Colorado Statesman
Saturday, March 13, 1915
Denver, Colorado
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PATRONIZE MERCHANTS WHO ADV. IN THE PEOPLE'S PAPER
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
THE JOURNAL OF THE WEST.
LABOR SHALL BE FREE
RAGE COUNTRY PARTY
SPEECH
HON. M.
B. M
ON THE INJUSTICE OF THE
AMENDMENTMENT TO THE
THE REPLY OF REPRESENT
ISSIPPI (A SOUTHERN
In the House of Represen
SPEECH OF HON. MARTIN B. MADDEN
ON THE INJUSTICE OF THE AFRICAN EXCLUSION AMENDMENDMENT TO THE IMMIGRATION BILL AND THE REPLY OF REPRESENTATIVE QUIN OF MISS- ISSIPPI (A SOUTHERN DEMOCRAT) THERETO In the House of Representatives January 7, 1915 PUBLISHED BY REQUEST
Mr. MADDEN. Mr. Speaker, beginning on line 8, page 8, of H. R. 6060, the immigration bill, passed by the House at the last session of Congress and reported to the House from the Senate on Tuesday, provides—
That after four months from the approval of this act, in addition to the aliens who are by law now excluded from admission into the United States, the following persons shall also be excluded from administration thereto, to wit: All members of the African or black race.
This language would seem to make it impossible for a Negro, a citizen of the United States, to reenter this country if he happened to be abroad for any reason.
This is the most drastic legislation I have ever seen proposed. It is discrimination of a kind that can not be justified.
Mr. Speaker, the possession of power should be used with great care. We never ought to use power unjustly. Men who have power can afford to be just. It would be unjust beyond measure to adopt this amendment to the immigration law. One tenth of the American people are of the black race, and no people in all the world's history has ever been more loyal to a Government than have these people to this. (Applause)
No other race numbering 10,000,000 of the Nation's population would submit to the indignities that have been imposed upon these people. Under this amendment citizens of America of African blood would be excluded from the right to return to America's shores. They have lived here 250 years. They have fought in every battle in which the Nation has been engaged. They have given their life blood for the preservation of the Union; they fought at New Orleans with Gen. Jackson, and in the Civil War 350,000 of these men volunteered that the Nation might be saved. They fought in 449 engagements, and left 38,000 on the field of battle, in order that we here to-day might live in a
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country protected by a single flag. (Applause.) There are not many of these people who come from abroad, not more than 5,000 a year, and most of them are English subjects. It is a question whether, if you adopt this amendment, you are not going to bring this country into international complications. The amendment operates against Christianity. American missionaries are sending large sums of money abroad in order that they may educate and christianize the people of Africa, and they frequently select young women to come to America to be educated, in order that they may go back home and educate their own people. If this amendment is adopted that can occur no longer, and we would have put our stamp of approval on the lack of opportunity to a down trodden race of people, whose loyalty to the Government has never been questioned.
America has always made the proud boast of being just to the downtrodden of all the world. Gentlemen, only a short time ago we passed a law in this House to gives self-government to the Filipino. Are we to be less just to the Negro, a race of people who have stood by the Government under which we live and for which we speak to-day during all its struggles for liberty? Are we to place burdens upon this race of people that are not imposed upon any other people of the earth? They ought to be given equal opportunity with every other race to come here. They are loyal and law-abiding, and have made more progress since the close of the Civil War than any other people in all history. They are engaged in all the pursuits that make for prosperity; they are engaged in agriculture, in banking, in the manufactures, in everything that makes the country great, and yet you by the Senate would exclude the people of African blood from coming to America's shores, and thereby humiliate 10,000,000 loyal American citizens and place the stamp
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of inferiority upon them. I plead with you, Members of the House, to open your hearts and do the thing that is just; and justice in this case can not be meted out except by the defeat of this amendment. Surely the American Congress is too great, too sympathetic, too just to enact such legislation as this. (Applause.)
Reply Of Hon. Percy E. Quin. Of Mississippi.
Mr. QUIN. Mr. Speaker, I am surprised at the sentiments just expressed by the distinguished gentleman from Illinois (Mr. Madden). He certainly does not know much about the African race. Of all the barnacles that the civilization of the United States has fastened to it, of all the leper spots, of all the sores, of all the misfortunes that the civilization of this Republic has fastened to the body politic it is the African race, which stands as the worst. I say, gentlemen, that of all the evils that the American Republic is confronted with to-day it is this black race this black death, this parasite of rece destruction that is fastened upon the Anglo-Saxon people and upon the civilization of the United States. You had just as well to begin to understand that the white people are going to rule this country.
I would favor the deporting of the black man from the United States. Certainly I favor this amendment forbidding any more Negroes from coming here, which would do away partially with that great wrong to this country.
We have a great race, but we have this one great evil, we are getting too many foreigners in this country, too many whose blood can not assimilate with that of our people. Any man that loves his country, who loves this Republic, could never hope to have the Negro race assimilate with the white race. It is impossible to the mind of any man who understands the Negro to have anything except revulsion at the idea of the Negro race being placed on equality with the white people.
Mr. Speaker, I am opposed to any race of people being allowed to come into this country who are not fit to intermarry with our people. Certainly no nigger should ever be allowed to marry a white person. So far as the Negro race is concerned, social equality is an impossibility. No Negro is good enough to associate with a white man. The white people in the South will never stand for the Negro to even attempt to stand on any plane of equality. Why not let this amendment of the Senate stand, which forbids any Negroes coming into the United States? Why not be real men and stand up for the purity of the white race all over our country? There is no
evil that is so great to the real success of the perpetuity of our institutions as the black blood of this country. Talk about bringing more in here. Mr. Speaker, this is one of the wisest provisions that has been placed in this immigration bill, and the people from the State where the distinguished gentleman comes from may not know the evils as do the people of the State of Mississippi, who have had to contend with him under the carpetbag, scallawag government which obtained after 1865, when the black man rode in high place, with a few of these carpetbag buzzards who held office in the State of Mississippi putting the black man in power, to run roughshod over the true civilization of this Republic. (Applause) If my friend had those conditions in Illinois, he certainly would not want anymore Negroes imported into the United States. For Heaven's sake men, if you understood what an evil the preponderance of black population is in any State or community, you certainly would not oppose this bar to any more African blood coming into this Republic. What few you have now you may manage, but if you get them on you in numbers like we have them in the State of Mississippi and other former slave-holding States, you will have a standing menace that will grow to be an intolerable danger and nuisance. I say, my friends, as a real patriot who loves his country, who loves the Anglo-Saxon blood and its predominance, we ought to let it rule, and the only way to keep it ruling is to prevent the African race from becoming too numerous in your Republic. The distinguished gentleman from Illinois (Mr. Madden) says you have one-tenth of the population of that blood now that is just one-tenth too-much—and I am not prejudiced against the black man, either. (Laughter and applause.)
Washington, March 3.—President Wilson today nominated Houston B. Teehee of Tahlequah, Oklahoma, to be register of the treasury, to succeed Gabe Parker, who recently became commissioner of the five civilized tribes. Teehee is a Cherokee Indian, now attorney for that tribe in Oklahoma. He was formerly a member of the lower house of the Oklahoma legislature.
Philadelphia, Pa., March 2.—Last Saturday the stork paid a visit to the residence of "Baby Jim," 1111 Rodman street, and left a chubby, smiling nine-pound baby boy and since its arrival no one has been able to hand its 750 pound father a red apple. The mother is reported to be doing well and Cress Simmons, "Baby Jim's" brother, says you can't beat the trio for happiness.
RACE NEWS
GATHERED FROM VARIOUS SOURCES
Decatur, Ala., Mar. 1.—John Gray, colored, has just been given a verdict for $10,000 in the Law and Equity Court here against the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company. He was badly injured by a car being backed over him while at work in the railroad shops in New Decatur about three years ago.
Philadelphia, Pa., March 3.—W, Sanders Hooper of this city has been appointed official herald for the Panama Pacific International Exposition at San Francisco, Cal. With a seven-foot trumpet he sounds reveille each morning and taps each evening. This is the firs time a Negro trumpeter has been employed in this capacity.
St. Paul, Minn., March 2.—Walter Chpstnut, 12 years old, a member of the St. Phillips Episcopal Club here, recently wrote an original western drama and with his youthful club members, successfully staged it to the great amazement and joy of a large audience. A prominent part was given each of the twelve members. Mr. Ira S. Ashe, organizer of the club, said of young Chestnut, yesterday: "I simply stood by and allowed young Chestnut, to carry out his own ideas in his own way, the result of which has opened the eyes of all.
We believe the colored vote in this country is worth something. If President Wilson is to be considered good presidential timber for 1916, he would do well to make up his mind to explain two knotty questions. Why did you allow white and colored clerks in the Departments to be segregated? Why have you not appointed a colored man as Recorder of Deeds, in Washington? Perhaps Mr. Wilson thinks these questions are immaterial. If so, its his privilege to continue so to think. This is the seed time. The harvest is yet to come.—Ledgér.
Beaufort, S. C, March 2.—On Tuesday, February 23, occured the death of one of the race's most noted characters, General Robert Smalls, in his seventy-sixth year of age. He had been sick for about ten months at his home on Prince street, and all the members of the family were around the bedside when the end came Born in Beaufort April 5, 1839, he was a river pilot by profession. During the civil war he was used as pilot by the Confederates on a privateer, the Planter, which had been fitted out as a gunboat. On May 13,
NO 29
1862, Pilot Smalls took the Planter which was being used as the special dispatch boat of General Ripley the Confederate post commander at Charleston, from the wharf at which she was lying and carried her out of the Charleston harbor, under the confederate guns, and delivered the vessel to Captain Nichols of the Federal ship Onward, one of the fleet of Federal ships blockading Charleston harbor at the time. He was put in charge of the gunboat Crusader as pilot, serving also on the Planter, and was in charge of the vessels during many engagements with Confederate forces, both naval and land. He was pilot on board the monitor Keokuk when that vessel was struck ninety-six times in the attack on Fort Sumpter on April 7, 1863, sinking the next morning, just after Smalls and the crew had been taken off.
TROOPERS OUGHT TO GET MEDELS FOR SERVICE
Service badges should be given the members of Troop D, Ninth cavalry, for their distinguished services at Naco, in the opinion of army officers and civilians who are familiar with their conduct there. It is asserted that the troopers are more deserving of such recognition than the army of pacification in Cuba, which was given such badges.
During the whole of the Naco trouble Troop D was stationed along the line from the main street of the town, east to the stockyard. A troop of the Tenth cavalry patroled west from Main street. These soldiers while on patrol duty as well as while they were in camp, were constantly exposed to the stay bullets from the Mexican side during the three months' seige. Many times they felt sure they were being deliberately fired upon, but not once did they retaliate.
Their orders were not to fire back unless "maliciously" fired upon. In at least one instance, where a Mexican officer was escaping to this side of the line, such malicious shooting occurred, but even then the colored troopers did not shoot. In all their conduct at Naco, the members of this troop, and all the other troops for that matter, showed the same fine discipline and patience. They never complained. They showed that there are no better soldiers in the world—Douglas Daily International.
NEWS TO DATE IN PARAGRAPHS
DAUGHT FROM THE NETWORK OF WIRES ROUND ABOUT THE WORLD.
DURING THE PAST WEEK
RECORD OF IMPORTANT EVENTS
CONDENSED FOR EUBY
PEOPLE.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
ABOUT THE WAR.
Thirty-seven were drowned when three British ships were sunk in raids by German submarines Tuesday.
Latest reports from Mexico City indicate a menacing condition of affairs for the 25,000 foreigners there, of whom 2,500 are Americans.
Tre British steamship Wyvisbrook has been seized by Carranza authorities at Campeche and her commander, Captain Muir, has been placed in jail.
No great activity has been reported on the Eastern front except at Rawa, to the southwest of Warsaw, where German army headquarters claim the capture of 3,400 Russians.
The British and French fleets have battered their way a step nearer to Constantinople; not, however, without damage to the ships engaged, and the battle royal for the Dardanelles continues.
Fire which threatened the French steamship La Touraine was brought under control and all her passengers are safe on board, according to a formal announcement issued in Paris by the Compagnie General Transatlantique, owner of the liner.
A ministerial crisis similar to that in Greece has occurred in Bulgaria according to information reaching Paris in special dispatches. Premier Radoslavoff is reported to have been overthrown by the influence of King Ferdinand and the followers of Dr. Ghenadieff, former foreign minister, he desiring to take immediate action against Turkey by occupying Adrianople.
WESTERN.
Renegade Indians, Utes and Plutes, fired on a party returning from Bluff, Utah, which reached Cortez, Colo. The three men entombed in the Ayrshire coal mine near Oakland City, Ind., were found dead when the debris was cleared away.
The passing of the Goulds from official connection with the Missouri Pacific-Iron Mountain system occurred at the annual meetings of the two roads at St. Louis.
H. A. Floyd of Sheridan, Wyo., a native of Colorado, has been named by Governor Kendrick of Wyoming as secretary of the new Public Utilities Commission of that state.
The proposition of the Detroit street railway commission to take over the property of the Detroit united railway by assuming the payment of a mortgage of $24,900,000 was accepted by the directors of the company.
Recent raids made by roving bands of Mexican factionists upon their live stock and food supplies have caused the Kickapoo Indians living in eastern Sonora to prepare to go to war, according to several tribesmen who arrived at Douglas, Ariz., to communicate with the government, whose wards they are.
Governor Carlson of Colorado spoke before the Swedish-American Republican Club of Illinois at Moline, Ill., at the annual celebration in memory of the birth of John Ericsson, designer and builder of the Monitor of Civil War fame. He paid tribute to the memory of Ericsson as a true patriot, who gave his skill and energy to his country in her hour of need, and impressed upon his hearers the need of real patriotism in every day life through constant endeavor to upbuild the city, the state and the nation.
WASHINGTON.
President Wilson has selected Monday, May 10, as the date for the Pan-American financial conference. President Wilson will not attend the California Exposition this month but will be represented by Vice President Marshall. The comptroller of the currency issued a call for the condition of all national banks at the close of business Thursday, March 4. President Wilson is taking active steps to work out a budget system of government expenditures, for submission to the next Congress. The Justice Department announced there would be no prosecution in connection with election irregularities in "Uncle Joe" Cannon's election district.
Gen. W. L. Marshall, consulting engineer of the reclamation service, was selected by Secretary of the Interior Lane to take charge of operations looking toward stemming as much as possible the expected overflow of the Colorado river. The State Department received word from Ambassador Gerard at Berlin that the German war office had told him all waters surrounding the Shetland and Orkney Islands are in the war zone but that shipping on both sides of the Faroe Islands is safe.
A British soldier was killed by a ilion, according to the latest casualty list from German East Africa.
Warning to Americans to leave Mexico has been reiterated by the State Department through the Brazilian minister at Mexico City.
A proposal to establish a censorship over the American mails was opposed in the House of Commons by the home secretary, Reginald McKenna.
General Villa, in a statement to the press, repeated his invitation for the foreign diplomats at Mexico City to make their headquarters at Chihuahua City.
Mrs. Emma Dalquist, proprietor of a road house at Safety, twenty-two miles east of Nome, Alaska, was lost in a blizzard and no trace of her can be found.
There has been prepared by the government a new decree which extends the moratorium in France for another period of three months, from April 1 to June 30.
Italy and Rumania probably will enter the war together on the side of the allies, according to newspapers at Rome, which oppose the present policy of neutrality.
Greece apparently is at the parting of the ways with her King exerting his influence to maintain the neutrality of his country in opposition to the retiring premier, M. Venizelos, the man to whom Greece owes her revival.
A dispatch from Amsterdam to the Exchange Telegraph Company says that, according to Vienna telegrams, Count Stephan Tisza, the Hungarian premier, will soon be appointed Austro-Hungarian foreign secretary.
A bulletin issued at Bordeaux, France, by Dr. Denuce, who is in attendance upon Mme. Sarah Bernhardt, whose right leg was amputated recently, says that the condition of Mme. Bernhardt continues to be very satisfactory.
A Carranza harassing expedition held up a Villa supply train between Juarez and Chihuahua City, securing various munitions but no arms or ammunition. A report from Laredo stated that Monterey fell into the hands of the Gonzales forces. This was denied in Villa advices.
SPORT.
The stewards of the London Jockey Club have called a meeting to consider the question of continued horse racing during the war. Eddie Johnson of Pueblo and Jack Torres of Albuquerque started training in Denver for their battle which is scheduled for March 17.
Six early closing purses with a total value of $21,000 have been announced for Kalamazoo's Grand Circuit harness meeting August 2 to 6 inclusive.
The New Mexico Military Institute won the rifle shooting championship of the military schools of the country at Washington, having won the seven matches.
Jess Willard is now as confident that he will meet and defeat Jack Johnson in Havana early in April as he was a month ago that similar operations would be staged in Juarez.
Governor Hayes of Arkansas sent a message to the House announcing that he had vetoed the racing bill passed by both houses of the Legislature. The point of order was raised that the time in which the governor might veto the bill had expired. Speaker Sawyer sustained the point of order and declared the bill a law.
GENERAL.
Hiram H. Nickerson, a widely known former railway president, died at North Wayne, Maine, after a prolonged illness.
In the room where he twice faced a jury for the murder of Stanford White, Harry Kendall Thaw went on trial in New York for conspiring to escape from the state hospital for the criminal insane at Matteawan.
Albert E. Sells, who confessed in Los Angeles to the murder of Jacob Vogel, millionaire banker, and his wife in Fruitvale, Cal., Feb. 11, lived in Denver for twenty years, according to advice received by the police of Denver.
Credit of railroads as reflected in their ability to obtain new capital was discussed before Interstate Commerce Commissioner W. M. Daniels in Chicago in the petition of forty-one western railroads for permission to increase freight rates.
Attorneys for Harry Kendall Thaw, slayer of Stanford White, made their first attempt to get testimony concerning his sanity into the record of his trial for conspiracy to escape from the state hospital for the criminal insane at Matteawan. The attempt was unsuccessful.
By the time peace comes to Europe there will be 2,500,000 widows, 6,700-fatherless children, and 2,500,000 women forced to marry "inferior men," according to Hamilton Holt, editor of the Independent. Editor Holt gave the figures at a peace meeting at the University of Chicago.
Announcement was made that Daniel LeRoy Dresser of New York and Newport, one time president of the Trust Company of the Republic, was married to Miss Marcie Walther of New York on Dec. 22. The ceremony took place in Albany and was private. With the approval of Governor Withycombe, regular Sunday religious service at the Oregon state penitentiary was eliminated in favor of a motion picture play. For the next four Sundays prisoners will attend motion picture shows instead of religious services.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
The Hecla mine case at Boulder has been set for March 19.
A citizens' committee nominated a ticket for the coming city election at Rocky Ford.
Warwick M. Downing is now president of the El Paso Consolidated Gold Mining Company.
Ten thousand dollars will be spent by the Denver park department during 1915 for improvement work.
Of a total of 314 deaths in Denver during February, there were 7 suicides, caused by accidents and 1 homicide.
Mrs. Sarah M. Sherick, 85, pioneer settler of Colorado, died in Golden. She and her husband came to this state in 1862.
Coloradomen gained full control of the Gold Sovereign Gold Mining and Tunnel Company at the annual meeting in Cripple Creek.
Dr. G, C. Lamb, who bought a ranch at Ordway last spring and farmed it last season, has sold the place to J. W. Ray of Cafon City.
A committee of Denver Germans raised over $17,000 for the relief of the wildows and orphans of German soldiers who have fallen in the European war.
Miss Aurelia Blair, 47 years old, died in the home of her brother, John A. Blair, in Pueblo, after a long period of illness. She came to Pueblo eighteen months ago from her home in Denmark.
Olney springs water, which was piped into Ordway about two years ago, is to be piped over the city, as many property owners are desirous of putting it into their residences for domestic use.
John W. Wingate, grand commander of the Knights Templar of Colorado, arrived in Denver Monday from Durango to inspect local chapters of the lodge. The 470th state conclave opened Tuesday evening.
The affairs of the Denver postoffice will be turned over by Postmaster Harrison April 1 to the newly-appointed postmaster, Benjamin F. Stapleton. Harrison left for San Francisco on a two weeks' vacation.
It is now proposed by a certain group to so modify the charter of Colorado Springs that a commissioner for the city will not have to give all his time to the position but may engage in other business.
Petitions are being circulated in Fort Collins asking for the submission of a proposition to bond the school district for $36,000 for the purpose of building and equipping an addition to the high school building.
J. Z. Miller, chairman of the board of directors of the federal reserve bank for the Tenth district, told the bankers of Denver that it in practically certain the first branch reserve will be located at Denver.
When Thomas Farrell, a roomer at a Market street lodging house, died at the county hospital in Denver, it was supposed he was penniless, but, sewed to the lining of his ragged coat was found a bankbook which showed $1,500 on deposit to his credit at a savings institution.
Michael Soden, a Colorado pioneer, celebrated his ninety-fifth birthday anniversary at his home in Denver. Although within five years of the century mark, Mr. Soden is hale and hearty, and helped to entertain a company of 100 relatives and friends at his birthday party.
"At the End of the Rainbow," a three-act drama with a cast of twenty characters, will be the annual play to be presented by the members of the Junior class of the Central High school at Pueblo under the direction of E. R. Birk, teacher of expression, in the Auditorium the latter part of March.
Senator Hasty, chairman of the finance committee of the Senate, went over to the House Monday and asked Chairman Puffer of the House appropriations committee to make the rounds jointly of the various state departments and state institutions, with a view of making a further cut where the situation may justify.
Vigorous protests against the proposed omission of Denver on the transcontinental auto route of the Lincoln National Highway association, are being framed by scores of autoists of the state, following the receipt of official maps of the association in which Cheyenne is placed at the northern extremity of the big highway.
More than six hundred Irish residents of Denver who attended the meeting of the Irish-American Progressive society in the Knights of Columbus hall in Denver to celebrate the one hundred and thirty-seventh birthday anniversary of Robert Emmet declared for a "free Ireland" and advocated seeking "the armed assistance of England's enemies" to gain Erin's political independence.
Mr and Mrs. J. T. Wasson celebrated their golden wedding at their home in Rocky Ford. They were married at Holton, Kan., the day of the second inauguration of President Lincoln but have lived in Colorado for many years.
Five-acre summer homesteads in Colorado available for periods of thirty years may be procured from the secretary of agriculture as the result of Senator John F. Shafroth's amendment to the agricultural appropriation bill recently passed by both branches of Congress.
CONVICT-AUTHOR HELD
WARDEN TYNAN TO PROBE LIFE LED BY J. J. MOORE.
Sends Man to Kansas City and if the Charges Are Substantiated Parole Will Be Held as Violated.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
Colorado Springs.—On evidence indicating that J. J. Moore, alias J. A. Boyle, author of the Boston Blackie stories, has violated his parole, Warden Thomas J. Tynan of the state penitentiary will send a man to Kansas City. Warden Tynan has had Moore watched since the convict-author was given permission to leave the state to accept employment and a report of his marriage followed. Moore had never mentioned a desire to marry while under parole to the warden.
Moore was arrested by the chief of police in Kansas City with a woman after Clement Anthony Martin and Bertha McAndries Martin, married in an elopement to this city, had been taken into custody by federal authorities. The Moores and the Martins had been together most of the time since leaving Denver.
Tynan wired the Kansas City police for facts in regard to Moore's detention and when no reply came he wired the police there to hold Moore. "I am going to send a man to Kansas City," said Warden Tynan. "I think we have established the fact that he has broken his parole through information obtained from United States Attorney Tedrow. I am satisfied that Moore has not been in good company and if the points on which I am having him held are sustained he will be brought back for violating his parole."
Contract Let for Milk Condensery.
Loveland. Loveland will have a milk condensery in operation within a few months as the result of efforts put forth by the Larimer County Farmers' Union. The plant will cost $32,000, and have a capacity for handling 50,000 pounds of milk daily. The capacity will be doubled as soon as the business justifies it. The plant will be operated by the Larimer County Co-operative Milk Condensery Company, formed last fall, and under the provisions of the constitution and by laws only those who deliver milk to the plant will share in the profits. Approximately 1,500 cows have been pledged, and it is expected that this number will be increased to 2,000.
Homesteader Frozen to Death.
Towner.—James Crum, a homesteader, started to his home with his two sons. His wagon and load being too heavy, he left the wagon and the boys took the mules and rode home, leaving the father to walk. He did not show up at the ranch and the boys hung out a lantern, which is the custom in this section of the country if one of the family is out at night. But the father did not get home. Sunday morning news was spread and a searching party found him frozen to death about three miles from home. His tracks in the snow showed he had been lost
Special Train to Save Boy's Life.
Grand Junction.—The Uintah Rail way Company ran a special train to take a small boy from Atchee, Colo., to a hospital in Fruita, after he had fallen and bitten his tongue nearly off. The boy was the son of Roy Muto of Atchee. The train made record speed down a twenty-eight-mile grade and delivered the boy at Mack, from where he was taken to Fruita, ten miles, in an auto in fifteen minutes. The boy will live, although he suffered greatly from loss of blood.
Belgian Officials Wife in Springs.
Colorado Springs.—Madame Depage wife of the surgeon general of Belgium, is coming to Colorado Springs in connection with the campaign she is heading in this country for the relief of the Belgian sufferers. She is scheduled to be here some time after March 14. Mrs. Lyda M. Touzalin and Mrs. Leslie J. Skelton, together with other prominent women, are arranging a reception for her and making plans for another campaign in this city.
Printer Friend of Greeley Dead.
Colorado Springs.—John Scott, 83 years old, died at the Union Printers' Home, where he had been a resident for twenty-two years. He was one of the oldest printers in the United States, was a personal friend of Horace Greeley and a charter member of New York Typographical Union No. 6 or which Greeley was president.
Register and Receiver Named
Pueblo.—James B. Orman of Pueblo, former governor of Colorado, was notified of his appointment as receiver of the United States land office at Pueblo. Major G. M. Dameron of La Junta, has been appointed register. They will succeed G. G. Withers of Pueblo and J. W. Hawley of Trinidad.
Blown to Bits by Dynamite.
Longmont.—Blown to bits with a atick of dynamite, the body of Charles Sall, 40, blacksmith at the Lyons quarry, was found on the road near the Lyons cemetery by Nat Ulvila, a quarryman going to work. Coroner Howe of Boulder found evidence to convince him that it was a case of suicide. The dirt beneath the body was undisturbed, the body receiving the full force of the charge. Sall's watch and a section of his vest were found 100 feet away.
ERNEST HOWARD
Carpenter, Job and Repair Work.
Coal, Wood and Express.
CLEANING, PRESSING, DYEING, REPAIRING, RELINING AND REMODELING.
WORK CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED
2549 Washington Avenue Denver, Colorado
The Market Company
Wholesale and Retail Staple and Fancy Groceries, Fish and Oysters. Hotels and Restaurants Our Specialty. Fresh and Cured
Fruits, Vegetables, Poultry and Game.
1688-89 Arapahoe Street Denver, Colorado
CHAS. HARRIS, Pres. J. M. JOHNS, Treas. SEIB MILLER, Sec.
RAILROAD PORTERS' CLUB
LUNCH ROOM IN CONNECTION
Billiards and Free Check
Pool Room
1728½ Wazee St. Only one block from Union Depot
Phone Main 8416. Denver, Colorado
C. H. SHIRLEY, Pres. J. C. HAMPSON, Vice Pres PAUL J. SHIRLEY, Sec. and Treas.
Courteous Treatmet. Right Prices Leaders in Prescription
Paints, Oils and Glass.
Coal, Wood
1021 21st Street.
You Have Tried the Best
Now Try the Best
THE
Giant
FOR QUALITY
CLEANING, PRESSIN
ING, RELINING AN
WORK CALLED FOR
2549 Washington Avenue
PHONE MAIN 3028
JOHN K.
Meats, Fancy and
1864 CURTIS
Corner Nineteenth.
Phones Main
169, 181, 189, 190
The Market
s. Glazing Done and Express. Phone Champa 752.
Our Prices Reasonable
Satisfaction Guaranteed
CLEANERS
AND
TAILORS
McCAIN & RICHARDS, PROPS
Phone Main 7376
ING, DYEING, REPAIR-
AND REMODELING.
OR AND DELIVERED
Denver, Colorado
RES. PHONE GALLUP 942
E. RETTIG
and Staple Groceries
TIS STREET
Denver, Colo.
C. E. Smith, Manager
Res. Phone South 1608
et Company
and Fancy Groceries, Fish and
Restaurants Our Specialty.
Barn Fed Meats
es, Poultry and Game.
Denver, Colorado
OHNS, Treas. SEIB MILLER, Sec.
ORTERS' CLUB
IN CONNECTION
Free Check
Room
one block from Union Depot
Denver, Colorado
arbett
ream Co.
TON STREET
CREAM
Little Better Than the
thought Was Best
J. C. HAMPSON, Vice Pres
LEY, Sec. and Treas.
AS DRUG CO.
tmet. Right Prices
Prescription
Store No. 2.
26TH AND WELTON
Main 4955-4956
AFRO-AMERICAN CULLINGS
The bestowal of the first Spingarn medal—an admirably planned prize, to be awarded annually to the colored man or woman who has rendered the greatest service to the colored race—upon Prof. Ernest E. Just, a young scientist and professor in the Howard university medical school, attracted widespread attention. The committee, of which Mr. Taft is a member, did not find the choice an easy one, there being a number of possibilities from whom to select. That the recipient should be a scientist rather than an inventor, or a leader in farming or banking, will doubtless surprise many people, as it will put to their trumps those who continue to maintain that the Negro is incapable of the higher education. Professor Just, be it noted, is but thirty-one years of age; yet he has already attracted the attention of scientists of repute, no less a one than Prof. Jacques Loeb endorsing his original work in physiology, biology and zoology in these terms:
"His knowledge of biology and his critical ability are of an unusually high and lofty order. In the work that he devotes to Howard university he is actuated by very high motives, since the remuneration he receives is only a fraction of his nominal salary. He could easily increase his income by giving up his position. Professor Just has sacrificed a good deal for the advancement of medical schools for colored people, and he will do a good deal more if he is given a chance, as I hope he may be."
Plainly, this is just the type of man the Spingarn medal ought to distinguish—a colored man who is proving the capability of the race, and is also ready to make sacrifices for the benefit of his people. It has been a distinct weakness of the race in its struggle upward from slavery that it has often lacked solidarity and a readiness to contribute to the welfare of the whole. That this is now a rapidly passing condition there are plenty of instances besides this one of Professor Just to prove. Indeed, the support given to the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, in whose hands Professor Spingarn has placed the award of the medal, is a remarkable case in point. That organization has taken radical and unpopular ground; timeservers in both races have shunned it as if it were something unworthy, instead of a manly and straightforward effort to preserve to the colored people their civil and political rights as guaranteed by the constitution. Yet the association has flourished, spread over the country, and made a reputation for itself as a guardian of the colored people's liberties, largely as a result of the efforts and financial sacrifices of the Negroes themselves.
Commercially, elephants in India come under two classes—the one of pageantry, the other of utility. Every native prince of nobleman of distinction in India keeps elephants to swell his retinue, while, on the other hand, government officials and private persons, such as timber contractors, etc., require them for work.
The quaint city of Berne has been the capital of the Swiss republic since 1848. It is one of the most interesting towns of Zahringen, and by 1288 it was strong enough to ward off two sieges by Rudolph of Hapsburg, the ancestor of the present emperor of Austria.
With Julius Rosenwald of Chicago at its head, a party of business men, philanthropists and social workers from that city visited the various schools of the Tuskegee, Ala., institute operated by Booker T. Washington and took part in a meeting of the board of trustees. Several rural schools which Mr. Rosenwald has aided in Montgomery were visited.
Near Basel-Augst, in Switzerland, is the site of the old Roman colony of Augusta Rauracorum, with remains of a theater, and at the nearby town of Rheinfelden are wall and towers partly preserved, for this was one of the outposts of the Holy Roman empire. It has only belonged to Switzerland since 1802, and is picturesque, like the majority of the towns on the Rhine.
More than four hundred patents have been issued by the United States for devices intended to harness the power of sea waves.
It has been computed that at the time of the arrival of Columbus there were 25,000,000 Indians in North and South America.
Schemes for the construction of a 3,000-mile railway through Central Africa, at a cost roughly estimated at $50,000,000, have been revived by the termination of the war between Italy and Turkey.
The post office in England intends to try the motorcycle for rural service. Orders have been placed for experimental machines.
The life of the domestic horse is about twenty-eight years, while that of the wild one is thirty-eight years.
Manassas is the only school of its kind in the entire five surrounding counties, the only place where any sort of an industrial training is given. The children come principally from this section of Virginia, where they have often gone no further than the fourth grade in the rural schools. In nearly all cases this means the scariest possible training—the bare brittleinnings of the three R's. However, there are things more fundamental than even these which must be taught many of these pupils, who come from homes where the use of water for cleansing purposes has never been known, and where the simple everyday care of their bodies is another new lesson to learn. It is remarkable how quickly they come to realize the value of this lesson, and the pride with which daily soap-scrubbed faces shine once they know the added feeling of self-respect gained by the simple medium of soap and water.
The pupil must be fourteen to enter the school—and may be forty. There are usually about an equal number of boys and girls in attendance. Most of these children are too poor to pay for their tuition and board, for which a very nominal price is asked, but this difficulty is arranged for by a system of crediting the child for daily jobs done in connection with the trade he is pursuing, or any necessary work to be done about the building, in the kitchen, laundry, or about the grounds. The trades offered the boys are carpentry, cobbling, wheelwrighting, blacksmithing, upholstering, and, most important of all for boys of that section, farming. The girls have cooking, sewing, laundering, dairying, and light farming.
As early as 1798 a night school for Negroes was started in Philadelphia. In 1844 an industrial school was proposed, and in 1856 the first Negro university in the new world was started, named Wilberforce university, and now one of the largest Negro institutions of higher learning in the country. There are operated under the auspices of this church the following institutions, each one named for one of its deceased bishops: Allen university, Columbia, S. C.; Morris Brown university, Atlanta, Ga.; Payne college, Cuthbert, Ga.; Edward Waters college, Jacksonville, Fla.; Payne university, Selma, Ala.; Campbell college, Jackson, Miss.; Lampton college, Waco, Tex.; Wayman institute, Harrodsburg, Ky.; Payne Theological seminary, Wilberforce, O. There are also the Shaffer High school in Liberia, West Africa; Turner seminary, Shelbyville, Tenn., and Kittrell college in North Carolina, and institutions in Capetown, South Africa, and Georgetown, South America.
The members of this church have raised more than $3,000,000 to support their schools, and their graduates are scattered all over the world—where Negroes are. Some are teaching the Filipinos; some are organizing and training the militia of Liberia, the Negro republic of West Africa, and they are in every state in the Union in almost every honorable occupation of labor. A hundred African students have been trained in these schools for the purpose of going back to their homes to help raise their people. The watchword of the church is "self-respect and self-help."
Corks steeped in vaseline make exe
cellent substitutes for glass stoppers.
Buffalo is to purify its drinking water with chlorine gas, and hopes that the unpleasant taste caused by the more common method of using hypochloride will not appear. The process will kill germs, but not clarify the water. If Buffalo wants its water to sparkle it will have to install a filtration system as in Cleveland, where the plant cost $2,000,000.
More than 99 per cent of the timber in the Phillippines is owned by the government and is worked through concessions and licenses, as no land more valuable for timber than for agriculture can be bought. The valuable trees of the same species are often scattered through the forests instead of being grouped, and this makes lumbering more expensive.
A camera operated by electricity has been invented for lowering into oil wells to photograph the conditions surrounding broken tools.
A gun, has been discovered in large quantities in the Malay Peninsula that yields from 10 to 20 per cent pure rubber.
To drain Lake Mariotis, in the Nile delta ten pumps have been installed each with a capacity of 100,000,000 gallons daily, and it is believed that eight more will be required.
The Pacific Steam Navigation company has decided to extend its Straits mail service from Callao to Panama, in view of the opening of the Panama canal.
In the Alps there is a letter box 10. 000 feet above the sea level, from which daily collections are made.
GERMANS SINK AMERICAN SHIP
ARRIVAL OF CRUISER EITEL IN NEWPORT NEWS CAUSES GREAT SENSATION.
NEWSSTUNSPRESIDENT
TEUTON VESSEL BEGS FOR REPAIRS IN VIRGINIA PORT AND LANDS CAPTIVES.
Washington, March 11.—President Wilson was stunned by the news that an American ship carrying grain was sunk by the German cruiser Prinz Eitelfriedrich which made port for repairs at Newport News Tuesday. State Department officials would make no announcement, but the action of Germany in sinking a ship carrying grain was outside all international law precedents, it was declared. The German cruiser, after a commerce-destroying cruise over the Pacific and Atlantic oceans of fifteen thousand miles landed for repairs. She brought with her rescued crews and passengers of American, British, French and Russian ships, and lay at anchor in a state of mechanical exhaustion from the strain of a fifteen-thousand-mile voyage.
The cruiser began her scouting for ships of enemies of the Fatherland at Tsing-Tau, China, last November, under Commander Thierichens, who admitted sinking of eight merchant ships—three British, three French, one Russian and one American. The sinking of the American ship—the William P. Frye, a sailing vessel bound from Seattle to Queenstown with 5,200 tons of wheat—in the South Atlantic concerned American officials. Collector Hamilton said last night it was obvious that the Eitel Friederich would intern here.
Commander Thierichens told the collector he had no idea of leaving port within 24 hours; that the boilers of his vessel were in bad condition and that repairs under six weeks would be impossible. He said under these conditions the vessel would be intermed unless permission could be had to remain until repairs made.
Two English vessels carrying horses for the armies of the allies at first hesitated about leaving port, but when it became evident the German would not depart at once, they put to sea. The owners of the destroyed ship Frye took out a policy for $11,500 with the government war risk insurance bureau last October and this may play a part in determining its status as a carrier of cargo not subject to seizure. Under the usual practice of international law as followed in previous wars a battleship can sink a neutral vessel only when she carries contraband and would in any case be certain of condemnation by a prize court.
The William P. Frye was owned by the Arthur Sewall Company. When overhauled by the German cruiser she was bound from Seattle to Queens town with a cargo of wheat. The skipper's wife said she and the children were frightened when overtaken by the German cruiser but that her fears were allayed when she went aboard the cruiser, the officers and men making every effort to give them all possible comforts.
As soon as the Eitel Friederich had anchored here, Collector Hamilton and aides visited the ship, and first-class passengers from the French passenger steamer Florida, together with the captains of the eight destroyed vessels, were brought to Newport News.
GENERAL VILLA IS DEDFIANT!
Hands Off Mexico and Let Us Settle our Differences Alone, Says Northern Chief.
El Paso, Tex., March 11.—General Villa, in a statement received from Torreon, declared that in event of intervention of foreign troops to subdue the Carranza forces, he and all other Mexicans would unite against the invaders. He denied recent interviews in American newspapers, which, he said, had just been called to his attention, in which he was quoted as having said that he would not oppose armed intervention on the part of several powers "to reduce the Carranza troops to order," provided that he would be made commander of such a move.
"There is nothing more grotesque and absurd than such an assertion," said the message from the northern leader, "since I, as a true Mexican, always have insisted that our troubles be settled solely among ourselves.
"Should, unfortunately, some nation invade our territory, I would be ready to fight against it without measuring the danger nor the number of the invaders until I would see the entire country in the possession of Mexicans only. All of us would fight united against the common enemy."
Warship to Guard New York Port.
Washington.—Secretary Daniels ordered the naval yacht Dolphin from the Washington navy yard to New York to aid in the enforcement of neutrality in the harbor there.
GOVERNOR SIGNS BILLS
MANY MEASURES APPROVED BY STATE EXECUTIVE.
Short Appropriation Bills and Act Taking Legislative Employees Out of Civil Service Signed.
No. 40, by Puffer—In relation to the sale of merchandise in bulk without proper notice.
No. 43, by Bills—Providing that wives of old soldiers and sailors may be admitted to state home.
No. 49, by Humason—Short appropriation bill for state normal school at Gunnison.
No. 51, by Weiss—Short appropriation bill for soldiers' and sailors' home.
No. 86, by Garwood—Short appropriation for industrial workshop for blind.
No. 140, by Roberts—Providing for the payment or $5 a day to coroners while engaged in investigating violent deaths.
No. 266—To amend an act entitled "An act to incorporate the town of Georgetown."
No. 1, by Lewis—Fixing the classification of Teller county.
No. 22, by Williams—Allowing the town of Blackhawk to refund bonds.
No. 3, by Knauss—Making the larceny of automobiles a felony.
No. 5, by Knauss—Reducing the stealing of bicycles from a felony to a misdemeanor.
No. 37, by Kluge and Means—including cities and towns in drainage districts.
No. 44, by Kluge and Means—An act relating to drainage districts.
No. 46, by Hasty—The short appropriation bill.
No. 62, by Williams—Short appropriation bill for the state capitol.
No. 25, by Lines—Providing for a
No. 25. by Lines-Providing for a closed season on cottontail rabbits.
No. 26, by Hasty-Adding a district judge in the Third judicial district.
No. 30, by Weiland and Mitten-Appropriating $50,000 as a water defense fund for Colorado.
No. 67, by Carver and Lewis-Relating to property exempt from taxation in cities of the second class.
No. 10, by Barela-Authorizing the county commissioners in each county of the state to purchase land, not exceeding sixty acres in amount or $20,000 in cost, for fair ground purposes.
No. 72-To provide for the interchange of public school teachers between Colorado and other states. The exchange teachers will hold their positions for one year, and must have had five years' experience in their given district before they are eligible to go on the exchange list.
No. 45.—For the refunding of irrigation district bonds, and to repeal act entitled "An act for refunding of irrigation district bonds."
No. 18—To prevent persons from flowing water and allowing water to flow upon public roads and highways and fixing the punishment therefor. The fine is from $10 to $300, or a jail sentence not to exceed three months.
Says Board and Room for Girl for $5. Denver.—That Denver affords ample and exceptionally good accommodations in board and room at $5 a week for working girls is stated by Mrs. Catherine Van Deusen, secretary of the state minimum wage board, who has just completed an investigation of the subject.
Investigate Howland Money Envelope Denver.—The House of Representatives, through its special investigating committee, will probe into every detail of the receipt by Representative W. W. Howland of Denver of an envelope containing money in the House chamber during the afternoon session of February 9.
Denver.—Governor Carlson signed the statewide prohibition bill. Prohibition will be effective January 1, next.
Anti-Tipping Bill Author Threatened.
Denver.—A "black hand" letter, containing threats of death against Representative Robert Harris of Denver and other traveling salesmen who aided him in drafting an anti-tipping bill. now before the Legi-lature, was received by Harris. In the same mail, Senator William H. Adams received a letter, apparently from the same person, assuring him of the writers' belief that Adams would see to it that the anti-tipping bill is killed in the Senate.
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DRUGS, CHEMICALS AND
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JAMES E. T.
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1004 Nineteenth St
The Champa Pharmacy
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Twentieth and Champa,
Is the place to get your
DRUGS, CHEMICALS AND PATENT MEDICINES
WE SERVE DRINKS.
Prescriptions Our Specialty.
Phone us and we will deliver the goods to all parts of the city.
JAMES E. THRALL, PROPR.
PHONE MAIN 2425.
1004 Nineteenth Street, Corner of Curtis
FINE WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS
COORS' CELEBRATED BEER ON TAP
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Sales Daily at 2 p.m. Office Furniture a Specialty.
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PHONE YORK 7837
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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.
Phone Main 1461
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Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice in the city of Denver, Colorado.
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 lines, 5 cents per line.
No discounts allowed on less than three months' contract. Cash must accompany all orders from parties unknown to us. Further particulars on application.
It occasionally happens that papers sent to subscribers are lost or stolen. In case you do not receive any number when due, inform us by postal card and we will cheerfully forward a duplicate of the missing number.
Remittances should be made by Express Money Order, Postoffice Money Order, Registered Letter or Bank Draft. Postage stamps will be received the same as cash for the fractional part of a dollar. Only 1-cent and 2-cent stamps taken.
Communications to receive attention must be newsy, upon important subjects, plainly written only upon one side of the paper; must reach us Tuesdays, if possible, anyway, not later than Wednesdays, and bear the signature of the author. No manuscript returned, unless stamps are sent for postage.
All communications of a personating nature that are not complimentary will be withheld from the columns of this paper.
MEMBER
NATIONAL NEGRO PRESS
ASSOCIATION.
KEEPING YOUR EYES OPEN.
Open and penetrating eyes are essential to real up-to-date progress. Seeing details and adding them to your already acquired store of knowledge, is the acme of business success or any other kind of success that may be named. The Holy Writ has only condemnation for the man who "has eyes and sees not," and words of praise and promise for the man who has eyes and sees with them. Seeing to advantage is the boon of every man. There are so many good and new things to see in this growing world that a man ought never to use his precious time and splendid faculty in simply seeing the evil. The viewpoint or vantage ground for observation is also necessary. Some people never place themselves at the right place to get a focus. A pool room, dive or gambling parlor is a poor place to see the great transaction of commerce. A card table or bar room is a poor place to see educational, literary or scientific progress, and bad associates and low levels are poor places to see spiritual visions. Get the right viewpoint and train your optics and thoughts in the right direction and you will see thousands of opportunities and possibilities where one does not occur to you now.
What the Negro needs now and needs sadly is a new vision and a new viewpoint in order that he may see the wonderful changes and chances that are taking place around him every day. Read this paper and keep posted as to how you and yours may become a part in the various things that are transpiring every hour. If you have eyes, then see. It is our duty to point it out for you.
Open and penetrating eyes are essential to real up-to-date progress. Seeing details and adding them to your already acquired store of knowledge, is the acme of business success or any other kind of success that may be named. The Holy Writ has only condemnation for the man who "has eyes and see not," and words of praise and promise for the man who has eyes and sees with them. Seeing to advantage is the boon of every man. There are so many good and new things to see in this growing world that a man ought never to use his precious time and splendid faculty in simply seeing the evil. The viewpoint or vantage ground for observation is also necessary. Some people never place themselves at the right place to get a focus. A pool room, dive or gambling parlor is a poor place to see the great transaction of commerce. A card table or bar room is a poor place to see educational, literary or scientific progress, and bad associates and low levels are poor places to see spiritual visions. Get the right viewpoint and train your optics and thoughts in the right direction and you will see thousands of opportunities and possibilities where one does not occur to you now.
What the Negro needs now and needs sadly is a new vision and a new viewpoint in order that he may see the wonderful changes and chances that are taking place around him every day. Read this paper and keep posted as to how you and yours may become a part in the various things that are transpiring every hour. If you have eyes, then see. It is our duty to point it out for you.
SOUND BUSINESS ADVICE.
There are several old adages, "business is business," "business before pleasure," etc., which, translated, means that business cannot be done on promises, songs or hopes, but only on sound, practical, punctual business methods. Contracts are agreements to pay and ought to be regarded as sacred obligations. This the Negro has not yet learned to do and because of this is fast losing the respect of the business world. Firm after firm and company after company is declining Negro patronage with thanks. Do you wonder why it is? Listen; it is not prejudice, not caste, not social contact or social discrimination, none of these things; it is simply lack of certainty, reliability and promptness on the part of the Negro to make good his agreement. It is this desultoriness, laxity, slackness and tardiness that is causing the Negro to lose out in the business world. The commercial agencies, the trade journals, the collection agencies are all filing a bill of complaint against the Negro and the merchants and business men are heeding their advice. In other articles to follow we are going to show the practical working of these changes against the race. We are not scolding, nagging or knocking the race; we are but telling living truths, truths to help us and not let us fall in the esteem of those with whom we have to do business. Keep your eye upon this column for sound business advice. The Colorado Statesman is in the field of constructive race help and is doing its duty. Keep the files of your paper and follow carefully our talks upon this important subject.
There are several old adages, "business is business," "business before pleasure," etc., which, translated, means that business cannot be done on promises, songs or hopes, but only on sound, practical, punctual business methods. Contracts are agreements to pay and ought to be regarded as sacred obligations. This the Negro has not yet learned to do and because of this is fast losing the respect of the business world. Firm after firm and company after company is declining Negro patronage with thanks. Do you wonder why it is? Listen; it is not prejudice, not caste, not social contact or social discrimination, none of these things; it is simply lack of certainty, reliability and promptness on the part of the Negro to make good his agreement. It is this desultoriness, laxity, slackness and tardiness that is causing the Negro to lose out in the business world. The commercial agencies, the trade journal, the collection agencies are all filing a bill of complaint against the Negro and the merchants and business men are heeding their advice. In other articles to follow we are going to show the practical working of these changes against the race. We are not scolding, nagging or knocking the race; we are but telling living truths, truths to help us and not let us fall in the esteem of those with whom we have to do business. Keep your eye upon this column for sound business advice. The Colorado Statesman is in the field of constructive race help and is doing its duty. Keep the files of your paper and follow carefully our talks upon this important subject.
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The Right Kind of Reading Matter
The home news; the doings of the people in this town; the gossip of our own community, that's the first kind of reading matter you want. It is more important, more interesting to you than that given by the paper or magazine from the outside world. It is the first reading matter you should buy. Each issue of this paper gives to you just what you will consider
The home news; the doings of the people in this town; the gossip of our own community, that's the first kind of reading matter you want. It is more important, more interesting to you than that given by the paper or magazine from the outside world. It is the first reading matter you should buy. Each issue of this paper gives to you just what you will consider
The Right Kind of Reading Matter
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ments are lacking in our present system. Our original unit of length is the English yard. A metal bar on which are marked the limits of a yard is in the custody of the English government. The original standard is said to have been the length of the arm of Henry I.
Our original unit of weight for most articles is the English avoirdupois pound. A cylindrical piece of metal in the custody of the English government is the standard. The original standard is said to have been the weight of a grain of wheat of average size, 7,000 of these making a pound.
Then we have the apothecaries' weight for drugs and troy weight for gold and silver. We also indulge in various other vagaries, as the long and short tons and the knot for nautical distance. There is no uniform and simple ratio between the different denominations, the units of length having the varying ratios, 12, 3, $51\frac{1}{4}$, 40 and 8.
The metric system has a single basic unit both for weights and measures. This unit is called a meter and is theoretically one ten-millionth of the distance from the equator to the pole on the earth's surface. A metal bar having the limits of a meter marked on it is the international standard and is kept at the international bureau of weights and measures in Paris. To obtain a unit of weight the amount of distilled water at four degrees Centigrade contained in a hollow cube, the internal dimensions of which are one one-hundredth of a meter, is called a gram.
The ratio between different denominations in this system is ten, that is, it is a decimal system and in this respect is like the United States system of money.
The Latin prefixes deci, centi and milli are used to express divisions of the gram and meter. Thus a centigram is one one-hundredth of a gram and a centimeter is one one-hundredth of a meter.
The Greek prefixes deka, hecto and kilo are used to represent multiples of gram or meter. Thus a kilogram is 1,000 grams and a kilometer 1,000 meters.
Making comparisons between the metric system and our own, a meter is about a yard, a kilogram about two pounds, and this when applied to water is called a liter and is about a quart. A centimeter is about one-third inch. A metric ton is nearly the same as our ton. A kilometer is about three-fifths of a mile. One hundred square meters is called an are, and a hectare or 100 ares is about $21\frac{1}{2}$ acres. Our coin known as the nickel weighs about five grams.
This system was formally adopted by the French government in 1799 and has since become the standard in all civilized countries excepting Great Britain, Russia and the United States. In 1866, by act of congress, it was made permissive in this country, and since that time various attempts to make it mandatory have failed. In England and Russia practically the same conditions obtain.
Probably the most potent reason that prevents the legal adoption of the system in England, Russia and the United States is the expense. The fact that it is not more generally used is probably due to the somewhat formidable nomenclature and to the fact that most children become familiar with the old system before
selfishness of Haman caused him to erect a gallows fifty feet high for Mordecai, on which, by a strange providence, he was himself hanged. Lot was punished for his selfishness toward Abraham, because he chose the best pasture lands for his own herds. Achan lost his life because he preferred the wedge of gold to the welfare of Israel. Judas sold his own soul, and not the Master, for thirty pieces of silver.
A mother cried frantically to stop a runaway team, for a child was on the wagon. A bystander said: "You are a foolish woman for making such a fuss; it is not your child." "I know that," said the woman, "but it is some mother's child."
All Christian service that is worthy of the name is unselfish. Christ pleased not himself; for he gave his life a ransom for others.
What this old world wants is lives that are full of unselfish deeds.
form. Neglected, badly housed and improperly clad, the child of a poor nonworker is terribly handicapped at the start. It has not a fair opportunity with which to begin life's struggle. And it is the consciousness of this, the knowledge that no employment for the head of the house blights the child's whole happiness and comfort, which makes it the most appalling of all the phases of the poverty question.
The haunting cry of poor children for food which the father cannot supply, and which the mother is powerless to give, is truly heart-rending.
The only remedy for destitution, poverty and crime is employment for all.
We must improve conditions, for the sake of the work seekers, many of whom are burdened with family responsibilities, and upon whom innocent children are dependent.
has been my experience that the college men will get into more accidents than the unskilled laborer who can't speak English.
If greater caution in ordinary affairs were instilled into our youth early it would become almost second nature for graduates of our schools to take care or themselves, but when one has to wait until he reaches college to be shown how to defend one's body, it is a difficult matter.
I believe caution should be taught to children in the schools as well as in the homes.
Simplicity of Metric Weights and Measures By Frank G. Wheatley, Boston, Mass.
ments are lacking in our present system. On the English yard. A metal bar on which arm is in the custody of the English government said to have been the length of the arm of B. Our original unit of weight for most an pois pound. A cylindrical piece of metal in government is the standard. The original the weight of a grain of wheat of average pound.
Then we have the apothecaries' weight of gold and silver. We also indulge in various and short tons and the knot for nautical dis and simple ratio between the different denom having the varying ratios, 12, 3, 5½, 40 and
The metric system has a single basic units. This unit is called a meter and is the distance from the equator to the po metal bar having the limits of a meter mark standard and is kept at the international bus in Paris. To obtain a unit of weight the four degrees Centigrade contained in a hollisions of which are one one-hundredth of a m.
The ratio between different denominatio is, it is a decimal system and in this resp system of money.
The Latin prefixes deci, centi and milli of the gram and meter. Thus a centigram gram and a centimeter is one one-hundredth.
The Greek prefixes deka, hecto and kilo of gram or meter. Thus a kilogram is 1,000 meters.
Making comparisons between the metric is about a yard, a kilogram about two pound water is called a liter and is about a quart third inch. A metric ton is nearly the same about three-fifths of a mile. One hundred s and a hectare or 100 ares is about 2½ ac nickel weighs about five grams.
This system was formally adopted by the and has since become the standard in all Great Britain, Russia and the United States. it was made permissive in this country, attempts to make it mandatory have failed practically the same conditions obtain.
Probably the most potent reason that p the system in England, Russia and the United fact that it is not more generally used is p formidable nomenclature and to the fact familiar with the old system before any attempt is made to teach the metric.
Selfishness Is Called World's Greatest Sin
By REV. DR. T. F. DORNBLASER
Pastor of Grace English Lutheran Church, Chicago
selfishness of Haman caused him to erect Mordecai, on which, by a strange providence, was punished for his selfishness toward All best pasture lands for his own herds. Acha ferred the wedge of gold to the welfare of soul, and not the Master, for thirty pieces of A mother cried frantically to stop a r on the wagon. A bystander said: "You are such a fuss; it is not your child." "I know it is some mother's child."
All Christian service that is worthy of pleased not himself; for he gave his life a ra What this old world wants is lives that a
Burden of Poverty Heavy on Children By Charles Goodman, Washington, D. C.
form. Neglected, badly housed and improper nonworker is terribly handicapped at the stability with which to begin life's struggle. At this, the knowledge that no employment for the child's whole happiness and comfort, which of all the phases of the poverty question.
The haunting cry of poor children for supply, and which the mother is powerless to
The only remedy for destitution, power for all.
We must improve conditions, for the ss of whom are burdened with family responsible children are dependent.
College Men Are Most Careless Persons By JOHN H. GLENNON, Chicago
has been my experience that the college men than the unskilled laborer who can't speak If greater caution in ordinary affairs early it would become almost second nature to take care or themselves, but when one college to be shown how to defend one's body I believe caution should be taught to as in the homes.
An ideal system of weights and measures should have a single unit that is stable and such ratio between denominations that changes from one to another are easy. These two require-
m. Our original unit of length is which are marked the limits of a yard government. The original standard is of Henry I.
Most articles is the English avoirdupoietal in the custody of the English final standard is said to have been average size, 7,000 of these making a weight for drugs and troy weight for various other vagaries, as the long local distance. There is no uniform denominations, the units of length 10 and 8.
The unit both for weights and measur is theoretically one ten-millionth one pole on the earth's surface. A marked on it is the international bureau of weights and measures at the amount of distilled water at a hollow cube, the internal dimension of a meter, is called a gram.
Distinations in this system is ten, that respect is like the United States.
Milli are used to express divisions migram is one one-hundredth of a redth of a meter.
Kilo are used to represent multiples 1,000 grams and a kilometer 1,000
Metric system and our own, a meter pounds, and this when applied to quart. A centimeter is about one same as our ton. A kilometer is red square meters is called an are, ½ acres. Our coin known as the
by the French government in 1799 in all civilized countries excepting states. In 1866, by act of congress, try, and since that time various failed. In England and Russia
that prevents the legal adoption of United States is the expense. The is probably due to the somewhat fact that most children become
Daniel & Whettley.
Selfishness is the great sin of the world. Cain is the first hideous example. After murdering his brother he had the hardihood to answer the Almighty, "Am I my brother's keeper?" The
erect a gallows fifty feet high for
villence, he was himself hanged. Lot
and Abraham, because he chose the
Achan lost his life because he pre-
re of Israel. Judas sold his own
pieces of silver.
To a runaway team, for a child was
you are a foolish woman for making
know that," said the woman, "but
y of the name is unselfish. Christ
be a ransom for others.
that are full of unselfish deeds.
The burden of poverty falls most heavily upon the child. Poverty is always ugly, repellent and terrible to see; but when it reaches down as far as the cradle, it assumes its most hideous
properly clad, the child of a poor one start. It has not a fair opportunity. And it is the consciousness of it for the head of the house blights, which makes it the most appalling on. a for food which the father cannot less to give, is truly heart-rending. poverty and crime is employment the sake of the work seekers, many responsibilities, and upon whom inno-
It is strange but true that college men are the most careless persons in every-day life, and are more often injured than those who have never had the advantage of an athletic training. It
he men will get into more accidents speak English. Affairs were instilled into our youth nature for graduates of our schools one has to wait until he reaches body, it is a difficult matter. to children in the schools as well
The Last Call
$ 9.50
FOR $15 TO $20 WINTER
SUITS AND OVERCOATS
ENDS IN A FEW DAYS
THE MAY CO.
SEWING
FACTORY SHOP
W. CAMBERS, 102
MEN'S SEWED SOLES .....
LADIES' SEWED SOLES ....
NAILED SOLES. 50c and 60c
The Turkish Idea
A wealthy Turk once complained about the British rule in Egypt. "Isn't it just?" he was asked. "That is exactly the trouble," he replied. "I have no more influence with the government than the water carrier. Of what use has it been to me to work hard and accumulate riches if they bring me no more favors from the government than the water carrier can get who has no money?"
Good on Muddy Streets
Good on Muddy Streets. Two London chauffeurs have patented a brush to be suspended on the outside of an automobile wheel to prevent its splashing mud.
The Price We Pay
There is no sadder sight than the direct striving after the unconditioned in this thoroughly conditioned world. —Goethe.
Prolific Apple Tree.
An apple tree owned by S. W. Alexander of Los Angeles, Cal., is exciting interest through the fact that, in the last year, it has had two crops, giving each time a different variety of apple.
Man's Inhumanity.
"The men are always prating about man's inhumanity to man," observed Mrs. Gabb. "What have they to complain about?" "Plenty," growled Mr. Gabb. "Eight out of every ten married men go around trying to get single men into trouble by advising them to get married."—Cincinnati Enquirer.
Willing to Let It Ache
A barefooted darky, while hoeing cotton one day, saw his big toe under a clod, and, thinking it was a mole's head, hit it and hurt himself. After working with it for a while he got tired, set his foot on a stump and said: "Well, jes pain away now; I doesn't care, you hurts yeself wus'n ye do me."
While You Wait.
PHONE SOUTH 3820
M. M. REID
REGISTERED NURSE
HOURLY WORK
250 South Pearl Denver.
The Weatherhead Hat Co.
TELEPHONE MAIN 3203
PIONEER HATTERS OF THE WEST
We Make
Old Hats
New
We Make Old Hats New
ESTABLISHED 1876.
PRACTICAL HATTERS
RENOVATORS, BLEACHERS,
DYERS AND FINISHERS
Of Gents' and Ladies' Hats of Every
Description.
1624 CHAMPA ST., DENVER, COLO.
Wouldn't Buy a Veil
Wouldn't buy a Vell.
I knew an old lady who was a tightwad. She was so stingy that when her husband died she didn't want to buy a black veil. So while the minister was preaching she went out of the back door and took the crepe off of the front door and fixed it on her hat. When the undertaker went to get the crepe he couldn't find it.—Chicago Tribune.
Be Ready
The secret of success in life is for a man to be ready for opportunity when it comes—Disraeli.
Neighbors.
"Are your new neighbors, the Wooseltsons, interesting people?" "Exceedingly so; he is the kind of man that won't speak to anybody without an introduction, and she is the kind of woman that borrows everything in your house without being introduced at all."
= BAMA EL MAGELLAN NAAM WBN EB AS: ESERIES SAMA EN EIEN SAS SERNA
THE COLORADS U\e/7 STAT eSMAN-
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Keep off the date of May 11th. Ball. In memory of our dear husbat
C. Harris, president of the Railroaa | °"4 father, who departed this life o
Porters’ club, 1728% ‘Wazee st, ig{20t" 88. March 9, 1914. Gone b
poet a not forgotten. ‘There is a vacan
left in our home that can never |
aa aoa filled.
Mrs. Leanna Moss of 1661 Williams Mrs. A. J. Rease and Children.
street has been quite ill since the es
les Oke ares Keep off the date of May 11th. Ba
Mr. D. Butler of Chicago was in the ;REMEMBRANCE FROM D. B. FA\
city a few hours last Saturday, the —
guest of the Railroad Porters’ club. We are in receipt of a letter fro
Mr. Butler was en route to Los An-|D. B. Faw, Harrison, Maine, infor
geles, Calif. ing us of his venture in the hog a1
> poultry business, having leased
Mr. JOR. Contee, president of the }#"™. His health is very much i
Douglas Undertaking Co., is some. proved as he is Uving up to the grat
what indisposed, confined to his bed, novice oF ( Setne, lose: to nani
but is much improved at present |Mf- Faw is an old subscriber to ¢
eee Colorado Statesman from the time |
Raymond Clark and wife and little
daughter left the city today for Lead,
S. D., where Raymond has a good
job awaiting him. The Statesman
hopes that they will be successful in
their new field of endeavor.
Mrs. Eline Fernandez, first class
dress making, tailoring and evening
gowns. Will go out by the day. Sat-
isfaction’ guaranteed. 1260 Vine St.
Phone York 8885.
Keep off the date of May 11th. Ball.
We are pleased to note the conva-
lescence of Mrs. A. G. Elliot of 4311
Clayton St. and Mr. Henry Green
of 520 24th St, who have been pro-
nounced out of danger and are gradu-
ally improving from their severe ill
ties.
The following persons are reported
seriously ill this week: Mesdames
Raines, Dickerson and Mr. C. B. Hill.
The Statesman hopes a speedy recoy-
ery and restoration to health of the
sufferers.
Wait for the Mason’s Entertainment
at East Turner Hall, Easter Monday.
Mrs. C. M. Thomas and Mme. Eline
Fernandez, the modiste, made the
Statesman office an enjoyable visit
Tuesday. Mrs. Fernandez is recently
from Kansas City, Mo., where she en-
Joyed an extensive clientage.
Ray Clark of Lead, S. D., who has
been a visitor in his home town for
several days, left the city today for
his adopted home. Ray is very popu-
lar among the younger social lights
and they have made his stay one con-
tinual round of pleasure.
C. A. Brown, who is in the railroad
service between here and Trinidad,
Colo., reports that our men are scor-
ing success there. Whatever posi-
tions they are placed in, they are Biy-
ing complete satisfaction as expressed
by their employers. Another hope for
us.
St. Patrick’s ball and barn dance,
Fern Hall Wednesday, March 17th.
Morrison's orchestra.
Mr, and Mrs. A. E. McPherson, who
are among our most progressive
householders, have purchased a mod-
ern 7-room residence at 2228 Lafay-
ette street. Mr. McPherson is not
only a property owner in Denver, but
he and his exemplary wife have filed
on a homestead in the Deerfield col-
ony which they have improved. The
Colorado Statesman is always in the
forefront and it believes in giving
publicity to all worthy efforts on the
part of its worthy constituents.
Don't forget the Mason's Big Enter-
tainment at East Turner Hall, Easter
Monday. This will be another big
event given by the Masons.
G. W. Halsey, popular resident of
this city, has resumed his position
with the Denyer and Rio Grande rail-
way after a six months vacation. Mr.
Halsey has been known for a number
of years as a capable and efficient
employe in whatever capacity he
serves and is generally the recipient
of many commendations from those
who have been fortunate to engage
his services. A good name being bet
ter than riches, we feel certain that
he will continue to live up to his rep-
utation and add more success to his
career.
On Easter Monday, April Sth, the
Masons will give a big entertainment
at East Turner Hall. Morrison's or-
chestra.
In memory of our dear husband
and father, who departed this life one
year ago, March 9, 1914. Gone but
not forgotten. ‘There is a vacancy
left in our home that can never be
filled.
Mrs. A. J. Rease and Children,
Keep off the date of May 11th. Ball,
REMEMBRANCE FROM D. B. FAW.
We are in receipt of a letter from
D. B. Faw, Harrison, Maine, inform-
ing us of his venture in the hog and
poultry business, having leased a
farm. His health is very much im-
proved’ as he is living up to the grand
advice of “getting close to nature.”
Mr. Faw is an old subscriber to the
Colorado Statesman from the time he
resided in Denver where he was high-
ly respected and esteemed by his em-
ployers and others in the community.
We feel proud therefore in wishing
him every succeess in this venture
and promise a good market for his
animals and birds when he starts
shipment.
A regular plantation ball for city
people at Fern Hall St. Patrick's day,
March 17th. Morrison's orchestra.
MISSION WORK AND SUNDAY
SCHOOL
At 31st and Blake Sts.
Sunday school at 1:30 p. m.
Preaching at 3.
Bible training class, 7:30 each Fri
day evening. Elder E, J. Clark,
teacher.
You are cordially invited to each
of these services.
B. A CATLETT, Supt
P. W. COLEMAN, Secy.
DOUGLAS UNDERTAKING Co.
DEATH NOTICES.
Mrs. Lucile Hazard, beloved wife
of Benj. Hazard, and sister of Mrs.
Eloise Thally, died March 10th at Her
residence, 2041 Marion St. Douglas
Undertaking Co. in charge.
Mrs. Lucile Hazard’s funeral will
be held Sunday, March 14, 2:30 p.m.
from Shorter’s chapel. Remains to
he shipped to Oakly, Kansas.
Mrs. Nellie Cox, late of 3320 Eliza:
beth, died March 11th. Funeral no:
tice later. Douglas Undertaking Co.
Keep off the date of May 1ith. Ball.
CUPID CAPTURES YOUNG DEN:
VER GIRL.
Mason-Escue Marriage.
On Thursday evening, Feb. 25, Miss
Veronia Hildegarde Mason, the only
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jas. 0. Ma-
son, Was married to Mr. Walter B.
Escue, The ceremony was solemnized
by the Rey. R. L. Pope at the home
of Mesdames EB, Waldon and J. E.
Bruce. Violin solo, Prof. Geo. Mor:
rison; accompanist, Mr, — Valuarez
Spratlin. Promptly at 8 o'clock the
wedding march played Mrs. Mae
E. Byrd, accompanied uf Prof, Mor-
rison, the bridal party descended
the stairs. Misses Richardson and
Colston as ribbon girls were dressed
in white silk messaline. The flower
girl, little Hazel Hawkins, a cousin of
the bride, and the ring bearer, little
Lilliam Betor, entered next and were
dressed in white with pink butterfly
bows in their hair. Miss Elsie Mc:
Williams as maid of honor and Miss
Madie Nelson as bridesmaid were
gowned in blue messaline and carried
pink carnations, The bride was giv-
en away by her father. She was
handsomely gowned in white chiffon
over white silk messaline, with rhine
stone trimmings, made by her mother
and carried a boquet of bride's roses.
Her veil was artistically caught with
orange blossoms. The house was
beautifully decorated, pink and white
being the color scheme. ‘The cere-
mony was performed in the library
under a large white bell which was
tolled just as the happy couple was
pronounced man ahd wife, showering
them with rice. From each corner
of the room were suspended garlands
of white wistaria and asparagus fern,
Over the door forming an arch were
Easter lilies, while in the parlor were
suspended garlands of pink and white
roses. In the dining room pink and
white hearts were strung from the
four corners of the room.
‘The table in the dining room was
presided over by Mesdames Thrower
and Yochum, while Miss M. A. Graves
and Mrs, 1, Jones presided at the
punch bowl. ‘Those assisting in serv-
ing were Mesdames Turner, Colstén,
Starks, Ross, Bruce, Richardson, John-
son, Derry, Robinson, Misses Jessie
Ford, Mary Colston, Alice Foster,
Marie Starks, Lillian Richardson;
Master Cuthbert Byrd on the door.
The groom, who is just 21, and his
best man, Mr. Thornton’ Lippins,
were attired in conventional evening
dress. The bride, who is 18, is a na-
tive Colorado girl and at the time of
her marriage, was a student of the
Manual Training high school. She is
a favorite among the younger set, an
energetic church worker, especially
in the Sunday school and Christian
Endeavor.
Many handsome and useful pres-
ents were given them, including cut
glass, silverware, linen, chinaware,
leather chairs, china cabinet, dress-
ing table and chair, etc. Mr. and
Mrs. Escue are at fome to their
friends at 232 Humboldt St.
THE PEOPLE'S PRESBYTERIAN.
E. 23rd Ave. and Washington St.
Pastor, J. A. Thos-Hazell, S. T. B.
Sermon topics, Sunday, March 14:
11 a, m,, “Stirred by Righteous In-
dignation.”
2:30 op, m., services at the Mission.
4:15 p.m., Y. B.S, C. B
5 p. m., “The Highest Ministry.”
Last Sabbath afternoon the choir
sang to a congested house at the Aud
itorium hotel. Among the critical
audience was Prof. F, Schweikher of
the Western Institute of Music, with
offices in the Denham puilding, the
eminent organist of the Central Pres-
byterian church. His testimony with
others was that the pieces were fault-
lessly rendered. The engagement
was of mutual benefit to Mr. Watson,
the proprietor of this institution, as
well as to the choir.
The public is requested to attend
worship at all three services Haster
Sunday at the People’s Presbyterian
chureh, 6 and 11 a. m. and 5 p. m.
Every rendition by the choir will be
a special. The orchestra will be an
addition. Eyery part of the choir is
how well balanced. The following
Thursday night at 8:30 o'clock the
cantanta, “Alleluia, Hail With Glad-
‘ness” will be rendered by a full choir
accompanied by the orchestra, Adults
25 cents; children 15 cents. Two
children can be admitted for 25 cents
Don't forget the date, Thursday night,
‘April Sth.
|. SHORTER CHAPEL'S NOTES.
TReGSIRSbere Li PSLeM BSD! (pastor:
Our pastor's sermon topics tomor-
row will be as follows: 11 a, m.,
“Lessons the Heathens May Teach
Us,” and at 7:30 p. m, “Misused
Light.”
A free church social for the mem-
bers and friends of Shorter is the lat-
est forecast for our activities. Wateh
for the date.
‘The luncheon served at the parson-
age Thursday evening by the Dea-
coness Board was both a pleasant and
profitable affair. With thg-return of
Sister Hall, the president/ the board
has taken on new life and the next
quarterly report will be the largest
rendered for a long time.
Mr. Wm. Parks, who professed
Christ and united with Shorter last
Sabbath morning, received the most
general and hearty welcome from the
membership we have witnessed for a
great while. On a number of occa-
sions Brother Parks has rendered siz-
nal service in this community in giv-
ing relief to the poor and unfortunate.
Now that he has allied himself with
the Christian church, it is hoped that
even greater works will show forth
in him.
Our Sunday school, A. C. B. League
and choir are making elaborate pre-
paratiots for the observance of Eas:
tertide. The exercises will culminate
in the thrilling Haster cantata, “The
Cross and Crown,” the most brilliant
ever written by L. EB. Ashford. ‘The
music has been in the hands of the
choir for about six weeks and the
public is promised even a superior
service to that very splendid cantata
rendered last. Easter.
Boost for the Red and Blue rally.
Let each captain get busy and report
for every one of his members. Watch
for the Red and Blue rally pins.
Mrs. Lucile Hazard, the charming
wife of Mr. Benjamin Hazard, 2041
Marion St, was peacefully translated
into the great beyond on Wednesday
afternoon at 1:30. At her bedside
were her husband, little Silas, her
darling boy of two years,*Mr. and
Mrs. Luci Thalley, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Brown and ‘other relatives.
Sister Hazard was an active member
of Shorter chapel and she, and Mr.
Hazard lived in Denver long enough
and well enough to draw about them
a large circle of friends and: admir.
ers. The funeral service will be held
from Shorter Sunday at 2:30 p. m,,
after which the remains will be
shipped to Oakley, Kan., and laid to
rest by the side of her mother. Our
deepest sympathy goes out to Mr.
Hazard, dear little Silas and the
other relatives.
PROTESTANT EPISCOPALCHURCH
OF THE HOLY REDEEMER.
Twenty-second Avenue and Humboldt
Street, Rev. Henry B. Brown,
B, D., Vicar,
[ENTEN SERVICES,
Sundays, 7:30 a. m., Celebration of
the Holy Eucharist
First and third, 11:15 a. m,, Choral
celebration with sermon,
Second and fourth, 11:15 a, m.,
Choral Matins with sermony
7:45 p. m., Choral Evensong with
sermon. «
Wednesdays, 4:30 p. m., half-hour
devotional exercises,
Fridays, 8:00 p. m., litany or peni
tential office. A course of addresses
on “The Lord’s Prayer,”
Special preachers on Sunday even-
ings from Feb. 21 to March 28. Sun-
day, March 7, 7:45 p. m.
‘The Rey. K. L. Tull Curate of Em-
manuel church—Mareh 14,
Noon-day services will be held in
the Tabor Grand during the third,
fourth and fifth weeks of Lent. Spe-
clal preachers from other states. An
invitation is extended to the public to
attend all these services,
Keep off the date of May 11th. Ball.
St. Patrick's Ball, Fern Hall, March
17th.
For Rent a strickly modern six-
room house at 956 Emerson street,
apply at O. K. Barber shop, 1834
Arapahoe street.
Be eee ee Ee a SS
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: > IQS
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Me SA 4 MONS *
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te \ MASON’S BIG s Z
: aw — \n Taster Entertainment =
‘a a GIVEN BY 3
3 ee * Centennial Lodge No. 4 =
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ba ae 5
| SMB A EAST TURNER HALL :
2 —|—> aa b | MONDAY, APRIL 5, 1915 4
‘ ° a pp Good Music by Morrisons Full Orchestra. 4
Bj E. C. Tumlin, C. A. Allen, J. H. P. Westbrook.
REFRESHMENTS ADMISSION, 35C. *
REEL EERE EE EEE EE EEE ERE EE EEE EE EEE ERP EE EEE ERED DS
NEGRO YEAR BOOK JUST OUT,
417. pages, Valuable Information,
ready reference book; should be in the
library of every minister, chureh
worker and public man or woman.
Copies for sale at the Statesman ot-
fice, 1824 Curtis street, roont 25.
J. H. DONIPHAN,
State Agent.
1721 Marion St.
Thre furnished or unfurnished
rooms for rent at 2929 Glenarm place.
For rent furnished room, man and
wife preferred, in modern house. Mrs.
C. Anderson, 1539 B. 80th avenue,
FOR RENT—7 room modern house,
friends at 2352 Humboldt St.
7772.
‘Two nicely modern furnished rooms
for rent. Apply 2255 Ogden street.
Mrs. J. E. Thomas, 1260 Vine street,
has nicely furnished rooms to rent to
first-class men, with board reasonable.
For Rent—Furnished rooms, mod-
ern. 2917 Welton st. Phone Blue 1681.
For rent four-room house, 322 24th
street. Apply at 1824 Curtis street,
room 25.
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S5O.00 ur esrane time, Sle
the High Srown wouse Batis fart clit Send 4175
Woe namie oot, atrants ana soeltons cordne|
prising ptsonr ie the neat one in gout. comnsenity
Bef tt thins "vcry family wanta 8 Neuro
Seni cent far Poply to IagUiry tnd etalon.
NATIONAL NEGRO DOLL COMPANY.
pen SEAN |
Office 313', Kittridge Bldg.
Phone Main 7416
Residence 822 32nd St.
Phone Main 8397
T-Emnest McClain, &.B.D. D. S.
Sundays and Nights by Appoint.
ment
Office Hours:—8 a, m. to 12m.
2p. m. to6 p.m
Dr. Westbrook
Office 31 Good Block
16th & Larimer sts,
Phone Main 1433
Out of Office and at
nights Call Residence,
2714 Arapahoe Street
Phone Champa 570
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RAILROAD MEN AND WAITERS’ CLUB,
Frank Burnley, the genial and popular manager of the Railroad Men
and Waiters’ Club, 2149 Curtis St., who has made extensive improvements
and decorations to the club rooms, resulting in special attractions and ac-
commodations to the members and patrons of this recreative resort.
The name of this club is sufficient indication of the welcome extended
to all railroad employes and their friends, and the privileges and advantaces
granted to members will be offered to those who visit the city on their way
to California or any other points.
It is therefore to your best interest to call and see these comfortable
rest rooms for men, who will find a pleasure in participating in the various
offerings for their edification and amusement. What with a library, music
‘room, billiard and pool rooms, and other things to delight the members and
‘visitors, Manager Burnley hopes to set a standard that will be beyond com-
parison, He says that his delight is in the abundance of pleasure you wil)
find in the Railroad Men and Waiters’ Club.
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BLE PAINTS. OWS VARRISHES GUSS xe sae a
<o} PAINTING. GRAINING, GLAZING. PAPER HANGING, t,o
‘Qi{ DECORATING AND HARD WOOD FINISHING. > ee e
cars cbs Neaaa]]
(2 AS \ aS
PEPTIC & este
The Central Bottling & Distributing Co.
Agents for the famous
CAPITOL BEER---IT’'S CAPITAL
Try a case, 2 doz. pints for $1.10, delivered promptly; empties called for.
Family Liquors, Wines, and Cordials
Genuine Goods at Popular Prices
A glass of good wine will improve your Sunday dinner, and aid digestion.
2727 Welton Street. Phone Main 6363.
3s ER EER R eee ee +
Fundamental ;
Principles of :
Health<z2>s ;
Stasis, as It Is now officially desig-
nated, with its attendant poisoned
state of the blood from time imme-
morial has been held responsible for
most of ills humanity is heir to.
In the past constipated patients
were plied with pill and powder, oils,
salts, waters and other laxative com-
pounds, both natural and manufaec-
tured. One after the other Invari-
ably they all failed in the end and
the doctor had to be again consulted.
Generally he only varied the dose of
this or that or preseribed another
drug, without any attempt at a
thorough investigation, and generally,
too, without even so much as a cur-
sory examination. Finally the public
caught the idea and ceased going to
the doctor for such a minor ailment
and experimented with various pills,
vewders and waters, such as the in-
genuity of the manufacturer could
devise or the druggist could sug-
gest.
Aided and abetted by the artistic
lithographer and the circus bill post-
er, an educational campaign for in-
struction on how every man may be-
come his own physician now forms
@ highly suggestive background to the
general landscape throughout the
country, As the result of clever ad.
vertising campaigns the carrying of
a box of laxative tablets, pills or
candy fn the pocket in order to facili-
tate the regular daily dose of the
remedy has become habitual with a
large percentage of our people
Constipation ungortunately is not
an insignificant local affair that may
easily be overcome by some simple
remedy but, on the contrary, it is gen-
erally a symptom of a slowly develop-
ing constitutional condition, the spe-
cific name of which will appear in
the death certificate of the victim.
It is only of late years that we really
have begun to understand the relations
existing between constipation and the
rest of the body; to comprehend that.
functional inactivity in the gastric
tract is perhaps but a part of a gen-
eral functional derangement certain.
to end disastrous!y if not corrected
by a comprehensive readjustment of
individual habits and relations.
Just as it is impossible for us to
understand human society until we.
ure able to visualize it, according to.
the teachings of Herbert Spencer, as_
an organism, as a living evolving body, |
Just 0 is it impossible for us to unu-
derstand our tudividual physical ills
until we are able to reverse this proc-
ess of Speuoer’s and visualize these
bodies of ours as a soclety of indi-
vidual units co-operating for mutual
help and protection.
When we came to understand that
our bodies are composed of individ-
ual cells, each a comprehensive indj-
vidual unit, and that the welfare cf
the body as a whole depends on the
welfare of that individual cell or unit,
then it becomes fairly clear and easy
for us to grasp our needs and the
reasons for our ills and we begin to
see a logical way out of our difficul-
ties.
By far the most important factor in
the maintenance of health is food. To
the average individual food means
something edible and palatable, which
will satisfy the demands of hunger
and thirst and enable him to maintain
normal strength of body and mind.
Up to a very recent time textbooks on
physiology taught that the three chief
foods of men were proteids, fats and
carbohydrates. Tucked away in an
obscure corner, if indeed they were
at all mentioned, under the name of
fash the minerst salts received a bare
mention, the author usually explaining
that little sr nothing was known of
their action in physiology.
Recevdy we have come to under-
stand that not only are there many
protvids and that some proteids do
nos alone suffice to sustain human
life. but we have come to understand
also that proteids, fats and carbohy-
dretes are not the three chief foods
of man,
Going back through millions of
years to the cingle cell, to the ameba
state of existence, we find that the
primary ford elements were, and still
are, air, water and mineral salts. Com-
ing up the long lndder of progressive
animal evolution, we finally come to
© period where proteids, fats and car-
bohydrates, in fixed definiteness and
proportion, became necessary to us.
as vertebrates; and, while these three
classes of foods are absolutely vital
to our existence as higher animals,
ve are beginning to comprehend that
they are still subsidiary to the first
three—exactly as our more recently
acquired brain, superimposed on to
our primitive sympathetic system, has
recently been demonstrated to be sub-
aidiary to the ductless gland system
comprising our prisnordial nervous
system.
The individual workers of the body.
wonderful fluid are known to be the
mineral salts, and these are absolttely
necessary to.maintain the normal com:
position and activity of the sndividual
cell; hence the same must be true
of the complete organism, because the
organism is constructed out of the
blood stream,
Any blood which is formed from fm
proper food, or from proper food im
properly prepared or badly cooked, is
chemically of a poor quality and can
not furnish the right material for the
upbuilding and normal functioning o}
the individual. Constipation ‘ty posi
tive evidence of defective metabolism
resulting from inadequate ‘ood ele
ments, and only will be corrected by
the correction of one’s personal food
intake and general habits. The habit
ual use of laxatives is useless an¢
dangerous.
CAUSES OF CONSTIPATION
‘Habitual use of Inxatives is uselesi
and dangerous. That positive state
ment is made in the light of 25 years
observation of cases that have per-
sistently followed the laxative habit
because it appeared to be vastly eas:
ier to take a simple little pill, guar
anteed to produce satisfactory results,
than it was to follow an intelligently
planned but necessarily prolonged die
tetic regime. Herein lies the prestige
and the charm of the purgatiye habit:
It is the can opener principle. You
buy physiological activity instead of
making it yourself according to the
laws of nature, and thereby beat na-
ture at her own game. It is cuick
and casy; results are “guaranteed,”
What constitutes constipation? As
a rule few seek to analyze this ques-
tion, but content themselves with the
bare fact that there seems to be some
lack of activity along the 35 feet of
intestinal canal which appears to re:
quire correction. Then, Without the
least thought as to the ultimate re:
sults, one or more of the 60 odd tra-
ditional remedies are blindly recom-
mended, or perhaps a supposed rem-
edy may even be ttsed solely on hear-
say evidence by and from one abso-
hitely without knowledge concerning
the functional requirements of the
human machine. In this connection
there is food for thought in the fol-
lowing statement from one of our
highest authorities: “Drugs of un-
known physiological action cannot
conscientiously be set to act upon
bodily tissues In disease in which we
are ignorant of deviations from the
normal.”
What are the deviations from the
normal in constipation? Contributions
from the experimental physiologists,
the clinician, the radiographer and the
surgeon have only very recently en-
abled us to begin to understand the
probable causes of constipation. We
are finding that there are many causes
and that very often the constipation is
only a symptom of graver conditions
than a “simple intestinal inactivity.”
Von Noorden, Boas, Strassburger and,
most of all, Adolph Schmidt have add-
ed enormously to our fund of know!
edge as to the physiology, mechanics
and patholouy +f the alimentary tract.
Boas’ test breakfast and Riegel's test
meal make it possible to determine
the general functional activity of the
stomach, while by means of Schmidt's
test diet the functional activity of the
intestines can be estimated practically
as correctly as with the X-ray.
Microscopic investigation of the
feces under such conditions frequent:
ly discloses the fact that many cases
of chronfe constipation are due to the
fact that the digestion 1s too good.
Starling and Baylis proved that in-
testinal stasis, or constipation, is due
to a diminution of an internal secre-
tlon, to a lack of the “hormcnes.”
The radiographer by means of the
bismuth test meal fs able to show to
the naked eye the actual waves and
contortions of the intestinal canal and
has disclosed dislocated organs, fes-
tooned colons, dilated and kinked ca-
nals unsuspected by earlier clinic
methods.
‘The surgeon uncovers adhesions,
ulcers and similar conditions often
unsuspected from any definite symp:
toms.
In addition to all the above condi-
tions which may easily account for
constipation, there is another cause
not generally considered. Physiology
teaches us that the expulsion of fecal
matter from the intestines takes place
in such a manner that the contents
therein act as a kind of independent
body with stimulating action upon the
walls of the intestines and the plexus
myentericus, a network of sympathet-
fe nerves situated between the longi
tudinal and the cireular muscular lay-
ers of the intestinal tract. As a re-
sult there follows a contraction of the
walls of the intestines and their con-
tents are expelled.
All nerves, the plexus myentericus
included, are under ‘the control of the
central nervous system, which creates
motor impulses through the medium
of the pneumogastric nerve (vagus),
so that strong emotfons, mental shock
and the like may by reason of the
frritation of the — pneumozastric
(vagus), the motor nerve of the fn.
testines, produce a movement of the
bowels, or an inhibitory or restraining
influence through the intervention ot
the splanchnic (visceral) nerves may
cause a check to the peristaltic move
ments. Obviously, then, mental states
may also be at the bottom of some
cases of constipation, But without
any discrimination whatever the ama-
teur, ignorant of the possible condi
tions, takes and recommends reme-
dies promiscuously. And society
stands aghast and puzzled at the in
HIS FRIEND'S WIFE
By GORDON JOHNSTONE,
Sa
¥eaneeney
the carpet and stared at the tousled
‘head of the boy reading the newspa-
per.
“Did I hear you right, Denny?” he
asked. “Did you say Nora Reagan’”
Denny scanned the column and
‘found the paragraph. 4
| “Yes,” he answered. “Mrs. Nora
Reagan, East Thirty-fourth street.
Malone pressed the hot ashes in his
clay pipe and rubbed the bowl medi-
‘tatively with the palm of his big hand.
“Read it again, lad,” he urged sott-
ly, as his gaze returned to the flowered
pattern of the carpet.
The boy read it with the intonation
of a child reciting a memorized lesson
at school
“A young widow. Has child for
adoption. Unable to support. Baby
eighteen-months old. Irish blue eyes.
Weighs twenty pounds.”
Denny laid the paper in his lap and
looked at the big man sitting on the
| horsehide chair.
“WIL you tear that out and give tt
to me, Denny?” the man asked. The
| boy complied with his request,
Crossing the room, he picked up his
“hat and opened the door.
| “Where ure you goin, Barry?” called
Murphy senior from the kitehen,
| “For a bit of a walk, John,” Malone
“answered.
| Reaching the avenue, he turned
‘down. By the light in a store win-
dow he took out the ragged paper and
‘studied the address, Replacing it in
his pocket, he took up his walk, re-
‘peating the number to himself.
| Halt-way down the street he found
‘the address, and searched the dimly
‘lighted hallway for the name. Run-
‘ning his eyes over the dirty mail-
fpasah He vtounil it
He pressed the button. A pause en-
sued. There was no response. Again
he rang and waited. After what
seemed an interminable time the latch
clicked,
Pushing his way in, he climbed the
stairs covered with oilcloth. On the
vecond landing he backed into a cor-
ner to let a much-perfumed woman
pasa.
On the floor above Nora Reagan
stood in the lighted doorway, a little
red head pillowed against her shoul-
der. Malone paused near the top and
looked at her. The woman peered into
his face.
“Barry!” she cried. “Barry Ma-
lone!” She staggered back into the
room. “Is it yourself, or am I dream-
ing?” Seaeil
“It’s no dream, Noreen,” he an-
swered. “It's myself.”
A bright flush crept up from her
white throat over her face and lost it-
self in the bronze hair. She had not
heard that old name in ages. To her
husband she had always been Nora.
No one but her mother and Barry had
ever called her Noreen, and that was
years ago on the bogs round Wexford.
She reached out her disengaged hand
to him.
“Come in, Barry,” she said, “and
bring your happiress with you. "Tis a
sight you are to cure blind eyes. And
it's a girl {am again to see you.”
Malone stepped into the room and
closed the door. Turning, he looked
at the frail little figure radiating her
Joy, but showing the signs of a battle
against odds.
The face would always be beautiful.
‘There was the milklike skin, and the
charm of eyes and hair. The girls of
Nora Reagan's coloring were the glory
of Ireland. Malone's eyes rested on
the little red head pressed against her
shoulder, and the wonder of a child-
less man dreamed in their depths.
He dropped into the chair she point-
ed out to him,
“Barry,” she erled, “it was my good
angel that sent you tonight. ‘There
was a woman here just now that want-
ed to take the baby.”
Nora's voice fell to a horrified
whisper:
“And, Barry, there was paint on her
cheeks. Think of it! Red paint!
Malone remembered the woman he
passed In the hall.
“Yes,” he said; “I met her on the
way.”
‘The woman shuddered and hugged
the little bundle closer.
Malone glanced up at the crayon on
the wall.
“When did Tim go?” he asked
quietly.
“Twelve months this morning Tues
day.”
“Lye been down in Panama,” he
apologized—“working on the canal. I
don’t know much about what's going
on.”
“He was killed in the expressman’s
strike,” she explained. “He used to
speak of you very often, Barry, and
wonder where you were keeping your-
self.”
“God never made a better man® he
pe eae
“What's his namet
“You'd never guess.”
“Tim?” be ventured.
“No.”
“Your father's?"
Again Nora shook her head.
“'Twas Tim that named him.”
“What, Noreen?”
“Barry,” she answered, beaming in-
to his face.
A strange light came into Malone's
eyes, and his big hands opened and
closed over his hat,
“Yes,” she continued; “I left it to
Tim. The priest was for wanting the
/name of a saint, but Tim would have
none of them. ‘I'm going to call him
after my comradelad, he said. ‘My
comrade-lad that saved my life in
Rosslare Harbor.
“Who is that?’ asked the priest.
“The finest lad ever made, answered
Tim. ‘My friend and comrade —Barry
Malone.”
There are men in the world ‘who will
stand in the shadow of a great sorrow
firm of lip and dry-eyed. But let the
arrow of a beautiful happiness pierce
their hearts and the tears will gush up
from a living fountain. Barry Malone
was one of them. \
“Will you let me hold him, No-
reen?” he sfid, reaching out his arms.
Nora laid the baby in them. ‘The
blue eyes turned up on him witht all
the wonder of unfathomable seas. He
put his big finger into the little hand.
The soft, petal-like slips closed over it
with a clutch that seémed incredible.
The hot blood rushed into Malone's
face and his whole body trembled.
Nora bent over the pair like a dove
above her young. Gently he pulled his
finger from its vise and reached in his
pocket for his handkerchief to blow
his nose. His fingers came in contact
with the plece of paper, and he drew
it out and passed it to the mother.
“Twas that brought me here,” he
sald, as she glanced over it.
“I'm boarding with a family by the
name of Murphy,” he continued, “The
Murphys of Dungarvan—up on Forty-
seventh street—and I've come down
to ask you if you'll be living with us.
‘There's plenty of room, and little—
little Barry”—the name was music to
him row—“will be a great comfort to
‘us all. Will you be coming, Noreen?”
Nora looked at him, and her breast
rose and fell with its joy.
“Now, Barry?” she asked.
“Tonight, Noreen.”
‘The woman glanced round at the
furniture.
“What will T do with this?”
“We'll talk about that tomorrow,”
he smiled. “It’s of no importance
now.”
For a second she hesitated and then
disappeared in an inner room. When
she returned she wore her hat and car-
ried a small bundle.
“All ready?” he asked.
“Yes.”
“Then ‘faugh a ballah!’” he cried,
jumping to his feet.
‘The woman gave a little, frightened
scream and clutched the baby.
Malone laughed.
“He's snug as a bug in a rug, No-
reen—don't be afeard.”
Nora put out the light while Barry
waited in the hall with the baby.
“Tis like the old days, Barry!” she
eried as she joined him. “Only there
wasn’t any little lad on your shoulders
then.”
“Wasn't there, though?” he smiled
as he paused on the second step. “Are
you for forgetting Sheamus!”
“My brother!” she cried.
“Yes,” he answered; “but there
was one thing I was having in the old
days that I'm not having now.”
“What was ‘Dat, Barry?”
“A kiss? alanna.”
‘The woman leaned over the railing
and her mouth touched the laughing
lips upturned above the little red
head. /
ACTION OF TRIGGER FINGER
In Its Operation Writer Points Out
How Much It Resembles a
Pocket Knife.
“The peculiar action of a trigger
finger resembles that seen when a
pocket knife is opened or shut,” writes
Dr. Adoniram B, Judson, in reporting
such a case to the Lancet. “Movement
is smooth till a square shoulder at
the near end of the blade presents an
obstacle which retards motion till a
certain point is reached, which mo-
tion is accelerated with a jerk.
“A counterpart of this obstacle may
be found perhaps in a node on an ar-
ticular surface, where it woulfl cause
the halting action of a trigger finger.
In the construction of a knife, how-
ever, an important feature is present
which is absent from the anatomy
of the hand, and that is the strong
steel spring concealed in the handle of
the knife. It produces positive pres:
sure between the surfaces composing
the metallic joint. If the spring were
absent, or if its place were taken by a
strip of some inert substance like
cork, there would be no jerk, and shut-
ting and opening the knife would be
perfectly smooth.
“While there is nothing very close-
ly resembling a steel spring in the
hand or forearm, still we may find in
muscular action a force which draws
the surfaces together and creates a
pressure comparable with that pro-
duced by the steel spring.”
In the Wake.
“I follow the medicat profession,” re-
marked the newcomer proudly.
“Surgeon?” we asked politely, just
to make conversation.
“Undertaker,” he replied _senten:
tfously, though gravely. At that. we
‘considered the rejoinder a bit cryptic
and ~brouded in gloom —-Philadelpbia
Public Ledger.
ST. PATRICK’S RETURN
Every True Irishman Believes the
Good Saint Will Go Back to the
ANzoNe on the west coast of Ire-
tand will teil you that some day
St Patrick is coming back to Ireland,
the land he loved. No one says when
that aay will be, although there is rea.
son to believe that it will be on the
aay of the final judgment of the world.
Whether or not his return {s desir.
aple depends altogether upon the
point of view of the teller of the
Prophecy. {If he be a gloomy pes-
simist he is Ikely to remark that St.
Patrick can't come soon enough, God
knows. If he be a cheerful optimist
he will add, “and may that day be far
although ‘twill be a good day when-
ever it comes.”
ireland has a personal regard for
St. Patrick probably equaled by no
other country in the world in its rela-
tion to a patron saint; and so it fs
that the prophesied return of the mis-
stonary to the isle has had a his-
toric bearing upon certain of its char-
acteristics and events, so that even
the passing of the home rule bill has
met in certain remote districts of Ire-
{and with the turn of phrase, “If St.
Patrick came back now, ‘tis the
pleased man he'd be.”
And, indeed, ft St. Patrick were to
return to the island to which he came
80 many cen‘uries ago he would find
some marvelous changes wrought by
the early years of the twentieth cen-
tury. For Ireland has been passing
through a peacetul revolution and its
results would be even mote apparent
to a watchful patron than they would
be to the average observer.
‘The revival of the Irish language
has a history of tremendous interest
to the student of statesmanship, The
system of summer schools for stu-
dents in the districts where the Irish
language was still a living language
has been strikingly successful and has
‘done much to break down the section-
alism of Ireland.
Although the passage of the home
rule bill through the commons is nomi-
nally the most important event in the
history of Ireland in the last two dee-
ades, nevertheless the student of
Irish history recognizes that the
measure is merely the culmination ot
Ireland's struggle to maintain her na-
tionality. And should St Patrick
come back to his island he would find
that Ireland had, by remembering
‘The days of old
Ete her faithless sons betrayed her
When Malach! wore the collar of gold,
won back from her past the circlet of
ner glory and is on the high road to
the throne of the national indepen-
dence and integrity that her children,
no matter where scattered, have held
as the ideal of their country’s state.
IRISH PROVERBS
He who gets a name for.early ris:
ing may sleep all day.
Where there's a woman there's
talk, and where there's geese there's
cackling,
A woman has an excuse readier
than an apron.
A man ties a knot with his tongue
that his teeth will not loosen.
Haye your own will, like the women
have.
‘Three without a rule—a wife, a pig
and a mule.
‘The husband of the sloven is known
amongst the crowd.
Don't praise your son-indaw till the
year's out.
Better the end of a feast than the
beginning of a fight.
Never take a wife who has no faults.
However near a man’s shirt is, his
skin is nearer.
A pig in the sty doesn’t know the
pig going along the road.
Melodious 1s the closed mouth.
TASH TN AMERIGAN ULTIES
CG we ds
3 ai
eh
BHA t
oA
AN i)
WW is W
bh hI brs
New York, Boston,
Q 2
fd
q
e i ¥ 14
® ls
a f
BA A ?
Philadeiphia and Pittsburgh and
Chicago. Cleveland.
‘The figure of Uncle Sam shows the
“pure American” population, the other
figure the Irish population.
Lesson From Life o; Saint.
St. Patrick's day, to those that know
history, is a day Important to men of
every nationality and of every religious
faith, ns well as to the Irish and to
those that believe in the Catholic re-
ligion,
St Patrick proved that courage {8
the great asset of the numan being
and that what a man is determined to
get he can get, if he will fignt per
sistently and without fear.
Ang the mold of his hand,
That you shook ‘neath his stroke,
That you trembled and broke,
‘Te this beautiful land.
as"
Foe
F i>
% Ai Fh le
¢ ia ween
i
2
: |
-
:
¥
|
Sa
ao . £o
Co th
The Quick Smile of the Celtic Race.
Here he loosed from his hold
A brown tumult of wings,
Till the wind on the sea
Bore the strange melody
Of an island that sings.
He made you all fair,
You in purple and gold,
You in silver and green,
brilidavevenihatinaetseen
Without love can behold.
: A fez
EY thee
Sosa ae
fae) =
ae ge. 7
i Sree Rey '
(om 22 2 ‘i
\ vg eet | :
as ‘
\ an
x. Pp ’ Bs |
op tie
we Og ae |
“4 oe id
b: ee e oe
Css etcyeememerne ene cenmertai
Far From the Madding Crowd of Dub-
lin and Belfast.
\ have teft you behind
In the path of the past,
With the white breath of flowers,
With the best of Géd’s hours,
1 have left you at last.
Dora Sigerson.
St. Patrick’s Day
Millions of the brave sons and fair
daughters of Erin, as well as a count-
less number of people who are not so
fortunate as to have Irish blood in
their veins, Irish poetry in their hearts
and Irish wit in their heads, are wear-
ing green in affectionate memory of
a little island across the sea and in
St. Patrick and the Snakes.
The versions of the method em-
ployed by Saint Patrick in ridding Ire-
land of snakes varies. In the north
countries, where there seems to be
more of poetry, one is told that it was
through the charm of the shamrock—
Saint Patrick's symbol—the reason for
its adoption being its trefoil leaves,
used as a convincing illustration of
the doctrine of the Trinity.
‘The plant that blooms forever
With the rose combined
And the thistle twined
Dety the strength of foes to sever.
Firm be the triple league they form,
Despite all change of weather:
In sunshine, darkness, calm or storm,
Sul may they fondly grow together,
Superstition Lingers.
In some parts of Ireland there 1s =
superstition that the “poochaun”
(fairy) blows a poisonous breath on
the sloe on halloween, and to eat the
berry after November 1 would result
in serious iliness, if not death. for
this reason the youth of the country,
although fond of the sloe, will shun it
after the visit of the :poochaun.”
i
WASHIIN i?
24
ZI.
Alila\
Sey
fees TS
Cos: 3 Aare
J sa FIDE)
7 ne a
sae
CORSET RELS
‘City Called Washington Is Not Known to the Law
Wee —It cannot be proved by the census office that anyone lives
in a city called Washington. Congress convenes there, but knows the
city not. Verily, Washington is a literal example of what a wit once called
was dreamed of in the early days as a memorial to the first president
of the United States, is called Washington only by courtesy.
‘There are only two business transactions that concern the city as a city;
you can buy a railroad ticket or mail a letter to or from Washington.
People will tell you offhand that Washington is coterminous with the
District of Columbia. That is a resonable conclusion, but it is not supported
by any legal definition; and, moreover, there is no specific authority for the
origin of this name as applied to the federal territory.
It is understood that legislation is about to be introduced to change all
this, fathered by one who contends that it was intended from the very begin-
ning that the federal capital bear the name of Washington; wherefore, if
the District of Columbia and the federal capital are synonymous, the former |
term is a corruption which has crept in and should be discarded. |
The idea is to formulate a bill demanding that the words District of
Columbia shall be struck out of al) legislation concerning the federal capital
and the words Washington City be inserted in their place.
“Made-in-America” Flags for the Coast Guard
SCRA DEINAMHIRIGA flags may be substituted for the bunting that now
flies from coast guard cutters and stations. The coast guard is ex-
perimenting with fiags of cotton material, with the possibility of substituting
cotton flags that they will weather these conditions and be nearly as good as
ever. Also, the cotton flag costs about half as much as the bunting flag; a
considerable item of expense, where there are 329 flags flying daily, as
many more in shipholds and station lofts, and also 17,000 signal flags, count
ing sets in use and those in reserve, owned by the coast guard.
There are 44 coast guard cutters in service, and most of them having
one or more extra flags besides the one fiying from the peak. A flag is flying
daily from each of the 285 coast guard stations on shore, and perhaps as
many more are held in reserve. Each coast guard cutter carries at least
twenty-six signal flags of the international code, making’ a full set.
‘The fiags of the former revenue cutter and life-saving service will con
tinue in use on cutter and station unti) they wear out. All the new flags will
bear the title, “United States Coast Guard,” instead of the former appella-
tions. It may be years before the last flag representative of the older serv.
ices is disposed of.
Post Office Inspector on a Long Honeymoon Trip
Pox, OFFICE INSPECTOR E. P. SMITH walked into the office of Chief
Inspector Joe P. Johnston the other day as the head of the postal secret
service was perusing the list of post offices that had not been checked up.
“Neglected who?" inquired Smith.
“Guam,” repeated the chief. “How long will it take you to get ready
to go there?”
“I am ready,” answered Smith, figuring that he was to be dispatched
on an ordinary journey. “Where is it?” o 7
“On the other side of the world,” said Johnston, without cracking a smile.
("Better go home and pack up. You will need a trunk for this trip. You
will cover about twenty-five thousand miles before you get back.”
Smith, like a good reporter, did as he was told. When he returned in
the morning he was accompanied by a pretty little woman.
“My wife,” he said, introducing Mrs. Smith to his chief. “If you haye no
objections I will take her with me. I will pay her expenses. We never have
had a real honeymoon trip and this looks like a real chance.”
Chief Johnston gave his consent and in a few minutes the gleeful Smiths
were on the way to Union station. i
It probably will take Smith about one day to check up the accounts of
Postmaster B. F. Duarte of Guam.
Uncle Sam Will Conserve the Thanksgiving Bird
F the American turkey is to play as important a part in the Thanksgiving
I and Christmas feasts of the future as it has in the past, people of the
United States must learn more about the methods of raising this great
dustry has sent Andrew Weiant, one of its scientific assistants, on a survey
which will cover the whole country and which will include a thorough study
of methods of management, not only of turkeys, but also of guinea fowl. ‘The
guinea fowl is occupying a more and more important place as an article of
food because of the fact that it has taken the place of game in many parts
of the country where wild’ game birds have kecome scarce.
Mr. Weiant will travel through all the sections of the country where
turkey raising has been developed as an industry. The government's expert
will study not only methods of management in the different sections, but will
look into the cause of the great loss in turkeys. The principal cause, it is
generally known, is the peculiar disease known as “black-head,” and the
agricultural department's expert will study the methods of management
which have been put into operation to check the spread of this disease.
sy
a ae. Se
Z <y A
Se
oe eS pe Oe
eer aie y
Ee) NT LES »
ew AN a
ms passes oy 1%
cotton Sags for the bunting flags
bearing the devices of the revenue
cutter and life-saving services, as
fast as they wear out and are retired
from service. The cotton flags may
also replace the signal flags on coast
guard cutters, if the tests being made
meet with approval,
‘The bunting flags, when wet and
frozen, conditions that are accom-
panied by strong wind, are frazzled
out on the ends quickly, and are soon
unserviceable. It ie claimed for the
mere 5 Boer Phe Sree oe Ree cc. eee es
perts of the United States department
of agriculture. At the present time
the turkey is considered one of the
hardest of any of the members of the
poultry family to raise, Disease kills
off many every year, and this fact
is said to be the principal cause for
frequent shortage of supvly and the
variation in price which is observed
by housewives when conducting their
marketing.
‘The federal bureau of animal in-
dustry has sent Andrew Weiant, one |
which will cover the whole country ar
of methods of management, not only o
guinea fowl is occupying a more and
food because of the fact that it has t
‘of ¢he country where wild’ game birds
Mr. Weiant will travel through
turkey raising has been developed as
will study not only methods of manage
Jook into the cause of the great loss
generally known, is the peculiar dis
agricultural department's expert will
which have been put into operation tc
Se tt ee ere ae cath are fo Sere th ee ne ne
& man or a postal guide can its ex-
istence be proved.
Time was, however, when there
was a City of Washington, with de-
fined limits, a charter and a city gov-
ernment, but since the abolishing of
the charter in 1871 and the establish-
ment of the territorial form of goy-
ernment in the District it is an actual
fact that Washington has no legal
existence, no government, no proper-
pe Pats Neale gt Sect Gareias Po ee Be”
i} YA a ==
A ss i snd
KY) \ JA) ee
ith Per
rings EES
se conditions and be nearly as good as
t half as much as the bunting flag; a
there are 329 flags flying daily, as
fts, and also 17,000 signal flags, count.
owned by the coast guard.
in service, and most of them having
* flying from the peak. A flag is flying
ird stations on shore, and perhaps as
*h coast guard cutter carries at least
jonal code, making* a full set.
cutter and life-saving service will con
| they wear out, All the new flags will
juard,” instead of the former appella-
t flag representative of the older serv.
a Long Honeymoon Trip
MITH walked into the office of Chief
‘r day as the head of the postal secret
offices that had not been checked up.
fourth-class office onthe Island of
Guam, the only federal postal station
in this insular possession. Investiga-
tion had disclosed that no inspection
had been made of the office since
1908—six years. Although it is a
small office—one of the very smallest
in the chain of thousands, the law re-
quires that the postmaster be checked
up annually.
“It seems that we have neglected
Guam,” mused Johnston,
ANOTHER ONE — aig )
I WONDER WHAT / 7x >) =
(s KILLIN’ EM GQ Dia, |
Ke.
iio
iN A
reset Be,
of its scientific assistants, on a survey
d which will include a thorough study
turkeys, but also of guinea fowl. The
more important place as an article of
\ken the place of game in many parts
have become scarce.
Il the sections of the country where
an industry. The government's expert
ment in the different sections, but will
in turkeys. The principal cause, it is
ase known as “black-head,” and the
study the methods of management
check the spread of this discase.
TO, PREPARE AND
AGRICULTURAL DEPARTMENT EX-
PERTS GIVE RESULTS OF
STUDY AND EXPERIMENT.
SOME PLANTS EATEN RAW
Fresh Vegetables an Ensential Part of
Man's Diet—How Waste Can Be
Avoided in the Compounding
of Salads.
Fresh green vegetables are gener
ally relished and form a part of man's
diet whenever they can be obtained.
Such vegetables may be called salad
plants though it is difficult to classify
plants according to the uses to which
they are put, for almost all are used
for many different purposes. Lettuce,
for example, a vegetable which in this
country is most always eaten raw, in
Europe is often cooked, and thus it
becomes a potherb as well as a salad
plant, Water cress, though often used
as a salad, is sometimes used simply
as a condiment. Peas, beans, potatoes:
and vegetables such as spinach, which
are most commonly served as a “vege:
table,” are often put into salads.
In spite of these difficulties in the
way of classification, we may include
under salad plants those whose leaves
and stems are usually eaten raw with
a sour dressing, and define a salad as
a dish consisting in whole or in part
lot vegetables, either raw or cooked,
| mixed with a sour dressing. Salad
dressing usually contains a fat as well
as an acid.
Housekeepers often claim to know
and care little about salads, but those
|who dig wild Jerusalem artichokes in
the spring or start the early pepper-
grass or radish to serve as relishes at
the table are providing salads for
hse families; or again, those who
prepare the cold vegetables left at
noon, such as “greens,” with a dress-
ing even of salt and vinegar for sup-
per, make salads. Fresh cucumbers
with vinegar or other dressing are sal-
ads just as much.as are the more elab-
orate dishes.
|Salad: a Food To Be Eaten With Salt.
The derivation of the word salad
shows it to mean a food to be eaten
with salt. It would be better to keep
near to this original meaning rather
than to go to the extreme of some
housekeepers who. in their search for
novelties for their tables, build up
salads from strange combinations in
ornate forms.
The distinctive salad plants are
very succulent; that is, they consist
mainly of water. Hence, they are es-
pecially refreshing in warm weather.
As a separate course they are a pleas-
ant contrast to the heavier dishes of
a formal meal. They also serve to
prevent too great concentration of
food, and thus aid in the digestive
process. Upon the valuable saline
properties of these raw plants we are
just beginning to place a definite
value, though evidently these were
recognized by the instinct of the peo-
ple of the far past.
Why Dressings Are Used.
Fat is a compact food and, weight
for weight, is about two and a quarter
times as valuable as protein or car-
bohydrate for fuel in the human body.
A tablespoonful of ofl would go far-
ther toward supplying energy for keep-
ing the human machinery running
than a large head of lettuce. Over all
the world people have instinctively
added a condensed dressing consisting
mainly of oil, bacon fat, or cream to
the salad plants bulky with cellular
tissue and water, and have eaten such
salads with meat and bread supplying
protein and carbohydrate, and thus
have secured a fairly balanced ration.
Moderti study of bacteriology indi-
cates that pagan and religious cere-
monies of purification by fire and wa-
ter had definite value for healthful life
in this world. Water cleanses to some
extent, but only through intense or
long-continued heat is complete sterili-
zation and freedom from bacteria and
parasites secured. Therefore great
care is needed in the selection and
preparation of foods which are not to
be subjected to heat. Cress, lettuce,
and other salad plants, carelessly cul-
tivated and handled in the market and
half cleaned in the kitchen, may trans-
mit disease, as may milk, raw oysters
and other animal foods.
‘The fashion of cutting across a head
of lettuce or celery, though it may
give each person a fair share of the
choice and less tender portions, can-
not be recommended, because it is
practically impossible to cleanse the
axils of the leaves, the grooves where
they join the stem. All such plants
should be separated in their natural
divisions and washed in more than
one water, individual attention being
given to hollows in stalks or leaves.
Sand is unpleasant, but less harmful |
than other things that may be eft be-
hind after washing; its presence, how-
ever, justifies the suspicion that the
washing was not thorough or care-
fully done. Vegetables such as aa
ach, which are dificult to free from
grit, should be washed in a number
of waters, and lifted out of the pan
each time {1 loose handfuls before the
water has been drained off. In this
way the sand and grit has an oppor-
tunity to sink to the bottom of the
pan, while if the vegetables are left.
In it, part ct the sand at least is ‘again
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
ee ctaction
that any inferior portions, insects, or
other things which are undesirable are
removed. The quality of vegetables
may be greatly injured by insect pests
and plant diseases, It the plant suf-
fers very severely from such enemies, |
it cannot make normal growth, and so
all or parts of it may be inferior. For
instance, green peas or string beans
from vines badly attacked by insects
or by some fungous disease do not at-
tain full perfection. Obviously, leaves |
used as greens are of inferior quality
if worm-eaten. Insect pests and plant
diseases can often be controlled by
the use of inseeticides and in similar
ways. If such things are used there
is al) the more reason for washing |
vegetables thoroughly before prepar- |
ing them for the table, to remove any
Hellebore, copper salts, or other sub-
stance uted in treating the plant,
which may adhere to it. Salt in the
water will aid in drawing out para-_
sites if they happen to be present
‘There {s distinct advantage in wash-|
ing all salad plants in running water,
especially for the removal of insects
from lettuce. After washing several
times and removing Imperfections,
salad plants may be kept in a cool
place like a cellar or refrigerator for
some hours or even a day before us-
ing. After draining off the last wa-
ter, wrap the leaves or stalks in a
cloth or put in a clean paper bag:
this is more effective than keeping
them in water, '
During the cleaning process it 1s
‘advisable to sort out the coarsest por-
tions to add to soup materials; the
next best may not be attractive to
serve by themselves, but can be cut
or shredded for combination with oth-
‘er materials, while the best of all—
the heart of the cabbage, celery, or
Jettuce—should be served in the least
elaborate way with salt or a simple
dressing
Save Waste in Making Salads.
No plan for serving salads should be
encouraged which leads to a waste of
food material. If it 1s desired to use
the outer portion of a cabbage for a
salad bowl, any adhering dressing may
afterwards be washed off and the cab-
bage used for a scallop or soup. The
outer leaves may be cooked for greens
or soup.
Many materials may be combined
with the cabbage, celery, and lettuce
—raw apples, radishes, or even canned
fruit, such as pears cut in slices or
cubes.
Lettuce is generally recognized in
this country as the main dependence
for salad by itself and in combination
with other foods. There are many ya-
rieties, adapted to different conditions,
but all may be classed under two gen-
eral heads—the cabbage lettuce, where
the heads are solid and compact, and
the cos lettuce, where the leaves are
long and loose and less delicate than
those of the other type.
Romaine is an example of cos tet:
tuce. There are also varieties with
blanched centers and curly varieties
with dark-tinged leaves.
Chicory may be cultivated for salad,
and is more desirable when blanched.
Endive, which is nearly related to
chicory, is another useful salad plant.
‘The corn-salad or lamb’s lettuce is
a small plant often found in city mar-
kets.
Sorrel, wild and cultivated, some
young and tender seaweeds, and many
mild-flavored plants or weeds may be
used as raw salads. Others are better
for partial cooking, even if served cold
as salads.
Celery in its wild state is an un-
promising if not harmful vegetable;
by cultivation, and especially by
blanching its leafstalks, it has been
made a popular salad plant, and has
been thought to have certain medi-
cinal virtues. The fibrous outer stalks,
and larger white leaves of a bunch
of celery! should be reserved for soup
making. Some of the larger stalks,
too stringy to serve whole, may be
used in salads if cut in quarterinch
slices, or if too tough for that, may
be cooked after cutting and added to
soups or served with white sauce or
toast. The tender inner stalks should
be served plain to eat with salt. Some-
times the groove in the stalk is filled
with prepared cheese. The center of
the root is a delicate morsel. Leaves
and root may be dried to flavor futnre
soups.
Well Recommended.
‘A young country Scotchman and his
sweetheart went to Glasgow for a
day's outing. After spending the
morning looking round the big shops
and the center of the city, the young
man suggested that as it was near
one o'clock they should look out for a
suitable eating-house to get something
to eat
Having spotted a likely place, they
entered and took their seats at a
small table, and when the waitress
came for their order the young man.
asked for a sixpenny meat-pie, This
was brought in due course, and he
started eating it with evident relish.
‘The girl waited a little time wonder-
ing very much where she came in.
At last, in sheer desperation, she
said to her companion:
“Is the pie good, Jock?”
“Good?” replied Jock, “I should
think it {s; it's ripping! You should
get one.”
In Schoo! Days.
When Walter Scott was a boy his
teacher asked him to give the part of
speech of the word “with.”
“It’s a noun,” said young Scott.
“You are very stupid,” said the
teacher. “How came you to say such
a thing?”
“I got it from the Bible, sir,” said
the future novelist, stoutly. “There's
a verse that says ‘they bound Samson
with withs.’”*
IS PREPARED TO DO ALL KINDS OF
JOB PRINTING
Commercial, Fraternal, Church, Book and Stationery Jobs A SPECIALTY
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 and We Will Give You Satisfaction
Prices as Reasonable as Those of Any Job Office in Denver
Phone Main 7417
Specialties From Parasol Designers
MUCH ingenuity is evident in the shaping and covering of new parasols. The skill of the manufacturer must be equal to making up the most fanciful dreams of those who originate sunshades that look like big, brightly colored flowers, with their cups inverted. They have seized upon the Persian designs in silks, upon the broad stripes and checks, and appropriated bold-figured laces to make the most intricate and the most captivating things!
One of the simpler designs is shown in the picture. It is rather large and bowl-shaped. Its first covering is of white silk. Posed over this is a vaguely flowered overcovering finished with a scallop at the edge in each panel of the parasol. The scallops terminate in a small ornament which, with a portion of the edge, hang free from the undercovering.
A pretty parasol, smaller in size and not so deeply curved, is covered with white taffeta. Long diamond-shaped panels of Persian silk in bright colors, with red dominant among them, are shirred so that their edges are narrow ruffles. One of these is mounted over each rib, their upper points disappearing under the tip at the top. The lower point reaches within about five inches of the edge of the white taffeta covering. This is a gay and rich-looking little affair, suited to almost any light summer costume.
Plain white parasols with borders of black and white "checkerboard" silks are novel and immensely smart. They are not expensive, ranking in price with those made of broad stripes. Among the latter a black and white striped covering has a border of bright Persian silk at the edge, about six
A Word or Two About Caps
土
土
WITHOUT any claim to originality to aid them these two bouoir caps unblushingly call attention to themselves as noteworthy. They are examples of what the new laces bring to morning caps in the way of attractiveness and grace. If these laces and nets were less supple, they would not fall in such soft ruffles, and if they were too sheer they would not make such successful plaitings and hair coverings. The cap at the left has a full soft crown of all-over lace and a frill of lace about the face which widens toward the back, where it covers the neck. It is adjusted to the head by the elastic cord that is run in a casing on the under side where the frill joins the crown. A few little roses of chiffon, joined by long stems of silk-covered cord, wander aimlessly over the crown.
The cap at the right is made of fine net, having a broad panel of lace along the center of the crown running from front to back. The frill is of plaited net and the cap is adjusted with a small elastic cord.
Narrow satin ribbon is laid in a series of short puffs across the front of the cap, ending at each side in a short, pointed end. These are the simplest
inches wide. It is made on the frame that we are all familiar with, and is moderate in design as well as price. Parasols of shepherd's check, bordered with bright-colored bands, are not new in designs, but they are, like the all-white ones, always in style. They look especially smart with outing hats and dresses, and will be seen with the Panama hat decorated with a sash in the same color as the band on the sunshade. They are among the least costly of all and stand near the head of the list of desirable accessories for summer toilets.
Finish for Lingerie.
An exquisite finish for lingerie can be achieved by crochet work, says the Modern Priscila. Instead of buttonholing neck and sleeves, cut smoothly, following the lines of the pattern. Turn from you with forefinger of left hand, following the method known as rolling or whipping. Over this crochet with fine cotton, white or colored, using four single stitches, and picot of four chain. Set all close together. It is substantial, dainty, producing effect similar to tatting, and is rapid work.
Liberty in Sleeves.
There is a delightful liberty in the realm of arm covering. To each arm its sleeve is evidently the creed of the designers at the moment. If a woman wishes to let an admiring public see that she has been given the rare gift of a lovely arm she may adopt the Grecian shoulder drapery which serves as a sleeve, but is careful not to hide a fraction of the arm.
土
of caps, innocent of wires. There are any number of others, in all sorts of shapes, all suggesting the hour of golden leisure spent at home. They are only a part of the story of caps, which continue to flourish in the smile of favor which the dancing girl still bestows upon them. But the dancing cap is really another story.
The Hair at Night.
When sleeping, the head should always be uncovered and the hair will retain its beauty and luster much longer. Brush the hair thoroughly, then raise it nearly to the crown of the head and braid it in one long braid. It can then be thrown over the pillow and you can sleep on either side or the back without lying on the hair, and the hair is getting a good airing all night.
Several skirts for dancing have old-fashioned lace flounces, two or three of them, festooned under roses, and individualists are elongating their lace sleeves until they form mitts with thumbs to cover the top of the hands.
JULIA BOTTOMLEY.
Lace Flouences.
P. B. B.
RESIDENCE PHONE YORK 7992
Lady Assistant
Polite Service
to All
Parlors, 1830 Arapahoe Street
ONE CAFE New Dining Room in Connection to Keystone Social Club. Nothing like it ever attempted in Denver. Lowest prices for best quality of meats. Your patronage solicited.
KEYSTON OPEN FOR BUSINESS New Dr to Keys like it Strictly home cooking. Lower food. Eastern corn-fed meats.
KEYSTONE CA
N FOR
BINESS New Dining Room in C
to Keystone Social Clu
like it ever attempted
some cooking. Lowest prices for best
western corn-fed meats. Your patronag
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
Syl. Ste
2217 Champa St. Phone Cha
Syl. Stewart Man
ampa St. Phone Champa 1379
AMPA 2077 DA
Stewart Manager.
bone Champa 1379 Denver, Colo.
2217 Champa St. Phone Champa 1379 Denver, Colo.
PHONE CHAMPA 2077 DAY OR NIGHT
CAMMEL & CO.
UNDERTAKERS
FIRTS. CLASS MORTUARY ESTATE
LISHMENT, AMBULANCE SERVICE. FIRST AID TO THE BE
REAVED. COURTEOUS TREAT
MENT.
LADY ASSISTANT
Parlors 2807 Welton St
TOM LEWIS, Prop.
The Marian
The Marian Hotel
M. H. H.
The Only Colored Hotel in Denver
1835-37-39 ARAPAHOE STREET.
PRIVATE DINING ROOMS
ntain Athletic Club
Billiard room. A supberb Gymna-
ing that goes To make up a FISRT
RICHARD FRAZIER, Manager
Denver, Colorado
Rocky Mountain
A high class Pool and Billiard
sium and in fact everything that
CLASS RESORT.
RIO
2014 Champa Street.
Mountain Athleti
ass Pool and Billiard room. A suplefact everytning that goes To make DRT.
RICHARD FRAZIE
Street. De
THE BARBELL CENTER
A high class Pool and Billiard room. A supberb Gymnasium and infact everytning that goes To make up a FISRT CLASS RESORT.
YOU CAN BUY A PIANO ON PAYMENTS OF $5.00 A MONTH, OR RENT ONE FOR $2.50 A MONTH AT CASSELL BROS. 16th and Broadway.
Brickler's New Barber Shop is located at 2208 Larimer street. Shave, 10. Hair cut, 25c; children, 15c.
Furnished apart three rooms, where in each kitchen single, electric or ern throughout. able, 2352-2358 6 Twenty-fourth at 6707. Mrs. R. M.
---
---
FULL
DINNER
11:30 a.m.
to
8:30 p.m.
INCORPORATED AND BONDED
FUNERAL CARRIAGE
Soup, Fish or Meat, Two Vegetables Coffee, Tea or Cocoa Desert 25 CENTS
CAMMEL & CO. UNDERTAKERS
FIRTS:CLASS MORTUARY ESTABLISHMENT, AMBULANCE SERVICE. FIRST A1D TO THE BEREAVED. COURTEOUS TREATMENT.
LADY ASSISTANT.
DENVER, COLORADO.
Short Orders at All Hours Chinese Dishes of All Kinds
PHONE MAIN 7413
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.
Denver, Colorado
DAY OR NIGHT
Denver, Colorado