Colorado Statesman

Saturday, August 29, 1914

Denver, Colorado

8 pages

Page 1
Page 1
Page 2
Page 2
Page 3
Page 3
Page 4
Page 4
Page 5
Page 5
Page 6
Page 6
Page 7
Page 7
Page 8
Page 8
Page text (machine-generated)
REGISTER! REGISTER!! REGISTER!!! THE COLORADO STATESMAN THE JOURNAL OF THE WEST. LABOR SHALL BE FREE RACE COUNTRY PARTY VOL. XX1. DENVER COLORADO SATURDAY, AUGUST 29 1914 NO. 1 Oklahoma Welcomes Session Of National Negro League (Special to Colorado Statesman.) Muskogee, Okla, August, 19. This wonderful city of the awakened West is crowded with thousands of progressive people gathered from the four corners of the country to attend the fifteenth annual session of the National Negro Business League, and to listen to Booker T. Washington and his victorious followers tell how their people have overcome. Fourteen cities have played host to the famous Business League, but no city, from Boston to Philadelphia, has presented a livelier scene in its preparation for the comfort and entertainment of the delegates of the league than this Wizard City of an engaging commonwealth. Nor has such a crowd of believers ever gathered for a feast of a new Isreal's Pensover. The capitol of a wonderful province of daring and achieving black people—Muskogee invited the black population of the whole country to come; and here they are by the inch, yard and league—countable, but uncounted! The delegates began arriving Monday. Special trains and special league Pullman cars, an idea fathered and promoted by the ever planning Emmett J. Scott, secretary of the league, brought them in by the hundreds. And from far away points special Pullmans came, laden with a cargo of purpose, dignity and achievement; black and proud of it; having and determined to have more. The homes of this thriving city, homes of comfort, convenience, homes set in the West, but fashioned in the East, are open houses to the delegates. The heart of the West is worn on the sleeve, and the sleeve is too long to measure. Muskogee presents the attire of the holiday. Everywhere is the picture of Booker T. Washington, and no color line has been drawn in the placing of this picture, nor in the flags and bunting hanging everywhere, nor in the heart touching welcome seen in every eye and heard in every "how d.y'do." Music is as free as oil, and the rith oil, and the rich blacks out here are present to tell about having "too much oil to burn." PACKED HOUSE AT OPENING The program started off in reg- ular routine before a jammed house. It was business from the fall of gavel. "I have done it and I am not afraid to tell it"—that was the keynote of the meeting. Tonight more people than a king could number tried to squeeze into Convention Hall to listen to the annual address of Booker T. Washington. The people saluted him with the voice of pride. He finished a wonderful appeal to his army of peace and progress more than ever the unmatched leader! "Lord, spare him until the harvest days." prayed one brother overcome, but balanced. 1930 P. Dr. Washington spoke in part as follows: Throughout the world the ten millions and more of black people in the United States are being observed and studied in a larger measure than is true of any similar group of black people in existence, or perhaps that has ever existed. People from all parts of the must follow the ten Master when he says evil with good." A general, howe contents himself writing the territory ther or merely devotes fending himself as saults of the enemy eral who gains ren State Hist & Nut Hist Booleys State House REGIS ADO THE JOURNAL DENVER COLORADO world interested in the civilization of black people are coming to the United States to study the condition and the progress of the American Negro; for after all is said, if there is any place where the Negro has a chance to show his mettle, it is right here in the United States. For this reason, as well as for the sake of ourselves, it is a matter of extreme importance that we not disappoint ourselves nor those who are studying and observing us. Within the fifty years of our freedom, and even before physical freedom came, great and almost marvelous progress has been made, but we must not rest upon the past we must continue to go forward. I believe that the time has come when we was a race should begin preparing to enter upon a new policy and a new program. In plain but in emphatic words I want to suggest whether the time has not come when we should get off the defensive in things that concern our present and future, and begin to inaugurate everywhere an aggressive and constructive progressive policy in business industry, education, moral and religious life and in our conduct generally. We [Picture of a man in a suit with a bow tie]. must follow the teachings of the Master when he said, "Overcome evil with good." A general, however able, who contents himself with merely holding the territory that he occupies, or merely devotes himself to defending himself against the assaults of the enemy, is not the general who gains renown for genuine leadership or gains the confidence of the world. A general who occupies much of his time in explaining the weakness of the enemy or the unjust assaults or tactics of the enemy is not the general who wins many battles; so it is in business of every kind. EMPHASIZE OUR OPPORTUNITIES. It is not well for us or our children that we should dwell so much on the defensive, with the negative side of life instead of the positive side. It is not well that our minds should be so continually centered upon our miseries or upon those who mistreat us. In the future let us emphasize our opportunities more and our difficulties less. Let us talk more about our white friends, and about our white enemies less. We do our children a lasting injustice when we feed them constantly upon the miseries of the race. Let us talk about the man who has got a job, and less about the man without a job. Let our fraternal and secret societies talk less about sickness and death, and more about health and life. Let our societies spend less money in taking care of the sick, and much more money in promoting the health of the race and they will have to spend less on account of sickness and death. Instead of giving the world a chance to discuss the high death rate of the Negro let us put the world to wondering why the Negro keeps so healthy and strong. Let us make health contagious in every community rather than disease. I often deplore the fact that so many of our men's organizations, women's clubs and best newspapers devote so much time to merely resenting something or "getting back" at some unfriendly critic, instead of devoting more ttime to constructive and progressive measuas. Too often insignificant occurrences and insignificant individuals are given an importance and an advertisement by organizations and newspapers that is unnecessary and hurtful. Let us, in the future, spend less time talking about the part of the city we cannot live in, and more time in making the part of the city that we live in beautiful and attractive. Let us get off the defensive in explaining why the house that we live in so often has the gate off the hinge, the fence palings gone, windows and doors broken out, and plastering knocked off. Instead of this, let us put people to talking about the beauty and attractiveness of the house occupied by our people. Let us make such progress in these directions that the other fellow will be kept so busy talking our progress that he will have no time to abuse us. Let us acquire wealth and intelligence so fast that the world will forget our poverty and ignorance. Let us be so thrifty and industrious that people will have no time to talk about our carelessness and idleness. Let us make the Negro so law-abiding that people will talk less about the criminal Negro and more about the one who obeys the law. W. H. With the Colorado Statesman's familiarity with Republican politics and its knowledge of Isaac N. Stevens for more than twenty-six years as a public man filling various city positions in the legal sphere, and as a politician, a true hearted full-blooded Republican it is surprising that this man of marked ability and sterling worth had not been called upon ere now to fill some important State position where he could be of more service and greater help to the people of the State, instead of confining him to the circumscribed city and county area. He can be termed THE MAN OF THE HOUR, as at this time when so many important questions pertaining to State and Country are exhibiting themselves with extraordinary power there can and must be placed in positions to combat successfully with such grave issues only men of I. N. Stevens' calibre and stamina to help to shape our destinies. Fearless in actions that tend to the good of a people irrespective of class, creed, or color, devoted to duty in his present position of City Attorney of the City and County of Denver, undaunted in his determination to suppress vice and corruption upholding the dignity and morality attached to public positions and their occupants it must be said of him that his righteous principles warrant and deserve the respect and confidence of the people, and the staunch support of not only Republicans but the other parties, as he has established a record record to none in his management of things governmental in his invaluable assistance from time to time to our Municipal Authorities. It is not necessary to enumerate the different things that Mr. Stevens has accomplished as a public man, nor the great savings he has brought about in his opposition to long drawn out litigations in which the City and County of Denver formed a party; but the facts stare us in the face that no better choice could be made by the Republican Assembly for United States Senator than I. N. Stevens, and the Colorado Statesman not only indorses but advises very strongly the colored voters to vote solidly for him on Tuesday, Sept. 8th, as we will have a friend to help our cause in any Bilis that may be brought before the House wherein our freedom and liberty will be deprived us by segregation or any other evil. Every Republican and every independent and unbiased voter therefore in Colorado will be serving their own and their State's best interests in casting the vote for I. N. Stevens—the MAN OF THE HOUR. [Portrait of a man in formal attire, set against a decorative frame with an American flag motif.] OPPOSED TO STATE-WIDE PROHIBITION PRESIDENT WILSON LEAVES NO DOUBT AS TO HIS VIEWS ON PROHIBITION. HE SAYS: "I am in favor of local option. I am a thorough believer in local self-government, and believe that every self-governing community which constitutes a social unit should have the right to control the matter of the regulation or the withholding of licenses." With his wonderful breadth of vision, President Wilson has been able to see, through the maze of prohibition fallacy, the growing tendency on the part of the American people to return more strongly than ever to the beliefs of the early American statesmen whose farseeing wisdom was invoked in the formation of the government that has served as a model for all liberty-loving races. He has witnessed the utter failure of state-wide prohibition to accomplish the result for which it was intended in Maine, in Tennessee, in Georgia, in West Virginia and in Kansas, where either the open saloon, without regulation, or the "blind tiger" and "boot-legger" have supplied the demand of the human appetite, and where the evil of intemperance has grown by leaps and bounds. Despite the demands of the fanatics for more stringent prohibitory laws, the President has calmly watched the result of local option, where it has been tried, and has reached the logical conclusion that in that doctrine lies the solution of the liquor problem. VOTE AGAINST STATE-WIDE PROHIBITION MOONSHINERS Flourish in Dry Georgia, According to Report of United States Revenue Agents Atlanta, Ga., July 29.—An increase of approximately 300 per cent in the number of illicit distilleries in Georgia since the "dry" law went into effect is shown in a report sent to the Internal Revenue Department at Washington by J. H. Surber, revenue agent, for the fiscal year ending June 10 last. Surber charges the difference was caused by the increased demand for liquor, and says the moonshiners are getting $3 a gallon where they formerly had been able to sell for only $1. INSANITY AND PAUPERISM, KAN SAS AND NEBRASKA. It is claimed by the advocates of state-wide prohibition that the prohibition states over the country have not only less pauperism and less insanity but less crime, on the average, in proportion to population than the "wet" states. Kansas is the model "dry" state and Nebraska, her nearest neighbor, with like natural conditions is "wet." Surber has jurisdiction over Georgia, Alabama and Florida. In these states his men destroyed 1,301 stills and made cases against 1,153 persons, two of whom were women. Georgia mountaineers operated 948 of those establishments, it is said. In Georgia's last "wet" years only 480 "stills" were found by the revenue officers in Georgia, Florida and Alabama. Rev. Dr. Lyman Abbott says: "It was not the method of Jesus. He lived in an age of total abstinence societies and did not join them. He emphasized the distinction between His methods and those of John the Baptist, that John came neither eating nor drinking; the Son of Man came eating and drinking. He condemned drunkenness, but never in a single instance lifted His voice in condemnation of drinking." The following are the official statistics: The federal census report of insane and feeble-minded in institutions in 1910 (Bulletin 119), gives these figures for Kansas and Nebraska: Insane in hospitals January 1, 1910: Kansas, 2,912; Nebraska, 1,990. Admitted in 1910: Kansas, 905; Nebraska, 411. Insane with alcoholic psychosis, admitted in 1910: Kansas, 70; Nebraska, 20. Feeble-minded in institutions, January 1, 1910: Kansas, 420; Nebraska, 446. Admitted in 1910: Kansas, 86; Nebraska, 23. ALLIES SMASH GERMAN ATTACK ALLIES SMASH GERMAN ATTACK RUSS ARMY HOLDS EAST PRUSSIA AFTER TEN-DAY GRAPPLE AT CLOSE RANGE. REVERSES ON BORDER KONIGSBERG AND DANZIG ARE FORTS THAT NOW CHECK RUSSIAN ADVANCE. Western Newspaper Union News Service. London, Aug. 27.—After ten days of desperate hand-to-hand fighting, Russia is in possession of nearly all of east Prussia, according to the military correspondent of the Daily Express. The strongly fortified German positions have been carried, one after another, at the point of the bayonet. The Russian soldiers, trained in this method of attack, have charged in the face of rapid-fire guns and have driven the enemy out of their entrenchments, slaughtering all who offered resistance. The ferocity of the Russian form of attack is shown by the fact that many of the defenses have been taken by the use of hand grenades. Thrown at close range one of these exploding shells frequently killed thirty or forty German soldiers time and time again. The same close fighting, in which the infantry soldiers creep under cover as close to the enemy's trenches as possible, then, leaping to their feet and firing as they run, fall upon the defenders with their bayonets, has won for the Czar's forces decisive victories against Austria. The Russian army invading east Prussia is stated on the highest authority to number the astounding total of 3,000,000 men, while the reserve army of 5,000,000 is slowly following up their victorious march. The only success claimed by the German-Austrian allies took place near Krasnik in Russian Poland. There, the official dispatches say, a battle of three days' duration ended in a complete Austrian victory. The Russian forces were repulsed along the entire front of forty miles and are now in full flight in the direction of Lublin. The military correspondent of the Nieuwe Courant at The Hague declares he is able to state on trustworthy authority that the Germans plan to abandon temporarily east and west Prussia and Pomerania to the Russians and withdraw slowly to the River Oder, where the main defenses of Berlin lie. Germany, according to the correspondent, appears to have undertaken this measure to give time to her army operating against France to try and deal the British and French armies their death blow and then march on to Paris, the distance between Mons and Paris being four times less than the distance between St. Petersburg and Berlin. The Germans in the Elbing district of east Prussia near the Vistula river, are fleeing westward before the Russian advance. A St. Petersburg dispatch to the Reuter Telegram Company says that the Russian troops in eastern Prussia have occupied the towns of Nordenburg, Sensburg and Bischofsburg and the railway station at Rothflies, and adds that the Russian advance continues. In eastern Galacia the Russians have driven back the Austrian rear guard beyond the River Zeota Llpa, which runs north and south, about thirty miles west of Tarnopol. A dispatch from Bucharest, via Rome, says that the Russian columns invading Galacia have occupied Tarnopol, an important city eighty miles east, southeast of Lemberg, capital of Galacia. Three Austrian army corps are said to be opposing them. The Russian embassy issued the following statement: "In eastern Prussia, on Aug. 24, the line of the River Angerap, although fortified for defense, was abandoned by the enemy without an attempt to offer resistance. Insterburg and Angersburg are occupied by the Russian troops. The enemy has retreated in great disorder, partly towards Koenigsburg and partly toward Rostenburg. From the front Ortelsburg-Soldau the Russians are gradually advancing, the enemy retiring to Osterode and leaving several guns, machine guns, ammunition wagons and provisions." The Times St. Petersburg correspondent says that the Germans, who retreated by forced marches after their defeat by the Russians at Gumbinnen, are assembling a part of their forces at Konigsberg. The German fortified position on the River Angerab was abandoned without fight. "The roads beyond the Angerab are strewn with cartridges, knapsacks and equipment, cast aside in the hasty flight of the German troops," says the Times correspondent. "North of Neidenburg there was stubborn fighting in which the Russians were again victorious, largely through their superb use of the bayonet. The enemy here had established the entire Twentieth army corps in a fortified position. The Russians had to negotiate pits and barbed wire before they could get at their opponents. 1,500 REFUGEES REACH NEW YORK ARRIVED ON LINERS FROM COP. PENHAGEN, GENOA, PALER- MO AND NAPLES. ENVOY TO FRANCE SAILS WILL NOT PRESENT CREDEN- TIALS UNTIL PLANS OF HER- RICK ARE CARRIED OUT. Western Newspaper Union News Service. New York, Aug. 27.—Nearly 1,500 Americans stranded in Europe at the outbreak of the war reached New York on the Scandinavian line steamer Oscar II from Copenhagen and the Italian liner Taormina from Genoa, Palermo and Naples. The Oscar II brought in 1,104 passengers, of whom 784 came in the steerage. Nearly all were Americans. The Taormina had 768 aboard, of whom several hundred were Americans. Sixty-seven Americans came in the Taormina's steerage. Among the ships sailing from New York was the Wilson liner Francisco with two 4.7 caliber rifles mounted on her rear deck. These, her officer says, were merely a saluting battery. Her destination is Hull. The destruction of a British collier in the river Elbe was witnessed by Mrs. Emma Muir of this city, who was in Vienna at the outbreak of hostilities between Austria and Russia. While proceeding down the river Elbe, she said, they saw a British collier strike a mine and blow up with all hands. Their boat stopped and a government boat came alongside with the news that England had declared war. Mr. and Mrs. William Hitt, the latter formerly Miss Katherine Elkins, were in Norway at the outbreak of the war. They said they had made the trip to Copenhagen without unusual experience. The Campania, with 400 passengers, many of whom were said to be English and French reservists, and the France, with approximately 500 passengers, most of them French reservists, sailed. William G. Sharp, newly appointed ambassador to France, sailed on the France. He said that he would not present his credentials in Paris for some time, as Ambassador Herrick had mapped out certain plans of a routine nature for the assistance of Americans in France, which he wished to carry out. Sharp said he would do all he could to aid Herrick in this, withholding his credentials to the French government in the meantime. MAYTORENA AGAINST CARRANZA Sonora Governor Says He'll Seek to Dislodge "Enemies of Honest Government." Nogales, Sonora, Mex—Jose Maria Maytorena, governor of Sonora, announced that he had come here at the head of 2,000 or more troops to dislodge "the enemies of honest government." Maytorena is supported by Gen. Francisco Villa. Those whom he proposes to war against have the support of Carranza. Maytorena, in a signed statement, declared his action was decided upon when Carranza, after having banished supporters of the governor, ignored his protests and demanded his resignation. "I have no political ambition," Maytorena concluded. "My only wish is to serve my country, and I will gladly turn my office over to a duly elected successor in 1915." NAME JOHNSON FOR GOVERNOR Fredericks and Hall Oppose Present Executive of California. San Francisco, Cal.—John D. Fredericks of Los Angeles has been nominated for governor of California by the Republicans, Fred H. Hall by the Democrats and Hiram W. Johnson by the Progressives, according to incomplete returns from the statewide primaries. Other probable nominations follow: United States Senator—Francis J. Heney, Progressive; Samuel M. Shortridge, Republican; James D. Phelan, Democrat. Lieutenant Governor—John M. Eshulen, Republican and Progressive; Joe V. Snyder, Democrat. Brigadier General Andrews Retires. Washington.—Reaching the army age limit, Brigadier General George Andrews, adjutant general of the army and hero of the Indian wars, was retired and was succeeded by Col. Henry R. McCain, who was promoted to the rank of brigadier. Cardinal Farley Visits Pope's Tomb. Aug, Rome, 25.—Cardinal Farley of New York, accompanied by Monsignors Patrick J. Haynes and John Edwards and the Rev. Thomas D. Carroll, went to St. Peter's and were received by Monsignor Guissepe de Bisogno, administrator of the Basilica. They prayed before the tombs of the apostles, and then descended into the crypt to pay a last homage before the resting place of Pope Plus X. They remained there deeply engrossed in prayer for a considerable time. FRENCH CAVALRY ON THE MARCH Aug. 26—French form new War Cabinet, with Rene Viviani as President of the Council and Millerand War Secretary, with the Daily Mail says after ten days of hand-to-hand fighting Russia is in possession of East Prussia. Japan falls in on the battlefield and attacks down to siege. German possession of Togoland in West Africa surrenders unconditionally to the British. The French victory over Russian division in Russian Poland. Ten sailors killed on the German cruiser in Oriental waters. French official statement contests reverses on border of Belgium but claims victory on the south. Belgians drive fourth German division advancing on Antwerp. Aug. 25.—French war office issues statement saying Mluhausen has again been abandoned, and that fight is in progress between Maubeuge, departmental Vasges, and central Vasges, with a front of 200 miles, on which "hangs the fate of France." Mluhausen has again been evacuated. In Lorraine the two armies began a march, and the two armies gives casualties as 2,000. Charleroi taken and retaken twelve times in three days. Refugees at Ostend. Adbert, uncle of Emperor, killed during hand-to-hand fight in Belgium. Austria formally declared war on Japan. Emperor Francis Joseph in critical condition. Austrian officer overseeing Joseph says bombardment of Belgrade by Austrians has destroyed every house in the city. Aug. 24.—French war office issues statement admitting heavy losses, and deployments of naval cruiser Nauru. Difications reported captured St. Petersburg dispatch says that "in a line of battle extending from the northwest to the hordes of Russia are advancing into Germany, sweeping the Kaiser's resistance before them like chaff before a grenade." English, French, Japanese and Russian ships attacking Germany in Orient. Aug. 23—Japanese Ambassador Chinda notified U. S. that a formal declaration of war against Germany had been issued, and that Japan would share equally in a loan of $100,000,000 to Belgium. Great demonstrations at Tokio were held in the streets, followed by a large rally in Paris and a clared war on Germany. U. S. Ambassador at Berlin asked to take over affairs of Japanese government. The Japanese government had a frontier, the German army extending from Mons to Luxemburg, and the British forces from Lille to Verdan. The British forces had a path to Aldos Fleet was on the way to Tsing-Tau and early bombardment expected. Reported at Rome that several Austrian warships had been sunk in the Adriatic Sea, and over Riversam with 3,000 Americans caught in Germany when war broke out. Aug. 22.—Kaiser ignores Japan's ultimatum. Envoys quit Berlin post. A London dispatch says Germany capitals will be evacuated if Charleroi is crumbling before the German fire. French forces reported at Lille and Verdun to protect frontier, and at Nuremberg a prison was set on an overwhelming attack. A Nish dispatch says the Servians killed and wounded 25,000 Austrians in the battle along the Dinai and took 10,000 more plains than Waterloo. Aug. 21.—Germans bombard Narnau and took 10,000 more plains than Waterloo and run in Belgium for treasury. Germans occupy Brussels. Serbs riot 150,000 Austrian soldiers after four-day battle near Losnitzia. French clash along the Dinai. German forces in United States outlines to Japan its position on ultimatum to Germany, holding Tokio ruler to pledges. War tax on Germany is set to rise, an additional $10,000,000 demanded by Germans on province of Liege. Aug. 20.—Germans occupy Brussels as the Kaiser's army marches on Antwerp. French claim series of successes in the war, Germanism wins. Germanys wip Belgians at Aerschot, after hundreds are lost in allies' ranks. Russia and Austria struggling in evenly-matched contest on the Eastern Front will fight Japan to last ditch in effort to hold place in Orient. Japanese ultimatum to Germany explained in official message to United States charters nine steamers to bring Americans home from Europe. Turks Near War, Belief of Powers. Washington, Aug. 27.—Tension is so acute in Constantinople that diplomats there fear Turkey may at any moment be drawn into the general European war on the side of Germany and Austria. A strict censorship has been placed on the newspapers in Turkey, which are now controlled by the military authorities and are being used, according to diplomatic dispatches here, to create a strong pro-German feeling. The Turkish Cabinet is wavering between a declaration of war and the preservation of neutrality. The diplomatic representatives of the various powers are in constant conference with the government officials. Great Britain and Russia are endeavoring to keep Turkey neutral. Japan Fails in Sortie. Peking, Aug. 27.—Up to noon yesterday the only engagement reported to have occurred near Tsing-Tau, capital of the German protectorate of Kiao-Chow, was an encounter between a German torpedo boat and a British boat on Sunday or Monday last. The British torpedo boat returned to Wel-Hai-Wel with eleven men killed and wounded. It is said that the Japanese have failed in a sortie and are preparing to besiege the port. FRENCH FORM WAR CABINET MILLERAND CALLED BACK TO HIS OLD SEAT AS MINISTER OF WAR. VIVIANI IS PRESIDENT EX-PREMIER AND MEMBERS OF FORMER CABINETS CALLED AS COUNSELLORS. Western Newspaper Union News Service. Paris, Aug. 27.—The French Ministry headed by Premier Rene Viviani resigned last night. Another Cabinet was immediately formed. Premier Viviani visited Elysee Palace at 10:15 o'clock last evening and notified President Poincare that the members of the Cabinet decided to resign collectively. He said that he and his colleagues had come to the conclusion that in the circumstances through which the country was passing the ministry should save a wider scope and comprise all the best men in all the republican group. President Poincare charged M. Viviani with the task of organizing a new Cabinet, which the Premier accepted. He returned to the Elysse about an hour later and made known to the President the composition of the new Ministry, with himself as President, without portfolio. The Ministry follows: President of the Council—Rene Viviani. Minister of Foreign Affairs—Theo Delcasse. Minister of War—Alexandre Millerand. Minister of Justice—Aristide Briand. Minister of Interior—Louis J. Malvy. Minister of Marine—Victor Anguine. Minister of Finance—Alexander Ribot. Minister of Public Instruction—Albert Sarrut. Minister of Public Works—Marcel Sembat. Minister of Commerce—Gaston Thomson. Minister of Colonies—Gaston Doumergue. Minister of Agriculture—Fernand Ireland. Minister of Labor—Bienven Martin. Minister Without Portfolio—Jules Guesde. Munder-Secretary Fine Arts—Albert Dallimer. Among the members of the new Cabinet are several ex-Premiers and many members of former Cabinets. Marcel Sembat is a United Socialist deputy and M. Guesde a Socialist deputy. M. Delcasse was formerly ambassador to Russia. M. Millerand is a former Minister of War. Premier Viviani remained at Elysee Palace to present the members of the Cabinet to the President. War Formally Declared on Japan, and Vienna Preparing for Siege. Amsterdam, Aug. 26.—A dispatch from Vienna states that Emperor Francis Joseph has rallied slightly, but that his condition continues grave. Because of his advanced age there is little hope of his recovery. Austria formally declared war on Japan at 3:30 this morning. This is the answer of the nation to Japan's demand that she dismantle her warships in the Orient. Emperor Francis Joseph has signed a decree ordering the capital to be put in a state of defense. Ambassador Leaves Tokio. The message gives the official announcement that the Austrian government on Tuesday handed his passports to the Japanese ambassador. The Austrian ambassador at Tokio, it also announced, has been recalled. Travelers from Trieste state that the Austrians are concentrating for the defense of the Adriatic at Pola and Sevenico. The population of the latter have been sent inland. All the Austrian fleet has been assembled in the Fasana canal at Pola. ```markdown ``` Tokio. Aug. 24.—Germany having failed to reply within the time limit to Japan's ultimatum that she surrender Kiao-Chow, the Japanese government Sunday afternoon ordered the beginning of operations on land and sea. The time limit on the ultimatum expired at noon. The imperial rescript declaring war upon Germany was issued last evening. It officially inaugurates hostilities in the Far East as a result of Germany's failure to reply to the Japanese ultimatum. Vievedelelevedle Wi sedledededesle? : WHEN IN * PUEBLO STOP AT 9 J. H. PERRY’S# * If it is a Nice Clean Room; If it is a Shave ora Bath; If it is a Good Meal WE HAVE IT A nice cool dining room, home ccoking. Strangers areziacte welcome. Everything neat and clean. All kiuds cold drinks and ice cream served Sundays Phone Main 897. 121 Grand Avenue PUEBLO - - COLORADO PEE VN ERMINE. 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 2151 We Boost for Colorado You Should Boost for Us The Champa Pharmacy Twenticth and Champa, Is the place to got your DRUGS, CHEMICALS AND PATENT MEDICINES WH SHRVH ~_ DRINKS. Prescriptions Our Specialty. Phone us and we will delivor the gvods to all parte of tho city. JAMES E. THRALL, PROPR. PHONE MAIN 24265. —_{__z_———————————— Ess The Central Bottling & Distributing Co. Agents for the famous CAPITOL BEER---IT’S CAPITAL Try a case, 2 doz. pints for $1.10, delivered promptly; emptles 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. DID YOU EVER TRY ’ B Neef Bros.’ Beer? It’s made right, and tastes right. None better made anywhere and This is a Strictly Colorado Production BE SURE AN TRY IT. Supply Your pyome with the Celebrated Tivoli Beer BOTTLED BY THE EMPIRE BOTTLING CO. Z Phone Gallup 245 Everybody who reads magazines buys news- papers, but everybody who reade 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 @ CO. : : ; ; ; : CATERERS AND 3 : CONFECTIONERS 6 : pee emcee : : Phone: 168, 3 ; 1612 Curtis Street, Denver, Cole. AFRO-AMERICAN CULLINGS dered conditions which the new-born zeal of southern whites, armed with all the wisdom which modern social science can furnish, will be hard put to to combat. And alas! the south had first to forge her own weapons, nay, even to build the forge. In all the south there was no training school for social workers, few social experts, ew libraries of social science. The single library of Columbia university contains more valuable books than are owned by all the colleges of the south put together. So the first thing was to train lead- ers, all the way from district nurses to sanitary engineers. The new south is daring. It not only contemplated a school for social workers whose fac- ulty of white exp. ‘ts should teach in @ negro department as well as in classes of their own people, but it dreamed of rallying seven religious de nominations to the support of the training school. The dream has come true. The American Interchurch Col- lege for Religious and Social Work- ers opens its doors on the 14th of January. The negro department, opened on the fiftieth anniversary of the proclamation of emancipation, has been in operation almost a year. The school has astutely sat itself down in the shadow of Vanderbilt university and Peabody college (training school for normal teachers) in order to es- tablish a co-operative triad, no one of the colleges duplicating the ad- vantages of the other two, students of one passing freely to lectures in the others. Since the negro department is situated at a little distance (and al- so because negro students in the south do not go to a white college), protes- sors and social experts from the north will repeat their addresses at Nash- ville Institute for Negro Christian, Workers. Economy is achieved by this happy arrangement. Each of the seven co- operating denominations will eventu- aily have its own training-school on the campus, building and owning thelr own halls and giving at their own ex- pense all instruction in denomina- tional doctrine, polity, and methods, while the Interchurch college pro- vides a faculty to give all courses which can be taken in common by all the students. This amounts to about four-fifths of the whole curriculum. The social service library, already opened, will be at the command of all, and a chapel, gymnasium and ad. ministration building for common use. No such audacious system of church co-operation has yet been launched in America, nor do I know its parallel anywhere. It is estimated that the maintenance of seven distinct denomi- national schools with seven distinct faculties would require an annual out- lay of $105,000. Yet the seven, to- gether with the training schools main- tained by the Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. can be handled co-operatively for $70,000 a year. The saving is actual, too, for the demand for social work ers of every sort is so strong through: out the south that the denominations would be compelled to build indepen- dently had it not been for the Inter- church college. The south is full of the raw material for social work, college men and women who want only expert training to make the finest kind of instruments. The south needs not imported northern experts, but home-bred workers who know their ground—Mary Bronson Hartt ir Washington (D. C.) Star. In these days of great achieve- ments it is possible to reach heights before unknown by short cuts. The Japanese have assimilated western civilization in about a half century from the time, in 1858, when Commto- dore Perry of the United States novy first entered the harbor of Tokyo, the capital of Japan, and forced the Jap- anese to give up their policy of isola: tion and nonintercourse with foreign nations, There is no question that the colored people have assimilated American civilization in 300 years of contact and are today the equals of the other varieties which make up cosmopolitan America. The difference between the literacy of the white and colored peoples is not so great as the census would seem to indicate. The dense mass of \ynor- ance {s in the South, and the differ- ence between the literacy of the southern colored man and the south- ern white man is very small. In Chi- cago, owing to the large foreign popu- lation and the fact that all native citizens have had equal advantages, there is probably less illiteracy among the colored people than among the whites. Russ{a has 57,612 miles of navigable inland waterways; Germany, 11,293 France, 7,862; England, 3,906; Hol: land, 3,250; Sweden, 3,187, and Bel- gium, 1,440. The value of gold produced in the Gold Coast and Ashanti during 1912, was $2,045,405, the largest production on record. ‘There are 1,237 British gas compa- nies in England and Wales, 260 in Scotland, 110 in Ireland, 161 in Austra. lia and 72 in other British possessions. STYLE COMFORT y and SERVICE ’ Is What You Get at i HENNING’S $2.50 Shoe Store And You Save a Dollar. Henning’s Shoes Are on Everyone’s Feet, and Save a Dollar Is om EVERYONE’S MIND. Go and See for Yourself Henning’s $2.50 Shoe Store 820 and 822 FIFTEENTH STREET, DENVER WORK CALLMD rou AND REPAIRING DONE WHILB DELIVERED rou walt TELEPHONE MAIN 7377 THE CAPITAL CITY SHOE REPAIRING CO. SEWED HALF SOLES 60 cts. and 75 cts. HENRY WARNECKE, President 1511 CHAMPA STREET DENVER, COLO. Some twenty thousand persons are attracted usually to Hampton instl- tute, the pioneer industrial and agri- cultural training school for negro and Indian youth, founded in 1868 by Gen. Samuel C. Armstrong at Hampton, ‘Va. These visitors from all parts of the world, are attracted by the unique and effective educational meth- ods which Hampton institute has been successfully employing for over forty- five years in training negroes and In- dians for unselfish and eMficient sery- ice in the home, on the farm, in the shop, and in the kitchen. Hampton institute fs an industrial village with some 1,200 or 1,300 ste dents, 200 teachers and workers, 140 buildings, and an instruction farm of some 600 acres. Whatever work the Hampton school needs to hava done, the students are usually pre pared to do. Farming, home-making, teaching and the common industries form vital parts in the training of Hampton institute boys and girls. Blacksmithing, brick-laying and plas- tering, carpentry and cabinetmaking, thachine work, painting, printing, shoe- making, steamfitting and plumbing, tailoring, tinsmithing, upholstering and wheelwrighting, are the trades which are offered by the Hampton Institute Trade school. In the busy shops, on the scaffold: ings of new structures, in odd nooks tn corners of the Hampton grounds, negro and Indian carpenters have for many years been daily mastering the building art and have been preparing themselves for Ife’s emergencies by learning how to make the best possi- ble use of their resources—time, tools, skill and moral qualities. Today the construction of the Hampton institute buildings and the necessary repairs are being satisfac: torily done by student tradesmen. When it was necessary to remodel the principal's home, one of the oldest buildings on the Hampton campus, negro and Indian tradesmen did the necessary tearing down and building up. These operations were no easy tasks. The bulk of the work had tc be done in hot and trying weather. ‘The boys labored with a will. They were happy to have an opportunity of doing well what professional build. ers considered a difficult piece o work, HINKLE & REASONER CIGARS SHOES SHINED BY EXPERTS PHONE MAIN 6159 2051 Chazipa Street Der:ver, Colorado ‘Phone Champa 1166. ~~~“ Furnished Rooms in Connectio a per and RAY BRONSON, Proprietors Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars 1038 NINETEENTH STREET Corner Nineteenth and Arapahoe Streets, DENVER, COLORADC _a»the College of Missions, which is in "ie charge of the Flanner House set- Uement, has bought three adjoining vacant lots in Colton street, Indianapo- lis, which will be converted into a playground. The Flanner house owns four pieces of property and four lots. Plans are being made for an extension of the work. The free cooking school, which is being conducted this summer under the supervision of Mrs. Marion Colefisher, has met with the heartiest response, especially from the mothers in the neighborhood. The work is in the charge of two young women from the College of Misisons, one of whom “s neigborhood nurse. The main build- ing has been remodeled and things will be in readiness for a resident worker this fall. Rev. H. G. Derthick, who has the supervision of the social settlement work being conducted in the city under the auspices of the Col- lege of Missions, is outlining plans to create larger interest in the children’s department and to increase the force of volunteer family visitors. The play hour, which is conducted each Satur- day during the school year, will be de- veloped into a larger feature this year. RRs a eT REL SI a ON, OS SOE Ko Oey ; ’ 8 Jones’ Restaurant I Am Headed That Way, Where I Get the | Cleanest, Best and Most Wholesome Focé, Which f Gives You that Round, Comfortable, Coutented Fecling : Don’t Forget the Placo | 2236 LARIMER STREET, DENVER, COLO. ssessesneunevacen/\AgbAPvAgvagyaeeAgo eset ubge adh Ae ASV AEUAEVREYREAAINAE ACUMEN MEMEO A ENE A CEE NOC Nap ae An illustration of the value of ef- fective training in the industrial arts is furnished in the graduates of Tus- kegee, Booker T. Washington's school. There are more than one hundred of these trained young men and wom- en in Chicago, according to Fannie Barrier Williams. A recent investiga- tion shows that none of them is out of employment. ‘The following {s a partial list of the occupations in which they are engaged in this city: Two are practicing law, two are veterinary surgeons at the Union stock yards, three are under takers, three are plumbers and steam- fitters, flve are merchant tailors, two are shoemakers, three are dressmak- ers, two are electricians, one an as- sistant meat inspector at the stock yards, there are three trained nurses, three carpenters, ten clerks in the post office, one editor and publisher. Phones Main ©. E. Smith, Manager 169, 181, 189, 190 Res. Phone South 1608 Wholesale and Retail Staple and Faucy Groceries, Fish ané Oysters. Hotels aud Restaurants Our Specialty. Fresh aud Cured Eastern Corn Fed Meats Fruits, Vegetables, Poultry and Gaze. 1638-89 Arapahoe Street Denver. Colorade peewee ras Pe eee SES =) St ES | Wireless telephoning between Paris ‘and a suburb of Brussels recently was accomplished. Out of a total coinage of $62,500,000 produced by the Paris mint last year, $47,200,000 was in gold. To encourage boring for oi! the gov- emiment of South Australia has of fered a large bonus to the first per son or corporation producing 100,000 gallons of crude 90 per cent petrol- eum from a well. George Sanford of Bath, Me., has an old-fashioned mortar and pestle stand- ing 14 inches in hefght, which has beon in his family for 150 years. spent at home reacts in its benefits OLLAT’ vith unceasing “general profit. Sent out of town it's life is ended, 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. The United States mints made 186, 621,871 coins, worth $37,496,520, Inst year. Five Points Creamery Mrs. F. A. NEWMAN, Proprietor ICE CREAM A SPECIAL Phone MAIN 4395 817-819 TWENTY-SIXTH AVE., DENVE CREAM A SPECIAL Phone MAIN 4395 WENTY-SIXTH AVE., DENVER A SPECIALTY MAIN 4395 I AVE., DENVER, COLO. ICE CREAM A SPECIALTY 817-819 TWENTY-SIXTH AVE., DENVER, COLO. JOHN K. RETTIGER Fancy and Staple Gro 1864 CURTIS STREET eenth. . RETTIG and Staple Groceries TIS STREET JOHN K. RE Meats, Fancy and St 1864 CURTIS ST Meats, Fancy and Staple Groceries 1864 CURTIS STREET GIVE ME Blatz BEER And the Rest Our Pre The Best Satisfact You Have Tried the Rest NowTry the Best CLEANERS AND TAILORS Giant FOR QUALITY. McCAIN & RICHARDS, PROPS Phone Main 7376 CLEANING, PRESSING, IN ING, RELINING AND I WORK CALLED FOR AN 2549 Washington Avenue ING, PRESSING, DYEING, RELINING AND REMODEL WORK CALLED FOR AND DELIVER on Avenue De CUT FLOWERS POTTERY Floral Designs for all O MRS. L. A. DUNS FLORI Greenhouses Half Block West of H West Thirty-third and Irving. 326 ING, DYEING, REPAIR- AND REMODELING. OR AND DELIVERED Denver, Colorado WERS POTTED PLANTS Designs for all Occasions L. A. DUNSMORE FLORIST Half Block West of Highland Park third and Irving. 3269 Fairview Pl. CLEANING, PRESSING, DYEING, REPAIRING, RELINING AND REMODELING. WORK CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED 2549 Washington Avenue Denver, Colorado Greenhouses Half Block West of Highland Park West Thirty-third and Irving. 3269 Fairview Pl. PHONE. GALLUP 355 DRINK Tivoli Finest Beer Ever Brewed. Made In Colorado; Sold In Colorado; Drank in Colorado ORDER A CASE PHONE MAIN 1350. The WARD AUCTION COMPANY J. H. BIGGINS Furniture Repairing and Upholstering. All work Cash. PHONE YORK 7837 1417 East 24th Ave Denver Before You Buy Property, Let Lawyer W. B. TOWNSEND EXAMINE THE TITLE AND MAKE YOUR CONTRACT. LAWYER TOWNSEND MAKES A SPECIALTY OF COLLECTING FROM INSURANCE COMPANIES, ALSO ENDOWMENT MONIES. OFFICE 313 KITTREDGE BUILDING WARD AUCTION COMPANY Sales Daily at 2 p.m. niture a Spe PRIVATE SALES AT HAVE MOVED TO 1723-39 GLENA PHONE --- --- --- PHONE MAIN 3028 Corner Nineteenth. Paeonia suffruticosa 1417 East 24th Ave RES. PHONE GALLUP 942 VAL BLATZ'S PRIVATE STOCK BEATS THEM ALL Our Prices Reasonable Satisfaction Guaranteed DENVER, COLORADO Miss M. Cowden Hair Dressing Parlor Shampoo, cutting and curling. Scalp treatment, hair tonics, hair straightening, manicuring. Stage wigs for rent; theatrical use and masquerades. Goods delivered out of the city. All shades of hair matched by sending sample of hair; also combings made up. Cheapest Switches 50 Cents 1219 21st St. Denver, Colo Sales Daily at 2 p.m. Office Furniture a Specialty. HAVE MOVED TO— 1723-39 GLENARM ST. PHONE MAIN 1675. Denver, Cola. CONDENSATION OF FRESH NEWS THE LATEST IMPORTANT DIS PATCHES PUT INTO SHORT, CRISP PARAGRAPH8. STORY OF THE WEEK SHOWING THE PROGRESS OF EVENTS IN OUR OWN AND FOREIGN LANDS. Western Newspaper Union News Service. WESTERN. The Black Diamond, the official organ of the coal trade, reports a very optimistic change in business conditions throughout the country. An involuntary petition in bankruptcy was filed against the B. A. Lockwood Grain Company at Des Moines, Ia. Assets are given at $350,000 and liabilities at $250,000. Two were drowned in the Skunk river, north of Oskaloosa, Ia., when a boat overturned. The dead are L. E. Patterson, twenty-five, and Miss Zetta Miller, twenty. Both lived at New Sharon, Ia. William J. Mickel, deputy state food inspector at Grand Rapids, Mich., received a giant bomb through the malls. The inspector has been active lately in prosecutions at Muskegon and Manistee. Darius Miller, president of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy railroad, died at Glacier Park, Mont., after undergoing an operation for apendicitis. He had been touring the park with his wife in apparently good health. Two young girls, sisters, and a man who tried to save them, were drowned at a private bathing beach at the foot of Division street in Chicago while twenty other bathers battled with gigantic breakers in an effort to save them. The United States army transport Buford left San Francisco under orders to make a fast run to Galveston via the Panama canal, and thence to Europe, to assist in returning American refugees to this country. The Buford can carry 1,800 passengers. The appointment of the Rev, Francis Xavier McHenamy of St. Louis as president of Creighton university of Omaha, Neb., was made at St. Louis by the Rev. Alexander Burrowes, president of the St. Louis University and provincial of the Society of Jesus. In consideration of the faithful and efficient service of its employés, the Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis railway will, effective Sept. 1, issue annual passes good over all lines of the company to all train dispatchers, agents, operators, engineers, firemen, conductors, yard masters, shop and roadway foremen, brakemen, clerks, etc., who have been in the service continually for fifteen years. Fully 1,000 men will be benefited by this order. WASHINGTON. Parcel post exhibits will be a feature at county fairs throughout the country this fall. Representative Kindel of Denver introduced a bill which provides that it shall be unlawful for any alien previous to having been admitted to citizenship to have, keep or bear firearms. Nomination of Attorney General McReynolds to be an associate justice of the Supreme Court, and Thomas W. Gregory to be attorney general, were ordered favorably reported to the Senate by the judiciary committee. At the request of Representative Taylor of Colorado the House of Representatives gave unanimous consent that President Wilson's recent address to American people on the subject of neutrality shall be printed in the Congressional Record. By a vote of 163 to 81 the House struck out of the railway mail pay bill the Cullop amendment removing all assistant postmasters, clerks and employés in local postoffices from civil service. The bill was then passed. It revives the present system of computing compensation of railroads carrying the mail, and prescribes an examination for all present assistant postmasters. Sir Cecil Spring-Rice, the British ambassador, who has just returned from London, conferred at length with Secretary Bryan and Counselor Lansing on the general subject of American neutrality. As the United States and Great Britain have been foremost in developing abstract principles of international law governing obligations of neutrals, the British ambassador was particularly desirous that the United States continue the advanced position it has taken on neutrality as a whole. Foreign governments thus far have offered no objection to America's plan for a government-owned ship line. Gen. Powell Clayton, distinguished statesman, diplomat and soldier, died at his apartment in Washington at the age of eighty-one years. He had been in feeble health for many months. Legislation to carry out plans for the establishment of a fleet of government merchant ships to meet the emergency of war in Europe was up for consideration in the House and ready for immediate submission to the Senate. The woman's suffrage bill was rejected by the Swedish Parliament. A bitter commercial war against Germany and Austria has been inaugurated in England. Hawaiian islanders are looking forward to a tremendous boom in the territory following the opening of the Panama canal. The American minister, Ira Nelson Morris, with his family, has arrived at Stockholm after a good voyage from England to Bergen, Norway. The Tokio Chamber of Commerce has announced that Oriental European sea routes are safe except in the neighborhood of German possessions. One of a number of wounded soldiers brought back to Paris from the first attack on Muelhausen has no fewer than eleven bullet wounds in his body, but still is likely to recover. Harry Learned, an American who arrived in London from Berlin by way of Holland, says that the railroad trip from Germany to Rotterdam is slow, but that it is possible even for women traveling alone. An official announcement at Antwerp sets forth that King Albert of Belgium has promoted Lieutenant General Bertrand to the rank of full general, as a reward for his excellent conduct before the enemy. "The women and children and the old men have uncomplainingly gone into the fields to gather the crops—glad to give what help they can for their country," says the German chancellor, according to reports from Berlin. Every Canadian, man, woman and child, will assist in contributing toward the expense of the dominions preparations for the present war. The amount of each individual's contribution, based on population, will be about $2 per year. The Princess Patricia at Ottawa presented camp colors to the Princess Patricia Canadian light infantry at church parade at the mobilization ground of the regiment Lansdowne park. A crowd of 10,000 persons occupied the huge grandstand of the park while the corps stood in front during the service and presentation ceremonies. The duke of Connaught, the governor general, was present and addressed the men, as did the princess. SPORT. Standing of Western League Clubs. Sloux City W. L. Pot Denver 85 45 .621 St. Joseph 73 54 .587 Des Moines 64 64 .506 Lincoln 63 64 .494 Omaha 56 72 .432 Topeka 54 76 .411 Wichita 49 78 .388 Armstrong Rawlins, one of the best known polo players in America, who was injured by a fall from his horse in a practice game at Meadowbrook L. L., is said to be dangerously ill. Two former Denver boys and well known racing rivals, Harold Brinket and Eaton McMillan of Cheyenne, are expected to take part in the Denver Motor Club's race meet at Overland park on Labor day. Mordecal Brown, deposed manager of the St. Louis Federals, has quit baseball, according to information given out by an official of the St. Louis Federals. It is said Brown will return to his home in Terre Haute, Ind. Ray Bronson, manager of Milburn Saylor, the Indianapolis lightweight cabled from Australia that they will leave there for Milwaukee. He is bringing with him Jules Dubourg French middleweight, who fought McGoorty in Australia. GENERAL. At Gloversville, N. Y., about 1,200 Fulton county glove cutters formally declared a strike, demanding higher wages. The Minnewaska, an Atlantic transport liner, arrived at New York from London with 241 passengers, a majority of them Americans. Directors of the Pittsburg Steel Company decided to defer the declaration of the dividend on preferred stock usually payable Sept. 1. Mrs. Robert S. McCormick of Chicago, wife of a former United States ambassador to Russia, sent to the express of Russia a check for $1,000. Four hundred more Americans who were stranded in the war zone again set foot on American soil when the Lloyd Sebado liner, Principe di Udine, put in at her pier. The liner was chartered by R. A. C. Smith, dock commissioner of New York, to bring Americans from Europe. Damages in the sum of $1,040,467, with interest, are sought in a suit filed against the North German Lloyd Steamship Company in the Federal Court at Portland, Me., by the Guaranty Trust Company of New York because of the failure of the liner Kronprinzessin Cecilia to reach Plymouth, England, with $10,000,000 in gold bullion. Caught in the act, the police say, of snatching a pocketbook from a woman mourner at a funeral, Anthony Valdo, seventeen years old, was pursued by a crowd of men, women and boys and finally caught by a Philadelphia fireman. At Roanoke, Va., Miss Vaudie Kiser, a teacher of the Dickinson county public school, is in a serious condition from knife wounds inflicted by Charles Lowe, a thirteen-year-old pupil, when she attempted to punish him for a violation of rules. The boy is under arrest. ERNEST HOWARD, Carpenter, Job and Repair Work. Coal, Wood Wood and Exp L. HOPKIN 500 Eighteenth Street Cicles, Motorcycle City Work Kinds Rubber G uired Coal, Wood and Express. E. L. HOC 500 Eighteen Bicycles, M Novelty W All Kinds Ru Repaired E. L. HOPKINS 500 Eighteenth Street Bicycles, Motorcycles, Novelty Work All Kinds Rubber Goods Repaired Twenty Years Experience Phone Main 7661 Denver, Co Telephone Main 7661 Use Meadow Gold Butter 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 That Is Just a Little Better Than the Kind You Thought Was Best C. H. SHIRLEY, Pres. J. C. HAMPSON, Vice Pres PAUL J. SHIRLEY, Sec. and Treas. THE ATLAS DRUG CO. Courteous Treatmet. Right Prices Leaders in Prescription 1021 21st Street. Glazing Done Express. Phone Champa 752. KINS eet cycles, r Goods ience Denver, Colra.lo Gold TANTLY HAND streets R. COLO Co. STREET REAM More Than the as Best HAMPSON, Vice Pres d Treas. RUG CO. Right Prices option Store No. 2 26TH AND WELTON Main 4955-4956 OPEN FOR 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. SHORT 1857 Champa St. HENRY BECK Beck Wines Western Agents for Minne In 1644-46 Phone Main 1053 ALL KINDS RE The Welton F 2619 New and Second We Pay the PHONE MAIN 8247. When The Heads, F or Chiterlings except Eas SHORT ORDERS AT ALL HOURS Syl. Stewart Manag ampa St. Phone Champa 3543 Den JOHN Bick & Engstrom WHOLESALE DEALERS IN wines, Liquors and Cigars for Minneapolis Grain Belt Beer and Carnegie Imported Beer and Bock Ol. 644-46-48-50 Larimer Street 1053 Denver L. KINDS OF REPAIR WORK NEATLY DON REFINISHING A SPECIALTY. Welton Street Furniture F. R. LINDENMIER, Prop. 2619 WELTON STREET Second Hand Furniture Bou and Exchanged e Pay the Highest Cash Price for Furniture 8247. When You W oads, 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 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. New and Second Hand Furniture Bought, Sold and Exchanged We Pay the Highest Cash Price for Furniture When You Want The Heads, Feet, Tails Snouts, Neckbones or Chiterlings or any other part of the hog except the squeal go to 2800-6 Larimer Street. THE ZO SAM 1004 Ninete THE ZOBEL BROTHERS' SAMPLE ROOM 1004 Nineteenth Street, Corner of Curtis FINE WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS COORS' CELEBRATED BEER ON TAP R CORRIS, Pres. J. M. JOHNS, Treas. SEIB M. LROAD PORTERS' C CHAS. HARRIS, Pre RAILROA LUNCH Billiards RAILROAD PORTERS' CLUB LUNCH ROOM IN CONNECTION 1728% Wazee St. Only one block from Union Depot Phone Main 8416. Denver, Colorado FULL DINNER 11:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. DENVER Soup, Fish or Meat, Two Vegetables Coffee,Tea or Cocoa Desert 125 CENTS HOURS t Manager. 543 Denver, Colo. strom ERS IN urs and and Carnegie Porter, Pripps Ol. er Street Denver, Colorado NEATLY DONE. ALTY. Furniture Co. top. STREET Furniture Bought, Sold ed for Furniture Want outs, Neckbones part of the hog go to arKet OTHERS' ROOM corner of Curtis SEIB MILLER, Sec. ERS' CLUB CONNECTION free Check THE FRIENDS JOHN ENGSTROM DENVER, COLO. Phone Main 1461 COLORADO Western Newspaper Union News Service. Augs. 25 - Farmers' Fair at Fowler Sauk. 26 - Akron's Valley Fair, Rocky. 27 Sept. 1, 4—Morgan Co. Fair, Fort Morgan Sept. 10.—Sugar Day, Sugar City. Sept. 14-19.—Colo. State Fair, Pueblo. Sept. 15-18.—Lincoln Co. Fair at Hugo. The Seventh Day Adventists' camp meeting at Rocky Mountain lake has closed. Arthur Frank State Fair, a pioneer newspaper man, died suddenly at Boulder. C. J. Darras was acquitted at Boulder of murdering Noah Beeghley, a Superior coal miner. County Coroner Lawrence T. Beyle of Colorado Springs is rallying from an operation for appendicitis. Arthur Carney, aged twenty-one, was drowned in Payn's lake, seven miles south of Littleton, while fishing. Walter Brace, fifty, a Denver mining engineer, committed suicide in Syracuse, N. Y., according to a telegram. The one-and-one-half-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Martin Hien, of Arvada, was drowned while playing. The body was recovered. The Japanese tea garden, the buildings on the bathing beach and a part of the Derby at Lakeside in Denver, were destroyed by fire. The Billy Sunday tabernacle is to be dedicated with ceremonies the night of Sept. 3, three days before the revival meetings begin in Denver. Letters and cablegrams are still arriving from Denver travelers in Europe, telling of their present conditions and prospects for getting home. The home of Mrs. Angelina Garrumone, 1921 West Thirty-eighth avenue, Denver, who is serving a life sentence in the penitentiary for murder, was set fire. Sept. 30 is the date fixed by ordinance introduced in the City Council of Denver for the election for the recall of Commissioner of Safety Alexander Nisbet. An all-Colorado dinner at Corona, Sept. 12, is to be given the hundreds of delegates to the eighth annual conference of the National Tax Association, to be held in Denver Sept. 8 to 11. Thirty-five representatives of independent Colorado mines met in Denver to consider demands for an agreement with the United Mine Workers of America that will run two years, beginning Sept. 1. Denver friends of Darius Miller, president of the Burlington and Colorado & Southern railway systems, who died in Glacier park, Montana, following an operation for appendicitis, received partitions of his illness, showing that when he first became ill it was believed that he was suffering merely from a slight cold. Troop E, stationed at Walsenburg, has been scattered into eight detachments for several nights for the purpose of putting a stop to intermittent shooting by unidentified persons at the camp, says W. D. Blaisdell, formerly a soldier in the United States army, who is in Pueblo. Blaisdell has just come from Walsenburg. Henry Peltier, a Lafayette saloonkeeper, and Marshal Joseph Gordon of Lafayette were arrested by federal troops and turned over to Undersheriff Euler at Boulder, charged with violating the government order against liquor in the strike zone. Lleutenant Walker immediately revoked Marshal Gordon's permit to carry a revolver. The affections of a woman of advanced years, who has been the mother of eleven children, are as valuable as the love of a younger woman, in the eyes of Judge C. C. Butler of the Denver District Court. He overruled the plea of attorneys of John H. Williams that age should be considered when a jury awarded Hartman $8,000 against Williams in an alienation suit. Protestants and Catholics alike thronged into the nave of the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Denver to bow to the solemn pontifical requiem in memory of the late Pope Plux X, and to hear pronounced the last blessing he sent to his people in Colorado six weeks ago. One hundred and twenty thousand Catholics in the state received the blessing by order of Bishop N. C. Matz. On the eve of his ninety-second birthday, Henry Danforth Steele, long time resident of Colorado and pioneer grocer of Denver, died at the home of his daughter, Mrs. E. P. Shove of Colorado Springs. Old age was the cause of his death. Suicide was the explanation given by Deputy Coroner Bostwick of the killing of Robert Thompson, twenty five, 2330 South Milwaukee street, who was found dead with a shotgun wound in his left breast in a chicken coop in the rear of his home in Denver. JURY UPHOLDS WOMAN Do You Know That- WHO SHOT ENGINEER WHO TRIED TO ENTER HOUSE. Mrs. Nellie Richardson, of Cimarron, Shot J. W. Donelson in Eye, Killing Him Instantly. Western Newspaper Union News Service. Cimarron, Colo.—J. W. Donelson, fifty-five, engineer and employe of the Rio Grande railroad for more than thirty-three years, was shot and killed by Mrs. Nellie Richardson, twenty-one, when, according to the woman's story, he sought to enter her room shortly before midnight. The shooting took place in the absence of Mrs. Richardson's husband, who is a fireman employed by the same road. Richardson, after making his run, remained over night in Montrose. According to the woman, Donelson came to her front door about 10 o.clock and asked to come in. She refused this, she says. Donelson, according to Mrs. Richardson, an hour later made a similar attempt to gain admittance to her home and when repulsed walked to the side of the house, broke out the window sash of her bedroom and started to climb inside with the remark that he intended to remain through the night. Mrs. Richardson, clasping an infant in one arm, grasped up a revolver with the other and fired the weapon at Donelson. The bullet struck him in the left eye, killing him almost instantly. IS PREPARED TO DO ALL KINDS OF JOB PRINTING At a coroner's inquest, Mrs. Richardson was held responsible for Donelson's death, but the jury found that the woman was protecting her honor and that the killing was justifiable. Donelson was a wildower. Commercial, Fraternal, Church, Book and Stationery Jobs A SPECIALTY Weather and Crop Report. Denver.—There was somewhat more than the usual cloudiness, especially in the afternoon; temperatures were slightly above the normal in the southeastern and extreme eastern counties, while elsewhere in the state practically normal temperature conditions prevailed, says the United States report. Showers occurred at frequent intervals, and the weekly rainfall was generally above the normal except in the northeastern counties. Conditions have been favorable for both crop growth and farming operations, and all crops have made satisfactory progress. Hail caused some local damage to sugar beets in Logan county, and the potato crop is affected by blight in Mesa county. Sugar beets, alfalfa and ranges are in excellent condition. Peaches and cantaloupes are being shipped. Wheat and oats are being harvested, and thrashing shows a fairly good yield for both crops. 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. Boulder Girl Sails for Home. Boulder Girl Sails for Home. Boulder. Miss Enid Conkling of this city has received a letter from her sister, Miss Yetta Conkling, telling of experiences of Americans marooned in Europe since the outbreak of the war. Miss Conkling, while in Paris, declares when she attempted to cash a travelers' check to procure funds with which to leave the French capital, she was ushered into a room in which a number of millionaires were begging for money. Their checks were not recognized, she says, and they were glad to accept whatever assistance the American embassy could offer them. 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. Jury Holds Miner for Slaying. Boulder.—An inquest into the death of Steve Kojuharoff, the Bulgarian mining contractor who was shot and killed in the enclosure of the Hecla mine by Tony Perry, a non-union miner, was conducted by Coroner L. B. Kelso. The verdict of the coroner's jury was that the deceased came to his death by a gunshot wound inflicted with felonious intent by Tony Perry. Perry is being held in the county jail here. Will Build New Trails. Boulder.—H. N. Wheeler, forest supervisor for this district, announced a proposal to build new forest trails in the mountainous section of this country. They will be constructed this year and located where they will be of the greatest value to mining and commercial interests of the country. Prices as Reasonable as Those of Any Job Office in Denver Rich Pueblo Man Attacks Attorney. Pueblo.-George Adair, a wealthy property owner of 225 East Fourth street, is alleged to have gone violently insane when he administered a beating to former District Judge J. C. Elwell, who is aged and blind, in Judge Elwell's office in the Central block. Miner Slain: Assailant Flees. Boulder.—Michael Cochevra, a Bulgarian non-union miner, was shot and instantly killed near the Rex No. 1 mine at Louisville. His assailant escaped. Gas Fills Oll Room; Man Faints. Kersey.—Overcome by the fumes of gasoline and lying unconscious fifteen minutes before being discovered, J. L. Shawhan, an employé on the S. L. W. ranch, is in a serious condition here. He was in a pumphouse oilling machinery when the building filled with gasoline fumes and he fainted. He was found by his little son who came to see him, and a hired man was summoned to carry nim out of the building. A physician worked over Shawhan an hour before he was resuscitated. Ra Mee al an S 1b penal ae [geese oa ae ean are ONG ro ea the ne eae nae a er ae eee oe, eS ee Se Municipal Market, 20th & Ogden Tuesday and Saturday Famous Telephone Peas and Stringless Beans, From his ‘own Gardens A. S. BRITTON, ARVADA, COLO Kentucky Hand Laundry ‘ a 4 eat foe The Only Colored lee a ie bi : Laundry in the eee Fs eae i a, | _ ALL WORK GUARANTEED J. B. Catlett, Proprietor Phone Champa 2879 2224 Glenarm PI. rrr eh. be Ap et ee oe Hes cs RE OI SP ae LSA acme < eee ie a ies aie m a ae Sa OF eS ae im a : seared A bi e ere ee | ie ae ie? ee Sr a 2k 2 Ty f he nen F a ra < Oem eee ality: 5) wae oN |e Tan) Figs Ma | ae ae hd | Ny tea rae eee Ee hk Masi vi “2 ae <a ee ‘if R, eae : ae Pie oe ie 1023 EIGHTEENTH ST. We Have the Best Equipped Outfit in the West to Produce the Good Sewed Soles ...........600 750, $1.00] Resoling from heel to heel, entire Nailed Soles ............50c 680, 750] new bottom $1 50 Heels... .........++-256, 380, 500] and heel ..............5 ° Rubber Heels... seeseeseeceee 54 508 SHOES MADE TO ORDER. Turn Rips ......+++s+++++-166 to 260| Tallor Made .......e.sesceeeee- #10 Patches ..............+...18¢ to 250] WE CAN FIT ANY KIND OF We Use the Best Oak Lether, DEFORMED FOOT. REPAIRING WHILE YOU WAIT WALTER CAMBERS tone Eighteenth St es = § <isg< Msg 5 62. ©, 4 a aa Maas bx] a oe $i 7 =} =i Ag mais =o me 3 ie = This is the time of year when many people wear low shoes as a matter of necessity and of comfort. For the in- dividual who is annoyed with excess- ive perspiration, or the sensitiveness that comes from our alkali dust, the formula used in the German army for “sweating and sore” feet is helpful. ‘This is as follows: Salicylic acid, three parts; magnesium silicate, 87 parts, any bland powder to make 100 parts. If you are a tenderfoot and can arrange the time at noon, a hot soapy foot bath, fresh stockings and different shoes add greatly to one's comfort. To Make Geraniume Bloom. To make geraniums branch out and blossom, place a common pin directly in the center of the end of the main stalk. He Might Bite. A good many people sympathize with the under dog, but they don't want (he upper dog to know it, says the New York Times. Graceful and Durable Party Gown os = fe: : Y un ie Girdles That Are Popular Just Now f "bere ae ae =e > «Vag Re eS 8° : ME, OAR Fe i | ees fiw > r (te > p P =, * | Ee I » Poe ee eee eRe con ‘I there are gowns which are designed ‘along Mnes that remain and are ac ‘ceptable for several seasons, In de- signing a party gown It is a matter of good judgment to select conservative models in order that a dress which receives no hard service may outlast a single season or be easily remodeled This {s more especially true when high-priced fabrics are chosen. A very pretty gown, designed for a dinner dress or for parties, is shown tn the picture, and has an advantage in that {t 1s suitable to both youthful and older wearers. A glance at the model convinces one that It might have been worn at any season for several years without clashing with the prevailing fashions. ‘The model pictured is a brilliant de- sign made up of rose-colored satin in the skirt and underbodice and draped with silk mousseline in the same color. [52 ensconene ob tig wale in the matter of belts and girdles, is left very much to the fancy of the individual this season. These range {rom narrow belts, of which there are fow, to the widest of girdles, of which lhere are many. Of the latter the ma- jority fasten at the’back. But fasten- Ings at the side or at the middle front are used wherever the effect is more desirable than a fastening at the back. As to the sash ends, some girdles are finished with one or two falling from a knot. ‘The favorite adjustment of the wide girdle {s in a position in which it ex- tends from an inch or so above the normal waist Ine to six or eight inches below. It is adjusted rather loosely, or has that appearance, although the girdle is bone or fastened to a sup port to hold it in the proper place. It Is closed with hooks and eyes. Some of the long sashes of very wide soft ribbon are wound about the figure and pinned into position. ‘Three girdles are shown here which are typical of those favored at pres- ent. In the first a wide taffeta ribbon | Pe . PHONE MAIN 6123—Day or Night ee ras ¥ ; 7,7 THE es Gy DOUGLASS UNDERTAKING 4 ee COMPANY SURCONTES: INCORPORATED AND BONDED Pres. and Mgr. RESIDENCE PHONE YORK 7992. * M aa A a c Pe ea to All : QDR Parlors, 1830 Arapahoe Street Denver, Colorado Drink Capitol Beer DENVER’S PRIDE KA eet Saati > NOG Unesir LEED The Purity of Capitol Beer Is De- monstrated by Its Superior Flavor and Strength-Giving Qualities. ITS CAPITAL HAVE A CASE SENT HOME The Capitol Brewing Co. Phone Champa 356 Delivered Anywhere ‘The skirt is slightly draped, its grace- ful folds hanging from the waist line with some fullness arranged in the seam at the center front, It is full enough for dancing. ‘There {s a short underbodice of the Satin with a rich design embroidered in self color with silk floss. The over- drapery of silk mousseline could hard- ly be simpler. It is gathered into some fullness over the shoulder and top of the sleeves, which are cut in one. The mousseline is caught up in two places at the back and falls to a long point at the left side in front, where it is weighted with a fancy tas- sel In deep rose color. The sleeve amounts only toashort drapery at the top of the arm, supported by a short undersleeye of satin and finished with a medallion of embroidery. A girdle of wide moire silk matching the tassel in shade completes the gown. ky Mountain Athletic Club ’ Ps A high class Pool and Billiard room. A supberb Gymna- sium and infact everytning that goes To makeup a FISRT CLASS RESORT. RICHARD FRAZIER, Manager 2014 Champa Street Denver, Colorado PHONES: MAIN 2274 & 2275 Ss1O.00 ll OA OUR |e) THE RENT || PROFIT IS { h | Is Low o Be! YOURS | ey ee | Af eee r AD “S| 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, ios curris stREeT of white with cross-bars of rose-col ored satin and dresden roses woven in is designed for wear with white summer gowns. It fs finished with a large flat bow and fastened at the back. The ends of this girdle are stayed with bones to which the hooks and eyes are sewed. The bow is ad- fusted near the top of the girdle and pinned loosely to the dress with the aim always in view of avoiding a stiff effect. The second girdle is in wide white taffeta ribbon with a broad stripe of black satin near each edge. This Is finished and fastened at the ends with bones and hooks and eyes. The fas tening {s concealed under two short hanging loops of the ribbon. These black-and-white girdles of wide ribbon, or made of silk, are worn with alk white gowns. ‘The third belt is designed for wear with tailored dresses or skirts and blouses, and 1s made of white suede leather bound with black. It fastent with a buckle covered with leather and fs finished with a single blas end. JULIA BOTTOMLEY.