makers to send out the real "new" things for men, first of all this season. They're "masterpieces" of the tailor's art. Suits $12.50 to $30.
The old motherly practice has disappeared, but I find the same simples are used by our most intelligent physicians and kept for sale in most drug stores. Dandelion, tasy and pokeweed are often prescribed for the same disorders that our mothers prescribed them. Oh, no, not by the old names, but under certain cabalistic characters, which the chemist understands, but the reading of which would sound learned and potent to us laymen, if patients. I have often seen near Garfield park, on vacant lots, in masses of sweet clover, many of these medicinal plants, also in the gardens and waste places on the outskirts of the city.
The CAPITOL BREWING COMPANY
These same simples are the bases of most of our best cough and vegetable compounds, but instead of being made from good American plants they are generally manufactured from costly imported products. Why? Because the city man out of a job does not realize how money is planted under the roots of these plants; because the boy or girl living in the suburbs does not know how to recognize these plants except as weeds and has never been taught when to harvest them. Many of them are pests, but still they are money-producing things if one knows how or when.
T. H.
Why should this and one other topic not be the subjects of occasional school talks with illustrations? A few minutes twice a week with prepared charts in place of many "frills" now used to kill time would impart much useful information.
The purity of Capitol Beer is demonstrated by its superior flavor and strength-giving qualities. It's capital.
HAVE A CASE SENT HOME.
The Capitol Brewing Co.
Phone Champa 356. Delivered Anywhere.
The two topics I refer to are:
1. Simple medicinal plants, how to find and when to harvest them.
2. Insects beneficial to man and how to recognize them.
During the last quarter of a century I have been watching with interest the growth and improvements made in our great city. Most of the improvements have been in sidewalks, streets, buildings, transportation and communication, all of which have been advantageous to commerce, while at the same time in a subordinate way to all the people.
HENRY BECK JOHN ENGSTROM
PHONE MAIN 1053. DENVER, COLO. Western agents for Minneapolis Grain Belt Beer and Carnegie Porter, Pripps Imported Beer and Bock Ol.
On the other hand, I regret to say that my observation has led me to conclude that this city, as well as many others, has been neglectful of one thing which is of paramount importance to the health and happi-
"Cub" Clark's Bar.
ness of her entire population, and that is suitable public comfort stations conveniently located and distinctly prominent.
Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars. Tivoli Beer on Draught
For neglect in this respect is the primary cause of multitudinous ailments, and among them are headache, indigestion, Bright's disease of the kidneys, rheumatism and so forth. I do not deem it honorable for myself, as a medical man, to remain silent on this most important question.
1017 19th St. Three Doors from Curtis St.
City authorities should see that public health and comfort stations be installed as rapidly as possible, designated by understandable signs, and they should advertise the locations in our public newspapers.
Phone Main 6123.
Denver, Colo.
Not more than one person in a hundred in the city of Chicago knows of our excellent, finely equipped public comfort station situated in the City hall at Washington and Lasalle streets.
Midway Theatre
Tests are to be made by the Panama canal commission to determine the value of cement mortar applied to iron plates by the "cement gun" as a preservative of iron. Twelve plates $63\%$ x14 inches have been coated with a one-to-three mortar of cement and sand after they were cleaned to a gray metal by the sand-blast process.
ANNEX 2118-20 Larimer Showing Three Reels of the Very Best Pictures Made Complete Change of Program Every Day. We Strive to Please All. Laboring Men Bring Your Families. ADMISSION ALWAYS 5 CENTS
Six of these have been covered with a half-inch coating and the remaining six with a one-inch coat on one side and a 1½-inch coat on the other.
Three plates of each kind have been sent to Balboa and three to Cristobal, where they will be kept immersed in salt water to test the mortar method of preventing corrosion.
WORK CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED
REPAIRING DONE WHILE
YOU WAIT
Two plates of each kind will be taken from the salt water, both at the end of three months, and one-half of the coating will be removed to determine the condition of the metal. The duration of the test for the balance of the plates will be determined later.
SEWED HALF SOLES 60 cts. and 75 cts. HENRY WARNECKE. President
The real object in education is to cultivate in the child a capacity for self-control or self-government; not a habit of submission to an overwhelming, arbitrary, external power, but a habit of obeying the dictates of honor and duty, as enforced by active will power within the child. In childhood and in youth it is of the utmost importance to appeal steadily and almost exclusively to motives which will be operative in after life. In too much of our systematic education we appeal to motives which we are sure cannot last; to motives which may answer for little children of
DENVER, COLO.
LET US WASH YOUR Shirts, Collars and Cuffs, Blankets, Curtains and Rough Dry Work. The Denver Sanitary Laundry. PHONE MAIN 5670
six, ten or twelve, but which are entirely inapplicable to boys or girls of fourteen, sixteen or eighteen. Thus the motive of fear is one of these transitory motives on which organized education in the paet has almost exclusively relied; yet fear is a very ineffective motive with adults.
1082 Broadway
Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Foster visited relatives in Central City last Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. James West of Ogden, Utah, are in the city for the summer.
One of the best little tailor.sh in the city is conducted by that fable gentleman and competent w man, N. Ferry, 1905 Curtis str Prices reasonable. Ladies' and ge clothing cleaned, pressed, repa
---
Arapahoe Odd Fellows' annual picnic, Dome Rock, July 25. Adults $1.00.
P. J. Jackson made a flying trip to Colorado Springs on business last week.
Misses Vera Belle Eckles, Anna Wormley Grimes and Susie Beatrice Hall were the graduates from East Denver High School this year.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Brown of Beaumont, Texas, arrived in the city last Tuesday for an indefinite stay. They are stopping at 2944 California street.
The Masons' annual picnic—Remember it will be the biggest and best of the season. You are invited. Bloomfield Park, July 2nd, 1912.
Mrs. George S. Contee left Thursday morning to visit with relatives and friends in Missouri.
The entertainment given by the Life Line Club at Eureka hall last Monday evening was well attended and a neat sum realized for the club.
J. W. Cane was arrested last Wednesday by Deputy United States Marshal E. R. Chadwick at the Union depot, charged with violating the anti-pass law.
Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Chapman have moved to 3010 California street, where they will be pleased to see their friends.
Gil Buford of Colorado Springs and Dan Bruce of New York city spent a few days of last week in our city. They returned to Colorado Springs last Friday.
The little infant of Mr. and Mrs. E. Stanley, who died Saturday of whooping cough, was buried Monday afternoon from the family residence in West Denver.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Carter entertained a few friends last Tuesday evening in honor of Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Foster.
Mr. Author E. McAllister, who died at his home, 1153 Lincoln, Sunday afternoon, was sent to his former home, Frankfort Kansas, Tuesday, by the Douglas Undertaking Co.
John Menter, who is employed at the Five Points barber shop, met with a painful accident last Monday night at Eureka hall, by making a misstep and falling down a flight of stairs.
Mrs. Fox of 415 29th street will leave next Monday night for Topeka and Kansas City, where she will visit her daughter, Mrs. Frazier. Mr. C. Fox, who has been visiting his mother, will accompany her on the trip.
J. W. Pertilla of 4146 Winona Court has been appointed elevator pilot at the city hall. This appointment meets with the hearty approval of all the best colored citizens of the city. The Colorado Statesman extends congratulations to Mr. Pertilla.
Don't forget that Harry Jones has moved his barbership from 1022 19th street, to 929 21st street; where he has installed all of the latest and most puto-date instruments that go to make a first class tonsorial parlor. Call and see us and you will be pleased.
STOP, LOOK, READ AND ACT!
The Philip B. Stewart Republican Club will run a big excursion to Colorado Springs, July 4th, 1912, to attend the State League, to be held at the Temple theater. Tickets will be arranged for via the D. & R. G., one fare round trip, tickets good for six days.
The young people will take charge
Get ready for the Mammoth Summer Outing at Picturesque Dome Rock by the Woman's Guild of the Church of the Redeemer, on Wednesday, June 26th.
ORIGINAL IN POOR CONDITION
One of the best little tailor shops in the city is conducted by that affable gentleman and competent workman, N. Ferry, 1905 Curtis street. Prices reasonable. Ladies' and gents' clothing cleaned, pressed, repaired and dyed.
SCOTT M. E. CHURCH NOTES
The subject for Sunday morning will be "Faith and Doubt." Sunday evening there will be an educational meeting. Dr. P. E. Spratlin and Attorney G. G. Ross will deliver addresses upon "Christian Education." The choir will render special music for the occasion. The children under the direction of Mrs. Florstein Dooley and Miss Lela Rice will render a Children's Day program just after the morning service.
The annual fair and dinner went far beyond our expectations. The receipts have reached in the neighborhood of the one hundred dollar mark. When all of the reports are in it is believed that the receipts will come up to last year. Dinner tickets sold amounted to $48.25. Two prizes were awarded—first a handsome leather cushioned rocking chair and the second a comfort. The second prize was awarded to Mrs. Anna McPherson, while the first was given to the parsonage by the pastor. We wish to thank the ticket sellers and the fair workers and patrons.
The Rally Clubs have gone to work in earnest. F. D. McPherson is the captain of the Pinks, while John F. Thomas is the captain of the Blues. We are rallying to pay off the mortgage this year.
The Rev. Dudley Smith, district superintendent, will hold his first quarterly conference on June 15th. Let all of the heads of the departments get their reports ready. This is destined to be the best first quarterly conference which we have ever had. A reception will be given the new district superintendent.
The Junior choir will give a Baby contest the last week in July. The Silver Set contest will come off at the same time. The contestants are working with might and main. Who will get the handsome silver tea set?
The Rev. J. D. Rice is expected in the city this week. He will preach his first sermon after graduation at an early date. Miss Rosa L. Rice is in the city from Oakland, California. She will make an extended visit with parents and relatives.
Mrs. Frances E. Williams left for Golden, Colorado, this week to take up the same position which she held over a year at the School of Mines.
We must urge the young people not to neglect attending the Epworth League. Summer is here and the parks and out of doors have more attractions than the duties of the church. This ought not to be.
Do you need a suit of clothes at reasonable prices? Only $20 and $25? Then call on N. Ferry, No. 1905 Curtis street. Best goods, best workmanship, best goods for the money.
FOR SALE.
A nice home; 4-room house with one, two or three lots, in Colorado City, on boulevard; fine location; on easy terms. Inquire at 1004 Nineteenth street or 4604 Elm Court, Denver, Colo.
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.
When a fellows down and out,
Broke or in the "pen."
That's the time he broods, no doubt,
O'er what might have been.
"Because I'd 'a had to take it off an' put it on again," answers Lassludinous Lewis, anticipating the remainder of the query.
For first-class tailor work, cleaning, repairing, pressing and dyeing, call on N. Ferry, No. 1905 Curtis street.
Modern eight-room house for rent. Apply at 1610 Stout street.
Five-room house for rent, 320 24th street. Apply at 1824 Curtis street, Room 25.
Fort Rent—Three nice unfurnished rooms. Apply 2929 Glenarm Place.
Brickler's New Barber Shop is located at 2208 Larimer street. Shave, 10c. Hair Cut, 25c; Children, 15c.
For Rent—Nicely, modern-furnished rooms. Apply Mrs. T. Edwards, 2929 High street.
FOR RENT—A nice modern front room; gentleman preferred. Apply Mrs. N. Dean, 2218 Clarkson street, phone York 6121.
KNEW SOMETHING ABOUT IT
Modest Appearing Man Proved He Had Right to Criticise Youthful Art Student.
An art student was copying one of Abbott S. Thayer's paintings at the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art one day, when a plainly dressed man who looked as if he might be a mechanic approached and, posting himself at the young man's elbow, watched him as he labored over his subject.
"You've got the angle of the mouth wrong, and the left eye is too oblique," remarked the man decidedly.
The student blinked angrily and the hand that wilded the brush trembled slightly, but he took no notice of the unsolicited criticism.
"There is too much yellow in your flesh tint," continued the man
"Still no reply from the student, who ostentatiously slapped on more yellow in the high light on the nose. "Did you hear what I said?" questioned the man. "Yes, I heard," responded the student wrathfully, turning and glaring at his modest looking critic. "What do you know about it, anyway?" "I ought to know something about it," was the smiling response. "It was who painted the picture."
Wigwag—I wonder why it is that some men seem born to command and yet never quite fulfill our expectations?"
Henpeckke—Maybe they get married.
"He always comes back from a funeral looking refreshed."
"Why so, do you suppose?"
"He probably compares himself with the deceased, who can't come back."
"Mamma, this Turkish candy! splendid. How's it made?"
"Mercy, child! Don't try to find out!"
"All right, don't worry. He is too valuable an animal to take chances with. I'll have him treated right away."
GOLD! PLACE
Are you interested in making
THE NEWLIN'S GOLD PLACE
Of Douglas County, Colorado, offer golden opportunities of a lifetime: the counterpart of the great and far South Africa, should appeal to all full and accurate knowledge of or containing the reports of Professor South African experts and mining gold conglomerate reef in South Africa, from whose properties his gold have been extracted in the on our property given by Professor School of Mines. Many other prov have made reports on our property we will dispose of a limited amount.
THE NEWLIN'S GULCH G
221-222 McPHEE BUILD
Without cost or obligation on concerning your property, including
Name ...
Address......
City and State.....
PLACER GOLD!
in making money? If so, read carefully.
NEWLIN'S GULCH
GOLD PLACER CO.
Colorado, offers to prospective buyers one of the
of a lifetime. Our immense placer deposits—
great and fabulously rich conglomerate reef of
appeal to all who have a speculative mind. For
knowledge of our property, send for our circular
of Professors Caldon and Wandel, the eminent
and mining engineers, who opened the great
of in South Africa for Barney Barnato and Cecil
properties hundreds of millions of dollars in
acted in the last decade. Also read the report
on by Professor Butler of the Colorado State
by other prominent engineers and metallurgists
of our property. FOR A VERY SHORT TIME
limited amount of treasury stock at 5c per share.
GULCH GOLD PLACER COMPANY
PHREE BUILDING, DENVER, COLO.
Dbligation on my part, send me full particulars
party, including maps, engineers' reports, etc.
State...
GOLD! PLACER GOLD!
Are you interested in making money? If so, read carefully.
THE NEWLIN'S GULCH GOLD PLACER CO.
Of Douglas County, Colorado, offers to prospective buyers one of the golden opportunities of a lifetime. Our immense placer deposits—the counterpart of the great and fabulously rich conglomerate reef of South Africa, should appeal to all who have a speculative mind. For full and accurate knowledge of our property, send for our circular containing the reports of Professors Caldon and Wandel, the eminent South African experts and mining engineers, who opened the great gold conglomerate reef in South Africa for Barney Barnato and Cecil Rhodes, from whose properties hundreds of millions of dollars in gold have been extracted in the last decade. Also read the report on our property given by Professor Butler of the Colorado State School of Mines. Many other prominent engineers and metallurgists have made reports on our property. FOR A VERY SHORT TIME we will dispose of a limited amount of treasury stock at 5c per share.
THE NEWLIN'S GULCH GOLD PLACER COMPANY 221-222 McPHEE BUILDING, DENVER, COLO.
Without cost or obligation on my part, send me full particulars concerning your property, including maps, engineers' reports, etc.
ADD 3 CENTS FOR POSTAGE
MADAM M.
Manufact
Madam Holly's Wonder
PHONE CHAMPA 2561
GINAL IN PO
M M. A. HOLLY
Manufacturer Of
y's Wonderful Hair Grower
51 2118 ARAPAHOE STREET.
N POOR CONDIT
Change in the Plans.
FIRST TREATMENT $1.50
OTHER TREATMENTS EACH $1.00
RATES BY THE MONTH
BATES' TWENTIETH CENTURY
WONDER TEA AND POW-
DERS.
For Sale at Scholtz Drug Stores, Tot
man's and Elite Drug Stores,
TESTIMONIALS:
Gentlemen: I want to give you a short history of my condition so that others who have the same trouble I had may know there is a cure for rheumatism. In July, 1909, I noticed that I had inflammatory rheumatism. In health I had weighed 152 pounds, I dropped to 120 pounds. After being confined to the bed for two and a half months a friend recommended Bates' Twentieth Century Wonder Powder. In the summer of 1910 I began to take it. At this time, April, 1911, I have been well and robust for five months. My appetite is good and my weight is 140 pounds and not a trace of the old trouble remains. I have taken six bottles of the Twentieth Century Wonder Powder. If you want to refer anyone to me I will gladly express the merits of this medicine. Yours truly,
A. J. LYLE,
Continental Building.
Colorado Springs, Colo.
To Whom It May Concern: I have suffered with my lungs for a long time, after trying different remedies, from which I had lost flesh, and my appetite was more than bad. I tried Bates' Twentieth Century Wonder Tea, being recommended by another sufferer, and to my great happiness I am gaining in weight and my appetite has entirely returned. I feel like a new man; no more drowsy feeling and lack of ambition. How gladly can I sing the praises of Bates' Twentieth Century Tea.
GUS TRAVERS.
GUS PRAVERS,
526 E. Cimarron St.
FORD'S
HAIR POMADE
MAKES HARISH, KIRKY OR CURRY HAIR
GLOSSY, SOTTER AND MORE PLIABLE,
EASY TO GMB AND PUP IN ANY STYLE
THE LENGTH WILL PERMIT UNEXCEELED
FOR PREVENTING HAIR FROM FALLING OUT DANURDROF AND ICHING
OF SCALE BEWARE OF IMITATIONS, GET THE GUINEE, UP IN 25+ AND 50+ BOTTLES WITH CHARLES FORD'S NAME ON EVERY PACKAGE
TRY FORD'S ROYAL WHITE
SKIN LOTION FOR THE COMPLEXION.
MAKES THE SKIN WHITER IMMEDIATELY
UPON APPLICATION. WILL NOT IRRITATE
THE MOST DELICATE SKIN. UNECELELED
FOR ECZEMA, SALT RHEUM, PIMPLES,
ROUGH SKIN AND FRECKLES.
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS. IF YOUR DRUGGIST CANNOT
SUPPLY YOU, WE WILL SEND IT TO YOU DIRECT AT
THE FOLLOWING Prices, SMLL SIZED BOTTLE 25+ LARGE SIZED BOTTLE
50%. THE OZONIZE OX MARROW CO.
23 LAKE SHORE, CHICAGO, ILL.
AGENTS WANTED
J. H. BIGGINS
Furniture Repairing and Upholstering. All work Cash.
THE IVOLI UNION BREWING CO.
MADE IN USA
Firoli
DENVER, COLO.
OIL 60 CENTS
DISCOUNT TO CUSTOMERS
TREATED 10 CENTS
First Picnic OF THE SEASON WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12. BLOOMFIELD PARK
GIVEN BY
Rocky Mountain
Lodge No. 2320
G. U. O. of O. F.
The first opportunity for an outing with Outdoor Amusements,
Boating, Basket Picnicing and the like.
Best Music in Attendance.
Admission 25c
GASAWAY W
Palace Car A
CALL MAIN 5038, STAND 19
Special Rates for Pa
IN OUR Millinery Shop
Hat for LESS
IT'S THE TALK O
The Wonderful Values we offer in
Splendid Assortment
of Trimmed Hats AT LESS
Hats that sell from $7.50 to $10 priced
Also Other Great Tri
GASAWAY WALTON
Palace Car Auto Servic
IN 5038, STAND 19th & MARKET
Special Rates for Parties and Balls.
UR Millinery Shop You Can Buy
Hat for LESS MONEY
'T'S THE TALK OF THE TOW
Durable Values we offer in Trimmed and Untrimmed
Blendid Assortment
Trimmed Hats
AT LESS THAN 1-2 PRICE
sell from $7.50 to $10 priced specially at $3.50
Other Great Trimmed Hat V
SLITE
BURGERS SHOP
JATHS
CALL MAIN 5038, STAND 19th & MARKET STREETS. Special Rates for Parties and Balls.
IN OUR Millinery Shop You Can Buy Your Hat for LESS MONEY
WHILE THEY LAST-OVER 1,000 PIECES Beautiful all new Straw Braid at $4 \frac{1}{2} c$ per Yard. Worth up to 25c per yard-Yes, it's no mistake. $4 \frac{1}{2} c$ Will Be the Price
LYMAN'S SIX
Op
SHOE RE
1023 EIGHTE
We Have the Best Equipped Outfit in
DE REPAIR
1023 EIGHTEENTH ST.
The Best Equipped Outfit in the West to Produ
A man sewing a garment on a machine.
SHOE REPAIRING
Sewed Soles .....60c 75c, $1.00
Nailed Soles .....50c 65c, 75c
Heels .....25c, 35c, 50c
Rubber Heels .....50c
Turn Rips .....15c to 25c
Patches .....15c to 25c
We Use the Best Oak Lether.
REPAIRING WHILE
WALTER CAM
ION
REPAIRING WHILE YOU WAIT
LTER CAMBERS Eig
WALTER CAMBERS 1023
Eighteenth St
Rocky Mountain Lodge No.2320
BY WALTON
For Auto Service
AND 19th & MARKET STREETS.
For Parties and Balls.
Shop You Can Buy Your
LESS MONEY
K OF THE TOWN
Over in Trimmed and Untrimmed Hats.
LESS THAN 1-2 PRICE
priced specially at $3.50 to $4.95
Trimmed Hat Values
SIXTEENTH STREET
Opposite Daniels & Fisher
Admission 25c
“OLD HICKORY” COMMENTS ON
BOOK OF GEORGE W. MURRAY
OF SOUTH CAROLINA.
by ex-Congressman Geo. W. Murphy
of South Carolina, It bears the sub-
title: “Effects, Cause and Remedy for
Afro-American Troubles.” The book
forms a profound psychological study
of the traits, peculiarities, habits and
customs of the negro in America. In
order that this investigation into the
genesis of our troubles may be
studied by a very large number of
people, we purpose to give a detailed
review of same, and later on a crit-
ical analysis of some of the author's
inferences and conclusions. Our au-
thor starts out with the proposition
that In passing through two and a
half centuries of training for the ben-
efit of others the Afro-American de-
veloped traits and tendencles at va-
riance with Nature's laws, these
traits, characteristics and tendencies
being classed ns a disease. In order
to establish the truth of this propo-
sition, that the negro has traits and
dispositions at variance with Nature's
laws, the writer compares the negro
—now in a secondary state of free:
dom—with man in the original state
of freedom; he compares the feelings
and dispositions of the negro of to-
day with those of man’not cursed by
slavery or its effects. After defining
the term “ideal” as being a man’s
highest conceptions of persons, places,
things or qualities, often unattainable
but always destrable, the author lays
down the proposition that in a state of
natural freedom all races have
their human Ideals, their highest con-
ception of man, in themselves. And
this finding of the {deal within the
race forms the basis of race-pride,
self-appreciation and _ self-preserva
tion, and 1s seen not only in man, but
in animals. To a lion no animal
is as beautiful as a lion, nor is there
any effort to make himself any:
thing other than a lion, A China.
man’s Ideal is a Chinaman. The In-
dian’s highest conception of man ts
an Indian, and so on with all races
except the negro—he alone looks for
and finds his ideal outside of his own
race. As each race finds Its bighest
ideals of man within ftself 1t paints,
pictures and models man in the phys-
{eal likeness of {teelf, {ts Wolls, its de-
seriptions of man are all made to em-
twdy the elements that make up this
ideal. And, further, when men reach
the point—and all races inevitably
reach it—of avenging themselves on
God for having made them In his Im
age, they reverse the process, and in-
variably picture their gods as having
the same {identical qualities, linea
ments, features, etc., as they them-
selves have. And by a subtle proc-
ess of idealistic exaggeration these
gods are made to tecome nothing
more than an expanded replica or
shudow of the races that imaged
them. ‘That {s, the Chinese god or
angel is like the Chinaman, the Jap-
anese is lke the Japanese, the Afrl-
can’s like the African, the white man’s,
is like the white man. The Afro-
American alone of all races presents
a radical variation from this natural
law. He alone has and yearns to have
a God, angels, ideals, dolls, ete., en-
tirely unlike himself, And one of the
surest ways of jolting his religious
faith is to show him the picture of a
black angel or a black god! A busi
hess genius some years ago hit upon
the {dea of selling pictures of a col-
ored Christ to Negroes. A lady ac-
quaintance of ours—a devout Chris-
tian, too—saw one of these pictures
of a black Christ and exclaimed: “If
that is Christ, I'll pray no more!”
Seeing, then that some mighty
force has operated to differentiate the
Afro-American from other races in
the matter of fdeals, feelings, dispo-
sition—differentiated him not only
from other men, but has made him
ashamed of himself and his kind, thus,
reversing if not abrogating a law of
Nature and of Nature’s God—the au-
thor next seeks to determine the ex-
tent of this variation from man in a
natural state, and thus measure the
depth of the disease, Like some great.
surgeon exanilning with skilled fingers
the body of a suffering patient, and
saying to him, “Thou allest here, and
here,” our author diagnoses with rare
penetration the manifold weaknesses,
frailties and ailments of the Afro-
American, and what is more, gives
their cause and remedy.
In giving the symptoms of the Afro-
American disease, the writer states
that when a white man buys a doll
or a picture embodying the Ineaments
of his race, he does so with a two-
fold object in view: to amuse his off-
spring and to keep before its eyes
such an {deal that will foster and
develop pride of race, The Afro-
American, unmindful of any similar
purpose as the latter, buys a doll or
picture as nearly like that of the
white man as he can find, and In
time the offspring begins to think
there Is something wrong or degraded
about itself, and begins to form ideals
foreign to its own race. Photograph-
make up in shirk for what he lacks
in work, Hence in every community
occupied by Afro-Americans the in-
dustrial captain is white, unless a
white man refuses to’be a competitor
for the place. The idea merchant
for the Afro-American is white, and
he will pass by business places of
another Afro-American, to give his
patronage and influence to his {deal
merchant, right in the face of the
fact that the members of every other
race, including that of his ideal mer-
chant, are universally discriminating
in favor of members of thelr own
tribe and going out of their way to
reach them. This causes all the
profits from the patronage of the
black man to be left with members
of other races and results in giving to
others the power to own the business
community and to make those mem-
bers the masters of the political and
social world. The Afro-American’s
ideal lawyer, doctor and other _pro-
fessional men are white, and his deal
man or women {8 the one who Is
either white or near white. In our
organizations, schools, dance halls,
churches and other social gatherings
preference is given to those who in
complexion most nearly resemble that
{deal. Such preference 1s most dis-
tinetly seen In schools controlled en-
tirely by Negroes, and where a wom-
an applicant with a black skin is
accorded about the same treatment
as a pheasant hen finds among a gang
of coyotes. When the man with’ a
black skin reaches the heights, he
does so by sheer force of brain power
and unquestioned efficiency, and with
no fortuitous aid from color—he
riges not because of but in spite of
his black face. The Afro-American’s
ideal in the way of hair is straight,
and he (or ‘hall we precipitate a riot
by saying “she") is ransacking the
earth and prizing up hell in order
to find something with which to trans-
form the hair given him or (shall we
say “her”) by nature. With their
ideals within their own race, all other
people are “involuntarily drawn to-
wards members of their own race;
but having his ideal outside of his
rece, the Afro-American involuntarily
draws away from his race and volun-
tarily to other races. The white man,
observing this unnatural tendency on
the part of the Afro-American to get
away from himself, has very wisely
drawn up sundry restrictions around
his own race—certain “dead lines”
and has said to the Negro: “Thus far
and no further.” ‘The Afro-American
finding all races fenced off :rom him,
can not scale those bars, but he
spends a great deal of time in peer-
ing longingly through them. “Ac-
tions, impelled by the diseased spirit,
vhich is sesponsible for all these
symptoms, have resulted in making
the Afro-American a pauper, criminal,
outcast and laughing stock, In de-
stroying his influence, ballot and citl-
zenship, In’ depriving him of all em-
ployment in the economic world
above that of menials and scavengers
and in cheapening his personality and
life.” Such and so many are the ef-
fects and symptoms of the disease
from which, according to our author,
the Afro-American 1s suffering. In
reading over them, we could not but
recall the searching question asked
by Macbeth of the physiclan attend-
jag upon his ailing wife: “Canst thou
minister to a mind diseased? Pluck
from the memory a rooted sorrow.
Raze out the written troubles of the
brain, and with some sweet oblivious
antidote cleanse the stuffed bosom of
that perilous stuff which weighs upon
the heart?" The answer given by
the physician ts significant, and we
think applicable to our case: “"There-
in the patient must minister to him-
self.”
We have seen that the Negro has
developed tendencies, dispositions.
habits, customs, not traceable in men
in a natural state of freedom, and
differentiating him today from the
members of all other races.
This shows that some powerful and
destructive external influence has
wrought havoc with nature's law, and
has inflicted incalculable injury on the
Negro, inner or spiritual being.
Instead of the spirit implanted by
nature, there has been substituted and
developed a spirit which despises the
body in which it is placed, and the
race with which it fs {dentified. And
this distorted unnatural spirit is nur-
tured in the cradle, continued in the
home, encouraged in the church and
finished in the schools and colleges.
The result 1s, a being ashamed of, at
war with, and incessantly trying to
“steal away" from ftself.
When the Negro was first brought
to this country and thrown In contact
with the white man, his {deal man,
his highest conception of man, was in
himself. He was not only too proud
and self-respecting to be a slave, but
eR av SORE TLS Ae AYE Nee a
any one possessing a white face. The
effect of this artful training 1s still
seen in the Afro-American’s dispost-
tion not to serve member of his own
race; it 1s seen in thelr tendency to
oppose the elevation of a member of
their own race; it is geen in the lack
of class or rank in so-called Negro
society where the alley rat and the
“sofled dove” from the gutter expect
and are given equal recognition and
honors with those who have never
gone astray or been caught tn the
cess-pools of vice and corruption!
This breaking down of rank, and
erasing of all marks of class was
begun by the slave-holders for a pur-
pose, and is continued today-—for a
purpose by both secret order and
church—the latter being ‘the most
shameless and brazen sinner fn this
respect. Her secred doors are equally
open to maiden in her Innogence and
purity, and to the woman who has
spent half a tfetime, and who contin-
ues her habitation, in the sewers, The
latter is given a more cordial welcome
if she has (and she geuerally has) the
“goods” and is willing (and she fs usu-
ally willing) to part with a goodly
amount of same for the glory and
honor of God—through and by the
minister!
‘This systematic breaking down of
rank, the destructioin of {deals and the
wreckage of standards, had a fourfold
result: ‘The white man had a higher
opinion of himself and a lower opin-
fon of the negro; the negro had a
lower opinion of himself and a much
higher opinion of the white man,
“There is scarcely a white man in
this country,” says our author, “even
including ‘Tillman, Vardaman, and
Dixon, who appreciates and honors
the color of the white man on the one
hand, and despises the color of the
black man on the other, more than
the Afro-American himself. He 1s as
wild over trying to be white as Till
man is over being white.”
‘The institution of slavery bunched
all the dark-hued victims in the same
condition and trained them to feel
that they were all equal; It placed the
‘master class far above this condition,
graded them round by round from
peasant or “white trash,” to president,
that each grade above remained a
perpetual door of hope, emulation and
inspiration to every white man in the
one below tt.
In the course of time and by a well-
known law of psychology, known as
the law of association of ideas, every-
thing in the way of power, honor, vir-
tue, Intelligence and magnificence be-
came associated in the minds of both
races with the white or master class,
and everything in the way of poverty,
ignorance, helplessness, ‘viclousness
and degradation became associated
with a badge of the black man, These
feelings transmitted from generation
to generation are existing in all their
force in a large per cent. of negroes
today, and where they do not manifest
themselves so plainly in the remain-
der they are, nevertheless, slumbering
deep down In the heart and mind. It
is seen then that as a result of this
baneful training, both races support
and oppose whatever tends to perpet-
uate, or to eradicate the effect of this
training.
Under such conditions the black
man gradually lost pride in himself,
developed contempt for his race and
color, felt that {t was honorable to
serve a white man, and dishonorable
to serve a negro,
Hence the idea now prevalent that
no one can do things, no one can
know, no one can be, except he is
white. During slavery days the ne-
gro was trained to carry everything
made on the plantation “to the big
house” or master’s quarters, and re
ceive In return sufficient rations to
keep soul and body together to enable
him to produce more, and when we
recall his conduct today towards his
own race in business we see that he
is still guided by the same instinct—
still carrying everything he can to|
“the big house,” or some of its in-
mates—Jew, Dago, Syrian, white man,
anyone except to one of his kind.
What is the effect of this unnatural
policy? This policy of carrying every-
thing to “de big house.”
It 1s to make the people of “de big
house” richer, more honorable, more
powerful, and the people of the quar
ters more dependent, more despised,
poorer and more degraded. It gives
to the former all that this world holds
dear; it gives to the latter pauperism,
criminalism, degradation,
‘The white man and the negro are’
each bent on keepling up this con-
dition—the former as a business pol
fcy, and the latter because by centu-
ries of training he 1s built that way.
Ephraim is joined to his idols and de
Yoted to his white ideals,
‘The work of correcting this training,
restoring these transferred Ideals, {m-
planting a sense of self pride. is a
a man fn business made independent
by that patronage, has gone into other
quarters, and put up the sign elther
visible or invisible, but always effect-
ive: “Negro patronage not wanted.”
Query: What race, or what people
are the prize asses of the world?
NO MORE CHEAP COTTON
FINANCIAL AUTHORITY STRONG-
LY OF THAT OPINION.
(From the Wall Street’ Journal.)
Cheap cotton in the old sense of the
word seems a thing of the past. In
1895 and 1898 middling uplands sold
in New York at 5.62 and 5.37 cents,
respectively; but it may be that In
October, 1908, at 9 cents and in De-
cember last year at 9.37 cents cotton
was actually cheaper, in view of the
changed conditions of production and
consumption, than in either of these
earlier years,
All elements in the cost of produc-
tion, including labor, interest on the
land, depreciation of machinery and
facilities, and expense for fertilizers,
have risen rapidly; and at the same
time the demand for cotton has grown
so fast as to establish the price on a
higher level, even if cost of produc-
tfon has remained unchanged.
Some of the factors tending toward
higher prices may be here tabulated,
In the first column 1s given the esti-
mated consumption per capita; in the
second the approximate interest cost
of land devoted to cotton production,
figuring the interest at five) per cent.;
and in the third column is given an
index number showing the rise in
wages. Farm labor has risen in price
to just about the same extent as other
labor:
85 gi: 28
Bsa Ese . 3e
Sone gee wie
855 7o< 25
1910 ......22.841bs. $2.97 207.9
1909 ......25.17 2.81 1975
1908 ......29.23 2.43 195.
1907 ......25.73 2.15 209.0
1906 ......29.02 2.31 192.6
1905 ......29.00 2.14 185.2
1904 ......27.42 2.03 182.4
1903 ......24.64 1.99 182.5
1902 .....,25.65 1.90 1iT4
1901 ......25.94 1.64 172.1
1900 ......22.57 1.57 169.2
1899 ......27.87 1.49 164.4
1898 ......25.76 1.32 162.3
1897 ......18.77 1.23 161.3
1896 .....,18.67 1.18 161.7
1894 ......16.45 1.31 158.9
*Bstimated. **Rough approximate
based on census values,
Any accurate estimate of the cost
of the labor used in producing a bale
of cotton Is impossible for many rea-
sons; but assuming it to have been
about $15.00 in the late nineties, the
rise in wages indicates that it is now
no less than 19.25, ‘The interest on
land, buildings and machinery mean-
while has more than doubled. Judg-
ing from census returns, the average
value of improved land in 1910 was
about $60.00 per acre, as compared
with less than $30.00 in 1898. At five
per cent. this means an Interest cost
of $3.00 per acre or $8.00 per bale at
Present, against about $1.32 per acre
or $3.50 per bale in 1898. Nor does
this include added interest on build-
ings and machinery.
With the cost of production about
47 per cent. greater than in 1898, and
with the demand per capita of popula-
tion about 42 per cent. greater, it is
not at all improbable that cotton was
really cheaper last December than at
any time in the nineties.
SOWING COWPEAS.
The ground should be prepared for
the planting of cowpeas much as It is
for corn. If one intends to use land
that was in corn the year before, it
should be disked as soon as it Is
plowed, followed by more disking and
harrowing every ten days or two
weeks, according to the dampness of
the soll, occasioned by rains This
not only keeps a good mulch on the
ground, but also prevents the weeds
from getting a start. Seed the peas
in late May or June, the method’ of
seeding depending much upon the pur-
pose for which the cow peas are to be
used.
‘When the peas are intended for hay,
the drilling should be thick, using
about a bushel of peas to the acre.
With smail-seed varieties the ordinary
grain drill can be used to advantage.
When the peas are grown for seed
they should be planted in rows about
2%4 to 3 feet apart and cultivated fre-
quently. Barly varieties can be plant-
ed in the southern part of the corn
belt to follow small grain or early
potatoes.
THE EGG BASKET.
The old, old story of comfortable
housing, proper feeding, and the well-
filled egg basket, has been told and
retold. Poultry on the farm is one
of the easiest cared for products.
Only a little time needs to be taken
to give them a comfortable place to
live; a Uttle more time to give them
something to eat besides the ordinary
corn ratlon—say table scraps, beef
scraps or skim milk, together with
small grain; just a few minutes each
week to clean the house.
Believe that they are a part of your
assets. Make yourself think that the
hens are interested in your farm
business, and they will be the busiest
helpers on the place. They will buy
the groceries, help to shoo the chil-
dren, and buy the Christmas presents
for the whole family.
But they won't do ft unless you
help them.—Agricultural Epitomist.
Private Dining Room. ; Phone, Main 7413,
wane. The ——--8085
Newport Annex,
Cafe and Lunch Room
TT
Richard Frazier and Tom Lewis, Props.
=i
omental
Ca ae
SHORT ORDERS AY ALi HOURS.
DENVER, COLO.
In Connection
‘There Are Also
Nicely
Furnished
Rooms
And the Old
Reliable
Newport Thirst
Parlors
{ae an A raeanca a est
Loon Neca erg ares ee.) ca Ll ne ier pea eae eats tS a RE ae)
at R
H THE c
am a
ot a
= MONARCH LIQUOR
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Fl COMPANY x
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ny
at Mg PR x
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M{ TELEPHONE «yay Ag eee |e 1516 Mm
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i i be Sh m
_ rngSA *
* IMPORTED & DOMESTIC WINES & LIQUORS x
50808020808080505OR08O508080808ORUEUBUSOEOSOSC HORE On
PTOEOTOLOTOTOLOLOROTOLOLOTOTOLOLOTOSS:
$ D. W. REEVES, Manager. W. P. JONES, Proprietor,
e FULL LINE OF CIGARS AND TOBACCO.
$ Five Points Barber Shop
2727 WELTON STREET.
PHONE CHAMPA 471. DENVER, COLO.
hehe Ob Sh OL Oh Ob SLO6O46O6O06040606040606148
COCHRAN, HOKLAS & CO.
Contractors and Builders
“All MinaahiGk carpenter iver nana
jobbing. Store and office work a
specialty .. ° Phone Main 1925
1846 Arapahoe St. DENVER, COLO.
- . ,
Railroad Men and Waiters
= Clu ————
We lead, others follow. Home for Railroad and Club
Men. A welcome to visitors, All the latest magazines
and papers will be found in the Library room,
FRANK BURNLEY, Manager
2149 Curtis Street " Denver; Colo.
Phone Main 8232
THE ZOBEL BROTHERS’
1004 Nineteenth Street, Corner of Curtis
FINE WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS
COORS' CELEBRATED BEER ON TAP
ee ee ONIAE
DENVER COLORADO
If you have a patch of warm, loose and friable soil, prepare it for sweet potatoes. A sandy loam, or almost pure sand, is good. The plants need not be set out till rather late, but have the soil worked up fine and clean.
If you never have had good success with melons, try the use of well decomposed manure for the individual hills. Place some of the manure several inches below and on the surface. When the young plants come up and get started, thin to about three stalks to the hill, and watch them grow. Water when the soil is dry. A rapid and continuous growth with melons is discouraging to bugs and disease. Cultivate very clean till the vines begin to run.
The common garden sage is a hardy perennial, yet it does best by resowing every two or three years. Give it a warm, fertile soil along the fence line.
Every time you go among the fruit trees, remove unnecessary young sprouts and sappy growth from the trunks and larger branches. Undesirable growth, removed early, will leave no scars and the vitality of the trees will be saved.
Soil for late potatoes should be plowed in the spring, harrowed two or three times to prevent escape of soil moisture, and again plowed and worked down fine before planting. The late potato crop goes into the ground at a time when much of the soil's moisture has been lost by summer evaporation; hence, all means must be taken to keep as much as possible of the spring moisture in the soil. Frequent and level cultivation will aid in this matter.
Peppers are tender while young, but hardy later in the season, enduring frost in the fall without injury. For these reasons, the plants should not be set out till rather late in spring. Large peppers are mild; small ones are hot.
The size and quality of the grape crop may be increased by clean and fine cultivation with careful removal of surplus growth up to fruiting time. All small fruits do better by conserving the soil moisture while fruits are ripening.
Never be afraid of making the garden soil too rich with well decomposed home manures. Bone meal and nitrate of soda are good commercial fertilizers to use. Incorporate all fertilizer's well with the soil by disking or harrowing before planting.
Always in transplanting cut off a part of the roots and top of each plant. Root pruning induces a better new root growth, and shortening the top lessens evaporation when the young plants are getting a start.
A cloudy day with moist soil is the best time and condition for transplanting. A few plants can be handled safely in the evening when the sun is low. Avoid exposing the roots to the wind. Where transplanting must be done in dry weather, water each plant after it is set to settle the soil about the roots, and rake the surface fine about the plants to form a dust mulch for holding moisture. Raking the garden in dry weather is equivalent to watering it.
Cultivate rhubarb, asparagus and other perennial vegetables as you do other crops if you would have large growth. Spading decomposed manure into the soil along the rows will stimulate growth. Summer mulching for this class of plants will aid in keeping down weeds and holding soil moisture. Plant parsnip seed in good soil, free from fresh manure, and cultivate for a long season of growth. This crop need not be harvested in the fall. The roots may be allowed to remain in the ground all fall and winter, digging them in the winter and early spring only as they are needed for use. Allowing them to remain, the open garden soil during the winter makes the roots more tender and better flavored. Celery plants should be started in a cool situation with moist soil and partial shade.
I have found that a field that has been packed by winter rains or by pasturing and remains too wet for working till late in spring will begin to dry out nicely by giving the surface a disking. The soil, which the dicks turn up dries out quickly under the sun and wind, and after a day or two of drying the field will be in good condition for plowing or deeper disking. On thin land for oats or corn, disking and cross-disking are equal to a good plowing, and better in some cases. Where corn is to be planted more power should be used, more weight applied and the disks run deeper. If the soil can be disked six inches deep in the same time it is plowed to that depth, it is better to disk, as the soil will be ready for planting and in perfect condition with a harrowing for smoothing and leveling the surface.
When plowing and harrowing or disking is to be done every available horse and mule should be in harness to make the work easy and move on rapidly. Some allow one team to remain idle while the other is pulling the plow. It would be better all around to hitch three or four of them to the plow for deeper working and rushing things for reasonable planting. Better work four horses eight hours of the day than two horses sixteen hours. It will be easier on the man, at least.
ORIGINAL IN FOOR CONDITION
NO YELLOW STREAK IN J. JOHNSON, SAY EXPERTS
NO YELLOW STREAK IN J. JOHNSON, SAY EXPERTS
DOPE ON PAST PERFORMANCES
FAILS TO SHOW ANY QUITTING
BLOOD BUT IT MAY BE SHOWN
ON JULY 4.
London.—Several times the question
has been put to me, "Has Johnson a
yellow streak?"
There never was a colored boxer of
note who escaped the suggestion of
cowardice.
The colored race have for tens of
centuries regarded the white man as
the ruling lord. Once get such an
idea into your head, and you will
surely find yourself battling against
great odds to dispel it. Indeed, it is
next door to impossible to break
away from the fetish.
So with the black boxers. They are,
no matter how good, always fighting
against the odds. Even when they
are champions, they are fighting, not
only their opponents, but history.
Now, it's a pretty tall order for a poor weak-minded nigger scraper, isn't it? Yes, I think so. The negro has to fight the odds. This proves in the long run impossible.
The prevailing idea of the white man's superiority is the one great factor that has broken so many champion boxers. Dan Creedon was the man to prove it against the Coffee Cooler (Frank Craig); Cribb dusted down Tom Moleneaux after a terrific fight about a century ago; Frank Erne, Terry McGovern and Battling Nelson all broke through against Joe Gans and made him a "has been." Joe Wolett, "the giant killer," was scared to death of Tommy West and Kid Lavigne. Dixon and all the others went the same way.
Now, these men had all ben champions. They had gone from victory to victory without a halt, in some cases going for years without suffering a reverse. But in the end the tradition of the white man's superiority "got" them and made them quitters. In other words, they showed the white feather, or, as our friends in the states say, "the yellow streak."
I make a bold statement now. Johnson is no quitter. I don't believe there is the shadow of a yellow streak in him. No prominent boxer has been so miscalled. No one has been more victimized. He is like the cur at whom everybody aims a swift kick.
It is a vogue, a fashion. Everybody is so unoriginal that he just imitates his neighbor. One paper sets the fashion and all the others follow suit.
But Johnson has done really marvellous things in the ring. Take his fight with Tommy Burns at Sydney. Burns was champion of the world. Australia is a white man's country. There they have no use for niggers. Yet they turned out to a man to see Burns vs. Johnson. Of course, they had an idea that Johnson would be licked, but when Burns "got his" they cheered Johnson, the new champion. Johnson certainly took a chance in fighting and beating the champion in such an aggressively white country as Australia. Jeffries was served likewise. Many of his ringers were desperate whites, who would just as soon pull a lead on a nigger as see him beat a white. Johnson is no fool. He knew this; yet he faced the music. Would you then stand by and hear him called a coward? I couldn't, and more, I won't. Give every man his due. "Render unto Caesar," etc.
Johnson is no quitter. He's as game as was any white man, be he soldier, sailor, or simply a fighting machine
But will he never show "the" streak? Ah, there you've got me. That I cannot foretell. It may be that one day he may find himself hard up against it, and then—well, who knows? He may then do exactly what his fellow blacks have done.
NO NEGRO RACE YET
IN THE UNITED STATES
Kansas City, Mo.—As yet there is no negro race in America, according to Dr. C. V. Roman, president of a negro medical school at Nashville, Tenn. Dr. Roman was one of the speakers at a session of the African Methodist Episcopal general conference here.
"The negroes are only beginning to be a race," said Dr. Roman. "Racial consciousness has been lacking, but the negro is finding himself. The material for a strong race is in him, but he faces the difficulties that every growing race has encountered—class prejudice and race prejudice.
"It has been said the negro is dying out, but the race never was stronger than today. At the close of the Civil war there were 4,000,000 negroes in the United States; now there are 10,000,000."
PULLS BABY FROM TRACKS AS HE
DIVES FROM PILOT.
Athens, Ga.—"Soap" Lockett, a negro fireman on the Georgia Midland railroad train No. 2, saved the life of a two-and-a-half-year-old white child, the daughter of John Potter, two miles south of Jefferson, in a heroic manner, the equal of which is seldom recorded. On a curve in a cut Engineer Tom Adair, running thirty miles an nour, saw the tot in the middle of the track ahead and put on the reverse, sand and emergency, but as he saw no hope, cried, "Lord, have mercy!" The negro fireman shot out the window along the running board, and leaped from the pilot beam, grabbed the baby as he dived and rolled off the track. The hind drivers stopped on the spot where the babe stood.
MARINES LAND ON CUBAN SOIL
GOMEZ, UNABLE TO COPE WITH
SITUATION, ASKS FOR
HELP.
PROTECT FOREIGNERS
GOVERNMENT HEAD POINTS OUT COMPLIANCE WOULD MEAN 1,250 OF BEST TROOPS.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
Washington.—Frank confession of President Gomez that he was unable to meet the demands of large plantation owners in eastern Cuba for adequate guards against the marauders and insurrectos was the factor that led Captain Kline, commanding the United States naval station at Guantanamo, to set in motion the body of United States marines gathered there. Captain Kline's action in dispatching nearly half of his available force into the interior of Cuba gave the signal for the departure from Key West to Guantanamo of half of the second squadron of the Atlantic fleet.
The facts as disclosed at the State Department are that several of the large American, British, French and Spanish companies operating plantations and mines in eastern Cuba telegraphed the Cuban government a demand for 100 regular troops for each of their mills and fifty for each of their cane fields.
President Gomez pointed out that a compliance with their request would require the use of 1,250 of his best troops for the protection of one group of foreign properties. If he acceded to such demands, he said his whole regular army would not suffice for police work alone.
Captain Klino, judging that the situation demanded the use of American guards, sent 450 marines by boat up Guantanamo bay to a landing near Calmanera, the terminus of the railway running up to the city of Guantanamo, fifteen miles inland.
Nevada Senator Dies
Washington. — Senator George S
Nixon of Nevada died in a local hos
pital here of spinal meningitis.
Senator Nixon had been at the Epsicopi
GEORGE S. NIXON.
eye, ear and throat hospital several days, when an operation for nasal catarrh was performed. Spinal meningitis developed, and the senator's condition soon became critical.
California Cotton Leads.
Washington.—According to the Agricultural Department there is no other state whose cotton crop can approach the condition of the Imperial valley.
Gives Mine Bureau Jurisdiction.
Washington.—The House passed a bill which broadens the scope of the statute supporting the bureau of mines in such manner that appropriations may not be made extending the work of that branch of the government to the metalliferous mining industry. Complete latitude is given towards allowing the director of the bureau to conduct investigations that will lead to betterment of conditions in regard to all classes of mining. The measure prepares the way for the establishment of metallurgical and experimental assay stations.
Washington.—The Woman's Christian Temperance Union of Whittier, by Olive J. Edwards, president, and M. J. Townsend, secretary, have sent a protest to Senator Work against the appropriation of $500,000 for rifle practice in the public schools.
Federal Architect Resigns.
Washington.-James Knox Taylor, supervising architect of the Treasury Department,' has tendered his resignation.
Abington, Maas.—John L. Sullivan, the former champion heavyweight prize fighter, who some time ago decided to lead the simple life and settle down on his farm here, is ill and friends declare that his condition is critical.
Cotton Tariff Bill Favored.
Washington.—The Underwood cotton tariff reduction bill was reported favorably to the House by the ways and means committee.
RACE PROBLEM
MR. M. S. EVANS SEEKING SOLUTION FOR RACE PROBLEM IN SOUTH AFRICA.
By V. P. THOMAS.
Mr. M. S. Evans, an Englishman living in South Africa, is in the United States studying the race problem for the purpose of knowing, if he can, how much like the race problem in the United States to solve, should go about solving it in order to establish a system best suited to insure peace between the whites and blacks and to provide opportunities for both races to develop, unrestrained by race prejudice and the consequent race conflict said to be inevitable wherever two distinct races live in the same territory, along those lines of human endeavor each of the two races in South Africa might prefer to follow.
Mr. Evans is trying to get first hand information regarding the complaints and grievances over the treatment of the negro people by the white people in the United States, especially in the southern states, from which section most of the complaints come, and to learn if the negro people are making the best of their opportunities under their present admitted disabilities.
Mr. Evans has been in the states five weeks and has been making personal inquiries and observations in many places, and he declares that a good deal of the information which he has been able to obtain is to the effect that the negro complains too much of disabilities and does not avail himself enough of the many opportunities for bettering his social and economic condition which plainly lay all around him in the United States and especially in the southern states, where cheap lands are in plenty and his labor in greater demand than he can supply the demand for it. Mr. Evans believes that the negro should employ his wanted labor more diligently and not spend the earning of this labor so carelessly, but should apply it more wisely to the uses of land ownership, profitable commercial affairs and businesses among his own people. He feels convinced that the co-operative inclination among the negro people is far below the wise point, and that if they would stick more together and understand better the necessity of general race co-operation in the pursuit of race welfare, prosperity and progress, this course would soon undermine the foundation for many of their complaints and grievances.
Mr. Evans says that some of the stories he has heard of the treatment colored people receive at the hands of their white neighbors in many parts of this country show cruelties that the average European would be unwilling to believe any civilized white man could ever allow himself to commit, and that if they are true, these cruelties must be ascribed to a moral standard and temper among the whites here that no European would find it in his heart to apologize for or condone.
Mr. Evans does not take much stock in the returns made by the U. S. Census Bureau with respect to the number of homes and farms owned by the colored people, saying that he has not been able to obtain any satisfactory reply to the question he has repeatedly asked as to the amount of mortgage resting against these homes and farms returned as owned by the colored people. He believes that the negro is different from the white man in characteristics as well as in color of skin, and that no matter how much the negro may attempt it he can never be the man that the white man is by nature. On account of this belief, Mr. Evans thinks it is best for the negro and the white man alike that they should not try to live together on terms of equality in any place. The negro should be off to themselves in the United States with some good and conscientious white men to lead them and help them to develop the best that is in them as a race.
A SURE ENOUGH SPORT.
A St. Paul youth called up his sweet-heart in Chicago by long distance and enjoyed a little talk.
The time slipped by and the rates slipped up.
It was a pleasant half hour all right, but presently he came back to earth, and then a rapid mental calculation showed him he had talked $18 worth.
But he was game.
"What are you laughing at?" the girl inquired.
girl acquiesced.
"I am laughing to think that this little talk has cost me as much as a railway trip to Chicago and return."
"Mercy!" screamed the girl. "Why don't you stop?" "Well," replied the youth, "I want to add enough for a parlor car each way. So they talked a little longer. "Just one more word," said the youth.
"What's that for?" "Tips for the porters." Then he rang off.—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
HER MOURNING UNLIMITED.
Down in Georgia a negro who had his life insured for several hundred dollars died and left the money to his widow. She immediately bought herself a very elaborate mourning outfit. Showing her purchases to her friend, she was very particular in going into detail as to the prices and all incidental particulars. Her friend was very much impressed, and remarked: "Them sho is fine cloes, but, befo' heaven, what is you goin' to do wif all dis black underwear?"
The bereaved one sighed: "Chile, when I mou'ns I mou'rns"—Harper's Magazine
H. HEUER, PROPRIETOR RESTING PLACE FOR COLORED GENTS MEALS AT ALL HOURS Pool Room in Connection
ASK FOR
CAR
Peerless
DID YOU
Neef B
It's made ri
None better
This is a Stri
BE
Supply Your H
The Emp
BUY YOUR BO
West 10th and Osage, Near Burnet
Denver, Colorado
FOR
ARLSON
Hearless Ice Cream
Phones: Main 112 and 113
D YOU EVER T
ef Bros.' Be
made right, and tastes
better made anywhere
is a Strictly Colorado Pr
BE SURE AN TRY IT.
Your Home with the Celebration
Tivoli Beer
Bottled by
Empire Bottling
Phone Gallup 245
OUR BOTTLED GOODS
Trade
QUALTY
McVicar B
Works
J. T.
Wines, Liquors and
PHONE MAIN 3762.
2609 Arapahoe Street Denver
Colorado Products Patronize Homemade
ZANG'S
DELICIOUS TABLE BEERS
IMBINE,
VIENNA AND
PILS
Corner West 10th and Osage, Near Burnham Shops Denver, Colorado
ASK FOR CARLSON'S Peerless Ice Cream Phones: Main 112 and Main 5787
DID YOU EVER TRY Neef Bros.' Beer?
It's made right, and tastes right. None better made anywhere and This is a Strictly Colorado Production
Supply Your Home with the Celebrated Tivoli Beer
The Empire Bottling Co. Phone Gallup 245
BUY YOUR BOTTLED GOODS OF THE
Family Trade a SPECIALTY
Beer, Wines,
P
2605 and 2609 Arapa
Boost Colorado Prod
ZA
DELI
COLUMBIN
VIE
Guaranteed Absolutely Pure. Delivered Daily to All Parts of the City.
The Ph. Za
TELE
We Boost for Colorad
The Prior
181
We buy and sell
Furniture, also
shades. Sewi
repaired a spe
Ph. Zang Brewing
TELEPHONE GALLUP 395.
for Colorado You Should Buy
Prior Furniture
1814 Curtis Street
buy and sell new and second
furniture, also repair work. Wi-
es. Sewing Machines sold
ered a specialty.
The Prior Furniture Co. 1814 Curtis Street
We buy and sell new and second hand Furniture, also repair work. Window shades. Sewing Machines sold and repaired a specialty.
PHONE CHAMPA 392
RUDOLP
SANITARY G
ME
ported and Domestic
Vegetables. Our Own
8-2760 Downing Avenue
DOLPH BROTHERS
MINITARY GROCERY, BAKERY
MEAT MARKET.
Domestic Table Delicacies. From
Our Own Bakery. Finest Goods
Eng Avenue
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
wing Co.
uld Boost for Us
ure Co.
cond hand
Window
sold and
Cash or Credit
WHILE YOU WAIT
ot ut Sewed Soles 60 cts. and: 75 cts. wt oF
WORK CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED FREE
THE EASTERN SHOE REPAIR
FACTORY
Yellow Front 1527 Champa St.
PONE 8453 MAIN
For Drugs and Medicines
MEYER’S
The Leading East Side Druggist
PHONE MAIN 3028 RES. PHONE GALLUP 942
JOHN K. RETTIG
Meats, Fancy and Staple Groceries
1864 CURTIS STREET
Corner Nineteenth. Deuver, Colo.
Rocky Mountain International Sportmen’s Association
SALIDA, COLORADO
JUNE 16 -19, 1912
ONE FARE FOR THE ROUND TRIP
VIA
THE DENVER & RIO GRANDE RAILROAD
“The Scenic Line of the World”
TICKETS ON SALE JUNE 14, 15 AND 16, 1912
FINAL RETURN LIMIT, JUNE 20, 1912.
For fares, full particulars and further detailed information, call on Local
Rio Grande Agent.
Frank A. Wadleigh, General Passenger Agent,
. Denver, Colorado.
THE
2A SOCIAL CLOB.=
Li "| PHONE MAIN 5496,
=; MACK SMART
% MANAGER.
2018 CHAMPA STREET DENVER, COLO
c = Ot
ice a) p S
XE oF CONES
At no time has our Open Stock Dinner Ware line been as large or
varied as at the present time. Out of these patterns you can select
‘one pigce or 100 pieces.
During the summer months these goods will be specially priced.
Come in and let us show you these good things.
SPECIALS
Regular 75¢ Hand Painted Bread | Regular $1.50 Cut Glass Handled
and Butter Plates; Assorted Dec- | and Unhandled Nappies and Bon-
orations—Special $4.50 Each. Bon Dishes—Special, $1 Each.
! OUR MOTTO:
| Courteous T vatment and Prompt Service.
THE CARSON CROCKERY COMPANY
Denver's Largest Exclusive China Store.
732-36 FIFTEENTH STREET.
THIRTY-SECOND ANNUAL CONVENTION
STATE SUNDAY SCHOOL ASSOCIATION
COLORADO SPRINGS
JUNE 18-20, 1912
ONE FARE FOR THE ROUND TRIP
VIA
The Denver & Rio Grande Railroad
“The Scenic Line of the World”
TICKETS ON SALE JUNE 17 AND 18, 1912, .
FINAL RETURN LIMIT, JUNE 22, 1912.
2 For fares, full particulars and further detailed information, call on Local
Rio Grande Agent.
Frank A. Wadleigh, General Passenger Agent,
Denver, Colorado.
Children’s Bonnets
Pod ieee
¥. bil
‘ ai nee ee
ore iat re
gaa. A we 5
ei a CO
EER RN é a
“Fe. |e Fn xs
awe ie
‘a
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for the Dutch bonnet flare over the
ears at each side, which is balanced
by a crown like a square in shape.
‘The bonnet pictured here is made of
light blue braid and white messaline
ribbon. The band of braid about the
head is repeated in the facing and the
edge {s finished with a puff of the rib-
bon. The square crown is made en-
tirely of braid and the crown is set
on by means of a puff made of the
ribbon.
At the left side a short bridle of rib-
bon, folded, is fastened to the frame
with a small spray of little roses and
terminates in a rosette of ribbon at
the point over the ear. This is re
peated on the right side and from
these rosettes short ties extend, fas
tening under the cheek at the left, in
a simple bow of two short loops and
ends, The ties may b? fastened on
the inside at the same points; this
will allow more flare to the frame
and give a closer fit, if it is desired.
Never was there so great variety to
choose from in» children’s hats and
bonnets, as are shown this season. But
nothing is prettier than these, the
simplest of designs made up of the
materials and in the colors which have
long been associated in our minds
with headgear for little ones.
| JULIA BOTTOMLEY.
ONNETS of lace-straw and silk
braids are shown, made up with
light welght silks or ribbons, of
high luster. Bright tones of
blue and pink are used on many of
them and tints of many colors in the
soft and supple ribbons that form the
trimming and sometimes part of the
body of the bonnet.
Fig. 1 illustrates a pretty combina-
tion. A fancy braid in deep ecrue
forms the body of the shape. A
quaint finish at the brim-edge is made
by over-casting a tuscan straw cord
about it. The shape bends outward in
a deep scallop over the ears and is
otherwise plain,
‘The scant trimming consists of a
wreath of small pink June rosebuds
laid in the simplest manner about the
crown. At the left side a very full
chou of ribbon, made of smal! puffs
set close together, complete the child-
ish design. It is an adorable little
model fitted to crown the straying
curls or smoothly bobbed hair of little
misses. It 1s worn without tles and
fastens with an elastic cord under the
hair.
Fig. 2 shows another combination
in which a silk lace braid ts com-
bined with puffed ribbon to make the
shape. Its foundation is a frame of
fine silk wire. This frame provides
PUTTING THE SHOES IN ORDER
VERY UP-TO-DATE
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Cie 2 Te:
p a SS
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LYS
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Hi Weer
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Ge
coarae, gulpurae Glin becwet alert
and belt of dull gold gauze. White
straw hat lined with brown velvet anc
trimmed with a brown paradise:
feather.
Now Is the Time to See That They
Are in Proper Condition for
the Hot Weather.
It one intends to have a supply of
summer foot gear in readiness before
the hot months are actually here
there are several things which should
be done as soon as possible. Last
year's shoes, which have presumably
been put carefully away, should” be
taken out of hiding and gone over with
a cream that will clean and preserve
the leather, then the cobbler should
have a chance at these before the
home repairs are attempted. A half-
sole, a new heel lift, new buttons put
on with patent fasteners, and straps
on the chafed front or back seam of
a boot will work a wonderful change.
It the renovated footgear does not
look quite new it will at least give
one something to wear on a bad day,
and every one knows it ruins new
shoes to get them wet or even thor-
oughly damp. After the cobbler has
done his work new ribbons should be
put on pumps and new ribbon lacing
fn ties. Then every pair should be
properly “treed” and polished and cov-
ered from the chance of dust.
a a ee
When children’s dresses have to
be patched, be sure to match the
weave of the material, and if it be
striped or plaid goods, take great
care that the lines of the figure ex-
actly match.
Before applying the patch be sure
that the material of the patch matches
the dress in color. For example, co
hot patch a faded garment with a
piece of new material. If the dress
is faded, wet a bit of new material
and lay it in the sun until it, too, is
faded the same amount as the dress
itself; then it can be put on under.
neath the tear, the frayed edges cut
away and the edges of the tear sewed
down with invisible stitches, Damp-
en and press the patch on the wreng
side and it will be almost impose!be
to see where the garment has been
mended. -
Footwear Indorsed by Paris.
The white boot is an important fac-
tor of the Parisienne’s toilette this
season. It is seen with white costumes
having conspicuous white touches.
These white boots have very high tops
that fit the ankle exquisitely, so that
the foot looks exceedingly trim and
dainty. Most fashlonables in Paris
now wear fiesh-tinted or cream silk
stockings with the buttoned boct,
black stockings being worn with
black s'ppers and’ pumps in the eve-
ning. The colonial pump of gun metal,
with a curved, oblong buck!e, is a new
model which 1s liked for piazza and
sountry wear.
Keeping Cream Sweet,
If you have cream you want to keep
sweet a few days, add two or three
lumps of sugar, stirring it well, then
cover it and set it away tn the coldest
corner of the refrigerator.
Pa BNI EY SS fi TN A Sw IB IB)
.
t DAY OR NIGHT. PHONE MAIN 6243
+
: A. M. LAWHORN
+ \
; Undertakers 5
+ i
t A first-class Mortuary establishment. First aid to the bereaved in the
$ time of death of loved ones. Prices below competitors. Polite servce
t
+ LAWRENCE JONES, Licenced Embalmer
t LOUIS HUBBARD, Funeral Director
t
t PARLORS 1925 Arapahoe Street
Tb hho 4-4-o444-4-4-+4444444-44-44444-4-4444444444444444-444465
RADE 2, O10 2.5) 0 I ad Oa RAD AAA. IT LOI RT NM SID DEY IN CNS
- Are you a member of THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN ATHLETIC ASSOCIA. =
| TION? If not, why not? You can only give one reason, why not, to-wit: The sale of
; liquors. I will give thirteen reasons why you should be. 3
- 4 THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN is the only club (not religious) in the 4
: ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION United States where gambling 1s abso-
; lutely prohibited, 3
> 2 THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN gives physical training to its mem- 4
: PTHLETIC ASSOCIATION bers.
[ & THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN teaches its members to be gentlemen tn
: ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION deportment.
- 4 THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN prohibits 1dud, profane or obscene lan-
ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION guage.
| 8 THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN Wll'nOt sell quers to one, of Its mem-
: ATHLETIC ASSOCITTION ers Who at en® tle fs under the Intlus
: ence of, drink.
| @ THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN pays $255.00 per month in salaries to
: ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION men who ‘support families
- 7 THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN gives one Annual Outing and one Grand
: ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Dance cach year. 3
- S$ THE ROCKY MOUNTTIN has nice, clean, steam-heated rooms for 4
; ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Men only. 3
- 9 THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN patronizes the professional and business
ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Men of the Race. 3
| 10 THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN employs Negro mechanics and art!
ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION 5218,
/ 11 THE ROCKY MOUNTTIN acts as a clearing house for the unem-
: ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION ploved of the race, Ite endorsement being
Sufficient with ail the railways in an
5 Out of Denver, and all the commercial yt
houses employing Negroes,
- 12 THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN contributes more to charity than any or-
z ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION ganization in Denver except the churches,
"18 THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN Carries nothing but the highest grade of
: ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION the purest wines and liquors, and finest 4
; grade of domestic and clear Havana ci- 3
; ars that money can buy, 3
re pial pcktas RV UT ils oii era ay ari anaes eames gina aee
A. BRADSHAW
j Millinery
x FOR JUST ONE HALF
fe SBR iy WHAT YOU PAY ON
beget aaah SIXTEENTH STREET.
ee = re
B/E ES B
. ae ian te . tS WE OWN OUR BUILDING
H fl | Ez Bre B ‘WAND HAVE NO RENT TO
Pe nen SES PAY THIS ENABLES
i i 7 7 US TO SELL 10 PER
; Bm, er it Suma CENT. CHEAPER
fromthe orp stand 1443-1447 Stout St.
TWENTIETH AND CHAMPA.
Is the place to get your Drugs, Chemicals and Patent Medicines. We
serve Hot Drinks. Perfumes, box candies and box paper
or specialties. Get our prices before buying elsewhere.
JAMES E. THRALL, Prop.
PHONE MAIN 2425.
J. R. DRESSOR WALLACE cLow A. B. CLOW
—_———The——__—_ :
Colorado Wall Paper & Paint
—— Company —— ;
WALL PAPER, PAINTS, OILS
: AND GLASS
Interior and Exterior Decorators. We
Do House Painting. Coach Colors, Paints
and Varnishes. Agents for John W. a
Masury & Sons. TELEPHONE MAIN 871. ’
GRIESE Le Y REO
728 W. Colfax, foot of Welton St. Denver, Colo '
PHONE MAIN 6123—Day or Night
RESIDENCE PHONE YORK 1669,
PARLORS 1023 NINETEENTH STREET.
a THE DOUGLASS
cde) UNDERTAKING
ge COMPANY !
na S
J. R. CONTEE CURTIS M.
Pres. and Mgr. 9499 HARRIS, ;
R; E, Handy Bec est. Manager
af es by r and Funeral
Embal ae eealel W i
Frank Rogere SMR "rere
‘Assistant ED ee oe
Funeral Cp Ss, SONA is
Director. eh iby Pens iD AAS Lady Assistant |
POLITE SERVICE TO ALL.
Ambulance and Carriages Furnished for All Occasions |