Colorado Statesman
Saturday, August 30, 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
RAGE COUNTRY PARTY
The South Passing To Strangers
Jews and Other Aliens Getting Control of the South Future Has Much To Make Plain Which The Present Conceals From The Jew and Negro.
VOL. XIX.
The Sou
Passi
S
Jews and Other Aliens G
Future Has Much To Make
ent Conceals From T
The Jews and other aliens are fast getting control of Southern merchandising, farming and banking interests. This fact is disclosed in the passing away of the familiar names of the old days, except in politics, and the appearance of new and alien names. Take the names of the Southern Travelers' Association, 1,000 of whom, with their wives and daughters, visited New York last week, as a sign, as follows:
George F. Daniels, president of the association; first vice president, Ben Feinberg; second vice president, A. A. Peeler; third vice president, Hirman Schocke; secretary James E. Boulder; treasurer, Ralph M. Neuburger and directors, Harry S. Aarons, Emanuel Goodhelp, Karl Marx, Gus Lebolt, Charles F. Young, Frank Wolff and B. J. Lommerich.
Daniels and Young are the only old Soutnern names in the list. While the old Southerners are looking after the political end the Jews, Negroes and aliens in increasing numbers are looking after the merchandising, farming and banking interests—the things that take not wings and fly away. The time will come when the sons of the old slave masters will be strangers and outcasts in the land of the South, and strangers will rule where they now misrule,
The Jews invaded the Southern States soon after the war with their merchandise in packs on their backs, and began to open stores in the cities, towns and crossroads as fast as their wholesale Jewish merchant connections in Baltimore, Philadelphia and New York could ship them the goods they ordered. They are still at it. The writer was a store boy for the Benjamin Fleishmans, in Marianna, Florida, forty-five years ago. The Ku-Klux killed both the brothers and burned their store, because they got most of the Negro trade, but other Jews came and planted stores thereabouts and are still doing it.
The Jewish merchants of the South do not intermarry with the white natives, and they do not bother with politics obtrusively, while voting with the Democracy
---
as a matter of policy, if not of principle. They attend strickly to the business of trade and barter, and try to be friendly with everybody. They have been from the first, and still are, very helpful to the colored people, especially in the farming districts, and have helped and are helping thousands of colored farmers to "get by" from crop to crop.
This is all the more significant of future conditions in the South when the fact is considered that while the colored people are being taught in all directions to stick to the land and own farm lands, the young white men are going in steady streams to the cities and towns in search of easier work and more quickly made fortunes than country life and farming occupations offer them. The future has much to make plain which the present conceals for the Jew and the Negro.
RIDICULE "JIM CROWISM"
Cincinnati, O., Aug. 19.—The fairminded white newspapers of the country are showing they are opposed to the "Jim Crow" administration at Washington in no uncertain terms. The Cincinnati Times-Star, under the caption "The Administration,s 'Jim Crow, Policy," speaks out as follows:
The South, is in the Saddle in Washington. Bills has been introduced to pension Confederate veterans. Members of President Wilson's cabinet have issued orders segregating the departmental Negro employees, creating "Jim Crow" quarters for them apart from their white associates. A. E. Patterson of Oklahoma, nominated for Register of the Treasury, a postition held for the decades by a Negro has requested the withdrawal of his name from the consideration of the Senate because of the intense opposition of men like Vardaman, Tillman and Heke Smith. Men and women in the employ of the Government have right to be treated without dis-
DENVER COLORADO SATURDAY. AUGUST 30 1913.
ORIGINAL IN POOR CONDITION
State Hist & Nut Hist Goutes
State House
GIANTS WHO
ADO
E JOURNAL
DENVER COLORADO
tinction of race or color. To screen them from the sight of their fellow employees is an insult to them and their race. This contemptuous treatment of the Negro in departmental service has evidently been perpetrated with President Wilson's consent. The withdrawal of Mr. Patterson's name from the consideration of Southern senators was done with the President's sanction. Is this "The New Freedom?" Other daily papers are as equally sarcastic in ridiculing the "Jim Crow" policy inaugurated by the Wilson administration.
DON'T BE FOOLED
The following editorial appeared in the last issue of the Philadelphia Tribune.
Many years ago a learned Governor of New York, while referring to the subject of the Abolition of Slavery said that the slave may be emancipated, but emancipation would not elevate their condition, or augment their capacity for self preservation. He prophesied that want and suffering would gradually deminish the emancipated people, and that they would disappear as the inferior has always been known to disappear before the superior race. And in closing, he exclaimed, "The fate of the African is as certain as that of the original possessor of the soil upon which we stand, but there will be no heroism or dignity in his fall; his struggles will be with the arts not the arms of his oppressors.
Today the people of color are just beginning to understand what the distinguished New York official meant. In the unfoldings of time each chapter discloses a new verse. And yet not new but an old verse attired in new cloths and our people are beginning to realize better than ever before how much is wrapped up in the prophecy that the thing which will actually destroy the people of color in these United States, will be brought not by the guns—not even by the lynchings, but by the wiley arts of his oppressors
Take for instance the fight now going on against the Emancipation Exposition. Study the space given and articles published in one of our city dailies, and one may easily decern that it is a scheme of our oppressors to start our folks to fighting among themselves. This much having been accomplished, says the oppressor, will either make the proposed project a dismal failure, or a very tame affair. Assuredly so tame that it will not be worth $95,000.
Some among us are foolish enough to think that the white newspaper men who are making the fight against the Exposition are friends of Lorenzo Harris and
are enemies of Harry Bass. Not a bit of it. They are only incidents. The sole object of the white man is to sow the seed of distrust and dissatisfaction in the breast of the colored people. This is one of the arts, predicted years ago of our racial distruction, and many of us will doubtless allow ourselves to be ensnared by the cunning designs of our oppressors in this particular. Either ignorant or forgetful of the fact that long years after Harry Bass and many others of us have answered the dread summons, and be 'forgotten that the history of the successful outcome or the dismal failure of the proposed Exposition, will live on. And as generations come and go on the waves of time that history will remain, furnishing the mind of men, either with an undisputed argument of our racial strength or uncontradictory proof of our utter worthlessness. Because it is well to bear in mind that any class which lacks the ability to get together and work together in a common cause is regarded as being worthless in these days of combination and organization.
Common sense, what old folks use to call gumption, argues that even if we do not like Harry Bass or are not satisfied with the way he and his associates have been managing things, yet as a race, we are on trial. Have we the mental, the moral, the intellectual strength to get together despite the cunning artifices of our oppressors and bring a glorious victory out of a threatening defeat? If not we may as well say of ourselves as Casius said to Brutis. "The fault that we are underlings is not in our stars, but in ourselves."
TRIED TO PUT PIANO OUT
OF COMMISSION
Mt. Gretna, Pa., Aug. 20.—Prof. E. C. Roberts, pianist at the Kauffman Auditorium, was shown an act of prejudice by one of the white employees of the grounds. He poured water into the new $500 piano and nearly ruined it, thinking that the colored musician would be discharged. Young Roberts was much worried as it appeared that he was not taking proper care of the piano, but after much tracing it was discovered that water had been poured into the piano by this white man on circumstantial evidence and was discharged. Roberts still holds his position.
The most thoroughly modern private hospital in Huntington, W. Va., is the Barnett Hospital, owned and managed by Dr. Clinton Barnett, a Negro physician of that city. Dr. Barnett built and equipped his hospital at an expense of $25,000.
RACE NEWS
GATHERED FROM VARIOUS SOURCES
Ex. Gov. P. B. S. Pinchback has tendered his resignation as revenue agent. On August 15 he served notice on Commissioner of Internal Revenue of his intention to quit the service, and his resignation was promptly accepted.
C. H. James, a Negro wholesale commission merchant a Clarkeston, W. Va., did a $60,000 business the past year. Mr. James owns the three story block in which his business is located. He employs ten persons, all of his own race. He has been, at times, secretary and chairman of the Wholesale Commission Merchants' Association of his city.
under threats from Lane, Lane was found guilty less than an hour after the jury retired.
Los Angeles, Aug. 7.—Anouncement was made here today that San Langford and Joe Jeanette, the colored heavyweights, had been matched for a 20 round bout at Vernon on October 7. The two fighters will come to the coast September 20 and begin training at once. Though they have met several times this will be their first battle over the 20-round route.
Huntington, W. Va.—Following a recent court decision that the Chesterfield & Ohio Railroad must
Beaufort, S. C., Aug. 19.—Gen. Robert Smalls, until recently Collector of Customs of Beaufort, is reported seriously ill here with diabetes. Since June 15 Gen. Smalls has been confined to his bed. He is steadily growing weaker.
Springfield, Mass., Aug. 20.—This city has become aroused over the discrimination that exists in the Y. W. C. A. relative to young women becoming members. Several young women have made application for membership in the association, but have been refused each time on the ground of color. This situation is embarrassing to colored women, as it is a handicap to the moral and intellectual development of young women of the race.
All of the colored girls, with the exception of one, quit work at the Butler Bros. wholesale house. It is stated that the walkout was caused by refusing the colored women passage on the passenger elevators. Several of the women worked on the 8th floor and it is stated a ruling was made that they would have to ride on the freight elevator in the future. So rather than have themselves classed as freight they all quit work, with the exception of one. Dallas Express.
Raleigh, N. C., Aug. 24.—Grady Lane, the first white man to be sentenced to death in this state for killing a Negro, awaits execution on November 20 in the state prison. Lane was convicted in Carthage for the murder of Geo. McCain, a colored mail clerk. During the trial Will Burley, a Negro, confessed the killing, but proved afterwards he had confessed
NO 52
under threats from Lane, Lane was found guilty less than an hour after the jury retired.
Los Angeles, Aug. 7.—Announcement was made here today that Sam Langford and Joe Jeannette, the colored heavyweights, had been matched for a 20 round bout at Vernon on October 7. The two fighters will come to the coast September 20 and begin training at once. Though they have met several times this will be their first battle over the 20-round route.
Huntington, W. Va.—Following a recent court decision that the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad must take up all ticket coupons, no matter who is holder, William Jackson a porter on the railroad, is said to be $20,000 richer. He had gathered hundreds of the coupons given him during the pendency of the suits to determine the validity of the 2-cent-fare law, while the railroad was charging 3 cents a mile. Several other porters will be several thousand dollars richer, it is said, as a result of picking up the coupons thrown away by passengers. The railroad, knowing Jackson and others had thousands of these coupons, wanted to settle only with the original purchasers, but the courts have decreed otherwise.
The Al Bartlett Film Company, located at 217-18 Rhode building, Atlanta, Ga., are the first people to make a special feature moving picture without a single white man to appear in the whole picture. Their first production is called "A Cow Puncher's Mistake," with such leads in the cast as Tillie Johnson, Edward Dorsey, I. W. James, Alfred Gramma and L. Janaux and forty others. It is the intention of this firm to make regular releases every week as soon as it is found out how this one will take. Should the project prove a success then of course, a regular stock company of colored players will be organized. The heads of the Bartlett Film Company say they have felt the proper demand for Negro pictures for some time and now present the first release for your approval.
Disillusionment.
A woman had three caskets to give to a man. One day she read in his eyes that he could take but the nearest and lowest, and that instant arose from her heart the walling cry, "The king is dead."—Will Levington Comfort.
THE WORLD IN PARAGRAPHS
A BRIEF RECORD OF PASSING EVENTS IN THIS AND FOR-EIGN COUNTRIES.
DOINGS AND HAPPENINGS THAT
MARK THE PROGRESS
OF THE AGE.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
WESTERN.
Two men were drowned when a wall of water from a cloudburst swept down Murray creek, which flows through Ely, Nev.
Dr. B. Clarke Hyde must face a jury for the fourth time on the charge of murdering Colonel Thomas H. Swope, millionaire philanthropist of Kansas City.
Two sample cases, containing unset diamonds valued at $25,000, were stolen from a jewelry establishment on one of the busiest corners of State street in Chicago.
Policeman E. E. Campbell was shot and killed at San Diego, Cal., by William Bremer of Los Angeles, who then turned his pistol on himself, inflicting a slight scalp wound.
By approximately three to one, San Francisco voted bonds in the sum of $3,500,000 for the extension of the municipal street railway system in competition with the privately owned United Railroads of San Francisco.
An entire family was wiped out when an automobile in which were J. E. Rowan, his wife and two children and a sister-in-law, Mrs. Edna Smith, all of Breckinridge, Pa., was struck by a special train on the Pennsylvania road.
Practically unanimous commendation of President Wilson's message on the Mexican situation was expressed at Colorado Springs by the twenty-five governors in attendance at the governors' conference when its purpose became known.
F. Drew Caminetti, companion of Maury I. Diggs, in the elopement from Sacramento, Cal., to Reno, Nev., with Marsha Warrington and Lola Norris, which resulted in the conviction of Diggs for violation of the Mann white slave act, was brought to trial in the United States District Court in San Francisco before Judge William C. Van Fleet.
To lessen the "white man's burden" by teaching the Indian to stand upon his own resources, to grant an extension of the time for payments by settlers on lands under government reclamation projects, and to lower public utility rates to consumers by charging rentals for government power sites in proportion to the rates charged the people by power and light companies, these are three definite policies mapped out by Secretary of the Interior Franklin K. Lane, personal representative of President Woodrow Wilson at the governors' conference at Colorado Springs.
WASHINGTON
The President named Henry L. Larsen of Denver to be second lieutenant in the marine corps.
The Senate confirmed the nomination of A. F. Browns as register of the Sterling land office.
Dr. Thomas Robinson, for forty years connected with the Treasury Department, is dead.
An agricultural currency amendment to the administration currency bill was adopted by the House Democratic caucus.
Urgent instructions were sent to the consul at Chihuahua to see to "the prompt and adequate punishment of those committing outrages on American citizens."
Consul Letcher, reporting from Chihuahua that seventy-five Americans arriving there from Madera, told of the capture of that town from Poncho Villa by independent guerrillas.
Milk for the middies now is assured for the United States naval academy through the selection of a 700-acre dairy farm only a few miles removed from the historic buildings at Annapolis, Md.
Attempts to increase the limit of the proposed income tax on the larger incomes failed in the Senate when Senators-Borah, Bristow and Cummins led an effort to amend the income tax section of the Democratic tariff bill.
The United States will facilitate a court test of the California anti-alien law, but the initiative must come from some aggrieved Japanese representative. President Wilson let it be known that such was the status of the situation.
Senator Sheppard of Texas interpreted President Wilson's address was such a full recognition of the belligerency of the constitutionalists that he announced he would not press his resolution for the recognition of Carranza followers.
An increase of 3.9 per cent in the production of wheat in the principal wheat-producing countries of the northern hemisphere is reported by Able to the United States Department of Agriculture by the International Institute of Agriculture at Rome, Italy.
FOREIGN.
Gunboats in Guaymas harbor shelled the rebel positions, according to meager private advices received at Tucson, Arizona.
The Balkan peace treaty was ratified at Bucharest. The Turks continue to advance into Thrace and have now occupied Gumuljina and Mastanle, according to Sofia advices.
American Consul Thomas D. Edwards has been instructed by the state department at Washington to investigate the reported killing of five Americans at or near Chihuahua during July.
Two of the most powerful native ruling families of British India were united in London when the Princess Indira, only daughter of the reigning Maharajah Gaekwar of Bordoa, was married to Prince Jitendra, son of the Maharajah Gaekwar of Bordoda, was mantic courtship.
Harry K. Thaw won three victories over the New York state authorities at the Sherbrooke, Quebec, and was then locked in the Sherbrooke jail, immune for the time from the immigration authorities, after having received an ovation from the townpeople of Sherbrooke that would have done honor to a prince of royal blood.
Michael Maybrick, an English musical composer, who under the name of Stephen Adams, wrote some of the most popular songs in the English language, among them "Nancy Lee," "The Warrior Bold" and the "Holy City," died at Burton, Eng., at the age sixty-nine. Michael Maybrick was a younger brother of James Maybrick, whose wife, Florence Maybrick, was sentenced at first to death at Liverpool in 1889 on a charge of poisoning him with arsenic, but later commuted and released.
SPORT
Standing of Western League Clubs.
Club Won. Lost Pct.
Denver 84 64 Des Moines 73 64 Des Moines 73 64 Lincoln 68 61 Lincoln 68 61 St. Joseph 67 61 St. Joseph 67 61 Anaha 65 68 Topkick 57 69 Sloux City 56 72 Wichita 46 81 Animas, Colo.
"The race track vied with the agricultural and live stock exhibits for attention at the Bent County fair at Las Animas, Colo.
"Jack" Johnson's music hall engagements in London were postponed on account of the intense resentment displayed on all sides.
That daredevil of the turf, Foxhall Keene, at the risk of his life led the team in a terrific onslaughter against team in a terrific onslaughter against the army players of the Twelfth cavalry, defeating them by $12\frac{1}{2}$ to 1 at Colorado Springs.
Mollie Darling, driven by McMahon, established a new state record for the 2:09 pace on the half-mile track at the Great Western circuit races at the Iowa State fair in Des Moines, winning the first heat in 2:05. She lost the second, but took first again in the third handily.
Hurled to the ground when his pony turned a complete somersault, Foxhall Keene, captain of the Cheyenne Mountain Country Club polo team, and a player of international fame, was injured at Colorado Springs five minutes after the beginning of the game with the Denver Prairie Dogs.
GENERAL.
Judge W. S. Shoemaker, pioneer attorney of Omaha, veteran of the Civil war, and for thirty-five years prominent in Nebraska politics, died at an Omaha hospital of heart disease.
President Wilson warned all Americans to leave Mexico at once, following the delivery of his message to Congress, which was received in ominous silence at the Mexican capital.
Lieut. Gov. Martin H. Glynn was formally recognized as acting governor of New York by the assembly, after a bitter debate. The vote in favor of such recognition stood forty-eight to twenty-eight against.
George A. Hartman, the leper who recently was isolated at the quarantine camp fourteen miles south of St. Louis, escaped for the second time since he was taken to the quarantine camp, less than three weeks ago.
"With scores of American women outraged and a thousand American citizens murdered; with pillage, blackmail and tansom existing on every hand in defiance of American rights of citizenship, the situation in Mexico is beyond endurance," declared Governor O. B. Colquitt of Texas, who was at Colorado Springs for the governors' conference.
With Governor George W. Clarke of the state of Iowa to welcome visitors to the Hawkeye domain, and Mayor J. F. Elder extending the hand of fellowship on behalf of the city, the Keokuk and Hamilton power dam was formally dedicated at Keokuk, Ia. A parade through the business streets and thence to Rand park, where the formal exercises were held, was a feature of the day.
Rejecting the proposal to ask the government for a battleship to take them to Panama for their 1914 session, the governor's conference at Colorado Springs decided to meet next year at Madison, Wis. The invitation was presented by Governor McGovern. Officers re-elected were: Governor McGovern, chairman; Miles C. Riley, secretary and an executive committee consisting of Governor Ammons of Colorado, Governor O'Neal of Alabama and Governor McGovern of Wisconsin.
Boost Colorado Products
ZANG'S NEW BEERS NOW ON THE MARKET
Guaranteed Absolutely Pure
Delivered Daily to All Parts of the City
The Ph. Zang Brewing Co.
TELEPHONE GALLUP 395
SAVING
A visit to our store spection of the various are now on sale will save many dollars.
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.
$1.00
PAIR
PARASOLS
All fancy parasols now on
sale at 1/4 and 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
WE REPAIR, RE-COVER UMBRELLA
THE
Perini
WE REPAIR, RE-COVER UMBRELLAS AND PARASOLS
THE
Perini Bros.
CO.
1021 16th St., Opposite Postoffice.
GLOVES
Ladies' 16-button Milanese silk gloves, regularly sold at $1.50, now $1.00 PAIR
ART GOODS Broken lines of pillow tops, center-pieces and seafs to embroider at
CORSETS
A summer clearance sale on corsets is now on in this department, many values are to be found.
Patronize Home Industry
You Should Boost for Us
SHOES
All $3.50 and $4.00 oxfords, pumps and strap slippers in all leathers at $2.85 PAIR
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
HANDKERCHIEFS
Ladies' pure linen hand-
embroidered handkerchiefs,
20c values at
FINISHED PIECES
at 1-2 Price
Embroidered pillow tops,
scarfs and center-pieces at
1-2 Price
BRELLAS AND PARASOLS
J. Gibson Smith
Art Dealer
Removed To
1638 Tremont St.
PHONE MAIN 4843
FOR GOOD MEALS
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
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.
"MEXICO AGREES TO NOTHING,
SAYS SENOR GAMBOA,
WILL WELCOME LIND.
HUERTA IS ELIMINATED
WILLIAM BAYARD HALE SAILS
FOR UNITED STATES TO
MAKE REPORT.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
Mexico City. Aug. 29.—The announcement of the contemplated return of John Lind to Mexico City brought from Senor Gamboa, minister of foreign affairs, the declaration that Mexico agreed to nothing and that Senor Gamboa's note of August 26 to Mr. Lind was the last communication he sent.
It was suggested to the minister that President Wilson's representative was coming to the capital to resume negotiations. Senator Gamboa replied that this appeared not unlikely, as he naturally expected a reply to his last note. He added that Mr. Lind would be entirely welcome at the capital and that personally he would be glad to see him.
It is regarded here as possible that further conferences between Senator Gamboa and Mr. Lind may result in an agreement unless Washington continues to be a stickler for compliance to the letter of the demand for General Huerta's non-candidacy.
Senor Gamboa's last note appeare to make it clear that it would be in impossible for General Huerta to be candidate for the presidency under the laws.
For the reason that the other propositions, Mr. Lind's last note says, may be settled later, and since Senor Gamboa intimates in his last note conformity with this suggestion it is pointed out as probable that the negotiations will be reopened. Senor Gamboa intimated that further negotiations along the direct line of the demands would be useless, although at the same time he expressed hopes of a settlement.
The return of Mr. Lind would do much to reassure some thousands of anxious Americans, many of whom are planning a speedy departure from the capital.
The warning of President Wilson was telegraphed to all consuls who could be reached in this way and arrangements have been made to courters to points such as Durango, which are cut off from telegraphic communication. The warning contained the sentence:
"You convey to the authorities the indication that any maltreatment of Americans would raise the question of intervention."
Lind to Remain Near Battleship.
Vera Cruz.—President Wilson's representative, John Lind, will remain in Vera Cruz for several days.
William Bayard Hale sailed on the steamer Morro Castle for Havana. He will disembark there and proceed by the Key West route to Washington. He carries with him the originals of the Mexican government's communications.
Gamboa Ridicules President's order.
Mexico City.—Senor Gamboa said: "Do they think we are 'Boxers' in Mexico? Have you seen mobs chasing Americans through the streets or any unfriendly manifestations even by the people of the lower class? We have 400,000 or 500,000 Mexicans in the United States. We have made no suggestion to them to return, in the belief that they might be lynched."
Thaw Case Tied Up Indefinitely.
Sherbrooke, Que.—The case of Harry Thaw, so far as Sherbrooke is concerned, entered temporary doldrums. The court victory of his lawyers in quashing their own writ of habeas corpus and having him recommitted to jail, means either that he will remain there until tried by the king's bench, criminal side, in October, or that New York state, outflanked to date in legal skirmishes must make some new move looking to his liberation and seizure by the immigration authorities for deportation.
World's Biggest Ship Fire Swept.
New York.—The steamship Imperator, the largest vessel afloat, was swept by fire as she lay at her dock in Hoboken with her crew and 1,131 steerage passengers on board. Second Officer Gobrecht, who led the crew into the hold to fight the flames, was cut off from his men and suffocated. His body was found an hour afterward, untouched by fire, and brought ashore.
Shoots Suitor of His Divorced Wife.
Grand Junction.—Joe Gurr, a paroled convict, shot Phoenix Wade, rival for his divorced wife's affections, through the arm, and wounded Patsy Mease, a 6-year-old girl, when he began firing on the crowd that poured from the Orpheum Theater at Vernal, Utah.
Washington. — President Wilson nominated Henry Morgentau of New York to be ambassador to Turkey.
ORIGINAL IN POOR CONDITION
Do You Know That-
PRESIDENT TELLS CONGRESS THAT REBELS PRACTICALLY CONTROL MEXICO.
HANDS OFF, U. S. POLICY
THE GOVERNMENT HAS FAILED TO MAKE GOOD PROMISES FOR PEACE.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
Washington, Aug. 27. — President Wilson in person addressed Congress today on the Mexican situation as follows:
IS PREPARED TO DO ALL KINDS OF
"Gentlemen of the Congress: It is clearly my duty to lay before you very fully and without reservation the facts concerning our present relations with the Republic of Mexico. The deployable posture of affairs in Mexico I need not describe, but I deem it my duty to speak very frankly of what this government has done and should seek to do in fulfillment of its obligation to Mexico hereafter, as a friend and neighbor, and to American citizens whose lives and vital interests are daily affected by the distressing conditions which now obtain beyond our southern border.
Commercial, Fraternal, Church, Book and Stationery Jobs A SPECIALTY
"These conditions touch us very nearly. Not merely because they lie at our very door. That, of course, makes us more vividly and more constantly conscious of them, and every instinct of neighborly interest and sympathy is a aroused and quickened by them; but that is only one element in the determination of our duty.
Glad to Call Ourselves Friends.
"We are glad to call ourselves the friends of Mexico, and we shall, I hope, have an occasion, in happier times as well as in these days of trouble and confusion, to show that our friendship is genuine and disinterested, capable of sacrifice and every generous manifestation.
Ball and Concert Programs, Bill and Letter Heads, Calling Cards, Wedding Cards, Envelopes and Everything in the Printing Line Turned Out in the Neatest and Best Style Promptly on Short Notice.
"The peace, prosperity and contentment of Mexico mean more, much more, to us than merely an enlarged field for our commerce and enterprise. They mean an enlargement of the field of selfgovernment and the realization of the hopes and rights of a nation with whose best aspirations, so long suppressed and disappointed, we deeply sympathize.
"We shall yet prove to the Mexican people that we know how to serve them without first thinking how we shall serve ourselves.
Whole World Desires Peace.
"But we are not the only friends of Mexico. The whole world desires her peace and progress; and the whole world is interested as never before. Mexico lies at last where all the world looks on. Central America is about to be touched by the great routes of the world's trade and intercourse running free from ocean to ocean at the isthmus.
We Have Supplied Our Office with New Job Press & Type of Up-to-Date Style and Our Work Will Be on a Par with the Very Best.
"The future has much in store for Mexico, as for all the states of Central America; but the best gifts can come to her only if she be ready and free to receive them and to enjoy them honorably. America in particular—America North and South, and on both continents—waits on the development of Mexico; and that development can be sound and lasting only if it be the product of a genuine freedom, a just and ordered government, founded on law. Only so can it be peaceful or fruitful of the benefits of peace. Mexico has a great and enviable future before her if only she choose and attain the paths of honest constitutional government.
Give Us a Trial and We Will Give You Satisfaction
"The present circumstances of the republic, I deeply regret to say, do not seem to promise even the foundations of such a peace. We have waited many months, months full of peril and anxiety, for the conditions there to improve, and they have not improved. They have grown worse, rather. The territory in some sort controlled by the provisional authorities at Mexico City has grown smaller, not larger.
Prices as Reasonable as Those of Any Job Office in Denver
"The prospect of the pacification of the country, even by arms, has seemed to grow more and more remote and its pacification by the authorities at the capital is evidently impossible by any other means than force. Difficulties more and more entangle these who claim to constitute the legitimate government of the republic. They have not made good their claim in fact. Their successse in the field have proved only temporary.
"War and disorder, devastation and confusion seem to threaten to become the settled fortune of the distracted country. As friends we could wait no longer for a solution which every week seemed further away. It was our duty at least to volunteer our good offices—to offer to assist, if we might, in effecting some arrangement which would bring relief and peace and set up a universally acknowledged political authority there.
"Accordingly, I took the liberty of sending the Honorable John Lind, formerly governor of Minnesota, as my personal spokesman and representative, to the City of Mexico, with the following instructions:
"Press very earnestly on the attention of those who are now exercising authority or wielding influence in Mexico the following consideration and advice:
"The government of the United States does not feel at liberty any longer to stand inactively by while it becomes daily more and more evident that no real progress is being made toward the establishment of a government at the City of Mexico which the country will obey and respect.
"The government of the United States does not stand in the same case with the other great governments of the world in respect to what is happening or what is likely to happen in Mexico. We offer our good offices not only because of our genuine desire to play the part of a friend, but also because we are expected by the powers of the world to act as Mexico's nearest friend.
Act Solely in Mexico's Interests.
"We wish to act in these circumstances in the spirit' of the most earnest and disinterested friendship. It is our purpose in whatever we do or propose in this perplexing and distressing situation not only to pay the most scrupulous regard to the sovereignty and independence of Mexico—that we take as a matter of course to which we are bound by every obligation of right and honor—but also to give every possible evidence that we act in the interest of Mexico alone, and not in the interest of any person or body of persons who may have personal or property claims in Mexico which they may feel that they have the right to press.
"We are seeking to counsel Mexico for her own good and in the interest of her own peace, and not for any other purpose whatever. The government of the United States would deem itself discredited if it had any selfish or ulterior purpose in transactions where the peace, happiness and prosperity of a whole people are involved. It is acting as its friendship for Mexico, not as any selfish interest, dictates.
All America Cries for Peace.
An America Cries for Peace.
"The present situation in Mexico is incompatible with the fulfillment of international obligations on the part of Mexico, with the civilized development of Mexico herself and with the maintenance of tolerable political and economic conditions in Central America. It is upon no common occasion, therefore, that the United States offers her counsel and assistance. All America cries out for a settlement.
"A satisfactory settlement seems to us to be conditioned on—
"(A)—An immediate cessation of fighting throughout Mexico. A definite armistice solemnly entered into and scrupulously observed;
"(B)—Security given for an early and free election in which all will agree to take part;
"(C)—The consent of General Huerta to bind himself not to be a candidate for election as president of the republic at this election; and
"(D)—The agreement of all parties to abide by the results of the election and co-operate in the most loyal way in organizing and supporting the new administration.
U. S. Pledged to Aid New Regime.
"The government of the United States would be glad to play any part in this settlement or in its carrying out which it can play honorably and consistently with international right. It pledges itself to recognize and in every way possible and proper to assist the administration chosen and set up in Mexico in the way and on the conditions suggested.
"Taking all the existing conditions into consideration, the government of the United States can conceive of no reasons sufficient to justify those who are now attempting to shape the policy or exercise the authority of Mexico in declining the offices of friendship thus offered. Can Mexico give the civilized world a satisfactory reason for rejecting our good offices? If Mexico can suggest any better way in which to show our friendship, serve the people of Mexico and meet our international obligations, we are more than willing to consider the suggestion.
Lind's Proposals Rejected.
"Mr. Lind executed his delicate and difficult mission with singular tact, firmness and good judgment, and made clear to the authorities at the City of Mexico not only the purpose of his visit, but also the spirit in which it had been undertaken. But the proposals he submitted were rejected, in a note the full text of which I take the liberty of laying before you.
"I am led to believe that they were rejected partly because the authorities at Mexico City had been grossly misinformed and misled on two points. They did not realize the spirit of the American people in this matter, their earnest friendliness and yet sober determination for some just solution for the Mexican difficulties; and they did not believe that the present administration spoke, through Mr. Lind, for the people of the United States.
"The effect of this unfortunate misunderstanding on their part is to leave them singularly isolated and without friends who can effectually aid them. So long as the misunderstanding continues we can only await the time of their awakening to a realization of the actual facts.
Huerta Government's Reply.
The Huerta government suggested the following alternative in rejecting Wilson's proposals:
United States send new ambassador to Mexico without restraints. Strict observance of neutrality laws. Unconditional recognition of Huerta government.
1633-1639 ARAPAHOE STREET.
A Step and a Half Toward 17th St. from Daniels & Fisher Tower.
Phones Main 190, 189, 169.
Our Wholesale Department Caters Especially to Pullman Dining Car.
Hotel and Restaurant Service.
Our market is a model of perfect sanitation and cleanliness, and it is refreshingly cool to step into our store and see the many good things we have to tempt the appetite on these hot days.
PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY!
Buy a Denver Made Trunk from the Factory and You Will Be Money Ahead.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
We have been making Trunks
established. Every Trunk we sell
Best Made.
WE CARRY A COMPLETE LINE
TELESCOPES, ETC. EVERYTHING
Second-hand Trunks Take
We Repair Trunks, Suit Cases, La
If you have any Repairing, t
call and give you an estim
The Welton
2223 Welton St. Phone
THE STORE A
THE JOS
Phone
Annual
Clearing
An Event L
to by Every
Denver as a
Saving Oppo
SATISFACTIONGUARANTEED or MONEYREFUNDED We have been making Trunks for fifteen years, and our quality is well established. Every Trunk we sell is strictly Hand-Made, Denver-Made, the Best Made.
The Welton Trunk Factory 2223 Welton St. Phone Champa 2048 Denver, Colo.
THE STORE ACCOMMODATING
THE Joslin DRY GOODS CO.
Phone 3270 Main
Annual August Clearing Sale
An Event Looked Forward to by Every Housewife in Denver as a Great Money Saving Opportunity.
See Our Advertisements in the Sunday Papers—
Sale Commences Monday
AUGUST 4TH
COME EARLY FO BROWER
ARLY FOR BEST SELL
WER & SCH
COME EARLY FOR BEST SELECTIONS
REAL ESTATE FARM LA
311 Cooper Building
DENVER, COLORADO
Telephone
Residence
HENRY BECK JOE
Beck & Engstr
Beck
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
Wines, L
Cit
Western Agents for Minneapolis Gra
Imported B
1644-46-48-56
nes, Liquors and Cigars
Wines, Liquors and Cigars Western Agents for Minneapolis Grain Belt Beer and Carnegie Porter, Pripps Imported Beer and Bock Ol.
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HENRY BECK
T SELECTIONS
CHUCK
FARM LANDS
Telephone Champa 1962
Residence Phone Main 7345
JOHN ENGSTROM
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
CABUN CASE IS FREE
MONEY COURTS BARRY
JOS. D. D. RIVERS.....Proprietor
1824 Curtis Street, Room 25.
Phone Main 7417.
One Year ..... $2.00
Six Months ..... 1.00
Taree Months ..... .60
PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.
Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice in the city of Denver, Colorado.
All communications of a personating nature that are not complimentary will be withheld from the columns of this paper.
Display advertising, 25 cents per square. A square contains ten agate lines.
Reading notices, ten lines or less, 10 cents per line. Each additional line over ten lines, 5 cents per line.
No discounts allowed on less than three months' contract. Cash must accompany all orders from parties unknown to us. Further particulars on application
Remittances should be made by Express Money Order, Postoffice Money Order, Registered Letter or Bank Draft. Postage stamps will be received the same as cash for the fractional part of a dollar. Only 1-cent and 2-cent stamps taken.
Communications to receive attention must be newsy, upon important subjects, plainly written only upon one side of the paper; must reach us Tuesdays, if possible, anyway, not later than Wednesdays, and bear the signature of the author. No manuscript returned, unless stamps are sent for postage.
It occasionally happens that papers sent to subscribers are lost or stolen. In case you do not receive any number when due, inform us by postal card and we will cheerfully forward a duplicate of the missing number.
THE COMING OF FALL—CLOSING OF EVENTFUL SOCIETY SEASON.
There is a division of opinion as to which is the more beautiful season of the year—spring or fall. From time immemorial until recent years spring with its many evidences of new life and beauty, when all nature seems to come from its winter's hiding in a dress of green, was unanimously voted the loveliest season of the year. But sentiment has begun to change in favor of spring's closest competitor—fall.
It is in the fall that Nature takes on a coat of brown, which indicates the beginning of the end of vegetation that was begun in the spring, and it is the idea of passing rather than the actual beauty to the eye that seems to make fall the less popular. But the one strong point in favor of the season that is just rounding the corner is that it gives new life, vigor and vim to the man, the master of the earth.
The coming of fall brings to a close one of the most active society seasons Denver has yet enjoyed. There have been numerous visitors, and they have been lavishly entertained. It would seem that our socially inclined citizens of Denver go a little to the extreme in the matter of entertaining. A certain amount of entertaining is necessary for the social life of a community, but we should ever bear in mind that lavish entertaining is a thing not to be even attempted by people who have to earn every dollar they get by the sweat of their brow.
OPENING OF THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS
The public school stands as a by the taxes and supported by the are open to all and its mission is to the community. Every mother and race as well as to the nation to see this training should not be neglect mind is most active and capable of ment. Our watchword at this time See that he goes the first day and Let no excuse keep you from doing you cannot afford to buy books for to you free of cost by the Board of almost everything else for the aski why every boy and girl should not he or she has finished the last grade.
Many parents will send their emies and some to professional school glad to see so many of our Colora for serviceable occupations, but we people have not taken the fullest ad might, and our words are sent out collect your opportunity for your ch concerned. As a race we cannot af ple without the advantages of a ccially since it costs you nothing but child does not come behind in any
public school stands as a bulwark of the nation and supported by the suffrage of the people all and its mission is to reach even the humbly. Every mother and father owes it to him. It is to the nation to see that his child has a proper should not be neglected, especially in the year active and capable of the largest and quick watchword at this time is, see that your child goes the first day and every day and up to keep you from doing your full duty to your afford to buy books for your child they will cost by the Board of Education, the tuition thing else for the asking. There is no excuse and girl should not be in school and kept finished the last grade of the high school. Parents will send their children away to college to professional schools; others will go to to many of our Colorado young people fitting occupations, but we feel that the rank as not taken the fullest advantage of the public our words are sent out to them in particular. Opportunity for your child's sake and for that As a race we cannot afford to have any of our the advantages of a common school education costs you nothing but a determination to come behind in any good thing.
The public school stands as a bulwark of the nation. It is built by the taxes and supported by the suffrage of the people. Its doors are open to all and its mission is to reach even the humblest child in the community. Every mother and father owes it to himself and to the race as well as to the nation to see that his child has a proper education. This training should not be neglected, especially in the years when the mind is most active and capable of the largest and quickest development. Our watchword at this time is, see that your child is in school. See that he goes the first day and every day and up to the last day. Let no excuse keep you from doing your full duty to your children. If you cannot afford to buy books for your child they will be furnished to you free of cost by the Board of Education, the tuition is free and almost everything else for the asking. There is no excuse in this city why every boy and girl should not be in school and kept in school until he or she has finished the last grade of the high school.
Many parents will send their children away to colleges and academies and some to professional schools; others will go to teach. We are glad to see so many of our Colorado young people fitting themselves for serviceable occupations, but we feel that the rank and file of our people have not taken the fullest advantage of the public schools as they might, and our words are sent out to them in particular. Do not neglect your opportunity for your child's sake and for the good of all concerned. As a race we cannot afford to have any of our young people without the advantages of a common school education, and especially since it costs you nothing but a determination to see that your child does not come behind in any good thing.
Economy.
Hub—"Have you done what I asked and saved some money this month?" Wife—Yes, dear. I spoke to the grocer and he's promised not to send in his bill till next month.
THE ZION BAPTIST CHURCH.
David E. Owen, Pastor.
Zion was crowded all day last Sunday, notwithstanding a funeral in the afternoon. Many visitors, were
Talking Shop.
Enthusiastic interest in one's occupation is always an advantage, but, on the other hand, it is not well for a woman in business to talk of her work at all times and places. Naturally, the thing that we do constantly is our most absorbing interest, but we must remember that other people have other things to talk about.
Economical.
While in a lunch room one day five-year-old Beatrice ordered omelet, and later her guardian was surprised to see her eating the parsley, too. "Do you like parsley?" "No," answered Beatrice, "but I hate to see things wasted."
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bulwark of the nation. It is built on suffrage of the people. Its doors do reach even the humblest child in father owes it to himself and to the that his child has a proper education. And, especially in the years when the of the largest and quickest developments, see that your child is in school. Every day and up to the last day your full duty to your children. If your child they will be furnished by Education, the tuition is free and there is no excuse in this city use in school and kept in school until of the high school. Children away to colleges and academies; others will go to teach. We are do young people fitting themselves to feel that the rank and file of our advantage of the public schools as they to them in particular. Do not negild's sake and for the good of allford to have any of our young peo common school education, and espeit a determination to see that your good thing.
THE ZION BAPTIST CHURCH.
David E. Over, Pastor.
Zion was crowded all day last Sunday, notwithstanding a funeral in the afternoon. Many visitors were greeted every one of whom was doubly welcome and is invited to return.
The body of Sister Margaret Jacobs, for more than thirty years a member of Zion, was laid to rest at Fairmont last Sunday afternoon. She was a member of Zion's old pioneers whose ranks are rapidly thinning to our sad regret.
The son of sister Annie Grey will be buried from the Campbell church at two o'clock tomorrow afternoon.
The pastor will preach from "The Glory of Labor" Sunday morning, Text: "Come unto Me all ye who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest."
Do not fail to be present at the evening stereopticon service which closes the summer programme. Subject, "The Pilgrim's Progress." John Bunyan's inspired dream is a source strength to every child of faith. Rock of Ages, beautifully illustrated with twelve views will be sung by the choir.
Coal! Coal!! Coal!!!
617 West 11th Ave.
CARSON'S
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)
Five-Points Pool and Billiard Par
CIGARS, TOBACCO
and SOFT DRINKS
2710 WELTON STREET.
e-Points Pool and Billiard Parlor CIGARS, TOBACCO and SOFT DRINKS
Five-Points Pool and Billiard Parlor CIGARS, TOBACCO and SOFT DRINKS
Phone Main 2759
THE NEWPORT SALOON
1841-45 ARAPAHOE STREET.
When
The Heads, Feet,
or Chiterlings or
except th
East'
When You Want
the Heads, Feet, Tails Snouts, Neckbones
Chiterlings or any other part of the hog
except the squeal go to
East's Market
6 Larimer Street. Phone Main 1461.
THE PRIOR FURNITURE CO
1814 CURTIS STREET
NEW AND SECOND HAND FURNITURE BOUGHT,
SOLD AND EXCHANGED. WINDOW SHADES
AND SEWING MACHINES SOLD AND RE-
PAIRED A SPECIALTY
me. Champa 392 Cash or Credit
Why Not Be Cool and Comfortable
At Zion Church Each Sunday
Evening During the Hot Weather?
When You Want
The Heads, Feet, Tails Snouts, Neckbones or Chiterlings or any other part of the hog except the squeal go to
2300-6 Larimer Street.
THE PRIOR
1814 CU
NEW AND SECOND
SOLD AND EXCH
AND SEWING
PAIRE
NEW AND SECOND HAND FURNITURE BOUGHT,
SOLD AND EXCHANGED. WINDOW SHADES
AND SEWING MACHINES SOLD AND RE-
PAIRED A SPECIALTY
Phone. Champa 392 Cash or Cred
Why Not Be Cool and Comfortable
At Zion Church Each Sunday
Evening During the Hot Weather?
SERMONS IN PICTURES BY MENAS OF THE
SUBJECT—TO-MORROW NIGHT:
"The Pilgrim's Progress"
ILLUSTRATED SONGS
EVERYBODY WELCOME
EVERYBODY WELCOME
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Phone Champa 2756
2710 WELTON STREET.
E. R. PAGE, Prop.
Only Colored Saloon in Denver
ANNEX CAFE AND LUNCH ROOM
SHORT ORDERS AT ALL HOURS
CHINESE DISHES OF ALL KINDS
FURNISHED ROOMS
TOM LEWIS, Proprietor.
ET. DENVER, COLORADO
Phone Main 1461
Cash or Credit
STEREOPTICON.
Men's Shirts
Men's Shirts
Usually priced from $1.50 to $10.00, on sale now at from $1.15 to $6.45.
Manhattan and Poinsettia brands, all fabrics, all patterns, all colorings worn by men of good taste.
$1.50 shirts, $1.15.
$2.00 shirts, $1.38.
$2.50 to $3.00 shirts, $1.88.
$3.50 to $4.00 shirts, $2.85.
$5.00 to $6.50 shirts, $3.55.
$7.50 to $8.50 shirts, $5.45.
$10.00 shirts, $6.45.
Separate Arapahoe Street Entrance to Our Men's Shop.
Clearance Prices on White Goods
FLAXON — Stripe or check designs; regularly 25c to 35c; the yard .....17c
VOILE — 40 inches wide; six different stripes; regularly 30c; the yard .....20c
LONG CLOTH — 36-inch mercerized Coronado; boxes of 10 yards, regularly $3.50; the box .....$2.25
NAINSOOK — 36-inch, fine, soft, Tower Sea Island, regularly $2.50; the box .....$1.65
Thirty pieces of fine French voile and crepe, embroidered borders, allover effects, 48 to 52 inches wide, regularly $1.25 to $9.50 the yard; on sale at half price.
TRUTHFUL FURNITURE AD. you to know that every word in our advertisement do not exaggerate or overstate.
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.
MINILESALE FURNITURE.
FURN
2016 BLAKE
ROCK ISLAND
CHAPEL
1928
IT IS THE TRUTH
That we are the real Wholesale Furniture House on the rail road tracks selling at retail and dealing direct with the public.
IT IS THE TRUTH
if you $1, $10, $25 and even $50 on Rugs, Brass B
ening Room Furniture, Kitchen Furniture, as well
ure.
**UE** that we will gladly call for you with our auto
will Phone Main 7930, and bring you to and from
with no obligation to buy.
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
REFRIGERATORS at about one- half regular price
for $6.50.
EVENPORTS AND DIVANETTES, 15 styles, range
up. We save you from $10 to $30.
ARRIAGES, the collapsible kind; best quality; just
with retail $10.50. We offer them at $5.50.
9x12 AXMINSTER RUGS, choice of four leading
$13.50 to $19.00.
X—LISTEN—IT'S ON THE RAILROAD TRACK.
EXPENSES ARE LOW AND PRICES CHEAP.
FRANKLIN & SON
BLAKE STREET, on the Tracks
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.
FINE WINES, LIQUORS and CIGARS, SCHLITZ BEER ALWAYS ON TAP. MEALS AT ALL HOURS.
Telephone South 683
Cor. West 10th. & Osage. Denver, Col.
It is rumored that Dave Strosier is to be married.
Mr. Alexander of 3347 Delgany street is on the sick list.
A. Colston, who was injured last week by a fall is able to be out again.
D. B. Faw was in the city Wednesday from Estes Park on a business trip.
Mrs. Eugene Parks, her sister, Mr. Keen, her cousin, Mrs. L. Davis, a daughter, Julia, left the city this week for St. Louts. Mrs. Davis and Mr. Julia will visit there for a few weeks and then proceed to their home Vicksburg, Miss.
Mrs. Rachel Haskins entertained an informal dancing party at Fehall, last Tuesday evening in honour of her visiting guests. A very enjoyable evening was spent and danced.
Chas. Burdine, clerk in the P. O. department is enjoying his summer vacation.
Miss Cassie Flemings of Colorado Springs was a visitors in the city the first of the week.
Mr. J. N. Morris of Minneapolis has returned after a visit to his sister-in-law, Mrs. Victoria Morris.
Mrs. L. J. Parks arrived in the city Wednesday from her country home and remains until tomorrow.
Miss Hattie Huff left last Thursday for her home, Memphis, Tenn., after a two months visit with her brother and friends.
Little Miss Grace Dunlap arrived in the city Wednesday from Colorado Springs, she is the guest of Miss Vivian Rivers.
B. F. Givens of 2515 Curtis street has gone to Idaho Springs to recuperate his health. His wife accompanied him.
Mrs. Frances Walker of Omaha,, is the guest of her son and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. James B. Gist of 2632 Downing avenue.
Dr. E. F. Canty, the popular manager of the Elite Drug store is forging that enterprise to the front along business lines.
Misses Helen and Mable White left last Tuesday for their home in memphis, Tenn., after a sojourn in our city and Colorado Springs.
Adam Speed, of Minneapolis, who has been sojourning in our city for several weeks, left this week for Seattle, Wash. Mr. Speed is a chirapodist.
Mrs. Oscar Rand of Pueblo, enroute to her home, from Estes Park, visited with relatives, Mesdames Lynch and Cole a few days this week.
Our restaurants, baber shops and other places of business would do well in the tourist season to imitate our white brethren in decorations and inducements.
A. H. Tinsley and family, brother of Mrs. M. Brown of 2932 Stout street, left Sunday for their home in Oakley, Kansas, after visiting several weeks in Denver.
Mrs. Hatch and sister, Miss Jessie Willis, are in the city on their way to their home in Indianapolis. After a pleasant trip to California. They are the guests of Capt. Johnson.
Miss Frances Russ of 2612 South Logan street delightfully entertained a number of young people Thursday evening in honor of Miss Corona White of California. The color scheme, yellow and white prevailed.
Mrs. Alex Reeves and daughter, Constance, arrived in the city Wednesday and remained until Friday, when they departed for their home in Emporia, Kansas.
Miss Ethel Michem, who is one of the teachers in the high school in Oklahoma City, arrived in the city Wednesday, and remained until Friday, when she departed for home.
Thousands of Pathians from all over the United States are this week attending the Supreme Lodge, at Baltimore, Md. Colorado is about the only state not represented.
Miss Lulu Berry of San Antonia, Texas, accompanied by her Nephew, Master Palmer Berry, arrived in the city Sunday for a few weeks visit with her sister, Mrs. A. Armstrong of 2555 Clarkson street.
Mrs. Fred Williams, who has been visiting in the city several weeks was called home, this week to Cairo, Ill., on account of the death of her nephew.
After spending a few days in Colorado Springs and Manitou, Mrs. Frances J. Wilson and Mrs. Mamie Tood returned to Denver, each being greatly benefited by their trip.
Mrs. Georgia Wilson of 2748 Welton entertained at breakfast, last Thursday morning, in honor of Mesdames Frances J. Wilson, Mamie Tood and Williams of Kansas City, Mo.
George Olden of Topeka, Kansas was a visitor in the city this week and while in the city was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. A. Froman, 2423 Emerson street. Mr. Olden is en route to the coast.
Mrs. Eugene Parks, her sister, Mrs. Keen, her cousin, Mrs. L. Davis, and daughter, Julia, left the city this week for St. Louis, Mrs. Davis and Miss Julia will visit there for a few weeks and then proceed to their home in Vicksburg, Miss.
Mrs. Rachel Haskins entertained at an informal dancing party at Fern hall, last Tuesday evening in honor of her visiting guests. A very enjoyable evening was spent and dancing was indulged in until the "we sma hours." The hall was beautifully decorated and dainty refreshments were served.
Messrs. Page and Ratley have recently opened, what is known as the Reo club in the Five Points district. The club is run strictly for the accommodation of whist devotees and for this the appointments are perfect. Besides the card rooms there are elegant reading and writing rooms together with a perfectly appointed Kitchen at the service of the members at all times.
Why not get in line with some of our people and trade at the Elite Drug Company. Fresh line of drugs and chemicals on hand. Free delivery to all parts of the city.
2100 Arapahoe Street.
Phone Main 2701.
Mrs. A. A. Ealy and Mrs. Moral Keelan were hostesses last Friday morning, when they presided at a breakfast of smart appointments, complimentary to Mrs. W. H. Gibson of Oakland, Calif., who is their house guest. Covers were laid for Mesdames Gibson, Fairfax, Jackson, Saunders, J. R. Contee, Ross, Marshall Lewis, James Holly, Miss La Cour and the hostesses.
One of the swellest affairs of the week was the dancing party last Friday night, given by Mrs. Addie Harrington, Albertera Hamlett, Mattie Overs and Sadie Brewin, at Fern hall. The hall was beautifully decorated in goldenrods and asparagus ferns. Until a late hour the guests danced to the music of the Webster orchestra, when they departed, each de claring that it was one of the prettiest parties they had attended.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Wims gave a very finely appointed reception last Tuesday, complimentary to the following out of town guests: Prof. and Mrs. H. C. Vaughn, Mrs. D. Maddux, Miss S. E. Harris, Mrs. W. A. Jackson, Mrs. C. F. Kimbrough, Miss Diemer, and Mrs. B. F. Sharp. The reception was from five to seven and was held at the beautiful residence of Mrs. Georgia Letcher, 2031 Marion, the house being beautifully decorated, Bufford, the well known caterer served the refreshments. Mr. and Mrs. Wims are fine entertainers and have made many friends by their open-handed hospitality.
Mrs. C. B. Franklin and Mrs. M. Bruce, who are spending a week at their summer cottage, Navajo, up the Platte Cañon, complimentary to Mrs. V. Carter, most royally entertained the following friends who paid them a visit Sunday: Dr. L. J. Ford, Mr. C. H. Johnson and wife, Mrs. Raymond Clark, Mrs. Arzee Boisseau and C. M. White. A dinner was served worthy the New York Delmonico, which was very much enjoyed after the vigorous exercise of mountain climbing. Navajo is a large well appointed cottage with beautiful grounds and location surrounded with the most charming scenery. No more enjoyable recreation could be devised than a weeks stay at this scenic resort.
ANNOUNCEMENT EXTRAORDINARY.
The Keystone club under the management of the popular club man, Mr. Sylvester Stewart, will be opened to the public, Saturday evening, August 30, 1913, at the home of the Old Two Jim's club, 1859 Champa street, which has been remodeled and is now one of the finest club quarters in the west. Wishing to see our many friends and thanking them in advance for their patronage.
We remain, Your truly,
Yours truly.
THE KEYSTONE CLUB.
BETHLEHEM BAPSTAT CHURCH
NOTES, SUNDAY, AUG. 31.
9:45 a. m., Sunday School subject of lesson Israel at Mount Sinai Scripture, Exodus 19, Hebrews 12:18-24.
11 a. m., preaching.
In the evening there will be a joint meeting of the B. Y. P. U. and the Ladies' Mission Circle.
Program.
Devotionals conducted by the devotional committee.
Reading Scripture lesson, Mrs. M. Kennedy.
Paper, "Why Am I a Member of the Woman's Missionary Society," Mrs. A. E. Reynolds. Solo, Mr. W. M. Hill. Reading, Mrs. Georgia Harrison. Solo and pantomine, Miss Nellie Evans. Remarks by the president, Mrs. M. E. Morrison.
The public is invited. East Thirty-second and Lafayette street.
Dr. J. H. P. Westbrook, office 29
Good Block, 16th and Larimer Sta.,
Phone, Main 1433. Residence, 265
King street, phone, South 2068.
DEATHS
Mrs. Fannie Johnson, died, August 26, at Park Avenue hospital and was buried, August 28, at Riverside cemetery, Rev. Over of Zion Baptist church officiating.
Mr. Edward V. Palmer was buried, August 24, from Campbell Chapel, Rev. Bray officiating. The funeral was conducted under the auspices of the Damon Lodge No. 5, Lodge of P. Interment at Fairmont.
Hazel N. Coleman died at 1421 31st st., Saturday, August 23. Remains were shipped to Nicodemus, Kansas for burial.
The above funerals in charge of A. M. Lawhorn.
Bernard Gray, aged twenty-two, died at St. Anthony's hospital Sunday 24th inst., funeral service will be at Campbell A. M. E. church Sunday, August 31, 2 o'clock, friends are invited. Interment Riverside.
Harry Clark, a brother of Edward, who died at the County hospital, August 19th, was buried, August 22nd. Remains were laid to rest at Riverside.
Mrs. Calpurnia Chinn Miragal, the beloved daughter of Mrs. Mable fallings, died of typhoid fever, Saturday, August 23, at Cody, Wyoming, where she had been living with her grandmother several months. Mrs. Miragal waws reared in Denver and attended school at Howard University, Washington, D. C., and Cheyney Institute, Cheyney, Pennsylvania. The funeral was largely attended and many beautiful floral designs, which covered the grave were given by her many friends. Mrs. Miragal leaves to mourn her loss, a devoted mother, grandmother, sister, husband, and little daughter and a host of friends in this city, as she was loved by all who knew her.
The funeral took place. Thursday afternoon from the Douglass Undertaking Co's, parlors, Rev. Ward, officiating. Interment at Fairmont cemetery. Mrs. Fallings has the sympathy of the entire community in her bereavement. Douglass Undertaking Company in charge of above funerals.
CARD OF THANKS.
We wish to thank our neighbors, friends and Columbine Court of Calanthe, No. 279, who so kindly assisted us during the illness and death of our mother. Mrs. Margaret Jacobs.
CAMPBELL CHAPEL.
The pastor will preach at both services tomorrow. The day has been set apart to raise our annual conference assessments. Pastor desires that every member pay their dollar money. The entertainments for next week are as follows: Monday evening Feast in the Wilderness, with old fashion southern dinner on the church lawn for only twenty-five cents. Dinner served from 11 a. m. to 11 p. m. management of pastors aid. Tuesday evening, grand musical and dinner at Mrs. Jennies Piersons residence, 2340 Cleveland Place at 8 p. m. An evening of splendid home entertainments is assured all who attend. It's free. Thursday evening, The Queen Coronation will take place at the people's Tabernacle. Governor Ammons, Mayor Perkins, Dean Hart, and other distinguished persons will deliver specially prepared addresses. Management of Mrs. W. Chas. Blackwell.
Mrs. Cynthia Taylor an old and faithful member of Campbell who was injured in a fall from a street car last Wednesday evening is doing nicely. Mrs. O. U. Bray of Pueblo, Colo, sang a solo after the sermon last Sunday night to the delight and edification of the splendid congregation. Mrs. Celia Lewis entertained the sewing circle last Thursday at the home of Mrs. Jennie Pierson in a most delightful way. The first Sunday in September will mark the last quarterly meeting in this conference year. All Denver is cordially invited to unite with us in these services.
SHORTER CHAPEL.
Washington and Twenty-Third Sts.
Rev. Robert L. Pope, B. D. Pas-
The order of service at Shorter tomorrow will be as follows:
9:45 a. m. Sunday school. Lesson: Israel at Mt. Sinai. Ex. 19; 1-6,16-21.
11:00 a special sermon for men by the pastor. At this service the men will be given seats of honor.
6:45 p. m. Allen C. E. League. Topic: Missionary Essentials. 11:00. Prayer. Eph. 6: 10-20.
8:00 Monthly Sacred Forum. Programme.
1. Introductory Service.
2. Anthem, "O Paradise," by the Choir.
3. Announcements.
4. Soprano Solo, "He Leadeth Me," by Mrs. J. N. Batts.
5. Paper, ____.
6. Anthem, "Sail on O, Ship of State," by the choir.
7. Address, "Our Public School Problem," by Dr. P. E. Spratlin.
8. Violin Solo, selected, Mr. George Morrison.
9. Offertory, Doxology and Benediction.
Some seventy-five, or more of our children were given a delightful outing at Manhattan Beach last Wednesday afternoon, the Sunday school providing free transportation and free admission. It is just splendid to have something free.
Our pastor made a flying visit to Cheyenne last week, taking in the Frontier's Day celebration. While there he was the guest of Rev. and Mrs. James Washington.
It is gratifying to note the large number of out of town visitors that attend our service. Last Sabbath the number exceeded a half hundred.
Miss Willa Crane, niece of Mrs. R. L. Pope, left Thursday evening over the Rock Island for Pensacola, Fla., her former home.
Our sympathy goes out to sister
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Mabel B. Falling because of the death of her elder daughter, Dimple, last Saturday at Cody, Wyo. The remains were shipped here and interred from the Douglas undertaking parlor with Rev. A. M. Ward officiating.
Last week, the Sunday school board was pleasantly entertained by Mr. and Mrs. U. G. Brown, 2637 Marion and the Stewardess board by Mr. and Mrs. Wims, 2221 Humboldt.
The last picnic of the season will be given by the P. P. C. Club at Manhattan Beach, Tuesday, September 2. This promises to be the biggest event of the summer. Refreshments will be served by the ladies of the clug.
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Nicely furnished rooms for rent in
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telephone Olive 1608. Mrs. Howard
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A nice modern furnished front
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Phone Olive 1577.
Three apartments for rent at 2929
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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.
13 CENTS A DAY BUYS A PIANO.
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Before You Buy Property, Let Lawyer
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ILLINOIS SOCIETY GIRL TO TEACH IN LABRADOR
SENATOR AN ADEPT IN HEAD WAITER'S ROLE
DISSATISFIED WITH EMBASSY: PAY TOO SMALL
WILD BEASTS ARE NOW HER FAVORITE PETS
Miss Mildred Armour, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. Cochrane Armour of 1608 Ridge avenue, Evanston, Ill., who made her debut in society only two years ago, has forsaken social joys to teach a kindergarten classes in Dr. Wilfred Grenfel's mission at Battle Harbor, Labrador.
M.
Miss Armour, who was a Smith college student, sailed a few days ago on the famous mission schooner, George B. Cluett, which left the old gashouse pier in Boston amid the cheers and shouted good wishes of many Boston society folk. With Miss Armour as a fellow teacher is Miss Carolyn Woolley, a Hartford (Conn.) society girl and a classmate at Smith college.
Illinois has been encounters with the women suffrage advocates taken to Washington by the demonstration a few days ago.
Senator Lewis of Illinois has been encounters with the women suffrage advocates taken to Washington by the demonstration a few days ago. When the flood of petitions urging the passage of a constitutional amendment poured in upon the senate Colonel Lewis quickly capitulated. But his surrender, which was abject, did not take him beyond the battle lines.
When the flood of petitions urging the passage of a constitutional amendment poured in upon the senate Colonel Lewis quickly capitulated. But his surrender, which was abject, did not take him beyond the battle lines, and he has had
several extremely interesting experiences with suffrage leaders. At a hotel near the capitol, where he had gone for a hurried meal, Senator Lewis paid the waiter and called for his hat and cane. There being some delay, he walked to the dining room doorway, and had taken the post usually occupied by a head waiter when a suffrage advocate from
"If the United States can't maintain embassies and legations abroad as they should be our diplomatic service had better be abolished," said Judge James W. Gerrard, recently appointed American ambassador to Germany in Berlin the other day, adding:
PETER H. BURGESS
"Under existing conditions, and until our people see the necessity of properly providing diplomatic living salaries and embassy buildings it is absurd to talk about a poor man taking the post of ambassador.
"I am beginning to doubt," he continued, "whether this ambassadorship business pays."
The pampered lapdog has had his day. His aristocratic nose, what there is of it, is sadly out of joint. He may live in a hygienic kennel and frequent bench shows, where he wins—or doesn't—blue rosettes for his mistress; but he no longer peers from underneath her arm or sits beside her in the limousine, for he has been supplanted by another.
THE FASHION
Imagine his feelings, if you can, upon learning that his rival in his lady's affections is a common wild animal. Titled English women have recently taken to adopting as pets baby beasts Antiquity of Cotton Weaving.
Britain's cotton trade is but in its infancy compared with the industry in India. For what are 3 against 3,000?
Thus writes Mr. Thomas Ellison in his "Cotton Trade of Great Britain:" "Fabrics as fine as any that can be turned out at the present day by the most perfect machinery in Lancashire were produced by the nimble fingers of the Hindoo spinners, and the primitive looms of Hindoo weavers, a thousand years before the invasion of Britain by the Romans."
When Britons were shivering in their woad in fact, the Hindoes were
Others on the little craft are Dr. and Mrs. John Mason Little, Jr., and their year-old baby, John Mason Little III., known as "Snow Baby Little" because he was born in Newfoundland; Miss Louise Little, a sister of Doctor Little; Miss Jessie Luther of Providence, R. I., and a dozen other society and professional folk.
"Of course I cannot help feeling just a little anxious about Mildred going away off to that cold country," said Mrs. Armour, "but I understand that the Cluett is a very good vessel and they have very skillful officers and crew on board.
"Mildred, you know, was in Smith college and Doctor Grenfel has always obtained volunteer teachers there. My daughter will teach a kindergarten class in the mission at Battle Harbor, which is attached to the big hospital Doctor Grenfel maintains there. I am sure she will enjoy the life and will get the best of care."
The Cluett, it is said, will touch first at St. Anthony's, Newfoundland, where Baby Little was born, and then will proceed to Battle Harbor and Indian Harbor in Labrador.
HEAD WAITER'S ROLE
New England approached him. In tones of imperious authority she addressed the senator:
"I want you to seat me over yonder in the corner by the window," she said, pointing to a vacant seat.
"Certainly," responded Colonel Lewis with a courtesy and grave never equaled by the best trained head waiter. Deftly through the maze of tables he conducted the lady to the seat she had selected.
Idly twirling the menu, she demanded, addressing Colonel Lewis, still playing the role of head waiter, "Now what do you advise me to take?"
"Well, madam, under ordinary circumstances," responded the smiling senator, "I would advise you to take me; but as I am married that would cause both of us embarrassment under the law. The man who has just entered the room and is now standing at the door is the head waiter of this place, and I am certain he will recommend you food. I will send him to you."
Senator Lewis withdrew with several profound bows, not divulging his identity, but thoroughly enjoying the experience.
BASSY; PAY TOO SMALL
The judge is dissatisfied with the present embassy, which he finds too small.
"I could not invite my mother-in-law," he observed. "The president must have been aware of its size and therefore selected a childless ambassador."
Being asked what he estimates it would cost him to suitably maintain the dignity of the United States, he answered:
"Well, one American ambassador who has been in Europe less than a year told me that so far he has spent $128,000, and he did not seem to be making a splurge either."
The judge gave the talk about poor men for diplomats and about diplomatic simplicity a severe jolt in the interview, frankly declaring that he intends to conform to the customs and court of the country to which he has been sent, even to wearing a diplomatic uniform and that he purposes doing everything necessary to give Germans the right idea of the dignity, importance and greatness of America
HOW HER FAVORITE PETS
from the jungle. The duchess of Sutherland, who was known, until the recent death of the late duke, as the marchioness of Stafford, has a tame infant leopard, which she brought back with her from a recent hunting expedition upon which she accompanied her husband.
Another member of the aristocracy affects a tiny lion cub as a pet. The tawny coats and lithe, sinuous movements of these forest animals are strikingly becoming to tall, graceful women, and the fad is an interesting one.
For the same reason, perhaps, grey hounds seem to be coming back into fashion. In fact, it begins to look as if majestic brutes were going to super sede toy dogs as personal attaches.
Loss.
A man will fret more over 50 cents that he accidentally drops into a sewer than he does over $5 which he loses because the player who "calls" him has aces full.
glorying "in garments of a texture so fine as to have earned the poetic description of 'woven wind.'"
Way of it
"It is corporations nowadays, not poets, who write words that burn." "How do you mean?" "When their books are wanted in an investigation of their methods."
Why, of Course.
"I know why some trees are evergreen."
"Why are they?"
"Because Nature wants to look spruce in her new firs."
CAPITOL IN COLORADO
DURING SUMMER SEASON WOULD ENHANCE EFFICIENCY.
Secretary of the Interior Lane Approves Denver or Colorado Springs at Governors' Meeting.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
Colorado Springs, Colo.—"In the interest of governmental efficiency, there ought to be a summer capital established either in Colorado Springs or Denver, because of the delightful surroundings and unparalleled summer climate to be found in Colorado."
In an impromptu address delivered at the opening session of the fifth annual conference of governors Secretary Franklin K. Lane of the Department of the Interior electrified his audience on more than one topic, but his preference to a summer capitol in Colorado Springs or Denver particularly electrified the large assemblage that had gathered to welcome the governors and Mr. Lane.
"We are delighted to be in Colorado Springs, where nature has been so lavish with her attractions and where the climate is so perfect," said Secretary Lane. "The matter of a summer capitol for our government has been long discussed and to my mind it is a serious question. When President Washington selected the site for the
O
national capitol he had many reasons therefor, most of them political. Certainly the matter of climate did not enter into the calculation.
"A summer session in Washington involves a tremendous amount of suffering on account of the heat. This applies every summer to the vast army of department employés who carry on the routine work of the government.
"I am convinced that if we are to have efficiency and if we are to secure the maximum results from a minimum of energy, there is an urgent necessity that part of our time be spent in a city where the climate is cool in summer and conducive to the best work with the least possible amount of discomfort and suffering. I am speaking very seriously.
"Personally, I am making my summer capitol west of the Missouri river for the reason that I wanted to get acquainted with a part of my job, locking after the lands under my department and to see the people who are directly affected by my department. I could not think of a better time to accomplish this than when the heat was so excessive in the city of Washington. I am a Western man and I know what good climate is—you good people certainly have it in Colorado." Secretary Lane then proceeded to deal with his Western trip and the problems of the public land department.
Italian Kills Countryman
Trinidad—During a fight which occurred in one of the bunkhouses at the Prfmurose mine, north of Aguilar, Pletro Brach, an Italian miner, drew a long dagger and stabbed Giovanni Vallanzan, aged twenty-six, in the breast. When Valanzano fell to the floor Brach completed the murder by cutting his victims throat.
Two Women Bottleggers Fined.
Boulder—Mrs. Mary Hartman and Mary Oesch, proprietors of the Monarch boarding house near Marshall, were each fined $25 and costs by County Judge E. J. Ingram, upon being found guilty of bootlegging to the miners in that district. Each contributed $61.25 to the county funds.
Labor Leader Buried
Colorado Springs.—Delegations of labor unionists from all parts of the state attended the funeral of Gerald Llippiatt, organizer of the United Mine Workers, whow as killed in a revolver battle with detectives at Trinidad.
Boy Dies; Buggy Plunges 20 Feet.
Telluride.—Plunging over the side of a railless bridge, this side of Vanadium, a buggy carrying five boys crashed to the bottom of a twenty-foot gulch. John Wylander, twenty, of Telluride, was instantly killed and Frank Alien was seriously injured, Albert Munchiando sustained a sprained thumb and several painful bruises, Edwin Calboun's back was badly sprained, and William Ballinger was cut and bruised.
WEEK'S EVENTS IN COLORADO
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
Dates for Coming Events.
Sept. 2-5—Colorado Stampede and Roundup at Fort Collins.
Sept. 2-5—Larimer County Fair at Avond.
Sept. 2-5—County Fair and Race Meeting at Rocky Ford.
Sept. 3-5—Wild West Show at Fort Collins.
Sept. 4-5—Apple Pie Day at Rifle.
Sept. 3-5—Second Annual Fall Festival at Weldon.
and Fruit Fair at Grand Junction.
Sept. 9-11—Weld County Fair at Greeley.
Sept. 12—County Fair and Race Meeting at Sugar City.
Sept. 12—Morgan County Fair at Fort Morgan.
Sept. 9-12—Delta County Fair at Sept. 11-12—Eighth District W. C. T. U. Convention at Denver.
Sept. 17-18—Annual Meeting Order Sister Star at Grand Junction.
Sept. 16-18—Western Slope Fair at Montrose.
Sept. 15-19.—Annual Masonic Meeting at Denver.
Sept. 15-20. Colorado State Fair at Pueblo.
Sept. 23-26. - Colorado - New Mexico
and Indian Carnival at Du-
rango.
Sept. 23-26. - Trinidad-Las Anima-
s, Fair at Trinidad.
Sept. 27-28. - Bankers' Convention
at Denver.
Sept. 29-30. - Inter-County Fair at
Limon.
Oct. 7-12—Meeting Society of Ameri-
Oct. 21—Colorado State Bantus Asso-
ciation at Pueblo.
Oct. 30-Nov. 1. Colorado Kennel Club
Show at Denver.
Jan. 19-24. National Western Stock
Show at Denver.
1915. Last Grand Council of North
American Indians. Denver.
Colorado is to have an official good
roads day in October.
Tracklaying has commenced on the
line between Craig and Steamboat
Springs.
Mayor J. M, Perkins of Denver, who
is a surgeon, performed an operation
for appendicitis on his own son, Earl,
aged 19 years.
The case of H. H. Bernard against
"Queen Anne" Bernard at Craig for
divorce resulted in a hung jury. Two
jurymen out of six stood out for Mrs.
Bernard.
Fred Klinnefalter, thirty-one., for several years a trusted clerk in the employ of a drug company in Denver, was arrested, charged with embezzlement.
T. J. Faires of Rocky Ford has received the contract for the new Elks' home to be built at the corner of Elm avenue and Ninth street this fall. The contract price is $20,408.
The Supreme Court will, on September 8, hear arguments for and against commission government, and by October 1 it is expected that the court will hand down its decision.
To rope and hogtie a large bear bear was the unusual experience of Clarence and Aaron McKee and Jas. McRae of Collbran while crossing Cannon Flat on Battlement mesa.
Three hundred seventy-three cars of genuine Rocky Ford cantaloupes shipped from Rocky Ford in the first week of the 1913 season sets the record for the history of the industry.
Theodore Salelli, Italian section boss, held on recommendation of the coroner's jury for the murder of Mrs. Marie Decker, cook at the Haywood section house, fourteen miles from Fairplay, was released under $500 bond.
That the potato crop of the Greeley district has been damaged not to exceed two per cent, was the statement made by Dr. H. A. Edson of the United States Department of Agriculture and Dr. Hans W. Wollenweber, his colleague in the government service, just prior to their departure from Greeley for Carbondale.
State Senator Thomas H. Iles entertained at his immense stock ranch in Axial basin at Craig. People from all over northwestern Colorado and a dozen or more from Denver, Fort Collins and Boulder attended the big barbecue and dance in the senator's huge hayloft. It is estimated that fully 200 couples were on the floor. The dance is an annual affair.
On a warrant charging misconduct in the Antlers hotel at Colorado Springs, Francis W. Keeler, thirty-two year old, president of a brokerage firm of Denver, and Mrs Jacquana Russell, thirty, wife of Thomas Russell of Chicago, were turned over by the Denver police to a constable from Colorado Springs. They were held several hours in the city jail.
In order to take advantage of the present low water in the Gand river, the secretary of the interior has authorized the reclamation service to begin at once the construction of the diversion dam for the government high line canal at Grand Junction. The dam will be located above Palisade, and its estimated cost is $375,000. The completed project will cost between $4,000,000 and $5,000,000. It will water about 50,000 acres of land.
Mr. and Mrs. John Maurice Raymond, residents of Leadville in the early boom days and residents of Denver since 1891, celebrated their golden wedding anniversary at the home of their daughter, Mrs. Andrew W. Gillette, in Denver.
Casting their dignity to the winds for the moment, twenty-five governors of states of the union mounted twenty-five scrawny burrows on the summit of Mount Manitou at Colorado Springs, two miles above sea level and indulged in a real sure enough race along the narrow mountain trails.
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AFRO-AMERICAN CULLINGS
To serve and uplift the negro race by training its girls and young women to be good cooks and good laundresses is the purpose of the National Training School for Women and Girls—an awkward title for one of the most interesting experiments in vocational education yet made in this country, says the Baltimore American. The primary object is not to train girls to be servants, but to train them so that if they do become servants they will be good ones, and if they become housewives in homes of their own they will be efficient there. To this end this school has subordinated the conventional three R's of the conventional school to the unconventional three B's of this particular school. To quote from the school catalogue: "The aim is to make practical use of the three B's—the Bible, the bathtub and the broom. The Bible is the text book for all students, and by daily study and teaching students will be brought to value it as the best guide for action. The positive power of the bathtub in refining and developing one's physical powers is dwelt upon; physical cleanliness is required. The broom holds third place in importance in the practical scheme. The negro home is suffering more from the lack of women who know how to make and maintain a home than anything else. This school is established to train housekeepers and home makers. Every student is taught how to work and must not be lacking in a disposition to do so. A clean life, a clean body and a clean home are all that the humblest member of the race needs to insure real advancement. We shall conform to the actual needs of the race regardless of present educational methods and notions."
The Grand Imperial court of the Daughters of Isis closed its annual session at Indianapolis with the election of the following officers: Grand imperial commandress, Mrs. Cassie Melker, St. Paul, Minn.; grand imperial deputy commandress, Mrs. Priscilla Smith, Baltimore, Md.; first grand imperial lieutenant, Mrs. Anna D. Groves, St. Louis; grand imperial treasurer, Mrs. Laura Williams, Washington, D. C.; imperial grand recordress, Mrs. Laura Harris, Memphis, Tenn.; first grand imperial ceremonial daughter, Mrs. Ward, Philadelphia, Pa.; second ceremonial daughter, Mrs. Marion Price, New York city; oriental guide, Mrs. Anna Fisher, Pittsburgh, Pa.; grand imperial inner spy, Mrs. Gertrude Pritchett, Indianapolis; grand imperial outer spy, Mrs. Anna Crooker, Chicago; imperial recorder, Levi Williams, Jersey City, N. J.; imperial treasurer, J. Frank Blagburn, Washington, D. C.; imperial oriental guide, George H. Wharton, Philadelphia, Pa.; grand marshal, Howard W. Pinn, Boston. The next meeting of the council will be held at Pittsburgh, Pa., the first week in August, 1914.
The State Colored Farmers' congress met recently at Prairie View, Texas. The subject of scientific farming is one that the colored people can address themselves to with the promise of benefits no less substantial than result from similar meetings on the part of the white people. The possibilities of Texas agriculture are unlimited, and intelligent co-operation in placing the industry on a higher plane of intelligence cannot be too strongly presented to the congress, who constitute so large a proportion of the working forces on the farms of South Texas, particularly.
"The Negro Yearbook" is a publication prepared by Monroe N. Work, a member of the staff of Tuskegee Institute, to summarize facts concerning the negroes. It ought to have a wide circulation, for it presents material of great interest, showing the really remarkable progress made by a race just out of slavery. Fifty years ago, for instance, the negroes owned only a few thousand dollars' worth of church property. Now their church holdings are valued at $57,000,000. In 1867 there were 800 schools for freedmen, with 2,000 teachers and 111,000 pupils. Last year there were 1,700,000 negro children enrolled in southern common schools, and 100,000 in normal schools and colleges, with 34,000 teachers.
An official statistical review of the silk production of mulberry leaves and silk cocoons in Spain from 1901 to 1910 shows that this industry is confined to 12 provinces, which yielded in the decade 346,772 metric tons of leaves and 12,674 tons of cocoons.
Manila is to have a new brewery, a plant being moved in from Hong Kong.
Some of the larger dry goods houses of this country are said to expend annually as much as $100,000 in the preparation of samples, which are sent to their patrons throughout the country from which to make selection of stock.
The present rate of timber cutting in this country is three times that of the growth.
T. H. Seymour of Middleboro, Vt. says his horse knows the days of the week.
Negroes in New York say they will boycott an exposition which will be held in that city in October to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of their freedom, unless the governor heeds hundreds of letters protesting against the work of nine negro commissioners he appointed and orders the commission to change its course. Hunter C. Haynes, a negro who helped draft the bill passed by the legislature last April, appropriating $25,000 for an industrial exposition and celebration, says the commission is planning an exposition to consist of sociological congresses, charts and African curios. Others of the colored race are demanding the work and progress of the negroes of New York state be portrayed, since the bill specifically states the exposition is to be for that purpose: "Fifty years of my race's most serious history," Haynes said, "have been connected with political degradation. Now, when we plan an exposition designed to do good, this commission makes a partisan affair of its work. It will be impossible to give a creditable exposition in such a short time. Nothing tangible has yet been done. More than $3,000 has been spent in salaries and in carrying out impractical ideas."
In appointing Madison R. Smith minister to Haiti, President Wilson broke through a custom of giving this post to a colored man. Mr. Smith is a former member of congress, having served in the Sixtieth congress as representative from the Thirteenth Missouri district. The present minister to Haiti is Dr. Henry W. Furniss, colored, of Indianapolis. This is the second important post given to colored men in the last administration which has been filled by President Wilson with a man of another race. The register of the treasury, a position which has for years been held by a colored man, is to be filled now by a full-blooded Chocktaw Indian, Gabe E. Parker of Oklahoma. The president originally appointed Adam E. Patterson, a colored man, as register, but when it became apparent that he could not be confirmed Patterson asked the president to withdraw his name.
The United States bureau of education, in co-operation with the trustees of the Phelps-Stokes fund, has announced that it is making a study of private and higher schools for colored youths. A report of the equipment of the different schools, their work and their place in the educational system with which they are connected, will be publisher later. The Phelps-Stokes fund is the residuary estate, amounting to about $1,000,000, bequeathed by Miss Caroline Phelps-Stokes of New York for various philanthropic purposes, among which is the education of colored boys and girls. Gifts have been made to the University of Virginia, University of Georgia and to the Peabody college in Nashville, Tenn., for the maintenance of fellowships and research work in the field of colored education. A number of smaller sums also have been given for related purposes.
Emphasizing the importance of self-help among the negroes of the south, leaders in the negro Methodist Episcopal church in Alabama have laid plans whereby it is hoped to raise at least $16,000 during the summer for the work of Miles Memorial college, the connectional school for negroes in this state.
The election of officers of the Imperial Council of Colored Mystic Shriners was the most important Incident of the closing of the fifteenth annual session at Indianapolis. John H. Murphy of Baltimore, for the last eight years imperial recorder, was unanimously elected to the office of imperial potentate. Mr. Murphy is a native of Baltimore, where he conducts a large job printing establishment, and has for the last 21 years been owner and publisher of the Afro-American Ledger. He has been identified with the colored Shriners since their organization and has been prominent in colored Masonic circles for 38 years. The other officers are deputy imperial potentate, Joseph L. Sherwood, St. Paul, Minn.; imperial chief rabban, George McKing, St. Louis, Mo.; imperial assistant rabban, Clarence E. Dunlap, Indianapolis.
Among the gifts to the kaiser's daughter at her wedding was a clock sent by the city of Hamelin. It is made from a wine cask sawed in two. The hours are champagne corks. The hands are corkscrews, and the weights are bottles filled with champagne.
A new highway in the Philippines will be constructed within a few months. It will be the southern link to the unbroken chain of roads from Manila to southern Luzon and will connect the towns of Albay and Sorsogon.
Mrs. E. A. Fish of Point Pinos, near Pacific Grove, Cal., is the only woman in the United States in full charge of a lighthouse.
There are 70,000 cities in the United States from which telephone message may be sent.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
JULY COAL OUTPUT 759,934 TONS.
Coke Production Runs to 83,609 Tons,
Making 600,046 Tons For Year.
Denver.—More than three-quarters of a million tons of coal were produced in Colorado for the month of July, according to a report of State Coal Mine Inspector Dalrymple. The total production for the year is 5,879,815 tons. There is a shortage of miners in the state, according to the report. There is a decrease of 141,677 tons in the production for the present year under that of 1912, due to the scarcity of men. It is believed that with a settling of conditions which appears probable the decrease will be made up before the end of the year. The exact production of coal for July was 759,934 tons. The coke production for the month was 83,609 tons with a total tonnage for the year of 600,046.
There was an average daily employment throughout the state of 13,250 coal miners during July. This is several thousand below normal, and is due partially to the decision of men to leave the state because of strike conditions.
Land Speculation Under Board's Ban. Denver.—Volney Hoggatt, new register of the state land board, announced that no more state land will be sold except to actual settlers or to persons who will improve the land, the latter preferred. His action is a direct slap at land companies that would purchase large tracts from the state for speculative purposes. "Section 5184 of the revised statutes of Colorado permits of no other sales," Hoggatt said. "This section reads that the state board of land commissioners may at any time direct the sale of any state land to actual settlers only or to persons who shall improve the same. "Thousands of acres of state lands have heretofore been sold to speculators who never dreamed of improving the land or settling thereon. Those lands were bought at a low price and offered to the very people whom the state intended should be the purchasers — actual settlers — who have been compelled to pay to the speculators from two to ten times the price the state originally received. This is a crime against the state and I am going to see if I can stop it."
Officials Reject Open Shop Talk.
Officials Reject Open Shop Park
Denver.-Officials of the United Mine Workers of America, forming the policy committee in charge of negotiations for the settlement of the threatened strike in the Southern Colorado coal fields, issued a signed statement in which they denied that the "open shop" would be considered as a basis of negotiation with the operating companies. It is upon this basis that State Labor Commissioner Brake has declared he is proceeding to bring the settlement about. Rumors of dissension between Frank J. Hayes, international vice president of the mine workers' and their general organizer, and the local policy committee, are also denied. The statement at firms the intention of the union of officials to exhaust all honorable means to bring about a settlement before the strike order is issued.
16 FROST Mesa County Expenditures
Denver. About $80,000 a year for
several years has been charged to the
expense of road work by officials of
Mesa county, according to a report of
the state examiner after investigation
of the county's books, and State Auditor
Kenehan intends to find out
where the money has gone.
Fifty Elk For Colorado Mountains.
Denver. Fifty elk from the Yellow,
stone park reservation, a portion of a
herd of 150 to be transferred, will be
placed in Denver's new mountain
park system before the close of 1913.
Bear Creek canon has been selected
for a range. The elk, which remain
after those which are to go to the
mountain parks, have been shipped,
will be distributed about the other
state game preserves.
Governors Given Rich Samples of Ore.
Denver.—Specimens of Colorado's richest ore, worth over $500, were presented to the governors at Coloradac Springs by State Commissioner of Mines Henehan. As an advertisement of the mining industry of the state, Henehan had prepared ornamental boxes and filled them with the best high-grade specimens obtainable.
Denver.—The new law requiring heads of all state departments to turn their cash receipts over daily to the state treasurer will be enforced.
Treasurer Gets Land Board Funds.
Denver.—All of the funds in possession of the state land board were put into the keeping of the state treasurer. The action was in compliance with a law passed by the last Legislature which makes the treasurer custodian of the funds of the various boards.
Denver.—State Auditor Kenehan has received a petition signed by fifty residents of Rifle, asking him to investigate the county commissioner of the Rifle district.
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
Twentieth and Champa,
Is the place to get your
DRUGS, CHEMICALS AND PATENT MEDICINES
WE SERVE DRINKS.
Prescriptions Our Specialty.
Phone us and we will deliver the goods to all parts of the city.
JAMES E. THRALL, PROPR.
PHONE MAIN 2426.
A first-class Mortuary establishment. First aid to the bereaved in the time of death of loved ones. Prices below competitors. Polite service
PARLORS 1925 Arapahoe Street
Fine Wines Liquors and Cigars Phone Champa 1156
WORK CALLED FOR AND
DELIVERED
REPAIRING DONE WHILE
YOU WAIT
a g [
Wi: THINVER PRY (OODS (50
“ ” . *
The Denver” Sewing Machines
The Denver does not make Sew: Loy,
ing Machines, but by special ar: AG oy
rangement with one of the three Gg
largest Sewing Machine factories in we
the world the factory name is omit- Sd
ted and “The Denver” substituted. Ay eae
In this arrangement the maker's y ee
Fuarautoe Is Hot modified in any ga <A
particular and we add our own (im) \ i? hy
promise that YOU SHALL BE \oq ff i
SPARED ANY TROUBLE WITH \ i! Lh
YOUR MACHINE For TEN \ ;
YHARS, “It those. mactines were \ SHAN
not splendidly good and roliahie we | Ug Nosy
could not afford to assume the ree |) Speemeliff | Vay
sponsibility for their satisfactory sie \ \\ Ip ie
operation for so long a period Manne \= am Ba sem
NO MACHINE CAN GIVE you SSS
MORE THOROUGHLY GooD n= ate | I
SERVICE = eg ei
And as we pay no agents’ commis = ies
sions for collectors’ salaries we can WQ[==! Lo eaeu
and do save our patrons from $13 jaar ERS ast
to $20 on their machines. There is i FAA ff BcaRins
only on profit between you end the iy 5
makers. (| P 4 ie
WHY PAY AN AGENT $15 To ) Seep |!
$25 FOR SELLNIG YOU THE MA- Mey
CHINE WHEN THE DENVER IS ey :
SELLING THEM IN THE SAME
BUSINESS-LIKE METHOD IT PURSUES IN SELLING THREAD
AND SHOES?
The price is the same and you have the Machine to use while paying
for it.
$2.00 Down, $1.00 a Week 3
The Denver COLO: ‘The Denver CRES “1
NIAL model senses... QO CHNT MOG) See... B29
‘The Denver SPECIAL The Denver GRAND
model COSO0 So eae ee Se0
SEE THESE MACHINES DEMONSTRATED IN OUR BASEMENT
HOUSE-FURNISHING DEPARTMENT. $
o Great Sactifice Sale
ar During Month of A g st
- ON
Af.
he, FUR COATS
genio EY
BEAN RP Such as Natural and Black Ponies, Mar-
ee "ay ee Bole boas and aie ete, Alaa) all
es For Collars and Maffs,
st e A small deposit will secure any garment
mo ae
Youman’s Fur Compan
Pp
PHONE MAIN 8045 422-424 5th STREE1
NOW is your time
Sas 86 buy your
“3 SUMMER OUTFIT
VK ——— EE
LEED
ZZ Ne Everything Reduced
~ \ 1 4 to 1 2
| C.F.ADAMSCO.
| Uy 1444 CURTIS ST.
iP Is the Place
WZ Call and Be
WZ Convinced
CASH OR CREDIT
Open Saturday Evenings Until 9 p. m.
SMART DRESS FOR EARLY FALL
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One-piece model of white satin, trimmed with lace and set off with black
satin sash, This model shows the new tendency for conservative drapery.
ISSUE SDE Sc
it should be put on with a fine camel's
Well Kept Eyebrows hair brush, wiping afterward, as don
with the vaseline. In either case th
Add Greatly to the paigird of one Hauafarslaned eoipuat
back the hair, while the application 1:
General Appearance | ee ear nee aepteation i
it should be put on with a fine camel's-
hair brush, wiping afterward, as done
with the vaseline. In either case the
fingers of one hand are used to push
back the hair, while the application is
made with the other. That is, when
the right brow is massaged, start with
the left hand at the edge of the eye
brow nearest the temple and with the
fingers brush the hair backward to-
ward the end near the bridge of the
nose; this movement will raise the
hair so that in making the application
with the other hand you can easily
reach the roots. After the application
is made to one eyebrow reverse and
anoint the other; then give a firm, yet
gentle massage, working in as much
as possible. This will feed the roots,
and in a measure restore some of the
natural oll which has been lost. After
‘some little time the brows should be
wiped, to remove the superfluous oil.
f MME ARMAND.
Women and girls know that the eye-
brows are often ruined by dust when
motoring or by exposure to the sun,
all of which dries them to such an
extent that the glands are unable to
aourish the hair roots.
If your brows are getting thin, strag-
sly or losing thelr natural gloss you
have reason to suspect something has
happened to them and every effort
should be made to better the condition
by feeding tho roots.
In this freatment one of the first
essentials is to keep the brows thor-
oughly clean This means more than
superficial washing, for whilo mere
dust may be loosened, {t cannot be
taken out, and so the pores get
choked. Many a pretty eyebrow has
been hopelessly ruined by just being
neglected, and its owner probably did
‘not know why, because many women
do no more for the eyebrows than
to wash them when performing the
‘daily ablutions,
| To properly wash the eyebrows a
‘small, soft brush 1s necessary
(brushes that come for the purpose
may be purchased at almost any drug
store, but if desired a child's small,
soft tooth brush, kept for the purpose,
will answer just the same), and some
bland soap which contains pure oll,
elther olive ofl or castile, are good.
The soap should be liquid, the water
tepid and, after dipping the brush into
the water, then into the soap, a vig-
orous scrubbing should follow. Scrub
down into the roots. Rinse seyeral
times to make sure that all the soap {s
removed. A good way is to thorough-
ly cleanse the brush, freeing it from
soap and then scrub the brows with
clear, clean water, otherwise the roots
and pores become clogged, just as
those do on the head, when the hair
has not been properly rinsed after a
shampoo.
| Always when coming in from the
summer wind the brows should be
given a gentle but thorough brushing
fn order to remove as much of the
dust as possible before it settles to
the skin. ‘Then they should be bathed,
they need not at this point be scrub-
bed. If you form the habit of scrub-
bing them once a day and if per-
formed in the morning or before re-
tiring at night it will suffice. ‘This
washing, in the very nature of things,
extracts the natura? oils and their
equivalent must be restored
‘As a substitute for natural ofl of the
skin vaseline {s excellent, seis sweet
almond oil. If the former is used it
may be applied rather thickly with
the finger tips, wiping off any super
fuous amount With old, soft cloths.
No grease should be allowed to get
on the skin beyond side the hair line
or there will be a mussy look. The
slightést amount that remains on the
brows enhances the line and their
beauty by siving a luster with no
look of gressa If almond oll is used
Re,
;
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i ais Gs f | Z|
een |
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Hat of Black Straw and Maline, Witn
Velvet Ribbons.
Buttons of Silk,
Some of the midsummer frocks are
trimmed with what at a little distance
appear to be huge crochet buttons.
On closer inspection they prove to be
made of silk. Here is the secret of
their making: Take a circle of silk
and shir a little circle in the center
of it. Make another line of shirring
a little distance from this circle and
continue shirring the silk in circles
until you have a piece of shirred but
ton mold. The shir strings should be
carried to the wrong side of the silk
—the side next the button mold—and
fastened securely there,
Good for Flowers.
When flower leaves begin to curl
and fall off after bringing them into
the house, the fault is due to lack of
moisture in the atmosphere. Place
the flowers in pans and fill the pans
with hot water, and the steam will
revive the droopiest flowers. Cigar
ashes and small pieces of half-burned
cigars will be found to be splendid for
placing in the earth of fiower crocks.
‘The ashes alone will kill small rose
Insects and not injure the plant.
"PHONE MAIN 6123—Day or Night
! RESIDENCE PHONE YORK 7992.
PARLORS, 1830 ARAPAHOE ST.
) THE DOUGLASS
ee ee UNDERTAKING
oY 4 COMPANY a
J. R, CONTEE CURTIS M.
Pres. and Mgr. 99.94 HARRIS
p Le Asst. Manager
nian on bp CMa scene!
Tae’ QUEER. —
Director. ay Ey i SDS. way Assistant
POLITE SERVICE TO ALL.
Ambulance and Carriages Furnished for All Occasions |
Ps
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1023 EIGHTEENTH ST. — ®
We Have the Best Equipped Outfit in the West to Produce the Goods
Sewed Soles ...........60¢ 750, $1.00 Resoling from heel to heel, entire
Nailed Soles ......._....50c 65¢, 75¢ new bottom $1 50
Heels... .......+.++.25¢, 38¢, 50c] and heel ..............+ °
Rubber Heels ...........46+.00++ +506 SHOES MADE TO ORDER.
Turn Rips ..............--15¢ to 25c| Tailor Made ......2...eseeeese0 + $10
Patches ..............++..15¢ to 25¢ WE CAN FIT ANY KIND OF
We Use the Best Oak Lether. DEFORMED FOOT.
REPAIRING WHILE YOU WAIT
WALTER CAMBERS iene
Eighteenth St
ft eae AERA eR Ee OES AEE ED cern tag
The Best Place in the City to Get a 5
, 4
; Home-Cooked Meal Is at the ;
: Holmes Gab
olme are :
;
SS ee
: 3
MRS. L. P. HOLMES, Proprietress 3
:
; PHONE q
$ 2121 Arapahoe Street OLIVE 1117 3
Dry Goods, House Dresses, Hosiery, Corsets
Underwear
n Millinery
a Gents’ Furnishings
ia BES |] morro teres on
| is Siew)? (eee, | | es
i a | an a A
Pesta eee | A- BRADSHAW
LE ! “f Around the Corner from the
p aa EDS He Old Stand.
f-Bevaldickei te: ts 1443-47 Stout St.
NEW CLIFTON BAR
W. S. THOMPSON, Proprietor ‘
Fine Wine, Liquor and Cigars
1701 Arapahoe Street, Denver, Colo.