Colorado Statesman
Saturday, September 20, 1913
Denver, Colorado
Page text (machine-generated)
PATRONIZE MERCHANTS WHO ADV.IN THE PEOPLE'S PAPER
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
THE JOURNAL OF THE WEST.
LABOR SHALL BE FREE
RACE COUNTRY PARTY
COUNTRY OR CITY LIFE
VOL. XX.
Which do you prefer, city or country life? Which is the more healthy and profiable? And are persons let free in choosing for themselves the place they will reside in and the occupations they will engage in to make their daily bread and meat and a penny over for the rainy day? All these questions have been and are being discussed in all lands, and especially in our own, because of the wonderful increase in population, the natfraal tendency from country districts to the city districts, and the failure to produce enough food stuffs in the country to feed those in the cities with corresponding advantage to both. People are no longer satisfied with steady occupation and a living return for their labor, either as wage earners or independent workers in any line; they want more than that; they think they do; they want to make enough to furnish them with the luxuries, in many instances the extravagancies, of life for themselves and an added fortune to bequeath to their children. It is not possible to do this in the country districts. The average farm will yield a fair living for the industrious; so, the sons have been leaving the farms in the United States ever since the commercial era set in after the Slave War, most notably in the abandoned farms in the New England and Middle and the Southern States.
The Philadelphia Record, speak ing on this subject, says:
Booker Washington is urging a great ameliorative reform in his efforts to induce the black men of the United States to embrace the opportunity the white men have so largely neglected of making good any lack of corn, or cattle, or cotton to meet future demand. He pointed out in his late address, delivered in this city, and there were 200,000,000 acres of unused and unoccupied and in the Southern States alone ready to the hand of the 10,000,000 blacks who, if they would go back to the land instead of flocking to the towns, might turn the South into a new Garden of Eden, with no less advantage to themselves than to the country at large and all its inhadrants. The black who owns and cultivates a farm is master of himself and independent. He is at the same time a source of strength and standing to the country he lives in. The tillage of the land is the one great bottom industry on which all others are dependent. In the eventful movement "back
to the land," which must come in the near future, Booker Washington will have brought an inestimable advantage to his race if, following his persuasion, they shall get there first.
But colored people are just like white people in this matter. Some of them want to get rich quick, and imagine that this can more easily be done in the city than the country districts, and have not only flocked to the cities of the South but those of the North and West, as the whites have done, since 1876. And, too, the city life offers attractions in every direction that the country life does not and never will offer. This phase of the matter is the most difficult to deal with in the case of both colored and white people, especially the younger ones. The real countryman has to be born, soil of the soil; it is difficult to manufacture, to create him, when he has been born in the city or with his face towards it.
The Negro is, naturally, a countryman, a ruralist, but he is easily spoiled by a trip to the great city. Our farmers in all sections should be encouraged to send their sons and daughters to agricultural schools, so that they may return to the farm with knowledge to improve the productivity of the land their fathers own and to add to the acreage. It will be found a difficult task to induce the hordes of colored people who have gone from the country districts in the past twenty-five years into the large cities to return to the country life or to convince their children that it is best for them to do so. They can't see it. They have made human ties and material obligations from it is hard to break away; so hard that they will not in most instances consider the matter at all. Yet, some few will return, with much persuasion.
The proper work, then, is to encourage colored farmers everywhere to send their sons and daughters to agricultural schools, where they will be prepared for the higher, better and more effective work of farm and country life. Then, too, there should be an organized effort in the cities of the North and West to induce the people who come from the farm districts of South to seek employment among the farmers of the North and West. Such an organized effort could do much to relieve the large cities of the ever increasing number of colored people who become "floaters" and "hand to mouthers," whom the police have to watch.
DENVER COLORADO SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 20 1913.
State Hist & Nat Hist Society
State House
GIANTS WHO
ADC
THE JOURNAL
DENVER COLORADO
MILLIONAIRE MARRIES COLORED HOUSE MAID
(From Chicago Defender)
Tuesday was an awful bad day for millionaire Geo. Willis (white) a Grand boulevard millionaire, who for three years had in his employ Ethel Smith, young, comely woman of 27 years, a maid in his bachelor apartment. As water wears away rock it seems this cultured gentleman's prejudices had vanished and before he was aware of things he was nearing the state of fatherhood and maid the mother for his child. Tuesday the climax came when he was hauled into court and made to marry the woman he had wronged.
Many a colored man is serving time in Joliet for such acts and this gentleman can consider himself fortunate that he was sentenced to marry this young woman and pay-her $35 per week until the child becomes of age.
The judge that tried the case made him give a bond of $25,000 and pay the money into the court each week or month, as he desires. While in court, his honor in rebuking the man of wealth said: "Look at you, a man of intelligence in silks and satins, heir of the ages, taking advantage of this poor, illiterate ignorant girl in this manner. If you were living in the South you would walk off from your prey and not give her a dime if you disposed to do so. But the time is here now when all judges, to get the respect of his community and nation, must give the law as laid down and not as he feels." The judge sent the 'prisoner's brother for a gold ring and performed the ceremony in his chambers.
Mr. James Carter, 3025 State street professional bondsman, was best man and main witness to the marriage. As we go to press the millionaire's attorney said his client need not pay any more than from $8 to $12.
The judge dissents from this and said that law was for working men, but the child of a millionaire calls for more. It's station in life required more to raise it. The judge refused to reduce the bond and the money allotted to the unfortunate young woman.
This case is a celebrated one and one that our daily papers ought to give big headlines after the way they cut up over the Jack Johnson case. This case will not reach the light of day as far as the papers are concerned and the poor, benighted heathen will see that the king can do evil and he must answer for his evildoing. We are glad to live in a city and a state where the respect for law and human rights stand so high."
CHINAMAN DRAWS
COLOR LINE
Springfield, Mass., Sept. 6. Because Jue Fun, a Chinaman, drew the color line against Frank Prestrige, colored, a suit for $5,000 damages has been entered in the Superior Court. Jue Fun recently opened a Chinese restaurant on Worthington Street. Prestrige, who is a waiter at the Worthy Hotel went to the restaurant with his wife one evening recently to eat some chop suey. According to Prestrige's story, no waiter appeared to wait on them. Finally Jue Fun was called, and when they asked for some chop suey they were told it was all out. They then asked for a steak, but were told there was also a shortage in the meat line.
When asked how it was that other people were being served, Jue Fun said they were regular customers. Prestige claims he went to the restaurant another night and was again refused food. He gave the same order that a white man sitting at the next table gave and was told the supply had run out. Prestige, according to his story then ordered a pot of tea, but was told he could not be served. Prestige, has engaged the leading attorneys in the city to fight the case. The situation is made doubly peculiar from the fact that Jue Fun has a colored wife about whom much has been said. At present they are not living together.
NEGRO MEDIC BARRED BY BRITISH GUARDIANS
London, Sept. 18.—The "color line" is not often drawn in England, but the Camberwell poor law guardians today declined to appoint a Negro as district medical officer on the ground the poor were very fastidious in such matters. It was admitted during the session of the guardians that the Negro doctor's qualifications were better than those of the other candidates and some of the guardians wanted to treat him as "a brother." The majority of the guardians, however, supported Dr. Robert Capes, who opposed the appointment of the Negro physician. In doing so, he said:
"In plain English he is not a suitable doctor for a post of this sort. The pcr are a great dea more fastidious than people imagine. They would refuse to be attended by a man of color.
Ring Denoted Physician.
Ring Denoted Physician.
Previous to the sixteenth century
every physician in Europe wore a ring
on his finger as an indication of his
profession.
Miners Not Prone to Suicide.
There are fewer suicides among
miners than among any other class of
workmen.
Washington, August 5,—The United States bureau of Education, cooperation with the trustees of the Phelps Stokes Fund, to day announced that he is making a study of private and higher schools for Negroes. 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 published later. The Phelps Stokes fund is a residuary estate amounting to about $1,000,000, bequeathed by Mrs. Carolina Phelps-Stokes of New York, for various philanthropic purposes, among which is the education of Negroes. 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. A number of smaller sums have been given for related purposes.
Muskogee, Okla., Sept. 7.—A colored girl 10 years old will pay the largest income tax in Oklahoma. Sarah Rector, who lives just west of Muskogee, has an income of more than $112,000 a year. It is the old story of the lucky allottee and the oil well. Sarah is the descendant of a Creek freedman. She had nothing to do with the selection of her allotment and probably has never seen it and does not know where it is. But it is 160 acres of land and upon it has been drilled the biggest producing well in the mid continent field. This is what is known as the Jones Gusher, near the town of Cushing. The well is producing more than $2,500 a day and Sarah gets one-eighth as her share. This is just the beginning. Arrangements are already made to drill other wells. There is no doubt but these will also be big producers.
Washington, D.C., Sept. 10- Like hungry suckling calves which have been kept away from the mother cows, the Democrats are trying to suck all the teats of the government milk bag at once. The edict has good forth that every position filled by a Republican is to be filled by a Democrat, and it matters not what the position is. At a recent caucus a set of resolutions were adopted that provide for turning out every employee appointed by a Republican. Even the Negro barbers are slated to go, and their places filled by white
barbers. On this point a Southern Democrat expressed himself by saying that he saw many places filled by colored men and he knew they were Republicans because in all his life he had never seen a colored Democrat. The white man of the old Southern aristocracy would never have countenanced for a minute the ministrations of any but Negro barbers. They placed a white man who did that sort of work beneath their consideration. No better indication as to the class of white men now controlling the South is to be found than is shown in this contemplated action.
Fort Mills, Corregidor, P. I.—It is asserted by soldiers of the 24th Regiment, U. S. Infantry, stationed at this point, that they are the victims of rank discrimination and injustice, in that they are relieved from soldier's regular duty and compelled to labor every day, including Sundays, with picks and shovels in the mud and water. It is also said that their tents are pitched in swamps where the water flows under the cots, and that the soldiers have to tie their shows to the cot legs to keep them from washing away. This regiment has been stationed here for three months and during that time have had to work night and day during some periods. The white soldiers are not required to do this work and some of them sit around and jeer and ridicule the Negro soldier at work in the mud. There are 1,200 native prisoners at this station, and when the rain starts they are taken in. The native prisoners, it is said, frequently ask the Negro soldiers if they are prisoners, and want to know why they have to work in the rain. Conditions for the Negro soldier at this station are getting worse every day. The food is plentiful, but is half cooked, and hardly more than slops. The soldiers are faithful and willing and are trying to do their duty under these adverse circumstances, but they feel very keenly the humiliating discrimination from which they are suffering.
Two Extremes in Life.
The saddest thing in the world is to feel that we are alone; the best thing in the world is to feel that we are loved and needed.—A. C. Benson.
Forty Years a Public Charge.
Forty years in the workhouse is the record of a man living at New Ross, County Wexford, Ireland. The inmate is seventy years old.
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GREENHOUSES: Thirty-Fourth and Curtis Streets ‘\
Western Newspaper Union News Service,
On motion of the government the
Diggs-Caminetti sentences were again
Postponed at San Francisco,
Three American cowboys rode inte
Pirtleville, Ariz., and roped and haule'
down a pole from which flew a Mexi:
can flag.
Charles S. Prim, eighty-two, who
helped survey Nebraska and Kansas
territories, died at his home neat
Atchison, Kan.
Secretary Lane of the Departmen
of the Interior is considering a voy
age to Honolulu and back before he
returns to his work.
7. O. Puckett, a farmer living near
Clinton, Mo,, lyis been indicted by
grand jury on’ the charge of killing
his mother, Mrs, Susan Mackinson.
Dressmakers from all parts of the
United States and Canada attended
the annual fall fashion show and con
vention of the Chicago Dressmakers’
club.
Workmen excavated at Los Angeles
the bones of a mammal believed to
have been a pre-historic elephant. Th»
‘skeleton measured eighteen feet in
‘height. 5
Winter contracts for milk, opened
throughout the Elgin, Ml, district by
big dealers, offer an increase of ten
cents a hundred on the flat rate over
last year's price,
Former Circuit Judge Frank J. Tay:
lor was shot dead at Astoria, Ore.,
when about to take a train for hi
summer home. C, C, Hansel, who be
lieved Mr. Taylor had influenced
Mrs. Hansel to get a divorce, was ar
rested.
Maury I, Diggs, former state arehi
tect, and Attorney Charles B. Harris
of Sacramento, were found not guilty
by a jury in the United States Dis
triet Court at San Francisco of subor-
dination of perjury in connection with
the Diggs-Caminetti white slave cases.
With addresses of welcome by Goy
ernor A. 0, Eberhart and Mayor W=)
lace G. Nye, and a brief response by
General A. R. Stocker of Miamisburg,
Ohio, the eighty-ninth annual sover-
eign grand lodge, Independent Order
of Odd Fellows, formally was opened
at Minneapolis,
James Francis Cook, son of W. H.
Cook, a wealthy resident of Holly-
wood, was arrested at Los Angeles in
connection with the murder of Frank
B, J. Nelson, The police asserted they
got a full confession and attributed
the murder to an insane infatuation
for Nelson's young wife.
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Meats, Fancy and Staple Groceries
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Corner Nineteenth. Denver, Colo.
WASHINGTON,
‘The Alaskan government railroad
bill was made unfinished business on
and after Dec. 8
Secretary Daniels made conditional
awards of thecontracts for six new
torpedo boat destroyers, numbers 57
to 62.
Senators Thornton and Bankhead
Introduced bills to. appropriate $25,
00,000 for good roads, in co-operation
with states,
‘The Senate passed, without refer
ence to committee, the House appro-
priation of $100,000 to get Americans
out of Mexico, —
President Wilson returnéd from
Cornish, N. H,, on a train that was an
hour late and was driven at once to
the White House.
The House adjourned Monday, as a
mark of respect to the late Represen-
tative Wilder of Massachusetts and
Representative Sullivan of New York.
‘The naval affairs committee of the
House has made plans for an exten-
sive trip of inspection to take in all
naval stations on the Pacific and gult
coasts.
After long months of weary house
hunting Vice President and Mrs.
Marshall have found a house which
comes well within the §2,000 the vice
president feels he can afford for
house rent out of his $12,000 salary.
Cotton consumed during August
amounted to 458,726 running bales, the
census bureau announced. Cotton
on hand, August 31, in manufacturing
establishments were 776,764 bales and
in Independent warehouses, 497,650
bales. Imports amounted to 7,754,257,
168 bales.
Fort Logan among other army posts
will not be enlarged, and will prob-
ably be abandoned ultimately, if a
recommendation made by the army
board is followed out.
Post Wheeler, secretary of the
American embassy at Rome, has been
recalled to Washington to consul:
with Secretary Bryan and the ques.
tion of his return will depend on the
issue of that conference.
Senator O'Gorman introduced a bill
to place in front of the capitol a copy
of the J. Q. A. Ward statue of Wash-
ington at the New York sub-treasury,
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FOREIGN.
Count de Smet De Nasyer, Belgian
minister of state, died at Brussels.
Dr. Daniel Crosby Greene, 70 years
old, an American missionary, died at
Tokio.
A dispatch from Gibraltar says the
Spaniards have suffered a serious re-
verse near Ceuta, Morocco.
It is announced officially that King
Constantine of Greece will visit Paris
incognito when he will be received by
President Poincare.
“Viva La Independencia! Viva Mex-
ico!” was the ery which ushered in tho
celebration of the 108rd anniversary
of Mexico's independence. i
Over 10,000 men have joined in the
strike movement started by the trans:
port workers at Dublin, and the butld-
ing and other trades are greatly at-
fected.
A workman in London found on 1
sidewalk practically the entire pearl
necklace valued at $650,000, which
was stolen on July 16 while in transit
by mail from Paris to London.
Mareus N. Geddes and Edward J.
McCutchen, two El Paso railroad en-
gineers, while hunting east of El Paso
along the Rio Grande, were arrested
by Mexican federal soldiers from
Juarez,
‘The rebel general, Panfilo, is re
ported to have taken Fresnillo, state
of Zacatecas, and to have’ scattered
the federal garrison of three hun-
dred, capturing five prisoners, two
gatling guns and much ammunition,
‘The judicial branch of the United
States government assumed joint
guardianship of Harry Kendall Thaw
ut Colebrook, N., H. By virtue of a
writ of habeas corpus issued at Con-
cord, United States Marshal FE. P.
Nute became one of the Matteawan
fugitive's custodians.
SPORT.
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Won. Lost. - Pet.
Denver Siccreen#he mage (638
Des Moines icl)iicss 88 66 TBBT
Lineoli. 52100 Seaee0) ot) eBagt
Su Joseph 21icssicsie 7a fe e800
Omaha tect hiicyasseeteace tS manEnO
Topeka acilsc: accu gnu et ori Bas
sloux Cly IEIITIID 687 $4 ase
Wichita cestressecests 68 911808
Max Lillie, aviator, was killed in a
flight at the Galesburg, Ill, district
fair.
‘The baseball season of the Michigan
State league closed and Manistee won
the pennant, with a percentage of .6G0S
for 120 games.
P. C. Davis, an aviator, died in a
hospital in Chicago as the result of an
accident while he was flying over the
Juneau County fair at Maustonu, Wis.
Death claimed a fifth victim of the
aeroplane accident at Beuchenbeuren,
Germany, when a military machine
crashed into a crowd. This makes the
twenty-fifth death due to air craft dis-
asters in Germany in one week.
The Pacific Athletic Club an-
nounced at Los Angeles that negotia-
tions for a twenty-round bout between
Leach Cross and Joe Rivers, light-
weights, at Vernon October 7 or 14,
had virtually been concluded. Cross
and Rivers have twice battled to a
draw. x
- GENERAL.
The governors of the New York
stock exchange voted not to open the
exchange until noon on Monday, Sep-
tember 22, the day of Mayor Gaynor’s
funeral.
Mrs. Clementina Butler, one of the
organizers of the Women’s Foreign
| Mfssion Society of the Methodist Epis-
‘copal chureh, died at Newton, Mass.
| She was ninety-four years old,
Charged with murdering his wife’s
father, mother and sixteen-year-old
brother, D. B. Baxter, thirty-five years
old, a telephone lineman, is being
sought by the police of Memphis,
‘Tenn.
Frederick L. Colwell of Yonkers, re-
garded as a star witness against Gov-
ernor Sulzer at his forthcoming trial
on impeachment charges, has disap-
peared, according to announcement
by the Assembly board of impeach-
ment managers. ,
A halt in political activities in New
York city’s municipal campaign
‘through respect for the late Mayor
Gaynor, was called by John Purroy
Mitchel, fusion candidate for mayor.
‘Edward McCall, his Tammany oppo-
nent, agreed and the political lull will
last until after the mayor's funeral.
Three employes of the New York,
New Haven & Hartford railroad are
held by Coroner Eli Mix to be crim-
inally responsible for the disastrous
wreck at North Haven on September
2, when the White Mountain Express
plunged through the second section of
‘the standing Bar Harbor Express, ex-
‘acting a toll of twenty-one lives.
| At Chattanooga, Tenn., the formal
‘opening of the Grand Army of the Re-
publics forty-seventh annual encamp-
‘ment was occupied chiefly with sight-
seeing tours to historic battlefields.
A drizzling rain did not deter thou-
sands of veterans from making pil-
grimages to Lookout Mountain, Chick-
amauga Park and Missionary Ridge.
“Big Tim” Sullivan passed through
the streets of New York's East Side
for the last time Monday, His body
‘was taken to old Cathedral of St. Pat-
‘rick, a quarter of a mile from the
‘rooms of the association bearing his
‘name, where it had lain in state since
Saturday afternoon. Tens of thou-
‘sands of men and women from every
section of New York had gazed on his
features there, and a throng such as
‘only the East Side can furnish, along
‘with congressmen, followed the body
‘to the cathedral and to its last resting
‘place in Calvary cemetery, Brooklyn.
ORDERED BY TRINIDAD CONVEN.
TION ON SEPT. 23
Impassioned Speech By Mother Jones
Precedes Vows of Vengeance
Against Operators
Western Newspaper Union News Service,
Trinidad, Colo—As a climax of an
afternoon of impassioned speech-mak-
ing, 250 delegates to the so-called
United Mine Workers’ convention of
Colorado voted unanimously to call a
strike in the southern district Septem-
ber 23. The convention then adjourned
amid a storm of cheers and singing.
While the action of the convention
was expected in all quarters, it was
hardly believed that those present
would work themselves into such a
fever of enthusiasm. They shouted,
danced about the room, vowed ven-
geance on the operators and pledged
themselves to stay with the strike un-
til they won “or dropped into their
graves.”
‘The resolution calling for the strike
was included in the report of the pol-
icy and scale committee, and was as
follows:
“In view of the failure of our efforts
to obtain a peaceful solution of our
differences, and in view of the fact
that the operators have even refused
to answer any of our invitations for a
joint meeting, we hereby instruct that
a strike call be issued by the district
policy committee to all the Mine
Workers of Colorado to take effect
Tuesday, September 23, 1913. *
| “We further recommend that any
‘member who is discharged because of
affiliation with our movement shall be
promptly supported by the organiza-
tion.
“In conformity with the past policy
of the organization, which has worked
so successfully in our district, we rec-
ommend that we sign up with all com-
panies that agree to our demands, pro-
vided, however, that they agree not to
furnish coal to fill contracts of com-
panies on strike and that companies
‘that sign up must do so for all the
“mines they operate.”
At the same time was presented the
report of the policy and scale commit-
tee. The report of this committee.
after setting forth the menner in
which the demands of the union have
been ignored, submit the following as
a basis of settlement:
First—Recognition of the union,
Second— Ten per cent advance in
wages and tonnage rates (the gradu-
ated scale on day wages, practically in
accordance with the Wyoming wage
‘seale) and a 10 per cent advance in
wages of coke oven workers.
‘Third—-An eight-hour working day
for all classes of labor in or around
the coal mines and at the coke ovens.
Fourth—Pay for all narrow and dead
work, which includes brushing, timber-
ing, removing falls, handling impur-
ities,
Fitth—Check weighman at all mines
to be elected by the miners without
interference by company officials in
said election.
Sixth—The right to trade at any
store we please and the right to choose
our own boarding place and our own
doctors,
Seventh—The enforcement of the
Colorado mining law and the abolition
of the notorious and criminal guard
system which has prevailed in the
mining camps of Colorado for many
years.
Reading of these reports was pre-
ceded by an impassioned address by
Mother Jones, who worked the dele-
gates into a frenzy by a long speech
on the “downtrodden labor man” as
she saw him.
Following the report of the commit-
tee on policy, Frank J. Hayes also
made an address in which he indorsed
the action of the convention.
Leap From Train Results in Accident.
Pueblo.—Obeying the command of
4 brakeman to get off, Ray Jewell,
twenty-five, of Arkansas, leaped
from a moving passenger train near-
ing this city and was so badly in-
Jured that it is expected he will die at
& local hospital, where he was taken.
Jewell, who is said to be the son ot
a minister, received a fractured skull
and other injuries.
Road Damage Heavy.
Longmont. — County Commissioner
Jones Townley estimates the damage
to roads and bridges on the north and
south forks of the St. Vrain, occa-
sioned by the cloudburst, at about $5,-
000.
Year Each For Holdups.
Colorado Springs.—Robert Stewart
and Fred Wilkinson, who pieadea
guilty to “planting” a holdup of a
Manitou restaurant recently, have
each been sentenced to one year in
the penitentiary.
Picnickers to Meet.
Longmont—The St. Vrain Valley
Pioueers’ Association will meet on
September 25 for its annual reunion,
Statves.Gitt-4o Boulder!
Boulder.—Several statues that will
and to the picturesqueness of the
campus haye been presented to the
University of Colorado by the esmmit-
tee in Denver of the Bundes Turnfest
which was held there in June.
Marries Man Who Shot Husband,
Grand Junction —Waiting only until
Fred Wade was treed on the charge ot
killing her husband, Mrs. Joseph Gurr
married him,
COLORADO
STATE NEWS
ee Satan. CITA An ee Maw: ieee
"26,—Colorado - Now Mexico
“Bir and indian Carnival at Die
Sept” 23-26 —‘Triniand-Las Animas
County wair at Trintdad,
Sept. 27;28—Bankers’ Conventicr at
Sept. 29-30—Inter-County Fair at
Liman:
Gcu't-8—State w. ©. 'T. U. Conven-
tion ac Fort Collins,
Oct. 2-4.—Sedgwick County Fatr at
Sulesbure Gi
Oct. 2-4—1I Paso County Tair at cal-
Oct. ies Soctety of Amerl-
0st DE NiGrado State Baptist Asa0-
ciation, at Tueblo
Sept 24°26. Good Honds Conference at
oct FA. 0. 0, F. Annual Bncamp-
Geli tho! colorado’ icennet Club
Show at Deriver
dan. 12-15—"Colorade Poultry Fanciers’
‘Association. show. at. Denver.
Jan’ 15-34°"National Western Stock
‘Show at Denver,
191b—"Last “Grand: Counell_ of North
American Indians, Denver.
Edward W. Whiteley was elected to
head the royal and select grand mas-
ters of Colorado Masons at the Den-
ver meeting.
The comptroller of the currency re-
extended the corporate existence of
the First National bank of Central
City for twenty years.
The funeral of J. A. Enright, who
was killed in an automobile accident
in Big Thompson caiion was held at
St. Peter's Catholic church in Greeley.
Cc. S. Miner, for the last eleven
years one of the most prominent resi-
dents of Fort Collins, died of blood
poisoning caused by an internal infec-
tion.
The fifteenth annual observance of
the anniversary of the battle of Beech-
er’s Island was held onthe historic
site of the battle, fifteen miles south
of Wray.
Did Mrs. Julia M. McLean of
Boulder committed suicide, or did she
die from valvular heart disease, as
predicted by her physician three
weeks ago?
The “movies” have invaded the
State Teachers’ college and classes in
biology are now being taught by Pro-
fessor Eugene Beardsley by this
means at Greeley.
The twentieth annual convention of *
the state society of the Order of the
Eastern Star opened at Grand Junc-
tion with a ball in the Auditorium,
given by the local chapter.
Struck by a passenger train while
he was walking to work, Carmine
Cricelli, forty-five, of Denver, an Ital-
ian laborer, was hurled several feet
through the air to his death.
Owners of irrigation ditches cannot
prevent their neighbors from approprt-
ating a certain part of the water after
it leaves the ditches, according to «
decision of the court of appeals.
. Funeral services for the late Mrs.
Howard Zimmerman, Denver woman
who was killed by an automobile in
San Diego, Cal., were held at the Fair-
mont cemetery chapel in Denver,
Colorado is to be the location of the
proposed $2,000,000 international tu-
bercular home of the Loyal Order of
Moose, according to assurances by
Walter E. Dorn, supreme dictator of
the order.
Carl Sieguard, a German Russian,
was severely injured at Fort Morgan
when a motorcycle he was riding at
high speed crashed into an automobile
driven by U. G. Cover of Fort Mor-
gan.
Jackson county authorities believe
they are on the trial of Frederick
Lundgren and Frank Lindsey, two
convicts who escaped from the Fall
river convict road camp several
weeks ago.
Robert Maxwell, also known as
Thomas Reid, and his common law
wife, Mrs. Clara Maxwell, were found
responsible by a coroners jury in Den-
ver for the death of their three-
months-old child.
‘That authorities will enforce vig-
orously prosecution of Morgan county
bootleggers was indicated when ten
informations against five defendants
were filed in the District Court chars-
ing illegal sale of liquor.
In his fight to save his neck from
the noose,»Samuel L. Long, Jr., who
killed Phillip Sandoval in a Denver sa
loon, will call the dead man’s young
bride to the witness stand to testify
us to the character of her husband.
The city of Colorado Springs has’
fixed assets worth more than $6,000,
000, according to figures prepared by
the city treasurer for purchasers of
the city’s new bond issue. The total
bonded indebtedness is $1,775,341.73.
The town of Center, which has been
without railroad communication with
the rest of the outside world, was hos-
tess to the entire San Luis valley. The
celebration was for the completion of
the San Luis Central railroad from
Monte Vista into Center, a distance
AFRO-AMIERICAN CULLINGS
There never was a time in which
mankind was absolutely perfect in all
things; nor do we believe such will
be the state of society before the
millenium dawn; but, there have been
periods in which existed a more
wholesome regard for sacred obliga-
tions, The tendency to degenerate
from exalted conditions is a growing
failure; and the affliction is apparent
in every phase of civilized life. The
Golden Rule is trampled upon daily,
and there is a small inclination to
render as we would recelve. Sentl-
ments, enthustastically expressed {n
favor of religion, fall short in its
practice; and promises faithfully giy-
en are treated with disdain, Through
this medium a lack of confidence is
created, and operations are hampered,
because faith In integrity is destroyed.
There are few who, seemingly real-
izing that the performance of obliga-
tions of individuals to each other ts
the basis upon which prosperity
stands; because a solemn trust be-
tween man and man removes obstruc-
tions and throws wide the gates of
opportunities. But when these are
closed on account of man’s delinquen-
cy and indifference to the duties
which should direct his steps, stagna-
tion follows; and general depression
reigns where peace and plenty should
abide, Nothing is so destructive to
happiness as the unsettled condition
which disturbs the repose of communt-
ties; and every act which casts a
shade over the conduct of society re-
tards to. a certain degree, its on-
ward strides. Little forethought rel-
ative to the part each {s expected to
play in the drama of life is exhibited;
and we drift along heedless of inev-
itable consequences. Very often, dil-
igence in small matters leads to con-
trol in great ones; and by our failure
to properly cultivate the chances by
which our varied careers are affected,
we forfeit cherished blessings and
lose the reward which faithful service
begets. Our understandings are ex-
perimental, and we are not wise as
to the outcome; but where duty meets
its requirements, things may be reck-
oned with a less degree of uncertainty.
The wheel of fortune ever turns; at
each revolution somebody wins and
somebody loses; but winner and loser
alike pursue their occupation In hopes
of final success. With faith in the
honesty of our fellowman, we rest
our hopes of triumph; but should he
desert our cause in the midst of ac:
tion, our prospects are doomed to dis:
appointments. Human interests are
so interwoven that whatever injures
one member has a baneful effect up-
on the other, likewise; therefore, it
is fitting that caution in dealing
should be exercised lest, in our ef.
forts to handicap the progress of
others, we do irretrievable damage
to our own.
Resolutions: declaring that the pol-
icy of the administration at Washing-
ton in segregating the races is a petty
one were adopted by the Illinois State
Federation of Colored Women’s clubs.
‘The federation promised co-operation
in preparing for the semi-centennial
celebration of Negro freedom to be
held in 1915, The state was com-
mended for providing an appropria-
tion for this event. It was decided
to hold the 1914 convention in Moline.
Among the speakers were Senator
John Dailey of Peoria, Bishop Fallows
of Chicago, Rev. A. J. Carey of Chi-
cago, Rev. Charles Virden, visitation
agent for the state board of adminis-
tration, and Mrs. Nora Taylor of Cht-
cago.
‘The National Negro Business league
in an address to the public setting
forth the achievements of the race
during fifty years of freedom, says
that the possessions of Negroes in the
United States amount to $700,000,000,
exceeding the possessions of the white
peasantry of Russla. ‘The address fur-
ther states that while there were 4,-
500,000 Negroes at the beginning of
the civil war, of whom 3,600,000 were
slaves, the number has increased to
ten million; that only 30 per cent. of
the race owns twenty million acres of
land, equal to the area of South Caro-
Mna.
‘The annual convention of the league
ended with the re-election of Booker
'T, Washington as president for the
fourteenth consecutive time. Charles
Banks, of Mound Bayou, Miss. was
elected vice-president; Emmett J.
Scott of Tuskegee, Ala., secretary. and
Charles H. Anderson of Jacksonville,
Fla., treasurer.
‘The statement has been made that
life would be prolonged if persons
would acquire the habit of stooping
by the hips instead of bending the
backbone.
Polygamy was declared a felony in
England in 1604, but it was not un-
til 1866 that the congress made plu-
rallty marriages unlawful in the Unit-
aa’ States.
Bullet-proof armor to protect pilot,
passenger and motor is required in the
latest specifications for aeroplanes for
the United States army,
Cremation shows a marked Increase
in Burope. Last year there were 7,-
555 cremations in Germany, as against
6,500 in 1910.
While the millions of Negroes in
the south are largely an ignorant peo-
ple so far as letters are concerned,
they are not as a rule’a degraded
people, declared Booker Washington
at Philadelphia. Some of the finest
specimens of physical and moral man-
hood to be found anywhere in the
world can be found among the coun-
try people of our race. There is a
vast difference between ignorance and
degradation,
Now as to our program for the fu-
ture. We should make up our minds
thoroughly that there 1s a permanent
place in the country for us, and that
we haye more friends both in the
north and the south than we have
enemies.
We should make up our minds that
we are to use material gain and pros-
perity not as an end, but as a means
towards securing and enjoying the
best things in our American life.
What are our chances and what is
the outlook? The large number of in-
dependent, prosperous and lawabiding
black people right here in Philadelphia
partly answers this question. What
hundreds in Philadelphia have done
others can do throughout the United
States.
There is a place for at least 900,000
independent, self-supporting Negro far-
mers. When I was recently in the far
west, nothing impressed me more than
to note the large number of educated
white men who were beginning life as
farmers. Often they started in a little
hut or “dug out,” and suffered priva-
tions, but they were sticking to it.
‘Those are the people who in the fu-
ture make the great kings of indus-
try.
There are openings in the south for
1,000 more saw mills and 1,000 brick
yards. It is easily possible to find in-
viting places north and south where
4,000 more grocery stores can be
opened.
We need 2,000 additional dry goods
stores and 1,500 shoe stores. Our race
needs 1,000 more good restaurants
and hotels.
‘The officers of the Philadelphia
Negro Business League's committee in
charge of the recent celebration are:
Chairman, Charles H. Brooks; secre-
tary, Charles R. Taylor; treasurer, B.
C, Dawkins. Other national officers of
the league besides Dr. Washington
are as follows: - Vice-presidents,
Charles Banks, Mount Bayou, Miss.;
J. B, Rush, Little Rock, Ark.; S. G.
Elbert, Wilmington, Del.; Harry T.
Pratt, Baltimore, Md., and John M.
Wright, Topeka, Kan.; corresponding
secretary, Emmett J. Scott, Tuskogee,
Ala.; treasurer, Charles H. Anderson,
Jacksonville, Fla.; registrar, F. H. Gil-
bert, Brooklyn, N. Y.; assistant regis:
trar, R. C, Houston, Fort Worth, Tex.;
transportation agent, A. B. Jackson,
Philadelphia; official _ stenographer,
William H. Davis, Washington, D. C.;
compiler, S. Laing Williams, Chicago,
mM.
A truckers’ association, composed
of colored farmers, was organized at
Natchez, Miss. About 100 acres was
pledged. There were fifty colored far-
mers at the meeting who evinced
much interest and enthusiasm. The
assembly was addressed by Prof. G.
W. Brumfield, Prof. 8. H. C. Owens,
Dr. A. W. Dumas, J. R. Ross and
James Boyd. Prof. G. W. Brumfield
was elected president. J. R, Ross,
secretary, and John S, Toles, vice-
president.
_ We must not lose faith in our white
‘friends, and above all this we must
shave constant and unvarying faith in
‘our own race. We must have pride
of race. We must be proud of being
a Negro as the Japanese is of being a
Japanese. Let us go from this great
meeting filled with a spirit of race
pride, rejoicing in the fact that we
belong to a race that has made greater
progress within 50 years than any
race in history, and let each dedicate
himself to the task of doing his part
in making the 10,000,000 of black citt-
zens in America an example for all
the world in usefulness, law-abiding
habits and high character.
If an English engineer's plan to run
an electric railroad up the side of
Mount Popocatapetl in Mexico be car-
ried out, passengers will experience a
;change in temperature from 70 degrees
‘above zero to 10 below within two
hours.
The French postal authorities are ex-
perimenting with American automatic
and sem[-automatfe telephones in two
cities with a view to their general in-
troduction into Paris if satisfactory.
A new German machine cleans and
sorts medicinal tablets, rejecting brok-
en ones, and packs them in boxes or
tubes at a rate of from 150,000 to 200,-
000 a day.
Imports from Brazil to the United
States last year were $115,000,000,
while exports to that country were
valued at $29,000,000.
Sam Patterson, sixty-five years old,
was sent to the whipping-post in Wil-
mington, Del., the other day for wife
beating.
GRANTS CLEMENCY TO TWO—DE-
NIES REQUEST OF FOUR.
Lauro Garcia, Under Death Penalty
for Killing, May Escape Hang-
man’s Noose.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
Denver.—The sentences of two men
were reduced and four requests for
executive clemency denied by the
State Board of Pardons.
Denyer citizens awaited with great-
est interest action in the case of
Frank Campbell, sentenced from two
to three years for killing Charles
Blackford, a prisoner. Denver police-
men, court oficers and legislators
haye made pleas for Campbell, but
his case was not even considered. It
came before the board as a continued
case.
The request of James Edwards, sen-
tenced from Garfield county to twen-
ty to thirty years for bank robbery,
was denied,
Walter Irving’s sentence, from Pu-
eblo, to life imprisonment, was com-
muted to twelve years to life.
Lawrence Rex's sentence,-from Pu-
eblo, to death for murder reduced to
thirty years to life.
‘The board denied the application of
A. H. Shoettler, Pueblo, seven to
eight years for assault to rob.
Shoettler applied at the Elk’s home
for aid. He was put to work, clothed
and fed. According to the evidence
he struck the night watchman and en-
deayored to rob the home.
The case of Lauro Garefa, sen-
tenced from Larimer county to hang
for murder, came before the board.
Garcia appealed to the Supreme Court
for a new trial but was unable to ob-
tain enough money to pay for the
transcript of the case. If the case does
not go before the Supreme Court, the
pardons hoard will act.
One of the Important cases con-
tinued was that of W. C. Baragar, who
killed Alvina Bollen, his former sweet-
heart, on the streets of Denver. The
case has attracted attention because
of threats of the girl’s brothers to
[kill Baragar if W@ is pardoned. Her-
man Bollen, a brother, wrote the
board that he would be at the prison
doors to shoot Baragar as soon as he
is pardoned. Baragar was sentenced
to life imprisonment by former Judge
E. T. Johnson, October 5, 1900.
Haven Reports to Land Board.
Denver.—More than 200,000 acres
of state Jand are tied up by persons
who have failed to make their pay-
ments as agreed, according to a re-
port made to the State Land Board by
Horace Hayen, clerk in the depart-
ment. The report was made follow-
ing « suggestion by the board that
Haven give them information regard.
ing the state of affairs in the depart-
ment. Havens suggests that an order
be made requiring that all certificates
of purchase in arrears more than
sixty days be cancelled immediately
so that the land will be open for
settlement,
Muddle Holds Up School Funds.
Denver:—Questions regarding the
powers of the State Tax Commission
regarding just what the revenue will
be this year have led Auditor Kene-
han and Treasurer Leddy to notify
Governor Ammons that they will hold
up all warrants except those for sal
aries, The order will seriously affect
schools of the state.
Water Commissioners Named.
Denver.—Three new water commis-
sioners have been appointed by Gov
ernor Ammons. They are: F. A.
Byrne, Pagosa Springs, Commissioner
in district No. 29; F. D, Hutchinson.
Yampa, commissioner in district No.
58; and C. B, Rundell, Sheephorn,
Eagle county, commissioner in dis-
trict No. 52. ‘
Deputies Named to Check Taxes.
Denyer.—The work of county as:
sessors will be checked up by four
special deputies appointed by the tax
commission. The majority of com-
plaints received by the commission
have not been on the assessments, but
on the way they have been distri-
buted. A careful investigation will be
made by the deputies on the 1913 val.
uations throughout the state, and a
report made to the tax commission in
two or three weeks. The special depu
ties appointed by Commissioner C. P.
Link of the tax commission with the
approval of the other members are
A. R. Fischer, former assessor of
Weld county; J. H. Decker, former
assessor of Boulder county; C. D.
Wright of Denver, and W. N. Beatty
of Saguache county. A fifth deputy
will be named.
Delinquents Paying Up on Land.
| Denyer—The State Land Board is
receiving an average of $3,000 a day
from delinquents holding certificates
of purchase, according to Volney T.
-oggatt, register of the board.
Oct. 9 Urged as State Clean-Up Day.
Denver.—Governor Ammons has
beon asked by Samuel F. Woolard,
chairman of the fire prevention com.
mittee of the Trans-Mississippi_ Com-
mercial congress to issue a proclama-
tion declaring Oct. 9, “official clean-
up day” for Colorado. The idea is to
minimize the danger of fires by re
moving rubbish and waste and in
structing people in the handling of
gasoline. The letter says that fifty
per cent of the fires of the nation are
canna sty Gérelnuaionk:
(N MEXICAN WATERS AS LONG
AS PROTECTION MAY BE
NECESSARY.
WILL NOT RECOGNIZE HUERTA
GOVERNMENT UNTIL PEACE
1S ESTABLISHED
eyestern Newspaper Union News Service:
Washington.—So far as the Wash-
Ington adininistration is concerned, it
became known that no move is con-
templated in the Mexican situation at
present. The elections of October 26
now are awaited here with keen inter-
‘est, and the next step in the policy of
‘the United States is likely to make its
‘appearance thereafter.
| Administration officials made no
‘comment on the long excerpts of Gen-
‘eral Huerta’s message to the Mexican
Congress, published here. It is under-
stood that the administration does not
attach much importance to the docu-
ment, though there are passages in it
Which did not pass without careful
notice.
Huerta’s statement that “the tense-
ness of diplomatic relations” was
with the government of the United
States, although luckily not with that
people,” invoked little attention, as
the same sentiment previously had
been voiced by the Mexico City of-
ficials and the answer from here was
the enthusiastic reception which Pres-
ident Wilson received when he ad
dressed Congress, and the speeches
supporting him made by Republicans
and Democrats in Congress.
Although the period allowed for for-
eign battleships in Mexican waters by
the Huerta Congress expires next
month and Huerta opposes an exten-
sion of time, United States vessels will
remain to protect Americans.
Meanwhile, officials at Washington
‘will make no move in the situation.
Bryan cables Lind at Vera Cruz of
America’s views of Huerta’s message.
It is believed at Washington Huerta
will not figure in coming Mexican elec-
tions.
United States crusier brings 139
American refugees to San Diego trom
west coast of Mexico. They tell of
hardships.
In some quarters here there fs a
strong disposition to doubt whether
there will be a constitutional election
jn Mexico on October 26.
IS PREPARED TO DO
ALL KINDS OF
Commercial, Fraternal,
Church, Book and
Stationery Jobs
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.
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.
Give Us a Trial
and We Will Give
You
Satisfaction
Prices as Reasonable
as Those of Any
Job Office in Denver
The Colorado
Statesman
1824 CURTIS STREET
Room 25 Phone Main 7417
READY FOR SULZER TRIAL.
Four Assemblymen Who Voted for
Impeachment Defeated.
Albany, N. Y., Sept. 18 —The stage
is set for the opening at noon today
of the trial of the impeachment ot
William Sulzer, governor of New
York, before the first high court of
‘impeachment ever convened in thik
‘state to pass upon charges file¢
against her chief executive.
Four assemblymen who yoted for
‘impeachment of Governor are defeat-
ed for renomination at Buffalo,
Sulzer’s friends claim issue is re-
sponsible for defeats of regular Dem-
ecratic organization in several locali-
ties.
John B. Stanchfield is added to staft
‘of attorneys of Governor.
| Mrs, Sulzer aids in planning defense
and will be one of important wit-
nesses.
While the stage is set for trial at
Albany; opponents say Governor will
‘surrender office before undergoing
cross-examination.
WHITE SLAVERS SENTENCED.
Diggs Gets Two Years and $2,000 Fine
ea a 81/500,
| San Francisco.—Maury I. Diggs.
former State Architect of California,
was sentenced by Judge Van Fleet in
the United States District Court to
serve two years in the state peniten-
tiary at San Quentin and to pay a
fine of $2,000, for violating the Mann
white slave traffic act,
F, Drew Cammetti, son of Anthony
Caminetti, United States Commission-
er General of Immigration, was sen-
tenced to eighteen months at ‘San
Quentin and to pay a fine of $1,500 for
a similar offense.
Killed in Dispute Over Card Game.
Rock Springs, Wyo.—A dispute over
a card game between two employés on
the Henry Nevins ranch in Moffai
county, Colo, according to word
brought here, resulted in the killing
‘of Bale Herndon, The alleged slayer,
a negro named Jones, was taken to
Craig, Colo.
Thaw at New Hampshire Capital.
Concord, N. H., Sept. 18,—Harry
Kendall Thaw was brought to the cap:
ital of New Hampshire to await a hear:
ing before Governor Felker on Tues
day next on the matter of his extra
dition to New York, If extradition is
refused, he will be a free man, to go
where he wilt within the borders of
this stato; if it is granted his case
will be reviewed by the United States
District Court on a writ of habeas cor
pus granted by Judge Edgar Aldrich,
and perhaps appealed to the Supreme
Court of the United States.
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
CARSON TABLE 24 FREE
NEW YORK COUNTY SANTY
JOS. D. D. RIVERS.....Proprietor
1824 Curtis Street, Room 25.
Phone Main 7417.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
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.
ECONOMICS AND THE NEGRO
Although there are many things mixed in with the principles underlying the various economic reform propositions preached to the numerous classes and sects identified with and largely composing the masses of the general citizenship of the United States, which in their abstract nature seem to appeal directly to the interests of the Negro, he has never been known to exhibit any considerable amount of interest in them, and any effort that has ever been made to gain his support for them in a political way has, in the end, proven a very dismal failure. Socialism, labor unionism, the single tax and all other economic movements which have tended to array the poorer classes or the laboring masses in a political struggle against what is called the capitalistic class, have passed entirely over the head of the Negroes of the United States and left them in nearly the same political position which they have occupied since the franchise was placed in their hands. It is a common thing to find distinct efforts being made to convert other racial elements and to draw them to the standard of these struggling reforms, but similar work among colored people, if attempted at all, has not proved fruitful.
It may be generally supposed that the colored man's intellectual capacity is not sufficient to appreciate the force of the arguments favoring the overthrow of long-settled social, political and economic conditions, but, in fact, there is hardly any industrial or political argument of prominence which has been brought before the people which has not been quite thoroughly studied and digested by the intellectual leaders of the Negro race. Indeed, there are individual Negroes of undoubted intellectual ability who strenuously champion some of these reform causes, but they are given seant and impatient hearing among their fellows. Instead of mental inactivity it is sober judgment or strong intuition which keeps the Negro anchored in one political harbor. The promoters of economic reforms, as a rule, dream of conditions which they do not really want to see realized in their entirety. The social strata from which these reformers generally rise is one which accords no equitable ground upon which the Negro can stand, and the social and industrial prejudices of labor unions and Socialistic centers are ever-present contradictions of the virtue of their principles. Strange as it may seem, social reforms founded upon justice, such as do all humanity the most good, are generally initiated by those whose finer intellects and feelings arouse a sympathy stronger than the logic of the class reformer.
The Negro's greatest champions have been men of culture and intellect, and the higher social classes, south as well as north, furnish him his greatest protection and help. Thus it comes about that in all efforts to array class against class in a political or industrial way, the Negro sees his interests plainly allied with those who are responsible for conditions as they exist today.
RACE UNITY.
Perhaps the subject of unity, or lack of it, is oftener discussed by our leaders and the race journals than any other one subject, and it is deservingly so, because we are going to progress along the lines we most desire only in proportion to the unity in action upon the things that concern us as a race.
Rudyard Kipling has written in verse the "Jungle Law" which every Negro should commit to memory and ever keep in mind. It is as follows:
Now this is the Law of the Jungle, as old and as true as the sky:
And the Wolf that shall keep it may prosper but the Wolf that shall break it must die.
As the Creeper that circles the tree trunk, so the Law runneth forward and back;
For the strength of the Pack, is the Wolf and the strength of the Wolf is the Pack.
We don't mean to discount any of the wonderful progress the race has made during the past fifty years, but we are of the opinion that still greater progress could have been made along many lines if there had been unity.
The most of the wealth the race has accumulated has been; for the most part, of individual effort. Aside from our fraternal societies, we have few big business concerns or buildings, the result of united effort on our part.
In cities like Philadelphia, Washington, New York and Chicago where the Negro population exceeds eighty thousands there is little to point to with pride which Negro capital has done.
The Negroes in these cities have failed to provide places of amusement for themselves and every dance or picnic that is given, the hall or grounds have to be rented from a member of the other race.
To give an idea of how much the four cities mentioned must spend in rentals for places of amusement we will compare Denver's population and expenditures for the same thing. Denver's Negro population is about ten thousand, and it has been estimated that fully ten thousand dollars is paid out annually for halls and picnic grounds, so one can see what an enormous amount of money is being paid to others that had just as well remained within the race, if there was only unity in our investments however small they may seem.
We have spoken of the great gains to be made in a financial way by united effort, but we by no means mean to overlook the many advantages to be gained by unity in resenting every insult or attempt to treat us other than full fledged American citizens.
Dissemination of Disease by Pets
By E. Starz, Montana Department of Health
That our house pets and domesticated animals may be the cause of disseminating certain diseases among the human family is an established fact, and many cases of that kind are on record. Yet many lovers of pet dogs, cats, birds, etc., are not aware of the dangers which such animals present to them when afflicted with some disease.
It is a well-known fact that the cat is susceptible to diphtheria, and the records are full of cases of transmission of that dreadful disease to children playing with such afflicted pets. Likewise are birds carriers of diphtheria.
Dogs are infested with many kinds of tapeworms (taenia), among them tenia echinococcus, the eggs of which cause hydatid cysts. It is, therefore, not strange to find persons who are constantly surrounded with dogs suffering frequently from hydatid cysts and tapeworms.
Barber's itch (tinea tonsurans), a contagious and persistent skin affection, is frequently transmitted from cats and dogs to man. The same is true of favus or tinea favosa, which is caused by a parasitic mold called achorion schoenleinii, producing yellow scaly crusts on the skin.
Another disease of the dog which is transmissible to man is the sarcoptic itch, caused by a microscopic mite called sarcoptes scabiei. Hydrophobia is still another disease of the dog and cat which is transmitted to man by being bitten by these animals and many persons die from it yearly.
The disease called glanders or fancy is caused by bacillus mallei, and numerous cases of infection from afflicted animals to man are known. The greatest number of cases of natural glanders infection occur among hostlers, drivers, farmers, horse butchers and other habitual handlers of horses. The bacilli generally gain entrance through abrasions or wounds of the skin. Laboratory workers occasionally become infected through the respiratory organs (nose and lungs) by spilling accidentally culture material. Glanders infection is highly fatal.
Anthrax, charbon, splenic fever, or wool sorters' disease is a disease of animals, and easily transmitted to man. The name "wool sorters' disease" is derived from the fact that handlers of hides from cows or wool from sheep which have died from anthrax occasionally contract the disease. Actinomycosis, or "lumpy jaw," is a disease caused by a ray fungus generally found in cattle or swine; rarely in horses or sheep; occasionally cases having been observed in deer, elephants, dogs and cats. Infection in man generally occurs by inoculation with lumpy jaw material carrying the ray fungus, actinomycosis bovis.
Human tuberculosis is certainly transmitted to dogs, cats and birds. Many investigators and observers cite cases where dogs, cats and parrots, presenting all the lesions of tuberculosis, were shown to have contracted it from contact with human beings.
These examples should suffice to call the attention of the public to the danger which is connected in keeping pet animals in our apartments. Any pet animal showing signs of disease should be removed from the living room and isolated. We owe that precaution to ourselves and others.
What's the Harm of Little Kiss?
By Jefferson Emerson, Baltimore, Md.
What's the Harm of Little Kiss?
By Jefferson Emerson, Baltimore, Md.
Some features of the "purity wave" now on in this city reach the ludicrous, as witness the arrest of an eighteen-year-old girl and a sixteen-year-old boy in Gwynns Falls park for spooning. Witness, also, the good sense of a Baltimore magistrate in dismissing the youthful couple with the pronouncement that spooning is not indecent. The serious feature, however, in this incident is the arrest, the ride in a patrol wagon and the hearing in a police court of this youthful couple for what? For that which is ages old and which will continue for ages—simply spooning, which is the slang name for courting.
Courting—that which the gods smile upon, which is as natural to a boy and a girl as is the budding of the trees, which is as natural as the cooing of the birds, and which is predestined by nature to be preliminary to the popping of the eternal question which makes happiness hold sway over this broad land. This age is prosaic and commercialized enough without minions of the law stepping in and laying hands on those who recall to us all our youthful lovers' spoon. As the magistrate has wisely decided, there is nothing indecent in holding hands and even in a stolen kiss.
Fly Swatting Scheme Futile and Absurd By Dr. Charles E. Page, Boston, Mass.
Fly Swatting Scheme Futile and Absurd By Dr. Charles E. Page, Boston, Mass.
Flies are our fellow sanitarians. Oceans of filth are by them consumed and transformed into the tissues of their healthy bodies in the course of the "fly season." When you kill one fly early in the season you kill a swarm of busy little scavengers that would have been helping to prevent disease by helping us to "clean up." When ever we make everything and every corner and place clean we have said goodbye to flies; on longer needed and with nothing to subsist on, they are doomed.
The cleanup at Panama, in New Orleans and Cuba brought about as a matter of course improvement in health of the residents at those points; not from absence of fly bites or mosquito bites, but solely from the banishment of filth and filthy surroundings.
The effort to banish flies by swatting here and there one is about like attempting to drain the ocean by dipping it up with a teaspoon.
Not one fly in ten millions alights on a human being; and when one does the contact is harmless. At any rate, the swatting scheme is as futile as absurd.
Chain gangs of prisoners in many communities are compelled to live under conditions of filth that are ideal for the spread of soil pollution diseases.
Chain Gangs of Convicts Breed Much Disease By Prof.Chas.Wardell Stiles,Birmingham,Ala.
During the past twenty
years I have had a number of opportunities to observe prisoners in penitentiaries, prison farms, jails and chain gangs, and have been seriously impressed with the average lack of cleanliness among the criminals and their guards, although the opportunities for rigid discipline rendered it possible to make these penal institutions admirable schools in which the state might easily give to its charges some good lessons in cleanliness hygiene and sanitation.
With few exceptions, the authorities not only failed to see and to utilize the opportunity offered, but they actually permitted things to occur which were dangerous to the communities.
JOHN H. HARRIS
Coal! Coal!! Coal!!!
J. R. JACKSON
The Coal and Wood Man
617 West 11th Ave. Phone Champa 2756
617 West 11th Ave.
Five-Points Pool and Billiard Parlor CIGARS, TOBACCO and SOFT DRINKS
E. R. PAGE, Prop.
Phone Main 2759 E. R. PAGE, Prop.
EAT AT
LOGAN'S LORADO
LUNCH ROOM
First Class Accommodations
Meals at all hours,
Come and see AND WHEN YOU DO YOU WILL
BE TREATED RIGHT.
E. W. Logan, Proprietor 1936 Lawrence St.
Stop!
Stop!
Did you ever stop to think that you are help ing to pay the big up town rents when you buy without consider ing this. Patronize Home Industry N. FERRY Phone Main 7411 1905 Curtis Street
THE MUSEUM TANZANIA
HEALTH FOR INSTITUTION
A MUSEUM FOR THE
RESToration OF THE
MUSEUM
$20.00 AND $25.00 SUIT IN THE CITY
Best Goods, Best Workmanship. Best for the money in the
City of Denver. Give me a trial and you will be convinced
I give all my customers perfect Satisfaction, Fit, Style, Work-
manship and the BEST FOR THE MONEY.
How do I Turn Out Such Fine suits for the Money? Why? On
account of THE LOW RENT.
PAPER. DOLLAR BAR
STEVE TODOROFF, PROP.
Fine Wines Liquors and Cigars
Phone Champa 1156
1038 Nineteenth Street. Corner 19th and Arapahoe Sts
Denver, Colorado
---
ELT I,
THE COLORADUNS AAS FATESMANL
Z Ef A (oA; i x
. fw) 3G bee Se oe
eS fee
Pccata yy Ss ed
fone clei: Ba LMA aes fate
Pie ada an Rd We de See ee
SS ee Oa! 3 ee ee
aed Fat a (nes MTN Dison doe Lod
=< SERS peta’ ee
S. P. MeBeth left this week for Theo. W. Pool, the paper hangé
Angleton, Texas, on a business trip. |and decorator is receiving no itt
Nine amount of flattery for the super
Mrs. M. A. Cole is, im Peublo this |NO"K he 1s doing. When in need
week, onve huamensttly, painting, graiping, paper hanging, ete
don't fail to give him a call, at 62
APE wa, io Kalamath street.
Mrs. V. Spittil was called to. Salt Pg Pho Maia
wake City this week on accor of het > .
Lake Olly (this oH BECOUnE OfLNEE' || Mensaramwirdr and: meoclousu Wi
father’s death. Ko
open a fine café at 1857 Champ
wares a St. today. If their plans are carried on
Mrs. C. Fisher of 1421 Humboldt} the place will rank second to non
street, who has been suffering several! jn the West ‘The Colorado Statesma
weeks with hay fever is much better. | wishes them much success and hor
et that they will receive a liberal shat
S. H. Baxter of 2727 California | °f Patronage from the public.
street, who has been ill for two weeks } z ——
is able to be out again. | SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
a ae Don't fail to be at the big publ
Messers. R, H. Clay and L. B. Me-| meeting of the People’s Sunday All
onia of Junction City, Kan. were in|ance, Sunday, Sept. 21st
the city this week on a visit. __ The only matters to be taken up at
Mrs. G. E. Clayton left Monday for
her Kansas City, Kan., home very
much impressed with Denver's hospi-
tality.
Miss Dorthy Malvin left Thursday
of last week for Kansas City, to visit
firends and relatives three weeks.
J. J. Houston and EB, W, Houston re-
ceived the sad news last week of the
death of their sister, Miss Reta, who
died at her home in New Iberia, La,
Mrs. Clarence Holmes, left Wednes-
day fora visit with friends in Boston,
Baltimore, and Washington, She was
accompanied by her son, Clarence,
who will attend Howard University
this year,
Dr. Phillip D. Lee of Milledgville,
Ga., who is visiting Dr. E. F. Cantey,
spent quite a pleasant trip with Dr.
Cantey last week, sight seeing in Colo-
rado.
John H. Newman of Grand Junction
was in the city this week, the guest
of his daughter, Mrs. Charlie Smithea.
He returned home Thursday, accom-
panied by his little grandson, Charlie
Smithea.
Miss Luvenia MePherson ot» Gar-
den City, Kan., is the house guest of
Mrs, Bredlove on Pennsylvania ave-
nue. She fs very favorably impressed
with Colorado people.
Tommy Lewis, proprietor of the
Newport saloon, has just had his place
newly decorated, It is the finest coi-
red saloon in the West and one cap
always rely oh good treatment and
good goods.
“Last Monday night when Miss Her-
moine Jones was returning home from
night school, some unknown colored
boy slipped up behind her and threw
a rock at her, hitting her in the head.
‘The wound was not serious, but very
patntal.
‘The Welton street Furniture Com-
pany, 2621 Welton street, has a com-
plete line of the best heating stoves
and ranges to be found in the city, at
reasonable prices. Before purchasing
elsewhere call and se thir stores,
Mrs. Jennie Henderson of Colorado
Springs, was recently in the city on
business, while here was a guest of
Mrs. J. T. Hammond, 1625 South Lin-
coln street. She presented little Thel-
ma Hammond with a nice check to a
bank account for the future. Mrs.
Henderson is one of our large prop-
erty owners of Colorado.
Mr. Joseph E. Brown of Topeka
and Miss Alice Nelson of Pueblo were
quietly married Tuesday evening at
the home of Mrs, Joseph Peach, 2605
Lafayette street. Rey Deas performed
the ceremony. They are at home at
726 Bast 25th avenue to their many
friends. Se
Miss Marcella Groves of Manitou,
Colo., who has been visiting her sis
ter, Mrs. C. B. Prior, returned to her
home last Saturday. While in the city
Miss Groves was the recipient of
many social functions, and on Friday
evening, she entertained the friends,
who made it pleasant for her at an in-
formal dinner.
The Keystone Club at 910 19th
street, which has just ben newly pa-
pered and decorated, makes it one of
the most unique of any in the West.
It is inded an ideal place to spend the
leisure hours and you are always
made welcome.
Theo. W. Pool, the paper hanger
and decorator is receiving no little
amount of flattery for the superb
work he is doing. When in need of
painting, graiping, paper hanging, ete.,
don't fail to give him a eall, at 622
Kalamath street.
Messers. Bird and MeCollough will
open a fine café at 1857 Champa
St. today. If their plans are carried out
the place will rank second to none
in the West. The Colorado Statesman
wishes them much success and hope
that they will receive a liberal share
of patronage from the public.
SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT.
Don't fail to be at the big public
meeting ot the People’s Sunday Alli-
ance, Sunday, Sept. 21st.
The only matters to be taken up are
discrimination cases. Come and bring
your friends. Bear your share of the
‘race's responsibility. Be a man or a
woman; 2630 Welton>4 p. m.
! A RECHERCHE RECEPTION.
Mesdames W. F. Charlton and G.
A. Derry gave a very pretty recep:
tion last Friday afternon in honor of
Mesdames Maria White, H. Zimmer-
man, G. EB. Clayton and Cora A. Pe-
nix. ‘The ladies were all handsome-
ly gowned and presented a bewitch-
ing appearance. ‘The house was beaw:
tifully decorated, the color display
was pink and emérald green harmo-
niously blending with a large arch of
flowers under which the ladies stood.
Dainty refreshments were served and
the number of callers were numerous,
CAMPBELL NOTES.
CAMPBELL CHAPEL, A. M. E.
CHURCH.
Cor, 23d and Lawrence Sts.—Rev. H.
Franklin Bray, D. D., Pastor.
Good congregations greeted the pas-
tor at each service last Sabbath and
the offerings were such .as would
make any earnest pastor's heart glad.
Rey. J. H. Brown of Ogden, Utah,
preached to the enlightenment and ed:
ification of a large congregation in
the evening, after which the members
gave him a nice financial lift on his
way to conference.
Father Bray of the Indiana confer:
ence will be in charge until the arrival
of the pastor from conference.
Sister Taylor is able to be at her
work again after a painful and dan.
gerous fall from the street car.
‘The farewell reception on Monday
evening, in which every department of
the chureh took part, was such as
has seldom been seen in Campbell.
There was a spirit of good fellowship
and love running through it all as
would send any preacher to his con-
ference with rejoicing. The pastor
paid a high tribute to the faithfulness
of the officers and members and re-
ported that $3,096.80 had been collect.
ed during the year. The church is lef!
with the floating debts met and the
insurance and interest on the mort-
gage paid. Some of the debts paid
ran back as far as six years.
Tuesday morning at 3:50 the pas:
tor, accompanied by several of his col-
leagues boarded the Santa Fé flyer
for Albuquerque, the seat of the an-
nual conterence, with “Success” in
large letters, perched upon his ban.
ner.
‘The members and friends are invit-
ed to hear Father Bray tomorrow and
enjoy the good singing of the choir.
Let everybody be found at their post
during the sitting of the conference.
SHORTER CHAPEL, A. M. E.
CHURCH.
Sunday marked the close of the first
year of the pastorate of the Rey. R.
L, Pope at Shorter Chapel. ‘The year
has indeed been a very successful one
in which the pastor has ingratiated
himself into the hearts of the people
of Shorter and of Denver. The splen-
did reports of the year's work were
read at the final board meeting on
Monday night. It is the prayer of the
people that the appointing powers
wnay seo fit to return the Rev. Pope
for another year.
Mrs. R. L. Pope accompanied her
husband to the annual conference on
‘Tuesday morning.
Rey. A. Wayman Ward, our theol-
ogical student at Wilberforce, will be
the acting pastor during the’ pastor's
absence at conference, Will preach
at both morning and evening services.
The Sunday school with Mrs. Rebec-
ca Glenn as superintendent, will hold
its regular session at 10:00 a. m.
An interesting meeting of the A. ©.
E. League has been planned for the
Sunday evening liour. All persons are
invited to be present at 6:45 p. m. Mr.
Royal Brown, president.
The Centennial Four: Messrs. R.
I. Smith, R. O. Smith, B. R. Smith
and B. H. Miller, assisted by Mr. Geo.
Morrison, violinist, presented an excel-
lent musical program on Tuesday ev-
ening. These young men show rare
musical ability. They left Wednesday
for Fisk yniversity to enter the musi-
cal department there. Denver is proud
of her young men who are pushing
to the front. By encouragement and
study this four may develop into as
wonderful a_musical organization as
the famous Byron Brothers of Chica-
go. Denver is the great western mu-
sical center and will yet be heard
among the greatest. ,
‘The new pastor for Shorter will be
welcomed by Shorter en masse on
Monday night at the recital. Be there
tataroot lite
Nicely furnished rooms for rent in
a modern house, at 2222 Curtis street,
telephone Olive 1608. Mrs. Howard
Steele,
DEATHS.
Mr. Robert J. Stanford, who died at
2239 Champa street, Sept. 11, His re-
mains were shipped to his home Sun-
day 14th, Chatanooga, Tenn.
Miss Jessie May Graves, who died at
820 30th street, September 15th, was
shipped to her hoxfie, Mammouth, 1.
AT REST.
a es
Mrs. Eliza M. Jackson, the wife of
J. W. Jackson, died Wednesday morn-
ing, September 17th, at her home
429 West Sth avenue, after an illness
of several months with paralysis, Mrs.
Jackson lived a consistent Christian
life and was dearly loved by all who
knew her. She was a faithful mem-
ber of Zion Baptist church and ot
Household of Ruth, No. 276.
She leaves to mourn her joss a hus-
band, three children, Ruth, Orlando
and Charles, two sisters and a host of
friends of both races.
‘The funeral services will be held
this afternoon at 2 o'clock from the
family residence, under th auspices of
the Household of Ruth, Rev D. B.
Over, officiating. Interment at Fair-
mount. Douglass Undertaking Com-
pany in charge.
ANNOUNCEMENT.
Mr. Clarence B, Langston, who has
been manager of The Denver Star
since March, has tendered his resigna-
tion, to take effect Saturday, Septem-
ber 20. Mr. Langston will engage in
business for himself, doing job work
exclusively and will have office with
The Colorado Statesman,
DISPENSATION NOW ON.
Why not join the oldest and strong-
est exclusive Negro fraternal organiza
tion in the world? Western Star
Lodge of United Brother of Friend-
ship is initiating new members at the
nominal fee of $3. Protect your fam-
ily by our endowment. For further in-
formation: Daniel Jones, W. M., 229
W. 11th Ave.: R. M. Grigsby, W. Sec-
retary, 445 St. Paul St.; Geo. D. Hall,
D. M., 1707 Arapahoe St.; E. C. Can-
mel, G. M., 3158 Champa St.
For Saie. Stoves and ranges, apply
J. H, Biggins, 1417 B. 24th avenue.
Desk room for rent at the Colorado
Commercial Alliance, 1025 21st street.
Phone Main 3724.
Nicely furnished rooms for rent in
modern house, 2337 Glenarm place,
Phone Olive 1343.
Three apartments for rent at 2929
Glenarm Place. Inquire at 2815 Arapa-
lhoe street, Mrs. M. Cole
For rent, nicely furnished rooms in.
modern honse at 1910 Washington
street, Call after seven o'clock,
For Sale—Five room brick house,
good condition, lawn and trees. Sell
reasonable. Party going to coast.
1422 South Cherokee.
Wanted by reliable parties, a couple
who would like to go on an improved
ranch, Call at the Colorado States-
man’s office, 1824 Curtis street, room
25, for particulars,
For rent a five room frame house
at 322 24th street. Apply at 1824
Curtis street, room 25.
Wanted—A gentleman wishing «
neat energetic girl to go in company
with at leisure. Particulars will be
given by G. C., 2528 California street.
Phone Olive 612 after 6 p. m,
ANNOUNCEMENT.
At the Morris Millinery Parlors,
2953 Stout street a fine sample line
of ready-to-wear hats has just been
received from Chicago. The sale of
these hats begun Friday and will con-
tinue two weeks, Prices are in the
reach of all, fram $1.75 to $2.50. Don’t
miss this great sale. Every hat is a
bargain, Come early and get first
choice,
Keeping Tab on the Hen,
In the effort to secure an accurate
record of the hen’s egg achievements,
an aluminum crayon-holder has been
invented by which the chicken makes
her mark as she leaves the nest. The
crayon is mounted on the foot and the
color of the crayon indicates the par-
ticular bird,
He Listened to All.
Fontenelle listened to everything
and he offended no one by disputing
anything. At the close of his life he
was asked the secret of his success,
and he replied that it was by obsery-
ing two maxims, “Everybody may be
right” and “Everything may be so.”
Before You Buy Property, Let Lawyer
W. B. TOWNSEND
EXAMINE THE TITLE AND MAKE
YOUR CONTRACT. LAWYER TOWN-
SEND MAKES A SPECIALTY OF
COLLECTING FROM INSURANCE
COMPANIES, ALSO ENDOWMENT
MONIES.
OFFICE 313 KITTREDGE BUILDING
Mrs. Wm. G. Campbell
SOLE AGENT FOR THE
Johnson Hair and Scalp
Preparations
Novelties, Toilet Goods, Etc.
Will Treat the Scalp for Dandruff,
Eczema, Itch and Scurf. Will Sham-
poo and Straighten Hair.
Prices Reasonable Phone Olive 1304
2835 STOUT STREET.
|
Oysters! Qysters!!
Blue Points, Lynn Haven’s, Balti-
more and New York Oysters
Received Daily By Express
WASHBURN’S MARKET
THE ONLY EXCLUSIVE FISH AND OYSTER
MARKET IN DENVER
1506 ARAPAHOE ST. PHONE CHAMPA 2211
Very Reasonable Prices—Our Specialty, the Finest of Work.
The Sanitary Clothes Cleaners
and Pressers
WE PLEASE THE BEST DRFSSERS
PRICE LIST.
Ladies’ and Gents’ Suits Steam or French Cleaned -.....2.......$1.00
Ladies’ and Gents’ Coats Cleaned and Pressed. ........-+ee+ee0+ 1.00
Ee esesic leap tier libieeeeedies ear cece eee
Skirts Cleaned and Pressed Pe eeteesncecsicacescscecseocnecescs s00:
Suite Sponged and Pressed ..........0c... cece cescccccccccecss OS
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED TO EVERY CUSTOMER
“ PHONE MAIN 1800 2622 WELTON STREET
Galle and Deliveries Made Danser Colerao
Drink Capitol Beer
DENVER’S PRIDE
Ke Bas
UG) GN > Z a rfid SS ad
The purity of Capitol Beer is demon-
strated by its superior flavor and
strength-giving qualities. It’s capital.
HAVE A GASE SENT HOME
The Capitol Brewing Co.
Phone Champa 356 Delivered Anywhere
FOR SALE—FURNITURE
> AT
>
Tandy’s Old Warehouse
2005 Arapahoe St.
Complete line of high and cheap grades of furniture and
carpets; brass beds, $5; stecl range, $6; buffet dressers,
cook stoves, heating stoves, iron beds, complete,
$2.50, and a lot of other bargains.
THE DELUXE, 13 CENTS A DAY BUYS A PIANO
Furnished apartments. Two and| WITH MUSIC LESSONS FREE. P
three rooms, with hot and cold wa-|ANOS FROM $88 UP. COLUMBIN
ter in each kitchen. Also front|MUSIC CO., 920-924 15th STREP
room, single, electric lights and gas.) CHARLES BUILDING
Rrcaernithronmuoueenintas’ very rem: || ee
sonable, 2852 Ogden street, corner
Twenty-fourth avenue. Phone York =
6707. Mrs. R. M. Blakey. | . vas eS
Furniture Repairing and Up-
holstering, All work Cash.
PHONE york 7602
1417 East 24th Ave Denver.
13 CENTS A DAY BUYS A PIANO.
WITH MUSIC LESSONS FREE. PI-
ANOS FROM $88 UP. COLUMBINE
MUSIC CO., 920-924 15th STREBT,
CHARLES BUILDING
. eS
SK UNION ap,
< ew,
; S
SZ:
GS ee a
fz Ek
KIDNAPED BY A WOMAN
Bracebridge stood on the steps of
the Casino. He had just tempted For-
‘une, and for once the jade had proved
~+ prude, and he was left with a broken
purse. ‘To describe his remorse would
be impossible, he wondered dully
what his mother would think when he
should seek her out that night in their
unpretentious hotel that overlooked
the bay at Monaco and tell her that
the trip would have to be postponed;
that they must hasten home without
delay. He cursed himself for a fool,
and then chuckled grimly as he
thought of the surplusage of money he
would have when he had pawned ya:
rious articles of apparel, the proceeds
‘of which would go to buy tickets for
home.
“Just enough for a box of cigar
ettes,” he muttered as he stumbled
down the steps to the street.
“Sir, can you not understand even
English?” spoke a delicious musical
yoice. Bracebridge scrambled slowly
back to earth from the realms of de-
spair into which he had descended. A
big red limousine car stood by the
curb, and from its window protruded
a vision of pink and gold and fluffiness
that caused ®racebridge to uncover
with a haste that was more worshipful
than graceful.
“Eh! What do you want?” he asked,
rudely, for his dulled brain was not as
quick as it was wont to be, nor his
tongue as smooth; but the next in-
stant he blushed in cogfusion at his
own gruffness. “I beg your pardon,
madam; can I be of service to you?”
“Ah, you can,” she sighed, relieved:
ly. “Come into the car,” and she
threw open the door, making room for
him beside her.
“But,” said Bracebridge, hesitating,
caer ba
“Come, if you are going,” she spoke
impatiently, at the same time rising
and grasping his wrist. Bracebridge
stepped from the curb and dropped on
the seat beside her.
“Away, Adolphe!” she cried, sharp-
ly. The chauffeur started the machine
with a rush,
Bracebridge had a_ sensation of a
swift journey through the night, but
it was a dim one, for he was busy
drinking in the woman's beauty as she
sat beside him, her neck encircled by
@ pearl collar, an expensive opera
cloak thrown over her shoulders. The
girl laughed mischievously and sald:
“Tam human; you act afraid, as
though you might be in the presence
of a deity. I would not harm a living
creature and surely not you. Besides,
1 am smaller than you, you see.” She
ranged her tiny gloved hand in white
kid beside Bracebridge’s larger ones.
‘And then the eternal masculine as
“sumptiveness of soul arose in Brace-
bridge. He could not tell from whence
came his sudden courage, but with a
pounce he captured her fingers and
threw his muscular arm around her.
“You are mussiug my frock; I will
all Adolphe, you insolent man,” she
vaid, between gasps.
‘The car ran to the curb and stopped
with a jerk. When the door was
opened Bracebridge was saying: “I am
clumsy, madam, in arranging your
cloak, and I greatly fear your ruffles
¥ ill be spoiled.” He stepped out and
looked around; they were back in
front of the Casino again.
“{ thank you greatly that you will
aid me at all, sir,” she said, smiling.
“I abducted you o na wager, sir, that
I could carry off the first gentleman }
saw at the Casino.”
“And may I see you tomorrow?” he
asked, his soul in suspense.
“The heart cannot be, controlled,”
she whispered softly.” “Drive on,
Adolphe.” The machine whirred
away.
“And now to purchase those cigar
ettes,” said Bracebridge. Something
crackled in his coat pocket; he felt,
and it was a newspaper.
“How did I get that?” he asked him.
self, opening it ¢bsently. The flaming
headlines caught his eye:
WOMAN IN RED AUTO
ROBS ENGLISH LORD.
Most Daring Scheme In Years—Lord
Algernon the Victim.
He put his hand in his change pock-
et, where reposed his last five-frana
note, “a remnant of the last battle.”
“The devil; that girl has touched
me!” he cried. “I was a fool not ta
think before what her game was. . ..
But thank the gods that I am only a
common person; they'll never know
what a fool I've been, as they know
about the Englishman. I don't believa
I will smoke cigarettes tonight,” he
added, as an afterthought. He pulled
out his old briar pipe, lighting it in
silence; then he slowly took his way
toward the hotel.
“pis sad to lose your money and
your ideal on one summer's eve,” h¢
quoth, very crestfallen.
(Copyright, by Daily Story Pub. Co.)
‘Witbank =
‘The old house between the Tibes
and the Piazza Navona at Rome are
shortly to be pulled down, and with
them an interesting old landmark—
the Osteria del Orso, situated at the
corner of the Via del Orso and the
Via Santa Lucia, writes an Italian
correspondent. This house once gave
shelter to princes and poets—among
the latter Dante and Goethe—and was
at one time the most fashionable hos-
telry in Rome. It was particularly
popular because the price of a room—
some 50 cents—in the fourteenth cen-
tury comprised wine ad libitum, while
in other inns the refreshments to
which guests were entitled free of
charge was limited to a certain por
ton.
WANT NEW BULLETIN
Big Demand for the Weekly News Letter.
Department of Agriculture Embarrassed by Growth in Popularity—Locking for Some Way to "Side-step" Without Hurting Any One's Feelings.
Washington.—Again the department of agriculture is suffering from an excess of popularity. The last time it ran into an embarrassment of this sort was when the past spring it issued its now famous "bird book," which was a manual of the common farm and orchard birds of interest to farmers. There was such a shoal of requests for copies that the department has never been able to catch up with the requests.
This time it is in connection with the "weekly news letter" that Secretary Houston undertook to get out as a sort of compensation to the 36,000 crop correspondents who get no other reward for their services. The first issue of this letter has just been put out. It consists of about 1,800 words of typewriting, giving in popular language and paragraph form summaries of bulletins and other things of immediate interest to agriculturists.
The intention was to get out an edition just large enough to supply the correspondents. The first number contained paragraphs about investigations into seed adulteration, damage to the market value of hides by the cattle tick, action against misbranded insecticides, etc., of direct interest to farmers. There was an immediate flood of applications for the letter from country papers and besides other things a request that a copy be sent to each of the $8,000 postoffices for posting for the benefit of visitors. All this was quite complimentary, but the appropriation for white paper alone to meet such a demand was too much of a drain, and the mechanical facilities for printing and mailing all the copies were entirely inadequate. So the department is now looking around for some way to sidestep gracefully without hurting any one's feelings.
Monthly Bulletin of the bureau of foreign and domestic commerce, department of commerce, showing exports from the principal customs districts of breadstuffs, cottonseed oil, food animals, meat and dairy products, cotton, and mineral oils shows a total of $47,750,000 for July, 1913, against $33,000,000 in July, 1912. The chief increase occurs in wheat, of which the exports from the principal customs districts during July, 1913, were 9,397,745 bushels, against 523,385 bushels in July of last year, the value being $9,003,182, against $537,928 in July of last year. These exports of wheat in July were larger than in July of any earlier year since 1901. Flour, also, shows a considerable increase, being $3,611,986 for July, 1913, against $2,616,022 for July, 1912. Meat and dairy products show an increase of about $2,500,000 over July of last year; cotton an increase of $1,333,000; mineral oils, an increase of nearly $1,000,000; while cottonseed oil and cattle and food animals show a slight decline. The total for the six groups of articles named—breadstuffs, cottonseed oil, food animals, meat and dairy products, cotton and mineral oil—for July, 1913, is $47,739,815, against $32,992,614 in July of last year, and for the seven months ending with July, $486,691,678, against $486,978,217 in the corresponding months of last year.
The present model of rifle used by the United States army should have
of rifle used by army should have a life of usefulness of at least ten years, in the opinion of the
Keeping U. S. Rifles Clean.
ordnance officers, and a determined effort is being made to prevent the condemnation of thousands of rifles that are turned in as worn out when they are really serviceable. A circular issued last week declares that one of these rifles should be capable of firing 8,000 to 13,000 rounds before becoming so worn as to be inaccurate.
Many of the rifles turned in as serviceable are found to be in this condition more through want of careful cleaning and the use of abrasives than by any reason of the actual number of rounds fired. Therefore, it has been ordered that such guns as are worn at the muzzle with barrels rusted or pitted, a sign that they have not been properly treated, shall be tried out by expert riflemen, and not condemned unless they show marked inaccuracy at the targets.
James M. Sullivan, minister to the Dominican republic and a resident of New York, is a literally hot-footed Democrat. This is literally true.
The other night, after a gruelling hot day of meeting officials of the state department and trying to find a job for some friends, Mr. Sullivan pulled up at his hotel here lame and hot footed. He said his feet were so hot that they were giving him agony and making the rest of his body and spirits hot, too. He called a sea-going hack, jumped in and ordered the driver to find a place where it was cool. The
driver headed for Potomac park along the river. Arrived there Mr. Sullivan saw some long, wet, soft looking grass. "Halt!" he called to the driver. The latter did so, suddenly. Mr. Sullivan reached down, unlaced his shoes, pulled them and his socks off, rolled up his pants and stepped out of the vehicle into the grass. He waded, dragged his feet, lifted them up and put them down softly. He had blades of grass between his toes, pulled great handsful and washed his feet with it. After being in the grass for half an hour the sky became overcast. The driver said a storm was coming. Mr. Sullivan told him to never mind; that he would be paid for getting wet. A storm did come. It rained torrentially. Through it all Mr. SuHivan stayed in the grass.
About two hours after-leaving the hotel he returned with cold feet and a pleasant temper. It was a large bill he gave the cochera.
the stress of the storm, but this chimney has never stood up within the memory of old inhabitants. It has been a leaning chimney for many years, but in view of the tenacity and persistence with which it leans one would hesitate to call it a decrepit chimney.
This old chimney leans as much as it did when 16th street was only 16th street and no more, when the section over which it leans was generally called Meridian Hill neighborhood, and before rich men began to build residences in that section.
Friends of the crooked chimney felt that in the late storm the end of it had come. They felt that its bricks and mortar and its topping tile would be scattered on the ground. But the chimney never lost a brick.
On the west side of 16th street, at the intersection of Columbia road and Mount Pleasant street, is a row of small frame houses. They sit rather far back from the street, for the line of 16th street and its grade were slightly changed when it was made into a great way. The chimney leans over the roof of the northernmost of these old houses.
Increase in the industrial and commercial activity of the United States during the last fiscal year, as compared with 1912, is disclosed by figures made public by the bureau of foreign and domestic commerce.
These show there was a gain of almost 12 per cent, in the value of exports of manufactures, manufacturers' materials and agricultural products. The increase amounted to $262,000,000, and the total exports this last year were $2,466,000,000. The imports increased almost ten per cent., the gain being $160,000,000, the grand total during the year aggregating $1,813,000,000.
Exports of iron and steel manufactures this year amounted to $305,000,000, against $268,000,000 last year, and the total exports of manufactures other than foodstuffs were valued at $1,187,000,000, against $1,020,000,000 in 1912. The copper produced in the first six months this year was $809,000,000 pounds, against 736,000,000 pounds in the same period last year, and the exports of copper and manufactures thereof, exclusive of ore, approximate $140,000,000 this year, against $114,000,000 last year.
The conversation in the cloakroom having turned from tariff to servants.
Senator Warren of Wyoming told this tale:
Washington family had resigned, according to the senator, and an hour or two before she left the house her mistress, in anything but a sweet temper, said to her:
"I hope you will leave here in a better manner than you came. If I remember rightly your goods were brought here in a wheelbarrow!"
"I am going away in an automobile," said the maid, as a motor car's chugging was heard outside in the back alley. "My new mistress is sending one for my clothes and things."
"Is that so?" was the scornful response of the ruffled woman. "Then why don't they drive up to the door in a respectful and respectable manner, instead of choosing the alleyway?"
"I don't know," replied the maid, "but I suppose they don't care to let people think they are on visiting terms here."
Baseball by Wireless.
When the battleship Illinois was returning from Madera to the United States and was distant 2,115 nautical miles from Arlington, and 2,610 nautical miles from Key West, she intercepted wireless messages from these stations and at the same time heard stations on both sides of the Atlantic Baseball scores were received the night the Illinois left Madeira, which added greatly to the interest of the messages.
Her Good Reason.
Rejected Suitor—and may I ask what the "sad circumstances" are that compel you to reject my suit
She—Certainly, sir; they are—
yours!
Woman's Age.
Few women are as old as they look before they get themselves fixed up in the morning.
MAN MADE MISTAKE
Penalties Caused by the Upright Position Are Shown.
German Scientists Point Out the Heavy Cost to Humanity for Standing Position—Experiments Prove Virtue of Locomotion on All Fours.
Three of Germany's famous scientists have been making experiments to prove that humanity makes a great mistake in walking upright instead of on all fours. Thereby, they declare man brings on himself many physical evils from which the more sensible and less aspiring horse and dog are free.
When man first stood on his hind legs he disturbed the whole equilibrium of his organism; and since then he has been trying in vain to adapt his architecture and organs to his unnatural carriage. As he has failed he has brought on himself weakness and disease.
One of the first to occupy himself with this question was Prof. Ernst Haekel, the Jena biologist and Darwinian. It has now been carried much further by the experiments which Dr. H. Gerhart has lectured on at the Berlin University Polyclinical institute.
Dr. Gerhart placed quadrupeds in a similar position, and observed them. A typical test was made with a fox terrier, which stood and walked on its hind legs for seven hours a day for 28 weeks. The terrier was then compared with an ordinary dog. Examination showed that the change had radically transformed the terrier's anatomy. In order to counterbalance the tendency to fall forward, the dog had continually bent its spinal column backward. The result was a marked deformation of the vertebrae. Standing upright had also deformed the thorax and pelvis. The bones of the hind legs had bent forward in a way suggesting rickets or degeneration of the bone.
The internal organs also showed changes. The left lung had fallen slightly; the heart was enlarged owing to the constant exertion of standing as a biped, and it had turned round partly on its axis. The liver, stomach and kidneys had also receded further from the head. In other words, the dog had grown closer to the human type.
Certain penalties caused by the upright carriage are shown by Dr. Ernest Klotz of Leipzig. It was plainly intended, he says, that the spinal column should be horizontal; and that all vital and easily injured organs, such as the heart and stomach, should hang downward from it and be protected by it. "The spinal column," he says, "is nothing but a roof of bone." It is not at all intended to stiffen the body into an upright carriage. When man went four footed, with his organs pendent from his spinal column, all the organs were in exactly defined positions as regards one another.
When he began to go upright these organs tended to sag and fall downward and thus disturbed their functions. This caused many ailments, and particularly digestive complaints, which no animal suffers from. These complaints have been a cause of weakness to man and, instead of returning to an all four attitude, he has for millions of years past been trying to adapt himself to the new conditions. But he has not altogether succeeded, and is still suffering from the disturbed equilope.
Most marked is the fact that the human legs have not adapted themselves to be man's only support. It even seems that in civilized countries the adaptive process has come to a stop and as a result of the failure of two legs to do the work of four patological deformation of the sole of the foot is going on.
Today man unconsciously hankers after his lost position of quadruped. This is seen by the attitudes he takes during sleep. Numerous scientific tests show that the regenerative effect of sleep both on body and mind is greatest when a man sleeps face downward as do the majority of animals. Nightmares, "sleep drunkenness," "brain pressure" and other abnormal sleep conditions are never experienced by a man sleeping in this position. They are caused by the genuine biped attitude of sleeping on the back. Sleeping on the back with the limbs outstretched, is so unnatural that the lower animals can be temporarily paralyzed by fixing them in that position.
In short, man's upright carriage, which he regards as his unique distinction and glory, is merely a psychological blunder, and it will remain so until man has perfectly adapted himself to it. Unluckily, there is reason to think that the perfect equipoise will never be attained.
Circus Catastrophe.
At the circus grounds many people wondered at the unusual delay, caused by the late arrival and a lack of sufficient workmen.
"They ain't goin' t' be no show today," said a live looking newsboy.
"Ain't goin' t' be no show? What fer?] anxiously queried another.
"Cause the elephant stepped on the coffee pot and they can't find the grounds."
Worth Remembering.
Always try to remember that it takes longer to correct a mistake than it does to make it.—Atchison Globe.
INSANE ARE CLEVER
Many in Asylums Earn Excellent Salaries.
There Are Scores of Lunatics Who Are Good Artists, and Some of Them Make Big Incomes by Their Art—Work Is Unreliable.
"I am sure," said a well-known mind doctor, in an interview with the New York Press, "you would be amazed at the clever work that is done by hundreds of men and women who are hopelessly insane. Some of it at least is as good as that done by sane people who earn large incomes.
"Among my patients today is one man whose skill with the brush would almost surely qualify him for high rank if he were only in possession of his senses. There are few of the great exhibitions which do not contain one or more of his canvases, and he has often received as much as $500 for a picture. And yet this man is as 'mad as a hatter,' the victim of terrible delusions and subject to violent homicidal attacks.
"Naturally, his work is unreliable. One week he will produce a masterly and beautiful picture, with genius in every line of it. The next he will paint the most weird picture, perfect nightmare in color which, curiously enough he always considers a masterpiece.
"And this man is no exception, for there are scores of lunatics who are quite excellent artists, and many of them make good incomes by their art. Several years ago an exhibition of pictures, the work of insane patients of the Bethlehem Royal hospital, was open to the public, and I can assure you many of them are beautiful works of art.
"There are hundreds of other lunatics who are just as skillful in music and literature. One of my own patients, who is hopelessly mad on one subject, and who is a perfect musical genius, has composed operas and symphonies and scores of songs which have won considerable fame for him and have brought him a small fortune. And I know of many other insane men and women who earn small and regular incomes in the same way."
"There are, similarly, hundreds of the insane who make a hobby, and sometimes a very profitable one, of writing. Indeed, many of our asylums have magazines which are almost entirely the work of the patients.
"Even in our public asylums there are hundreds of patients who make money by skilled work of one sort or another. Thus, in a county asylum I know well one man who does the most exquisite water color sketches, for which he receives from $15 to $50 each, and he has a market for as many as he can produce. Unfortunately, like so many mad artists, he is often unable or unwilling to finish a picture, and thus at least four-fifths of his work is wasted.
"Another patient, a former sea captain, spends his time in making the most perfect tiny models of ships, carved with infinite skill and pains from bone or ivory, for each of which he gets $5 to $10. For one very elaborate and beautiful model of a cathedral he was paid as much as $150, and it was certainly very cheap at the price. A third patient in the same asylum earns many dollars a year by cutting the cleverest silhouettes out of colored paper.
"Other patients are equally skilled in a very wide range of industries, from inventing toys and puzzles to making watches and picture frames, and from breeding canaries and mice to raising flowers. One very ingenious man actually made a clock, with no other material than pins, buttons, iron bed laths and pieces of knitting needles.
"The women, too, are just as clever as the men. I know one demented woman who writes the most charming books for children, and verses for Christmas cards, another who makes a good income, in her lucid hours, by illustrating books, and a third who draws several hundred dollars a year from royalties on her plays. And there are countless women in our public asylums who earn money in scores of ways, such as knitting, lace making, straw plaiting and leather work."
Watered Stock.
A milkman in a country town not far from New York was brought before the local court to answer a charge of adulteration of milk.
"You are charged," said the judge, "with a most serious offense, of selling adulterated milk. Have you anything to say in answer to the charge?"
"Well, your worship," answered the milkman, "the night before it was raining very hard, and the only cause I can give is the cow must have got wet through."—Harper's Weekly.
Hurrying Home.
Years ago, when there were only wooden sidewalks in the City of Winnipeg, Canada, holes were bored in the planks to let the water run through.
In the morning twilight a policeman found a man with the tip of his wooden leg in one of these holes and hurriedly walking around it.
"What are ye doing here?" asked the policeman.
"G'way offser," said the man. "Got to get home before the old lady wakes up."—Everybody's.
When You Want
The Heads, Feet, Tails Snouts, Neckbones or Chiterlings or any other part of the hog except the squeal go to
THE ZO
SAM
1004 Ninetee
1004 Nineteenth Street, Corner of Curtis
FINE WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS COORS' CELEBRATED BEER ON TAP
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WE S
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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.
Boost Colorado Products Patronize Home Industry
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2253 Welton St
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED or MONEY REFUNDED 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.
WE CARRY A COMPLETE LINE OF SUIT CASES, BAGS, COAT CASES,
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Second-hand Trunks Taken In Trade Used Trunks for Sale Cheap.
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2253 Welton St. Phone Champa 2048 Denver, Colo.
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ROBERT BRIDGES, ENGLAND’S POET LAUREATE
DOOLITTLE KEPT HIS PROMISE OF RAIN
LORD KITCHENER’S NEW ELECTORAL SCHEME
SECRETARY OF BIG FARM LABORERS’ UNION
A little surprise was. arranged for
the literary world by Mr. Asquith in
the appointment
of a poet laureate
whom few, if any,
. had considered a
pe possibility. The
ite ME) London illustrated
Me ee] papers came out
2 este with full-page
Ro” of Kipling, Noyes,
Ny Phillips, Hardy,
«a My) Masefield, Wat-
be son and Mrs.
~~ Meynell as likely
. aspirants, and
.Y then Mr. Asquith
5 handed the laurel
to Mr. Robert
ye Bridges,
Mm) «Mr. Bridges
Gentine Cau aN Tae
10)
a/
ay
tinguished English family, being the
son of John Bridges of St. Nicholas
and Walmer, in Kent, and a kinsman
of the Rev. Thomas Edward Bridges,
D. D., who was from 1823 to 1843
President of Corpus Christi college,
Oxford. At Eton, and later at Oxford,
Mr. Bridges was noted for his schol-
arship, but he found time to distin-
guish himself in athletics. He was an
enthusiastic cricketer and oarsman.
In 1867 he was placed in the second
class in the Final School of Litterae
Humaniores. After leaving the unt-
versity he spent a number of years in
foreign travel, familiarizing himselt,
to an extent unusual for an English-
man, with life on the continent and in
the far east.
On his return to London he became
a student of medicine at St. Bartholo-
mew’s hospital, receiving, in due
course, the degree of M. B. at Oxford.
He then began the practice of his pro-
fession, being regularly attached to
the staff of St. Bartholomew's hospital
and of the Children’s hospital in Great
Ormonde street. Retiring from prac-
tice in 1882, he married and left Lon-
don for his beautiful rural estate at
Yattendon, in Berkshire. Since that
time he has devoted himself exclu-
sively to literature, and particularly to
poetry.
It may be that one of the reasons
for the smallness of the company of
In the good old days before Dudley
Doolittle, representative of the Fourth
Kansas district,
became famed as
a weather proph-
et, his neighbors
- . depended on the
he fluttering of the
3 birds, the turning
we & of leaves and
vee Wy’) | barometers to tell
. # | them when it was
Sf | soing to rain. But
Stee fF | that was before
— 4 last Labor Day,
Ss when Doolittle
< came into his
bh ed own.
i wet On that day
Mie | Doolitle, who is a
Democrat, and
\ Fred S. Jackson,
Ne - Hoaablicat
became famed as
a weather proph-
et, his neighbors
- . depended on the
>. fluttering of the
> birds, the turning
en & of leaves and
vee Wy’) | barometers to tell
. # | them when it was
oe s| coing to rain. But
Se 7 | that was before
ES - last Labor Day,
bs when Doolittle
< came into his
bh ed own.
i wet On that day
Rie | Doolitle, who is a
Democrat, and
\ Fred §. Jackson,
his Republican
opponent for congress, were to speak
from the same platform at Lebo,
Kan. Jackson, by choice, was to talk
last.
It was a dreadfully hot and sultry
Just before leaving Egypt recently |
for a vistt in England, Lord Kitchen-
7——_ ¢r took a leading
pee part in giving ef-
—- fect to a very im-
portant political
@| reform in Egypt.
It consists partly
: wm| in the combina-
wr e tion of the gen-
7 @ | eral assembly and
3 ow legislative coun-
cil into a new
body, the legisla-
tive assembly,
ia and partly in the
oe Institution of a
fs va new electoral sys-
& tem. The new
legislative assem-
bly has to some
rE extent the right
lancinitiatinw ow
ie
With the winning of the strike in
Lancashire, England, farm laborer
trade unionism,
at the practicabil-
ity of which so
many people had
scoffed, shows {t-
self as something
of which account
must be taken.
The English Agri-
cultural — Labor-
ers’ union 4s
steadily — gather-
ing in members
in the most un-
likely counties,
and if it can win
in a struggle in
a district where
the highest agri-
cultural wages in
BPneland are: valid.
i | at the practicabil-
ity of which so
many people had
scoffed, shows It-
self as something
Ja Soo
t must be taken.
" The English Agri-
’ | cultural — Labor-
ee ers’ unfon Is
s. steadily — gather-
ing in members
~ in the most un:
likely —_countles,
and if it can win
in a struggle in
a district where
the highest agri-
cultural wages in
England are paid,
there seems to be every chance of its
giving a satisfactory account of itself
elsewhere. The difficulty of getting
farm hands into a union 1s great, be-
cuuse the men live at great distances
from one another, and because thelr
Mr. Bridges’ admirers is his devotion
to the most technical and abstruse
Problems of versecraft. His book,
“Milton's Prosody,” is, in the words ot
Dr. Herbert Warren in “Robert Bridg-
es and Contemporary Poets,” one ot
the most minute and illuminating con:
tributions ever made to the study of
English metric generally, and especial-
ly to that of Milton’s blank verse. In-
fluenced largely by the work of the
late W. J. Stone of Radley college, he
tas written a large number of poems
in the classical meters, poems in
which the quantities of the syllables,
rather than their accents, are the es-
sentials. Of this extremely difficult
‘sort of writing, which can never be
‘thoroughly appreciated except by
‘those intimately familiar with Greek
and Latin postry, a good example 1s
the “Peace Ode,” written in June,
1902, on the conclusion of the Boer
war. It is unrimed and in Alcaics.
Interesting to students of the sub-
ject as are Mr. Bridges’ experiments
in classical meters, it is on hiw work
done in the familiar English rhythms
that he must depend for popular es-
teem.
‘There can really be no difference of
opinion about Dr. Robert Bridges’
place in English poetry. Among the
men poets of today he 1s unquestion-
ably one of the most entirely poetical.
His only rival in fine lyrical quality
is Mr. W. B. Yeats, whose true work
in poetry is concentrated in some ten
or twelve poems, most of the copious
writing—plays and verse—which are
to be found in the fine edition of his
works that was published some years
back by Mr. A. H. Bullen being of a
markedly inferior quality.
If the office of laureate tx 80 be con-
fined to a man, there can not be a
question but that Dr, Bridges haa done
the most perfect lyrical work among
them, and that all his books will be
greatly enhanced in value by the ap-
pointment.
But the post of poet laureate, row
shorn of all its trappings of office, its
need for odes on state occasions and
the like, which Dr. Bridges is no more
likely to write than Mr. Yeats, should
obviously be given to the greatest man
et letters, to the man who {s not only
a fine poet and prose writer.
day, but no worse than the whole
state had experienced for many
weeks. Half the farmers in the au-
dience had given. up their corn crops
as lost on account of the drought.
The sky was clear and the sun burn-
ed like, a big coal of-fire.
Dudley started to speak at exactly
two o'clock. He looked at his watch
and said: -
“I promise you that within an hour
we shall have rain. Therefore, I shall
talk only 45 minutes so that Mr,
Jackson may have a chance to say a
few words.”
“It it rains, we'll vote for you!”
shouted many persons in the crowd.
Doolittle spoke 40 minutes and
then turned to sit down. Before he
reached his chair a torrent of rain
began to fall. ¢ Not only was Jackson
unable to speak that afternoon, but
so great was the rainfall that his
night meeting in the opera house was
canceled, too.
And inasmuch as Doolittle kept his
promise of rain, the crowd kept its
promise of votes.
nine. But the most interesting part
of the new reform is the novel meth-
od of electing members. The elec:
tors are to be divided into groups of
fifty, and each group will elect an
elector-delegate. The _electors-dele-
gate, in turn, will be divided into
groups, each representing about 200,-
000 inhabitants, and each such group
will elect one member to the assem.
bly. Every elector-delegate is bound
by law to keep in touch with his fifty
electors. ‘This system, which gives
the humblest peasant an immediate
voice in an election, has been de-
scribed as one of the most effective
methods of ascertaining the wishes of
a nation ever inyented. It also dis-
tributes the electoral right more
evenly. Hitherto each town, village.
or district had only one elector-dele-
gate, irrespective of its population,
and thus a large town might have
had no greater rights in an election
than a small village.
low wages make it impossible for
them to subscribe more than five
cents a week. As Mr. Edwards (the
secretary of the union), an assistant
secretary and two organizers receive
in all about $1,000 a year, the en-
thusiasts at the head of the organiza.
tion are hardly leading it for what
they~can get out of it! In Scotland a
farm servants’ union is making sound
progress, and is able to publish a re-
markable illustrated — twenty-page
monthly, the style and tone of which
reflect no small credit on those di-
recting the movement.
Telephone Wire.
There are 6,000,000 telephone sta-
tions in this country, and the amount
of wire made use of will total at 12,
000,000 miles. Some idea of what this
total means may be grasped when we
calculate that this length of wire could
be wrapped around the earth 500 times
and that {t would make fifty separate
Ines from the earth to the moon, but
there would not be half enough wire
to reach from the earth to our nearest
planetary neighbor.
Food Believed to Have Effect on
Character.
Men Who Have Given Thought to the
Subject Are of Opinion That
Proper Kind of Eating Is of
Immense Importance.
Nowadays eating has become a ver-
Itable science, and there are those
who assert that a man can alter his
very character if he will only Indulge
in the right kind of dict. The other
day the private secretary of the Ma-
harajah of Jhalawar gave a lecture on
food in London, in the course of which
he stated that the eating of onions is
conducive to “darkness of spirit.” He
also averred that the caste system in
India fs largely regulated by diet.
Thus, those of the highest caste only
eat vegetarian meals in order to keep
thelr souls pure. Members of an-
other caste are allowed to eat meat so
that they may become fitted to be war-
rlors; while the lowest caste of all
eat “stale, flat foods,” which suit their
unspiritual natures,
‘Two noted German professors gave
it as their opinion not long ago that if
people would eat plenty of chalk they
would have not only more energy and
happiness, but considerably increased
brain power.
A doctor in Philadelphia recently
stated that no one who eats a pound
of macaroni daily will ever become a
drunkard, but he also stipulated that
the would-be teetotaler should live en-
Urely on a vegetable diet and never
touch meat in any circumstances.
In direct contradiction to the “vege-
tarianism for soulfulness” theory is
that of a New York woman. She be-
Meves that there is nothing like fine
chops and glasses of beer to inspire
‘poets and writers, and she opened a
‘restaurant for the express purpose of
‘providing those who would woo the
‘muse with the proper kind of diet.
‘She has no patience with people who
‘would become “soulful” on prunes and
lentils. and her “inn for bohemians,”
as her establishment is called, has
certainly been well patronized by bud-
ding Tennysons and future Merediths.
‘The belief is gaining ground in
many quarters that if you wish to
stave off old age and to have the feel-
ing of perennial youth and gaiety, no
matter what your actual years may be,
you cannot do better than eat plenty
of sugar. One of the pioneers of this
theory {s Professor Metchnikoff, who
has made exhaustive experiments to
prove his statements.
There are some who even assert
that not only does the frequent eating
of sugar keep one from growing old,
but that if a man or woman will begin
the sugar treatment, even after senil-
ity has set in, the effect will be so
great as to amount.to a complete
change in his or her character.
Moneker.
Moneker, or moniker slang, and
probably “thieves Latin” for “a name”
has for some time puzzled those who
try to follow such graceless fag-ends
of language back to their originals.
One who has evidently devoted much
study to the subject says that “in ac-
cordance with the law of back-slang
moneker is but cognomen disguised.
‘The objection does not lie that a pure-
ly Latin noun is above the reach of
the thief in his kennel, for the Alsatla
of the mediaeval thief was the kitchen
of the monastery, whence Latin came
out with the garbage. With the tre-
mendous vitality of word roots the
master-of back-slang inverted the
order of root and prefix and cognomen
was rearranged into nomencog. The
next inversion took hold of the first
syllable of the root and inverted it;
the result is mon-en-cog. From this
to moneker is the easy progress of
word degradation in the pronouncia-
tion of those unworthy to speak. It
is for this reason that, if any prefer-
ence is preferable in speech so low,
moneker is the preferred spelling.”
‘There does not appear to be finality
about this derivation, however. Can
any reader help us out?
Countess Dances 15,000 Miles.
The Countess Lambsdorff has just
given her unique memoirs to the pub-
lie in book form, and St. Petersburg ts
full of talk about them. The author
states that she attended 225 dances
prior to her marriage and 557 after
her wedding. Before she was married
she received 18 offers of marriage at
different balls, and afterward 272 men
sent her love missives, while 100 more
enthusiasts and temperamental gen-
tlement threatened. to shoot them:
selves in their despair.
‘The number of dances which Count:
ess Lambsdorff takes to her credit is
nothing short of stupendous. She took
part, she says, in 2,934 square dances,
4,500 waltzes and 600 polkas. She had
1,700 partners, of which, she declares,
1,200 were stupid, 300 boresome, 120 in-
offensive, 22 nice and only three witty.
‘The countess estimates that she has
danced over 15,000 miles; as_ she at
tended 7,934 dances, this estimate 1s
modest.
timmavion’® Used labMan. Catchers,
Motion picture theaters now play a
part in the catching of criminals in
Bohemia. When a criminal of impor-
tance is “wanted” by the police author-
ities of Prague and difficulty is experi-
enced in finding him, a photograph 1s
sent to every motion picture theater
in the country and this is shown, with
@ short explanatory note, until the
criminal is found or the order for the
display of the photograph 1s with-
drawn.
WIN’S AWAKENING
tyranny they said: “As bossy as Win
Neffens’ wife.”
Win Neffens’ wife had been named
Serena before her characteristics had
@ chance to develop. She was pretty
ina birdiike way, with snapping
black eyes and a pert twist of the
neck and a general snug, trim round-
ness of person that reminded one ot
@ sparrow. When Win first knew her
he was charmed with her little air of
proprietorship and the way she ruled
him and ordered him around.
It was pleasing to think that a girl
took enough interest in him to act as
though she owned him. Nobody had
ever interfered with his having his
own way before and it amused him to
Iet such a scrap of a girl bend him,
‘a six-footer and broad in proportion,
to her will. After the novelty wore
off it was different,
Still, being a good-natured and
placid fellow, he endured it and was
not particularly unhappy about it till
the question of joining the Antelopes
came up. The Antelopes were primar-
fly a fraternal order, but they were
fitting up real club rooms, with a
reading room, billiard and card rooms,
and Three Pines had never had any-
thing of the sort before,
Up to that time when fell the
shades of night and business men In
Main street shut up shop there was
no place to go but home, and they
went, If clustering around the eve:
ning lamp reading the Daily Clarion
and the Farm Journal ever palled
they dla not voice their boredom, be-
cause the case was hopeless. With
the advent of the Antelopes a great
light shone out. All the male popula
tion hastened to join the Antelopes.
Then and there Serena Neffens de
lvered her ultimatum.
“Don’t you let me hear of your go-
ing near those Antelopes, Win Nef-
fens!” she told her husband. “It's
perfectly scandalous the way the men
are acting about it. I for one am go-
ing to keep my husband at home!
Where should a married man be but
home, I'd like to know? Pretty idea,
| deserting his wife and family just to
-waste money on cigars and billiards
and gossip! You don't see me going
out to clubs evenings, do you? Well,
you don't go, either!”
Win Neffens walked out of the
house without a word, as was usual
with him when Serena talked, but he
wore a@ frown, which was unusual.
Every man in town but himself was
going to join the Antelopes and he
wanted to join, also. It would be nice
to have a comfortable club to drop
into occasionally—Serena _ needn't
have been so peremptory and selfish.
He felt rebellious. It was while he
was fuming bitterly that the tempter
in the shape of Ben Sprankle got hold
of him.
“S'pose Serena kicked up a row, eh?"
asked that astute elderly personage
when Win told him shortly that he
wasn't going to join. “Huh! Don't be
an idiot! You join anyhow and she'll
never know it! The boy's won't tell
on yeh!”
In a fit of reckless daring Win Net.
fens followed Sprankle’s advice and
with the freemasonry of a small
town all the other members . were
aware that they were to keep still
about it at home. Thereupon Win
launched out on his double life.
When he was date to supper he ex-
plained that he had been talking with
a traveling man. Besides, his business
Jinereased so that every once In a
| while he had to go back to the store
after supper to work on the books and
his correspondence.
It wore on Win and he developed
nerves. Serena was always lecturing
on the sins of the Antelopes. She
called the club a home-breaker and
said she, for one, wouldn't stand it the
way the other women did.
Win was always guiltily expecting
the blow to fall. When Serena did not
come home one day till a half hour
after he arrived for supper, he took
ono look at her face and knew the
blow had fallen. Somebody had told
her. As he surveyed her standing
gazing at him breathlessly, biting her
lip, collecting her forces for one grand
explosive attack, a curious calm fell
over him, the calm of despair. Then
| to his utter amazement, he heard him-
self speaking, or, rather, roaring. Hoe
even pounded the table with his big
fist.
“What do you mean,” he heard com-
ing from own. lps, “by being away
from your home this time of the day?
What do you mean by keeping me
waiting for my supper? Gadding
| about, gossiping, neglecting your bus-
band and your duty—"
“Wh—wh—why, Win!” gasped his
startled wife. He had never in all the
| years even raised his voice before.
“[ tell you, I won't stand it!” he
concluded at the end of five minutes’
heated remarks that seemed to form
themselves, “This is what drives a
| an to clubs! You can get your sup-
an: a iy a a ees a iti
Double Reason.
Maud—I understand Mr. Pryde has
stopped trying to trace his family
tree. I suppose the further back he
went the harder it got.
Jack—Yes, and the further back he
went the harder his ancestors got.
NEW RECIPES FOR POTATOES
Dishes That Will Be Popular With All
Who Are Fond of the Univer-
‘sal Edible.
Every housekeeper likes new and
tasty ways of dishing up potatoes, and
these two recipes are particularly
‘good.
| For potato cakes take cold boiled
mashed potatoes, dredge lightly with
flour and season well with salt and
Pepper, adding a little bit of -yeast.
Mix the potatoes with a little cold
milk into a paste and roll out into
round shape about one inch in thick-
ness. Place a lump of butter In a
frying pan and put in the cake, cov-
ering it and allowing it to cook. When
one side is brown turn, and a little
more butter and brown the other side.
Drain the cake well and garnish with
parsley and serve hot.
For potato duchess, select mealy
boiled potatoes and beat them with a
fork lightly while they are still hot.
Have ready a couple of eggs well
beaten (the whites and yolks separ-
ately), the whites being beaten to a
stiff froth. Beat the yolks into the
potatoes and season to taste; then add
a tablespoonful of butter and two of
cream. Whip all together until
creamy and then whip in lightly the
beaten whites of the eggs. Place the
mixture over the fire in a saucepan
and stir well together until thorough-
ly hot, then serve.
CHICKEN WITH CREAMED PEAS
Cutlets a Dish Worth Serving at Any
Home or More Formal Dinner
Party.
Cook @ four pound fowl in boiling
water to cover, to which has been add-
ed seven slices carrot, two slices tur-
nip, one stalk celery, one bay leaf,
three sprigs thyme and one small on-
fon. Add salt to water when fowl ts
half done. Cool, remove meat and
chop. Melt one-fourth cupful butter,
add one-half cupful flour, and pour
on gradually one cupful chicken stock
and one-third cupful cream. Season
with salt, cayenne, and a slight grat-
ing of nutmeg. Moisten meat with
sauce and spread on a plate to cool.
Shape in cutlet form, dip in crumbs,
egg and crumbs, insert a one and one-
half inch tubular piece of macaron{ In
each cutlet, fry in deep fat, and drain
on brown paper. Arrange aroun
creamed peas.
anata oreatiniee.
“Melon delight” is a novel and re
freshing dessert. As in all those des:
serts calling for cantaloupe, only those
of the finest flavor should be selected.
Cut the melons lengthwise, in halves
or thirds, according to size. Remove
the seeds and spongy tissue. Fill
each with vanilla ice cream and some
very thin slices of fresh peach. Dec-
crate with two or three cherries,
candied or fresh.
Occasionally, when- the cream 1s
served with these melons, the pulp 4s
scooped out, diced and flavored, and
then returned to the shell, with the
cream and other garnishes. The va-
rious flavors are in that case more
likely to be amalgamated, if one con-
aiders that desirable. Usually the
flavors in such sweets are better for
being kept distinct.
‘Baan Mold
| A reader who asked for a thicken-
ing medium to use with fruit juices
to replace gelatine, ete., will find this
simple dish desirable, Add a little
sugar according to the acidity of the
fruit, to whatever fruit 1s to be used.
Set in a rather cool oven until the
juice flows freely. Soak a teacupful
of sago in a pint and a half of cold
water for an hour, then bring to a
boil in a saucepan, then simmer gen-
tly until clear and rather thick, Add
halt a pint of the fruit juice, boll to-
gether a few minutes and sweeten to
taste, Pour into a wet mold or bowl,
and set away until firm enourh to
turn out. Serve with sugar and
cream.
Mayonnaise of Chicken in Shells.
Pour a teaspoonful of mayonnaise
Into some china shells and fill up each
with finely minced chicken, a little
minced ham, shredded lettuce, strips
of hard boiled egg and a stoned olive.
Cover it all thoroughly with mayon-
naise and sprinkle with minced pars-
ley and sleved yolk of egg. Any re-
mains of meat can be served in this
way, to which a chopped up anchovy
is a delicious addition.
RNG cere ee
Stove polish, when mixed with tur
pentine and applied in the usual man-
ner, is blacker, more glossy and more
durable than when mixed with any
other liquid. The turpentine prevents
rust, and when put on an old rusty
stove will make it look as well ar
new. s
To Stop a Leak.
To stop a leak, mix whiting and yel-
‘low soap into a thick paste with a lit-
tle water. Apply this to the place
where the leakage is and it will be
instantly stopped. A visit from the
plumber will still be necesary, but
there is no special hurry for more
radical repairs.
When Milk Curdles.
| should you ever have trouble with
milk curdiing when you put it on to
boil try adding a liberal pinch of bi-
carbonate of soda to each quart of
milk before putting it on the stove.
Leftover Desserts.
Cut sponge cake in cubes, use what
gelatine you have, put in a glass dish
In any way you wish, mix some
whipped cream through {t and pile it
on top as well.
A Big Gift to the Pubiie
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THE REPUBLICAN’S news
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service, gives our readers every
morning all the news yathered from
every part of the world.
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Stage wigs for rent; theatrical |
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PPPS OO DISS SISOS SSIS CLI GE
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A Word to the
Borrower
ETA US
IF you are a bor-
rower of this
paper, don’t you
think It is an in-
justice to the man who is.
paving for it? He may be
jooking for it at this very
moment. Make it areg-
ular visitor to your home.
‘The subscription price is.
an investment that will
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e+
In the Latest of the Styles
ee ae
—e |.|lCl\A ee
be HS ee Ak
ieee | Lee
Mooet uy pink charmeuse with tunic of chiffon finished with pands of
beaded net. Extremely full skirt. Y decollette.
TO BE POPULAR THIS FALL! FOR THE NEGLIGEE OR NIGHT
FOR THE NEGLIGEE OR NIGHT
Charming Robes in the Lightest of
Silks Well Suited for Wear on
Separate Occasions.
Forecast of Styles That Have Been
Settled On as the “Smartest
of the Smart."
In the majority of fall models wom-
en will look older, This is because the
bonnet, mushroom and bell shapes
have given way to the hat with an up-
turned brim, and to be strictly in style
the brim raust turn at the back
If you are young and fair to look
on, by all means wear a chinband on
your new fall hat. This can be of vel-
vet ribbon, taffeta or moire or of tulle
and maline. It can have a fastening
by means of a hook and eye, or the
streamers can be tied at one side, co-
quettishly under one ear or just in
front. ‘The chinband will be noticeable
on hats for afternoon and evening.
One “cap” is of velvet, with a puffed
erown and a visor which comes down
in front. At one side is a panache
mounting to a great height and giving
a dashing effect that would look well
with a military suit.
On a black velvet hat for evening
there is used chantilly lace for the
brim and for the wired bow at the
back that holds the turned-up brim.
‘The sugar-scoop hat of black velvet
will be a typical fall style. It has no
clearly defined crown and the greatest
height is at the back. The tilt is
down toward the nose, and a pandeau
is frequently the means to the end.
In a boat-shaped hat the length from
front to back is emphasized by a hort-
zontal line of feathers. The brim flares
up decidedly at the side.
There has been inspiration in- the
Jockey’s cap, which is now shown in
green velvet, the brim turned up at
the back and extending out in front.
Wired loops rise at the back.
A visor cap has a satin extension in
front, a low crown and loops of ribbon
‘at each side pointing backward,
Alluring robes in delicately colored
crepe de chine and white lace are list-
ed as nightgowns, but may quite as
properly be worn as negligees, and
most women buy them for that pur-
pose. The back and front, each cut
from a single breadth of double-width
crepe de chine, are so gradually
sloped from the lower edge—finished
with an ‘a-jour-headed hem—to the
bust, that nowhere is there an atom
too much fullness. At the top the
crepe de chine widths at back and
front are opened at the right side and
drawn in a point to that shoulder,
while the other side is caught under
the left arm. The entire lower sec-
tion is swung from a deep yoke of
white lace whose neck is drawn taut
by a ribbon run beading after the
robe is on, for there is no other open-
ing and no fastening to bother with.
The elbow sleeves are simply wide
puffs of lace ending in narrow ruffles
gathered with ribbon and beading.
PRETTY COMBINATION.
IE
cdl
| Ti \
(WG
Cir ;
peel
y
‘ i]
oy
Hidden Sashes.
Half hidden sashes are considered
tne grand chic. The sash frankly en-
circles the waist and forms a more or
less conspicuous bow at the back.
Then the ends pass under a tunic of
lace chiffon or machine embroidery—
according to the nature of the costume
—emerging at the knee to fall over
the skirt. Sometimes the ends of the
sash are knotted under the semi-
transparent tunic and caught against
the skirt, to give the clinging effect
now fashionable. Indeed, most sash
ends are now attached to the skirt
1n some fashion, for floating ends are
anything but smart. If the sash is
not sewed against the skirt at its
ends, it is at least substantially
weighted, so that even when the
wearer dances the ends fall limp and
straight.
Women Wear Sandals.
| Cothurnes, the quaint laced foot-
‘gear of the season, may lead us to the
‘sandal period again. A great many
‘smart women are wearing sandals in
‘thieir homes, and, of course, any num:
‘ber favor sandals for the country, but
‘sandals on city pavements are neith:
‘er sensible nor practical, and it {s
to be hoped they will not become
peuninniahie:
The combined knickers and camisole
has now become very popular wear,
and here we show a pretty design.
‘The camisole has a square opening
edged with beading and lace, the lat-
ter only finishing the armhole.
Wide beading forms the waist-band,
also edges the legs, to which are set
deep material frills, trimmed with in-
sertion, tucks and lace.
Materials required: 3 yards 40
inches wide, 1% yard narrow, 2%
yards wide beading, 2% yards inser-
tion, 2 yards wide and 3% yards nar-
row lace, 4 yards wide and 1% yard
narrow ribbon
.__ Fall Colors.
Among the fall colors is a curious
shade of green known as Bakst green.
Copper, brick, silver and violet in ex.
quisite tones are among the colors of
beautiful new fabrics.
e
Aeystone Social Club
. EVERYTHING for the
PLEASURE of
GENTLEMEN
Buffet Connected
1859 Champa Street or 910 Nineteenth Street
Phone Champa 1379
SYL. STEWART, President JAS. F. CLARK, Manager
The Market Company
1633-1639 ARAPAHOE STREET. =
A Stop anda Halt Toward 47th\stctram Daniele a. Flener Tower:
Phones Main 190, 189, 169.
PEOPLE are particular ~
what they eat
We cater to the very best families in the city, and supply only the finest of
Fresh Fruit and Vegetables
The Best Brands s and the Choicest of
wReatte Groceries its cet’ Meats
Gir Wholesale "De parhileab Caters Bapeciaily’to Bullman Dining’ Gar
eotivanl Tanta tean Service
Our market is a model of perfect sanitation and cleanliness, and
Ainge @eruaverrovrenieu Me Tone lesion tesa Heng
BROWER & SCHUCK
REAL ESTATE FARM LANDS
311 Cooper Building Telephone Champa 1962
DENVER, COLORADO Residence Phone Main 7845
HENRY BECK JOHN ENGSTROM
Beck @ Engstrom _
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN |
Wi Li da ||
ines, Liquors an
Cigars |
WesternsAgents for Minneapolis Grain Belt Beer and Carnegie Porter, Pripps
Imported Beer and Bock Ol.
1644-46-48-50 Larimer Street
Phone Main 1053 Denver, Colorade
i ALL KINDS OF REPAIR WORK NEATLY DONE. ee
REFINISHING A SPECIALTY.
The Welton Street Furniture Co.
F. R. LINDENMIER, Prop. \
: 2621 WELTON STREET
New and Second Hand Furniture Bought, Sold
and Exchanged
We Pay the Highest Cash Price for Furniture
PHONE MAIN 8247. DENVER, COLO.
FD PHONE YORK 5391 722.24 EAST 26TH AVE.
OY of FIVE POINTS
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\ # JOHN W. DAWSON
a Ki Successur to A. M. JORGENSEN
GOOD LUCK
FINE HORSESHOEING
Blacksmithing, ee Carriage Work
REPAIRING AND PAINTING
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A first-class Mortuary establishment. First aid to the bereaved in the
$ time of death of loved ones, Prices below competitors. Polite servce :
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+ PARLORS 1925 Arapahoe Street z
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PHONE MAIN 61 23—Day or Night
RESIDENCE PH ONE YORK 7992.
PARLORS, 1830 ARAPAHOE ST.
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J. R. CONTEE CURTIS M.
Pres. and Mgr. ma & @ Gg HARRIS.
Licensed P} ess. Asst. Manager
Embalmer Se be mf sk @® and Funeral
Frank Rogers SS Wea es Director.
‘Assistant Dae aereesa 9c eee ee ws
Funeral 4 Mi eH ay
Director. aaa pata es =Lady Assistant
POLITE SERVICE TO ALL.
Ambulance and Carriages Furnished for All Occasions
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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)
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1023 EIGHTEENTH ST.
We Have the Best Equipped Outfit in the West to Produce the Goods
Sewed Soles ...........60c 75c, $1.00 Resoling from heel to heel, entire
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Rubber Heels ....................506 SHOES MADE TO ORDER,
Turn Rips ................15¢ to 25¢| Tailor Made reer rere 1)
Patches ..................156 to 256 WE CAN FIT ANY KIND OF
We JJse the Best Oak Lether. DEFORMED FOOT.
REPAIRING WHILE YOU WAIT
WALTER CAMBERS ¢ignt0?3, st
W. S. THOMPSON, Proprietor
Fine Wine, Liquor and Cigars
1701 Arapahoe Street, Denver, Colo.
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REN Five Points Grocery
ae oe ERED) © 2700 WELTON STREET
SEM SA Were es PHONE 8488 MAIN
SENAY 2 A on Re BEE:
a ees UAE “2, The Only Up-to-Date Grocery
Sr eee and Market at Five Points
Sage SS Ae
ORG See will pay you!
Soon = oan an MEATS i you are not
NER enw aeRlgNe buying your food supply from us,
to make a change.
MARKET DEPARTMENT
We are handling nothing but the highest quality meats, fish and
poultry. At present we are getting by express shipment strictly fresh
caught fish, salmon, trout, cat fish, halibut and oysters.
FRESH VEGETABLES EVERY MORNING