Colorado Statesman
Saturday, May 30, 1914
Denver, Colorado
Page text (machine-generated)
PATRONIZE MERCHANTS WHO ADV. IN THE PEOPLE'S PAPER
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
THE JOURNAL OF THE WEST.
LABOR SHALL BE FREE
RAGE COUNTRY PARTY
Colored Mayor Of Battersea
VOL. XX.
A short time ago the Negro press of America had many good and complimentary things to say of J. R. Archer because of his election as Mayor of the borough of Aattersea, an English municipality. It was felt on this side that his election was an exposition of the Negro's standing in that foreign country. We were glad enough to contribute our mite to the flow of praise but with a sense of reservation. It was something, in that he was elected to a position that stood out, it had to be admitted. Knowing the general social situation we were fearful, not of what has happened, but of some mistake, a hoax, or something that would mean nothing in the end. In time our doubt gave away to admiration, thinking of the supposed fine civil and political spirit of a community that chose a Negro as its head, to administer its affairs. In the language of Cyrano De Bergerac, it was all too good to be true.
"All that glitters is not gold." The startling information comes that the Negro mayor is being "systematically" harrassed by the white people of the borough. He has complained to the borough council, and which complaint is set forth in the publications of that community. A clipping from one of these publications had this
"After patient toleration of numberless jibes and taunts because of his colour, Battersea's mayor, Mr. J. A. Archer, has at last disclosed to the Borough Council the distressing position in which he finds himself. During the short time he had been mayor, he said, in addressing the council, he had been made to suffer very considerably, apparently because he was a man of color. He had been assailed with the foulest inuendoes, and he had forwarded to him some of the most disgraceful letters and postcards it was possible to imagine. Within the past few weeks he had received at the Town Hall a letter casting the foulest aspersions upon his mother for being the parent of a black mayor of Battersea. Another letter was of so scuarilous a character that he was seriously considering whether he should not take legal action with regard to it. His position had been rendered almost intolerable by reason of these letters and by the action of certain members of the council who objected to a man of colour being Mayor. Born at Liverpool, Mr. Archer is the son of an Irish woman and a native of the West Indies."
So after all it turns out that the white people of Battersea were not in love with Mr. Archer, although some of them saw fit to choose him as the head of the municipal government. Our fear for the fate of the Negro Mayor was not without some foundation. He suffered from a new direction. Our own country with all of its advertised and real meanness has not gone the way of this English borough. Had he been elected in America by a white constituency he would have been respected. Even in the South where Negro opposition is at its worst, when men are appointed to office they are respected. Not until the time comes for a possible change owing to change of administration do we find white citizens opposing them. When the terms of Negro office holders are expiring every source of pressure is exhausted to have them go. But while in office they enjoy the respect and consideration of all men.
So Mr. John Bull, who thought to teach the Americans how to emancipate the Negro, and in the meanwhile, mind you, secretly abetted the South, has exhibited a bit of malignity, of which, it was not thought capable. The municipality of Battersea has tossed Mr. Archer, mayor, high up in the air, as a sportsman does his clay pigeons, in order to get a first rate crack at him. We long since have been suspicious of that country's fairness. Many years ago, perhaps thirty, the London Illustrated Times had the observation of an Englishman. He said in effect that in America all men were "free" except about four million blacks. These were limited in various ways. However, if the conditions were the same here as there, if we found black men jostling English workmen out of their jobs, we would have the same social relation.
The impression of that observation was most profound. It was in that impressionable period of life when men hate best and love best.
Our own county was being bitterly assailed by the Negroes, by us, and with that zeal common to all youth at oppression, of its kind at any rate, because of the treatment of the Negro. Lynching had just begun, a thing we got very much used to in time. But at the beginning the news of a lynching was the signal of assembling of Negroes in every Northern city where they were in considerable numbers. They did nothing but
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resolve but it was their most—their only means of protest. We, in our deep distress, as we viewed it, turned to England, the land of Wilberforce, very much as the earth-wearied think of heaven, a possible haven, even if never attained. We cited England to shame our own.
All, of course, did not read the "Illustrated Times," consequently the thought still obtained that England was for the Negro race. But slowly it becomes known that the observer in that publication was a prophet. He was even more than a prophet if it were possible. He had it that the industrial situation influenced by Negro workmen would be the cue for the English denouement. Negro workmen have not caused it, nor the thought of them. It makes for a condition fairly unthinkable—but it is a stern reality. Perhaps it is not the proper thing to judge the island by Battersea. We have more than Battersea. We have watched the pendulum swing as it concerned the coming of the prize fighter Johnson. It accelerated. John Bull grew red in the face and talked of its South African provinces. And we, in a measure, agreed with him. But we can not take on this Battersea business without show of feeling. Only a few Negroes are in that borough, perhaps not a half dozen; perhaps Archer's family only. And yet we have this demonstration. It is plain that we have something to be thankful in that our home is in blessed old America.—The Freeman.
PRESS LETTER
COLORADO BUSINESS MEN'S
HOME RULE LEAGUE
Fighting Prohibition In Virginia
Two thousand citizens of Richmond, embracing its foremost men in commerce and in professions assembled in the Academy of Music one night last week, adopted as their own a platform formulated by the Virginia Association for Local Self-government, declaring the Associations' allegiance to the principle of Local Self government enunciated by Jefferson and re-affirmed by President Wilson, and its hostility to State-Wide Prohibition, which threatens to nullify that principle.
In many respects the mass meeting was the most remarkable ever held in the city. On the stage, vice-presidents and sponsors for the giant gathering, sat one hundred citizens of Richmond who have attained high standing in the city's life, and crowding the Academy of Music from the ground floor tothe topmost gallery was an assembly of citizens representing practically every art and industry that in aggregate make up the
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sum of Richmond's assets. The meeting marked the beginning of a conflict that according to one of the speakers of the evening will shake the state from end to end and cause untold bitterness and recrimination before its final adjustment.
Grocers Oppose Agitation
By a vote of more than two to one the National Retail Grocers Association at its annual meeting in Louisville, Kentucky, May 21, adopted a strong Anti-Prohibition resolution. The vote came after a fight lasting more than an hour. the most bitter of any during the four days meeting and one that proved the feature of the final session.
Citizens Of Cincinnati Protest
A spectacular protest against prohibition agitation was staged in Cincinnati last Friday night when ten thousand members of various industrial and social organizations of the city marched to Music Hall to hear facts concerning the "dry" movement by representative speakers. At 7:00 o'clock aerial bombs were exploded in every district as the signal of the beginning of the most colossal demonstration against prohibition in the history of the city. Weeks had been devoted to planning details of the affair, thousands of buttons and flags were distributed and emblematic banners with appropriate legends were borne by thousands of marchers.
An Awakening In Turkey
A dispatch from Constantinople:
"With a view of raising the moral standard of the Turkish people and to break the opium habit the Government has decided to break from that part of the Mohammedan faith which demands prohibition of the manufacture and consumption of alcoholic beverages, and to induce several Austrian and German brewers to establish plants in the Ottoman empire is offering valuable consesions."
Turkey at the present time is the only prohibition country in the world and probably the poorest, while its people are a race of drug and cigarette fiends.
What Reform Next?
Those of the American citizens who delighted in Roosevelt's vigorous denunciation of "mollycoddes" should glance about them and notice "whither we are drifting" in the current induced by Prohibition agitation. The agitators have declared war not only upon the open saloon but upon the private "snack" at home or in the retired precincts of the social club Reports from various meetings justify the prediction that the next step will be
RACE NEWS
Baltimore, Md., May 20.—The will of Mrs. William M. Elliott filed for probate May 20, provided a fund of $150,000 for the creation of a corporation to educate Negroes in this state.
Paris, May 16.—The suit for $10,000 damages brought by W. H. Galvin, a prize fight manager, against "Jack" Johnson was settled outside of court today. Johnson's wife complained that Galvin had insulted her in front of the restaurant Au Filet de Seul on February 24. Johnson attacked Galvin, striking him on the jaw with his fist, dislocating it.
colored voters in the county. The support of these and that of the white farmers throughout the country, by whom he is held in high esteem, will elect him. His prospects are very bright.
Tampa, Fla., May 18.—The encampment of colored Pythians here is in celebration of the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Grand Lodge of Pythias, jurisdiction of Florida. Yesterday, and all day today, bands of colored Pythians of the uniform rank of their order, and members of the Florida Dental Medical and Pharmaceutical Association, which
Our people will do well to take special interest in their daily employments, and do everything possible to please those for whom they are working. At one time it was considered that the Negro had an option on certain kinds of work; but that day has passed. You must do your duty, and do it willingly, for there are others waiting for the opportunity—Mobile Weekly Press.
London, England, May 22.—Dr. H. Reginald Smith of Chicago, Ill., is at the Royal Eye Hospital, where there are 500 patients daily. He is doing special nose and throat work with such skill that he has attracted the attention of several English professors. He has matriculated at this hospital for six months and will take up other work before returning to the States. This is the longest time that an Afro-American from the States has paid for hospital matriculation.
Charleston, W. Va., May 19. For the first time a colored man was placed on a Kanawha county ticket when C. H. James was selected by the Progressive party in convention here today as one of its five candidates for the lower house of the legislature, being third in a field of seven. Mr. James, who is a wholesale produce and commission merchant, came into political prominence two years ago when as one of the two colored delegates from this state to the Progressive national convention, he was referred to at some length by Col. Roosevelt in a speech before that body. There are 2,500 against the use of tobacco. Already certain religious publications have seriously asserted that no man is leading a Christian life who uses either liquor or tobacco.
NO 40
colored voters in the county. The support of these and that of the white farmers throughout the country, by whom he is held in high esteem, will elect him. His prospects are very bright.
Tampa, Fla., May 18. - The encampment of colored Pythians here is in celebration of the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Grand Lodge of Pythias, jurisdiction of Florida. Yesterday, and all day today, bands of colored Pythians of the uniform rank of their order, and members of the Florida Dental Medical and Pharmaceutical Association, which holds its convention in conjunction with the encampment, arrived in the city. The assembly of the uniform rank is ordered for tonight at Camp Andrews, as Plant Field is designated by the colored fraternal order. Sessions of the professional men are already begun, having opened this morning at 9 o'clock, and tonight the opening session will be held at the Beulah Baptist church. The welcome to the city, musical programs and other features will mark the opening meetings.
Columbus, May 17.—Within 24 hours after having been granted a pardon by the governor, Robert Garnes colored, who had served a 33 year sentence in the Ohio penitentiary, died of tuberculosis in a hospital here today. Garnes was removed to the hospital soon after the pardon was granted. He was received at the penitentiary May 3, 1881, to serve a life sentence for murder, having been convicted of killing three members of a family by the name of Scott in Union county. Jealousy over a girl is said to have been the cause of the killing. During his stay at the penitentiary Garnes was never outside of the prison walls. He entered the prison at the age of 23. For many years he spent his time laboring in the bolt shop, but his health began to fail recently and his friends and relatives petitioned the governor to save him from dying behind the prison bars.
Railroad Ties Used in New York.
Out of the 135,000,000 railroad ties used each year in the United States.
New York supplies about six per cent.
and consumes about 16,000,000.
For Unpleasant Odors.
For Unpleasant Odors.
Burnt coffee will free the house from cooking odors. So will a smouldering piece of string. A handful of lavender flowers in a bowl with lemon peel covered with boiling water imparts a gentle fragrance to an entire apartment.
The Little Savoy
A. C. LiNDSEY, Proprietor SHORT ORDERS ICE CREAM and CONFECTIONERIES
CONFECTIONERIES Phone CHAMPA 2570
2721 Welton Str
Five Points C
Mrs. F. A. NEWMAN
ICE CREAM A S
Phone MAIN 4
817-819 TWENTY-SIXTH AVE
Welton Street, Denver
Points Creamery
Mr. F. A. NEWMAN, Proprietor
REAM A SPECIALTY
Phone MAIN 4395
ENTY-SIXTH AVE., DENVER, COLO.
2721 Welton Street, Denver
Five Points Creamery
Phone MAIN 4395 817-819 TWENTY-SIXTH AVE., DENVER, COLO.
OHN K. RETTIG
Fancy and Staple Groceries
1864 CURTIS STREET
th. Denver, Colo.
JOHN K. RE Meats, Fancy and St 1864 CURTIS ST
Meats, Fancy and Staple Groceries 1864 CURTIS STREET
GIVE ME
Blatz
BEER
The
Curtis
Park
Floral
Company
FLORAL DESIGNS PUT UP WHILE
YOU WAIT
CHOICE PLANTS AND CUT FLOWERS
GREENHOUSES: Thirty-Fourth and Curt
TELEPHONE, MAIN 1511
C. H. SHIRLEY, Pres.
PAUL J. SHIRLEY, Se
THE ATLAS I
Courteous Treatment
Leaders in Pres
any
IS PUT UP WHILE
YOU WAIT
AND CUT FLOWERS CONSTANTLY
ON HAND
S: Thirty-Fourth and Curtis Streets
N 1511 DENVER, COLO
Y, Pres. J. C. HAMPSON, Vice Pres.
PAUL J. SHIRLEY, Sec. and Treas.
ATLAS DRUG CO.
us Treatmet. Right Prices
Leaders in Prescription
The
Curtis
Park
Floral
Company
FLORAL DESIGNS PUT UP WHILE
YOU WAIT
CHOICE PLANTS AND CUT FLOWERS CONSTANTLY
ON HAND
GREENHOUSES: Thirty-Fourth and Curtis Streets
TELEPHONE, MAIN 1511 DENVER, COLO
C. H. SHIRLEY, Pres. J. C. HAMPSON, Vice Pres PAUL J. SHIRLEY, Sec. and Treas.
Courteous Treatmet. Right Prices Leaders in Prescription
A Dollar
Kept, with the home merchants it is benefit. Business men should awake this dollar at home and make a bid for
the home merchants it is a messenger of continuous business men should awake to the importance of keeping it home and make a bid for it by judicious advertising.
Kept. with the home merchants it is a messenger of continuous benefit. Business men should awake to the importance of keeping this dollar at home and make a bid for it by judicious advertising.
VINEGAR
PHONE MAIN 3028
Corner Nineteenth.
Store No. 1.
2701 WELTON ST.
Main 895 875
RES. PHONE GALLUP 942
Denver, Colo.
VAL
BLATZ'S
PRIVATE
STOCK
BEATS
THEM ALL
Store No. 2.
26TH AND WELTON
Main 4955-4956
spent at home reacts in its benefits with unceasing general profit. Sent out of town it's life is ended
THE WORLD IN PARAGRAPHS
A BRIEF RECORD OF PASSING EVENTS IN THIS AND FOR- EIGN COUNTRIES.
IN LATE DISPATCHES
DOINGS AND HAPPENINGS THAT MARK THE PROGRESS OF THE AGE.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
Dr. J. E. Stubbs, president of the University of Nevada, died suddenly at Heno.
One man was killed and more than $500,000 damage done by a severe storm that swept Superior, Wis., and surrounding country.
Samuel Fitzgerald, a soldier stationed at Jefferson barracks, saved nine persons from probable incineration during a tenement fire in St. Louis.
Commercialized vice in Chicago has been almost stamped out in the last year of unremitting war against $1$, according to the citizens' committee of fifteen.
September Morn, the picture over which the Chicago police censor and art dealers and critics clashed, was given judicial sanction in a ruling of the Appelate Court for the first district of Chicago.
Bocks of the Miller Brewing Company, seized by the prosecuting attorney at Memphis, Tenn., show that the company has sold in Memphis, since the dry law went into effect March 1, $30,232 worth of beer.
The value of the mine output of gold, silver, copper, lead and zinc in Utah in 1913, was $44,858,210, compared with $42,992,302 in 1912, according to Victor C. Heikes, of the United State Geological Survey.
Trainmen on Western roads are preparing to take a strike vote, according to advises received in Denver from railroad officials in Chicago where representatives of engineers and firemen have been holding conferences for the last three months.
"He told me this career in winning souls was more worthy than my love," declared Miss Georgia W. Jay, pretty blonde, whose $50,000 suit for breach of promise against Homer Rodeheaver, choir director for Evangelist Billy Sunday, was on trial in Chicago.
Ben B. Lindsey of Denver, who, with two women from the Ludlow, Colo., coal district, was in New York speaking at mass meetings as a protest against the policy adopted by the Rockefeller interests' in the Colorado strike, failed in his attempt to interview John D. Rockefeller.
The two young daughters of Shan Ching Shu, Chinese consul-general in San Francisco, who disappeared from their home and were believed to have been kidnapped, were found sleeping in a dry creek bed in the Berkeley hills. They had wandered into the hills to pick wild flowers and lost their way.
WASHINGTON.
That Carranza intends to make Tampico the Constitutionalist capital until Mexico City is captured was the import of apparently reliable information from Admiral Mayo to the Navy Department.
The Oklahoma reciprocal demurrage law was annulled as unconstitutional by the Supreme Court on the ground that the Oklahoma court had held it applied to interstate commerce as well as state commerce.
Official dispatches, sent from Mexico City and received at a diplomatic source in Washington, say the "withdrawal of Huerta is possible" and that it is being delayed by the necessity of "arrangements to permit the dictator to abdicate with dignity."
Confirmation of the killing by Mexicans of Richard Urban, an American citizen of German birth, was received. American Consular Agent Montague at Cananea reported that Urban and a companion were attacked without provocation at Pointed mountain, eighteen miles west of Nacozari. A band of Mexicans fired from a house without warning® Urband fell dead, but his companion escaped.
Former President Roosevelt came back to the national capitol, where he spent seven years as chief executive. Into nine hours the colonel crowded a speech on his South American expedition, a call on President Wilson, a political conference with the Progressives in Congress, a visit to the Smithsonian institution to see the trophies from his African hunt of four years ago, a meeting with a few members of the diplomatic corps, and a dinner with friends.
Denial that passage of the new currency law was an "abject surrender to Wall street and the banking interests" was made in the Senate by Senator Shafroth of Colorado. "The Wilson administration objected to the continuation of power in Wall street," he said "It insisted that concentration of wealth should be divided."
The body of Porfirio Laurel, an American who was killed some time ago in Mexico, was recovered and taken to Laredo, where it was buried. Examination showed that Laurel died from bayonet wounds.
Mme. Sarah Bernhardt, the actress, who is on tour, was reported seriously ill at Liege, in dispatches received at Paris.
The primrose is to be the emblem of the French suffragettes. This decision was reached at a conference representing 2,000 members, held in Paris.
Miss Freda Graham, the suffragette who smashed the Bellini paintings and others in the National Gallery, in London sessions was sentenced to six months in prison.
Ada Rice, supposed to be a militant suffragette, was arrested on Epsom Downs after she had discharged a pistol loaded with blank cartridges at a policeman. The policeman was slightly burned.
Pleas of guilty were handed down in London by seven of the nine British army officers and all the eight civilians charged in January last with graft in connection with contracts for supplying army canteens.
Earth shocks, which have been felt daily since the disastrous earthquake of May 8, became more accentuated at Catania, Sicily. Rumors were circulated that hundreds had lost their lives in the outlying districts.
The engagement of Prince Oskar, fifth son of the German Emperor and Empress, to Countess von Bassewitz-Levetzow, mailed of honor to the Empress, was announced at Potsdam, The prince is 26 years old.
Sir Joseph Wilson Swan, inventor of the first incandescent electric lamp, died in London. He was eighty-six years old and was born in Sunderland, Eng. Sir Joseph also perfected the carbon process and the dry plate, which revolutionized photography.
Mexicans arriving from the capital at Vera Cruz report that Jose Maria Lozano, former minister of communications, and Querida Moheno, formerly foreign minister, but now supposed to be holding the portfolio of commerce and industry, are missing.
Standing of Western League Clubs.
Clubs— Won. Lost. Pet.
St. Joseph 21 12 636
St. Joseph City 23 14 638
Denver 21 13 618
Lincoln 18 18 500
Omaha 16 18 471
Des Moines 15 18 455
Wichita 15 21 417
Topeka 11 26 297
The derby, best known of the English classic horse races, was won at Epsom by an American horse, Herman B. Duryea's Durbar II.
Shamrock IV., the challenger for the America's cup, was launched at Gosport, Eng., and christened by the Countess of Shaftesbury.
The funeral of W. L. Haynes, once secretary of the Denver Baseball Club and widely known in Western sporting circles, was held at his boyhood home, Ennis, Tex. The body was taken from Denver.
In the second round at Versailles of the French amateur golf championship, Ouimet, American champion, defeated Palmer, former Irish champion, by 4 up and 3 to play. Travers beat Rufer by 1 up.
Mike Gibbons of St. Paul was not forced to extend himself to defeat Johnny Alberts of Elizabeth, N. J., at Syracuse, N. Y., in a ten-round mill. It was what might be called a scientific exhibition but not a scrap by any means. Neither battler got even a scratch.
Fifteen thousand persons attended the opening of the thoroughbred racing season at Belmont park New York, and saw the Metropolitan handicap, at one mile, go to John Whalen's four-year-old golding, Buskin, ridden by Jockey Fairbrother, in 1:37 4:5. The time equals the track record for this event, established by Fashion Plate four years ago.
GENERAL.
Graphic word pictures of the terrors of the Colorado strike war were painted in New York for the United States commission on industrial relations by wives of two miners.
For the first time in the history of national Decoration Day the Confederate veterans from the North Carolina soldiers' home this year will attend the exercises at the Union cemetery in a body, headed by the Confederate drum corps.
Declaring that so far as they are able to ascertain, John D. Rockefeller, Sr., had not returned a dollar of his vast wealth during the year for taxation anywhere, not even New York, Cuyahoga county tax commissioners of Cleveland, Ohio, placed $311,226,347 of the oil king's wealth on the state tax list for taxation at $1.41 per $1,000.
According to a Baltimore dispaten, the official list of midshipmen of the first class shows that the number who will graduate June 5 and be commissioned is 154. First honors will be taken by Midshipman Edward Ellsberg of Colorado City, Colo. Another Colorado boy who will be up among the ten highest honor midshipmen is Fred E. Pelton. Another Colorado boy who will graduate is Adrian R. Marron.
J. Pierpont Morgan characterized as untrue the testimony of Charles S. Mellen, former head of the New York, New Haven & Hartford railroad, before the Interstate Commerce Commission in Washington, that J. Pierpont Morgan concealed from Mellen facts regarding the New Haven road which Mellen should have known.
Jacob August Riis, author and social worker, died at his summer home at Barre, Mass., after a long illness. Mrs. Riis and a son were at Mr. Riis' bedside when the end came.
OPEN FOR BUSINESS New Dining Room in Connection to Keystone Social Club. Nothing like it ever attempted in Denver. Strictly home cooking. Lowest prices for best quality of food. Eastern corn-fed meats. Your patronage solicited.
FULL DINNER
11:30 a. m.
to
8:30 p. m.
Soup, Fish or Meat, Two Vegetables
Coffee, Tea or Cocoa Desert
25 CENTS
SHORT ORDERS AT ALL HOURS
1857 Champa St.
HENRY BECK
Beck
Wine
Western Agents for Minn
1644-4
Phone Main 1053
ALL KINDS
R
The Welton
2619
New and Second
We Pay th
Syl. Stewart Manor
Champa St. Phone Champa 3543 De
BK JOHN
Beck & Engstro
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
Wines, Liquors and
Cigars
S for Minneapolis Grain Belt Beer and Carnegie
Imported Beer and Bock Ol.
1644-46-48-50 Larimer Street
n 1053 Denw
ALL KINDS OF REPAIR WORK NEATLY DO
REFINISHING A SPECIALTY.
Velton Street Furniture
F. R. LINDENMIER, Prop.
2619 WELTON STREET
Second Hand Furniture Bo
and Exchanged
We Pay the Highest Cash Price for Furniture
8247.
When You W
heads, Feet, Tails Snouts, N
erlings or any other part of
except the squeal go to
East's Mark
er Street. Pho
E ZOBEL BROTHER
AMPLE ROO
Nineteenth Street, Corner of
Beck & Engstrom
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN Wines, Liquors and Cigars Western Agents for Minneapolis Grain Belt Beer and Carnegie Porter, Pripps Imported Beer and Bock Ol.
1644-46-48-50 Larimer Street
Phone Main 1053 Denver, Colorado
ALL KINDS OF REPAIR WORK NEATLY DONE. REFINISHING A SPECIALTY.
The Welton Street Furniture Co.
New and Second Hand Furniture Bought, Sold and Exchanged We Pay the Highest Cash Price for Furniture
When The Heads, F or Chiterlings except Eas
When You Want
When You Want
The Heads, Feet, Tails Snouts, Neckbones or Chiterlings or any other part of the hog except the squeal go to
2300.6 Larimer Street.
THE ZO
SAM
1004 Ninete
1004 Nineteenth Street, Corner of Curtis
FINE WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS
COORS' CELEBRATED BEER ON TAP
R COD
ERRIS, Pres. J. M. JOHNS, Treas. SEIB MU
LROAD PORTERS' C
CHAS. HARRIS, Pres
RAILROA
LUNCH
Billiards
RAILROAD PORTERS' CLUB LUNCH ROOM IN CONNECTION
1728 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Wazee St. Only one block from Union Depot Phone Main 8416. Denver, Colorado
PHONE MAIN 8247.
DENVER
Soup, Fish or Meat, Two Vegetables Coffee,Tea or Cocoa Desert 25 CENTS
Manager.
543 Denver, Colo.
strom
S IN
ers and
and Carnegie Porter, Pripps
Ol.
er Street
Denver, Colorado
GREATLY DONE.
LTY.
Furniture Co.
up.
REET
ure Bought, Sold
d
or Furniture
Want nuts, Neckbones part of the hog to rKet
THERS'
OOM
ner of Curtis
SEIB MILLER, Sec. R'S' CLUB NECTION ee Check
A
JOHN ENGSTROM
DENVER, COLO.
Phone Main 1461.
COLORADO
BELIEVE 1,200 LOST
Empress of Ireland, With 1,200 Aboard and Storstad, Bearing 150, Collide Near Father Point, Ontario
RESCUE SHIPS RUSHED TO THE SCENE OF DISASTER FIND NO TRACE OF THE HEAVILY-LADEN STEAMER.
FEW LIFEBOATS AFLOAT
ARE ONLY SIGN OF STRICKEN STEAMSHIPS.—WIRELESS CALLS CEASE QUICKLY. ONLY FEW SAVED.
Quebec, Ontario, May 29.—Twelve hundred persons are believed to have perished thirty miles off Father Point this morning following a collision between the Canadian Pacific steamship Empress of Ireland and the collier Storstad. At 5 o'clock this morning a dispatch just received from Father Point stated that the Empress of Ireland sank almost immediately after the collision and only a few persons got away.
There were approximately 1,200 persons aboard the Empress of Ireland and about 150 on the Storstad. All but a few who escaped in lifeboats which were seen near the scene of disaster are believed to have gone down with the ships. Father Point, near which the collision occurred, is 155 miles down the St. Lawrence river from Quebec at the head of the Gulf of St. Lawrence.
The first news of the disaster, received from Father Point, stated that "S.O.S." signals from the Empress had declared the ship to be in collision with another vessel and sinking rapidly. While rescue ships were rushing to the scene the wireless of the Empress ceased.
Latest reports declare that no sign of the ships is visible and only a few lifeboats are afloat.
The Empress of Ireland was in command of Lieutenant Kendall, R. N. R., and left this port at 4:20 p. m. yesterday for Liverpool, with 77 first, 206 second, and 504 third class passengers, a large mail, and general cargo. With her crew she had some 1,200 persons aboard. Among her passengers was a large party of the Salvation Army going to the international conference of the army in London.
"S.O.S." signals from the Empress brought the first announcement of the collision and the signals of distress were immediately responded to by the Canadian government steamer Eureka and the mail-tender Lady Evelyn, which put out at once to render aid. Father Point kept in communication with the Empress of Ireland for a short time, but the responses of the disabled steamer suddenly ceased, which led to fears here that the steamer was in a serious plight.
Denver. — Among the passengers aboard the Empress of Ireland was Mrs. F. H. Dunleavy, wife of a Denver real estate dealer, who resides at 3021 East Seventh avenue. Mr. Dunleavy said this morning that Mrs. Dunleavy left here about a month ago for a trip through the East, and was booked to sail on the Empress of Ireland for London, where she expected to visit with relatives until September. Her name is given on the passenger list.
STRIKERS BLAMED FOR ATTACK.
One Man Fired from Colony and Other Ran There, Declares Report. Washington.—Colonel Lockett, commanding the United States troops in the Colorado coal fields, reported to the War Department details of the first exchange of shots between the army and the strikers. Secretary Garrison gave out this statement based upon Colonel Lockett's report:
"One of our sentinels on a detached post at Segundo, a place about 35 miles south of Walsenburg, in the Trinidad district, was attacked about 10:30 on the night of May 25 by two men with firearms. Considerable disorder ensued. A full investigation was made and it was found that one of the attackers fired from the strikers' colony in the vicinity, and the other after firing retired into the colony. The return fire on the strikers and pursuit of them by the soldiers ceased because of danger to the other occupants of the colony. The leaders of the strikers' colony were requested to produce the persons of the two offenders."
Posse Search for Missing Magnate. Roswell, N. M.—Posses are being organized here for a search of the foothills for Charles S. Densmore, oil minate and publisher of the Southwestern Mining Journal, who mysteriously disappeared.
Widow of Former Speaker Reed Dies. Portland, Me.—Mrs. Thomas Brackett Reed, widow of the former speaker of the National House, died after a brief illness. Mrs. Reed leaves a daughter, Mrs. Arthur Balentyne, of San Diego.
PEACE PACT FOR MEXICO
PROVISIONAL PROTOCOL SENT TO WILSON AND HUERTA FOR SIGNATURES.
U. S. PLEDGES SUPPORT
DELEGATES REJOICE OVER WHAT
THEY THINK WILL END HOSTILITIES.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
Niagara Falls, Ont., May 29.—Mediators in the Mexican controversy have reached a completed agreement on all points and have submitted their recommendations to President Wilson, Secretary Bryan and to Victoriano Huerta in Mexico City.
Representatives of Argentina, Brazil and Chile, Frederick Lehmann and Justice Lamar, representatives of the United States and the three envoy sent by Huerta are extremely happy over what they regard as a definite, equitable settlement of the difficulty.
Here are the terms of the agreement reached by the mediators:
First—A provisional government is to be placed in charge of Mexico. It is to consist of five men and to be representative of all factions, with Constitutionalists in the majority.
Second—The government of the United States pledges itself to recognize this provisional government and also pledges to that government its moral support.
Third—American troops are to leave Mexico; they are to evacuate Vera Cruz the moment the provisional government is established and operative.
Fourth—Huerta is to remain in power during the organization of the provisional government and is to officially turn over to the provisional government the government of Mexico.
Fifth—Provisions are made for an election at a certain period of time after the establishment of the provisional government, at which a president and other officers are to be chosen. Reforms in the election laws are provided for so that the election may be "popular, fair and impartial."
Sixth—The mediators made a strong recommendation to the new provisional government for radical' reforms in the land laws.
The belief and hope are unanimously expressed that the terms agreed upon will be satisfactory to President Wilson, Huerta and the Constitutionalists. Should acquiescence come within 48 hours it is expected that documents for submission to Washington and Mexico City will be ready within a week.
There are some other minor details yet to be put into shape and conferences will be necessary for this purpose.
The mediators and delegates intend to use every effort to maintain the secrecy of the names of individuals until all elements in the proposed new government have assented to the plan or the actual change in government accomplished.
There is every reason to believe, however, that already the Washington government has in its possession a list of names from which five men acceptable to it eventually will be agreed upon. The suggestions were made by the Mexicans and the theory under which the United States is being asked to approve some of them is that it has a right to indicate who it will or will not recognize. It is also probable that this list has been sent by the Mexican delegates to General Huerta.
104 EXECUTED, 35 WOMEN SHOT. Huerta's Saltillo Defeat Results in Massacre of Federal Chiefs.
Amargos, Coahuila. — Thirty - five women camp-followers lost their lives with 300 federal soldiers in the battle of Paredon, outside Saltillo, it was learned here, and fifty-seven federal officers were executed after the battle. Among those who fell before the firing squad were General Munoz, a nephew of ex-President Porfirio Diaz, General Orsono and nine colonels. Reports of these executions at first were denied but now seem well-established. The men shot, it was said, reiterated their loyalty to the Huerta government and rather than violate their allegiance to it, gave their lives.
Nogales, Ariz.—Thirty-five federal officers captured by the constitutionalists at the city of Tepic were executed May 24, according to a message received here from General Alvaro Obregon, the constitutionalist commander.
Cheyenne, Wyo.—W. E. Luton, town marshal of Gillette, departed for that place in custody of Sheriff L. G. Butler of Campbell county, who holds him on a warrant charging felonious assault on Lou Jenne.
CROPS ARE DOING WELL
ACCORDING TO REPORT OF FORECASTER BRANDENBURG.
Growth Retarded in the Eastern Coun ties, But Conditions Generally Are Favorable for All Crops.
Western Newspaper Union News Service. Denver. The second weekly report rendered by the local weather forecaster since the head of the department in Washington instituted the new feature of recording weather conditions and effects on vegetation in various districts, was rendered by F. H. Brandenburg. Following is the report for the week ending May 25. "Over the greater part of the state temperature conditions have been favorable to plant growth, but in the south-central part reports indicate that the weather has been too cool. In the eastern counties continued cloudiness, frequent showers, heavy precipitation and insufficient sunshine interfered with farming operations and have retarded growth, while in the western part of the state weather conditions have been ideal.
"Winter wheat and rye are doing well, also oats and spring wheat, although in localities and seeding of the latter has not been completed. Conditions have been about right for the growth of sugar beets. Alfalfa and grasses are in excellent condition. Early potatoes are coming up, and fruits are generally doing well."
Body of Man Found in Pool.
Denver.—With both of his arms wound tightly around a fence post, the body of an unknown man was found in a pool formed by recent overflowing of the Platte river, 300 feet northeast of the Forty-sixth avenue bridge, in Globeville. The condition of the corpse indicated that it may have been in the water for a month or six weeks; and yet the place where it was found was dry land from late last summer until last week, when heavy rainfall caused the river to inundate it to a depth of three or four feet.
Find Cronin Guilty of Assault.
Trinidad. — Charles and Timothy Cronin, charged with assault to murder W. M. Williams, a lumber dealer, here, on March 25, were found guilty as charged, by a jury in the District Court. The jury was out two hours. Williams was found unconscious in his place of business. Charles McDonald, a Pueblo prisoner, confessed to the crime, which he denied on the witness stand.
Memorial Meeting at Greeley.
Greeley.—Under the auspices of the local post of the G. A. R. a memorial meeting was held at the Sterling theater. More than 1,000 heard an interesting program made up of speeches made by prominent men and women and musical numbers furnished by some of the best talent in the city. The W. R. C. attended in a body.
Mediators Hope to Bring Peace.
Denver.—The operators and the coal strikers are "not very far apart" on some points regarding the Colorado coal strike, according to Secretary W. D. Wright, Jr., of the Legislative investigating committee which is trying to effect a settlement of the industrial controversy.
Woman Is Candidate for Office.
Colorado Springs.—Mrs. Inez Johnson Lewis, former county superintendent, and who was the Democratic candidate for state superintendent at the last election, will be a candidate for the county office on the Democratic ticket this fall.
Meadow Unanimous for Water Bonus.
Meade.—At the special election held here for the purpose of voting upon a bond issue of $11,000 for the purpose of installing a modern, up-to-date waterworks system, not a single dissenting vote was cast.
Three Strikers Held at Trinidad.
Trinidad.—Two strikers are in jail and one under $5,000 bond charged with murder as a result of the battle at Forbes on April 29, when nine persons were killed and the camp swept by fire.
Work Resumed at Forbes Mine.
Trinidad.—The Forbes mine of the Rocky Mountain Fuel Company resumed operations Monday, after having been closed since the battle and fire of April 29.
Miller Jury Is Discharged.
Colorado Springs.—The jury that heard the trial of the statutory charge against David B. Miller, involving a fifteen-year-old girl, was unable to agree and has been discharged.
Boy Bit by Rattler Dies.
Golden.—The three-year-old son of Frank Vacher, a rancher living four miles northeast of Golden, died a few hours after he had been bitten six times by a large rattlesnake.
Fire on Federal Troops at Segundo Trinidad.-The United States troops stationed at the camp of Segundo were fired upon. One soldier, a member of the patrol under Captain Cushman, was the object of an attack by some unknown person, who hurled a brick at him through the window of a scale house and followed the missile with a shot. The soldier fired in the direction of the shot. When the patrol started out to search for the disturber, twenty shots were fired upon the soldiers. This report was received at the headquarters of Col. Lockett.
Western Newspaper Union News Services.
DATES FOR COMING EVENTS.
June 9-11.—G. A. R. Encampment at
Fort Morgan.
Lakewood, IL.
June 19-20 - Meeting Colorado Bankers' Association at Colorado Springs.
June 25-28 - State Christian Endeavor Convention at Colorado Springs.
June 29-30 - Meeting Colorado Bankers' Association at Colorado Springs.
Aug. 18-21—Prowers Co. Fair, Lamar.
Aug. 25-27—K. of P. Grand Lodge and
Uniform Rank Encampment, Pueblo.
Aug. 25-28—Bent Co. Fair, Las Animas.
Aug. 25—Santa Fé Trail Day, Las Animas.
Aug. 25—Farmers' Fair at Fowler,
Sept. 1-4—Arkansas Valley Fair,
Rocky Ford.
Sept 3 - Watermelon Day, Rocky Ford,
Fair, Burlington.
Sept 4 - A n d 5 - Stockman's
Fair, Burlington.
Sept. 10—Sugar Day, Sugar City.
Sept. 11—Sugar City, Sugar City.
Sept. 15-18—Lincoln Co. Fair, Hugo.
Sept. 19-26—Race Meet, Denver.
Sept. 20—Inter-Co. Fair and Race
Meet at Lincoln Co.
Oklahoma. New Mex. Fair at Durango.
1915. Last Grand Council of North American Indians at Denver.
Reuben Zinn and Tony Peters were killed in a wreck near Cheraw.
The Custer Slide Mining & Development Company, recently organized by Colorado Springs capitalists, will develop the Custer slide in Idaho.
Plans and specifications for Greeley's $110,000 federal building were received by Postmaster Hubert Reynolds, and advertisements for bids will be published.
While playing near an irrigation ditch on the farm of David Kelly, north of Greeley, Charles, the two-year-old son of the family, fell in and was drowned.
The park commission of Denver granted the Seventh Day Adventists permission to use the Rocky Mountain lake grounds for their annual encampment, Aug. 17-23.
The formal dedication of Denver's new music stand at City park will take place on Sunday, June 14, when Frederick Nell Innes and his organization of fifty musicians will open the summer series of concerts.
On the recent examination trip of the class of 1914, Colorado School of Mines, twenty-four of the members secured positions, in addition to the seven Chinese graduates who are provided for by their government.
Former Governor Alva Adams set at rest rumors that he was to be a candidate for the United States Senate this fall by announcing that he would not enter the race. The reports that he would run have been current ever since his return from a trip around the world.
Two strikers, W. Kathodovas, a Greek, and Charles Bell, American, are in the county jail at Trinidad charged with active participation in the battle and burning of the houses and mine buildings at Forbes on April 29, which resulted in the death of nine employés and mine guards of the Rocky Mountain Fuel Company. The two men were arrested in Colorado Springs.
The Denver Union Water Company filed in the United States District Court an amendment to its original petition to prevent the operation of the 20 per cent rate reducing ordinance. By the amendment its seeks to make its original petition cover not only the present, but the future as well, and to forever stop the city from cutting the rates below its present leaflet schedule.
At the annual election of Denver Typographical Union No. 49 the following were elected: Frank J. Pulver, president; Alonzo Wiley, vice president; F. C. Birdsall, secretary treasurer; M. H. Ropkey trustee; Charles S. Semper, sergeant-at-arms; A. E. Thorson, doorkeeper; F. L. Pferdesteller and Joseph E. Seller, delegates to the International Typographical union convention.
John R. Lawson and John McLennan, district officials of the United Mine Workers of America, and Mrs. Alma Lafferty, president of the Women's Peace Association, decided to accept subpoenas from the military court martial to appear as witnesses in the trial of Lleut. K. E. Linderfelt of the Colorado National guard, charged with murder, manslaughter, arson and larceny in connection with the Ludlow battle, April 20. The union leaders previously had declared they would ignore the court martial.
In trying to pull a cow out of a mud hole at Thornburg, John F. Wilson, a cattleman, was thrown from his horse and in the mixup was kicked badly by his horse before he could disentangle himself from the rope. When he finally extricated himself Wilson found that three ribs were broken and that he was otherwise badly hurt. He was taken into Meeker for medical attention.
Colorado and Denver will be the mecca for summer tourists in the future as a result of co-operation between the solid South and the West.
The OLD RELIABLE EAST END DINING ROOM AND RESTAURANT
DAVID LONG, Proprietor 2345 LARIMER STREET, DENVER, COLORADO
Colorado Wall Paper & Paint Company
WALL PAPER, PAINTS OILS AND GLASS Interior and Exterior Decorators. We Do House Painting. Coach Colors, Paints and Varnishes. Agents John W. Masury & Sons. Phone Main 871 728 W. Colfax, foot Welton St. Denver
In All the Latest Novelties TORREY'S MILLINERY 2647 WELTON STREET, DENVER, COLO.
Paper Dollar Bar
STEVE TODOROFF and RAY BRONSON, Proprietors Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars
Jones' Restaurant
I Am Headed That Way, Where I Get the Cleanest, Best and Most Wholesome Food, Which Gives You that Round, Comfortable, Contented Feeling
J. W. BEACH
Phone Main 5277 1855 Arapaloe Street
DENVER, COLORADO
SPECIAL BRUSHES MADE TO ORDER
DENVER BRUSH FACTORY Branch 1408 Curtis St. Champa 770 418 Fifteenth St
VINEGAR
DAVID
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Colorado
Pain
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Interior and E
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728 W. Colfa
YOU ARE
To Ins
Pattern
In All
TORRE
2647 WELTO
Phone Champa 1156
Paper
STEVE TODOR
Fine Wine
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MEALS:
BREAKFAST from - 6 to 8:30
DINNER from - 12 to 2:30
SUPPER from - - 5:30 to 7:30
Furnished Rooms in Connectio
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SOK, ! 2) D. RIVERS. .0/51.¢.--eyateensoes Heness.ceretre cet netapeletor
1824 Curtis Street, Room 25.
* Phone Main 7417.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
ORG PORT io oisg ns Fa 50 Aids Piece eos etarianse van teedacbesesvencuaemences Eee
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PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.
Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice in the city of Denver,
“olorado,
AN communications of @ personating nature that are not complimentary
will be withheld from the columns of this paper.
Display advertising, 50 cents per inch, An inch contains twelve agate lines.
Reading notices, ten lines or less, 10 cents per line, Each additional line
over ten Ines, 5 cents per line.
No discounts allowed on less than three months’ contract, Cash musc accom-
pany all orders from parties unknown to us, Further particulars on application.
Remittances should be made by Express Money Order, Postoffice Money
Order, Registered Letter or Bank Draft, Postage stamps will be received the
same as cash for the fractional part of a dollar, Only 1-cent and 2-cent stampa
taken.
Communteations to recelve attention must be neway, upon important sup-
Jects, plainly written only upon one side of the paper; must reach us Tuesdays,
It possible, anyway, not Inter than Wednesdays, and bear the signature of the
autor, No manuscript returned, unless stamps are sent for postage.
It occasionally happens that papers sent to subscribers are lost or stolen.
{n case you do not receive any number when due, inform us by postal cara and
we will cheerfully forward a dupiicate of the missing number.
MEMORIAL DAY.
‘Today brings foreibly to us a reminder which is dual in form—the paying
of respects to our dead heroes, which is fraught with the natural feature of
sadness and the impressiveness of our gain from the loss of their lives. The
story is too well known for repetition herein, but we are glad to state that
the celebration of the day has gone beyond the confines of war, and has filled
the role of reminding families and relatives of their departed loved ones
whose existence here has left them many examples which have helped to
mould and shape their present career. It is not giving the flowers to the
dead, but it seems so timely and charitable that we should decorate the graves
and tombs of those who have predeceased us, thereby showing our token of
affection, and at the same time, affording us an opportunity for self-exami-
nation,
COPYING AND IMITATING.
We have often come in contact with people, especially of our race, who
are continually charging us with the above tendency as if a terrible crime
is being engaged in (they arguing that we are not originators, but copyists
and imitators), and we take this opportunity of showing the benefits and ad-
vantages to be obtained if we copy and imitate good ideas and examples set
us by other races. On reliable historical records we base our contention that
nations once in barbarism and heathenism, actually void of the beauty and
grandeur of civilization, emerged from darkness into light by adopting meas-
ures towards their advancement which were offered them by. self-sacrificing
men who laid down their lives for the purpose of leaving standards and set-
ting up perpetual monuments, which when followed, resulted in benefits that
were handed down from age to age, Originators seem to be in a class by
themselves, but do we ever stop to think that nothing would be heard of an
original plan if it did not find acceptance and encouragement, getting the
support that would give it prominence in a community.
In this particular we are greatly hampered in this country, as from lack
of loyalty to one another, pride in the interests of our business, etc., strongly
backed up by the cruel arm of prejudice from the other side, even when we
are responsible for the production of anything great and good, it is hardly
ever known, and if known, for the most part so discouraged that we lose
the claim and the credit of its origin. In spite of all these we must aver that
it is wisdom to copy the good features and imitate the ideals of other races,
as they can serve no other purpose and can bring no other results but the
best, which must push us to the front, where we will take our place with
others as time rolls on. Copy everything that’s good; get away from the
bad. ‘The former is meritorious of success, triumph, reward; the latter spells
Joss and ruin, and in the majority of cases we lose to such an extent that
our action is almost irretrievable and our loss irrecoverable. ‘
Business tacties, constructive policies, get-together spirits, unanimity of
ideas, educational assemblies, financial combinations are some of the stan-
dards set us by other people, and surely there is ever¥thing to gain in being
accused as copyists of such qualities which must bring us unlimited resources.
Follow, then, that which is of good, is good, and the inevitable will therefore
result,
PROHIBITION CAMPAIGN STARTS. ee
a give th
, and the leaders of the movement against the use of alco-| most. it
hether publicly or privately, having issued their ultimatum Li
- started in earnest to try to monopolize all the strategical | js in it
efield, and with their modern machinery of plans and plots,| goog 1
on the ‘conscience of a people and nation. denriving tan le
‘The fight is on, and the leaders of the movement against the use of alco:
holic beverages, whether publicly or privately, having issued their ultimatum
to the nation, have started in earnest to try to monopolize all the strategical
points on the battlefield, and with their modern machinery of plans and plots,
intend to pounce upon the conscience of a people and nation, depriving them
of their domestic privileges by dictating the kind of drinks they should use,
instead of leaving them to their choice.
THIS DESPOTIC ACTION MUST REMAIN IN TURKEY, for although
the forces of Prohibition are marshalling all the money and speakers of great
oratorical powers to enforce the adoption of an unworkable measure on this
country of such a cosmopolitan population, yet the saneness and soberness
of more than two-thirds of the voting element of this great republic will prove
to our reformers that we are not going to relapse to the barbarism or pertain
to the fiendish qualities or practices of some other countries by removing
alcohol and substituting opium or other narcotics which will surely do more
deadly work, thereby increasing our death rate and necessarily diminishing
our population. While there are a few states in the Union that have carried
this proposition of not sanctioning the general use of alcohol, yet they have
allowed margins for its special use, in what is termed CASES OF NECES:
SITY, and this is where the mockery comes in; that in nearly all of the
prohibitive places the prescriptions in which alcohol is compounded amount
to nearly 75 per cent of the annual output. This fact we have gotten from
sources that have been specializing for years on the comparison of the public
use of alcohol (its present form) and the medicinal use which our reformers
would try to convince and then convert us, goes towards the betterment of a
people, There must be no compromise, no half and half, no partially negative
and affirmative action, If alcohol is not to be used, if it is such a “great
destroyer” (as Congressman Hobson of Alabama would have us believe), then
we must do away with it in its entirety; we must close our family liquor
stores, take it out of our drug stores, hermetically seal our breweries, and
last but not least, write indelibly fn the books of our treasury the non-accept:
ance of money for the manufacturing or licensing of the sale of liquor in the
United States.
‘This shows the monstrous fallacy of the Prohibition promoters, and we
assert with emphasis right here in Colorado that we disapprove of any inter:
ference by any federal act of our hereditary right and customary privileges,
when there are laws already enacted to punish us for any action of crime.
Why make the use of alcohol a erime?
(mic current has two poles, and the electrician must recognize them before
he can harness the force, The two sexes are nature’s great proclamation
of this duality. No form exisis that was not previously conceived, and
there is no manifestation without spirit and matter, the former being
‘the positive and the latter the negative force. We talk glibly about them
and then go on acting as if only one of them were in existence. Some
take the side of matter and some the side of spirit. The truth is they
are counterparts of each other, Man is a dual being, and there is nothing
in one part of the duality that has not its analogy in the other.
One of the best ways to comprehend this is to study the physical body
of man, following its analogies. It is conceded by many men of science
that the various parts and organs or glands of the body have a life of
their own, but an organ is a congregation of living celle, each being an
individual in its place. When they have fulfilled their purpose these
cells die of old age, leaving young ones in their places.
‘This is true of cellular structures of the whole body except the nerve
cells. They are permanent and endure during the life of the man. If
it were possible to strike away every other cell from a body and leave the
nervous system intact and in place, we would have every part of the outline
of the man’s body, even to his most minute features. Every cell in the
organic man receives its life and guiding force through a tendril from a
nerye cell. So every collection of cells forming an organ or muscle gets
its guiding impulse from a given center in the spinal cord, and through
that from a epecific center in the brain. As the brain is the organ of
thought, the mind of man is the supreme being to the cell.
‘As the mind of the physical man is the supreme being to the body cell,
the nerve cell being its organ of communication, so is the mind of God ever
playing upon the mind of man, through the ego, his organ of communica-
tion. “As above, so below,” is an ancient occult maxim, and it is thus
that man is created in the image of God, and his physical body is
the negative manifestation.
po oue shall be permitted to indulge his anger upon the helpless young.
In the rearing of children, as in any other branch of the world’s
work, a constructive policy is always preferable to a destructive one. You
can’t breed broad-minded, honorable, courageous men on a diet of fear.
The works of Frederich Froebel, of Parker, of Pestalozzi, of Miss O’Grady,
are monuments to the development of character and the upbuilding of
the race. Their theory, proved by its success, was “prevention of wrong
activity by the proper direction of the natural forces and latent powers
of the child.”
Paternal neglect, improper habits and unwholesome environment are
the general causes of delinquency, truancy and grosser forms of juvenile
sin. Thus it is again demonstrated that the child suffers for the sins,
incompetence and ignorance-of the parent. A careful perusal of Rudyard
Kipling’s tale, “Baa, Baa, Black Sheep,” would more clearly elucidate the
responsibilities of parents and’ grandparents and demonstrate the products
of their errors,
Like begets like, and children reared in an atmosphere of hate, cruelty
and revenge naturally respond to those vibrations, and are capable of all
the animal passions that go to make up undesirable citizens. Nor ix
the child the only sufferer; hate, like all other emotions, is introactive,
'and the parent is coarsened by the infliction of such punishment, even
| more than the victim. .
lation becomes an easy prey for an ambitious general with a daring army.
Japan proved this in her wars with Russia and China. Large standing
armies breed military despotism, under which all useless crafts and vicious
monopolies grow fat and arrogant. So there is wisdom in the suggestion
to give a military training to every American youth in every public school
in every state in the Union. An hour each day after school will answer
the purpose. ‘This system would eliminate the necessity for a large stand-
ing army and at the same time, in the course of twenty-five years. would
give the United States trained material for an army of 10,000,000. of the
most intelligent and capable men in the world.
Lack of patriotism, indifference of Americans to the national defense.
is in itself sufficient cause ultimately to destroy this republic. This nation
does not believe in war because at present it has ample territory. With
Europe and Japan it is different, The present influx of foreigners to this
country will soon cause this government to look with warlike vision for a
distant dumping ground for its own surplus population. For the peace
of this nation immigration should be stopped indefinitely.
| Men with iron in their blood must settle this question. A nation of
gelatinized shrimps is not fit to rule, and soon it becomes a tempting
prey for those who are. Such is history.
high as $1,500 to $2,000 had been paid for them. One dealer who.
it is said, could have sold his stock of foxes in July for $65,000, sold two
weeks ago for less than $35,000, the latter price being due to the decline
in prices, to some extent, but also to the fact that many of the animals
had died in the meantime. “One young black fox, for which $1,600 had
been paid, died five days after being placed in the corral,
Owing to the decline in price fully 150 young foxes, all of the rel
variety, held in captivity in southern, Yukon, have been turned out t«
return to their native haunts in the wilds. Previous to sickness developin:
among foxes in captivity here, upward of 200 young ones had been shippei!
from Whitchorse alone to fox ranches in New Brunswick, Prince Edward
island, and to dealers near Boston, Masa. At present there are not ove:
fifty held im this locality.
Description of
Mental Characteristics
gq
Doing Away With
Corporal Punishment
By B. J. BERNHARD, Chicago.
Military Discipline
Develops the Best
q
Many Foxes Die
While in Captivity
By ROBERT. W, BALDWIN
q
One great stumbling block
to the progress of the world
lies in the fact that the
minds of people in general
have not grasped the iden
that duality is necessary in
all manifestation. The elec-
Less than a century ago
the beating of wives, chil-
dren and slaves was an ap-
proved custom; today slay-
ery is abolished, wife beat-
ing legally prohibited, and
Dian Godlenesditiie day.wlien
As far back as light is
shed on the history of hv-
man affairs we learn that
military discipline develops
the best that is in people.
Without an efficient army
a country with a vast popu-
Nearly 50 per cent of the
foxes that were held in cap-
tivity have died from some
unknown cause in Alaska
during the past season,
Many of these foxes were
black, and in some cases as
or them. One dealer who.
a July for $65,000, sold two
‘ice being due to the decline
t that many of the animal~
< fox, for which $1,600 had
1 the corral.
young foxes, all of the rei
n, have been turned out to
evious to sickness developing
young ones had been shippe!
- Brunswick, Prince Edward
t present there are not ove:
we
! ti MID-SUMMER
i xf CREATIONS
an |
: | Now on Display
At!
Sh from $2.75 to $5.50
| Py ans} Geogeous light colored models
Vee sk made of fine hemps that are
« ye) % adorned with imported laces, flow-
tea | in ers or ribbons. Cool josking and
Ht A | | wonderfully styish.
\ { I | For Summer Functions, Weddings
\ Ne or Graduation.
G 1120-22 SIXTEENTH STREET
We Beg to Announce That Our
Annual June Di t Sal
——_—BEGINS———
Monday, June Ist
GF iucuded arene
&, ff GH rr sale will be our jen-
‘I fs oa yer tire stock of up-to-
ag fi —— B the-minute Open
¢ Var ‘ Mstock Dinnerware,
pS H Cut Glass, Silver-
“ : : Mwave, Fancy China
, ai BP and Lrass Novelties.
aa Discounts will range
—— from 10 to 50%.
A MOST OPPORTUNE TIME TO SECURE A BEAUTIFUL AS
WELL AS USEFUL GIFT FOR THE JUNE BRIDE
OR GRADUATE.
PQ OTs
Oram)
Sak. CORRE: SUT =
Denver's Up-to-Date China and Glassware Shop.
732-36 FIFTEENTH STREET (Near Stout)
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 !NSURANCE
COMPANIES, ALSO ENDOWMENT
MONIES.
OFFICE 313 KITTREDGE BUILDING
The Weatherhead Hat Co,
Practical
Hatters
Poineer Hatters of the West
Established 1876
RENOVATORS, BLEACHERS:
DYERS AND FINISHERS
of Gents’ and Ladies’ Hats of Every
Description.
1624 Champa St. Denver. Colo.
‘Telephone Main 8698.
Seth Hoffman Coal Co.
Dealers in
Coal, Wood, Coke, Hay
Grain
Coal from Sack to Carload Delivered
Anywhere in the City.
Office: 2807 Welton Street
DENVER - COLORADO
Ee Ne RTE SS ee ee
4
- She 3
; 3
¢ 3
WARD AUCTION :
3
; 3
| COMPANY
- Sales Dally at 2 pm. Office Fur 4
: niture a Specialty. 3
: Sen 3
; = 3
; PRIVATE SALES AT ALL TIMES 3
: = 3
> HAVE MOVED To— Ss
> §MF-1723-39 GLENARM ST.-3@ ;
: PHONE MAIN 1675. 3
;
AS
Miss M. Cowden
| Hair Dressing Parlor :
|
Shampoo, cutting and curling. |
Scalp treatment, hair tonics, |
| hair straightening, manicuring. |
| Stage wigs for rent; theatrical |
use and masqueradest
; Goods delivered out of the |
city. All shades of hair matched |
| by sending sample of hair; also
combings made up.
a
Cheapest Switches 50 Cents
| 4219 ist St. Denver, Colo.
SE Seige £ 3
: Tact 2... eee
DRINK
| Gi e y
|
|
Finest Beer Ever Brewed.
Made Ii Colorado; Sold
in Colorado; Drank in
Colorado
ORDER A CASE
PHONE MAIN 1350,
J. H. BIGGINS
Furniture Repairing and Up-
holstering, All work Cash.
PHONE YORK 7837
1417 East 24th Ave Denver
Mrs. Eva Johnson left Thursday to spend Decoration Day in Colorado Springs.
Mrs. Mable Lewis-Lowry of Alamosa, Colo., is in the city visiting relatives and friends.
Mrs. C. R. Brown left last Wednesday for Pine Bluff, Arkansas, to visit a few days with relatives.
George F. Wilson died at Couhospital, funeral notice later.
The funeral services of Harry Smill will be held Sunday, May 31st, at Douglas Undertaking Co. parlor, 2 m. Friends invited, Interment Ri-side.
Steven Adams, the seven year Mexican boy's, funeral was held M day morning, May 25, at 10 a. m. was laid to rest at Riverside. Douglas Undertaking Co. in cha
The Young Peoples' Carnival, Shorter's Chapel, June 2nd, by the Sunshine Club.
It is rumored that a popular young couple are thinking very serious of—Oh, well, guess!
Mrs. James Gray left Wednesday to visit relatives and friends in Topeka, Kansas.
Will the party who telephoned in regard to the Elati property, submit an offer? This is a splendid buy. S. A. Bondurant.
Charles A. Button, one of our popular postoffice clerks, is enjoying his annual vacation on the ranch at Arvada. He says fishing is good.
J. J. Houston, who has been making some necessary improvements on his ranch at Deerfield, Colo., returned to the city last week.
Mrs. Annie Batiste left Tuesday night to visit with friends and relatives at her old home in Austin, Texas. We wish her a pleasant visit.
Don't forget Monday night, June 1st. Big shirt waist drawing for lady and gent. Everybody will have a chance, Fern Hall, Parisienne academy. Admission 25c.
Mrs. Francis Martin of Baxter Springs, Kans., who was called here on account of the death of her son, Wm. C. Martin, returned to her home this week.
Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Bondurant have purchased a beautiful home on Marion street. Mr. Bondurant is numbered among one of the leading business men of the West.
Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Roy will move next week, into their home at 3032 Columbine street. It is all modern and furnished with the latest desired furniture, while the beautiful lawn, shrubbery and flowers present a most admiring scene.
Those owing for The Colorado Statesman are kindly asked to pay, as the money is always needed. It it just as much your inherent duty to pay for your newspaper as to pay your house rent, grocery bill, etc., so kindly remit.
Among the graduates of the Arvada high school this year was Frederick Earl Britton, who was honored with a place on the commencement program. He is the third one of the Britton family to complete the high school course at Arvada.
The funeral of Wm. C. Martin, who died very suddenly last week, was held Monday afternoon from the funeral chapel of the Douglas Undertaking Company. Rev. Washington officiating. Besides a large circle of friends, deceased leaves to mourn his loss a mother, Mrs. Francis Martin of Baxter Springs, Kans., and a sister and neice, Mrs. Ida Koontz and Mrs. Carl Smith of this city. Interment at Fairmont.
The Annual Thanksgiving Services of the United Brothers of Friendship and Sisters of Mysterious Tens, and Juveniles, was held at Bethlehem Baptist Church last Sunday afternoon. The church was taxed to its fullest capacity to listen to the very excellent program which was well rendered. The services were called to order by Master of Ceremonies Daniel Jones, and after the preliminary exercises, which were sandwiched with vocal and instrumental music, the pastor, Rev. A. E. Reynolds, was introduced, and that he pleased his hearers with a very masterful sermon was evidenced by congratulations. This organization is among those that have proven to be of material benefit to the race as well as the community, and all should feel proud of the great benefits derived from it, both to its members and public in general.
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George F. Wilson died at County hospital, funeral notice later. The funeral services of Harry Smith will be held Sunday, May 31st, at the Douglas Undertaking Co. parlor, 2 p. m. Friends invited. Interment Riverside. Steven Adams, the seven year old Mexican boy's, funeral was held Monday morning, May 25, at 10 a. m. He was laid to rest at Riverside. Douglas Undertaking Co., in charge of the above.
In Memoriam.
In memory of our darling grand-
mother, Cathrine Ware Wells; died,
May 28, 1913:
We loved her, yes we loved her,
But Jesus loved her more,
And he has sweetly called her
To yonder shining shore.
The golden gates were opened,
A gentle voice said "Come."
And, with farewells unspoken,
She calmly entered home.
DAUGHTER, SON, GRANDCHIL
DREN and GREAT GRANDCHIL
DREN. NAOMI LOWE.
PERKINS--SMALL.
On Monday evening, May 18, Miss Addie Perkins, formerly of Denver, and a member of Shorter chapel, was united in marriage to Mr. Ewing W. Small of Pasadena, Calif. Rev. W. S. S. Dyett, pastor of the A. M. E. church at Pasadena, performed the ceremony.
MEMORIAL DAY TODAY—THERE WILL BE A MONSTER PARADE.
Today is Memorial Day, the day that all patriotic citizens give honor to the departed dead. The usual parade will be held at 10 a. m., forming at Sixteenth and Broadway, down Sixteenth to Arapahoe, then to Seventeenth street, up Seventeenth to Broadway, where it will disband.
"LEAN, Baby LEAN," and listen to me. Will YOU go to the big SHIRT WAIST dance Wednesday evening, June 3, at the beautiful Houston hall? A large TIME awaits YOU.
THE ZION BAPTIST CHURCH.
Twenty-fourth and Ogden Streets, David E. Over, Minister.
The June luncheon of the Men's Bible Class will be given on Tuesday evening, the 9th. The supper will be served at 6:30, followed at 8 o'clock with the regular Bible lesson. Every man is welcome.
The Church Aid Society will hold a popularity contest between the ushers and the male members of the choir Friday evening, the 12th. A splendid program is being prepared, including a drill by the children. Admission free.
The advanced pupils of Miss Beatrice Thrashley will be presented in recital at the church on Tuesday evening, June 30th. An admission fee of 25 cents will be turned over to the work of the Missionary Circle.
Zion's Juvenile Choir is preparing to lead the public worship on the first Sunday. The young people have a treat in store for the congregation which no one can afford to miss.
SHORTER CHAPEL'S NOTES.
Our pulpit will be occupied tomorrow both morning and evening, by the Rev. W. H. Mance of Kansas City, Kan., who returned with our pastor from Pueblo yesterday. Be sure to hear him. In the afternoon at 3 o'clock the men of Shorter will go in a body to the auditorium to hear Congressman Hobson on Dry Colorado. Let every self respecting man hear him.
Hiram Commandery of Knight Templars of Denver held Ascension Day service at Shorter Chapel Sunday evening. The popularity of the craft was evidenced by the large audience in attendance, notwithstanding the fact that the public announcement of the meeting was made only a day or so in advance. Few organizations have presented so imposing and attractive appearance as did the Sir Knights and members of the Chapel of the Eastern Star. Our pastor delivered the sermon for the occasion, and so acceptably was its reception by the members of the craft and congregation that the most flattering compliments were showered upon him. One Sir Knight going so far in his expression of approval as to pledge a donation of $5.
The contest for the gold headed cane is on in dead earnest by the Ushers club. Vote for your choice. The race grows more and more exciting as the end of the contest approaches. June 18th is the date.
The mask carnival by the Stewardess board was postponed from the 21st to June 11th on account of the storm. Tickets for the 21st will admit you.
13 CENTS A DAY BUYS A PIANO,
WITH MUSIC LESSONS FREE. PIANOS FROM $88 UP. COLUMBINE
MUSIC CO., 920-924 15th STREET,
CHARLES BUILDING.
NAST & CO. "The Photographer"
A. H.
CHARLES A. NAST
The above likeness of Mr. Charles A. Nast, the EMINENT PHOTOGRAPHER of Denver. Everybody knows Mr. Nast for his genial kindly ways which reflect themselves in his work. The only trouble about this matter is that his work is so fine he cannot give it away in competition with the cheap stuff at starvation prices.
If any one can afford it, it pays to have something good made by NAST. His place is on the corner of 16th and CURTIS ST. (THE OLD CORNER), over Scholtz's Main Drug Store.
As a Financial Proposition:
The pen is mightier than the sword, but it's a safe bet that the sword swallower makes more money than the poet.
Called to Order.
Mater at the Theater—"Now, daughter, don't laugh satirically at the sad parts. If you can't cry, keep still."—Columbia Jester.
For Rent—Furnished Rooms, modern, No. 2108 Arapahoe Street. Mrs. Lizzie Peopletoe Carter, Proprietor.
Wanted good barber. Apply Rocky Mountain Athletic Club, 2014 Champa street.
FOR RENT—Seven room house, good condition. Gas and electricity, 2018 Champa street, $15 per month. Apply Rocky Mountain Athletic Club, 2014 Champa street.
For Rent—A nicely modern furnished room. Apply Mrs. George Ingram, 2355 Ogden street.
FOR RENT—Two 8 room modern houses, walking distance, $22.50 and $18 per month. S. A. Bondurant, 6 E. 11th Ave., telephone Main 3433.
Two nicely furnished rooms for rent to gentlemen, or man and wife who work out. Apply to Mrs. Annie L. Walker, 2507 Clarkson street, 'phone York 6685.
ICE CREAM PARLOR FOR SALE, 2721 Welton street. A. C. Lindsey, Proprietor.
Brickler's New Barber Shop is located at 2208 Larimer street. Shave, 10. Hair cut, 25c; children, 15c.
FOR SALE.
8 room modern, 24th and Marion,
$2,500.
6 room modern ex. fur., 28th and
Cal., $2,000.
5 room brick, 8th and Elati, $1,500.
5 room modern ex. fur., 400 block,
South Grant, $1,850.
FOR SALE—Seven room modern.
1½ lots, 22nd and Ogden. See this
and make an offer.
Above properties can be handled by
making small payment down and rest
like rent. S. A. BONDURANT.
6 East Eleventh Ave. Tel. Main 3433
THE DE LUXE.
Furnished apartments. Two and three rooms, with hot and cold water in each kitchen. Also front room, single, electric lights and gas. Modern throughout. Rates very reasonable, 2352-2358 Odgen street, corner Twenty-fourth avenue. Phone York 6707. Mrs. R. M. Blakey.
Bolden Bros.' Barber Shop
Rufus Bolden, Mgr. W. D.
Smith, G. C. Craig Artists
BATHS AND ELECTRICAL MASSAGE
QUICK SERVICE
PHONE MAIN 4052
926 19th Street Denver.
Near Curtis
SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT
THE Joslin DRY GOODS CO.
WE COMMENCE
OUR SUMMER
OPENING SALE
MONDAY, JUNE 1ST
With a buying power that ranks with the world's foremost, we are enabled to offer and display a new stock of summer merchandise that has never been equaled.
We cordially invite you to come and see the magnificent display. The store decorations alone are worth a visit.
We realized long ago that you have the right to expect quick service, and have worked with that idea. By service we mean:
To make shopping a pleasure.
To wait on customers promptly and quickly.
To give each one our undivided attention.
To be prompt in deliveries.
To give the best values at the lowest prices.
Another one of our article purchased here or turn it; your money or given to you gladly. We fairness.
We have issued man paper that will give on many suggestions for receive one at your resid something for everybody.
We ask you to accept to this opening and see be as great as that of "
other one of our features is that if for any reason an
purchased here does not give absolute satisfaction, re-
quire your money or merchandise of equal value will be
to you gladly. We leave it entirely to your sense of
have issued many thousands of a four-page illustrat-
that will give one a very good idea of the event and
suggestions for summer apparel. If you failed to rene-
me at your residence, phone or call for one; there
ing for everybody in it.
I ask you to accept this as a personal invitation to com-
pening and see for yourself; then your enthusiasm will
meet as that of "The Store Accommodating."
Another one of our features is that if for any reason any article purchased here does not give absolute satisfaction, return it; your money or merchandise of equal value will be given to you gladly. We leave it entirely to your sense of fairness.
We have issued many thousands of a four-page illustrated paper that will give one a very good idea of the event and many suggestions for summer apparel. If you failed to receive one at your residence, phone or call for one; there's something for everybody in it.
We ask you to accept this as a personal invitation to come to this opening and see for yourself; then your enthusiasm will be as great as that of "The Store Accommodating."
Is What You Get at
HENNING'S
And Y
Henni
Are on Everyone's
EVER
And You Save a Dollar. Henning's Shoes on Everyone's Feet, and Save a Dollar Is on EVERYONE'S MIND.
Are on Everyone's Feet, and Save a Dollar Is on EVERYONE'S MIND.
Go and See for Yourself
Henning's $2.50 Shoe Store
820 and 822 FIFTEENTH STREET, DENVER
enning's $2.50 Shoe Store
and 822 FIFTEENTH STREET, DENVER
CUT FLOWERS POTTED PLANT
Floral Designs for all Occasion
MRS. L. A. DUNSMO
820 and 822 FIFTEENTH STREET, DENVER
Greenhouses Half Block West of Highland West Thirty-third and Irving. 3269 Fairview GALLUP 355 DENVER, COLORA ERNEST HOWARD,
Greenhouses Half Block West of Highland Park West Thirty-third and Irving. 3269 Fairview Pl. LUP 355 DENVER, COLORADO
ERNEST
Carpenter, Jo
Paints, Oils and G
Coal, Wo
Carpenter, Job and Repair Work. Paints, Oils and Glass. Glazing Done
1
PEONY
for any reason any
dute satisfaction, re-
equal value will be
likely to your sense of
four-page illustrated
ea of the event and
if you failed to re-
all for one; there's
al invitation to come
your enthusiasm will
odating."
H
Shoe Store
Dollar.
Shoes
a Dollar Is on
D.
Shoe Store
ET, DENVER
POTTED PLANTS
for all Occasions
DUNSMORE
FLORIST
West of Highland Park
Eng. 3269 Fairview Pl.
ER, COLORADO
ARD,
Hair Work.
Glazing Done
express.
Phone Champa 752
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HOUSEWIFE ALWAYS SAFE IN
SERVING THE STRAWBERRY.
Here Are Six Suggestions for the Use of the Delicious Fruit—Muffins Added to Enjoyment of Af-
Strawberry Bavarian Cream.—Take one cupful of mashed strawberries, using both the pulp and the juice, three-quarters of cupful of powdered sugar, one cupful heavy cream stiffly beaten, and three-quarters of level tablespoonful of granulated gelatin. Soak the gelatin in four tablespoonfuls cold water. When it is soft, melt over hot water. Add melted gelatin to strawberry juice and let it partially cool or set. Beat the sugar in the whipped cream, fold this into the partly set gelatin and allow the whole to stiffen thoroughly before serving. It may be molded in large fancy mold, in a plain loaf, or individual molds. This dish may be served with plain cream and sugar or the remainder of the box of strawberries may be mashed, sweetened to taste, and poured around it.
Old-Fashioned Strawberry Short Cake.—One quart flour, one scant teaspoonful salt, two teaspoonful baking powder, two tablespoonfuls butter, one pint milk. Sift flour, salt and powder together, rub in cold butter, add milk and mix into smooth dough just soft enough to handle. Divide in half and roll out the size of pan used. Bake in hot oven 20 minutes. Separate the cake, and spread with butter. Hull one quart strawberries, wash, mash, add cupful sugar, spread over cake and serve.
Steamed Strawberry Pudding.—Mix one cupful sugar, two eggs, one teaspoonful baking powder, two cupful flour, one cupful sweet milk, two cupfuls strawberries and steam two hours. Mash two additional cupfuls of berries, add three-quarters cupful sugar and serve with pudding.
Strawberry Punch—Hull and wash one quart ripe strawberries and half a pint raspberries. Crush together and strain juice through a sieve. Make a sirtup of two cupfuls sugar and one and one-half cupfuls water. Mix with the juice and sirup a large tumbler port wine. Keep on ice for several hours. Serve in small glasses with lady fingers.
Strawberry Muffins—Add to one pint flour two teaspoonfuls baking powder and a little salt; sift all together. Cream one-quarter cupful of butter, two tablespoonfuls sugar and add the beaten yolks of two eggs. Stir into butter, sugar and eggs alternately one cupful sweet milk and the flour mixture. When smooth, stir in beaten whites of two eggs. Have ready one cupful fresh strawberries thoroughly cleaned and hulled and sprinkled with sugar. Stir into the mixture without breaking. Pour in buttered muffins, bake in slow oven three-quarters of an hour and serve warm.
Strawberry Layer Cake.—Cream one cupful sugar and one tablespoonful butter. Add one egg, beaten thoroughly, one cupful sweet milk, two cupfuls flour into which two teaspoonfuls baking powder have been sifted, a pinch of salt and a dash of nutmeg. Divide this mixture into two or three cake tins and bake in a moderately hot oven. Hull and clean one box strawberries, cut the berries in half, sweeten and place between and on top of layers. Whip a half pint cream until stiff. Put over berries and serve.
Rhubarb Dumplings
Children will enjoy these for lunch or supper, even though they do not like rhubarb. Many children very much dislike it, in fact. The rhubarb is stewed in half its weight of sugar and a little water. While it is cooking mix a biscuit batter, using a pint of flour, a half teaspoonful salt, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder and a cupful of milk. Drop this in the rhubarb by spoonfuls and cook for from eight to ten minutes. A pinch of ground ginger or a few raisins can be added if the flavor is liked.
For Emergencies
To keep the tablecloth clean at a child's place, I have found it most helpful to get some thin white oilied paper, spread under the child's plate and extending a little beyond. It will be very noticeable, especially if it is cut and laid smoothly on the cloth.
To keep a meal hot for a late comer take a soup plate and almost fill it with hot water, then place the dinner plate, with its contents, on top of the hot soup plate, and cover closely with another plate.—Exchange.
Little Steamed Puddings
Cream one-quarter cupful of butter with one-half cupful of sugar, add one-half cupful of milk, then one cupful of flour sifted with two level teaspoonfuls of baking powder and a pinch of salt, and last fold in the stiffly beaten whites of three eggs. Have some small molds or cups buttered, fill half full with the batter, cover with buttered paper and steam three-quarters of an hour. Serve hot with a sauce.
Individual Peach Dessert
In a frappe glass place one-half a peach from a can of peaches, with the cavity side up. In the hollow place four or five marshmallows and nearly cover with sirup from the can. Now heap up the glass with whipped cream pled lightly on top of the marshmallows. Serve very cold with crisp mao arroons.
HOPE OF THE NATION IS IN ITS YOUTH
je gala RSET aS
Me tig
a a mM, AN 8
i ! oe on gx x :
i / fF ;
eg "A ——-
e — se
N OUR common schools we have not only the nurseries, but the real West
I Points and Fort Leavenworths of the Republic. From theme is to come the
ever-flowing stream of our fresh young soldiery, who shall maintain the
‘integrity and glory of the nation.
In more than 250,000 buildings they gather—in the rude log hut or primi-
tive “shack” of the remote frontier and in the costly and commodious struc-
tures which we rear in the crowded city. Many thousand officers of the Field
und Staff and Line marshal and guide day by day 16,000,000 of theso juvenile
warrlors—the infantry, cavalry and artillery of our homes.
It is upon the intelligence and morality and loyalty of the American citizen
that the institutions of our country rest—“broad-based upon the people's will.”
Give our common school system to Mexico. Educate their children as we
are training ours. Break up their great landed estates into small farms and
Jet the common people own and till them, and barbarous Mexico would be
wiped from the map of the world.
Sacer acerorasen os a CTO TTT,
0860065006056660606086060656 ) clenificanne. Tate dex. cic
A
Ruins Comer
Gran ok
POPES EEE SESS SSSETSETESSOIOS
PEE REE? A TS A
peesceaerersnatentenna
N American must re-
yy he looks upon the red
clay fields and pine-
A, grown land where the
WS Army of Northern Vir-
WES Or glands con tecenae
render were agreed upon and signed.
Eee ans panes evel nat nae
these words of Grant “L regard it
as my duty to shift from myself the
responsibility of any further effusion
of blood by asking of you the surren-
a ae
Zo. same
4 | ey
Sl ae
ie Boe .
ie a7 Vw
fl a
a
We is
General Grant in Wartime.
der of that portion of the Confederate
states army known as the Army of
Northern Virginia.” Also there.comes
to mind these words of Lee: “After
four years’ arduous struggle the Army
of Northern Virginia has been com-
pelled to yield to overwhelming num-
bers and resources.”
It is espectally tmpressive to visit
the surrender ground of Appomattox
upon the anniversary of the events
which gave to Appomattox everlasting
Be SS? et /
RSS. SN ey S
CO Saeco Se!
TaN nee
2 eH a ——
ae i
aly
Ci
ly ys
ce
T
\
VI\A we
ayv\A
Dont eu hese tne fesery or eee
Ben Crouse teary ar ag
Dest Sates cre ecuaeel Saas
De areca ede eta
Heat Weed of mete tay
Riermrgiecs co sitaitoinion
St reese gt eS
tower of the Theological seminary on
the edge of the town, “The engagement
was desperate,” he declared, “and the
Union forces seemed to be getting the
worst of it when I suddenly saw the
corps flag of General Reynoids. Thad
no one to communicate with, soI sent
‘one of my men to Buford, who rushed
up and selzed my glasses, and on see-
ing Reynolds said, ‘Now we can hold
this place.’ Very shortly after this
General Reynolds and his staff came
up and, seeing Buford in the cupola,
he cried out, ‘What's the matter,
John?” ‘The devil's to pay!’ and go-
ing down the ladder he met General
Reynolds, who said, ‘I hope you can
hold out until my corps comes up.’ ‘I
reckon I can,’ was Buford’s reply.
“Reynolds then suggested that they
ride out avd see about it. ‘General,
do not expose yourself too much,’ said
Buford, but Reynolds laughed and
‘moved nearer still. After giving some
ROT NTT
| (F (@)
aes
|show how deeply and sincerely we
‘cherish the memory of those for
whom the garlands are twined, It will
/be necessary for some men to make
speeches and for others to listen. For
the benefit of the listeners as well as
[of the apeniers, a recipe for a Memo.
‘rial day address, furnished by one
who may bp a bit cynical, is given.
Take three stories, strictly fresh.
Add one tablespoonfui each of ancient
‘sud mediaeval history; allow to come
‘to a boil, and settle witn a chip of
‘Plymouth Rock. Add slowly 15 drops
of Webster's extract ct American rev-
olution (tea flavoring). Pour over
one quart Appomattox apple sauce.
Stir in rapidly six gallons solid facts.
'—the heavier the better, Beat up thor-
oughly four or more modern problems,
‘first being careful to separate them
a
| >
| (Y,
| Y
(
AEBEING
significance. Today {t is a ruined
hamlet where a few drowsy persons
dwell. The courthouse was ‘burned 15
years ago, and around the desolated
court square, cumbered with ashes,
charred plaster and shattered bricks,
a half dozen tottering dwellings cling.
Some are tenanted, but others are too
near collapse for even this faint dis-
tinetion.
‘The “surrender house,” the home ot
William McLean—in the parlor ot
‘which Grant and Lee met, is no more
ie
Co
a SD
= oe He 3
s Ce
As oo’
¥ ee ws)
\ o a 4
ae)
Gannhohetieiiess
The site and garden of this house are
heaped with piles of brick and rotting
lumber, which once were the house
About 1892 the McLean house was
taken down for the purpose of removal
to and reconstruction at the Columbian
exposition at Chicago, but the execu-
(on of this plan was carried no fur-
ther than the demolition of the house.
There were two Appomattox towns
in 1865. It was at Appomattox Sta-
tion on the line of railway between
Petersburg and Lynehburg that Sheri-
dan’s cavalry captured a train of sup-
‘plies from Lynchburg intended for
Lee's army. These supplies stood be-
tween Lee's men and starvation. Ap-
pomattox Court House—the county
seat of Appomattox county—was three
miles northward. Today Appomattox
Court House oceuples the site of Ap-
pomattox Station and {s a brisk vil
lage. Old Appomattox Court House—
the Appomattox of history, the Appo-
mattox where the expiring hopes ot
the South were crushed—this is the
hopeless village told of.
Much of the ground occupied by the
armies is now covered with tall, thick
pines. In a particularly dark stretch of
pines the traveler comes upon the
North Carolina monument, the most—
in fact, the only—imposing marker on
the fields of Appomattox. The in-
acieti on this monument, which
gives glorious praise to the soldiers ot
‘North Carolina, has caused tense dis-
cussion. The accuracy of the state-
ments cut on the stone has been de-
nied.
North Carolina
First at Bethel
Farthest to the front at Gettysburg
and Chickamauga
Last at Appomattox.
OIUBFCKaIS7
om
Re Wie)raseec LL
FOR _E a 17
OF LBRwrORS,
Pe CRS
42RENCR iBIE Be
1E tragic death of Gen.
John F. Reynolds occurred
less than an hour after
the beginning of the battle
of Gettysburg. The best
account of this has been
given by a member of the
Union army signal corps.
Ha wae watshinc paihe
vi
HE time is again at hand to
pay tribute to our honored
dead, to indulge in Mara-
thon runs, to enter con-
tests for silver cups and
to secure tickets that will
admit us to the double-
headers at the baseball
grounds...o. that we mae
4
2
O far as those to whom the
day was originally dedi-
cated are concerned, the
crest has been passed.
The tide is ebbing. The
army of stalwart men who
once marched with meas
ured tread and upright
shoulders is today the thin
blue line that wavers at times in
ypite of the heroic attempts to
throw off the weight of years. This
is the pathetic feature of Memo-
rial day. The broken ranks, the fal
tering footsteps, the snowy lock,
the stooping shoulders, the halting
gait, the shortening line ‘that each
year brings bear silent testimony to
the fact that it is only a matter of a
few years until the thin blue line will
have become a blessed memory—when
the last of the boys of '61 will have
From Atlantic to Pacific.
From the Pine Tree to Lone Star,
they. are kath'ring "round Old Glory,
And they® marching to. the war,
Don't you hear the horses prancing?
Don's you hear the sabres clash?
pont you hear the cannons roaring?
Don't you hear the muskets crash?
pont you amell the smoke of battle?
‘Oh. youl wish that you had gone,
When you bear the shouts and cheering
For the boys who whipped the Don!
‘There'll be Yankees, there'll be Johnnies,
‘There'll be North and South no more,
When the boys come marching homeward
With Old Glory. borne. before
From Atlantic. to, Pacific,
from the Pine ‘Tree to Lone Star,
They'll be one beneath O10. Glory
‘After coming from the war.
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directions to Buford, which showed
his determination to concentrate and
to fight, General Reynolds again
mounted his horse and rode away to
meet the head of his column. The
woods at this time were full of Con-
federate sharpshooters who were pick-
ing off men here and there. When
General Reynolds, accompanied by his
aids, Captains Mitchell and Baird, and
Orderly Charles H. Veil, rode up one
of the Union regiments was approach-
ing the woods. Reynolds exclaimed,
‘Forward, men; forward, for God's
sake, and drive those fellows out of
the woods!’ He turned to look for
his supports and to hurry them on,
but before he could speak again the
bullet of a sharpshooter had penetrat-
ed his brain and he fell forward, dying,
upon his horse. His fall was not no-
ticed by the troops, who swept on and
‘compelled Archer's brigade to sur-
render. General Reynolds’ horse car-
ried the body a short distance, when
‘it was borne to the rear in a blanket
just as Archer himself was being
brought in a prisoner.” The death of
|General Reynolds was a severe blow
to the Union forces, and no casualty
of the war brought more widespread
mourning. His monument is one of
the finest on the field today.
from their solutions. Then put both
mixtures together and beat to 2
froth, When well mixed, add the fol
lowing slowly: One cupful politics
(with extreme care, or it may curdle).
One quart milk of human kindness.
(The genuine article is extremely rare,
but a substitute recommended by many
public men, and closely resembling
the pure variety, may be obtained any-
where. Use the condensed form.)
Tincture of reltgion—a small quantity,
to taste. One-half cupful premonitions
of national disaster. One and one-third
cupfuls hope. One sprig sage (ad-
vice). If in danger of becoming heavy
and falling flat, add quickly a pinch of
gunpowder. Three drops each of pa-
thos and wit. These are scarce and
hard to procure; but a very little, well
diluted, you will find will go a long
way. Laurel and bay leaves may be
substituted for pathos, if necessary.
Stir the whole until thoroughly tired,
then place in a cold oven and let
warm up gradually. When done
brown garnish with firecrackers and
flowers of rhetoric, and serve hot, on
a large American flag.
HENRY HOWLAND.
°
The Monarch Liquor Co.
The Only Strictly Family Liquor House in Denver
WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF
Imported and Domestic Wine, Liquors
and Beer
| DELIVERIES FROM 7 A. M. TO MIDNIGHT
: shane
mem Champa 508 1538 Court Pl.
PROMPT ATTENTION TO OUT OF TOWN ORDERS
Boost Colorado Products Patronize Home Industry
ZANG’S NEW BEERS
NOW ON THE MARKET
GUARANTEED ABSOLUTELY PURE
Delivered Daily to All Parts of the City
The Ph. Zang Brewing Co.
Telephone Gallup 395
We Boost for Colorado You Should Boost for Us
The @hampa Pharmacy
Twenticth and Champa,
Is the place to get your
DRUGS, CHEMICALS AND PATENT MEDICINES
WHE SERVE ~ DRINKS.
Prescriptions Our Specialty.
Phone us and we will deliver the goods to all parts of the city.
JAMES E. THRALL, Proper.
PHONE MAIN 2425.
The Central Bottling & Distributing Co.
Aasastcontnoliancte
CAPITOL BEER---IT’S CAPITAL
‘Try a case, 2 doz. pints for $1.10, delivered promptly; empties called for.
Family Liquors, Wines, and Cordials
Genuine Goods at Popular Prices
A glass of good wine will improve your Sunday dinner, and aid digestion.
2727 Welton Street. Phone Main 6363.
BS ee——————
CARLSON’S
Dd
Peerless Ice Cream
<= Phones: Main 112 and Main 5787
PID YOU EVER TRY
Neef Bros.’ Beer?
ee ros. eer:
It’s made right, and tastes right.
None better made anywhere and
This is a Strictly Colorado Production
BE SURE AN TRY IT
Supply Your Home with the
Celebrated Tivoli Beer
BOTTLED BY
THE EMPIRE BOTTLING Co.
Phone Gallup 245 |
Everybody who reads
magazines. buys news-
papers, but everybody
who reads newspapers
doesn't buy magazines.
Catch the Drift?
Here's the medium to
reach the people of
this community.
| THE BEST ICH CREAM AND |
: CANDIES AT
0.P.BAUR Q CO. :
CATERERS AND
— ne
; CONFECTIONERS :
——-.
Phone: 168. ;
1512 Curtis Street, Denver, Colo. ;
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Hampton boys learn how to care for milk, make butter and cottage
cheese, and handle cows to the best possible advantage.
They must handle dairy products according to the most approved stan-
dards.
The idea underlying this work Is to train who shall go out and show
the country people the value of good dairy methods. :
=
Rev. H. H. Dunn, pastor of Central
Congregational church; Rey. A. Law-
less, Jr., pastor of University church,
and President EB. M. Stevens of
Straight university have returned to
Washington from the National Congre-
gational convention held in Washing-
ton. A large delegation was present
from all sections of the United States.
Four national Congregational socie-
ties were represented in the conven-
tion, viz: The National Congregational
council, the Congregational Church
Building society, the Sunday School
and Publication society and the Amer-
ican Misstorary association.
The American Missionary associa-
tion is carrying on a most extensive
work among the colored people. It is
now conducting and maintaining 64
schools for the colored people in the
South, with an enrollment of 14,000,
under the direction of 600 trained
teachers. ‘The churches among the
colored people of the South number
206, with a membership of 15,000. A
most aggressive program for the fur-
ther extension of church work, for bet-
ter equipment of school buildings, and
higher efficiency in school work was
adopted. The new program calls for
greater local initiative, a more dis
criminating missionary support, a
larger number of _ self-supporting
churches, increased activities in 50
cial service in urban and rural centers,
closer supervision of the field and a
Sunday school superintendent for the
colored schools i the south.
Rev. Sterling M. Brown of Washing-
ton was elected president of the con-
vention. Rev. H. H. Proctor, D. D., of
Atlanta, Ga., was eletced secretary.
‘The next convention will meet at Tal-
jJadega college, Talladega, Ala.
Although she is only thirty-one
years old, Mrs, Winfield Stoner of
Quarrysville, Pa., is the mother of
nine children, and in a competition
with 350 others she was proclaimed
the champion cake baker.
A final word on the subject of our
personal responsibility as an executive
council to the churches seems to be
needed, says a correspondent of the
Standard. It has been suggested that
the executive council should ignore all
organizations among the churches and
deal directly with local churches. In
many cases that may be the fair and
proper way to operate, but I am firmly
convinced that the experiences of the
executive council in its work as well
as the present needs of the negro
churches only tend to emphasize the
advisability of using our friendly of-
fices to secure among the negro
churches such an organization of
forces as will win the respect and the
regard of possible benefactors and
make it possible for us to do through
them as a group force, what we are
confident that we could do less satis-
factorily if we dealt with them sepa-
rately and ignored that important and
essential relationship which éhey have
with one another.
Miss Cristie Holmberg has been
elected clerk in Santa Barbara, Cal.,
by an overwhelming majority over her
male opponent.
By February India’s greatest hydro-
electric plant will be supplying 60,000.-
horse power to industries in Bombay
and vicinity.
All the six sons of John xd Mary
Wheatland of South Croyden, Eng.,
are in the royal navy. Their ages
range from sixteen to seventeen years.
Countess Molitor, an English wom-
an, will shortly start on a perilous
trip across the Ruba-el-Khali, the
great sandy desert of South Arabia,
alone, using only native guards.
The Southern negro is working out
his own salvation, not in terms of poli-
ties, not in terms of formal education,
but in terms of property ownership;
end mainly in terms of land in the
rural regions. He is doing this with-
out let or hindrance in the South,
largely aside from the awareness of
the whites, largely because of thelr in-
difference, but even more largely with
the sympathy and help of his white
friends and neighbors. He is lifting
himself by tugging at his own boot
straps, a figure commonly used to in-
dicate an impossible something; but
in cfvilization, as in education, it is the
only possible means of elevation.
The negro is emerging from Jungle-
Hei and winning civilization mainly
and necessarily by his own efforts. His
progress every inch of the way is
marked by struggle—struggle within
himself for mastery over himself and
struggle outward, surrounding circum:
stances.
The negro problem will not be
solved by editorials, creeds or stat:
utes; by conferences, congresses or
assemblies; by pride, prejudice or pas:
sion. The development of the negro
can be stimulated, safeguarded and di-
rected wisely and beneficently. ‘The
stream of tendencies can be kept clear
of injustice and cruelty, brutality and
inhumanity, and {t will be so if we
have any Christianity worth the name.
—Dr. B. C. Rranson in the Southern
Workman.
A plea to the Methodist Episcopal
church, South, asking it to take a
deeper interest in the affairs of the
colored Methodist Episcopal church is
contained in the quadrennial address
of bishops which was made at a gen-
eral conference of the colored church
at St. Louis.
When a woman {s in love with a
man she'll listen to what he says—
just as if he were saying something.
Well worth consideration is this’ex-
tract from an editorial in the Chicago
Record-Herald:
“The problem 1s to educate these
grown-up children into mental and
moral maturity. That is no easy
task. Rather it {s an arduous effort
to which many a life must be given,
and it will never be helped along by
oratory, but only by the patient teach-
ing of line upon Mne, precept upon
precept, till the fundamentals of hon-
esty, thrift, thoroughness and keeping
one's word have been drilled into
their understanding and worked out
by them in practise, To that end such
a humble and patlent propaganda as
Booker Washington's, aiming to make
the blacks into well-behaved citizens
and good workers, honest and reliable,
fs worth all the oratory of Demos-
thenes and Cicero and Alexander L.
Jackson combined.” ‘i
Strikes and lockouts in Rhode Is-
land during 1913 caused a loss of $122,-
855 to wage-earners and about three
hundred and fifty thousand dollars in
value of production to employers, ac-
cording to the report of the commis.
stoner of industrial statistics.
London is. divided into two camps
over the proposition to widen Rich-
mond bridge, over the Thames. The
bridge was opened for traffic in 1777.
The way is narrow, but opponents of
the improvement plan say that to
tamper with the ancient structure will
destroy its beauty.
L, B. Johnson of St. Albans, Vt.,
generally attracts attention when he
drives through the town behind his
pair of two-year-old steers. He has
trained them so that they will obey
the reins as well as a horse.
PROPER CARE OF BLANKETS
Usefulness May Be Greatly Added to
by Adoption of Methods De-
scribed Here.
If housewives knew what a great
saving there was in having three or
even four sets of ‘blankets for their
beds, in as many weights, they would
not hesitate to make the outlay for
them. The cotton or silk and cotton,
blankets of June, July and August
Should be washed and rebound, if
needed, and put away in their tar bags
to give place to those of cotton and
wool.
| Now, the all-wool blankets, as all
housewives know, are most difficult
to launder perfectly, and are not al-
ways satisfactorily dry cleaned, so
every effort must be made to keep
them clean. This is done by using
them only in the extreme cold months,
December, January and February,
then shaking and airing them care-
fully, putting them away. If the up-
per sheet is very long, so that it folds
over, and the spread is used over the
blankets, they may really be used two
seasons or more without a real wash-
ing being necessary.
This method prolongs the life of the
blankets and makes them always seem
new. And once in two years one may
afford to buy a new pair of blankets
to use for best or to replace those
that have grown the bhabbiest in
service.
Old blankets are always in demand
in the household. economy for under
blankets, ironing board pads, scrub
rags and polishing hardwood floors,
and in a dozen other ways.
The Indian blankets offered in our
markets today are rather new, but
already in demand, especially those
of the Navajo weaving. This tribe
numbers about 1,600 natives and they
have a million sheep on their reserva-
tions. The designs on their blankets
are geometrical as a rule, and the
colors are black, blue, red, yellow and
gray. They are warm and durable, so
are in great demand for northern
travelers and residents at the army
posts. They are also quite a dominant
note in the eastern blanket centers.
OLD CHICKEN FOR FRYING
More Economical and as Appetizing
as Young Bird If Prepared in
‘This Fashion.
Few women know that from the
much-despised old hen one can make
a delicious dish of fried chicken. The
market price of old fowl is always
from 4 to 6 Cents less per pound than
that for the young birds; also, the
former has the better flavor.
Clean and cut up the old bird as for
stewing (this must be done in the
morning for an evening dinner), put in
stew pan two small onions, some pars-
ley, salt to taste and a pinch of pap-
rika. Add the chicken and enough
water and stew gently until tender.
Do not take the fowl from the stew
pot too soon, as herein lies the secret
of a tasty meal, but allow it to remain
in its own Juices until you are ready
to fry it. Then remove to a placter
and lightly flour each piece.
Have your frying pan hot; add your
butter and a few tablespoonfuls of
olive ofl. Fry to a delicate brown and
serve in a bed of lettuce, with milk
dressing, or cream, if preferred.
‘The chicken stock will make a fine
cream of chicken soup or clear soup
for luncheon.
If the hen is fat, there will be on the
soup stock, when cooled, a large
amount of rendered fat, which maybe
skimmed off and used for frying pota-
toes, thus affording saving in lard.
eynlev Gramm Gale:
Make a one-egg cake and bake in
round tin and cut with sharp knife.
Use this cream between and on top
and scatter whole preserved straw-
berries over top if you have them:
Cream—Bake three tart apples after
coring. Scrape out inside of apple and
beat till it grows light colored, then
add a little confectioner’s sugar and
beat again. Then aad stifly beaten
white of one egg and beat and add
enough more confectioner's sugar,
beating constantly till about the con-
sistency of heavy whipped cream. Use
the day after making. It sets into
a sort of sponge and looks like
whipped cream. The more you beat tt
the whiter it gets.
Fig Tarts.
Make and bake piccrust shells. Fill
with the following filling: Boil one
cupful sugar and three teaspoonfuls
water until {t threads, or about six
minutes. Pour over the beaten whites
of two eggs. Add one and one-fourth
teaspoonfuls of lemon juice, to one
cupful of chopped figs. Mix well.
‘Sane tanh peckainc,
Beat the whites of three eggs until
stiff, add one-half cupful of powdered
sugar and the grated yellow rind of
halz a lemon. Pcur on slowly one
cupful of boiling water, stirring all
the time, and the sauce is ready to
serve.
Gray Cake.
One egg well beaten, one cupful
sugar, one teaspocnful butter, one
cupful milk, two cupfuls flour, one
cupful walnuts, two teaspoonfuls bak-
ing powder, one teaspoonful vanilla. A
very rich and inexpensive cake.
Flemish Salad.
Cut up any dried fish or herrings
into waferlike slices, put them in a
salad bow! with potato, lettuce, cold
carrots, cut into dice, and a very few
spring onions. Pour a mayonnaise
over this and serve. ;
Do You Know
That—
The COLORADO
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
ao Si) cae: ae
HAMROCK BACKS TROOPS BE-
FORE COURT-MARTIAL.
Major Gives Testimony in Behalf of
Officers and Soldiers Accused
in Ludlow Battle.
Western Newsnaper Union News Service.
Denver—Major Patrick J. Hamrock,
tried before the court-martial com-
mission at the Golden rifle range on
charges of “murder,” manslaughter,
arson and larceny growing out of the
burning of the strikers’ tent colony
at Ludlow April 29, appeared in the
proceedings as principal witness to de-
fend men under him on similar
charges.
| Hamrock repeated his version of the
‘conflict which resulted in the deaths
of twenty-five persons, twenty-one of
whom were members of strikers’ fam-
fles. The ten defendents arraigned
each testified that Hamrock had pre-
sented the battle as it occurred. Each
denied that he saw any looting of the
eglony or deliberate burning of the
tents by members of the militia,
He reiterated a belief that the strik-
ers had fired first after he had sum-
MAJ. PATRICK HAMROCK
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Major Hamrock was in command
of the state troops of Colorado who
fired on the strikers’ tent colony at
Ludlow
moned reinforcements in anticipation
ot trouble, These reinforcements came
from Cedar Hill and Hastings before
the strikers armed themselves for bat-
tle, he admitted.
He’ praised the men who fought un-
der him, declaring against contrary
testimony of Capt. Carson, who testi-
fied his men were wholly undisci-
plined, that they had obeyed every or-
der he gaye.
‘The men arraigned included Ser-
geant P. M. Cullen, T. J. Casey, C. E.
‘Taylor and Corporal Charles Patton;
Privates B, J. Welsh, G. G. Osbourne,
Lawrence Campbell, F. W. Mason,
Harry B, Faulker and Daniel Pacheco.
‘They are members of Troop B. Second
infantry, principally.
Points brought out in previous testi-
mony of Hamrock that fire of rifles
and machine guns was directed on the
tent colony when strikers fired from
this direction upon the state troopers;
that he knew nothing of the manner in
which Louis Tikas, tent colony leader,
James Fyler, union secretary and
Frank Rubino, striker, met their death
deaths, after being taken prisoners,
out of which grew the “murder”
charges, and that every effort was
made to rescue the women and chil-
dren from the tent colony when it
caught fire, were reiterated by Ham-
mocks
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
tate Asks Bids for $1,000,000 Bonds.
Denyer.—Bids on the militia indebt
edness authorized by the special ses:
sicn of the Legislature are being
sought by State Treasurer Leddy. The
treasurer said that he plans to ask
firet for the highest bids on an amount
of bonds ranging from $500,000 to $1,
000,000, ‘The work of issuance and
sale of the bonds is being rushed.
‘Work of issuing vouchers for certifi:
cates of indebtedness, which will be
exchangeable for the bonds is occupy-
ing the regular office staff of the
Colorado National Guard. Militiamen
who have had pay due them for sev-
eral months are eager to get their
youchers, which are being completed.
Counterfelters Sentenced.
Denver—William EB. Tipton was sen-
tenced by United States District Judge
Robert B. Lewis to four years in the
federal prison at Fort Leavenworth
and to pay a fine of $600. James M.
Baker, son-in-law of Baker, received a
sentence of two years and a fine of
$100. ‘The men were found guilty of
conspiracy to counterfeit United States
uiver coins.
Special Auditors Find Extra Horses.
Denver.—The committee of three
named by Governor Ammons to check
up on the horses purchased for the
use of the state troops in the Trini-
dad strike zone, have reported. In-
stead of failing to account for the 270
hend contracted for, as it was predict-
ed by Auditor Kenehan would be the
case, the commission found three
horses in excess of the number for
which bills were presented. ‘The 270
head were billed to the state at $24,-
000, which is an average of about $90
‘each.’
HINKLE & REASONER Pool Hall & Barber S CIGARS
I Hall & Barber S
CIGARS
SHOES SHINED BY EXPERTS
PHONE MAIN 6159
E SAVE YO
$10.00
2051 Champa Street
WE SAVE YOU $10.00
WE SAVE YOU $10.00
Margaret L.
deliver the Best $20 to $25 Suit in Denver. Best Workmanship Tailoring
We Deliver the Best $20 to $25 Tailor Made Suit in Denver. Best Goods. Best Workmanship. Tailoring in all its Branches for LADIES AND GEN= TLEMEN. N Ferry, 1905 CURTIS STREET
THE SEWING MACHINE
THE BARRING ROOM
A high class Pool and Billiard room. A supberb Gymnasium and in fact everytning that goes To make up a FISRT CLASS RESORT.
RICHARD FRAZIER, Manager
2014 Champa Street.
Denver, Colorado
PHONES: MAIN 2274 & 2275
er Shop
YOU
THE
PROFIT
IS
YOURS
$25 Tailor
Best Goods.
oring in all
Slender Silhouette in Tailored Gowns
IN tailored gowns there is little departure from the elender silhouette. Skirts, with all their drapery, cling rather closely to the figure. Coats are short in the front and lengthen more or less toward the back. Many of them reach only a little below the waist line. Most of them open at the front and are finished with revers. The rolling, or standing collar, worn with the coat, is made of fine net or lace and wired to stay in place. An original design is portrayed here which differs in a few particulars from the majority of suits. It is very practical and quite graceful.
There is in this model a peg-top skirt, narrow about the feet, with a short tunic skirt over it. The jacket buttons up the front but may be opened to the bust line, with oddly shaped pointed revers finishing it at the sides. The sleeves are smaller and longer than in the most popular of the tailor-made suits. There is a wide frill of lace hanging over the hand and standing about the neck. Small pockets are simulated at each side on the body of the coat. Besides being unusual and attractive this model possesses much distinct-
Pretty Hats of Jet and Maline
THE LADY OF THE ROAD
88
FOR those who like jet in millinery, combinations of jet and maline prove themselves most attractive. Masses of maline absorb and hide the light, but jet tosses it about, plays with it incessantly, and this union of quiet and glitter makes the jet and maline hat fascinating. There is nothing new in the combination; anything so good does not need to be new, for it is recommended by more sterling virtues than mere novelty. What is new in jet and maline hats is the manner of combining the two materials, and the shapes. Just a glance at the three hats shown in the picture illustrates how original and effective the designer can be in using the materials given her.
A dashy, jaunty little hat hints of the Napoleon shape, with a jet coronet extending about the head, and a crown of a half-dozen thicknesses of maline. There is a border of folded maline softening the outline of the brim and two brushes or cockades of jet furnishing the trimming. The drooping one at the right side might be dispensed with, if the hat is to be worn
tion. Its thoroughly practical points make themselves evident.
Combinations of two materials are featured in tailored gowns for spring. A plain cloth skirt with a plaid jacket, or a cross-barred skirt with a plain coat, or a figured material trimmed with checks, are bright and pleasing. Perhaps the best-liked combination of all is that of black moire silk in bands and flounces on cloth of a contrasting color.
The draped collar must not go unmentioned. It lies in loose folds across the back and is cut sailor-fashion with pointed ends forming a "V" at the neck. It is among the most striking and becoming of the touches that mark the tailored gowns of this season.
The extremely short jacket and coat fronts lengthen the appearance of the figure at the front. By observing the different models a selection is possible that will either lengthen or shorten the apparent height of the wearer. Altogether, we have not had more attractive suits than these. But coats have been more shapely and rather more difficult to make than the loose-hanging variety which is now the vogue.
THE
by an older woman. It is a shape that may be placed on the head at several angles, and this widens its field considerably. For the jet hat has the advantage of appropriateness on both youthful and elderly heads. The turban with soft crown of maline and brim of jet, trimmed with curled peacock feathers, is so smart and unusual in style that it would arrest the attention anywhere. In this, folded maline follows the outline of the brim, and the crown is made of several thicknesses of maline. It is a shape for the youthful wearer. The placing of the feathers is especially clever.
One of the shapes which lifts away from the left side of the head with its crown forming a background for the profile is shown in the third picture. It is one of the most successful of hats. There is a bandeau which almost amounts to a cap, covered with frills of maline. The shape is draped with net, spangled with tiny jet sequins. An upstanding spray of fine feathers completes the model.
JULIA BOTTOMLEY.
PHONE MAIN 61 23—Day or Night
THE
DOUGLASS UNDERTAKING
COMPANY
INCORPORATED AND BONDED
J. R. CONTEE
Pres. and Mgr.
RESIDENCE PHONE YORK 7992.
Lady Assistant
Polite Service
to All
Parlors, 1830 Arapahoe Street Denver, Colorado
Drink Capitol Beer DENVER'S PRIDE
The CAPITOL BREWING COMPANY The purity of Capitol Beer is demon- strated by its superior flavor and strength-giving qualities. It's capital.
HAVE A CASE SENT HOME
The Capi
Phone Champa
THE
BLJ
PAINTS, OILS, VAN
PAINTING, GRAINING, GLASS
DECORATING AND HARD
1517-23 ARAPAHOE
WORK CALLED FOR AND
DELIVERED
TELI
THE CAP
REP
SEWED HALF S
HENR
1511 CHAMPA STREET
Capitol Brewing
Champa 356 Delivered A
THE B.L. JAMES
M.& M. CO.
PAINTS. OILS. VARNISHES. GLASS
PAINTING. GRAINING. GLAZING. PAPER HANGING.
GRATING AND HARD WOOD FINISHING
WALL
PAPER
23 ARAPAHOE ST. DENVER
ARTISTS
MATERIALS
FOR AND
REPAIRING
IRED
YOU
TELEPHONE MAIN 7377
THE CAPITAL CITY SH
REPAIRING CO.
D HALF SOLES 60 cts. and 75
HENRY WARNECKE, President
IPA STREET
DENVIE
The Capitol Brewing Co. Phone Champa 356 Delivered Anywhere
THE
B.L. JAMES
M. & M. CO.
PAINTS, OILS, VARNISHES, GLASS
PAINTING, GRAINING, GLAZING, PAPER MANGING,
DECORATING AND HARD WOOD FINISHING
WALL
PAPER
1517-23 ARAPAHOE ST. DENVER
ARTISTS
MATERIALS
BUY YOUR COAL HAY From
L COKE W Y AND GRA
COAL COKE WOOD HAY AND GRAIN
Full Weight Guaranteed
Telephone Main 3762 2601 Arapahoe Street
wing Co.
delivered Anywhere
WALL
PAPER
ARTISTS
MATERIALS
REPAIRING DONE WHILE YOU WAIT
TY SHOE
CO.
and 75 cts.