Colorado Statesman
Friday, July 25, 1913
Denver, Colorado
Page text (machine-generated)
PATRONIZE MERCHANTS WHO ADV. IN THE PEOPLE'S PAPER
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
THE JOURNAL OF THE WEST.
LABOR SHALL BE FREE
RACE COUNTRY PARTY
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR CONFETT
The time is fast approaching when again demonstrate that her title is met with the committee of the Knights Templar carry out of the visitors from August 12 to establishment of her reputation which will welcome the visitors, as well as make fairs long to be remembered. Costly as headquarters and reception rooms, Theater, Woman's Club building, Br. Among the variety of attractions will join the Broadway theater and the with their imported vines from Japan, a full-sized reproduction of the tomb in sacred burial place of Christ, which the tion when they defeated the Turks; the teenth to Eighteenth on Champa street, with the word "Welcome" in elec horse being so large that it will span end. Along the Court of Honor pillars, but when exposed will reveal beautiful circulates, with colored light playing lyre, from which vapor will issue in an come the grandstand and the numeri for the benefit of spectators witnessing petition for costly prizes, and the latter derful and magnificent display.
Upwards of 50,000 Knights will arrive Canada, and it is estimated that approx. These few facts are given our readers enter heartily into the enjoyment of men, etc., should prepare to participate generally accompany such events, as of these conventions are held.
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR CONCLAVE
The time is fast approaching when "Denver, the city of hospitality," will again demonstrate that her title is meritoriously gotten, and if the local committee of the Knights Templar carry out the plans agreed on for the entertainment of the visitors from August 12 to 15, then there will be a world-wide establishment of her reputation which will not be easily effaced.
The Denver Templars have decided to spend about $50,000 in order to welcome the visitors, as well as make this a red-letter event in the city's affairs long to be remembered. Costly decorations will adorn various places as headquarters and reception rooms, viz., the El Jebel Temple, Broadway Theater, Woman's Club building, Brown Palace hotel, Albany hotel, etc. Among the variety of attractions will be particularly noticed, the garden adjoining the Broadway theater and the roof garden of the El Jebel Temple, with their imported vines from Japan and beautiful palms and rare flowers; a full-sized reproduction of the tomb in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, the sacred burial place of Christ, which the Knights Templar saved from desecration when they defeated the Turks; the Court of Honor, extending from Fourteenth to Eighteenth on Champa street, with its great Colorado sunset archway, with the word "Welcome" in electric display, and a mounted knight, the horse being so large that it will span Champa street at the Eighteenth street end. Along the Court of Honor pillars are erected (now covered with canvas), but when exposed will reveal beautiful glass columns, through which water circulates, with colored light playing upon them, and on the tops designs of a lyre, from which vapor will issue in an expanding stream. Last but not least come the grandstand and the numerous colored electric lights—the former for the benefit of spectators witnessing the various drill teams in their competition for costly prizes, and the latter taking us into fairyland with its wonderful and magnificent display.
Upwards of 50,000 Knights will arrive from all parts of the country and Canada, and it is estimated that approximately 100,000 visitors will be present. These few facts are given our readers that they may prepare themselves to enter heartily into the enjoyment of this event, and those who are business men, etc., should prepare to participate in some of the financial returns that generally accompany such events, as quite an amount is always left wherever these conventions are held.
"Let us then be up and doing,
Still achieving, still pursuing," etc.
COLORED WAITERS
COLORED WAITERS
(Omaha Enterprise)
The Enterprise is glad to see the Omaha Club go back to its first love in the line of colored waiters. About a year ago The Omaha Club dismissed its colored waiters and employed white men. On July 1st Mr. J. C. Donley was selected as headwaiter and instructed to choose a suitable crew of men, and acted in accord with his selection and instruction.
This is as it should be. Colored men have followed this line of work for many years, and we conceive of no reason why they cannot
VOL. XIX.
render as good and even better service than any other class on that particular avenue. It is true that among colored waiters there are those who are careless and trifling, but if the man charged with selecting them will exercise proper care, the unfit among them will be eliminated.
About the time of the change at The Omaha Club, the hotels of St. Louis changed from white to colored waiters after they had used the white waiters for 20 years. We are glad of these things, we hope and believe that the colored men will render such service as to make it ever desirable that they be retained in their positions.
DENVER, COLORADO, FRIDAY, JULY 25 1913.
State Hist & Nat Hist Society
State House
HANTS WH
ADC
THE JOURNAL
DENVER, COLORADO
ATLANTIC CITY GETTING
READY FOR THE ELKS
Atlantic City, July 16 —The Grand Lodge of I. B. P. O. Elks of the world will hold its fourteenth annual convention in this city, August 26 to 29. More than fifteen thousand Elks and visitors are expected here for the weeks festivities. The registration committee, headed by George T. Banks, has completed the registration of citizens who will entertain the Elks attending this convention. The committee has put forth every effort that the rate of charges for accommodation shall be uniform and not exhorbitant. This registration bureau is not only for the Elks but for anyone who may wish to take advantage of the bureau's services.
The annual ball, reception and Elks' reunion will be held on the Million Dollar Pier, which will be open to visitors at six o'clock in the afternoon and be in charge of the Elks until two o'clock the following morning. The magnificent ball room of the pier will accommodate five thousand dancers with absolute comfort.
The committee has announced that cash prizes and silver cups for competitive drilling by the marching clubs, one for the best band in line of march, another for the club coming the longest distance, another for the best uniformed club and still another for the ladies having the best float in line.
Mayor William Riddle, of Atlantic City, will make the address of welcome at the public session on behalf of the city, and State Senator Walter E. Edge will welcome the lodge on behalf of the County and State of New Jersey.
NO DISCRIMINATION AFTER SEPTEMBER 1ST.
Albany, N. Y., July 15.—Attorney General Carmody's attention has been directed to the fact that circulars are being issued by some health resorts in which announcement is made that their places are not open to certain races. In a statement Mr. Carmody points out that, under an amendment made to the Civil Rights law by the Legislature, such notices will be prohibited after September 1. The Attorney General's statement follows:
The Civil Rights law was amended by the last Legislature, which amendment takes effect September 1, 1913, and provides that full and equal accommodations, advantages, and privileges shall be enjoyed by all persons within the jurisdiction of the State at all public resorts, places of amusement, or of public accommodation. The amendment fur-
---
ther provides that no person being the owner, lessee, proprietor, manager, superintendent, agent or employee of any such place shall, be refused or denied to any person on account ef race, creed, or color, or that the patronage or custom threat, of any person belonging to or purporting to be of any particular race, creed, or color is unwelcome and not desired or solicited. The production of any written or printed communication, advertisement, or notice announcing any such discrimination is admissible against the proprietor, lessee, superintendent or manager as presumptive evidence of an intend to violate this law in any civil or criminal action.
The public places to which this law applies are inns, taverns, hotels, either for transient guests, or for the accommodation of those seeking health, recreation or rest, restaurants, eating houses, public conveyances on land or water, bath houses, barber shops, theaters and music halls.
My attention is called to circulars being put out by health resorts in which it is announced that certain races are not welcome and will not be received. Such notices are plain voilations of this statute on and after Sept. 1, 1913, at which time the law takes effect, and subject the proprietor, agent, or superintendent to the penalty provided in this act.
The new law, the Attorney General points out, provides that any person violating its provisions shall be liable to damages of not less than $100 nor more than $500, to be recovered by the person aggrieved. A violation also is made a misdemeanor, and, upon conviction, a fine of not less than $100 nor more than $500, or imprisonment of not less than thirty nor more than ninety days or both fine and imprisonment, may be imposed.
Tuskegee Institute, Alabama, July 15.—With but two weeks passed Tuskegee Institute has broken all records in its summer school attendance. It has now nearly sixty more than it had enrolled at the close of last year and almost twice as many as the first year. Enrollment was 207 in 1910, 232 in 1911, 307 in 1912 and 386 at the present time. Each train brings a few more recruits. One feature of great attraction to teachers is the review of work to be covered by examinations in the various states. Twenty-five to fifty teachers are enrolled in the grammar, arithmetic and literature classes, getting ready either to renew their certificates in the same grade in which they now teach or to try for a higher grade. This feature especially attractive to teachers in Alabama, since the state examination is held on the Tuskegee grounds immediately after the close of the summer school.
RACE NEWS
Mr. Newton L. Gilbert son of President Gilbert of Selma University, won the "Baldwin Greek Prize" in Colgate University, Hamilton, N. Y., in their recent examinations, over 180 white men.
Columbia, S. C., July 9.—Governor Blease gave executive clemency to sixteen convicts yesterday and brought his record of prisoners released to nearly seven hundred since he took office, a little more than two years ago. Among those released yesterday were two murderers. The governor announced he would issue no more pardons until Thanksgiving Day, which he signalized last year by releasing 79 convicts at one time.
precipitated which only wiped by the prompt arrival squad of police. The factions were scattered and jured were removed to a One hundred Negroes usus and clubs, while the Greeks picks and shovels for Forty Greeks were taken. Most of the Negroes escaped.
St. Louis, July 19—Booker Washington the Twenty-third and Marker was opened on Monday, an enthusiastic crowd threw this beautiful building to and overflowed into the sting thoroughfares. The house is one of the best
New Cumberland, W. Va., July 3.- D. J. Graham, Jr., a colored attorney, filed a suit styled Joslma Steele et al., vs. the board of education of Hancock County in the circuit court here in an action for $10,000 damages. The plaintiff is colored and is asking damages because of the refusal of the board of education to allow his children to attend school. He is the only colored man in the county with children old enough to go to school. His children were first refused permission to go to school five years ago and have been refused each year since. He has five children, ranging in ages from 9 to 22. Attorney Graham also asks for a mandamus.
Paris, July 1.—There is much talk in Catholic circles here of the death of one of the most picturesque religious figures in Europe, the "Holy Nun" Sister Marie Benit Frey, who breathed her last recently near Rome after having been bedridden fifty-two years. Sister Marie is said to have made many predictions which were fulfilled with absolute accuracy which gives a sinister significance to her last utterances dictated on her deathbed to the nuns: "Before two years are past—about the end of 1914—yellow invaders and Negroes will be throwing dice for the fate of the last American girl in Central Park, New York, amid the smoking ruins of the great city given up to the idolatrous cult of Golden Calf."
Peoria, Ill., July 14--Fifty Greeks employed on a railroad construction gang started to march through the Negro section of the city yesterday, and a race riot was
NO 47
precipitated which only was stopped by the prompt arrival of a squad of police. The warring factions were scattered and the injured were removed to a hospital. One hundred Negroes used bricks and clubs, while the Greeks used picks and shovels for weapons. Forty Greeks were taken to jail. Most of the Negroes escaped.
St. Louis, July 19—The new Booker Washington theater, at Twenty-third and Market streets, was opened on Monday night to an enthusiastic crowd that filled this beautiful building to the doors and overflowed into the surrounding thoroughfares. The new house is one of the best equipped in the city, and is surpassed by few playhouses, if any, operated by colored men in the country. Built of a fine quality of yellow fireproof brick and concrete, with concrete roof and floor, it is absolutely fireproof, and is the latest thing in sanitation for buildings. According to inspectors, it is one of the safest and cleanest buildings in the city. They state that a fire is impossible and that there need never be a panic. Everything necessary to make the first class and comfortable has been done. There are thousands of square feet of windows and a full compliment of electric fans. The floor is built at such an angle that the stage can be seen from every point in the building to good advantage. Opera chairs with steel frames have been installed and in such manner that each patron patron has plenty of arm room. Besides these comfortable chairs, there are two boxes, holding forty-two people each. Each box is well equipped and beautifully decorated. As for the stage, every convenience known to stage craft has been installed. The dressing rooms for actors are well appointed and equipped for the comfort of those who are to be the fun makers.
WHITE MAN
COMMITS INCEST
Harrisville, W. Va., June 27. One of the nastiest cases in the criminal annals of West Virginia is on trial here in the circuit court. Maude Scott is suing Amos Scott for the support of their child. The two are brother and sister. The present case is a civil action. The plaintiff was also indicted by the grand jury on a charge of incest.
NEWS TO DATE IN PARAGRAPHS
CAUGHT FROM THE NETWORK OF WIRES ROUND ABOUT THE WORLD.
DURING THE PAST WEEK
RECORD OF IMPORTANT EVENTS
CONDENSED FOR BUSY
PEOPLE.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
WESTERN.
Mrs. Anna Blasi has announced her
candidacy to represent the First ward
of Chicago in the City Council.
Classical dancing has taken the
place of the rag, the tango, the bunny
hug and other such modern efforts at
the University of California.
John Aho, a farmhand near Grand
Rapids, Mich., committed suicide by
placing a stick of dynamite on top of
his head, lighting a short fuse and
blowing his head into fragments.
Andrew Johnson was found guilty of complicity in the assassination of Ed Callahan, former sheriff and noted feudist of Breathitt county, Ky., and was given a life sentence at Winchester.
Trapped by flames in the second floor of an antiquated convict camp, thirty-five negro prisoners were burned to death at the Oakley convict farm, twenty miles from Jackson, Miss.
The widows of Wilfred B. Frost, bigamist, whose death, on Feb. 27, exposed his double life, began life over again—together. With their four children they took up their residence on the north side in Chicago.
George Taylor, proprietor of a lunch room, was shot and killed by an unidentified person at Tama, Ia. Robbery is thought to have been the motive. Several hundred dollars which Taylor carried is missing.
The San Francisco Evening Post printed an interview with Secretary Daniels of the Navy Department in which he is quoted as saying that he intends to bring the entire Atlantic fleet through the Panama canal as soon as the canal is opened.
Effect of woman's suffrage on local option, was given its first test in Illinois at Carpenterville, a village six miles north of Elgin, the "drys" winning more decisively than they had won at the three previous local option tests in the village. The vote was 172 to 155. One hundred and fifty-one women voted.
A piece of Greek sculpture, the bust of a female child of about five years of age, stolen from the National museum at Athens fifteen years ago and said to be of priceless value and 3,000 years old, was recovered by the Baltimore, Md., police. The figure was dug up in the cellar of Charles Nemphos, a Greek confectioner at Hampden, a suburb.
WASHINGTON.
Clerks in the government departments either must pay their debts or relinquish their jobs.
Martin M. Mulhall, professed ex-lobbyist for the National Association of Manufacturers, refuted the most serious charge he has made before the Senate investigating committee.
Concerted opposition has developed in Congress to Postmaster General Burleson's order reducing parcel post rates and increasing the maximum size of packages to be handled in the service.
President Wilson pardoned T. F. Baker and John Wisherd, convicted at Abilene, Tex., April 13, 1912, of violation of the National Bank act, and each sentenced to five years in the penitentiary.
The battleship Louisiana, which sailed from Vera Cruz under rush orders, arrived at Tuxpan to protect Americans whose lives and property are endangered by fighting between the federalists and the revolutionists.
Reduction in parcel post rates within the first and second zones, an increase in the maximum rate of parcels and substitution of a new rate chart for the complicated present map was ordered by Postmaster General Burleson to take effect August 15.
An attempt by Senator Fall of New Mexico to force the Senate to enunciate a strong policy of protection for American citizens in foreign countries precipitated a hot debate which demonstrated appreciation on the part of the senators of the gravity of the Mexican situation and the necessity for a determined stand by the United States.
To protect American citizens imperiled by the revolutionary movement in the southern Chinese provinces, Charge Williams at Pekin has called on Rear Admiral Nicholson for a guard of marines and sailors from the Asiatic squadron to go to Kuling in Kiang Si province, which recently secoded. Martial law was proclaimed in Kiang Si and Kiang Su provinces. The Postoffice Department has approved the recommendation of Congressman Taylor that Michael J. Brennan be appointed postmaster at Leadville, Colo.
Truce has been declared between the Vatican authorities and the palace guards at Rome.
A militant suffragette "arson squad" set fire to a large unoccupied mansion at Perry Bar, near Birmingham, Eng., and burned it to the ground.
The United States battleship Louisiana left Vera Cruz, Mex., under full steam. She is bound for Tuxpan, where it is understood American and other foreign residents are in need of protection.
Prime Minister Asquith characterized the spectacle presented by the Balkan states as "disheartening and repellant," in a speech at the Chamber of Commerce centenary banquet at Birmingham, England.
The gunboat Wheeling steamed under rush orders to Frontera, Tabasco state, Mexico, where revolutionary activity has endangered the lives and property of Americans. The gunboat has 150 bluejackets, but no marines.
Threats to get all the Americans in the Madera settlement, burn the big Madera lumber mills, which supply the El Paso Milling Company with lumber, and raze every American house in the camp have been made to the Pearson company as the result of the harboring of the American cowmen from Hearst's Babicora ranch in Mexico, after they had killed two of the bandits of El Bocho Martinez's brigand band.
Three hundred million dollars in addition to the $625,000,000 already expended was the estimate given by Augustine Birrell, chief secretary for Ireland, of the sum necessary to complete the operation of land purchase in Ireland in accordance with the provisions of the land purchase acts of 1903 and 1909. These acts make it compulsory for a landlord to permit his tenant to purchase the land he cultivates.
Standing of Western League Clubs.
Won. Lost. Pet.
Denver 61 30 .670
Des Moines .56 41 .542
Lincoln .48 43 .527
Omaha .48 48 .511
St. Joseph .44 47 .484
Topeka .39 49 .443
Sloux City .39 51 .433
Wichita .36 58 .383
A big polo tournament with seven teams competing will be held in Denver ten days, beginning September 1.
Bobby Waugh of Fort Worth, Tex., won from Jack Redmond of Milwaukee at St. Joseph, Mo., in the tenth round of a scheduled fifteen-round bout.
The Indiana Automobile Pathfinders arrived at Tonapah, Nev., white with the alkali of the desert. Governor Oddie of Nevada met the tourists at Ely.
Honus Wagner's uniform and palm-less glove may be placed in the Carnegie museum at Pittsburg when the famous player retires from the diamond.
"Wee Willie" Sudhof, one time star pitcher of the St. Louis Browns, is reported to be violently insane in the observation ward of the St. Louis city hospital.
President W. A. Rourke of the Omaha Western League baseball club announced the release of Charles Arbogast, who has been manager of the Omaha team for the last two seasons. Rourke will manage the team himself. Arbogast goes to the Los Angeles team of the Pacific Coast League. Pitcher Luke Glavenich has been released to New Orleans.
GENERAL.
The Waukegan, Ill., plant of the Corn Products Refining Company, employing 500 men, was closed for an indefinite period. Archibald C. Hart, Democrat, was elected to the House from the Sixth congressional district of New Jersey to succeed the late James Martin. Hart had the support of President Wilson. The explosion of a bomb partly wrecked the Halvatia silk mills at Faterson, N. J., the resulting excitement bringing hundreds of workers, who have recently been on strike, from their beds to the streets. Fire started in the mat shop at Sing Sing prison in New York and quickly spread to the lumber, carriage and wagon departments, and the ice house. Those buildings were destroyed. The loss is estimated at $150,000.
Herschel Pierce, a 17-year-old express wagon driver, confessed at Lake Charles, La., that he stole $22,000 in currency from a Wells-Fargo chest in a railroad station last November, according to the police. His arrest followed the apprehension of his uncle, A. E. Amy.
Attorney General Ross A. Collins announced he would file in Coahoma county, Miss., a suit in Chancery Court against the Illinois Central and Yazoo & Mississippi Valley railroads, declaring an unlawful merger and asking penalties approximating $75,000,000.
Fifty, the majority women and young girls, went to death in a firetrap horror and fifty others were torn and maimed, many of them almost beyond recognition and most of them mortally, when the four-story factory building of the Binghamton Clothing Company was completely destroyed in a twenty-minute gust of flame at Binghamton, N. Y. John Cahill, a policeman, was murdered, probably by burglars whom he surprised in an attempt to break into the rectory back of St. Matthew's Catholic church in Brooklyn.
ZANG'S NEW BEERS NOW ON THE MARKET
Delivered Daily to All Parts of the City
The Ph. Zang Brewing Co.
TELEPHONE GALLUP 395
Boost Colorado Products
We Boost for Colorado
SAVING IDEAS
A visit to our store for an inspection of the various items which are now on sale will show a way of saving many dollars.
GLOVES
Ladies' 16-button Milanese silk gloves, regularly sold at $1.50, now
$1.00 PAIR
SHOES
All $3.50 and $4.00 ox-fords, pumps and strap slippers in all leathers at
$2.85 PAIR
PARASOLES
All fancy parasols now on sale at $ \frac{1}{4} $ and $ \frac{1}{3} $ less regular prices.
$10.00 Parasols at.....$6.00
8.50 Parasols at.....5.00
6.00 Parasols at.....4.00
3.50 Parasols at.....2.65
HOSIERY
Ladies' pure silk hose, lisle toes and heels, garter top, worth 75c, special
50c Pair
UNDERWEAR
Kaysey's vests and union suits at
50c
CORSETS
A summer clearance sale on corsets is now on in this department, many values are to be found.
FINISHED PIECES
at 1-2 Price
Embroidered pillow tops, scarfs and center-pieces at
1-2 Price
THE Perini Bros. CO. 1021 16th St. Opposite Postoffice.
Patronize Home Industry
You Should Boost for Us
J. Gibson Smith
Art Dealer
Removed To
1638 Tremont St.
PHONE MAIN 4843
FOR GOOD MEALS
GO TO
Mamma Neeley's
RESTAURANT
1829 Arapahoe St.
Everything Neat and Clean. Service First-class.
Denver, - - Colo.
J. H. BIGGINS
Furniture Repairing and Upholstering. All work Cash.
PHONE YORK 7602
1417 East 24th Ave Denver.
SPECIAL BRUSHES
MADE TO ORDER
Headquarters for all kinds of
Brushes and Janitor Supplies
SAM FRANCIS, Mgr.
Branch 1408 Curtis St.
Denver Brush Factory 418 15th St
Champa 770
J. W. CARRIE, SR J. W. CARRIE, JR
Carrie & Carrie
TONSORIAL PARLOR
HAND AND ELECTRICAL
FACE MASSAGE
1841 Arap. St. Denver, Colo.
landers in Denver.
Sept. 9-11—Mesa County Industrial
Walt Fair at Grand Junction.
Sept. 9-11—Weld County Fair at
Greeley.
Sept. 9-12.—County Fair and Race
Meeting at Sugar City.
Sept. 9-12.—Morgan County Fair at
Port McMurray.
Sept. 9-12.—Los Animas County Fair
at Trinidad.
Sept. 11-12.—Eighth District W. C. T.
U Convention at Denver.
Sept. 12.—Western Slope Fair at
Montrose.
Sept. 15-20.—Colorado State Fair at
Pueblo.
Oct. 1-3.—State W. C. T. U. Conventi-
tion at Port Collins.
Oct. 2-4.—Sedgwick County Fair at
Julesburg.
Oct. 7-12.—Meeting Society of Ameri-
can Indians at Denver.
Oct. 21-24.—State Baptist Association
at Pueblo.
Oct. 30-Nov. 1.—Colorado Kennel Club
Show at Denver.
Jan. 15-24.—National Western Stock
Show at Denver.
1915.—Last Grand Council of North
American Indians. Denver.
Secretary of the Navy Daniels will
be in Denver Aug. 1st.
It is expected that the Elberta
peach crop at Palisade will be ready
for shipment about Aug. 10.
The Civic Extension Club, of which women are the leading members, is planning another public park in the center of Loveland. The body of an unknown man was found in the water near the south bank of the Grand river and near the state bridge in Glenwood Springs. At the close of the fly-catching contest at the' Boys' club in Colorado Springs was announced that during the last six weeks more than 16,000,000 flies were killed. Seventeen business men indicted by the Denver grand jury on evidence charging the existence of a laundry "trust," gave bonds of $500 each. Thirty-two others will give bonds.
A renewed interest in commercial activities and in the upbuilding of Fort Collins has come with the consolidation of three old associations in the recently formed Industrial club. In all probability Dean Milo S. Ketchum of the engineering school of the University of Colorado at Boulder will accept the chair of engineering at his alma mater, the University of Illinois. Markley L. Young, of Buena Vista, died at Portland a few minutes after he had been taken from a train. He boarded the train at Pueblo and was taken with convulsions a few moments later. The State Highway Department has been notified that 700 feet of bridge work over Bijou creek has been completed. This bridge is on the road to Limon and eliminates two bad sand creeks.
Shot through the right arm and half way through his body, by his chum, Michael Morgan, of Platteville, John Embree did not utter a sound, and it was two hours later before Morgan knew of the accident.
Dr. J. A. Richmond was arrested in Denver on information filed by the district attorney's office, charging him with causing the death of Mrs. Emma Chandler, the young woman who died suddenly after an illegal operation.
More than 200 bankers of national prominence outside of Colorado will be invited to attend the annual convention of the Colorado State Bankers' Association to be held in Denver Wednesday and Thursday, August 27 and 28.
"Ridiculous" is what the Denver friends of Mrs. Genevieve Chandler Phipps and Edward W. B. Powell now are saying concerning the rumored marriage of these social leaders who returned from Europe on the same steamship.
The state railroad commission held a hearing on the case of the city of Canon City against the Florence and Cripple Creek and Canon City and Cripple Creek railroads to make the roads resume operations to Florence. The road was washed out July 21, 1912. The commission overruled the demurrer of the railroad company and the request to have the case dismissed, and it will be heard on its merits.
Oliver P. Wiggins, the last of the famous Indian fighters whose battles on the frontier are incomparable with the struggles for life in which he is now engaged, celebrated his ninetieth birthday in Denver.
The opinion of Governor Ammons and Senator Burris of Pueblo, sponsor for the public utilities bill, that the people of Colorado will enact this bill into a law when they have an opportunity to vote on it at the general election in 1914 may obviate the necessity of calling a special session of the Legislature.
FLORAL DESIGNS PUT UP WHILE YOU WAIT
CHOICE PLANTS AND CUT FLOWERS CONSTANTLY ON HAND
GREENHOUSES: Thirty-Fourth and Curtis Streets
TELEPHONE, MAIN 1511 DENVER, COLO
ZANG'S NEW BEER
Sold In Bottles By J. T. Turner
2605-09 Arapahoe St. Phone 3762 ORDER TO-DAY FOR SUNDAY FAMILY ORDERS RECEIVE·PROMPT ATTENTION.
2727 Welton St. Phone Main 6363
The Central Bottling & Distributing Co.
Agents for the famous
CAPITOL BEER---IT'S CAPITAL
Try a case, 2 doz. pints for $1.10, delivered promptly; empties called for.
Family Liquors, Wines, and Cordials
Genuine Goods at Popular Prices
A glass of good wine will improve your Sunday dinner, and aid digestion.
The Champa Pharmacy
SEWED HALF SOLES 60 cts. and 75 cts. HENRY WARNECKE, President
A first-class Mortuary establishment. First aid to the bereaved in the time of death of loved ones. Prices below competitors. Polite service LAWRENCE JONES, Licenced Embalmer LOUIS HUBBARD, Funeral Director
PAPER DOLLAR BAR
STEVE TODOROFF, PROP.
Fine Wines Liquors and Cigars
Phone Champa 1156
1038 Nineteenth Street. Corner 19th and Arapahoe Sts
Colorado
WORK CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED
REPAIRING DONE WHILE
YOU WAIT
AFRO-AMERICAN CULLINGS
Hampton Institute's remarkable results in training negroes are vividly set forth in the forty-fifth annual report of the principal, just made public. From a school of fifteen pupils and two teachers the institute has grown into a busy educational village of over a thousand persons, with a far-reaching influence, not only for the races it is designed to aid, but for the whole nation, which benefits by the splendid work and example of Hampton graduates everywhere. Industrial training is the keynote of the Hampton success, according to Dr. P. P. Claxton, United States commissioner of education, who is keenly interested in the Hampton work. It is noteworthy that this industrial training is of the most immediate and practical sort, applied to the ordinary producing tasks of life, first of all in the educational plant itself. At Hampton practically all the work is done by the students themselves. There are buildings to be kept in repair and occasional new buildings to be erected; there is a farm of 600 acres to be cultivated, with 150 cows and young stock, 40 horses and mules, hogs and poultry. There are horses to be shod, harness to be kept in repair, wagons to be built, boys to be clothed—these are a few of the industrial opportunities which the plant itself offers. Last year the students received over $86,000 in wages, of which about one-fourth went to the girls for domestic work in the institute. This year the boys of the trade school have built Clarke hall at a contract price of $26,142. The work called for the services of bricklayers, plasterers, carpenters, sheet metal workers, steamfitters, plumbers, cabinetmakers, electricians and painters. The architect who designed the building, after inspecting the brick work done by the boys, said it compared favorably with similar work done by New York men; and some of the local builders pronounced it the best piece of work in that section of Virginia. At Hampton work is considered a privilege; in fact, one form of punishment is the taking away of work from a pupil. No student is ever punished by being forced to work. At the same time, labor is not insisted on as an end itself, but rather as the means to an end. "The aid of Hampton," says Dr. George P. Phenix, vice-principal, "is not merely to train workmen, but to educate men and women who shall stand for the best things in the communities to which they return, and who can make their skill contribute to this end."
Colossal fortunes have been won and lost through the enterprises of men; but reverses have never succeeded in checking the ardent spirits. In all ages, in all climes, among all people, evil fate as well as fortune has played a part; but despite its frowns the combat has been waged, and valorous deeds have emerged which redound as a tribute to genius. The Negro should not curse the luck which is of his own creation, but exert every energy to make his position more tenable. Uplift is the outgrowth of hidden forces driven by individual will; and cannot be divorced from the benefits their efforts grant to man.
A simple police call is in use in Chicago, where one has but to ask for Main 13 and connection is at once made with the nearest police station.
There is one high office of the United States government which since the Civil war has been filled by a Negro. It is considered their property, after a fashion, and appears to be hereditary in the race. It is the office of register in the treasury. It is at present filled by J. C. Napier, a Negro, of course. Every piece of currency issued by the United States treasury bears the name of the register of the treasury. One need only look at the paper money in his pocket to read the name of this Negro. W. T. Vernon and J. W. Lyons are former Negro registers of the treasury whose names appear on a large amount of the currency now in circulation.
The poultry raiser need not have a watchdog to protect his flocks. Instead, a burglar alarm may be installed, which will be much more efficient protection. An alarm attached to the henhouse door with a bell in the owner's bedroom is inexpensive.
The voice of the past is but that of a will-o-the-wisp. To heed it is to die of fatigue. The present wants you, and the future awaits.
In focussing binoculars the tubes should be extended to their limit before placing to the eyes and then adjusted, for, if extended afterward, an optical nerve strain is caused that sometimes results seriously.
The offer for $10,000 for a safety train stop brought out 1.574 responses most of which were entirely impractical.
The efficiency of the water turbine has been recently raised by various improvements to 94 per cent.
In city and in country wherever there are any large number of negroes they are confronted with the same sort of a problem that confronted the colored-workmen at the Newport News ship yard. That is the problem of making the most of the opportunities for working. Nowhere in this country are the difficulties in securing work for colored persons as great as the opportunities for working. No negro in the south has to be idle because there is no work he can get to do. On the contrary, jobs, especially in the trades, are continually hunting him. If he loses his economic hold upon the south it will be because he has not made the most of his opportunities. Nevertheless there is everywhere, as at the Newport News, always the likelihood of the Negro being displaced by foreigners unless he become a reliable, a dependable workman. Although the problem of the shiftless, irresponsible Negro is general, it can be most effectively dealt with in a local way, just as was done here at Newport News. The responsible colored people here have set an example which should be followed by the better class of colored people in every community. Led by the ministers, teachers and parents, they should come together and take steps to see that the shiftless, irresponsible negroes stick to their jobs. This class of Negroes is a menace to the entire race. It is from their ranks that the chain gangs are recruited. It is they who bring disrecord upon us, and cause the whole race to be charged with being unreliable and irresponsible.—New York Age.
Men of genius have not always been good financiers. They have known how in many ways to make fortunes for others unscrupulous enough to steal their ideas or inventions, but they have not been shrewd enough to secure the protective copyright or trademark and provision for royalty, and so have died and filled the pauper's grave. It is said, for instance, that the great Thomas A. Edison knew so little about money matters in his early career that he did not know what to do with the first check he got, said to have been for $100,000, for one of his first inventions. The story seems incredible, but may be true. A news dispatch in the Philadelphia Record says that after spending all of his money to buy books from which to gain "additional knowledge to facilitate his work," John B. Trusty, aged forty-four years, "a colored man of unusual intelligence," has been removed to the poorhouse, "there probably to end his days." The Record says further: Trusty said his money is gone and he could not afford a physician or buy medicine if he did have a doctor. His food was nearly exhausted and he was facing starvation. Trusty is the inventor of numerous mechanical appliances now, in use in local plants. All of them are regarded as most efficient and economical machines. The inventor, however, does not seem to realize what his inventions would have meant to him had he had them patented, and he never received a royalty or even fair pay for them. While he worked he spent all his money, practically, buying books to help him work, and he had acquired a considerable library.
This country's production of lead during last year was 480,894 net tons, a decrease of more than 6,000 tons over the previous year.
The farmer who sells eggs should have a dating stamp, and after the eggs are brought to the house they should be carefully sorted and dated with indelible ink. The date will add 50 per cent, to the flavor of the egg when it is served at the consumer's breakfast table. It is a good idea for the farmer who retails eggs to include a card guaranteeing every egg to be as represented. It is not difficult to get five cents above the market price for such eggs, particularly when eggs found to be bad are replaced cheerfully with good ones.
Official figures, recently compiled, place the cement production of the United States last year at 83,351,191 barrels, which is a new high record and an increase of more than 3,800,000 barrels in a year.
When a fowl is dressed for eating examine the glizzard. If the grinding material is blunted the fowls are in need of proper grit.
A furniture museum is being organized in London for the benefit of furniture designers and builders.
Recent official English figures claimed a greater proportion of young adults for that country than in France, Germany, Sweden or Holland, but admitted fewer children than any of those countries except France.
The wireless time signals sent out by the government from Washington are picked up by thousands of watchmakers.
Ojibway has been selected as the name for the United States Steel company's new plant in Canada.
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THE LABOR OUTLOOK.
Every year thousands of foreigners are brought to our shores, and a very large percentage of the immigration thus induced comes with no well defined idea of assimilating itself with American ideals, but rather brings with it an unswerving faith in European standards, despite the beggard conditions that have forced them to seek an Eldorado from which they may recoup their dwindled stores. But the point of wendermer is reached when it is realized that these foreigners are taking the places of a native labor element whose every tendency is American and whose every dollar is spent or retained in the country where it is earned. In this problem of labor supply there is a very curious and conflicting application of ideas as to where the Negro comes in, and in most instances it is a great question of where he goes out rather than where he comes in. For this unprecedented demand for labor, which reaches so far as to be heard and answered in the remote corners of the old world, is one which largely leaps over the head of the willing and not unreliable Negro at home. Of course, in some cases where it seems necessary, there is a claim of unreliability placed against him, but in other cases, where the excuse is not demanded by immediate conditions, the Negro seems to be given little if any consideration at all.
For instance, the commissioner of agriculture and immigration of Virginia once said: "In my official capacity I can vouch for the statement that a desirable class of labor, capable of farm work, can be placed in large numbers in every section of Virginia, amid surroundings that will be found agreeable. There need be no fear that such labor will be placed on a footing with the Negro. The farmer has fully realized," says this commissioner, "that the Negro can no longer be depended upon, and is seeking the help which will enable him to cultivate his lands with certainty."
So badly does the South need laborers, it is represented, that it will receive with open arms working immigrants. Italians are especially being invited to take the place of the Negro in the raising of cotton.
There is a flat contradiction in the assurance that Italian or other foreign labor will not be placed on a footing with the Negro, and the reservation that Negroes that will work are gladly hired.
Back of it all is a long period of systematic injustice imposed upon the Negro laborer. As a slave and as a freeman, his labor has made the South all that it is industrially today, but the gradation of wages paid him would be an interesting investigation. The contract and other labor laws of the South, the oppressive methods long in vogue to keep Negro labor cheap and servile and the general, direful and inhuman restrictions put upon his natural ambition to rise above and get entirely away from the conditions of slavery, have born their natural fruit. The Negroes in large numbers have left the rural districts for the cities, while others have acquired their own lands and have become their own masters.
But after all, it would seem that there is yet sufficient Negro labor in the South to meet all demands if it were put on a square deal footing and not kept on a plane which arouses the suspicions of would-be immigrant labor. There is a vast fund of native labor supply in the United States which might be made and kept the source of immense industrial possibilities, if principles of wisdom and justice governed American activities.
---
CAMPBELL CHAPEL, A. M. E.
CHURCH.
spent by a goodly number of Dorcases. Mrs. Whitsell of Shorter visited and rendered splendid assistance as did also Rev. I. H. Harper, and Rev. Mrs. N. L. Bray of Pueblo.
Cor. 23d and Lawrence Sts.—Rev. H.
The members are rallying to the steward department for their special effort which takes place Sunday, August 10th. Every dollar of floating debt against Campbell has been wiped out and a neat sum is in the bank to the credit of the trustees. In order to manifest their appreciation for the unusually successful services of the pastor the church has determined to send him to conference paid in full.
The pastor will preach at both services Sunday.
11 a.m., subject, "Whither Are We Tending?"
8 p.m., subject, "The Gift of God."
The Sabbath School meets at 9:45 under the superintendency of Miss Ethel Fitchue, assisted by an able and faithful army of teachers. It will do you good to look in upon this department of our church.
Mrs. Mamie Jeter assisted by others is arranging to see that the pastor RIDES to Albuquerque to attend the annual conference.
The present membership will not live long enough to forget the wonderful sermon of Bishop Parks on last Sunday evening: Long before time for services to begin, great crowds were seen coming from every direction, and by 8 o'clock the church was filled to its utmost capacity. More than a hundred were turned away unable to get near the door. Hundreds returned to their homes rejoiced and encouraged because of the sermon of the Bishop, who spoke as a Prophet of God. Long may he live to bless the church and race.
Folks have been telling us that we had one of the best choirs in the state and now the Bishop comes along and says we have one of the best choirs in the Fifth Episcopal district. If you like good music come down tomorrow.
The Denver Brush Factory, 418 15th street, with a branch store at 1408 Curtis street, can supply you with any kind of a brush imaginable. Brushes and janitor's supplies a specialty. Call and see them.
Mrs. Hattie Berry entertained the Sewling Circle last Thursday and a pleasant and profitable afternoon was
Many Unfit to Do Hard Manual Labor
By Nathan Haskell Dole, Author, Boston
Many men and many women are physically unfitted to do hard manual labor; a delicate racehorse cannot compete with a drayhorse. But the modern Sir Galahads who fly to the help of Absolute Woman confuse all the manifestations of The Sex and are shocked to think of a big, brawny Amazon from Podolia or the mountains of Czekland working at a trade supposed to be wholly masculine. They are scandalized at the idea, not at the fact.
Of course, if conditions are unfavorable and prejudicial, nothing can be said to uphold it: this applies to men as well as women; but under cleanly and suitable circumstances there is nothing so very shocking in a woman engaging in hard manual labor.
This may sound cold-blooded, but if one stops for a moment to consider and call to mind what numbers of women are daily engaged in far more disagreeable and fatiguing work, the foundry and factory will seem mild.
How many washerwomen bend all day over their tubs, ay, and in very unfavorable environment, in damp cellars, leaving the hot water in which their poor, red arms have been parboiled to go out into a temperature perhaps below zero to hang their washing on frost-stiffened clothes lines! This band of those who stand next to professional pietists—cleanliness being next to godliness—includes multitudes of women who, in addition to their laundry work, have to cook for their families, and what can be more toilsome than to knead dough or lift pots and kettles in a hot kitchen, especially in summer, when the temperature outside is almost high enough to boil water.
Then there is a whole army of scrubwomen who, after the millionaire and office boy have left the magnificent skyscraper, invade the marble halls, which they probably dream they dwell in every night or whenever they sleep, and down they go on their knees, like the priestesses of some mystic rite, the incense of soapsuds rising into the lofty corridors, and they empty cuspidors—surely not a dainty task for frail woman!—and they clean the filthy floors tracked with street mud and the tobaccojuice decorations of their lordly master, man.
Hard labor, if it is creative, has at least some interest, but a great deal of the drudgery imposed on women is heart-breakingly futile. The washed dishes come back the next minute soiled, and so it goes in a perpetual round.
The time will come, undoubtedly, when the rewards of those disagreeable occupations will be more fairly distributed than they are now. So far in the history of the world the wages of work have been absurdly disproportioned. The easiest and most delightful employments have been the best paid.
It is not the ideal way for mothers of families to work, to be sure, but all I would contend is that it is not worse than doing dozens of other things which the majority of the women of our country are doing all the time and thinking it no especial hardship.
Probably the exercise involved in games of basketball or lawn tennis is as violent as that of lifting cores in a foundry, but that is performed by delicately nurtured girls; the feminine muscle is as capable of rugosity as the masculine. It has been a good idea, however, to call the attention of the world to the inequalities of life, for it has created a wave of
sympathy, and that is good for those who feel it as it is for them for whom it is aroused.
Nathan Assisted Sole
It is said to be a curious fact that the war of the rebellion gave to the world no really great war songs. None, at least, that could be compared to the French "Marseillaise." nor to the
It is said to be a curious fact that the war of the rebellion gave to the world no really great war songs. None, at least, that could be compared to the French "Marseillaise," nor to the splendid German song, "Die Wacht am Rhein." However, there are some that bid fair to outlive this generation and may be sung by generations yet unborn, notably among the number, "Marching Through Georgia" and "Tramp, Tramp, Tramp," which were composed by Major Alfred R. Calhoun, a Kentuckian. He lost a leg in a sharp engagement and was thrown into Libby prison, and while there composed the latter song.
Among other songs that have outlived the echo of the fierce struggle of half a century ago perhaps the most familiar now is "Dixie," which has become considered as distinctively southern, although it was intended originally as a purely northern song. "The Bonnie Blue Flag" was a great favorite in the south and was written after South Carolina had seceded from the Union and had adopted a single star in place of the Stars and Stripes.
It is to be regretted that our "America," by S. F. Smith, is in measure the same as the English "God Save the King," and our rather popular national air, "Yankee Doodle," has no inspiriring words to equal the air of the thousand or more war songs which were written. It is conceded by critics that only one has really literary value—namely, "The Battle Hymn of the Republic," by Julia Ward Howe. The soldiers, however, sang a parody on the splendid song, "John Brown's Body." The most popular song in the south was without doubt "Maryland, My Maryland." It possesses considerable literary merit, although it is said to be a parody on an old Persian song.
It must be admitted, after all, that our one great national air, "The Star Spangled Banner," has not as yet a rival in the field.
Some Excellent Tips for Hot Weather By H. P. ANDERSON, Boston
Some Excellent Tips for Hot Weather
By H. P. ANDERSON, Boston
Many persons are very careless of their health during the hot weather. Wherever I go I always try to hear what the doctors have to say about the hot weather. Here are a few of the rules that have been issued by the health officers of some of the southern cities:
During very hot weather eat as little as possible and sleep as much as possible.
Eat very little meat. If possible, eat none at all.
Drink plenty of water and eat fresh, green vegetables.
Don't worry about the heat. It may get hotter, but try and convince yourself that it will soon be cooler.
Abstain from all alcoholic drinks.
While you are in the sun there is no danger if you perspire freely.
Clothing should be loose and light in hot weather.
Ptomaine poison is very often caused by left-over foods. Many persons contract ptomaine on picnics. The food eaten on picnics should be very carefully prepared. Water should always be carried along, as it is especially dangerous to drink water from springs and streams in the country unless they are known to be safe. Typhoid fever is contracted by drinking such water.
A TRUTHFUL FURNITURE AD.
We want you to know that every word in our advertisement is the truth—we do not exaggerate or overstate.
IT IS THE TRUTH
That if everybody in Denver realized the money we could save them on Furniture we would have practically all the business.
IT IS THE TRUTH
That we can sell cheaper than up-town retails stores because of our less expense. Our Cash Method of doing business ,our Discount Method of buying in quantity for cash.
WHOLESALE FURNITURE.
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IT IS THE TRUTH
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IT IS THE TRUTH
That we save you $1, $10, $25 and even $50 on Rugs, Brass Beds, Linoleums, Dining Room Furniture, Kitchen Furniture, as well as Office Furniture.
IT IS TRUE that we will gladly call for you with our automobiles if you will Phone Main 7930, and bring you to and from our warehouse, with no obligation to buy.
IT IS THE TRUTH
That we offer REFRIGERATORS at about one- half regular prices; a good size one for $6.50.
BED DAVENPORTS AND DIVANETTES, 15 styles, ranging from $16.25 up. We save you from $10 to $30.
BABY CARRIAGES, the collapsible kind; best quality; just 75 of them, worth retail $10.50. We offer them at $5.50.
We offer 9x12 AXMINSTER RUGS, choice of four leading carpet mills, at $13.50 to $19.00.
STOP—LOOK—LISTEN—IT'S ON THE RAILROAD TRACKS,
WHERE EXPENSES ARE LOW AND PRICES CHEAP.
F. M. FRANKLIN & SON
2016 BLAKE STREET, on the Tracks
Why Not Be Cool and Comfortable
At Zion Church Each Sunday
Evening During the Hot Weather?
SERMONS IN PICTURES BY MENAS OF THE
STEREOPTICON.
SUBJECT—TO-MORROW NIGHT:
"Gethsemane and Calvary"" 24 Views
"JERUSALEM," Twelve Views.
"CALVARY," Twelve Views.
EVERYBODY WELCOME
J. R. DRESSOR WILLIAM CLOW A. B. CLOW
The Colorado Wall Paper and Paint Company
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.
728 W. Colfax Ave., Foot of Welton St. Denver, Colorado
10th Avenue Hotel and Bar
H. HUER, Proprietor
Deutsches Gasthaus
FINE WINES, LIQUORS and CIGARS, SCHLITZ BEER ALWAYS ON TAP. MEALS AT ALL HOURS.
Telephone South 683
Cor. West 10th. & Osage. Denver, Col.
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
William F. Finley left Monday for Los Angeles, Calif.
J. M. Garnett of Durango, Colo., is a visitor in the city.
Mrs. Sallie Anderson left Tuesday night for Chicago to visit relatives and friends.
Mrs. Baptiste, Mrs. F. Turner, M. P. W. Walker and Mrs. Annie Moore will give a lawn fete at 2229 Clarks street, Wednesday, July 30th. This prizes will be awarded. Those receiving the highest number of seeds lemons. First prize, a beautiful chocolate set; second, a fancy plate; third, a picture placque.
Mrs. H. A. Gibson of Boulder, Colo., is visiting Mrs. W. G. Campbell of 2835 Stout street.
Mrs. A. Mallory and son Herley arrived home Sunday from an enjoyable visit with relatives in Topeka, Kan.
A. R. Butter and C. W. Young will leave tomorrow to attend the Grand Lodge K. of P.'s at Colorado Springs.
Revs. H. Franklin Bray and D. E. Over are trout fishing in the mountains this week.
Rev. Mrs. N. L. Bray of Pueblo is the guest of her son, Rev. H. Franklin Bray, of Campbell chapel.
Miss Edith M. Millen left for Ogden, Utah, today to visit her father, who is in business there.
Mrs. W. C. Craig of Ouray, Colorado, is in the city, the guest of her sister, Mrs. Ella Starns, proprietress of the Starns Café.
Mrs. Willie Kaufman of Hot Springs, Ark., arrived in the city last week and is the guest of her cousin, Mrs. C. R. Brown.
Mrs. Edward Keen and son of St. Louis, Mo., are visiting her sister, Mrs. Eugene R. Parks, at 2244 Washington street.
Mrs. Martha Hall of Boulder was in the city this week to be at the bedside of her grandson, Clyde, who is suffering with typhoid fever.
Miss Julia Robinson of Kansas City, Kan., is in the city visiting Mrs. Charles Holloway and Mrs. Ella Starns. Miss Robinson is a dressmaker of much ability.
Dr. J. H. P. Westbrook, ex-grand chancelor of Colorado jurisdiction leaves on Monday, 28th inst., to attend grand session of the Knights of Pythias at Colorado Springs.
An order was issued Tuesday by District Attorney Rush that all social clubs with buffet in connection will have to pay a liquor tax of $600 per year the same as saloons, or close up business.
Rev. H. A. Carr, B. D., of Corsicana, Texas, who is en route to California, is stopping off for a few days in our city, and while here is the guest of Rev. and Mrs. R. L. Pope of Shorter's A. M. E. church.
A reception was given last Monday afternoon at the residence of Mrs. C. R. Brown, in honor of her cousin, Mrs. Willie Kaufman of Hot Springs, Ark. Quite an enjoyable afternoon was spent by the many invited ladies.
Mrs. Carry E. Ellsberry, who died at her home, 2312 Curtis street Tuesday 22. Funeral services will be held at Zion Baptist church, Sunday, July 27th at 2 o'clock. Douglass Undertaking Company in charge.
About twenty-five Boulder people will join the Denver Citizens' Picnic to Glacier Lake, Thursday, July 31st. This excursion and barbecue promises to be the largest leaving from Denver this season. The committee is working hard to see that everyone who goes will have a good time.
Mrs. Thos. Campbell, who was called to New York City last May owing to the sudden death of her sister, Mrs. Greene, will reach home Saturday, May 26th. Returning from New York City she spent a couple of months with her mother at Wilberforce, Ohio.
Zion Baptist Sunday School Picnic
In spite of the inclement weather quite a number of people left the Union depot last Thursday morning for the annual outing of the above Sunday school. A very enjoyable time was spent and Zion kept up the reputation of "good picnics."
Messrs. Charles and Spencer Smithea entertained a number of their gentlemen friends at a smoker Saturday night at the residence of Charlie Smithea, 1740 Humboldt street, in honor of Mr. Sidney DePriest of Salina, Kansas. A delightful evening was enjoyed by those present.
Mrs. Baptiste, Mrs. F. Turner, Mr. P. W. Walker and Mrs. Annie Moore will give a lawn fete at 2229 Clarkson street, Wednesday, July 30th. Three prizes will be awarded. Those receiving the highest number of seeds in lemons. First prize, a beautiful chocolate set; second, a fancy plate; third, a picture placque.
No better place to buy your Drugs and Chemicals than to buy at the Elite Drug Store, 2100 Arapahoe St., Phone Main 2701. Prescriptions carefully compounded and free delivered.
The Grand Lodge. K. of P., will convene in Colorado Springs, Monday morning. The following delegates who will attend from Denver are: J. R. Contee and C. S. Muse, Damon Lodge No. 5; A. R. Butter, Pythian No. 11; E. M. Blackwell, Progress No. 12.
Miss P. Lee, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Lee of this city, has returned home after visiting her classmates in Kansas City, Mo. Miss Lee graduated from the Topeka Industrial Institute with very high honors and was commended highly by the principal, Prof. W. R. Carter. She contemplates going South this fall to teach school.
Do not miss The Denver Citizens annual picnic and barbecue at Glacier Lake, Thursday, July 31st. All your friends are going. Train leaves promptly at 6:59 a. m. Be on time.
In loving remembrance of our dear father, Rev. J. H. Hubbard, who died four years ago, July 19, 1909.
Peace on the Saviour's breast.
MRS. A. L. WILLIAMSON.
MRS. E. MORRIS.
NOTICE, AN OUTING AT UNIVERSITY PARK.
On Friday evening, August 1st., a beautiful garden party will be given by Mrs. S. E. Bell at her residence, 2304 South Williams street, for the benefit of Central Baptist church. Mrs. Bell is sparing neither pains or expense in making this picnic an enjoyable event for all who attend. The supper, consisting of all the delicacies of the season will be donated and prepared by the hostess, who is considered one of the best caterers in the city. The public is cordially invited to attend and a good time is assured to all. Take University Park car.
Strangers visiting the city can well be supplied reasonably with Drugs and Chemicals and Toilet Articles at Elite Drug Co., Main 2701 Phone; 2100 Arapahoe St.
A DISTINGUISHED VISITOR.
Denver has as its guest at present one of the race's leading young women, Mrs. Lena V. DeFrantz, of Kansas City, Mo.
Mrs. DeFrantz was educated in the public schools of her home town, Topeka, and at Lincoln Institute. After teaching a short while she became the wife of Robert DeFrantz, secretary of the Y. M. C. A. at Kansas City, and thus began her duties not only as a housewife but as chief aid to her husband in his arduous duties in building up the "Y." Largely as a result of her untiring efforts, one hundred and thirty thousand dollars was raised recently to erect a suitable building for the colored "Y."
After her husband's success was assured Mrs. DeFrantz became the first colored member of the Kansas City Public Welfare Board and did such good work that the board was induced to appoint another member of the race. She is deeply interested in clubs, the kind that give aid to mothers and destitute children. Mrs. DeFrantz is doing a noble work, and before many years her name will be a household word throughout America. On her tour of Colorado she is accompanied by Mrs. Theodore H. Clay, principal of one of the Kansas City schools; Mrs. Gaitha Page, wife of the principal of another school, and Mrs. Thomas McCampbell, whose husband is one of Kansas City's leading physicians and business men.
While here Mrs. DeFrantz is making her home with her sister, Mrs. A. G. Fallings, 2434 Emerson street, and the other ladies, when they return from a sightseeing trip in and about the Springs, will stop at 2350 Ogden,
Before You Buy Property, Let Lawyer 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
SHORTER CHAPEL.
Washington and Twenty-third sts,
Rev. Robert L. Pope, B. D. pastor.
The order of service at Shorter
Chapel tomorrow will be as follows:
9:45 a. m., Sunday school. Lesson:
Moses' Request Refused, Ex 5: 1-14.
11:00 Sermon by the pastor subject:
"The Embodying of the Holy Spirit."
6:45 Allen Christian Endeavor
League. Topic: Missionary Essentials
Home and Abroad. 11 Prayer. Eph.
6:10-20.
8:00 p..m. Sacred Forum. (Monthly).
PROGRAM.
1. Introductory service.
2. Anthem Lost Chord by Choir.
3. Announcement.
4. Solo Soprano Selected, Miss
Frankie Buchannon.
5. Trio Lift Thine Eyes—Medlessohn,
Mesdames Fife, Holley and McGuire.
6. Address—Character Study, Dr.
C. D. DeFrantz.
7. Violin Solo — Selected, Mr.
George Morrison.
8. Anthem Selected, Choir.
9. Offertory. Benediction. Recessional.
The Episcopal visitation of Bishop H. B. Parks to the Colorado Annual conference was a source of inspiration, jubilation and helpfulness. He and Mrs. Parks arrived in Denver Friday afternoon, the 18th and were the guests of Rev. and Mrs. Robert L. Pope, 220 Twenty-third street. Among the courtesies extended them was an auto drive Saturday afternoon to points of interest throughout the city. Another auto outing was planned for Wednesday by Dr. and Mrs. J. H. P. Westbrooks, but rain prevented its accomplishment. Dr. and Mrs. H. F. Bray, Dr. and Mrs. R. A. Randolph and other friends contributed graciously to the end that every moment of our prelate's stay in our midst might be pleasant.
The sermon Sunday morning was a most remarkable one and through it the good bishop greatly exhaled the mission of the church. So clear and logical was the line of reasoning and so eloquent and forceful was the delivery that the entire audience which had crowded into Shorter's adutiorum was moved in a wondrous manner. Having visited Colorado Springs Monday and Pueblo Tuesday, the good bishop and his amiable wife left over the Union Pacific Wednesday afternoon for Salt Lake City. Dr. Julian C. Caldwell of Nashville, Tenn., will deliver one of his great addresses before the young people's mass-meeting Tuesday evening, July 29th. A program consisting of representatives from the social young people's societies of the city will be rendered. Come and bring your friend. Free admission.
Brickler's New Barber Shop is located at 2208 Larimer street. Shave, 10c. Hair Cut, 25c: Children, 15c.
CARS
A RELIABLE PLACE
Dinnerware
Silver
Common Gl
The Carson
Denver's Only Exclu
732-36 Fifteenth St.
Come and be Measured
Best Material, Latest
Best of Work.
THE PROFIT
Customer Tailor
Order at
CARSONS
A RELIABLE PLACE TO BUY YOUR
Dinnerware, Cut Glass,
Silverware
Common Glassware, Etc.
The Carson Crockery Co.
Denver's Only Exclusive Chinaware Store
732-36 Fifteenth St. (Near Stout)
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
$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
THE BAR
NEW WORK TAMARA
NATIONAL TIME, WEEK TIME
A MARKETING EXPERIENCE
IF I PLEASE YOU, TELL YOUR FRIENDS, IF NOT, TELL US
N. FERRY
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 small a rate and pay a collector's commission. No items of this nature accepted without a cash payment.
The Citizen's Picnic and Barbecue, to be given at Glacier Lake Thursday, July 31st, promises to be one of the biggest events of the season as the committee in Charge is sparing neither pains nor expense to make it such. Don't fail to join the crowd for a day's outing. Train leaves Union depot at 6:59 a.m. Round trip $1.50.
Nicely furnished rooms for rent in a modern house, at 2227 Curtis street, telephone Olive 1608. Mrs. Howard Steele.
FOR SALE—Nice 8-room house to a desirable colored family. Thoroughly modern, nice neighborhood, 2515 Humboldt st. $2,500; call at premises.
Eight-room brick house, with well; concrete chicken house and barn; five-cherry trees; garden; good, airy place; plenty of run for chickens; for rent or sale cheap, Mrs. C. Anderson, 1064 Ivanhoe, Montclair.
13 CENTS A DAY BUYS A PIANO. WITH MUSIC LESSONS FREE. PIANOS FROM $88 UP. COLUMBINE MUSIC CO., 920-924 15th STREET, CHARLES BUILDING.
Mrs. Wm. G. Campbell
Novelties, Toilet Goods, Etc.
Will Treat the Scalp for Dandruff,
Eczema, Itch and Scurf. Will Shampoo and Straighten Hair.
Prices Reasonable Phone Olive 1304
2835 STOUT STREET.
Conscientious at Least.
"Why did you say your prayers twice, dear?" asked his mother, kissing Charlie good-night. "Cause I was too tired to say it last night, and I'm making up for lost time."
No Facilities.
"They say that Cupid strikes the match that sets the world aglow. But where does Cupid strike the match?—that's what I'd like to know."—Cornell Widow.
SONS
CE TO BUY YOUR
, Cut Glass,
ware
lassware, Etc.
Crockery Co.
sive Chinaware Store
(Near Stout)
red. Do it To-Day.
Styles, Lowest Prices,
My Rent is low.
IT IS YOURS
--Clothes Made to
Half Price
Phone Main 7411
1905 Curtis Street
---
Citizens' Picnic AND BARBECUE THURSDAY, JULY 31st. GLACIER LAKE
Circling the crater on the Crest of the Continent-a trip to cloudland over the famous "Switzerland Trail of America." Four rounds of "the Giant's Ladder. Boating and Fishing: Webster's Full Orchestra. GENERAL COMMITTEE.-Eph Barton, Arnold Smith, Chas. Overton, Sandford Caldwell, Olie Grigsby, R. E, Webster, W. B. Townsend, Leonard Haynes, George Morrison.
ROUND TRIP $1.50
TRAIN LEAVES UNION DEPOT
REFRESHMENT AND TICKET
E. B. Blackwell, 2847 Glenarm Pl. Olive
Caldwell, 2246 Tremont Place; Miss Bank
Miss Beatrice Walker, 2546 Walnut street
ley, 2546 Walnut street; Miss Rose Watts
avenue, Pablo Walskino, 2737 California
Buy Tickets from Rice & Rice
2632 Welton St., Or The Maceo,
Officer Wm. Baker In
Of The Trai
AIN LEAVES UNION DEPOT 6:59 A. M.
FRESHMENT AND TICKET COMMITTEE—Mrs.
Bickwell, 2847 Glenarm Pl. Olive 1918; Mrs. E. Ethel
2246 Tremont Place; Miss Banks, 2542 Curtis street;
Rice Walker, 2546 Walnut street; Miss Alberta Kirt-
Walnut street; Miss Rose Watson, 1717 Pennsylvania
Pablo Walskino, 2737 California street.
Tickets from Rice & Rice Confectionery Co.,
Welton St., Or The Maceo, 2721 Welton St
Rice Wm. Baker In Charge
Of The Train
TRAIN LEAVES UNION DEPOT 6:59 A. M.
REFRESHMENT AND TICKET COMMITTEE—Mrs.
E. B. Blackwell, 2847 Glenarm Pl. Olive 1918; Mrs. E. Ethel
Caldwell, 2246 Tremont Place; Miss Banks, 2542 Curtis street;
Miss Beatrice Walker, 2546 Walnut street; Miss Alberta Kirtle,
2546 Walnut street; Miss Rose Watson, 1717 Pennsylvania
avenue, Pablo Walskino, 2737 California street.
Buy Tickets from Rice & Rice Confectionery Co.,
2632 Welton St., Or The Maceo, 2721 Welton St
Officer Wm. Baker In Charge
---
Great Sacrifice Sale During Month of July ON FUR COATS
Such as Natural and Black Ponies, Marmotts, Coneys and Seals, etc. Also all Fur Collars and Muffs.
A small deposit will secure any garment in this store.
Youman's Fur
Youman's Fur Company
---
---
A Big Millinery
Clearance Sale
THE HAT
200 Beautiful Trim
THE VERY NEWEST STYLES AND IN THE
MER SHADES. WORTH UP TO $5 AND $6.
69c $1
Untrimmed Shapes WHITE,
ORS.
SMALL SHAPES; WORTH THREE AND FOUR
19c 49c 65
Beautiful Trimmed Hats
BY NEWEST STYLES AND IN THE VERY NEWEST SUM-
S. WORTH UP TO $5 AND $6. DIVIDED IN TWO LOTS.
69c $1.69
med Shapes WHITE, BLACK AND ALL COLORS. IN EITHER LARGE OR
ES; WORTH THREE AND FOUR TIMES WHAT WE ASK—
49c 65c 95c
THE VERY NEWEST STYLES AND IN THE VERY NEWEST SUMMER SHADES. WORTH UP TO $5 AND $6. DIVIDED IN TWO LOTS.
Untrimmed Shapes WHITE, BLACK AND ALL COLORS. IN EITHER LARGE OR SMALL SHAPES; WORTH THREE AND FOUR TIMES WHAT WE ASK 19c 49c 65c 95c
A
PHONE MAIN 8045
422-424 15th STREET
THE FILM OF "THE WOMEN'S FILM" BY J. A. M. HARRIS, WITH A FILM BY J. A. M. HARRIS, AND A FILM BY J. A. M. HARRIS.
CERTAIN audacities of the mode are most noticeable in costumes designed for the street, or for traveling or general utility wear. Waist lines, for instance, are ignored; garments are cut without reference to it, as if the figure were as uniform in size as a stove pipe. These straight up and down lines, it must be conceded, have a marked distinction of style when properly worn. They are not for the stout figure and it is ridiculous for heavy women to attempt them. But, for those who may affect them, they provide a very pleasing variety in gowning.
A good example of one of the boyish-looking models is shown in the traveling gown of covert or serge or ratine, for this style is developed in a great number of fabrics. It looks easy going and comfortable. The belt, of the same material as the gown, is drawn about the hips. The absence of shoulder seams provides an easy adjustment of the coat, and an easy adjustment, after one has lounged about in it.
The skirt is provided with a very little draping and tailored with over lapped seams. It is narrow and has a short split to the ankle, insuring freedom in walking.
When the coat is removed a light weight, washable silk waist is revealed and this is ornamented with some hand embroidery. The skirt fits well about the waist and the figure looks trim and neat in simply the waist and skirt.
A straight sailor hat is in harmony with this plain out-of-doors gown, although there is no apparent preference for this particular shape. There are so many more graceful shapes designed for outing and traveling that there is no good reason why one should attempt the most severe of hats. But, with this hat, as with the gown, certain types wear the banded sailor particularly well. It is a neat, light, practical little hat, shading the eyes and protecting the head. Vells look well with it and they are provided in ample variety to choose from. Washable vells of lace or bordered net or chiffon are to be worn with this gown and hat and they provide completely for the comfort of the wearer. JULIA BOTTOMLEY.
LACE SCARFS IN HIGH FAVOR
So Popular They May Constitute, If Desired, the Only Trimming for Summer Gown.
The lace business is so revived that women are finding a new way of earning a livelihood, or rather reviving a very old one. All the French salons and those of Belgium are working overtime to supply the demand. Therefore it is quite natural that scarfs should come into fashion and that they should be the only trimming on a simple summer gown, if one so desires.
If a woman owns anything in the way of a fine lace scarf, either black or white, she should be sure to arrange it in some fanciful fashion over her shoulders and down her arms and not throw it on casually whenever she wears the gown. Chantilly shawls can be draped in this fashion and made to form one of those winglike transparent draperies that Callot invented and all the civilized world took up.
The trouble about one of these lace shawls is that it has too much body for summer drapery, and is better when made a part of the gown and put over material instead of the skin. For summer tulles and silk net are the best choices and it does not make any difference how vivid is the color. Conservative women may not care to use blue tulle over a scarlet gown, but the majority will not mind. There will be artists aplenty to give it approval.
Latest Princess Slips.
The Balkan blouse dresses were scarcely launched on the market before a separate lining, in the form of a slip, was made to take care of this new requirement. These new garments are cut on perfectly straight lines. They hang from the yoke-line to the skirt edge, with no curves appearing under the arms. Being quite snug-fitting around the hips, all bulkiness is eliminated in the dress, while extra fulness for the Balkan blouse is supplied by gathering in the top of the slip at the yoke-line, from which point it falls to the hips in the soft blouse effect which is now so fashionable.
But falling such an expensive one.
Trilling of lace, chiffon or net will do.
Baste it inside the coat or dress collar.
And graduate it to a point in the front.
Some of these net and chiffon frills come ready for adjusting and are not very expensive.
CHILD'S DAINTY FROCK
1
Though presenting the effect of great elaboration this little French frock of fine white batiste tucks and embroidery may be easily made at home with very little expense. The all-over tucked batiste which may be bought by the yard may be used for the deep yoke, thus saving much time and labor. The little embroidered medallions inset in the dress may be purchased by the yard also. Fine, double-edged, embroidered batiste joins the waist with the little straight skirt below, which is laid into the waist in tiny tucks. Dainty Valenciennes lace insertion crosses the shoulders and is edged with a narrow ruffle of lace. The skirt is also lace trimmed.
Use of Many Flowers
Even the greatest milliners use the field flowers in preference to large ones and their only recommendation is novelty. Somehow they do not seem quite suitable for the hat of a grown-up person, but perhaps this is only a mental suggestion left in our minds by custom. Every one is trying to bring the ostrich feather back again into fashion, but whether or not women will ever give up the dashing little fantasie is hard to tell.
In Plaid Taffeta.
Coat suits.
Are a novelty.
They are not all silk.
Some of them are of cotton.
They have great possibilities.
But not for the shopping district at
11 o'clock a. m.
W. L. CLAYTON TAKES OWN LIFE
BODY FOUND IN GAS - FILLED ROOM AT HOME BY HIS COUSIN.
HAD BEEN DESPONDENT
DESPAIR OVER HEAVY FINANCIAL
LOSSES THOUGHT CAUSE
OF ACT.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
Denver, July 24.—William L. Clayton, former state insurance commissioner, former state senator from Greeley, Weld county, and candidate for Congress on the Democratic ticket at the last election, committed suicide in his home, 1435 Clarkson street, Tuesday night by inhaling gas. There was no one else in the house at the time of the tragedy. Clayton's two little daughters are visiting in Estes Park. His wife died a year ago last February. The body was found Wednesday by R. H. Clayton, a cousin, 501 East Colfax avenue, who has been staying at the Clarkson street address for several nights, fearing an attempt at suicide.
Despair over heavy financial losses is the only motive that relatives and friends can give. Close acquaintances say that his wife's death caused Clayton considerable trouble and increased the stage of melancholia he has been in for several months.
He did not leave a farewell note, or anything indicative of his intention to kill himself, but R. H. Clayton, the cousin, tells of numerous instances within the last few weeks when the former insurance commissioner spoke of "ending it all."
GIRLS IN TERROR OF REBELS.
Penned Up in Town, Declare They Will Die Before Dishonor
El Paso, Tex.—William Condon, an American cowboy messenger, reached here after a heartbreaking ride from Madera, Chihuahua, and reports that the score of American men, women and children besieged by Mexican bandits in the town are huddled in two business houses of the main street and when he left were reduced to the point of starvation. American women in the party have sworn to die fighting with their husbands and fathers, for they have learned the terrible fate that will befall them should the Mexican outlaws take them captives. The bandits have sworn to carry out this purpose after butchering the men in the party. The men have barricaded and fortified the buildings as best they can and the women take turns with the men in sentry duty, Condon reports.
The bandits have surrounded Madera and are bent on exterminating the American men for the protection they gave a party of cowboys.
Czar Demands Bulgarian Sacrifices.
Sofia, Bulgaria.—The Russian Emperor sent a message to King Ferdinand in response to Bulgaria's appeal to Russia to end the war, expressing sympathy with Bulgaria's misfortunes and joy at the prospect of peace, but warning the Bulgarians they must be prepared to make sacrifices.
Examine Candidates for Mint Job.
Washington.—Senator Thomas took Frank A. Wheeler, his candidate for superintendent of the Denver mint, to be "looked over" by Secretary McAdoo. Shafroth's candidate, Thoams Annear, will be here and in turn will be brought to the secretary's personal observation.
OVER 50 DEAD IN FACTORY FIRE.
Unidentified Victims to Be Buried in Plot Together.
Binghamton, N. Y. — The exact number of persons who perished in the fire in the factory of the Binghamton Clothing Company never may be known. The list of employees is in the ruins. Only eight of the bodies recovered have been identified.
A careful estimate places the number of those in the building at the time the fire started at 113. Fifteen bodies, charred beyond recognition, are at the morgue, seven injured are in the hospitals, forty-six slightly injured are safe at their homes, eleven have been reported by relatives as missing and twenty-six others are not accounted for.
Mayor Irving will issue a proclamation for a general funeral for the victims.
Aeroplane Goes 700 Miles in 8 Hours.
Aeroplane Goes 700 Miles in 8 Hours.
Berlin.—The army aviator, Lleutenant Joly made a flight from Cologne to Konigsberg with a passenger, a distance of over 700 miles in eight hours.
Bellesfield Named Pueblo Postmaster.
Washington.—State Senator Sherman S. Bellesfield of Colorado was nominated by President Wilson for postmastership of Pueblo. The information from Washington was coupled with the announcement also of the nomination of M. J. Brennan as postmaster of Leadville.
Brady Dies Suddenly in London.
London.—Angina pectoris was the cause of the sudden death of Anthony N. Brady, the financier of New York city, in a London hotel.
HUNT HIDDEN MILLIONS
DREAM CAUSES RELIGIOUS SECT
TO SEEK TREASURE.
Holy Rollers Start Expedition to Unearth Bullion Supposed to Have Been Buried By Spanish invaders.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
Pagosa Springs, Colo.-The most unusual treasure-hunting expedition in the history of the state is now marching on Treasure mountain near here firm in the belief that it has been delegated by God to unearth the famous bullion treasure buried centuries ago by Spanish soldiers fleeing from Mexico. The party is made up of men, women and children and is much in the nature of a holy crusade with Spanish gold as the enemy to be captured. It started as the result of a dream or vision that came to one of the members of the Holy Roilers, an organization that has long maintained a settlement in Archuleta county.
One of the members of the camp in a vision perceived the spot where the treasure which has been hunted by hundreds of parties in the past was located. On coming from his trance he drew a map of the mountain and marked the spot where he believed that the treasure could be found. After conference the leaders of the congregation of Penitentes, as they are called in this country, decided that Providence has decreed that they should become treasure seekers. After several days of prayer the entire community, men, women and children, set out for Treasure mountain. The party attracted much attention and all along its route people turned out to see the fanatics on the march.
When they reach the spot designated by the map it is declared that they will dig in the vicinity all summer if necessary to unearth the gold which they are certain is buried there.
Daughters Wed; Father Drops Dead.
Grand Junction, Colo.—The sudden death of J. B. Maxwell, brought on by shock over news of the marriage on both his daughters, has cut short the romance of Bessie and Goldie Maxwell, who were married to Max W. Midgley and W. C. Riter at Salt Lake City after a twelve-hour courtship.
When Maxwell, the oldest engineer in the Rio Grande Western service, received the telegram at Helper, Utah, he fell from an attack of heart disease and did not recover consciousness.
Bullet Removed From Girl's Jaw.
Pueblo.—After spending a night of agony from the effects of a bullet wound in the jaw, received when she dreamed that there was a burglar in her room and called to her employer, E. F. Stone, who accidentally shot her through the closed door separating their apartments, Miss Nellie Dilts was operated on and the bullet removed. Attending physicians say she will be disfigured for life.
Crop Prospects Bright.
Colorado Springs.—Fifty business men of Colorado Springs went on a trip through the dry farming territory east of here. The party traveled in ten automobiles and made an inspection of the crops, the prospects for which are the best probably in the history of the region.
Successful Caesarian Operation.
Evans.—So far as known, the second Caesarian operation to be performed in Weld county was when Mrs. Conrad Hergert went under the knife. The child is living and the mother will recover. The first case here was that of a woman shot through the back. Her life was saved.
Kit Carson Held for Wife Desertion.
La Junta.—Kit Carson, son of the well-known pioneer scout of that name, was arrested at Trinidad for wife desertion, and an officer from La Junta will bring him back here. He left his wife and five children, all under sixteen years of age, three weeks ago.
Stock Growers Protest Tax Values.
Glenwood Springs.—Colorado cattlemen are up in arms against the assessments in most of the counties on cattle under the new full cash plan. At the convention of the Colorado Stock Growers' Association resolutions were adopted protesting against the proposed advances in assessments.
Prisoners Break Jail at Trinidad.
Trinidad.—Dislodging stone in the west wall of the county jail, seven prisoners effected an escape shortly after one o'clock Tuesday afternoon.
Cherokee Park Laundry Burned.
Fort Collins.—Fire destroyed the laundry of the Cherokee park resort, fifty miles northwest of the city of Fort Collins.
Gold Dividend Declared.
Colorado Springs.—The Portland Gold Mining Company made its quarterly dividend disbursement of 2 cents a share, amounting to $60,000. The net profits of the mine and mills for the quarter amounted to $243,043.09.
Man's Body Found in Old Hut.
Colorado Springs.—Louis Dallas, a tie cutter of Denver, was found dead in his cabin on Kettle creek, in the Black forest, about thirty miles north of Colorado Springs.
What a Dollar Will Do
at the
THE MONARCH
MINE & LIQUOR CO
You Can Get
One Case of Good, Ste
ized Beer, 24 Pints t
Or One Gallon of Pure
California Port, Sherry
Muscatel Wine.
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PHONE CHAMPA
1516 Court Place
SEEDS
Your back yard will help pay you
BARTELD
"WESTERN SEEDS FOR WES
THE BARTELDES S
1521-1525 Fifteenth St.
The Largest Poultry Supply H
HENRY MILLI
case of Good, Steamed
Beer, 24 Pints to the
Gallon of Pure 8 Yea
onia Port, Sherry, Angle
el Wine.
Full Quart of Bout
Rye or Bourbon W
Monarch Lique
PHONE CHAMPA 1231
Place D
SEEDS
hard will help pay your rent
BARTELDES'
SEEDS FOR WESTERN
THE BARTELDES SEED O
nth St.
West Poultry Supply House in
Y MILLER
1939 BROADWAY
GRAVEL RO
AND CEMENT
Good, Steamed, Steril-
4 Pints to the Case.
Con of Pure 8 Year Old
Art, Sherry, Angelica or
ane.
Quart of Bottled in
for Bourbon Whiskey.
March Liquor Co.
THE CHAMPA 1231
Denver, C
SEEDS
help pay your rent if you plan
RTELDES'
FOR WESTERN PLANTER
RTELDES SEED CO.
Denver, Col
Entry Supply House in the West
MILLER & C
19 BROADWAY
AVEL ROOFI
AND CEMENT WORK
One Case of Good, Steamed, Sterilized Beer, 24 Pints to the Case.
Or One Gallon of Pure 8 Year Old California Port, Sherry, Angelica or Muscatel Wine.
Or One Full Quart of Bottled in Bond Rye or Bourbon Whiskey.
The Monarch Liquor Co.
PHONE CHAMPA 1231
1516 Court Place Denver, Colo.
The Largest Poultry Supply House in the West
HENRY MILLER & CO.
Cement Ash Pits, $5 Up Repairing Promptly Done Tin Roofs Painted
All Work Guaranteed
Phone Main 1
V. F. Dav
Plumbing Inspector for City and
g, Heating and Ve
and Tests for Sewer Gas
defective buildings
Estimates Given
PHONE SOUTH 855
WER & SC
K Guaranteed Give Us
Phone Main 1062
F. Davis
Inspector for City and County of
Catering and Ventilation
Tests for Sewer Gases On All
active buildings
Annates Given
NE SOUTH 855 DENVER
R & SCHUCK
STE FARM LANDS
Telephone Champ
Residence Phone Main
W.F.D.
(12 Years Chief Plumbing Inspector for
Plumbing, Heating and
Examination and Tests for Sewer
defective build
Estimates G
842 BROADWAY PHONE SOUTH
BROWER &
W.F.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 buildings
842 BROADWAY PHONE SOUTH 855 DENVER, COLO
REAL ESTATE
311 Cooper Building
DENVER, COLORADO
K & Eng'st
Beck & En
Engstrom
Beck & Engstrom
Beck & Engstrom
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
Wines, Liquors
Cigars
Western Agents for Minneapolis Grain Belt Beer and C
Imported Beer and Bock Ol.
1644-46-48-50 Larimer S
Phone Main 1053
es, Liquors
Cigars
Minneapolis Grain Belt Beer and C
Imported Beer and Bock Ol.
4-46-48-50 Larimer S
63 D
Liquors and
Cigars
s Grain Belt Beer and Carnegie Porto
ed Beer and Bock Ol.
3-50 Larimer Street
Denver, Co
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
A steam engine
HENRY BECK
Give Us a Trial
1062
VIS
(Id County of Denver)
entilation
es On All Old
DENVER, COLO
HUCK
LANDS
Telephone Champa 1962
ence Phone Main 7345
from
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PRIVATE SALES AT ALL TIMES
HAVE MOVED TO—
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Miss M. Cowden Hair Dressing Parlor
Miss M. Cowden Hair Dressing Parlor
Shampoo, cutting and curling. Scalp treatment, hair tonics, hair straightening, manicuring. Stage wigs for rent; theatrical use and masquerades. Goods delivered out of the city. All shades of hair matched by sending sample of hair; also combings made up.
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SAYS AEROPLANING IS LIKE GAME OF POKER
PATRICIA REFUSES TO MARRY A FOREIGNER
SENATOR PENROSE LAUDS HOME-MAKING ART
BOAZ W. LONG CHOSEN AS CHIEF OF BUREAU
According to Miss Matilde Moisant,
the aviator accidents in the air do not
blunt one's courage or destroy the desire to fly. And Miss Moisant ought to know because she has experienced mo s every kind of mishap known to the game. She has been lost in cloud banks, pinioned under wreckage and rescued from a burning aeroplane, and yet she says she would fly again.
A.
Miss Moisant
had just returned
from San Salvador, where she went after retiring from the exhibition field. It was not until she had been the victim of four accident and in each instance had narrowly escaped death that she was persuaded to give up flying. And now she says she only quit because she had made nervous wrecks of members of her family, and was compelled to make a promise to stay on the ground.
Miss Moisant, it will be remembered, took up flying soon after the death of her brother, John B. Moisant, who lost his life in an aerospace fall. "I never
The report that Princess Patricia of Conanight is betrothed to the hereditary Grand Duke Adolph of Meckenburg and Strelitz is officially denied. There is said to be no foundation for it whatever.
A.
That the hand-some English princess should remain so long unmarried (the ungallant Burke's peerage says she was twenty-seven on March 17 last) seems strange, but gossips in court circles declare that she positively refuses to marry a foreigner. Grand Duke Adolph (he is thirty-one) is visiting King George at Windsor Castle, and his friends say he is trying to find out who is the facetious person in Berlin attempting to effect a matrimonial alliance through the newspapers between himself and Princess Patricia. The duke and the princess are well
Declaring that the "trouble of today is that we are getting away too far from the ideas of our forefathers," Senator Boies Penrose of Pennsylvania made a plea for "home-making as a profession" at the commen-cement exercises of the National School of Domestic Sciences, held at the Playhouse in Washington a few days ago. He declared that the art of home-making is not only the most honored
or all professions, but is indeed the corner stone upon which rests the welfare of the nation.
"There is too much ordering of groceries and household goods over the telephone nowadays," said Senator Penrose. "The old system of doing your own marketing at the market should come into vogue again. Telephone orders are sixty per cent, higher than when you do your own
In the appointment of Boaz W. Long to be chief of the bureau of Latin American affairs, Secretary of State Bryan has selected a man from commercial life whose acquaintance with Latin America, as he states it, consists of knowledge acquired in old Mexico in the course of travels during three months in the year during the past nine years. Heretofore the incumbent of the post has been a man versed in diplomatic affairs,
American affairs. Secretary of State Bryan has selected a man from commercial life whose acquaintance with Latin America, as he states it, consists of knowledge acquired in old Mexico in the course of travels during three months in the year during the past nine years. Heretofore the incumbent of the post has been a man versed in diplomatic affairs, and—with one exception—of ministerial rank.
Mr. Long is the son of Elisha V. Long, chief justice of the territory of New Mexico during Cleveland's administration. He is a native of Indiana, and about thirty years of age. His
could watch my brother fly without experiencing great fear," she said, "but with myself it is different. After I leave the ground I enjoy every minute without a thought of anything that might happen.
"If I felt the least afraid I certainly would not fly: Anyone who has not confidence in himself and his machine should never fly. I think many accidents are the result of fear, which often causes an aviator to lose his head. However, I think there are unavoidable accidents, no matter how cautious the aviator may be."
As an illustration Mies Moisant cited the case of Miss Quimby, whom she regarded as one of the most careful of women fliers.
"Miss Quimby never took chances," said Miss Moisant, "and frequently chided me for my recklessness. And here I have come out of accident after accident while Miss Quimby had to lose her life in her very first mishap! "It is something like a game of poker after all and each one is confident that he will win the next time. I can hardly realize what has happened to Miss Quimby and I wish some one would tell me it isn't true. Miss Quimby and I learned to fly at the same school and our exhibition flights were made together. No accident outside of that to my brother has made me so sad." Miss Moisant was considered very cautious.
MARRY A FOREIGNER
acquainted, but they never got along together, and the princess would be impossible as the future reigning consort in the stiff, provincial German court at Neu-Strelitz. Her unconventionality and independence would shock the Mecklenburg-Strelitz dowagers into fits of apoplexy. The duke has always been a special protege of Queen Mary's. The queen took Princess Mary to Neu-Strelitz last year for a family visit, and the prince of Wales is expected there in the near future, while the queen is also going again with Princess Mary in the autumn.
The queen goes ostensibly to see her aunt, the dowager grand duchess of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. She is one of the most remarkable old women alive. She will be ninety-one July 19, and is still hale and hearty, her intelligence unimpaired. She is a grand-daughter of George III. of England and a sister of Queen Mary's mother. She is credited with having arranged the match between Emperor William's daughter and Prince Ernest of Cumberland, and is believed to be really at the bottom of the present matrimonial plan for Duke Adolph and Princess Mary. But Patricia remains single.
UDS HOME-MAKING ART
shopping, and you don't get what you want."
Senator Mark L. Myers of Montana, in presenting the diplomas, said: "I am glad, in this day of the new thought and the new woman, to see some of them giving their attention to the home and such things in which our mothers and grandmothers were interested."
Representative Frank B. Willis of Ohio also spoke, as did Dr. Quay Russell of the University of Pennsylvania, Rev. Charles Wood and Rev. James T. Marshall led the devotional exercises. Mrs. Franceska K. Lawson sang. Several musical selections were given by a section of the United States Marine band.
Ups and Downs.
Governor Johnson of California at a dinner in Sacramento philosophized about a man of middle age who, having attained great success after years of struggle, failed through rash speculations, and fell back into obscurity again.
Governor Johnson summed up this man's fall in an epigram.
"How many of us," said he, "reach the topmost pinnacle of success only to be attacked with hopeless vertigo."
AS CHIEF OF BUREAU
home is at Las Vegas, N. M. He comes to the department of state heavily indorsed. Mr. Long's acquaintance with old Mexico has been obtained in the pursuit of his business interests as an advertising man. He has little acquaintance with official Mexico, he states, although his business brought him in to contact with many state governors and other state officials. He believes he knows the Mexican people. The failure of his prospects in old Mexico, incident to conditions of unrest and rebellion, forced him to seek elsewhere a field of endeavor. The state department affords him opportunity.
Rough Life.
"Can you build me a piano and leave the bark on the wood?"
"I guess so," opined the piano man.
"I want it for my hunting lodge. We rough it up there, you know."
Natural Result
"Jack Jingles has a swelled head."
"And what about. I would like to know?"
"Somebody gave it a good punching last night."
6,000,000 ACRES OPENED TO ENTRY
GOVERNMENT RESTORED VAST
TRACTS FOR SETTLEMENT
IN MAY AND JUNE.
LAND IN SIX STATES
OVER ONE-THIRD OF AREA RE
LIEVED FROM COAL WITH-
DRAWAL IN COLORADO.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
Washington.—Six million acres of withdrawn public lands were restored to entry during the months of May and June upon approval by the secretary of the interior on the recommendations of the United States Geological Survey. This action was the result of examination and classification of the lands of the survey, those restored either having been found now to be valuable for power sites, reservoirs, coal, phosphate or potash deposits having been definitely valued as coal lands, and rendered available for purchase under the coal land law.
Of these lands relieved from coal withdrawal nearly 2,500,000 acres were in the state of Colorado. Five and a half thousand acres were also withdrawn in Colorado as water power sites.
In Idaho 1,100,000 acres of coal and phosphate withdrawals were classified and restored, and for water power sites approximately 10,000 acres were withdrawn and about the same acreage restored.
In Montana 250,000 acres were restored as being non-coal bearing and about 1,000 acres as not valuable for water power sites, while about 150 acres were withdrawn for that purpose.
In North Dakota nearly 1,400,000 acres in coal withdrawal were classified and restored.
In Oregon approximately 75,000 acres were restored as non-oil bearing iands and about 12,000 acres were withdrawn for water power or reservoir sites.
In Utah about 1,500 acres were withdrawn for water power sites.
In Wyoming over 47,000 acres of coal withdrawals were reopened toentry and purchase; approximately 87,000 acres were withdrawn for classification as to whether they are oil bearing lands, and about 304,000 acres were restored as non-phosphate lands.
For all states the total withdrawals during the months of May and June were over 116,000 acres, and the total restorations were over 6,000,000 acres.
The total outstanding withdrawals on July 1 in all the public land states amounted to 68,609,289 acres, of which more than 58,000,000 acres are in coat land withdrawals.
These lands are held pending classification by the Geological Survey, and as rapidly as they are found to be mineral bearing they are either valued and placed on sale (as in the case of coal lands), definitely reserved pending appropriate legislation by Congress to provide for their disposition (as in the case of potash or phosphate lands), or held subject to development under departmental regulations (as in the case of water power or reservoir reservations); or if they are found to be non-mineral in character they are restored to public entry. This work of classification and valuation is being prosecuted by the Geological Survey as rapidly as the appropriations provided by Congress will permit.
SIMMONS MAKES TARIFF REPORT
Upper House Slashes Figures Placed by Representatives.
Washington. — Senator Simmons, chairman, presented the report of the Senate finance committee on the Underwood tariff bill.
The report declared that the measure makes an average reduction of 27.64 per cent from the rates of the Payne law. The Senate committee made a reduction of 4.22 per cent from the rates in the bill as passed by the House. The report estimates that receipts under the new bill will be: from customs, $266,730,000; from income tax, $58,830,000; from corporation tax, $37,000,000; from internal revenue, $207,000,000; and that other sources will bring the revenue up to $996,810,000. The disbursements are estimated at $994,700,000.
The committee details the changes that were made in the House bill, with the causes which impelled this action.
Washington.—Strong support has been developed in the Senate for President Wilson's policy of protection and supervision over Nicaragua.
New Bulgar Cabinet Formed.
Sofia.—The new coalition cabinet, under the premiership of M. Radoslavoff, the Liberal leader in the Bulgarian parliament, has been constituted as follows:
Premier and minister of the interior, M. Radoslavoff.
Foreign affairs, M. Guenadleff.
Finance, M. Toncheff.
Justice, M. Pecheff.
War, Gen. Vazoff.
Commerce, M. Blattcoff.
Public works, M. Dimcheff.
Railways, M. Morphoff.
CARLSON'S Peerless Ice Cream Phones: Main 112 and Main 5787
DID YOU EVER TRY Neef Bros.' Beer?
It's made right, and tastes right. None better made anywhere and This is a Strictly Colorado Production BE SURE AN TRY IT.
JOHN K. RETTIG
Fancy and Staple Gr
1864 CURTIS STREET
eenth.
E ZOBEL BROTHER
AMPLE ROO
Nineteenth Street, Corner of
Meats, Fancy and Staple Groceries 1864 CURTIS STREET
THE ZOBE
SAMPL
1004 Nineteenth
SAMPLE ROOM 1004 Nineteenth Street, Corner of Curtis
FINE WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS
COORS' CELEBRATED BEER ON TAP
DENVER CO
FIRST TREATMENT $1.50
OTHER TREATMENTS EACH $1.00
RATES BY THE MONTH
DISCOUNT
TREATMENT
ADD 3
MADAM HOLLY
Man
Madam Holly's W
PHONE YORK 2229
Supply Your
Celebrated
BOTH
THE EMPIRE
Phone
J. A. GARFIELD, Pres.
If you have a warm spot in your hear
Purlors, st
ADD 3 CENTS FOR POSTAGE
ADAM M. A. HOLL
Manufacturer Of
Adam Holly's Wonderful Hair Grower
MK 2229 2618 DOWNLE
oly Your Home with
celebrated Tivoli Bee
BOTTLED BY
EMPIRE BOTTLING
Phone Gallup 245
D, Pres.
C. A.
arm spot in your heart for the Maceo Ice Cream a
Parlors, stop in and get cool.
MADAM M. A. HOLLY
Manufacturer Of Madam Holly's Wonderful Hair Grower PHONE YORK 2229 2618 DOWNING STREET.
Supply Your Home with the Celebrated Tivoli Beer BOTTLED BY THE EMPIRE BOTTLING CO. Phone Gallup 245
J. A. GARFIELD, Pres. C. A. BRYANT, Mgr. If you have a warm spot in your heart for the Maceo Ice Cream and Confectionery Parlors, stop in and get cool.
THE MACEO
Fountain Drinks, C
ICE CREAM,
Our Specialty, Hot I
2712½ WELTON STREET.
in Drinks, Confectionery and ICE CREAM, DAIRY LUNCHES Specialty, Hot Drinks, Chili and Spa STREET. DENVER h's Market and Groc
Fountain Drinks, Confectionery and Cigars ICE CREAM, DAIRY LUNCHES Our Specialty, Hot Drinks, Chili and Spaghetti. 271214 WELTON STREET. DENVER, COLORADO.
Tesch's Market and Grocery
When You Want Live Chickens, Fresh Meats and Fresh Vegetables WE RENDER OUR OWN LARD 2601 Lafayette Street Telephone York 1979
Five-Points Pool and Billiard Parlor CIGARS, TOBACCO and SOFT DRINKS
Corner Nineteenth.
DENVER
RES. PHONE GALLUP 942
RETTIG
Staple Groceries
STREET
ROOM
, Corner of Curtis
- OIL 60 CENTS
DISCOUNT TO CUSTOMER
TREATED 10 CENTS
A. HOLLY
mer of
Ful Hair Grower
2618 DOWNING STREET.
ome with the
ivoli Beer
BY
OTTLING CO.
p 245
C. A. BRYANT, Mgr.
e Maceo Ice Cream and Confectionery
I get cool.
Stationery and Cigars
RY LUNCHES
Chili and Spaghetti.
DENVER, COLORADO.
and Grocery
Denver, Colo.
COLORADO
° °
Drink Capitol Beer
DENVER’S PRIDE
My. La ie as |
yes ADL aD)
NO Uae
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
SUMMONS IN DIVORCE.
NOW is your time
aes to buy your
“ca = SUMMER OUTFIT
oN a ee
TORS. z
j y i 4 Everything Reduced
YW al 1/4 to iD |
7) y
Z C.F. ADAMS CO.
La 1444 CURTIS ST. p
i ih lee:
| Call and Be
2 Convinced
CASH OR CREDIT
Open Saturday Evenings Until 9 p. m.
STATE OF COLORADO, }
City and County of Denver. } ss,
+ “No. 48849,
Alexander Jackson, Plaintiff,
Annie Jackson, Defendant.
|The People of the State of Colorado, to
the Defendant above named, Greet-
ing:
You are hereby required to appear
in an action brought against you by
the above-named plaintiff in the Goun-
ty Court, of the City and County of
Denver, State of Colorado, and answer
the complaint. therein. within — thirty
days after the service hereof if you are
served within this State, or within fir-
ty days after) the service hereof if
sefved personally outside the State of
Colorado, or, If served by publication,
within sixty days from the date of the
last publicataion, ov trial will be had
the same as though you were present.
‘This Js an action brought to obtain
a decree of divorce on the ground ot
Adultery and such other and furthar
retlef as may Seem tovthe Court. just
and equitable from the complaint,
copy of which is hereunto attactied,
and, Ge ‘evidence adduced’ upon’ the
trial,
Witness, Thomas L, Bonfils, Clerk of
the County Court, in and for the sald
City and County of Denver, at his of-
fice in Denver, this 19th day of May,
A,B. 118, ‘and the seal of said Court
hereunto affixed.
THOMAS L. BONFILS,
(Seal) Clerks of the County Court.
By ETHEL L. LING,
Deputy,
{gv B Townsend, Attorney for Plain-
ti,
First publication June 28, 1913,
~ Last publication July 26, 1913,
COME ONE, COME ALL.
Elder N. H, Hicks, missionary work,
er has opened a free to all gospel mis
sion at 2733 Welton street. All are in
vited to attend.
Sunday services, 3:30 p. m.
Sunday evening services, 7:30 p. m.
‘Tuesday evening, 7:30 p. m. ;
Friday evening, 7:30 p. m.
THE DE LUXE,
Furnished apartments. 2 and 3
rooms, with hot and cold water in
each kitchen. Also front room, singla,
electric lights and gas. Modern
throughout. Rates very reasonable.
2352 Ogden St, Cor. 24th Ave
Phone York 6707. Mrs. R. M. Blakey.
The Loyal Knights and
F am Ladies. of Malachites
F Is incorporated wader the
. Inws of the District of Cole
"i si umbla, Itsobjectistocom|
i ing the Negroes. of the
SM wovia for Grete matae) 2
SIME Sascement along indus
frist and conmmersiat lines:
Te also stnds for the fall
- gnloy eon, ae Negro OG
his clviland political ight,
Grand Supreme ‘iis movement is tue
Governor” fionatinltsscope: wehinre
lodges not onty in the United States but i
fantaieas Si 1 Colon, Bocas del Foro, Pas
Amma {CahaiZouc) and Costa Rica: 1etee dase
day forthe opr and he mest come together
Heemovemchts have failed because Our peo-
pie were tld that by contributing thereto tha
Face only would be beneSied, butno tangible
Fedividens benchts were offered, By our plas
the member pays 28: per month i the Asso-
Siation and receives $4.00 per week sick ben
sfitsand $100 at death. We wot only took
Siler therace bat each fudividual member ag
well, Abig convention soon tobe eld here,
Wevwant eiodgets cvery village aasiiet and
town and n delegate tobe sent totnisconven-
ie Organizers, srpnted: everywhere. For
ull partieatars went
KNIGHTS OF MALACHITES
1111 YouSt.N.W. Washington, D.C.
When You Want
The Heads, Feet, Tails Snouts, Neckbones
or Chiterlings or any other part of the hog
except the squeal go to
9
East's Market
2300-6 Larimer Street. ; Phone Main 1461.
THE PRIOR FURNITURE CO
ev 1814 CURTIS STREET
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 Credit
Me
Le ay
Be gO UNON Bae
eS By a
ES OZ ;
eS eI
al oy
Radice tt 2s aes
FIGHTING THE DREADED FLY
: PHONE MAIN 61 23—Day or Night
RESIDENCE PHONE YORK 7992.
PARLORS, 1830 ARAPAHOE ST.
" *
a
| © WM THE DOUGLASS <a
ita, I m
Pime UNDERTAKING (cmmaeeed
sy 4 COMPANY 1
J. R. CONTEE CURTIS M.
Pres. and Mgr. i 4 4agea HARRIS
Licensed p ft peers Asst. Manager
ree, iain OD rece!
peal qf : Shi Peg Nb
cnet NETS NTS, artant
POLITE SERVICE TO ALL.
Ambulance and Carriages Furnished for All Occasions
Se Sei ee ee
Housekeeper May Do Much Toward
Getting Rid of This Deadly Men-
ace to Human Life.
__ It has been demonstrated by physi-
cians and other experts that the com-
mon house fly carries typhoid germs.
Therefore, it is necessary that great
care be taken not to breed them.
The old adage “an ounce of preven-
tion is better than a pound of cure”
may be applied especially to files, for
measures to prevent their coming can
be used more effectively than methods
for destroying them after they arrive.
‘The housekeeper should insist that
not a drop of slop of any kind be
thrown about the door, and that all
sink-drains and cess pools be securely
covered and that no open slop pails
be allowed to stand near the house,
inviting a congregation of these sum-
mer pests.
Owners of country homes some-
times forget that the manure pile is
a menace to the health of the family.
particularly is this the case when
within easy reach of the dwelling.
Screens ought to be placed in all
the windows and doors before flies
fst other insects make their appear-
ance.
| Spraying slop pails, garbage cans
or ponds with kerosene is said to
destroy the larva of both flies and
mosquitoes,
Perfect cleanliness in the kitchen,
the free use of borax and ammonia
in washing floors, tables and sinks
will go a long way in preventing
trouble from flies.
ea y : : i ay
ean a oe a
ee ie e nh oa
Cie T' ee a
awe
| Wy | :
ICED TEA WITH FINE FLAVOR
Addition of Jasmine or Orange Blos-
soms Makes a Most Delicious
Summer Beverage.
It you want tea with a delicious
flavor, try the following experiment:
Get half a pound of very fine tea and
add to it a dozen jasmine or orange
blossoms. Put this mixture into a per-
fectly tight jar away from the light
and do not open for a month. If you
cannot get the orange blossoms or jas-
mine, purchase some orange flower
water and soak your tea in enough of
this water to cover it. In a few hours
it will be ready to use.
To make the tea have the water hot,
pour it over the tea and allow to stand
at least twelve hours. Tea made in
this way has a beautiful flavor and a
Gclicious perfumed flavor, that can be
obtained in no other way. Try’ com-
bining it with orange sherbet. There
is no way of preparing iced tea that
can compare with this. After sweet-
euing, and when you are ready to serve
{t, place the sherbet ing bowl, pour
the cold tea over it, and bring them
to the table together.
|
SHOE REPAIRING
1023 EIGHTEENTH ST.
We Have the Best Equipped Outfit in the West to Produce the Goods
Sewed Soles ...........606 75e, $1.00] Resoling from heel to heel, entire
Nailed Soles ............50e 650, 76¢| new bottom $1.50
Heels . ... ...+..+++++.25¢, 35¢, 50c] and heel ..............+ °
Rubber Heels vceececcceeeeeeeee +506 SHOES MADE TO ORDER.
Turn Rips ......++-++++++-180 to 250] Tallor Made .......2.se.20ee+e2 810
Patches .............0....186 to 25¢] WE CAN FIT ANY KIND OF
We Use the Best Oak Lether. DEFORMED FOOT.
REPAIRING WHILE YOU WAIT
WALTER CAMBERS a
Eighteenth St
Plums in Batter,
Make a batter with two beaten
eggs, five tablespvons of flour, a little
more than one pint of milk, and a
pinch of salt. Remove. the stones
from one quart of large ripe plums,
crack them, put the kernels Inside of
the plums again, mix the fruit with
two heaping tablespoons of moist
sugar and stir {t lightly Into the bat:
ter. Turn it {nto a buttered pudding
dist, and bake in a hot.oven till done,
about forty minutes. Sprinkle pow-
dered sugar over the top, and serve
hot with one-half cup of butter, ove
cup of sugar and one well-beaten egy
stirred to a cream and flavored.
Re oy ae ae eg go ERE ee BEET SRE egg Sea ae
$ The Best Place in the City to Get a 3
3 Home-Cooked Meal Is at the 3
, ;
, 3
, %
, 4
, KH l
, 4
OUmMes GATE :
, 3
a 3
, —_——<— Cg
y SS oo
y ;
, ;
Z MRS. L. P. HOLMES, Proprietress 3
Z ¥
, %
; ;
, 9
PHO! P
Z 2121 Arapahoe Strect Be
;
Ie LS ces ERR Meee mes Se
One-Egg Muffins.
One and one-half tablespoons melt-
ed lard, one tablespoon sugar, one and
one-half to one and three-quarter cups
of milk, une egg, three cups sifted
flour, three teaspoous baking powder.
pinch of salt, Use more or less milk,
according to the quantity of the flour.
Sift baking powder and flour together,
add butter, sugar, egy and milk.
Swiss Sauce.
Put a teacupful of cream into a
saucepan and when {t boils mix with
{t one wineglassful of sherry that has
been thickened with a teaspoonful of
flour. Sweeten to taste with sugar.
grate in a Ilttle nutmeg and boil for
fifteen minutes. ‘The sauce is then
Seady,
Dry Goods, House Dresses, Hosiery, Gareels
, Underwear
to Millinery
Beat ii oi Gents’ Furnishing
HEA ee oscar ee
i BBB | sr
wwe | A. BRADSHAW
\ (Around the Corner from the
ei fie eae Old Stand.
Saeeeees ‘A 1443-47 Stout St.
Housekeeper’s Hands,
Mutton tallow with a little sulphur
added is healing and whitening. When
the hard work of the day is done, rub
well {uto the skin, Keep a supply of
Indian meal near your soap dish. Ev-
ery time you wash your hands rub the
meal thickly on them after soaping.
When Baking Potatoes.
When making baked potatoes, you
will find it very good to nip the ends
off and grease them before placing in
the oven. When finished, you can
take them out, gently break apart
pte ArOlDe their appearance and
serve at once.
. Blackberry Salad.
As soon as blackberry season opens
try this salad. The berries must be
ripe, but firm and large. Mix with
tender white celery chopped rather
fine and serve with a mayonnaise
dressing on a bed of crisp lettuce.
About Hairbrushes.
‘To clean hairbrushes and make
them like new, put a tablespoonful of
ammonia into a basin of tepid water
and dip the brushes up and down in
it until they are clean. They dry with
Reistles down,
NEW CLIFTON BAR
W. S. THOMPSON, Proprietor .
Fine Wine, Liquor and Cigars
1701 Arapahoe Street, Denver, Colo.
Laundering Hint.
When froning sprinkle powdered
orris root under the froning sheet, and
this imparts a delicate perfume to the
freshly laundered clothing and flat
linen that is very agreeable.