Colorado Statesman
Saturday, May 3, 1913
Denver, Colorado
Page text (machine-generated)
OUR OFFICE PHONE MAIN 7417
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
THE JOURNAL OF THE WEST.
LABOR SHALL BE FREE
RACE COUNTRY PARTY
Mormons Mis- represented
Booker T. Washington Tells About His Visit to Salt Lake City Mormon Leaders explain in Detail About the Policy They Persue. Great Lesson For The Negro.
VOL. XIX.
Mormon
rep
Booker T. Washington Tells About
Mormon Leaders explain in Detai
sue. Great Lesson
Continued From Last Week I am convinced that the Mormons are not an immoral people. No immoral people could have such strong, fine bodies as these people have, nor such vigorous and alert minds as they have. It has been my privilege to address schools and colleges and universities in nearly every part of America, and I say without hesitation that I have never addressed a college anywhere where the students were more alert, more responsive, more intelligent than is true of the students in those Mormon colleagues. I was hardly prepared for the over generous and raptuous reception that was given me at the State University, the students of which for the most part are Mormons, and I had the same experience in addressing the private schools and other institutions conducted by Mormons.
I met, for example, one of the daughters of Joseph H. Smith, the successor to Brigham Young and now the head of the church. I was told that the other 48 children were just as healthy and strong and alert as she is. Just how many wives President Joseph H. Smith has or had I do not know. I am not going into the subject of plural wives, but I am simply stating facts and giving my impressions.
The Mormons have first-class schools of every character, and they are pushing the matter of technical and industrial education to a stronger degree than we are in the South among the colored people. In fact, time and time again I was told that they learned their methods for the most part from Hampton, Tuskegee and similar institutions. I was nearly taken off my feet when I went into a class in the university and the teacher showed me a large piece of pasteboard with the pictures of our students at Tuskegee at work in the various industrial departments. They said they were taking this as their model.
The Mormons have recently begun a systematic effort to give their young people training in gymnastics with a view of strenghting their bodies. Here again the colored people, especially in the schools of the South, can learn a great lesson. Everywhere in our colored schools we ought to have systematic and constant training in gymnastics.
There are about a thousand col-
ored people in Salt Lake City, and they are above the average in intelligence and in other respects. The colored women especially strike me as being exceptionally intelligent, more so I think than the men. They have here an Art and Music club which I had the privilege of addressing composed of very intelligent women. They have two good churches with very intelligent ministers. The main weakness in the life of the colored people in this city as in some others I have gone to, grows out of the fact that instead of having commercial organization to promote the business and industrial interests of the colored people they have a club house for which I am told they pay a rental of $150 a month, where the men are encouraged to drink and gamble. It seems that they cannot throw away their money fast enough, but in order to help it along they rent a house for $150 a month for the purpose of helping them to dispose with their money faster I have spoken to them plainly about this mistake, and I believe that a change for the better will take place. I met several colored men who have accumulated a responsible fortune and who are in good business enterprises.
I think it will interest my readers to know that there are colored Mormons in Utah. I met several of these. Many of them came here in the old days, in fact Brigham Young brought colored people with him to this country, and they or their descendants have remained.
Of course in the old days plural wives were not prohibited by law but I have made careful inquiry and could find no case where a colored man ever had more than one wife. It seems to have been the custom in the old days that a man could not take a second or third or fourth wife without the consent of his first wife, and I was told that no colored woman in Utah would ever give her consent for her husband to take a second wife.
I met one colored man who came out here in the early days who is now 82 years of age. He is a staunch Mormon, and neither the Baptist Church nor the Methodist church can get hold of him. He came here from Mississippi. He is a fine looking old fellow, a kind of Brigham Young. He has a farm worth $25,000, and lives in the midst of a Mormon colored colony
DENVER, COLORADO, SATURDAY, MAY 3 1913.
The Colorado Statesman's Position in This Election
The Colorado Statesman's Position in This Election
The candidates for the various offices for the Commission Form of Government having published their manifestoes, this paper urges the public to give its entire support to the men and women who will carry out the following principles:
That the candidates would come out and fearlessly express their views on the benefits to be derived from this new form; to what extent they will pledge themselves to subscribe their efforts to open the avenues of employment to the people of this city irrespective of creed, class, color or previous condition of servitude, so that a decent and respectable livelihood may obtain if they qualify for such positions; will they be honest, true and devoted to the oaths of their offices which would inspire them with that fairness to uphold righteous and square dealing with rich and poor alike, and placing the rigor of the law on those who justly deserve to be punished irrespective of position; and last, but not least, will they do all in their power to raise the moral tone of our city, so that in turn our citizens may be heralded as those who are ever striving for the uplift of humanity and the supporters of honorable men and women who will faithfully represent us, in making a fair and impartial distribution of taxation according to our respective financial status, where the poor shall not be overburdened and the rich escape their legitimate obligations.
These are some of the things we remind the people to demand from the political aspirants in this campaign, and this paper makes emphatic this statement to the people, that none but those who acquiesce to the foregoing statements and answer "I will to the best of my ability help to carry out these policies successfully," should be elected to handle the reins of our City and County government. This being one of the greatest campaigns in the history of Denver, let us evince the utmost interest in the same, and with a keen sense of our responsibility to provide for ourselves, arise with might and main and participate in a practical manner in this election, which is the only opportunity we will have in helping to dictate how we should be governed. Remember, Election, May 20th.
State Hist & Nat Hist Society
State House
The Colorado State Position
The candidates for the mission Form of Government manifestoes, this paper urges support to the men and women following principles:
That the candidates would express their views on the new form; to what extent they subscribe their efforts to open to the people of this city irreligious or previous condition of service respectable livelihood may be positions; will they be honest oaths of their offices which will fairness to uphold righteous and poor alike, and placing who justly deserve to be punished and last, but not least, will raise the moral tone of our country may be heralded as those who uplift of humanity and the sex and women who will faithful fair and impartial distribution respective financial status, who burdened and the rich escaped.
These are some of the ways to demand from the political and this paper makes emphatic ple, that none but those who statements and answer "I will help to carry out these policies elected to handle the reins of ment. This being one of the history of Denver, let us evin same, and with a keen sense vide for ourselves, arise with me in a practical manner in this opportunity we will have in should be governed. Remen
of which he is the leader. I am told that the Mormon church treats the colored people well. I will, in my next letter, discuss the Mormons further, and call attention to their creed, and so forth.
NOTES on NEGRO PROGRESS
Furlong Tract, a four block colored section of Los Angeles, Cal., has a property value of $375,-000. The personal property valuation is $75,000 making a total valuation of $450,000 worth of property owned by Negroes in this section of the city. The tract has four stores, two churches, a bakery and boasts of many colored ma-
The trustees of the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute have received $22,000 from the estate of the late Solomon Phillips of Uniontown, Pa. At a recent meeting of the Executive Committee it was decided to spend about $60,000 at Tuskegee this summer in improving the steam heating plant.
Saving Time.
It will always be a problem how much time in a year is saved by the man who is the first to get off the train as it runs into the terminal.—Philadelphia Ledger.
RACE NEWS
GATHERFD FROM VARIOUS SOURCES
Philadelphia, Pa., April 23. Commencing May 1, the Pennsylvania Railroad will put into effect rigid health rules in the dining car service and have notified all waiters, cooks, kitchen helpers and dishwashers, white and colored, that they will be obliged to undergo an examination every three months and that only one-hundred per cent. report on the physical test will insure them of remaining in the service.
Chicago, Ill., April 22.—The Negroes of Illinois scored their first victory against "Jim Crowism" in the State last week when succeeded in having the Campbell Bill killed in Senate Committee on Railroads. The Campbell Bill provides for the separation of races on railroad lines. The Negroes of Illinois made an aggressive fight against the passage of the Campbell Bill, and are as equally determined that all other unfriendly measures meet the same fate as the Campbell Bill.
Oklahoma City, Okla., April 21. In the regular session of the Legislature which recently adjourned, a bill was introduced, providing for a School for Incorrigible Negro Youth, carrying with it an appropriation of $35.000 for buildings and maintenance. The bill went before the proper committee and was returned with a recommendation that it be sent to the printer. Boley, Muskogee and Broonsville were candidates for the location of the school, but the bill died with the close of the Legislature.
JIM CROW SIGNS BARRED IN NEW YORK
JIM CROW SIGNS BARRED IN NEW YORK
Albany, N. Y., April 20.—Last Saturday Gov. Sulzer signed the Levy bill which amends the law relating to equal rights in places of public accommodation, resorts or amusement. Gov. Sulzer approved of the introduction of the bill before it was presented to the legislators consideration, and says, that it makes more stringent provisions against discrimination, on account of race, creed or color in places of public resort. The bill as amended provides that no person who is the owner, lessee or manager of a place of public accommodation, resort or amusement shall deny any person accommodations, or publish, circu
NO 35
late, display or post or mail any printed communication or advertisement to the effect that any of the accommodations or privileges of any such place shall be refused or denied to any person on account of race, creed or color, or that such persons are unwelcome. The production of such notice is presumptive evidence in any civil or criminal action that the notice was unauthorized.
A place of public accommodation, resort or amusement within he meaning of this article, the bill continues, shall be deemed to include any inn, tavern or hotel, whether conducted for the entertainment of transient guests or for the accommodation of those seeking health, recreation or rest, and any restaurant, eatinghouse, barbershop, theatre and music hall.
CLUB TO ARREST
RACE PREJUDICE
(Oakland Tribune)
The Northern California Branch of the National Association for the advancement of Colored People has been quietly organized in Oakland and San Francisco within the last month to prevent the development or accumulation of race prejudice in California, which is now one of the states that deals most fairly with the colored people.
The local officers include well known white people as well as prominent colored men and women and the organization is based on co-operation between the two races. There are ten thousand colored people about San Francisco Bay, of whom eight thousand live in Alameda county. There are sixty Negro business men in Oakland. The Oakland colored people pay taxes on one and a half million dollars' worth of property, and the San Francisco colored people on a half-million more.
The officers of the Northern California Branch are as follows: President, Probation Officer, Christopher Ruess; vice-president, Attorney Lawrence Sledge; secretary, Miss Eva B. Jones; treasurer, James A. Hackett; directors. Lawrence Sledge and Mrs. H. E. DeHart, expiring 1913; attorney, Cameron King and William N. Ricks, expiring 1914; and Miss Anita Whitney, president of the California Civic League and Mrs. Thomas M. Jackson, expiring 1915.
LATEST NEWS
EPITOMIZED
whata Dollar wip.
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OF Aes
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You Can Get
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| Or One Full Quart of Bottled in
Bond Rye or Bourbon Whiskey.
The Monarch Liquor Co.
PHONE CHAMPA 1231
1516 Court Place Denver, Colo.
FROM TELEGRAPHIC REPORTS
‘THAT COVER THE WEEK'S
EVENTS.
KEEPING THE READER POSTED
ON MOST IMPORTANT
CURRENT TOPICS.
‘Western Newspaper Union News Service.
WESTERN.
‘The California Senate has passed
the alien land law.
Some persons, supposed to be Hin
dos, entered the wild animal farm at
Los Angeles and so mutilated the
sacred bull that he died.
Utah members of the W. C. T. U. at
Ogden informed Secretary of State
William J. Bryan that his “diplomatic
dinner” was to their liking.
As prisoners of war, Gen, Pedr
Ojeda and twenty of his staff were
taken from a train at San Diego, Cal.
and rushed to Fort Rosecrans.
‘The immediate appointment of twc
women members of the police force
was decided upon by the Topeka,
Kan., city commission acting on sug
gestions from the woman's advisory
board, recently appointed by Mayor
Cofran.
A telephone message from Benning
ton, Neb., a town of 1,000 inhabitants,
twenty miles west of Omaha, stated
the entire town was in danger of de
struction by fire and two Omaha fire
companies were sent by a fast train
to that place.
Bogus bonds, deeds and stock rep:
resenting more than $2,000,000 were
seized in a raid on a rooming hous:
made by Chicago avenue detectives
They were found in apartments occu
pied by C. M. McNaughton, who, the
police assert, is a man of many aliase’
and allege he is the leader of a gans
which has swindled brokers and the
public out of $50,000 within two years
Your back yard will help pay your rent if you plant
BARTELDES’
“WESTERN SEEDS FOR WESTERN PLANTERS”
THE BARTELDES SEED CO.
1521-1525 Fifteenth St. eI Denver, Colorado
The Largest Poultry SURDIy) House in the West
CONGRESSIONAL.
The Senate passed urgent deiictency
bill as passed by the House.
Representative Sisson delivered a
“war speech” supporting proposed
California anti-alien land law.
‘The Senate confirmed a large num-
ber of postmasters and that of H, S,
| Breckenridge to be assistant secretary
of war.
Committee on education and labor
agred to favorably report nomination
of Charles P. Neill as commissioner
of labor statistics.
Senator Dupont’s resolution to re-
veal number and employment of all
retired army officers agred to by mili-
tary affairs committee.
Representative Lindbergh _ intro-
duced a resolution to bar members of
the House interested in banks from
serving on banking and currency com-
mittee during preparation of currency
legislation.
With only Senator Brandegee of
Connecticut dissenting, the Senate
committee on inter-oceanie canals
voted to postpone until the December
session of Congress any discussion of
Panama canal tolls.
Letters from 587 bank presidents
and cashiers throughout the country
protesting against washed money anc
proclaiming it “the counterfeiters’ de
light” were offered for printing as
public document by Senator Martine
Objection from Senator Smoot pre
vented the printing.
{Fen 1939 BROADWAY F
‘ey GRAVEL ROOFING
hs ; AND CEMENT WORK
SPY Sas
faa Cement Ash Pits, $5 Up
(A i?’ Repairing Promptly Done
( ) Tin Roofs Painted
SS wy All Work Guaranteed Give Us a Trial
i ed Phone Main 1062
W. F. Davi
- ff. Davis
(12 Years Chief Plumbing Inspector for City and County of Denver)
Plumbing, Heating and Ventilation
Examination and Tests for Sewer Gases On All Old
defective buildiugs
w ww EstimatesGiven % o&
812 BROADWAY PHONE SOUTH 855 DENVER, COLO
| TT
WASHINGTON,
Former Senator William EB. Chand-
Jer of New Hampshire has nominated
Senator La Follette of Wisconsin as
the logical candidate of the Republi-
can party for President in 1916, ,
“We people of the West need a re-
adjustment of transportation rates
and conditions more than we need a
redajustment of tariff,” declared Con-
gressman Kindel in his first address
in the House of Representatives, Kin-
Gel declared that he favored the Un-
derwood bill as the most honest tariff
measure that has been presented to
Congress in sixteen years.
Among the nominations sant to the
Senate by President Wilson were:
Secretary of legation at Copenhagen,
Alexander R. Magruder of Maryland;
assistant attorney general, Samuel J.
Graham of Pittsburgh, Pa.; commis-
sioner of labor statistics, Charles P.
Neill, Washington, D. C.; auditor of
the state and other departments Ed-
ward D. Hearne, Delaware; auditor of
the Navy Department, Edward Luck-
now of Wisconsin.
Anticipating that Congress will en-
act a free meat clause, Representative
Mondell of Wyoming has introduced a
bil requiring that all importations of
meat under the law be made subject
to the meat inspection act of 1906,
Mrs. Josiah Quincy Kern, author,
newspaper woman and lawyer, has
been admitted to the bar of the Su:
preme Court of the United States. Mrs.
Kern is the wife of Judge Josiah
Quincey Kern and is a 1907 graduate ol
Mussey’s college.
BROWER & SCHUCK
REAL ESTATE FARM LANDS
311 Cooper Building Telephone Champa 1962
DENVER, COLORADO Residence Phone Main 7345
HENRY BECK JOHN ENGSTROM
Beck @ Engstrom
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
Wines, Liquors and
Cigars.
Western Agents for Minneapolis Grain Belt Beer and Carnegie Porter, Pripps
Imported Beer and Bock Ol.
1644-46-48-50 Larimer Street ~
Phone Main 1053 Denver, Colorado
FOREIGN.
An earthquake shock was felt at
Ottawa, Ont. Houses were badly shak-
en, but no one was killed or injured,
according to reports,
A break between General Huerta
and Felix Diaz is considered inevit-
able by the American and Mexican
passengers who have arrived at El
Paso from Mexico City.
The deficit in the French budget
for 1913 will amount to $40,000,000
while in 1914, in order to meet the ad-
ditions to the national armaments, it
will be necessary for the government
to borrow $20,000,000.
Austrian troops have crossed the
border into Montenegro, according to
unconfirmed reports received at Lon-
don and Austria has begun ah inde
pendent action, regardless of the other
Buropean powers, to force Montenegro
to evacuate Scutari.
It is reported that the vatican phy-
sicians are using electricity to com-
bat the continued weakness in the
pope's limbs. In spite of this and oth-
er treatments, however, his holiness
spent another poor night getting very
little ifany sleep and awakening with
a slight fever.
The British government, according
to announcement made by Premier
Asquith, will provide an annuity of
3500 for the widow of Captain Robert
F. Scott, head of the British Antarctic
expedition, who perished while return-
ing from the South pole, in addition to
her admiralty pension of $1,000.
‘Townspeople of Santa Rosalia, some
800 men, women and children, are
walking nearly 109 miles to Chihuahua
City to escape the results of their
town’s capture by constitutionalists,
So completely destroyed was the Mex-
ican Central railroad that the rest-
dents of the town, unable to secure
vehicles, were forced to walk along
the railway to seek shelter at the stata
capital,
SPORT.
Standing of Western League Clubs.
Won Lost Pet.
Denver ..sscsseesesens 9 1-900
Lancolniiascseysecsesens Bs Be B00
Bee JOueph. tosesscseis 7 #1700
Omaha... IIIT 6B iB00
Bloux Clty ve...teeerrss § 5 600
Des Moines’ 0. 00..6062 8 7 “300
MapekpMeseccenvinssers Bune se 200
Withitaec sk. take a ee 00:
A flight of more than 1,000 miles
by aeroplane was completed at Kol-
jum, Holland, by the French aviator,
Ernest Francois Guillaux.
Jack Dillon of Indianapolis easily
had the better of Bob Moha of Mil-
waukee in their no-decision ten-round
boxing contest before the South Side
A. C. at Milwaukee.
Lieutenant Rodger Harrison of the
Royal Flying Corps, was instantly
killed at Farnsborough, Eng., when 4
military biplane which he was driy-
ing turned turtle and fell from a height
of 400 feet.
There are 2,490 certificated avia-
tors in the world, according to the an-
nual bulletin of the International Aero-
nautical association. Of these the
United States possesses 193; France,
9€8; Great Britain, 376; Germany, 335;
Italy, 189; Russia, 162; Austria, 84;
Belgium, 68; Switzerland, 27; Holland,
26; Argentine, 15; Spain, 16; Sweden,
10; Denmark, 8; Hungary, 7; Norway,
5, and Egypt, 1.
Mary Louise, E, A. Colburn’s won-
derful little trotter, has been entered
pretty extensively for grand circuit
races this summer. At the Denver city
park matinees and in races at Over
land park she has proved her right to
race against the best trotters. She
has been entered at the Detroit Blue
Ribbon races, and the list of entrants
for the Charter Oak $10,000 stake at
Hartford contains her name.
GENERAL,
The board of directors of the Asso-
ciated Press at a meeting in New York
re-elected all officers.
Gail Borden returned to New York
from Boston with his daughter, Romo:
na, according to friends.
‘A letter from Cardinal Gibbons op-
posing woman suffrage was read at a
mass meeting at Baltimore under the
auspices of the Maryland association
opposed to woman suffrage,
John N. Anhut, one-time counsel to
Harry K. Thaw, will be tried May 12
on an indictment charging him with
bribery in connection with an attempt
to liberate Thaw from Matteawan
asylum,
Brigadier General Henry Clay Coch:
rane, U. S. Marine corps, retired, died
at his home in Chester, Pa, He was
seventy years old. President Carnot
of France decorated him with the
cross of the Legion of Honor in 1899.
Financial interests in New York
haye learned that negotiations are in
progress by which the Republic of Mex.
Ico plans to cede to the United States
Lower California and all that portion
of Mexico lying north of the twenty:
sixth parallel of north iatitude and be
tween the ninety-e'ghth and 116th
meridians of wort iongitude, in consid
eration of $30,000,000.
‘A baby fully developed and weigh
Ing only seven and one-quarter ounces,
was born to Mr. and Mrs. H. Russel
of Matoon, Ill. This child is sald by
physicians to be the smallest fully de
veloped child that ever lived after
birth.
Less than six hours after Judge Gor
ter had granted her an absolute di
yorce from Frank Leh of Boston, Mrs
Jessie Leh was married to George R
Epsey while the latter was sick in bec
suffering from an attack of appendi
citis,
MEASURE OBNOXIOUS TO JAPAN PASSED UNANIMOUSLY BY CALI
FORNIA STATE SENATE IMMEDIATELY AFTER SECRETARY
OF STATE BRYAN LEAVES.
Principal Features of New Bill. | sideration. The members of the gov-
All aliens eligible to citizenship may
acquire and hold land In the same man-
Reta citizens of the United States
"All other, allens may" equire. and
hold land. “in' the manner and. to, the
extent and for the purposes prescribed
Bytny treaty ‘now existing between
tke “government "of the "United ‘States
and ‘the nation or country of which
Such ‘alien is A citizen or pubsect™
‘Corporations composed of aliens oth-
er than those who are eligible to elt:
Senship may acquire and hold land only
According Yo the terms of the existing
Present holdings of aliens, regardless
of thelr rights of citizenship, are pro-
fected.
The" state specifically reserves its
sovereign rights to enact any and il
Inws relating to the acquisition or
Holding’ of real ‘property by aliens.
Sacramento, Calif, April 30.—If the
purpose of the visit of Secretary of
State Bryan was to check further ac-
tion by the Legislature on an alien
land law directed against the Japan-
ese, his mission has becn a failure.
‘The conferences between Secretary
Bryan and the legislators closed at
11:80 o'clock last night,
Within three minutes, and before
most of the spectators knew what
had occurred, Senator A. E. Boyn-
ton, president pro tem of the up-
per house, convened the Senate, and
an amended land bill which provides
that no alien who is ‘neligible to citi-
zenship under the laws of the United
States may hold real property in Cali-
fornia, was adopted as a substitute
for the pending measure, by unani-
mous viva voce vote.
In reply to a question as to whether
the substitute bill, drawn by Attorney
LS >
Na =
Ea ey
WILLIAM J. BRYAN
General Webb, which was acted on by
the Senate later, would be acceptable,
Secretary Bryan said:
“I have telegraphed to President
Wilson and he deems it inadvisable to
sanction any particular statutes or
forms of legislation. He thinks that
{t should be made emphatically evi-
dent that we are acting just now as
the federal government, sanctioning
not this or that, but as friends of Cali-
fornia wishing to be of such service
as is possible to California in a criti-
cal matter?”
Governor Johnson prepared a state-
ment, in which he expressed the views
of the majority party:
“The conferences between the sec-
retary of* state and tho Legislature
were concluded tonight,” it says.
“We are delighted with Mr. Bryan's
speech, and all that he said was given
the most attentive and respectful con-
Newest Explosive 10 Times Dynamite.
Paris.—Prof. Arsene d’Arsonval of
the College of France has discovered
a new explosive, said to be ten times
‘more powerful than dynamite. The
explosive isa combination of lamp-
black and Hquefied gas. Experiments
in quarries near Paris have given re-
markable results.
Amundsen Will Sail Through Canal.
‘Washington.—Roald Amundsen, Are-
tic explorer, has written to Secretary
Garrison, expressing his purpose to
avail himself of the privilege of pass:
ing through the Panama canal this
fall with the Fram, the vessel in
which he is to make his latest Arctic
trip.
Electricity Used on Pope’s Limbs.
Rome.—It is reported that the vati-
can physicians are using electricity to
combat the continued weakness in the
pope's limbs. In spite of this and oth-
er treatments, however, his holiness
spent another poor night getting very
little if any sleep and awakening with
a slight fever.
Austria Sends Troops to Montenegro.
London. — Austrian troops have
crossed the border into Montenegro,
according to unconfirmed reports re-
ceived here and Austria has begun an
independent action, regardless of the
other Buropean powers, to force Mon-
tenegro to evacuate Scutari.
Montrose Man Appointed.
‘Washington. —The Senste confirmed
the appointment of Samuel L. Berry
to be receiver of the land office at
Montrose, Colorado.
sideration. The members of the gov-
ernment of California with unanimity
expressed themselves as desiring to
aid the national government and in no
wise to embarrass it, The spirit per-
vading the meetings was one of friend-
ly co-operation and full of patriotic
purpose. After it all, though, I think
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Governor of California.
the majority of the legislators felt, and
I certainly do myself, that no sutffi-
cient reason has thus far been pre-
sented that should cause California to
halt in any contemplated legislation.”
Washington, May 1.—Practically all
of Tuesday was devoted by President
Wilson to consideration of the situa-
tion arising from California’s project-
ed anttalien land law.
‘The President was in frequent tele-
graphic communication with Secretary
Bryan at Sacramento, Cal., and laid
the entire subject before the Cabinet
at a twohour meeting. He also con-
ferred at different times with John
Bagsett Moore, acting secretary of
state, who in turn was visited by Vis-
count Chinda, the Japanese ambassa-
dor.
No telegrams from or to Secretary
Bryan were made public at the White
House. Mr. Moore declined to discuss
the negotiations and reticence was
maintained at the White House. That
the President was somewhat worried
about the outcome of the situation is
shown by the fact that he sent several
secret messages in government code
to Bryan during the day.
Juneau, Alaska—The House anti-
alien fishing bill passed the territorial
Senate by a unanimous vote and is
now in the hands of the governor. A
message was sent to Governor John-
son of California, informing him of the
Alaska Legislature's action.
UNCLE TOM, 95 YEARS OLD.
Has Fifty Children and Sixty Great-
: Grandchildren,
Walnut, Ark.—In Thomas Ellison,
better known as “Uncle Tom,” who re-
sides in Newton county, it is believed
the real champion of the pregenera-
tion principles of Theodore Roosevelt
has been found. “Uncle Tom” is 95
years old. The birth of a son to one
of his granddaughters caused a recast-
ing of Hllison's record. Here it is:
Married three times.
Father of 50 children.
Grandfather of 126 children.
Great-grandfather of 60 children.
Great-great-grandfather of 27 chil-
dren.
His youngest child is 11 years old;
the oldest, 65, Ellison was born in
Clinton county, Ohio,
MAY BUY SLICE OF MEXICO.
250,000 Square Miles of Territory In-
volved in Proposed $30,000,000
Purchase,
New York.—Financial interests in
New York have learned that negotia-
tions are in progress by which the Re-
public of Mexico plans to cede to the
United States Lower California and*all
that portion of Mexico lying north of
the twenty-sixth parallel of north lati-
tude and between the ninety-eighth
and 116th meridians of west longitude,
in consideration of $30,000,000.
Fully Formed Baby Welghs 7 Ounces,
Matoon, Ill.—A baby fully developed
and weighing only seven and one-
quarter ounces, was born to Mr. and
Mrs. H. Russell. This child is said by
physicians to be the smallest fully de-
veloped child that ever lived after
birth.
Amendments Now in Order.
‘Washington, — The tariff revision
bill advanced another stage in the
House, when the reading of the meas-
ure, paragraph by paragraph begun.
TRYING TO RESTORE MIND.
Man Who Lost Identity in Denver
as Recoanizes Father.
Grand Rapids, Mich.—Frederick A,
Gorham, Jr., the Payette, Idaho, man,
who asked the Denver police to identi-
fy him, has reached his father’s home
in this city. He recognized his father,
‘but his mind is still somewhat cloudy.
It has not yet been decided definitely
regarding the treatment that will ve
administered in efforts to restore the
young man’s mind.
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Western Newspaper Union News Service.
Dates for Coming Events.
June 10-12.-State P. E. O. Society at Manitou.
June 17-19.-National Press Association Meeting at Colorado Springs.
June 22-23.-German Tornfest at Denver.
June—Northern Colo. Sunday School
July—At Green State
July—State Postal Services' Association
At Manitou.
July—Mississippi Jurisdiction, W. O.
W. at Colorado Springs.
Aug. 12-15.—Thirty-second Triennial
Conclave of Knights Templar, Deny-
sary
Aug. 18-20—American Association of Park Superintendents, at Denver.
Aug. 18-20—Army of the Philippines National Society, at Denver.
Aug.—Grand Council of Order of Red Men, at Denver.
Aug. 25.—Conference of Governors at Colorado Springs.
Aug. 26—Kingia of Pythias Grand Lodge Meeting at Trinidad.
Sept.-National Association of First-class Postmasters, at Denver.
Oct. 21—Colorado State Baptist Association at Pueblo.
Pueblo police arrested Joe Bernstein, charging him with using his taxicab as a speak-easy.
Two people were injured near Boulder when an automobile driven by Frank Heinzelman ran into a ditch.
The annual debate between Longmont and Loveland high schools resulted in a decision for Longmont.
John H. Cameron, sixty-five, first general superintendent of the Colorado Fuel and Iron Company, died at Pueblo.
Miss Lizzie Campbell, sixteen, was drowned in the north fork of the Gunison river east of Bowie, a coal camp five miles above Paonia.
At Grand Junction the congregation of the First Methodist church passed resolutions commending Secretary Bryan's grape-juice dinner.
The engagement of Miss Margaret Baldwin Allison, Colorado, and J. Rush Stoner, professor of psychology at Harvard, has been announced.
Abraham Jacobs, seventy-nine, a resident of Denver more than fifty years and one of the city's first merchants, died at his home, 1646 Clarkson street.
Thomas J. Chandler, eighty-two years old, builder of the first big blocks in Denver, died at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Albert Hatfield, in Semper, Colo.
Freeman Belcher, pioneer of 1859, one of the first settlers in the St. Vrain valley, died at the home of Mrs. Ernest Greeneley, a step-daughter, at Longmont.
Harold Stewart, fifteen, son of Mrs. Zulu Stewart, of Windsor, had both legs broken above the knees when he was thrown from a wagon against a fence post.
Dorato Gonzales, Jose Clay and Tomi Rico have been arrested charged with complicity in the murder of Mrs. Mira Sisneros Romero, shot in her home in Tercio.
Charles Erlenberg of Denver was killed at Trinidad when he fell between the cars of a Santa Fé coal train in motion and his body was completely revered.
Another of the small band of men who founded Denver in '58 is dead, Alfred Miles, ninety-three years old, died at the home of his granddaughter. Mrs. W. E. Bell.
Three Grand Junction boys have been arrested on the complaint of Robert McKnight, a Montrose sheepman, who says they stole his sheep and sheared them. Twenty employees of the state land board are in a state of fright and apprehension on account of the announcement that there will be a reduction in the force. It is stated that the Policemen's Protective Association of Denver will bring suit against Sheriff Daniel Sullivan for slander, demanding a money settlement of $10,000 and a body judgment. Colorado Springs hotel and restaurant men are preparing to test the constitutionality of the Sunday observance law which requires employers to give their employés one day off in seven.
Governor Ammons has appointed Austin W. Hogle of Denver a member of the board of trustees of the soldiers and sailors' home at Monte Vista to take the place of Henry F. Lake of Gunnison, who has resigned.
A three-months-old baby was instantly killed and a man is lying in a serious condition with a crushed arm and leg and it is feared internal injuries as the result of an accident which took place at the ranch of C. E. Shoop at Arvada.
The Denver police have been requested to locate relatives of Lillian Gardner, seventeen, who was stolen from her parents nearly twelve years ago by a band of gypsies. The request was made in a letter received by Deputy Chief John J. Leyden from Mrs. Benjamin Blain, of Adrian, Mich.
Scores of the prettiest girls in Greeley participated in the joint celebration of "Insignia Day and May Day" at the State Teachers' college. There are 200 cases on the docket of the United States District Court and three federal judges will sit on the bench of the Denver district this summer to dispose of them. Patrick H. Mullen, member of the Denver city board of supervisors and millionaire flour mill man, is at the point of death from a stroke of apoplexy which he suffered at his home.
DEBTS WILL BE PAID J.L.BRUSH DIES AT HOME
GOVERNOR AMMONS SIGNS LONG APPROPRIATION BILL.
Number of Salaries Reduced and $40,000 for Coal Mine Inspection Department Disapproved.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
Denver. — "Any indebtedness incurred by the state during this administration will be paid," said Governor Ammons after he had affixed his signature to the long appropriation bill.
The bill as passed by the Nineteenth General Assembly carried with it an appropriation of $1,840,000. By the process of trimming and elimination the net appropriation now is $1,700,000.
If the salary slash bill introduced in the assembly had passed, says the governor—and he was in favor of it—the saving to the state would have been at least $100,000 for the biennial period. The second class apropriations call for the expenditure of $1,200,000 and
M.
GOV. E. M. AMMONS.
the third class $540,000, but these have not yet been passed upon by the governor.
"But I have made up my mind as to certain items in the second and third classes," he says, "and it won't take long to dispose of them."
Officials and employés of the state looked for a wholesale cut by the governor in the long appropriation bill. But the majority of salaries are provided for by statute and therefore the chief executive had no authority to use the ax to any great extent.
The governor approves the long appropriation bill, with the following exceptions:
Payment of salaries of the board of land commissioners, $18,000. (These salaries must be paid out of the fees of the office.)
The dairy commissioner is cut out and department transferred to the state agricultural college.
Salary of the state chemist cut from $2,000 per year to $1,000.
Appropriation of $40,000 for the coal mine inspection department disapproved and the inspector and his deputies will be paid out of the special fund if such is available.
The inheritance tax clerk who has been receiving a salary of $1,800 per year is chopped down to $1,200 per year.
Pride Caused Death of Miss Conger.
Colorado Springs.—To her pride in refusing to ask funds of relatives was ascribed the cause of the death of Miss Lana Conger, twenty-four, of Des Moines, Ia., who died at a local hotel, by a sister, Mrs. C. B. Hutchins of Lamar, Colo. The direct cause of death was due to hemorrhages, but physicians express the belief that this illness was aggravated by the altitude, which affected the heart action and produced almost instant death when the convulsions came on. Only $3.00 was found among Miss Conger's effects.
Millionaire's Son in Jail.
Grand Junction.—J. Kear Owen, twenty-seven, who claims his father is Benjamin Owen, a millionaire shoe and shoe polish manufacturer of Boston was arrested here charged with an $18 check forgery.
Miniature Cyclone Hits Pueblo.
Pueblo.—Damage to the amount of $1,000 was done by a miniature cyclone which struck a portion of the Dundee residence district.
I. W. W. Hunger Strike Broken.
Colorado Springs.—Early morning found seven of the fourteen members of the I. W. W., who had been kept on a bread-and-water diet at the city jail four days for refusing to work on the rockpile, ready to swing the hammer for the regulation prison fare. They were accordingly given a hot breakfast of meat, biscuits and coffee, and were later taken to the rockpile to work out their thirty day's sentence for vagrancy.
FORMER LIEUTENAN GOVERNOR
SUCUMBS TO PNEUMONIA.
Well Known '59er Was Closely Identified With the History of Northern Colorado.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
Greeley, Colo., J. L. Brush, former lieutenant governor of Colorado, died at his home here after an illness of nearly two weeks. The contributing causes were blood poisoning and pneumonia. Blood poisoning developed from a scratch on his hand while he was working in his garden two weeks ago and the pneumonia was contracted about a week later. Governor Brush was seventy-seven.
Members of the family who were summoned several days ago were at his bedside when the end came. The last of the relatives reached the city barely in time to be recognized by the dying pioneer, who lapsed into unconsciousness for several hours preceding the end, which came quietly as though the patient were sleeping.
The funeral was held from the family home and was attended by people from all parts of the state.
Governor Brush was closely identified with the history of northern Colorado, where he lived the greater part of the time since crossing the plains with an ox team in 1859. He began his life in the West by mining in Russell gulch. Later he freighted across the plains and gradually drifted into cattle raising and farming. The town of Brush, in Weld county, is named after him.
Two sons, two daughters and a stepdaughter survive. They are Jared LJ Jr of Greeley, Walter, sheriff of Logan county; Miss Ada Brush and Miss Margaret Doolittle, a stepdaughter of California, and Mrs. C. E. Lester of Estes Park.
Explosion Kills Two, Injures One.
Cripple Creek.—A powerful explosive claimed as a toll the lives of Mrs. Ida Bacon and her daughter, five, and may also cause the death of James L. Bacon, former state representative from Teller and El Paso counties. The explosion which broke Mrs. Bacon's neck and killed the little girl instantly occurred just as Mrs. Bacon was preparing to get breakfast. The police and sheriff are investigating and an officer is continually sitting beside the bed of Mr. Bacon, awaiting for him to regain consciousness in hopes that he may say something which will throw some light on the disaster. Mrs. Bacon had a premonition that the members of her family would be blown up. While attending the funeral of a former friend, Mrs. Anna McLeod, she told another friend, Mrs. Caldwell, that the next funeral would be her own and that her death would be caused by an explosion. She complained that she had been unable to sleep for more than a week so fearful was she that she, her husband and baby would be annihilated.
"Murder," Says Teller County Sheriff. Cripple Creek.—"It was not an accident. High explosives were placed in either the firebox or oven of the stove and were put there by some party or parties with murderous intent." This was the statement made by Sheriff Henry Von Phil in referring to the explosion which caused the death of Mrs. Ida Bacon and her six-year-old daughter, Josephine, badly injuring James Bacon, representative from Teller county in the Eighteenth General Assembly, and wrecked the Bacon home at 309 West May avenue.
Soot Frustrates Dynamite Outrage.
Cripple Creek.—A dynamite bomb was thrown down the chimney in the home of Mrs. Nora Barnum at midnight and had not the explosive fallen into some soot in the pipe, probably another catastrophe would be added to that of the destruction in the James L. Bacon home, three blocks distant, in which Mrs. Bacon and her daughter were killed and Mr. Bacon perhaps fatally injured.
Lincoln's Niece Is Dead.
Idaho Springs.—Mrs. M. A. Collvert, a niece of Abraham Lincoln died at the home of her grandson Irving Coe, in this city, aged ninety. Mrs. Collvert was the daughter of Thomas Hanks, whose sister, Nancy Hanks, was the wife of Lincoln.
D. & R. G. Fireman Is Killed.
Grand Junction. — Gilbert Gregg, twenty-six, a Denver & Rio Grande fireman, was killed near Helper, Utah when he was struck on the head by a bridge support as he leaned from the engine cab window.
Christian Endeavor State Convention.
Longmont.—The Christian Endeavor state convention will be held in Longmont June 26 to 29.
State Health Board Names Officers. Denver. — An anticipated contest over the election of officers of the board caused the state board of health to retire into executive session after the general business of the evening had been transacted, but the "war scare" was baseless and the Denver ticket went through without a struggle, the old officers being re-elected, as follows: President, Dr. Sherman Williams; vice president, Dr. Jacob Campbell; secretary, Dr. Paull S. Hunter; treasurer, Dr. Crum Epler.
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SCHOOL COMMENCEMENTS.
the closing days of public, private will be held. In most of the cities, the closing is earlier than elapse on the stage of actual life will the world thought and world busing when an uneducated man even the half-educated must step schools of the land are doing a fro-Americans are keeping step
From now on the closing days of public, private and denominational schools and colleges will be held. In most of the Southern states where warmer weather obtains, the closing is earlier than elsewhere. The army of graduates going forth upon the stage of actual life will make the competition more interesting and the world thought and world business more keen. The time is fast approaching when an uneducated man can find no place of service or trust, and even the half-educated must step back and give place to the graduate. The schools of the land are doing a mighty work for young Americans, and the Afro-Americans are keeping step with the pace.
BACK TO NATURE
not take naturally to mechanize such his teachers and advisers masters. He is more naturally an agrarian, carefully knew of any other peas and herders. They were merely, but, it may be judged, they are of reasonable reliance. Nother. The principal uses of the institutes along natural lines, while of the mechanical trade access, the instructions the Negro slave or perhaps there is no other class of better natural idea of the uses of. He is not up in the modern social cause, of late years, his condition, improvements, but he has all of him a successful farmer when he ideas of the concentration of natural resources. The tilling of a population of all civilized races, and all the higher vocations and all. The effort of a people to get over this first, underlying purpose it is superficial and without students, servants and gypsy-like or present-day tendencies of Negroided throngs of unskilled labor in the development of the race. And the rural districts, whether in the South or upon mountain settlement upon the new pressing. Every Negro who leaves productive tract of land in the hit his race more than any hungaste and servility of city life. The Negroes' greatest mark in the
THE Negro does not take naturally to mechanism, the allied arts and sciences, however much his teachers and advisers may wish to see him develop along those lines. He is more naturally an agriculturist. As a native child of nature, he scarcely knew of any other peaceful occupations than those of crop raisers and herders. They were merely the necessary means of tribal maintenance, but, it may be judged, they were developed, in a crude way, to a point of reasonable reliance. Nothing more was required of tribal barbarians. The principal uses of the institution of slavery tended to develop their capabilities along natural lines, while the elementary knowledge that they gained of the mechanical trade accessories was merely incidental. Under meagre instructions the Negro slave easily became a trained agriculturalist, and perhaps there is no other class of people in the country today which has a better natural idea of the uses of the soil and the diversification of crops. He is not up in the modern scientific development of agricultural ideas because, of late years, his conditions have not kept him in touch with timely improvements, but he has all the fundamental knowledge required to make him a successful farmer when he shall have acquired the necessary modern ideas of the concentration of effort and the steady improvement of his natural resources. The tilling of the soil is the first and fundamental occupation of all civilized races, and out of its development and perfection grow all the higher vocations and all the extended branches of social development. The effort of a people to get up in the world while slighting and skipping over this first, underlying process, must always be doomed to failure, because it is superficial and without sound foundation. It is sure to make dependents, servants and gypsy-like wanderers of those who employ it. The great present-day tendencies of Negroes to flock to the cities and swell the unbridled throngs of unskilled laborers and servile classes seriously threatens the development of the race. A movement which will turn the Negro back to the rural districts, whether it be based upon schemes for industrial development in the South or upon more daring ventures at colonization or independent settlement upon the new soil of the West, should prove an unlimited blessing. Every Negro who leaves the city and establishes himself upon a productive tract of land in the rural districts, and sticks to it, will benefit his race more than any hundred Negroes who cling to the glamour and waste and servility of city life. "Back to nature" is the slogan with which the Negroes' greatest mark in the modern world must be made.
(Advertisement.)
S C. GREE
Candidate for
LEWIS C. GREENLEE Candidate for Commissioner of Finance
Identified with Denver's business progression for twenty-five years.
Active experience in civic affairs gives him the equivalent of civil service requirements as to experience, knowledge and ability.
Was Treasurer of City and County of Denver from 1908 to 1912. Was Superintendent of Denver's School Districts for nineteen years. Is now VicePresident of the Interstate Trust and Finance Company and financial confidant of many of Denver's business men.
Assures a conservation and progressive administration, devoid of political prejudice and party entanglement.
KNIGHT GIVEN SUPPORT FOR SCHOOL DIRECTOR.
Mr. Knight Is One of Largest Taxpayers of City and Has Fine Official Record.
Stephan Knight has been a resident of Denver for the past 42 years. He has been connected with the Colorado Milling & Elevator Company for 30 years and rose to the position of general manager from a clerkship on his own merits. He is also president of the Campbell-Sells Baking Company and the Macklem Baking Company, two of the largest concerns of their kind in the state. Each establishment is an employer of a large number of men.
Was Graduated from Schools of City. Prior to the consolidation of the school districts under the twentieth amendment Mr. Knight was director of School District No. 2 for eight years. That district comprised all of West Denver. For the past five years he has been a member of the consolidated school board and is now its president. Mr. Knight is not only a pioneer, but he was married to the daughter of one of the oldest pioneers in the state, C. R. Davis. His two sons were graduated from the Denver graded schools, from a Denver high school of this city and from the State university at Boulder. Both are now in charge of the two baking establishments of which he is president.
Stephan Knight is one of the heaviest taxpayers in the city and, while he does not believe that Denver's public schools should be stinted in the matter of financial support, he believes, he says, in a policy that will protect the taxpayers against extravagance in expenditures. "I believe in getting the best results for the money we spend," said Mr. Knight. "At the same time I do not believe in a penurious policy that will militate against the high standard that has been established in our public schools. All semblance of graft must be eliminated and the business end of public school administration must be conducted along sane and conservative business lines for the protection of those who support the public schools."
Hundreds of Taxpayers Will Support Knight. With 13 years' active experience as a school director, with an established record of success as a business man and with an intimate knowledge of the needs of the public schools, Mr Knight, it was learned, has been pledged the support of hundreds of taxpayers, among whom are many leading business men.
(Advertisement.) JOHN ALLISON.
Candidate for Commissioner of Property.
Asks your vote for this office if you cannot give me a first choice vote then give a second or third, the safest way to vote however, is to make but one cross after my name. In voting for the different choices you are splitting your vote and really only giving me one third of a vote.
You will find my name to be the
[Image of a man with a mustache and a suit].
JOHN ALLISON first under the heading, commissioner of property on the ballot.
I Am Not a Reformer.
If I am elected I expect to assist the council, (which will be composed of the commissioners of the various departments) to run the city in a conservative, business way. I believe in equal rights regardless of party, nationality or religion.
Let us Have Peace.
Mud-slinging, factional fights, and petty quarrels among the city officials must stop. It hurts the name of our beautiful city, not only at home but also abroad. At present investors are afraid to come to Denver and we need all of them we can get here.
Business Not Politics. Should run this
Lack of space forbids printing my policies here, but in ample time before election I will have them printed and distributed throughout the city and if you agree with me I will ask your support to the extent of one vote. Twenty years continuous resident of the city, business man and taxpayer (with exception of two years' service in U. S. Army in Cuba and Porto Rico during Spanish-American war. Business address 1762 Curtis st. and 1011 15th street.
NOTICES TO BE PAID FOR.
Owing to the increased cost of publication, it becomes necessary to make a nominal charge of 50 cents, payable in advance, for all cards of thanks, notices of condolence and resolutions. The price of room rent ads and other liners that run on a monthly rate of 50 cents must be paid in advance, as we are unable to carry them at so small a rate and pay a collector's commission. No items of this nature accepted without a cash payment.
KATHERINE KILKER McGOVERN.
Candidate for Commissioner of Social Welfare.
In these days when women are actively entering the business world, there is much fear abroad that the home may suffer by the exchange. The demands of home life and of the civic needs are each so incessant that there is imminent danger of sacrificing one to the other. Among those women who have met his problem and have been able to "make good" both as a home maker and as an efficient factor in public life is Mrs. Katherine Kilker McGovern, wife of the well-known undertaker, E. P. McGovern.
M. H.
MRS. KATHERINE KILKER McGOVERN While Mrs. McGovern, who is a candidate for the office of commissioner of social welfare, has reared a family of six children and seen them graduated from the best colleges of the state, she has given as freely of her personality to the affairs of the "outside world." During her forty years residence in Denver her name has been the inspiration of many charitable projects and many political reforms which Denver is enjoying today. As treasurer of the Jane Jefferson Democratic Club and as a member of the Woman's Club she has introduced movements for the city's betterment. The office of commissioner of social welfare is peculiarly suited to a woman, and public opinion has set aside that office for a woman, and it is hoped that this office will be filled by a woman of Mrs. McGovern's type—one who will bring both efficiency and personality into politics.
(Advertisement.) THOMAS F. McGREW.
Candidate for Commissioner of Safety.
Taking up my residence in Denver in September, 1890. I have followed the Real Estate, Insurance and Loan business continuously since that time. Have been actively engaged in this line of business for myself during the past 14 years. The only political position I have ever filled was that of Fire Commissioner of the Fire and Police Board and served as such from June 1st, 1912, to February 1st, 1913. Many things came up to contend with during this period not usual to the regular duties of the Fire 'Commissioner and I was in service continually during this time. The Cherry Creek flood came upon us and I was in service from 3 p. m. Sunday until 3:25 a. m. Tuesday continuously. We distributed hose to all business men who applied for same until we almost crippled the department however, we did not lose one section of hose and we received the thanks of the business men for the accommodations extended. We raised $6,240 for the Convention of the Fire Chiefs, of which amount their still remains a balance of over $760, which could be placed in the Firemens Pension Fund. We successfully gave the Firemens Ball, which had not been given for ten years or more, same netting about
J. B. H.
THOMAS F. McGREW
$4,000 for the pension fund; Engine company No. 3 (colored) gave a ball which netted about $100 for the pension fund, so that you will notice, should you transfer the balance of $760 from the chiefs convention fund to the pension fund, you will readily see that during the year we added about $5,000 to the pension fund, and should these dances have been given annually during the past ten years the pension fund would have been benefited to the extent of $50,000 as well as interest on same. We increased the roster of the department to 225 men, the largest number-of men the department has ever contained, and at the same time carried the department to a $16,000 credit balance, out of which we purchased four run-abouts for the assistant chiefs, one $5,000 sixty-five foot aerial truck, together with horses, harness and other equipment for same, two fire house locations for the sixteenth ward, helmets for the men, nozzles and other
equipment. I feel this a record that one can well feel proud of, and should the people elect me to the office that I aspire to, that of Public Safety, same will receive my untreining efforts, and I believe I will meet with the same success as your Comissioner of Safety as I did while acting as your fire commissioner.
Candidate For Commissioner of Public Safety.
Mr. M. T. O'Connor, who is a candidate for commissioner of public safety, is a man well known in our city, for 20 years a prosperous business man; a man who is a large taxpayer, and a man who has borne an excellent reputation. He was for several years secretary of the Plasterers' Union, which is one of the largest labor organizations in this city. Mr. O'Connor is one of those kind of citizens that go to make up a progressive city. He thinks no good citizen advocates what is commonly called an "open town." It is against good morals, good government and good principles. But every broad-minded citizen believes in equal rights to all, which means that thinking people believe that just so long as no one person or association violates the law of common decency, the law-abiding citizen of liberal views has just as many rights as the narrow-minded citizen of narrow views—and at the same time both have the right to follow their respective paths unhindered by the other, as long as neither violates the moral obligations of the law and of good citizenship.
Mr. O'Connor is a broad-minded man, one who has at all times look-
J. H.
M T O'CONNOR
ed to the welfare of the public;
having during his 20 years as a
citizen of Denver never taken part
in any campaign, but was at all
times in favor of home industry
and was a legitimate builder of
Denver.
Mr. O'Connor says:
"Denver is necessarily a city of amusement. For various reasons, the people who live here demand those liberties that are guaranteed by the constitution of the United States. There may be some who do not believe in any amusement that keeps the resident out late at night If so, they are entitled to the right to retire early. In the same breath, there may be those who, for one reason or another, desire to remain out as late as midnight, or even later. They are entitled to the same personal privileges as are accorded to the residents who desire to retire early. I wish to say that if I am elected to the office of commissioner of public safety that I will not molest any law abiding citizen, so long as he keeps within the bounds of the law, and that I will insist on, furthermore, I wish to say that everyone will get a square deal from a man who has pledged himself to be on the square.
For Commissioner of Improvements.
At the request of a number of tax payers I am brought forward for election to the above office. Being a resident of Denver for very many years, and filling various positions in the city from time to time, chief of which was Civil Engineer, I feel from the experience gathered, that in the interests of the tax payers I can serve
T. H.
John. B. Hunter
faithfully if elected. A square deal to all men in my business is my platform, and knowing the good results that accrue from continually acting this way, I cannot but put the same in action in my public life. A man who is thoroughly conservant with the City must necessarily be acquainted with the needs of its improvement and the lasting benefits to be derived from such improvements. Feeling that there must be confidence placed in me by the people who requested me to become a candidate, I give the assurance that whatever lies in my power to assist in making Denver one of the most beautiful cities of the world, and worthy of its progressive citizens, the same shall be done. Don't forget—election May 20th.
For Commissioner of Safety.
The policy of this candidate is that Denver be an up-to-date city and live up to its name as the "Playground of America." In his experience as a member of the fire department, being a worker and executive officer, he feels that he has the necessary fitness for the position he now seeks; and in his spirit of fair play for such laws that will cater to the betterment and not the detriment of the people.
GEORGE BECHERER
he does not indorse a wide open nor hermetically sealed Denver. His cooperation with the Juvenile Court, morals commission and other agencies to reduce and eliminate crime will certainly be appreciated, as also his connections with various business associations which garrison him with the ability to grasp the live issues of the city at present, and make him thoroughly capable of dealing with them. The Colorado Statesman urges its subscribers and the public in general to bear the date of election, May 20th, in mind.
Modern furnished rooms for rent. Mrs. A. Arnold, 2318 Arapahoe.
Mrs. I. H. Harper has opened an ice cream parlor at 2445 Larimer street. She will also serve dinner every Sunday at the above address. She solicits the patronage of the public.
THE DE LUXE.
Furnished apartments. 2 and 3 rooms, with hot and cold water in each kitchen. Also front room, single electric lights and gas. Modern throughout. Rates very reasonable. 2552 Ogden St., Cor. 24th Ave. Phone York 6707. Mrs. R. M. Blakey.
Nicely furnished alcove front room for rent with all modern conveniences. Telephone Olive 1608, Mrs. Howard Steele, 2222 Curtis street.
Dr. S. A. Huff has moved his residence to 2547 Welton street. Telephone Main 8492.
When you want Lawyer Townsend, call Champa 618. Office, 313 Kittredge building.
THE
MODEL HOTEL
Rooms Permanent and
Transient
ED. DOUGLASS PROP
Brickler's New Barber Shop is located at 2208 Larimer street. Shave, 10c. Hair Cut, 25c; Children, 15c.
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Be sure and vote Monday at school ; quested to be present. A. M. Lawh
election, Remember your interests | in charge of funeral,
Bie at Gtake. Word has been received by 1
: Lina Hayden of the death of
a a daughter, Dora Rolley, which occur
John Rutledge of Kansas City, Mo., April 29th, at Vancouver, B. C. '
spent several days in the city this| burial will take place at Ever
week on business and pleasure. Wash.
The Central Bottling and Distribut- Ce Naika ae
ing Co. have moved to 2727 Welton! Daniel D. Green's funeral was |
street, to a more desirable location. Monday afternoon 2 p. m., from |
it aan Cann Douglass Undertaking Co, Parl
The Sunshine Club will meet with Rev. F. H. Bray officated.
Mrs. Elizabeth Ratley, 2740 Marion Mr. Albert Payton, who died T
street, Thursday the 8th, day morning at his sisters home, %
ao Soe Tue ee Curtis st., will be shipped to his he
Mrs, Sadie McLane of Kansas City | in Bradstown, Ky.
is visiting her mother, Mrs. Jacobs] "My. James’ Green died Wednes
and brother, J. W. Taylor. morning at 2311 Walnut st. His
B ——__——_— mains will be shipped to his hom
Woodford Gordon of Kansas City | Waco, Texas, Saturday evening.
arrived in the city Wednesday to at-| “Tne Douglass Undertaking Co.
tend the funeral of his sister, Mrs.| charge of above funerals.
Hattie Hayden.
Albert Morris fell Monday and broke
several small bones in his right wrist.
‘The fracture is quite painful.
‘Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cowell came up
from Dallas, Texas, Monday and re-
turned Tuesday. Their many friends
were pleased to see them.
Mrs. Halley a devoted member of
Shorter’s A. M. E, church left the
city last week for Vancouver, B. C. to
join her daughter, Mrs. Eugene Carter
who is at present residing there.
Mrs. Brookins of Kansas City, Kan-
sas is In the city to be at the bedside
of her mother, Mrs. West who suffered
unother paralytic stroke a few weeks.
Her other daughters, Mrs. Yancy and
Mrs. Forbush are constantly in at-
tendance and giving their mother who
is quite aged, devoted attention.
Mrs. Lottie Martin arrived home
yesterday from her old home in May-
view, Mo., where she spent several
weeks with her parents and old
friends. Her father, Amos Jones, who
has been quite ill, she reports as being
almost well again. Mrs. Martin re-
ceived a hearty welcome in her home
town from her many friends.
John Allison, candy manufacturer,
1762 Curtis street is in the running
for commissioner of property. He has
for twenty successive years been a
resident of this city, business man
and taxpayer. He has never been a
candidate for office before, but with
his experience of the growing needs
of Denver, also his service in the army
during the Spanish-American war, he
feels he can fill the position that he
now seeks as his motto is Business
and not politics should dominate our
city affairs, and” therefore promises
faithful services ifs elected on May
20th. ¥
George Becherer, candidate for com-
missioner of safety should receive the
united support of every colored voter
in Denver on account of his attitude
toward the negro. He has at all
times treated us with consideration,
giving employment to our people al-
though few of the race have ever giv-
en him any support in his line of busi-
ness, The time has come when we
as a people must stand by those who
are willing to give us a square deal.
DEATH OF JOHN W._ SHIPTON,
A PIONEER OF THE
WEST.
Mr. John W. Shipton after a short
illness, died last Saturday at Omaha,
Neb., where he has resided for a num-
ber of years at the residence of his
daughter, Mrs. Henrietta Crawford.
Mr. Shipton was born in Missouri
in 1826. When quite a lad, with his
parents, he went to Iowa, where he
resided for a few years, but the lure
of the West called him and he joined
a party in 1849 and went by ox team
to California, After remaining there
for a number of years he went to Can-
ada, then to Chicago, afterwards re-
moving with his family to Denver in
1868, thus becoming a pioneer of the
Centennial State. Mr. Shipton was a
very intelligent and industrious man, a
prominent member and worker in the
Zion Baptist church, where he was
much beloved with the assistance of
his lovely wife, who died in 1897, they
at one time were the possessors of
mth yaluable property. Of late years
with the increasing infirmities of old
age he had been taking life easy and
divided his time with his daughter in
Omaha and with his other daughter,
Mrs, Ellen Russ, in this city.
Mr. Shipton is survived by four
daughters and three grandchildren, the
daughters are Mrs. Annie Davis of
Skagway, Alaska; Mrs. Ellen Russ,
Denver; Mrs. Henrietta Crawford,
Omaha. and Mrs. Joburness Hamlin,
St. Louis.
‘The body of the deceased was
brought to Denver Tuesday. Funeral
services -were held Thursday at 2
o'clock at Shorter A. M. B. church,
Rey. Pope officiating. Douglass Un-
dertaing Co. in charge.
DEATHS.
Mrs. Lucy Wilson who died Wed
nesday at 2649 Lawrence St., was
buried Sunday from Lawhorn’s Under-
taking Parlors.. Rev. H. F. Bray, of-
ficiating.
Mrs, Middie Ruth and Baby Phillips
were buried from the Lawhorn Under-
taking Parlors this week.
Mrs. Hattie Hayden died last Satur.
day at 2113 Welton street. Funeral
will take place Sunday afternoon at 1
o'clock at Campbell's A. M. B. church.
‘All U. B. F’s and S. M. T.’s are re-
quested to be present. A, M. Lawhorn
in charge of funeral.
Word has been received by Mrs.
Lina Hayden of the death of her
daughter, Dora Rolley, which occurred
April 29th, at Vancouver, B. C. The
burial will take place at Everett,
Wash,
Daniel D, Green's funeral was held
Monday afternoon 2 p. m., from The
Douglass Undertaking Co, Parlors,
Rev. F. H. Bray officated.
Mr. Albert Payton, who died Tues-
day morning at his sisters home, 2457
Curtis st. will be shipped to his home
in Bradstown, Ky.
Mr. James Green died Wednesday
morning at 2311 Walnut st. His re-
mains will be shipped to his home in
Waco, Texas, Saturday evening.
The Douglass Undertaking Co. in
charge of above funerals.
CAMPBELL NOTES.
Campbell Chapel, A. M. B.. church
corner 23rd and Lawrence Sts., Rey.
H. Franklin Bray, D. D., Pastor.
Four members were received inte
full membership last SuSnSday, Mrs.
Hattie Roser, Miss Annie Johnson,
Mrs. J. W. Williams, of Allen Chapel,
Kansas City, Me. and Mrs, Lucinda
Randall. McCoy Henderson was bap-
tized at the morning service.
Services tomorrow as follows: 9:45
Sabbath School, Miss, Ethel Fitchue,
Supt; 11:00 a. m., General class and
administration of the sacrament of the
Lord's Supper; 1:00 p. m., Funeral of
Mrs. Hattie Hayden; 3:00 p. m. Quar-
terly meeting at Shorter Chapel; 6:30
p.m. Allen League, Mrs, Frances
Barley will lead; 7:45, Preaching by
the pastor, subject: “The Heavenly
Conqueror.” You are invited to all
these services. Splendid singing at
each.
The annual rally of the Trustees
will take place on the fifth Sunday in
June,
The Sewing Circle had a profitable
meeting at the home of sister Mary
Jenkins, 2542 Clarkson St. last Thurs:
day.
What promises to be one of the
very best musicals ever given in this
city will be rendered by Rev. T. H.
Wiseman, Mrs. Lillian Jones, Miss
Jennie Hicks, Mr. Geo. Morrison and
Mr. Frank McVey, on Thursday even:
ing, May 15th. Get your tickets earl)
as We cannot accommodate more than
four hundred persons.
A May Pole Drill and Musical Ex
travaganza will be given at the churel
Wednesday evening, May 7th, under
the management of Mrs, L. 0. Tucker
A treat is in store for all who attend
A church conference was _helé
Tuesdayevening at which time th
request of Bishop Parks for the pay
ment of $500.00 on the church exten
sion mortgage was heartily endorsed
and the fifth Sunday in June set
apart as the day to deliver the goods
An invitation was extended the
Bishop to be with us on that occa
sion.
SHORTER CHAPEL NOTES.
The following order of service will
be observed at Shorter tomorrow:
10 a. m., Sunday school. Lesson,
“Joseph Interprets Dreams,” Gen. 40:
1-23.
11 a. m,, Preaching by Presiding El
der A. M, Ward.
3 p. m., Quarterly Communion ser-
vice. The Rey. Dr. H. Franklin Bray
will preach the communion sermon
and the officers and members ol
Campbell Chapel will affiliate in the
service.
6:45 p. m., Allen Christian Endea
vor League. Topic: The Ideal Chris:
tian, V. His Prayers. Matt. 6:5-13.
(Consecration Meeting.) Royal C.
Brown, Leader, The annual election
of officers will be held at the close
of this service.
7:45 p. m,, Preaching by Rev. A. M.
Ward.
Quite a number of the captains of
our Spring Campaign made flattering
reports last Sabbath. Thus far club
No. 10, Brother U. G. Brown, captain,
leads, ‘having reported $21.50. Clubs
No. 62 and 70, Sister Rebecea Nelson
and Brother J. C. Porter, captains, re-
spectively, are close seconds.
A hard-time social will be given
Thursday evening the 8th, at Shorter
under the auspices of Clubs 33, 42
and 52, Mesdames Irene Fife, Ida Cox
Holley and Lillie Lewis, Captains.
Bring your pennies for every thing
will count at this entertainment.
Admission five cents.
NOTICE OF STOCKHOLDERS’
MEETING.
Denver, Colo., April 12, 1913.
To the Stockholders of the. Westera
Loan and Investment Association:
You are hereby notified that the an-
nual meeting of the stockholders of
the Western Loan and Investment Av-
sociation will be held on Tuesday,
May 20, 1913, at the hour of 8 o'clock,
p. m., of said day, at room 25, West-
ern Newspaper Union building, 1824
Curtis street, Denver, Colorado, for
the election of officers and directors
of said association, and for the trans-
action of any and all other business
which may properly come before sa‘d
association,
L, C. CONNELL,
J. R, CONTEE, President.
Secretary.
13 CENTS A DAY BUYS A PIANO.
WITH MUSIC LESSONS FRED. PI-
ANOS FROM $88 UP. COLUMBINE
MUSIC CO., 920-924 15th STREET,
CHARLES BUILDING.
(Adyertisement.)
Carl M. Lindquist
Candidate for Commissioner cf
Public Safety
Carl M. Lindquist, the big-heart
ed, liberal, level-headed, square-
dealing cracker manufacturer, is
be 2 J
of _ :
ee
r : :
acandidate for commissioner of
safety. Everybody in Colorado
knows Carl Linguist, but every-
body dosen’t know that he is a
candidate for office. He has served
in the city council and in the state
legislature. During these years of
public service not one crooked act
is charged against him that we
have yet heard of, His record is
clean, Of those who know him, no
commendation is necessary. ‘hose
who do not, need only to investi-
gate to be conviaced of these facts.
Mr. Lindquist has been ia busi-
ness in Denver since 1887, and em
ploys 145 people,
For Commissioner of Social Welfare.
A resident and taxpayer of Denver
for thirty years, who filled various
positions with satisfaction, and from
his experience as County Superinte:
dent of Schools, Library Commission-
er, Health Commissioner, ete., is a fit
and proper person for the position he
now seeks.
He has also been successful in pro:
Pe
eee
—
curing and providing the following ae F sas
stitutions for the City and County: Ment:
Municipal Lodging House, Municipal| fiasem
Farm, Municipal Grocery Store, Muni- ms
cipal Wood and Coal Yard, Free Care a
for Inebriates, Public Comfort Station bE
for Women and also claims the dis-| Wo
tinguished feature of being the origia- Oe
ator of the ordinance allowing labor-
ers $2.50 per day and teams $5.00 per
day. |
Remember Election May 20.
ADVERTISEMENT
Dr. Elizabeth Cassidy
Candidate for
Commissioner of
SOCIAL WELFARE
I believe in a bigger, better and more har-
monious Denver. This means more work
for the laboring man, more profits for the
business man, and general prosperity for all
| SEE MY PLATFORM
Toh 6 ea) Corner
The Twenty-Second jyenyscond
and
Avenue Theatre Washingwes
| Daily change of program---Saturday and
Sunday matinee at 2:30--Evenings at 7:00
o'clock, with the best pictures, best music
and courteous treatment--The new show
| house is enjoying a good patronage from the
- best people. ADMISSION FIVE CENTS
Best Ventilated, Safest Neighborhood Picture
House in the City
CARL M. LINDQUIST
(Advertisement.
JOHN W. FORD.
JOHN W FORD
Candidate for School Director, Dis:
trict No. 1.
Mr. Hutton is no stranger to the
citizens of Denver. His candidacy for
the schoo! director has been urged by
a large number of parents who have
the welfare of the schools uppermost
in their hearts, He has lived 30 years
in Denver, is 40 years old. Gradu
ated from the Denver schools and also
from Harvard University, is a teacifer
7 — een
| P TY ee od
|
! a
> y
in the Deaver Law School, also at-
torney for tie Capitol Insurance Co.,
and for other companies, and a mem-
ber of the Chamber of Commerce,
Traffic, Athletic, Colorado Golf and
other clubs. He is interested in every
movement that has for its object the
uplifting of Denver, which is almost
a foregon» conclusion that his election
is practical!v assured.
NOTICE OF PROCEEDINGS FOR DE-
TERMINATION OF HEIRSHIP
‘AND FINAL SETTLEMENT.
In the Matter of the Estate of John
H. (Wilson, Degeasea.
Notice is hereby siven that on Mon-
day, the seco .d day of June, being one
of the regular days of the’ May’ term
of the County Court of the Clty and
County of Denver in the State of Colo-
rado, ‘I, Carry Wilson, administratrix
Of piiid estate, present ‘my final report
and settlement, pray the approval of
the ‘same and" apply to. be dis-
charged ‘as ‘such ‘administratrix, at
Which time and place any’ person In
Interest may: appear and present. ob-
Jections to the ‘same If any" there. be.
Notice is also hereby given. that
Carty Wilson has filed ‘her duly vert-
fied petition allesing that she is an
heir at law of said deceased and that
there are no others known to said pe-
titioner.
Accordingly on said date hereinbe-
fore mentioned or any ‘date to. which
such hearing may then be continued,
the said Court will then proceed to as
certain. and determine Who are. the
heirs-At-law of said dedeeased and as
such entitled to. inherit any lands,
tenements, hereditaments “or other
property. "veal ‘or personal. constitut:
Mig all or ‘apart of the estate of satd
deceased and enter a decree accord~
ingly, at “which time ‘and. place. all
pensons clalming to be heirs-At-law of
the sald deceased may appear and pre-
fenti their objections, and. proofs
Dated at Denver, Colorado, May the
2nd, 1913.
W. B. TOWNSEND,
_ Attorney for Estate.
First publication May 3, 1913.
Ecchaiubiention Mav 36, Bid
Tied poste” Mee tr! Aang
Fee eee ee May 24 A8is
Pee e re
QO si
ee iion aes:
OREN E Hy
PS Ba a.
4 RN ee
a ee |
ace oe yy
ae! PEAS
Gree’) |
ey eee
(Advertisement.)
WILLIAM E. HUTTON.
WILLIAM HUTTON
| VOTE FOR
EDWARD S. GOALSTONE
———— ror —————
COMMISSIONER of.
IMPROVEMENTS
The Man for More Dinner Pails,
Long Term Bonds, Lower
Interest and a Bigger
Denver.
A SQUARE DEAL TO ALL
; i :
: 5 os . eo
ee Se
—
_~ co
| all Mere
A long record of square dealing, a wide ac-
quaintance with Denver's business conditions, a
thorough and practical business training, success in
his own affairs makes Mr. Kirk the logical candi-
date for
COMMISSIONER OF PROPERTY
DENNIS GIBBONS °°":
COMMICSIONER .¢ SAFETY
h@' DO; PESSRERORS sO SONh eee ae
open; not wide open, but open.”—
Dennis Gibbons—Commissioner Pub-
lic Safety.
What with theorists and quack re-
formers on the one hand and gang-
sters on the other, we need a change
in city government. Back to honesty
and common sense, is my slogan. 1
believe in a restricted red-light dis-
trict and in firm, impartial but reason-
able regulation of the liquor traffic.
I believe in liberty, the watchword
of the Negro race in America, and in
fair-play, a quality admired aud, from
thirty years’ experience I dare say,
practiced by the colored people of
Denver. Give me your vote Mr.
Colored man or woman and Iwill
carry out to your satisfaction, my be-
lief that government should be admin-
istered without regard to race or color.
In the name of the great Negroes
who did much and said little, of
‘Toussaint L'Overture the Haitian, of
Booker T. Washington the American,
1, who would act rather than talk, ap-
peal to the colored people of Denver
for support in the coming election. 1
need your vote.
a a
Everybody Knows Harrison $, Vaughn
He is a lawyer, level-headed and honest.
When a mere strippling, he gave his right arm in
defense of his country.
; His 24 years of pub:
lic and private life. in
* * 4 Denver is a guaranty of
his ability and fitness
for the office of—
: oe Commissioner
- 2 of Property
ag Lo His comrades in the
ae Grand, Auge antlers
- oe hie candidacy.
SS er His influence will be
6 felt In, the Henestiand
- intelligent _administra-
oe tion of municipal af.
Os fairs, inviting strictest
— public scrutiny.
“ Give him your first
: / cholee_ vote.” If you
i a Fs x M UST favor another,
= je - give him your second
fer . choice vote without
co Se fail.
Ae dt eS For commissioner of
y. le a property be sure and
f Be Ae SU vote for—
HARRISON S. VAUGHN
i, Ask Your Neight
If You Don’t, Ask Your Neighbor
.
Charles L. Kirk
Of the Colorado Laundry &
Towel Supply Co.
CANDIDATE FOR
Commissioner
of Property
are dealing, a wide ac-
; business conditions, a
siness training, success in
Ar. Kirk the logical candi-
. OF PROPERTY
Gandlasie for
COMMISSIONER of SAFETY
eee 9 :
ye
ws Harrison $, Vaughn
ADVERTISEMENT
Designed for the Street, Made Up in Blue Charmeuse
Made Up in Blue Charmuse
Underwood & Underwood
A gown of blue charmeuse with green collar and lapels. Special features: the sash, very short jacket and draped skirt.
Sharp Contrasts in Living Room Something to Be Avoided by the Up-to-Date Homemaker.
A room is really a picture, or at least it should be composed with due regard to its esthetic possibilities. The walls are the background of which doors and windows are a part. The furniture is in the middle distance and the family furnishes the foreground.
It is evident that if the wall paper is figured conventional designs are always best and the designs should be worked out in varying tones of the dominant color. This dominant color may be any that lends itself charmingly to interior decoration. It should be soft, rich and beautiful in its varying shades.
It is not enough that it should blend with carpets and curtains or contrast harmoniously with them. It should be favorable as a background to the persons who make the main part of the picture, it should bring out the flesh tones, or at least not spoil them, and it should not clash with the colors of the garments worn by those who pass their time within the four walls of the room. Moreover, it should simplify the lighting problems, whether the position of windows or the effect of electric lamps is taken into consideration.
SETTING FOR TOILET TABLE
Various Dainty Accessories Are Offered for the Fancy of the Woman Who Likes Pretty Things.
Very lovely are the cut-glass salt bottles with square stopper of enameled on silver gilt in the daintiest and most artistic designs, while the large cut-glass perfume bottles have enamel stoppers and tops, the enamel generally toning with the prevailing color of the room.
A silver ruler with inch and centimeter measurement, which holds rubber, pencil and pen when the end is taken off, also finds a place in the boudoir. And a new paperweight in the form of a ruler with a handle in the center, the inch and centimeter measurements being marked thereon, is amongst the latest of useful feminine trifles.
Vells Now Often Discarded.
Vells are very much less worn than they used to be in past seasons. They are less easy to wear with very small hats, for the simple reason that they may easily touch the eyes or at least the eyelashes; but, since the extremely small hat is specially reserved for the very young woman, she may well permit herself to meet the full glare of daylight in the street without any softening vell. Besides this, some hygienic people pretend that the veil is harmful both to the complexion and the sight, and, while it is also true that the contrary opinion is held, the devotee of fashion will follow her own personal opinion without bothering her head about any other—Paris Edition of New York Herald.
In Cherry Red Cloth This Costume Would Be Fit for the Adornment of Any Woman.
For this house dress might be selected red cloth of fine texture.
The skirt is made with a panel down back and a wrapped seam down front, which is rounded off at the foot to show a small panel of braided satin in a delicate shade of gray.
The bodice has a yoke and deep cuffs of this; the sides and upper part of sleeves are cut Magyar and
THE LADY'S DRESS
laid on with wrapped seams; material fills in the space below yoke; a black satin ribbon is taken round the waist and arranged to hang in a bow and end in front.
Materials required: $3\frac{1}{2}$ yards cloth 48 inches wide, $1\frac{1}{2}$ yard satin 40 inches wide, 3 dozen yards braid, 2 yards satin ribbon.
Cotton In Netting.
One bride is making her comforters in an unusual way, says Good Housekeeping. She incloses the cotton batting in mosquito netting, tacking it here and there. Then she slips this into its outside cover. When the cover is soiled it is very easy to rip open one end and remove the cotton and also as simple to put the whole together again
AFRO-AMERICAN CULLINGS
The negro should not seek aid outside in accomplishing anything for his uplift that he can possibly accomplish without. We should help ourselves all we possibly can. Much has been done to help the race to attain unto its present position, and much must still be done. It takes more than fifty years of giving, praying and laboring to blot out the sins of 250 years of slavery, supplemented by generations of barbarism. He should be helped in the most practical and effective way. He should not be helped in doing what he can do for himself. He should not be pitied nor censured for not working, but should be given an opportunity to enter any position for which he is fitted, and go up or down on his merit. Very often where money is given it is not the thing that the negro needs most. He needs fair play and a chance to earn money to educate his own children and to buy his own home. It is also observed in this matter of giving that many of our most deserving institutions are entirely overlooked and often those who are the most reckless in management, resultless in endeavors, untruthful in the presentation of their cause, not only get a hearing, but get money. We do not censure people who give, because in their hearts they are exceedingly anxious to help the race, but we do censure the negroes who know the truth and will not put these representatives of fake institutions out of business.
Our own ministers and devoted laymen, both men and women, must take up their own work of race uplift, of rescue, of provision for the needy and fallen of their own people. So The Age would encourage all those of the race everywhere, both men and women, who are engaged in the work, or assisting it, of reaching the man and woman of the race in the street, whether they be on the downward way or are slowly falling to it. And we have this assurance amply demonstrated, that if we will begin the good work, even by organizing to do it and putting in our pennies, plenty of white people with plenty of money will be drawn to it and amply assist it; but they require a sign, and the sign is the evidence that we are organized and doing as best we can the things needful to be done for our own—New York Age.
Turn over a new leaf by starting a bank account in a savings institution. Start with a nickel if you can't do it with a dollar. Start it; that's the main thing, and add to it every week, if it be but a nickel, for fifty-two weeks. A man feels better towards himself and the rest of mankind when he has a penny where he can put his right hand upon it than when he has nothing—and the rest of mankind thinks better of such a man.
A negro accompanied William Clark of Lewis and Clark's expedition, which in 1840, explored the sources of the Missouri river and gained for the United States the vast and rich extent of land known as the Oregon country.
To remove ink stains from colored wash goods cover spots with lard, rub well, then wash in usual manner. While this method is simple, it is sure and will not injure the most delicate colors.
The turn in the lane is sometimes better if it had not turned at all.
Negroes were among the first adventurers to look for gold in California, and when John C. Fremont, in 1848, made his desperate and disastrous attempt to find a pathway across the Rocky mountains, he was accompanied by a negro named Saunders.
Suede shoes that have become shiny and worn looking can be freshened by rubbing them with fine sandpaper.
A coarse cloth dipped in salt and water and rubbed over straw matting will prevent it from turning yellow.
Races may hook and races may crook, but the fool bets on forever.
A negro by the name of Little Stephen was the first discoverer of the country of Zunnis, what is now called New Mexico.
Insist upon all the clothing in the family wash being plainly marked. There is nothing so annoying to whoever puts away the clothes as to guess to whom the different pieces belong.
When the world of women turn down those foolish hats, and make a bonfire of them, mere man will find a match.
The fellow who grumbles because things don't go his way would be grumbling if too many of them came his way.
Colored women of Decatur, Ill.. wives of union men, have organized an independent women's union label league. So far as known, this is the first auxiliary of colored women in the country
Time is the decisive factor in the accomplishment of any great purpose. The races have accomplished most and of a lasting character in the past who possessed the greatest patience in working out their problems of whatever sort. The Chinese, the Egyptian and the Aryan races are the greatest in this respect of all those who have "Survived the wreck of matter and the crush of worlds." They have builted for the ages because they were not in a hurry about it and preferred thoroughness in the workmanship that required infinite time and patience, to immediate results, rushed through in a hurry, with the least expenditure of time and patience, and, therefore, all the more subject to the gradual mutation of wear and tear. The New York East river bridges and the subways are works of the character that required time and patience, and were built for the future as well as for the present. The growth of character and the material evidences of growth are always a slow and tedious process, in the individual as in the race and nation. The National Negro Business league was organized in Boston thirteen years ago. Its growth has been progressive, and the good it has accomplished by precept rather than example has been more far reaching than its organizers could have dreamed of. It has had but one president, two chairmen of the executive committee and two treasurers since its organization, although the membership has steadily increased in numbers and improved in character. The business activities of the race have been vitalized and expanded with the years, so that where they were but few they are now to be found in every nook and corner of the republic, modest indeed but full of the promise of large growth. The business league has blazed the way for them, and will continue to do so, if our business men are wise enough to keep it alive in the future, when they no longer need to be led in the way they should go.
The activity of colored lawyers in the District of Columbia partially prevents such unwarranted arrests of colored people there as are made farther south. When such a thing is done, and the colored lawyer is successful in getting your acquittal before the court, the policeman who made the unwarranted arrest is frequently made to answer before the trial board. Once he is clear from the trial board, he is ever afterward more careful. The liberty of the colored people in any community in this country will be great in proportion to the unrestrained activity of colored lawyers in their midst; and their liberty will be curtailed in proportion to the prevention and suppression of colored lawyers.
Members and the ministers of the African Methodist conference in Indianapolis and in the south have started a movement to raise $100,000 as part of the Freedmen's Aid society fund to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of the negro's freedom. White members of the Methodist conference have agreed to raise $400,000, providing the negroes obtain $100,000. The fund will go to the general fund for maintenance, endowment, repairs, and new buildings of institutions for the education of the negro. Dr. I. Garland Penn of Cincinnati, secretary of the Freedmen's Aid society, has general charge of the negro campaign.
A historical study at Harvard university revealed the following: Negroes accompanied the first Spanish explorers and discoverers of America across the Isthmus of Panama with Balboa, and assisted in constructing the first ship that was launched in the Pacific. They were with Cortez in Mexico.
Negroes were with DeSoto in 1640 and the first stranger who settled in the state of Alabama, was one of the negroes who accompanied DeSoto on his march through the state.
Judge a man's wealth by the directoire gowns his daughters wear.
The first question from a woman of another: "Is she pretty?"
Enter the Marathon race for the swiftest cure for cynicism.
Popularity often means a lot of trouble with poor results.
It's not the long day that wearies us so much as the long time between freedom from small cares.
The coquette is wise in little affairs, but she doesn't know when the great gods pass.
What's the use of preaching abroad what you can't accomplish in your home? The world soon finds it out.
The man who is forever correcting others' mistakes can't be expected to take time for his own.
If you haven't got any other line, why just hold on to the line of least resistance.
ASK FOR CARLSON'S Peerless Ice Cream Phones: Main 112 and Main 5787
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COLORADO
BIRD BOOK ISSUED
Agriculture Department Publishes Valuable Work.
Farmers Are Informed That All the Winged Creatures Are Helpful in Destroying Pests That Injure Crops—All Are Voracious.
Washington.—"Fifty common birds of farm and orchard" is the title of one of the most remarkable bulletins that have been issued from the department of agriculture for a long time. The first edition is chiefly for distribution to members of congress, but the bulletin is of such general interest that its likely to run through many editions and take a place with the department's famous "Horse Book" as one of the classics of agriculture.
The bird book consists largely of pictures, but, as the introduction says, these are given prominence for a specific purpose. They are small color drawings, made by an artist who is also an ornithologist. The picture is used in each case as an idification of the bird, and the 250 words of text that accompany the picture relate merely to the bird's habits and range and the character of its food.
Dr. Henry Henshaw, chief of the biological survey, from which the book is issued, says that the records it contains are the result of the examination of about 50,000 bird stomachs by the experts of the survey in twenty-six years. He adds, however, that these stomachs were obtained, so far as possible, from scientific collectors, because the birds themselves are too valuable a national asset to be destroyed when avoidable, even for the sake of getting data on which to base laws for their protection.
Dr. Henshaw says that the object of the book is to give farmers and far-
M. H.
David F. Houston, Secretary of Agriculture.
mers' boys a ready reference publication by which they may tell at a glance which birds are valuable and which are harmful. It gives some figures which show what a large amount of good to agriculture birds do in destroying insects and eating weed seeds.
He points out that birds are vocacious eaters and have to work industriously not only for their own food, but for the food demanded by their ever-hungry nestlings. In this connection he points out that the stomach of a single unobtrustive field sparrow taken in New York contained three-quarters of an ounce of noxious weed seed. On this basis it could be calculated with fair accuracy that the sparrows alone in New York state destroyed annually 845 tons of weed seeds.
Many of the other figures given are equally interesting and surprising. The author says that nearly all birds are useful either as insect or weed eaters. Even the birds of prey, like hawks and owls, that have a bad name among farmers, do much more good than harm.
In the case of a single owl's nest there were collected from the neighborhood 3,000 skulls, mostly those of rodents, such as rats, mice and gophers.
"It will not be very long before the American Wireless Telegraph will en-
Wireless to Canal Zone.
naval wireless towers will be constructed in the Panama Canal zone, duplicating the initial plant at Arlington, near Washington. When they are completed Washington will be in communication with the Panama Canal zone, from where messages can be transmitted to the Philippines, Hawaiian islands, San Francisco and across the American continent to the capital. Many of the smaller islands in the Pacific ocean will also be connected by the wireless. Very soon experiments will be conducted at the Arlington station, and also on the Elfel tower, in Paris, to establish the longitude between the two countries. The work is of great importance, for when similar data are obtained by other nations the information will permit of the drawing of a true map of the world."
Exports from the United States to South America will approximate $150,000,000 in the South American fiscal year 1913, against $41,000,000 in 1903, $33,000 in 1893, $30,000,000 in 1883 and $30,000,000 in 1873. Imports from South America will approximate $240,000,000, against $107,000,000 in 1903, $102,000,000 in 1893, $77,000,000 in 1883 and $67,000,000 in 1873. In both imports from and exports to South America the chief growth has occurred during the last decade, the growth having been more rapid in exports than in imports.
This rapid growth in the exports to South America is especially interesting in view of the fact that manufactures form over 85 per cent of the total merchandise sent from the United States to that grand division, while they form but about 32 per cent of those sent to Europe and 47 per cent of our exports as a whole.
This growth in the exports to South America is distributed among a large number of articles and practically all the leading countries of that continent. To Argentina, for example, the total exports increased from $32,000,000 in the fiscal year 1908 to $53,000,000 in 1912, the chief growth having occurred in mowers and reapers, which increased during the five years in question from $1,000,000 to $2,250,000; plows and cultivators from $781,495 to $1,722,095; automobiles from $72,396 to $860,350; steel rails from $290,343 to $862,511; iron sheets and plates from $460,784 to $1,778,283; sewing machines from $440,045 to $724,134; steam engines other than locomotives from $259,481 to $1,342,578; windmills from $782,429 to $1,072,489; glazed kid leather from $6,864 to $1,141,661; boots and shoes from $94,661 to $377,407; naphthas from $332,760 to $1,642,477; cotton-seed oil from $239,139 to $600,881; printing paper from $168,923 to $733,003; soap from $61,219 to $370,834; and lumber, including only boards, deals, etc., from $3,621,074 in 1908 to $6,855,547 in 1912.
Country school children generally are not as healthy as children in the
tion, which bases its conclusion largely on investigations made by Dr. Ernest B. Hoag into rural educational conditions in Minnesota.
Failure to teach the children in the "little red schoolhouse" even the rudiments of hygiene, and the ignorance of the average country teacher along this line are held to be the causes.
Poor ventilation of the country school is a large factor in undermining the health of the children, in Dr. Hoag's opinion. As a result of this, he says, the children generally are afflicted with headache, earache and other ailments of a completely avoidable nature.
In his investigation Dr. Hoag found that 80 per cent. of the children in country schools drank tea and coffee; that 40 per cent. of them suffered from almost constant toothache, and that from 19 to 23 per cent. had frequent headaches.
"When I ask those who drink coffee to stand up," says Dr. Hoag, "nearly all the children arise; when I ask how many have a tooth brush, nearly all say they have, but when I ask, 'Did you use it this morning?' there is little response."
Dr. Hoag advocated medical inspection and the instruction of the teachers in hygiene and its practices.
the public by fraud operators doing business through the mails and arrested during the year, which ended June 30, 1912, was approximately $52.000,000, as compared with the estimate of $77,000,000 for the previous fiscal year. There were over 4,000 cases bearing on fraud schemes alone assigned to inspectors during the past year for investigation, and the department succeeded in arresting 572 persons and convicting 263, with numerous cases yet awaiting to be disposed of.
The report says that the discount aging feature to the department in its fraud crusade is the character of sentences imposed by the courts, and that in a number of instances parties, who have robbed the people of millions of dollars have received sentences of only a few months, and it generally appears in certain of the courts that defendants who obtained several hundred thousands of dollars and were guilty, as charged in the indictments, have been sentenced to pay only small fines, ranging from a few dollars to three thousand dollars.
Giddy Life in a Small Town.
The Fort Scott Tribune tells of a Kansas City man who visited recently his "country cousin" in Fort Scott The man from the city, wishing to explain the joys of metropolitan life said: "We have certainly been having fun the last two days. Thursday we automobiled to the Country club and golfed until dark, then we trolled back to town and danced until morning." The country cousin was not stumped in the least, so he began telling of some of the pleasures of simple life. "We have purty good times here, too. The other day we bugged out to Uncle Ned's and went out to the back lot where we baseballled all afternoon. In the evening we sneaked in the attic and pokered until morning."—Kansas City Times.
WAITING BLOW OF HEADSMAN
HUNDRED THOUSAND MARCHING
AGAINST FIVE THOUSAND
MONTENEGRINS.
NICHOLAS' HANDS TIED
NICHOLAS' HANDS TIED
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
London, May 1.—Like a man with his head on the block King Nicholas of Montenegro is sitting, waiting for the blow of the headsmen, Austria, to fall and crush him and his fighting little nation.
One hundred thousand Austrian troops are now marching against Montenegro by land, and thousands of Suatrian troops are proceeding by sea, say dispatches received from Antivarli.
Against this great force King Nicholas has sent to the frontier his available fighting force, a handful of men, five thousand troops, weary and ragged from many battles already fought, and many of them injured.
Against the forces coming by sea he has no defense save such as the old and infirm in those cities near the water may be able to present.
"We will retain what we have won at such bitter cost or we will all die!" King Nicholas has said. His preparations for the Austrian attack are proof that his stand is not one of a braggart. He means what he says, the powers have decided, and sentiment in favor of the little country that dares all in defense of its rights is growing steadily.
In addition to sending the only troops not engaged elsewhere to the frontier, King Nicholas is having mounted scores of heavy guns at Cattaro, the main point at the Austrian Montenegrin frontier, and is preparing the most stubborn defense possible.
And, to make his position still more grave, the intimation comes from Rome that if Great Britain, France and Russia do not support Austria in her action, or isolate that country in its move against Montenegro, Italy in defense of her own interests will step in and attempt to enforce the decision of the powers.
SENATE TO PASS WEBB BILL.
Japanese Land Controversy Likely to Lead to New Treaty.
Sacramento, Calif., May 1.—An open right of way for final action in the Senate on the Webb anti-alien land act has been prepared by the floor leaders in the upper house, and before night a concrete expression of the Legislature's attitude toward Secretary of State Bryan's diplomatic visit will be at hand in the shape of a vote on the most drastic land holding act yet proposed.
Secretary Bryan spent the day in San Francisco. It was not known whether he had received further instructions from President Wilson.
A long debate is not improbable, and a few amendments will be offered but they will be resisted with the full force of the administration leaders.
In comparison with the drafts that preceded it, the Webb act is said to be more drastic and effective in reaching the Japanese farmers of the state than any other proposed measure and at the same time least objectionable of all from an international point of view.
Senator Thompson denied that the wording of the act or any part of it can be taken as a concession to the objection of Secretary Bryan, and Governor* Johnson stated that from what he understood of the situation, the measure did not have the approval of President Wilson.
Bryan's Mission Far from Ended.
Washington, May 1.—Inquiry at the White House on what might be President Wilson's attitude toward the Webb bill brought the information that the President deemed it prudent not to discuss the negotiations toward an adjustment. There is no disposition at the White House to regard Secretray Bryan's mission as having been completed. Mr. Bryan probably will stay on the ground until the whole matter definitely is cleared up.
Mrs. Bryan Resting in Sanitarium.
Washington.—Mrs. William Jennings Bryan, wife of the secretary of state, is taking a rest cure at a local sanitarium.
Women Attack Troops and Police.
Auburn, N. Y.—Militia called out did not prevent rioting at the International Harvester Company twine mills.
There were several battles between police, soldiers, deputies and strikers.
Six strikers were arrested; three of them women.
Denver's Flag Day
Denver, May 1.—Today is Denver's Flag Day and Governer Ammons will unfurl Old Glory on top of the Chamber of Commerce building.
When You Want
WALL PAPER, PAINTS, OILS AND GLASS Interior and Exterior Decoration. We do House Painting, Coach Colors, Paints and Varnishes. Agents for John W. Masury & Sons. TELEPHONE MAIN 871.
Office of Commissioner of Insurance.
It is hereby certified that the State Farmers MUTUAL HAIL INSURANCE COOPERATION organization organized under the laws of Minnesota, whose principal office is located at Waseca, Minnesota, has complied with the requirements of the laws of this State applicable to sax company, and that hereby authorized to transact business as an insurance company in accordance with its Charter or Articles of Incorporation, within the State of Colorado, that it has and requirements of the law, until the last day of February, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and fourteen.
In company whereof, I. W. L. Clayton, Commissioner of Insurance, of the State of Colorado, have hereunto set my hand and affixed my seal of office, at the City of Denver, this 1st day of March A.D. 1919.
W. L. CLAYTON,
(Seal) Commissioner of Insurance.
JOHN H. UPTON,
Actuary.
Published in the Colorado Statesman by authority of Commissioner of Insurance.
STATE OF COLORADO,
Insurance Department.
of Denver, Colorado.
Assets $ 151 063.48
Liabilities 10 630.03
Capital 100 000.00
Surplus 40 433.45
STATE OF COLORADO.}
Insurance Department.}
Certificate of Authority for the Year
Ending February 28th, 1914.
Ending February 29th, 1914.
Office of Commission of Insurance.
It is hereby declared that the UNION HEALTH AND ACCIDENT COMPANY, a corporation organized under the laws of Colorado, whose legal office is located Denver, Colorado, has complied with the requirements of this State applicable to said company, and the c company is here authorized to possess business as an insurance company in accordance with its Charter or Articles of Incorporation, within the State of Colorado, subject to the provisions of the law of the state last day of February, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and fourteen.
A company whereof, I. W. L. Clayton, Commissioner of Insurance, of the State of Colorado, have hereto set my hand and affixed my seal of office, at the City of Denver, this 1st day of February, W. L. C. CLAYTON,
(Scal) Commissioner of Insurance.
JOHN H. UPTON,
Actuary.
Published in the Colorado Statesman by authority of Commission of Insurance.
of Denver, Colorado.
Assets $ 20,969.79
Liabilities 8,079.65
Capital Mutual
Surplus 12,890.14
STATE OF COLORADO.}
Insurance Department.}
Certification for the Year
Ending February, 25th, 1914.
Office of Commissioner of Insurance.
It is hereby certified that the WESTERN DEVELOPMENT COMPANY, a corporation organized under the laws of Colorado, whose principal office is located at Denton, Missouri, is cared for the requirements of the laws of this State applicable to said company, and the company is here authorized to conduct business as an insurance company in accordance with its Charter or Articles of incorporation. The Colorado subject to the provisions and requirements of the law, until the last day of February, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and sixty-seven.
In testimony whereof, I. W. L. Clayton, Commissioner of Insurance, on the Shire of Colorado and set up my hand and affixed my seal of office, at the City of Denver, this 1st day of March, A.D. 1913. (Seal) Commissioner of Insurance. JOHN H. UPTON. Actuary. Published in the Colorado Statesman by authority of Commissioner of Insurance.
STATE OF COLORADO,
Insurance Department,
Synopsis of Statement for 1912 and
Copy of Certificate of Authority
SWISS NATIONAL INSURANCE COMP-
PANY, LTD.,
of Switzerland.
Assets $ 1,212,656.68
Liabilities 852,524.68
Deposit 200,000.00
Surplus 159,735.59
Assets
$ 1,212,656.68
Liabilities
852,921.09
Deposit
200,000.00
Surplus
159,735.59
STATE OF COLORADO,}
Insurance Department.}
Certification Department for the Year
Ending February 28th, 1914.
Office of Commissioner of Insurance.
It is hereby certified that the STATE NATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY, LTD., has corporationized under the laws of Switzerland, whose principal office is located at Basle, Switzerland, has complied with the requirements of laws of this State, applicable to said company, and the company is hereby authorized to transact business as an insurance company in accordance of incorporation, within the State of Colorado, subject to the provisions and requirements of the law, until the last day of February, in the year of fourteen, one thousand nine hundred and fourteen.
In testimony whereof, I. W. L. Clayton, Commissioner of Insurance, of the Right to bear arms, have unto set my hand and affixed my seal of office, at the City of Denver, this 1st day of March, A. D. 1913. W. L. CLAYTON. (Seal) Commissioner of Insurance. JOHN H. UPTON. Actuary. Published in the Colorado Statesman by authority of Commissioner of Insurance.
STATE OF COLORADO,}
Insurance Department.
Exponents of this form, for 1912 and
Symbols of the Statement for 1912 and
1913
SWISS RE-INSURANCE COMPANY
SWISS RE-INSURANCE COMPANY
of Zurich, Switzerland
Assets $ 870,460.25
Liabilities $ 669,531.19
Deposit $ 200,000.00
Surplus $ 100,292.06
STATE OF COLORADO,
Insurance Department,
Certificate of Authority for the Year
Ending February 28th, 1914.
Official
Office of Commissioner of Insurance.
Office of Insurance of Switzerland.
SWISS RE-INSURANCE COMPANY,
a corporation organized under the
laws of Switzerland, whose principal
business is located at Zaragoza
Switzerland, has complied with the
requirements of the laws of this
State applicable to said company,
the company or its subsidiary,
thorized to transact business as
an insurance company in accordance
with its Charter or Articles
of Insurance of Colorado, subject to the provisions
and requirements of the law, until the
last day of February, in the year of
thousand nine hundred and
fourteen.
In testimony whereof, I. W. L.
Clayton, Commissioner of Insurance,
of the State of Colorado, here
hereunto set my hand, and affirmed
seal of office, at the City of Denver,
this 1st day of March, A.D. 1913.
W. L. CLAYTON,
(Seal) Commissioner of Insurance.
JOHN H. UPTON,
Actuary.
Published in the Colorado Statesman
by authority of Commissioner of Insurance.
STATE OF COLORADO.{
Insurance Department.{
Synopsis of Statement for 1912 and
Copy of Certificate of Authority
INTERNATIONAL RE-ASSURANCE
COMPANY, LTD.
of Vienna, Austrin.
Assets. $ 411,827.62
Liabilities. $ 9,438.66
Deposit. 250,000.00
Surplus. 152,388.36
Assets . $ 411,827.02
Liabilities . 9,438.66
Deposit 250,000.00
Surplus 152,388.36
STATE OF COLORADO.}
Insurance Department.}
Certificate of Authority for the Year
Ending February 28th, 1914.
Office of Commissioner of Insurance.
It is hereby certified that the INTERNATIONAL REASURANCE COMPANY, LTD., a corporation organized under the laws of Aus-
tralia, principal jurisdiction of which is cased at Vienna, Austria, has complied with the requirements of the laws of this State applicable to said company, and the company is hereby authorized to transact business in the insurance company in accordance with its Charter or Articles of Incorporation, within the State of Colorado, subject to the provisions and requirements of the law, until the last day of February, in the year of the date of the thousand nine hundred and fourteen.
In testimony whereof, I. W. L. W.
Clayton, Commissioner of Insurance,
of the State of Arkansas, had set up
to set my hand and affixed my
seal of office, at the City of Denver,
this 1st day of March, A. D. 1913.
G. W. L. W.
(Seal) Commissioner of Insurance.
JOHN H. UPTON.
Actuary.
Published in the Colorado Statesman
by authority of Commissioner of Ins-
urance.
ou Want
ls Snouts, Neckbones
other part of the hog
neal go to
Market
Phone Main 1461.
AM CLOW A. B. CLOW E PAPER & PAINT PANY PAINTS, OILS GLASS
STATE OF COLORADO.}
Insurance Department.
Synopsis of Statement for 1912 and
Copy of Certificate of Authority
ST. PAUL MUTUAL HAIL AND CY-
CLOSE ANONYMOUS
gf. St. Paul, Muncipisr.
Assets ..... $ 343,207.72
Liabilities ..... 2,500.00
Capital ..... Mutual
Surplus ..... 340,707.72
STATE OF COLORADO.{
Insurance Department.{
Certificate of Authority for the Year
Ending February 28th, 1914.
Ending February 25th, 1914.
Office of Commissioner of Insurance.
It is the office of the
ST. PAUL MUTUAL HAIL AND CYCLONE INSURANCE COMPANY, a corporation organized under the laws of Minnesota whose principal office is
PAUL MUTUAL HAIL AND CYCLONE INSURANCE COMPANY, a corporation organized under the laws of this State applicable to said company, and the company is hereby authorized to transact business with the insurance company in accordance with its Charter. Articles of Incorporation, within the State of Colorado, subject to the provisions and requirements of the law, until the last day of February, in the year of the Lord one thousand nine hundred and fourteen.
In testimony whereof, I. W. L. Clayton, Commissioner of Insurance, of the State of Colorado, have herefore my husband addressed my seal of office, at the City of Denver, this 1st day of March, A. D. 1913.
W. L. CLAYTON,
(Seal) Commissioner of Insurance.
JOHN H. UPTON,
Actuary.
Published in the Colorado Statesman by authority of Commissioner of Insurance.
STATE OF COLORADO.]
Insurance Department.
Symbols of Confidence for 1912 and
Copy of Certificate of Authority
SOUTH GERMAN RE-INSURANCE
of faxgrip
931,506.38
473,616.34
200,000.00
257,890.04
Assets ..... $
Liabilities ..... Capital
Surplus .....
STATE OF COLORADO,{
Insurance Department, {
Certificate of Authority for the Year Ending February 25th, 1914.
Office of commissioner of insurance.
It is hereby certified that the SOUTH GERMAN RE-INSURANCE COMPANY, a corporation organized principal office is located at Munich, Bavaria, has complied with the requirements of the laws of this State applicable to said company and company authorized to transact business as an insurance company, in accordance with its Charter or articles Colorado, subject to the provisions and requirements of the law, until the last day of February, in the year of the thousand nine hundred and fourteen.
Ending February 29th, 1934.
Office of Commissioning Insurance,
it is hereby certified that
the INDIANA AND OHIO LIVE STOCK IN
INSURANCE COMPANY, a corporation
organized under the laws of Indiana,
the office of commissioner, located
at Crawfordsville, Indiana, has
complied with the requirements
of the laws of this State applicable
to said company, and the company is
held in possession of such business
as an insurance company in
accordance with its Charter or Articles
of Incorporation, within the State of
Colorado, subject to the provisions
of the State of Colorado, in the
last day of February, in the year of
our Lord one thousand nine hundred
and fourteen.
in testimony whereof, I. W. L.
Clayton, Commissioner of Insurance,
of the State of Colorado, have hereunto
set my hand and affixed my seal of
office, at the City of Denver,
this 1st day of March, A. J. H.
CLAYTON.
(Seal) Commissioner of Insurance.
JOHN H. UPTON.
Actuary.
Published in the Colorado Statesman
by authority of Commissioner of
Insurance.
NAST THE GREAT BABY Photographer
ONLY CATERS TO FIRST-CLASS TRADE. OUR PICTURES SPEAK FOR THEM-SELVES.
COR. 16th @ CURTIS ST. POST BLDG.
ORIENTAL CAFE
1848
Arapahoe St.
Phone Main
4896
Commercial, Fraternal, Church, Book and Stationery Jobs a Specialty
Ball and Concert Programs, Bill and Letter Heads, Calling Cards, Wedding Cards, Envelopes and Everything in the PrintingLine Turned Out in Neatest and Best Style Promptly on Short Notice.
We have supplied our office with job press and type of up-to-date style and our work will be on a par with the
Very Best
Give Us a Trial and We Will Give You Satisfaction
PRICES AS REASONABLE
AS THOSE OF ANY JOB
OFFICE IN DENVER.
THE
Colorado
HELLO FRED!
Where did you get that nice shirt?
Fred-I got it at the
5 POINTS CAPITO
What else have they?
Fred-They have pants, children
shirts, collars, neckwear, holeproof
other articles for men and boys. I
fresh and good and their prices
their goods are union made
and home products.
Where is that store?
Fred-It is at
Fred-They have pants, children's suits, knee pants, shirts, collars, neckwear, holeproof hosiery, hats and all other articles for men and boys. Their goods are always fresh and good and their prices are popular, most of their goods are union made
THE BL JAMES
M. & M. CO.
PAINTS, OILS, VARNISHES, GLASS
PAINTING, GRAINING, GLAZING, PAPER HANGING,
DECORATING AND HARD WOOD FINISHING.
1517 23 ARAPAHDE ST. DENVER
The CAPITOL BREW
DRINK CAPITOL
DENVER'S PRIDE
The purity of Capitol Beer is demonstra-
and strength-giving qualities. It's capital.
HAVE A CASE SENT
The Capitol Brew
Phone Champa 356.
AUTOMOBILES
THE
BL·JAMES
M.& M. CO.
PAINTS, OILS, VARNISHES, GLASS
PAINTING, GRAINING, GLAZING, PAPER HANGING,
DECORATING AND HARD WOOD FINISHING.
WALL
PAPER
1517 23 ARAPAHDE ST. DENVER
ARTISTS
MATERIALS
The CAPITOL BREWING COMPANY
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.
AUTOMOBILES FOR HIRE
Up-to-Date Machines Careful Autoists
Phone Main 5038
R. B. BOLDEN AND
Managers
The Metropol
Phone Champa
Pool, Billiards, W
R. B. BOLDEN AND H. MARKS Managers
The Metropolitan Club
Pool, Billiards, Whist, Etc.
2657 WELTON STREET
You can't miss seeing it as it is the white front store at 5 Points. Well believe me, I sure will go there for my clothes.
GIVE ME A TRIAL
CLOTHING
CAPITOL
41203
IES
CO.
ES GLASS
HANGING
ISHING.
WALL
PAPER
ARTISTS
MATERIALS
BREWING
COMPANY
PITOL BEER,
ER'S PRIDE
demonstrated by its superior flavor
capital.
E SENT HOME.
Brewing Co.
Delivered Anywhere.
BY THE
HOUR OR DAY
AT
REASONABLE
RATES
G. WALTON
STAND, 1221 NINETEENTH ST.
AND H. MARKS
managers
politan Club
nampa 1745
ds, Whist, Etc.
MAYVIEW MIS SOURI NEWS
April. 29. 1913
Mrs. Lottie Martin, one of our home girls of whom we are justly proud has been visiting her parents for several weeks, left for her home in Denver, Colo., this week, enroute she will stop at Valley Falls, Kansas to spend a day with her husband's sister.
Mrs. Mamie Coner has a fine baby girl.
Mrs. Blancy Ray is still confined to ner bed.
Mrs. Ellen Scott after a long illness is up and about to the delight of her friends.
Amos Jones, father of Mrs. Lottie Martin of Denver, who has been quite sick is on the road to recovery. The following programme was rendered by the Mayview Colored School, Saturday, April 26th, at the A. M. E. Church. The graduates were: Miss Ethel Mae Divers and Wm. McKinley Bradford.
PROGRAM.
Song. Invocation, Rev. Cummings; Song, "The Little Farmers," School; Rec. "Welcome," Ellsworth Baker; Rec. "A Little Boy," Robert Scott; Song, "We Want 12 Hours a Day," George Connor, Ora Baker, Lucile Connor, Beatrice Bradford; Rec. "Dolly's Lesson," Lucile Connor; Rec. "Playing the Piano," Beatrice Clark; Rec. "What I Learn at School," Archie Connor; Song, "Tekio Merchants," School; Rec. "Queer Scholars," Beatrice Bradford; Rec. "I Don't Care," Murine Connor; Song, "When Dolly Grows to be a Lady," School; Rec. "Fishing" Earl Turner; Rec. "Spring," Margret Gordon; Duet, "The Quarrel," Archie Connor, Beatrice Bradford; Rec. "When Pa Begins to Save," Ora Baker; Dialogue, "Fashionable Follies," Beatrice Bradford, Ora Baker; Solo, "I Can Hardly Wait Until I Get to Be a Man," Elsworth Baker; Essay, "Education," Ethel Mae Divers; Song, "Sweet and Low," School; Essay, "Finished Yet Just Begun," McKinley Bradford; Address. Presentation of Certificates Play, "Jumbo Jum."
Smith, Mabel B. Willis Supt. Teacher
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST
CHURCH.
"I was glad when they said unto me, let us go into the house of the Lord.—Psa. 122:1.
Dear friend:A personal and cordial invitation is extended to you to attend the services conducted by the Seventh-Day Adventist, in the chapel of the People's Presbyterian church, corner E. 23rd avenue and Washington street.
Sabbath school (Saturday) 10:30 a. m.
Preaching, 11:15 a. m.
Young People's Miss'y Volunteer 50-
ciety (Saturday), 1:30 p. m.
Prayer meeting (Tuesday), 8 p. m.
Bible lecture (Sunday), 7:30 p. m.
A special program will be rendered once each month, to be composed of sacred music, recitations, etc., bearing on some special phase of the Gospel. Bibles and other religious literature may be obtained from any of our agents, or direct from the conference office, 1112 Kalamath St. Elder, J. W. Owens, Pastor, 2941 Glenarm Place, Phone Main 6646.
CREOLE HAIR GOODS.
Mrs. W. G. Campbell of 2835 Stout street, the popular hair-culturist, has just received a full line of Natural Creole hair from Boston. All who desire to purchase braids, transformation pieces or who desire scalp treatment, are requested to call before going elsewhere. Phone Olive 1304.
J. H. BIGGINS
Furniture Repairing and Upholstering. All work Cash.
PHONE YORK 7602
W. B. TOWNSEND
EXAMINE THE TITLE AND MAKE
YOUR CONTRACT. LAWYER TOWN-
SEND MAKES A SPECIALTY OF
COLLECTING FROM INSURANCE
COMPANIES, ALSO ENDOWMENT
MONIES.
OFFICE 313 KITTREDGE BUILDING
PHONE MAIN 61 23—Day or Night
RESIDENCE PHONE YORK 1669.
PARLORS, 1830 ARAPAHOE ST.
THE DOUGLASS
UNDERTAKING
COMPANY
A. B.
TOMB RIDE
POLITE SERVICE TO ALL.
ce and Carriages Furnished for All C
DE REPAIR
1023 EIGHTEENTH ST.
Best Equipped Outfit in the West to Prod
.60c 75c, $1.00
.50c 65c, 75c
.25c, 35c, 50c
.50c
SHOES MADE T
Tailor Made
.15c to 25c
.15c to 25c
Best Oak Lether.
REPAIRING WHILE YOU WAIT
TER CAMBERS
and be Measured. Do it it
Material, Latest Styles, Lowest
cost of Work. My Rent is le
THE PROFIT IS YOURS
her Tailor--Clothes M
Order at Half Price
POLI
Ambulance and Ca
SHOE I
102
We Have the Best Equipment
Sewed Soles .60c
Nailed Soles .60
Heels .25c
Rubber Heels
Turn Rips
Patches
We Use the Best Oak L
REPAIR
WALTER
Come and be N
Best Material, L
Best of W
THE P
Customer T
Order
THE SEWING MACHINE
SHOE REPAIRING
We Have the Best Equipped Outfit in the West to Produce the Goods
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.
Resolving from heel to heel, entire new bottom and heel $1.50
SHOES MADE TO ORDER.
WE CAN FIT ANY KIND OF DEFORMED FOOT.
Come and be Measured. Do it To-Day.
Best Material, Latest Styles, Lowest Prices,
Best of Work. My Rent is low.
THE PROFIT IS YOURS
Customer Tailor--Clothes Made to
Order at Half Price
$25.00 SUIT FOR.....$12.50
$28.00 SUIT FOR.....$13.25
$30.00 SUIT FOR.....$15.00
$35.00 SUIT FOR.....$17.50
$38.00 SUIT FOR.....$18.50
RY Phone
1905 C
E YOU, TELL YOUR FRIENDS, IF NO
IF I PLEASE YOU,
JOHN WRIGHT, LAMBERT
WALKER, LAMBERT
AUTHOR OF THE BOOK "THE
WALKER'S WEEKLY BIBLE"
C. B. PRIOR, President
THE PRIO
1814 C
NEW AND SECOND
SOLD AND EXT
AND SEWING
PAID
PRIOR FURNITURE
114 CURTIS STREET
O SECOND HAND FURNITURE
AND EXCHANGED. WINDOW SE
SEWING MACHINES SOLD AND
PAIRED A SPECIALTY
Empa 392 Ca
NEW AND SECOND HAND FURNITURE BOUGHT,
SOLD AND EXCHANGED. WINDOW SHADES
AND SEWING MACHINES SOLD AND RE-
PAIRED A SPECIALTY
Phone. Champa 392 Cash or Cred
J. R. CONTEE
Pres. and Mgr.
Licensed
Embalmer
Frank Rogers
Assistant
Funeral
Director.
N. FERRY
A. B. B.
TO ALL.
Finished for All Occasions
HAIRING
NTH ST.
The West to Produce the Goods
olling from heel to heel, entire
new bottom
and heel ..... $1.50
SHOES MADE TO ORDER.
or Made ..... $10
WE CAN FIT ANY KIND OF
DEFORMED FOOT.
WE YOU WAIT
BERS
1023
Eighteenth St
. Do it To-Day.
Sales, Lowest Prices,
Rent is low.
IS YOURS
Clothes Made to
half Price
RIENDS, IF NOT, TELL US
D. S. ELEY, Secy. and Treas
FURNITURE CO
S STREET
FURNITURE BOUGHT,
WINDOW SHADES
ES SOLD AND RE-
ECIALTY
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CURTIS M.
HARRIS
Asst. Manager
and Funeral
Director.
Phone Main. 7411
1905 Curtis Street
Cash or Credit