Colorado Statesman
Saturday, November 6, 1915
Denver, Colorado
Page text (machine-generated)
PATRONIZE MERCHANTS WHO ADV. IN THE PEOPLE'S PAPER
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
THE JOURNAL OF THE WEST.
LABOR SHALL BE FREE
RAGE COUNTRY PARTY
DR. WASHINGTON URGES COOPERATION BETWEEN BUSINESSMEN AND FARMER
VOL. XX11. DR. WASHING COOPERATION BUSINESSMEN
By authority of the Executive Committee of the National Negro Business League, I am writing to urge the officers and members of state and local Negro business leagues to take active steps at once to arrange "get-together meetings" with the farmers of their states and committees. By carefully working out plans in advance for these meetings great interest can be aroused throughout the surrounding rural communities and, in my opinion, much good accomplished. Notice should be sent to the farmers telling them of the coming of local league members, and acquainting them with the purposes of the visit. It is a better plan to use buggies, carriages or automobiles than railroads, as these conveyances will permit wider areas to be covered and more people reached. The program of these tours might include calling on individual farmers, speaking in churches and schoolhouses, and visiting small country stores.
By co-operating with the farmers in this manner greater confidence may be established between producer and merchant, mutual buying and selling methods adopted, and the volume of business of Negro merchants increased.
Another way to bring about results through Negro business league work is for the local Negro business leagues in cities not too far distant to have joint meetings. For instance, the local league at Tuskegee, Ala., has recently held joint meetings with the local leagues at Montgomery, Opelika and Union Springs, Ala. As the result of these joint meetings more helpful business and trade relationship has been established between the business men of these several communities.
I very much hope that the local leagues will take hold of these matters, for by so doing they will help the farmers solve their problems, and at the same time increase the business of colored merchants.
BOOKER T. WASHINGTON,
President National Negro Business
League.
Tuskegee Institute, Alabama,
Nov. 1, 1915.
CROSS-BREEDING OF WHITES AND COLORED PRODUCES GOOD RESULTS.
Berkeley, Calif., 1915.—That the intermarriage of whites and Negroes would not violate biological laws and that the offspring of such unions would be admirable stock is the opinion of T. T. Waterman, professor of anthropology at the University of California.
In maintaining this opinion, the professor said: "The idea that many
people hold of the danger of intermarriage between Negroes and whites is absurd. Every stock breeder knows the advantage of crossbreeding. Cross-breeding toughens the stock and improves the type. We need only to look at examples of cattle and other domestic animals to verify this.
"Cross-breeding of whites and Negroes would produce as good results. The offspring would have all the good characteristics of both types and would be immune to the exaggerated characteristic of either parent. Ill effects which now come from inbreeding would not appear in the progeny of such unions.
We have tangible evidence for the above in the natives of British Honduras, where inter-marriage with Negroes is not only sanctioned, but customary. The hybrids are muscular, strong mentally and in every way equal to their white brothers.
"Negroes and women have had their mental progress hampered for many years. Women in the last fifty years have shown that they can develop with great rapidity and that they are mentally man's equal. We have never given the Negro the same chance. His backwardness is not due to any inherent mental disability, but simply because he has not had opportunity.
"Give the Negroes the same chance that we have given women and we will find that they will progress as rapidly. I do not advise marriage with Negroes in view of the present racial feeling in the United States, but there is certainly no biological objection to such marriages."
Announcement has been made by Governor Charles Whitman of the appointment of the Hon. Charles W. Anderson, of New York City, the appointment to be effective November 1, 1915. Mr Anderson was until recently Collector of Internal Revenue in New York City, which position he held under three Presidents. As collector his record was A No. 1, his office handling more money, probably than any other office in the revenue service.
Mound Bayou, Miss., Oct. 26.—The Mound Bayou State Bank opened for business on October 21, with a paid up capital of $10,000, and a surplus paid in of $2,000. This is the second Negro bank established under the Guarantee Act of the State of Mississippi. Chas. Banks, general manager of the Mound Bayou Oil Mill and Manufacturing Co., is the principal promoter, having invested $11,000 of the $12,000 paid in.
DENVER COLORADO SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1915
state Hist & Nut Hist Booster
State House
ANTS WHO
ADO
E JOURNAL
DENVER COLORADO
COLORED GIRL HAS
$600 A DAY INCOME
Oilton. Okla., Oct 28.—The rising price of oil has boosted to $600 a day the income of Sarah Rector, 18-year-old Colored girl, who owns one of the most valuable oil land allotments in the Oilton district, and whose immense profits in the past have attracted wide attention. The fight over the job of being her guardian also, has been renewed in the courts.
Her tract of land is operated by B. B. Jones, millionaire oil man, who holds a lease negotiated by T. J. Porter, as the girl's guardian. Its production for October will be approximately 160,000 barrels and Sarah Rector will get one-eighth, or 20,000 barrels, which she has contracted to sell for 90 cents a barrel.
A recent decision of Federal Judge Campbell at Muskogee that the producer must pay the royalty in oil, if the owner so desires, has added 10 cents a barrel to the girl's income Before that she had been getting royalty on only 80 cents the market price when handled through an operator. But now, owing to the great demand for oil, she sells it independently at a premium of 10 cents a barrel. The Sarah Rector allotment has been a good revenue producer since it was first opened about two years ago. The girl has received from her land in royalty approximately $60,000 in cash up to May of this year, and on that date her roya'ty oil had accumulated during the previous four months was sold at the then market price of 40 cents a barrel, netting her an additional $65,000.
The land reached its high tide in production during the spring of this year. It was estimated to be making 20,000 barrels a day during April, or 600,000 barrels for the month, of which the girl's share was 75,000 barrels, but her income proportionately less than now because of the low price.
Much of Sarah Rector's money has been invested in farm lands and Muskogee city property, through her guardian. A short time ago a suit to annul the lease held by B. B. Jones on her oil land was instituted by E. C. Sweeney of the Commercial National Bank of Muskogee County Court to recover $1,570,000 from B. B. Jones, illegally appointed guardian. In the same petition he asked to have T. J. Porter removed as her guardian and himself appointed to act for her and her sister and brother, who also own valuable allotments. The county court denied his petition.
Sweeney's attorney's then filed suit in the Muskogee County Court to recover $1,250,000 was specified as the proceeds of the oil
sold by Jones and $320,000 as the bonus the girl could have obtained had she been free from the Jones lease. The case has not been decided.
The Sarah Rector allotment is a fractional 80 acre tract lying along the Cimarron River. It is very rough and hilly and has no value for agricultural purposes.
Sergeant R. M. Norris of Troop A, Tenth Cavalry, from Fort Huashaca, Arizona, who was a member of a team of 14 selected by Uncle Sam to represent the Southern department, U. S. A, which took place at the exposition grounds during the horse show last week, won first place and the blue ribbon in the high jumps, first place in the resource race fifth place in the P. I. course of sixteen jumps. Captain C. S. Babcock of the Tenth also distinguished himself by winning the second place in the two and a half mile race.
TAKING ADVANTAGE
From the numerous advertisements of the various merchants in the city, a rare opportunity is offered for preparations that are generally made about this time for Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays. Articles of merchandise, however costly, can be purchased on depositing small amounts. Our people ought to take advantage of such opportunities as from a keen observation of persons who are always on the lookout we lose that which would be of real benefit to us when we hesitate. Get in therefore with the crowd that read our paper and be ready to grasp what is yours today.
THE STORES
The stores advertising with us confine themselves to a class of goods which are being sold at such reasonable prices as to amount to a specialty, and being placed at this time within the reach of all, should come in for extraordinary patronage. Our dry goods, fur, millinery, jewelry, crockeryware, grocery and market and other stores are abundantly supplied with the choicest for the
HOLIDAY TRADE.
And persons availing themselves of this opportunity will find a ready and beneficial response in the catering specially indulged in by the managers and clerks of the respective places of business.
THE EASIEST WAY.
Purchase now by depositing a small amount for the articles required and get in with wise purchasers who take time by the forelock, securing for themselves the best by taking advantage of the good things that are now presented.
RACE NEWS GATHERED FROM VARIOUS SOURCES
Philadelphia, Pa.,- Ebenezer Bishop of Bridgeton, N. J., aged 112 years, died at the Philadelphia Hospital on Tuesday October 5. He was born April 2, 1803, in Bridgeton county. As a boy he was indentured to a farmer and worked at the one place for seventy years.
Muskogee, Okla., Oct. 20. Much interest has been excited by the announcement that the Sever's block, located on Broadway, sunning from Main to Second streets, the most prominent business location in the city, has been purchased for Luther Manuel, a little 12 year old Negro boy, by his white guardian, at a cost of $120,000. The investment was sanctioned by Judge Leahy. Luther Manuel is a youngster whose income from oil lands is pilling in at the rate of $25,000 to $30,000 a month. A similar investment was made for Sarah Rector, 15 years old, who has been called the richest Negro child in the world. The Bid Fike apartment and business block, South Second street, was bought for her for $57,000. This is in a Negro section, but Sever's block is in a locality where everything and everybody passes.
New York, Oct 23.—Alfred H. Lockhart, reputed to be the richest colored man in the Danish West Indies, paid a visit to the New York News office on Tuesday afternoon last week, and spoke in high terms of the work being done by the many branches of the race's leading paper. Mr. Lockhart is also the representative of the Standard Oil Company in the West Indies and not so very long ago entertained John D. Rockefeller, Jr. at his palatial residence in the Island of St. Luke's Hospital and will be leaving for Canada within a few weeks. Although here on business he is enjoying his trip, which is not the first, to the United States, Before leaving, he will make arrangements to send two of his children to school here, as he is very much impressed with the educational work of the United States, his eldest son having graduated with honor from one of the leading schools of Pennsylvania.
Cincinnati, O, Oct. 28.—Carl Young, colored, a graduate pharmacist of Howard University, and employed at the drug store located at the corner of Fifth and John streets, was brutally beaten here last week by a lieutenant of police
NO 12
and two patrolmen. The officers became enraged, it is said, when the young Negro came the door of his place and requested the officers to desist from the use of loud and profane language, reminding them that there were ladies inside the store. At this the officers, it is said snatched the young man out of the door and gave him an amurciful beating with their clubs, and later they called the patrol wagon and sent him to the station house. An indignation meeting has been held by the members of the Park Street M. E. Church, at which resolutions were passed to see that the young man gets justice. The sum of $40 was raised to assist in the prosecution of the policemen. A petition has been circulated and signed by over 700 citizens, it is said, demanding the suspension of the offending officers.
WHITE GIRL FROM TEXAS REFUSES TO POSE
Chicago, Ill., Oct. 24.—Seventy-five art students assembled in the largest studio in the Art Institute yesterday afternoon.
The model, draped, took her pose under the direction of Miss Jessie P. Lacey, instructor.
Members of the class had "laid off their proportions" and started to sketch in the detail. Miss Lacey was engaged in assisting a backward student.
Then the door of the studio opened and three colored girls walked in and looked about for seats.
The model, Miss Della Rains, who recently came to Chicago from her home in Dallas, Texas, saw the three as soon as they entered and "dropped" her pose.
"Are those Negroes going to work in this class?" she asked students near the stand. "They are members of the class and I suppose they came here to work," was the reply.
Miss Rains jumped from the posing stand to the floor and left the room.
Meantime Miss Lacey was explaining the democratic spirit that should prevail in large art schools such as that conducted by the Art Institute
"I was reared to respect the Negro as a citizen and I do not hate them as some Southerners are supposed to," said Miss "ains after the incident "I simply believe they should exercise tact in selecting the field for her activities."
THE LATEST IMPORTANT DI8-
PATCHES PUT INTO SHORT,
CRISP PARAGRAPHS.
STORY OF THE WEEK
SHOWING THE PROGRES8 OF
EVENTS IN OUR OWN AND
FOREIGN LANDS.
ABOUT THE WAR
Russian troops have landed in
Varna in Bulgaria, a Black sea port.
The French submarine Turquoise
has been sunk by Turkish artillery.
Berlin reports the capture of an im-
portant Serbian railroad junetion town.
British auxiliary vessel sunk in col-
lision at Galipoli and 155 men miss-
ing.
French occupy Strumitsa and ad-
vance twenty miles into Bulgarian
territory.
Germans have captured Kraguye-
vatz, where the main arsenal of the
Serbians is located.
One-fourth of Bulgarian city of
Dadeaghatch destroyed by allies’ fleet
in recent bombardment.
Bulgars are advancing on Nish, the
war capital of Serbia. They are meet-
ing with fierce resistance.
From all sides the Germans, Aus-
trians and Bulgarians are slowly clos-
ing in on the Serbian armies, the po-
sition of which grows graver daily.
The Berlin war office announced
that during the month of October
more than 40,000 prisoners were cap-
tured on the Russian and Serbian
fronts.
Germany is ready to consider peace,
according to Amsterdam reports, The
German chancellor is quoted as saying
that the kaiser will agree to peace if
Belgium is ceded to him with certain
other territory. An indemnity of $7,
500,000,000 is also demanded,
Premier Asquith in the British
house of commons admitied that the
campaign against the Dardanelles had
failed. ‘The premier, reviewing the
war, told the Britons they inust pre
pare to make great sacrifices and
adopt @ rigid economy in order to win
the war.
Defeated, the Villista army retreated
to the eastward from Agua Prieta,
jeaving 400 dead and wounded on the
battlefield, Eight persons on the
American side of the boundary, in-
eluding four soldiers of che Seventh
infantry, were wounded during the
fighting. Harry Jones, p~ivate in Com-
pany C, Bleventh infantry, died of the
wounds inflicted by a bullet from the
Agua Prieta battle line.
WESTERN
Edward L. Preetorius, publisher of
the St. Louis Times, committed sul-
side.
Six men are under arrest at Peoria,
Ul, in connection with an alleged
wholesale clearing house for stolen au-
tomobiles.
Perry Morris, a farmer, killed four
persons near Winnsboro, ‘Tex., includ-
ing himself, and seriously wounded a
fifth.
Four babies were born on two of
the troop trains which took reinforce-
ments to the Agua Prieta garrison via
Bagle Pass and Laredo,
William C. McAdoo, secretary of
the treasury, arrived in Chicago from
the Pacific coast. Prosperity is
everywhere, according to McAdoo,
Mrs. Rose M. Cosgriff. widow of the
late Thomas A, Cosgriff, was appoint-
ed administratrix of thet portion of
the estate left by Mr. Covgriff in Lar-
amie county, Wyoming, valued at
$300,000,
Colorado and Wyoming will unite
their forces in the build!ng of a mod-
ern highway from Denver through the
Rocky Mountain National park in
northern Colorado to the Yellowstone
National park in Wyoming. ‘The Yel-
lowstone highway, as it will be known,
is to be the first link in a 3,500-mile
chain highway joining al! the national
parks in the intermountain and Pacific
coast territory,
WASHINGTON
Secretary Garrison temporarily sus-
pended classified freight rates on the
Panama railroad,
England was asked by the United
States to explain the seizure of the
American steamer Hocking at Halifax.
The American steamer Llama was
seized by a British prize crew and
afterward run aground off the coast
of Scotland, according to a report to
the state department by the Ameri
ean consul at Dundee, Scotland,
Following the White House an-
nouncement that the president and
Mrs. Galt would be married the latter
part of December, it was stated that
the honeymoon would be spent in the
South, possibly at Pass Christian,
Miss.
A series of severe earth shocks
were recorded by the Georgetown uni-
versity’s selsmograph at Washington.
A complete and thorough investiga.
tion of the oll business of the United
States is being made by the federal
trade commission.
FOREIGN
Congress reconvened at Havana.
Canada is going to put a quarter of
@ million men in the field,
A son was born to Mr. and Mra.
James Hazen Hyde at Paris.
France makes no secret of the fact
that she has executed two women
spies.
Lewis Waller, one of the leading
actors of England, died in London of
pnuemonia,
Crown Prince Frederick Wilhelm ot
Germany is dead, according to a dis-
patch from Rome,
Villa repeated a statement of his
determination to fight both Carranza
and the United States if necessary
in order to obtain possession of Agua
Prieta,
With the object of utilizing heavy
stocks of alcohol now available, the
minister of finance at Petrograd has
recommended the export of 80,000,000
gallons,
The Chinese government rejected
the proposals of Japan, Great Britain
and Russia for a postponement of the
decision whether a monarchial form
of government is to be re-established.
_ Foreign Minister Grey informed the
house of commons that Great Britain
Intends to follow the course already
taken by the United States in regard
to recognition of the Carranza govern:
ment in Mexico,
The correspondent of the Havas
News Agency at Geneva transmits a
dispatch to the Frankfort Gazette
from Christiania, Norway, which
‘states that William J. Bryan will ar-
rive in Norway in mid-November.
Speaking at Canterbury, Viscount
“Milner, who recently raised a stir in
‘the House of Lords by suggesting the
‘withdrawal of the troops from Gallt
“poli, vigorously denounced “the policy
of secrecy” which, he declared, had
“characterized the conduct of the war
“up to the present.
Sir Edward Carson, who resigned
last month as attorney general, ad:
“dressed the house of commons, follow-
ing the speech of Premier Asquith, He
said that, in his opinion, the cabinet,
“however useful in times of peace, was
an organization and machine utterly
incapable of carrying on the war under
present conditions.
SPORTING NEWS
SO et CAO SHR COM EDGE: WW ACHIUE RASS
ball clubs are for sale. Ducky Holmes
is trying to buy Lincoln via a stock
company,
At Colorado Springs tne Americans
defeated the Nationals in their barn
storming tour game at Zoo park by the
score of 7 to 6.
A squadron of six army aeroplanes
will make a flight from Fort Sill,
Okla., to Fort Sam Houston, Tex.,
some time between November 20 and
December 1.
At Sheepshead Bay, L. 1, Dario Res
ta added another victory to his long
string when he won the 100-mile Hark
ness gold challenge cup race from i
field of six starters. Bol) Burman fin
ished second.
Jesse Willard, world’s heavyweight
champion, finished his engagement
with a “Wild West” show at New
Orleans and announced that hence-
forth he would give his attention to
the pugilistic kame.
‘The unmarried children of Robert
B. Ward, the Federal League baseball
magnate, who died at New Rochelle,
October 18, are to receive twice as
much as those who have married, un-
der the terms of his will, admitted to
probate at White Plains, N. Y. About
one-half of the estate, estimated at
$5,000,000, is to be divided among the
nine children, One-half of the estate
is left outright to Mrs, Mary C. Ward,
GENERAL
‘Ten thousand school children parad-
ed the streets of Cleveland, Ohio, in
the interest of the prohibition cause,
Homer Jones was shot to death by a
sheriff's posse near Durart, Okla., and
his brother, Willard, was fatally
wounded,
‘The Wabash railroad passed into the
control of the newly incorporated com:
pany of Indiana, the receivers relin-
auishing the property.
More than $4,500,000 has been ex-
pended in the last year in an effort
to make New Orleans rat-proof and
prevent the reappearance of bubonic
plague.
Herman Ridder, treasurer of the
Democratic national committee and
publisher of the New York Staats
Zeitung, died suddenly at his home
in New York.
‘The need of the American farmer for
an adequate merchant marine was
urged in an address by Secretary of
the Treasury McAdoo before the Tt
nois Manufacturer's Association at
Chicago.
Engelbert Bronkhurst, mining engi-
neer and said to be an expert on ex-
plosives, was arrested in New York
by Chief William J. Flynn of the
United States secret service, in con-
nection with the alleged plot to blow
up steamers carrying munitions to
the allies.
A. Maynard Lyon, 97 years old, of
New York, formerly a business asso
ciate of Henry Clews, has a new na-
tional anthem to supersede “The Star
Spangled Banner.”
Dr, O. B, Dyson, state veterinarian,
was indicted at Springfield, IIL, by the
Sangamon county grand jury on the
charge of not burning and burying the
bodies of diseased hogs.
Mrs, Helen Angle, who obtained a
divorce in February, 1911, on the
ground of desertion from her husband,
Frank W. Angle, was remarried to
him at Bridgeport Conn
he READY, NOT FOR WA, BUT
FOR DEFENSE, SAYS WHE
PRESIDENT.
lWiieon) Aske Natenia, (Supers. of
Plans for Preparedness at Ban-
| quet in New York City.
| Western Newspaper Union News Servier.
New York.—President Wilson
opened the administration campaign
for its nationa! defense program in a
comprehensive and carefully prepared
address delivered on the ith at the
Manhattan Club banquet.
‘The’ President was received with
enthusiastic applause as he entered
the banquet hail and during his ad-
dress.
‘The President called upon “men of
all shades of political opinion” to rally
to the support of the program.
He spoke of the United States as
“a nation too big and generous to be
exacting, but yet courageous enough
to defend its rights and the Mberties
of its people, wherever assailed or in-
volved.”
The President spoke in part as fol
lows:
“Mr, Toastmaster and Gentlemen:
“A year and a half ago our thought
would have been almost altogether of
great domestic questions. ‘They are
many and of vital consequence. We
must and shall address ourselves to
their solution with diligence, firmness
and self-possession.
‘We are thinking now chiefly of our
relations with the rest of the world—
not our commercial relations—about
those we have thought and planned
always, but about our politieal rela-
tions, our duties as an individual and
independent force in the world to our-
selves, our neighbors and the world
itself,
“Our principles are well known, It
is not necessary to avow them
again. We believe in political liberty
and founded our great government to
obtain it, the liberty of men and of
peoples—of men to choose their own
lives und of peoples to choose their
own allegiance
“We shall, I confidently believe,
never again take another foot of ter
ritory by conquest. We, shall never
in any circumstances seebito male an
independent people subjec’ to our do-
minion, because we believe, we pas-
sionately believe, in the light of ev-
ery people, to choose their own al-
legiance and be free of njasters alto-
gether, }
“For ourselves we wish /nothing but
the full liberty of selfdeyelopment;
and with ourselves in this great mat-
ter we associate all the peoples of
our own hemisphere. 1
“We have it In mind to be prepared
but not for war, but only for defense.
“phat plan calls for only such an
increase in the regular army of the
United States as experience has
proved to be required for the perform:
ance of the necessary duties of the
army in the Philippines, in Hawaii, in
Porto Rico, upon the borders of the
United States, at the coast fortifica:
tions and at the military posts of the
interior.
“For the rest, it calls for the train:
ing within the next three years of a
force of 400,000 citizen soldiers to be
raised in annual contingents of 193;
900, who would be asked to enlist for
three years with the colors and three
years on furlough, but who duving
their three years of enlistment with
the colors would not be organized as a
standing force, but woul be expected
merely to undergo intensive training
for a very brief period of each year.
“Their training would take place in
immediate association with the organ-
ized units of the regular army.
“It has been American policy time
out of mind to look to ths navy as the
tigsk oud (ehiat line of defenses mnhe
Youth Shot As He Talks to Girl.
Fort Collins, Colo.—Stepping off the
porch at the home of Miss Lura
street, aged 18 years, about 10 o'clock
Thursday night to investigate a noise
which the girl had heard by the side
of the house, Walter Willie, aged 19
years, was shot in the stomach and
through the left arm, Willie had just
returned home from church with Miss
Street. A charge of buckshot entered
the young man’s stomach and arm,
Residents who heard the report of the
gun say that only one shot was fired.
‘The sheriff and police officers visited
the shack occupied by Thomas Wat
ton, 60 years old, parole from the
state penitentiary while under a san-
tence imposed two and one-half years
ago on the charge of having commit-
ted a statutory offense ogainst Miss
Street. They found Watton fefgning
sleep, they assert, and arrested him.
Watton was paroled three weeks agy.
Watton has been paying attention to
Miss Street daily since his parole, ant
fs said to have made threats and
offered insults to her because of the
attentions young Willie was paying
her. }
BacterWiie i Ritet-Giicice of Lanne
Minot, N. D.—Charles R, Porter of
Anoka, Minn., won the right of first
choice of a 160-acre tract of land from
the 700 homesteads to be opened to
entry next May, at the Fort Berthold
land drawing here.
Indians Shoot Justice of Peace,
Vernal, Utah.—George H. Bartlett,
Justice of the peace at Whiterocks,
near here, was shot and dangerously
wounded by two Indians, whose re-
Quest for food he had denied.
very great and efficient force. Not
rapidly, but slowly, with eareful atten-
tion, our naval force has been devel-
oped until the navy of the United
States stands recognized as one of tne
most efficient and notable of the mcd
ern time,
In the fulfillment of the program I
propose I shall ask for the hearty sup-
‘port of the country, of the rank and
file of America, of men of ail shades
‘of political opinion.
_ “For my position in this important
‘matter is different from that of the
private individual who is free to speak
his own thoughts and to risk his own
opinions in this matter.
“The only thing within our borders
that has given us grave concern in 1e
cent months has been that voices have
been raised in ‘America professing to
‘be the voices of Americans which
‘were not indeed and in truth Amert-
‘ean, but which spoke alien sympathies,
‘which came from men who loved other
‘countries better than they loved Amer
ea, men who were partisans of other
causes than that of America and had
Forsation that their chief and only
allegiance was to the great govern:
ment under which they tive
“These voices have not been many,
but they have been very ioud and very
clamorous. They have proceeded from
a few who were bitter and who were
grievously misled,
“These men who speak alien sympa
thies are the spokesmen of small
groups whom it is high time that the
nation should call to a ~eckoning.
“The chief thing necessary in Amer
ica ‘n order that she should let all the
world know that she fs prepared to
‘maintain her own great position is
that the real voice of the nation
should sound forth unmistakably and
in majestic volume, in the deep unt
son of a common, unhesitating na
tional feeling.
“I do not doubt that upon the first
‘occasion, upon the first opportunity
‘upon the first definite challenge, that
voice will speak forth in tones which
ho man can doubt and with commands
which no man dare gainsay or resist.
“May I not say, while [am speaking
of this, that there is another danger
that we should guard against? We
should rebuke, not only “anifestations
of racial feeling here in America
where there should be none, but alse
every manifestation of religious and
sectarian antagonism, |
‘It does not become America that)
within her borders, where every man
is free to follow the dictates of his
conscience and worship God as he
pleases, men should rafse the cry of
church against chureh,
“To do that is to strike at the very
spirit and heart of America, We are
a God-fearing people. We agree te
differ about methods of worship, but
we ure united in believing in divine
providence and in worshiping the God
‘of nations,
/ “We are the champions of religious
right here and everywhere that it
may be our privilege to give it our
countenance and support. The gov-
‘ernment is conscious of the obliga.
tion and the nation is conscious of
the obligation, Let no man create di-
visions where there are none.
/“itere ts the nation God has build
ed by our hands, What shall we do
with it? Who is there who docs not
‘stand ready at all times to act in her
Dehalf in a spirit of devoted and dis-
interested patriotism? We are ca
only in the youth and first conscious:
ness of our power. .
“The day of our country’s life is
still but in its fresh morning. Let us
lift our eyes to the great tracts of
life yet to be conquered in the inter-
ests of righteous peace.
“Come, let us renew our allegiance
to America, conserve her strength in
its purity, make her chief among
those who serve mankind, self-rever-
enced, self-commanded mistress of all
forces of quiet counsel, strong above
all others in good-will and the might
of invincible justice and right.”
ee er ea eee
Boulder, Colo.—The b‘zgest mining
bonanza struck in Boulder county in
many years, not excepting even the
recent rich discoveries of tungsten, ir
the lease of Thomas Mobr and J. A.
Wasson on the Alice mine at James
town. They have seven men at work
on the lease and are turning out daily
ten to fifteen tons of ore that is bring:
ing not less than $100 a ton. The
further they go down on the vein the
better the ore gets. . It contains cop-
per, lead and zinc as well as gold.”
Mexican Bandits Raid U. S. Ranch.
Brownsville, Tex.—Twenty-five Mex-
icans raided the ranch of Adrian Ra-
mirez eight miles northwest of
Brownsville, confiscating a quantity of
guns, ammunition, saddles and cloth-
ing and threatening to kill Ramirez
unless he gave them money,
Arthur Coppel Heads Rio Grande.
New York.—Arthur ‘Coppel was
elected president of the Denver & Rio
Grande railway, Kingdon Gould, vice
president, and EB. C, Jeffery, chairman
of the board, at the meeting of the
road's directors.
Mexican Shell Kills Four Americane.
Naco, Ariz. — Francisco Villa
reached here Thursday with 3,000 of
the army defeated by the Carranza
forces at Agua Prieta and told Amer-
ican army officers that Dr. R. H.
Thighen, chief surgeon of _ the
Cananea Consolidated Copper Com-
pany, his assistant, Dr. Miller, and
two American chauffeurs, J. D, Py-
lant and A. L, Wilson, had been killed
by Calles’ fire in front of Agua Prieta.
‘They were succoring wounded at the
time and shot down while undef a
Red Cross flag.
APRA LAS SAA oe a ei ne
Tha ———
Midland Caf 4
: Mrs. Nevis Stree AND Mas, Peart Grarron, Props. :
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Give Us a Trial f
; 924 19th Street. Denver, Golo ¥
pee et eo 2 i ale i eens en
ERNEST HOWARD,
Carpenter, Job and Repair Work.
Paints, Oils and Glass, Glazing Done
Coal, Wood and Express.
1021 2st Street Phone Champa 752.
PHONE MAIN 3028 RES. PHONE GALLUP 942
JOHN K. RETTIG
Meats, Fancy and Staple Groceries
1064 CURTIS STREET yg,
Dorner Nineteenth. j Denver, Colo.
Phones Main ©. E. Smith, Managez
169, 181, 189, 190 Res. Phone South 1608
The Market Company
Wholesale and Retail Staple and Faucy Groceries, Fish amd
Oysters. Hotels and Restaurants Our Specialty.
Fresh and Cured
Eastern Corn Fed Meats
Fruits, Vegetables, Poultry and Ganie.
1683-89 Arapahoe Street Denver. Colorade
“STETSON HATS OUR SPECIALTY”
Phone Main 3661.
“BROWN, THE HATTER”
HATS CLEANED AND BLOCKED
50 CENTS
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
A Trial Will Convince You.
718% 18TH STREET.
Weatherhead Hat co
TELEPHONE MAIN 3203
PIONEER HATTERS OF THE WEST
LEO We Make
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ESTABLISHED 1876.
PRACTICAL HATTERS
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AFRO-AMERICAN CULLINGS
In reply to the very interesting let-
ter in the Times, referring to the es-
say on Southern music, by Prot. Al-
bert Mildenberg, as published in your
Sunday Magazine, I venture to add a
tew words, the result of great interest
and much research in my personal ac-
quaintance of many years with the
well-known English Negro composer,
Coleridge Taylor, and the famous
American authority, Harry T. Burleigh,
both of these men being grave and
earnest musicians, yet each pursuing
entirely different paths in the devel-
opment of their art, writes Albert J.
Weber in the New York Times. In
the case of Coleridge Taylor it has
been a steady advancement of a great
talent for composition along serious
lines, with no leaning toward develop-
ment of a race peculiarity or special
influence, it being simply the following
out of the classical as well as lighter
form ¢ of musical compositions follow-
ing those of all of the modern cele-
brated Buropean composers.
Regarding Mr. Burleigh, his work has
been @ development of an idea which
has had as its main inception and es-
sential character the bringing out of
peculiar and individual Negrofd quali-
ties, so far a: the themes and rhythm
are concerned, of course, seriously
treated, but nevertheless with the idea
of establishing a splendid and delight-
ful color in his work, and the exis-
tence of a characteristic that he attrib-
utes solely to the Southern plantation
Negro. It is but just and fair to pre-
sume that the charming melodies sung
by the Southern plantation Negro,
such as “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot”
and “Steal Away to Jesus” and the
humerous other spirituals that I have
heard unlimited times during my in-
vestigations in the South, throughout
that glorious “Land of Dixie,” are of
absolutely pure Negro origin, and this
fact no doubt re-enforces the conten-
tion of Prof. Albert Mildenberg’s argu-
ment that we must look to these fun-
damental principles of melody and
rhythm produced by these very Soutb-
ern Negro singers, and maintained by
them to this very day in their orig-
inal form, for the very essence of the
material upon which our American
folk-song exists and may be further
developed.
‘The more treatment they will under-
go at the hands of the trained and
skilled musicians the further away
from their intrinsic value they will be
drawn, the more will they lose their
entire individuality. ‘The natural mel-
odies in their original form, free from
harmonic treatment by technical mu-
sicians, will of themselves be a potent
factor in our future musical develop-
ment.
Statistics show that 55,000 of the
165,000 people in Birmingham are Ne-
groes. The school census of 1912
showed 21,336 Negrd children of
school age. The annual report of the
Birmingham public schools of 1913
as 7,960 Negro children enrolled in
he schools, 5,884 of whom attended
cegularly. This report shows 5,445
seats for these children, a lacking
vf 429 seats to accommodate them.
Our schools are sadly crowded; many
drop out for this reason, and I won-
Jer to what extent are these condi-
tions responsible for the large
amount of work left for the juvenile
court officers, for the restless, ignor-
ant young Negro who crowds the
dives, jails and mines, for the spread
of infectious diseases.—Mrs. Sidney
M. Ullman, in the Birmingham (Ala.)
Age-Herald.
A correspondent of a Washington
newspaper suggested that the United
States create a Negro army of from
500,000 to 1,000,000 men for carrying
on the reclamation work and other in-
dustrial undertakings in peace, and do
our fighting in time of war. This is
a most undemocratic and abhorrent
suggestion. Mercenary armies and
vicarious fighters were in fashion 150
years ago, when despotic kings used
them as their tools of oppression. The
odium that attaches to the term Hes-
sian, in our own history, is the result
of the intense feeling among our own
forefathers against hireling soldiers
‘The revolutionary fighters were will-
ing to risk their fortunes, their ener-
gies and their lives in the struggle
for liberty, and the English king
brought into the field against them
hired troops. Unprepared and undis-
ciplined as the Americans were, their
superior morale won for them victory.
With the arrival at New York on
the steamer Norseman from Liverpool
of 18 distressed Americans, forming
what was left of the crew of the Brit-
ish steamer Liberia, a dramatic chap-
Mrs, Ella D. Rowland of Zillah,
Wash., owns a vast apple orchard
upon which {t is claimed that she
raises the finest apples that are grown
in the United States.
Farmers in England are now pre-
paring to pay women the same wages
‘as given to the men called away to
war.
In proportion to population, Japan
has more suicides than any other civ-
Mized nation.
One of the most significant of the
many hopeful tendencies in the South
today is the spirit of co-operation be-
ing manifested on every hand between
the white and colored people. Never
in the history of the South, it is safe
to say, has there been so keen an in-
terest on the part of the white popula:
tion in the condition and welfare of
the Negro. In almost every large city
below the Ohio river, from Galveston
and Houston up to New Orleans, Bir-
mingham, Atlanta and even Washing-
ton, there has been an awakening in
some one or all of the phases of Negro
life. In the agricultural districts of
southern states there has been a re-
valuation of the status of the Negro
and a new attitude with regard to
him is being formed.
Of the many causes to which this
awakening is to be attributed two
stand out most prominently. First,
the publication of census statistics
showing the appalling death rate from
tuberculosis and other diseases
among Negroes and the absence ot
any well regulated effort looking to-
ward sanitation in Negro quarters.
The interest which many people have
taken has been, no doubt, the sort of
interest one would take if a mad dog
“were loose in the neighborhood; but,
regardless of the motive of self-pres-
ervation, the “cleanup” movement
has been responsible for great good.
In the second place, the colored peo-
ple themselves have been so untiring
in their efforts to bring to pass a new-
er and better era in the land of which
they are in indispensable economic
part that their labors are now bearing
fruit. There is a larger confidence in
the future of their race, because they
themselves are responding more rap-
idly and more satisfactorily now than
ever before.
The South in the next few decades
will become one of the richest sections
of the nation and of the world. It is
therefore important not only that la-
bor and capital should work in har-
mony, but it is even more important
that there should be an interracial
sympathy and co-operation in all econ-
omic and civie endeavor. The laborer
can be kept skillful and efficient only
as his environment is wholesome and
strengthening, and not weakening and
demoralizing. It is in the spirit of this
paragraph, reflected in an address de-
livered by Maj. R. R. Moton of Hamp-
ton institute, that the leading white
people of the South are coming to re-
gard the Negro problem. ‘That a large
share of their concern in the matter
lies on the side of the economic is
shown by the interest taken in the ef-
forts of a number of state and city
health officials to improve the sanitary
conditions in which the Negroes of
their respective districts are forced to
live—Chicago Daily News.
For carrying a policeman’s club
there has been inyented a strap to be
worn over one shoulder and extend
through an opening in the coat, obvi-
ating the necessity for a belt.
German scientists have utilized pho-
tomicrographs of crystallization forms
of various chemical solutions to pro-
vide new patterns for various arts and
crafts.
If you know a good recipe for mak-
ing raspberry jam, keep it to your-
self. Do not let it be said of you that
you held a grudge against the world.
Fortunate is the woman who is too
‘busy to have that kind of a tongue.
ter was written into a colonization
scheme, headed by Alfred Charles
Sam, said io be chief of an African
tribe, to transport Negroes from the
United States to the west coast of
Africa.
The project, as described by Sam,
was to enable Negroes to go to West
Africa, Join a colony, and live in com-
parative luxury.
The Liberia, financed, it was sald,
by Negroes, left Porland, Me., in May
and, after stopping at Norfolk, Va.,
proceed3d to Galveston, Tex., where It
was reported to have taken on 40
Negroes and started on its voyage to
the west coast of Africa.
At Anamabu, on the African coast,
‘the Liberia was seized by British au-
‘thorities, as the owner was a British
subject. While there the crew was
stricken by fever and removed to a
hospital. After their recovery they
were discharged. They then went to
Liverpool, whence they were sent
home as consular passengers.
“Auntie” Mahaley Gibbs, aged nine-
ty-nine years, according to city health
statistics, is dead at Memphis, Tenn,
Ezra Meeker wants the Oregon
trail appropriately marked. Inasmuch
as Mr. Meeker appears to have more
idle time than anyone else, why not
Jet him mark it?
In giving little Willie a present you
can greatly facilitate matters by also
giving him a hammer with which to
break it up.
‘The Britinh Royal Navy reserve was
established fn 1859; the Royal Fleet
reserve in 1907.
SUPREME COURT DEFINES JUVE.
NILE COURT JURISDICTION.
Decision Holds Court Erred When
It Denied a Motion to Quash In-
formation Against Wm. Colias.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
Denver.—The jurisdiction of the Ju-
yenile Court in Denver to try adults
charged with crimes against minors,
irrespective of the nature of the crime,
was denied in a decision handed down
by the State Supreme Court. The de-
cision held that the Juvenile Court
erred when it denied a motion to
quash an information against William
Colias, who was tried in the Juventie
Court for an alleged crime against a
minor and was sentenced to the peni-
tentiary for ten to twenty years.
According to attorneys, the effect
of the decision is to strip the Juvenile
Court of jurisdiction which Judge
Lindsey has been exercising for the
last five years, under which forty-
nine adults have been sent to the
penitentiary. It is contended, how-
ever, that the decision will not affect
the status of these prisoners, as the
Jurisdiction of the juvenile judge will
be held to have been de facto, from
which the defendants will have no
appeal.
The Supreme Court, in its decision,
denied the claim of Judge Lindsey.
made in the Colias case, through the
attorney general, that she Juvenile
Court has concurrent jevisdiction in
criminal cases with the District
courts. It held, in substance, that the
Jurisdiction of Judge Lindsey's court
in criminal casea is limited to those
which have to deal with the disposi
tion, custody or control of a minor,
Calendar of Legal Hangings.
Denver—Three Colorado men are
under sentence of death. The state’s
calendar of hangings foilow:
June 24, 1915—Harry Edgar Hillen,
slayer of Thomas J. Chase, Oct. 23,
1913.
Week of Oct. 31, 191s—James C
Bulger, slayer of Lloyd F, Nicodemus,
May 6, 1914.
Week Ending Jan, 29, 1916—George
Quinn, slayer of William Hebertson,
Oct. 26, 1914.
Week of Feb, 20, 1916—Oscar Cook,
slayer of Patrolman William MePher-
son, March 9, 1912.
Fire Destroys Mill; Two Burned.
Cripple Creek.—Ed Gaylord, for-
merly of Denver and a widely-known
horseman, was painfully burned
when the explosion of a gas furnace
caused a fire which partially de-
stroyed his cyanide mill on the
southern slope of Bull hill, The own-
er, and George Price, an employé,
were in the mill smelting the Octo-
ber cleanup, preparatory to shipping
it to the United States mint in Den-
ver when the explosion occurred.
Both Mr, Gaylord and Mr, Price were
badly burned. The loss is $20,000,
partially covered by insurance.
Girt's: Confession involves Fifteen.
Boulder—As the result of a juvenile
trial in the County Court here infor-
mation has been placed in the hands
of Deputy District Attorney Fleming
that will tear the little town of Hy.
giene, near Lyons, wide open. A 13-
year-old girl, who was committed to
the State Industrial School for Girls
by Judge Ingram, made a confession
which involves at least fifteen boys
and men of Hygiene, ranging in age
from 15 to 30 years. Two of the men
whose names are mentioned by the
girl are married,
Sentence Against Cook Affirmed.
Denver.—The Supreme Court has
affirmed the death sentence against
Oscar Cook, twice convicted for the
murder of Patrolman William J, Mc-
Pherson, March 10, 1912. Cook's pe-
tition for a new trial was refused and
he will be hanged some time during
the week of Feb. 20, 1916.
Smith Injured in an Auto Accident.
Longmont.—G. H. Smith of Den-
ver is confined to his room at the
Imperial hotel here, suffering from
injuries received when a touring car
in which he and his son P, A. Smith
and W. Babcock of Longmont were
‘riding, upset six miles south of Long-
‘mont.
Tungsten Camp Give Wage Increase.
Boulder—A horizontal wage in-
crease of 20 per cent has been an-
nounced by the Primos @ad ihe Wolf-
tone Mining companies, the principal
tungsten producers in this field, The
advance creates a minimum wage of
$3.60 a day. It will date back to the
first of the month,
Accidentally Killed Pet.
Grand Junction—While cleaning a
shotgun he did not know was loaded,
Kd Faber discharged bo.b barrels of
the gun into the head of uis pet burro.
Posses Trailing Helburg Slayer.
Longmont—A large posse of de-
termined men armed wich rifles and
shotguns Sunday scoured the country
in the vicinity of Longmont for Frank
Balistere, the Italian who shot Victor
Helburg at Loutsville. '
Eating Strawberries Yet. |
Grand Junction—Frank Bain and |
family of Appleton are enjoying the
most luscious strawberries they have
had this year and they are being gath-
ered daily from their own garden,
The 1023 Twenty-first Street,
Dearfield - ibis
ee Saaa
MRS. L. C. BARNES, Proprietor Se
3 EF eg ee
Strickly home cooking Pees
Dinner and theatre parties served fe
on short notices
Prices moderate
Oysters in season
Try Our 40ct. Chicken Dinners Open from 6:00 a. m. — 12 p. m.
COLORADO
STATE NEWS
DATES YOR COMING EVENTS.
ae eee ee eee)
Denver's new $50,000 depot is now
in use.
The Montrose flour mill has been
completed.
Fort Collins is to have a Chautauqua
next June,
Fruit shipments so far this season
from Palisade total 945 ‘cars.
A factory for the making of cans is
to be established in Longmont,
A camp of the Camp Fire Girls has
been organized at Yampa by 15 young
ladies,
Denyer taxpayers may be asked to
pay a 50 per cent increase in taxes
the coming year.
The trial of Thomas F, McGuire for
the murder of Harry B. Montgomery
was begun in Denver,
The Natural Flavor Food Products
Company is planning to erect a factory
building in Longmont.
Work on the Hoover oil well on
South Boulder has been temporarily
suspended pending the arrival of cas-
ing.
Dr. Perry Jaffa, 46, 2 resident ot
‘Trinidad, and one of the most widely
known surgeons of the state, died in
Denver.
The Supreme Court affirmed the
death sentence of James C. Bulger.
He will be executed between Oct, 31
and Nov. 6.
Raymond Husted is reported to have
taken ore from the Gold Sovereign
mine at Cripple Creek worth up to
$3,500 to the ton,
More than 900 persons attended the
Sacred Heart church in Denver when
Bishop A. J. Schuler held his first
pontifical high mass.
Fort Collins authorities have re-
quested that leayes and rubbish be
burned during the day, so there will be
no danger of night fires,
When the barn belonging to E. L
Akin of Fort Collins way destroyed by
fire, a driving horse, a pet pony and
a cow were lost in the flames.
J. W. MeLemons, chemist at the
Windsor sugar factory, lost all the
fingers on his right hand when they
‘were caught in the machinery.
Rich ore has been struck in the
Mary McKinney mine at Cripple
Creek, eight inches of the vein run:
ning better than $596 to the ton,
It fs stated that the civil service
commission has sustained the charges
made by Governor Carlson against
Printing Commissioner H. W. Risley.
Caught by a fall of rock in the Jewel
mine of the Ideal Fuel Company, in
the Aguilar district, Louis Trujillo, a
coal miner, 41 years of age, was in.
stantly killed.
In Denver in 1914 licenses were is-
sued for 5,931 machines, At the close
| of business, Oct, 18, there had been
|issued in Denver for 1915 8.108
licenses or an increase uf 2,177.
A field rich in tungsten and gold ore
which may be a sensation in the min-
ing reports of the year has been dis-
covered in Boulder county, according
to Abner Graves, veteran mining engi-
neer.
Charles Luscombe, city mission
worker, who was arrested and fined
for preaching on the streets against
the orders of Mayor Cla:amer, was re-
leased from the county jail in Fort
Collins.
Julius Londoner, one of the first
Colorado pioneers, first postmaster of
California Gulch, now Leadville, and
a brother of the late Wolfe Londoner,
died in Chicago at the home of his
so, Charles Londoner,
While Enos A. Mills fs in the East
starting on his active campaign for
extending the national park system in
Colorado, an active campaign will be
prosecuted by commercial organiza-
tions in Denver in ald of the project.
‘The deficit that faces the city and
county of Denver when the 1916
budget figures are all filed passed the
$1,000,000 mark when the school board
filed a schedule of estimates necessary
to conduct the schools for 1916.
Mrs, Rosemond H. Hawley, mother
of Mrs. John H. Denison, wife of
Judge Denison of the Denver District
Court, well known in Denver as a
leader in political and literary circles,
died at her home in Milwaukee, She
was 92 years old,
Bishop A, J, Schuler of the Sacred
Heart church, who was a few years
ago consecrated to the Fl Paso dio-
cese, has been presented with a check
for $800 to defray expenses incidental
to the purchase of vestments, ete,, re-
quired in his new work.
“Labor is face to face with the big:
gest problem in the history of the
world,” said Samuel Gompers, presi
‘dent of the American Federation of
5 Points Cafe
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT.
Chop Suey, Noodles and All Kinds of Chinese
Japanese and American Dishes
SHORT ORDERS AT ALL HOURS
2712 WELTON STREET PHONE MAIN 4730
W. C. CAMPTON, Pres. J. M. JOHNS, Treas. U, P. JACKSON, Sec.
RAILROAD PORTERS’ CLUB
LUNCH ROOM IN CONNECTION
°
BILLIARDS AND 4 FREE CHECK
POOL Hy ROOM
1728/2 Wazee St. Only one block from Union Depot.
J. B. MINTER. Barber.
PHONE MAIN 8416. DENVER, COLORADO.
A eo
Orn, (Me Grom Yes Hat!
SF S) HAVE A PLENTIFUL SUPPLYOF
Sgn a Use Ri Reale de BAIR
ee a REY) Tonic and yemet agua aah ies ena ey
et thls Geatustt olil grow esbmcceeois)
pig eS ee BY stop. falling ond splitting nal, radicate. den’
iis aS Se z i r, eradicate dan-
een Ea, Ha Sag 9 poe oe ee Goa dheseuen
Gey a i Ry ie pene farther inducement is nested Sealy
Ree HEE 6A eclentitioallyireatedl elects taseenna’and p
. ), Wye vn ee Soe eee a
Lee of scalp disease. Six week treatment ie
me trea tant’ giv 50.
E. WILLIAMS, 191 We
. 0 Pennsylvania, Denver.
Phone Champa 2211
Fish & Oyster Co.
Denver's Only Exclusive Fish and Oyster House
Fresh Fish, Oysters, Salt, Smoked, Dried and Canned Fish
Poultry and Game of All Kinds
1506 Arapahoe Street
Reliable Cycle and Motor Co.
Expert Repairing, Enameling, Vulcanizing
and Brazing. New Tires $1.75 and Up.
Wheels Built to Order by Skilled Mechanics.
Work Called For and Delivered. *.*
1021 21st St. Phone Champa 752
O. H. SHIBLEY, Pres. J.0. HAMPSON, Vice Pree
PAUL J. SHIRLEY, Seo. and Treas.
Courteous Treatmet. Right Prices
Leaders in Prescription
Btore No. 1. Store No. 2
2701 WELTON ST. 26TH AND WELTON
Main 895 875 Main 4955 4956
spent at home reacts in its benefits
A Dollar with unceasing general profit.
Sent out of iow it’s life is ended.
Kept with the home merchants it is a messenger of continuous
benefit. Business men should awake to the importance of keeping
this dollar at home and make a bid for it hy in sertisines
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
CLASSIC SHALL BE FREE
GREAT COUNTRY PARTY
JOS. D. D. RIVERS.....Proprietor
1824 Curtis Street, Room 25.
Phone Main 7417.
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.
All communications of a personating nature that are not complimentary will be withheld from the columns of this paper.
THE FARMERS HAVE IT.
It is being proven more and more (to use a phraseology) that the "farmers have it on us." What with city lots, cottages, apartment houses being exchanged for farms and ranches among the well-to-do, and the exodus of our people to settle on government lands, taking up claims, etc., it surely appears as if a wave of prosperity is on its way to Colorado. A particular feature that has our endorsement is in the number of young people who have resolved to get away from the lure of city life and start on the road of independence, viewing the same with the far-seeing eye of their foreparents. Legacies are not coming the way of the colored American as to encourage him in luxury and ease, therefore he is beginning out here to learn the lesson of the early provision for himself, if he is to be a legatee.
We have received information and very favorable reports from those who have made sacrifices to launch in this direction, and we assure them that every encouragement we can offer will be unhesitatingly done. Some have gone as pioneers and adventurers; others will follow, and so keep the good work in front of them until pauperism and poverty will no longer be to our credit, but fortunes coming to stay with us for all time, never to leave us behind in the race which wins recognition from man to man. Our hats off to the farmers.
AMERICA FIRST.
As we wend our way through the streets of our city, as we peruse the columns of our daily and weekly newspapers, we come in contact with indications that ought to indelibly stamp on our hearts the words "America First" with all the truism they contain. This we hold should be the motto of every American who is beginning to realize that the country which was held up so near and dear to the minds of her adopted sons and daughters when normal conditions transpired in the world is confronted with an internal menace which is incomparable, especially now that we are at peace with the world and up to the present have acted within reasonable bounds to remain neutral in this unfortunate struggle engaged in by our sister nations.
From the numerous incidents of wanton destruction of property, loss of life, etc., in our country from sympathizers with some of the belligerents in Europe, an alarming feature is spreading over our nation as to the ways and means necessary to combat with this evil which if not immediately suppressed will surely be a blot on us for generations to come. Traitors are the worst enemies to any cause, and as the Negro element has yet to learn this quality of treachery which is showing itself daily among other Americans who have an original and an adopted home, in spite of the lawlessness that he is subjected to by a class which represents the worst of any country, would it not be wisdom to take him into confidence as he has demonstrated in the past and even now, in serving his country on the Mexican border, that he is worthy of more recognition than in his fellow American who not only uses the country conveniently, but in a moment of imaginary wrong lends his efforts to disrupt and destroy the very foundations of our republic by trying to plunge us into internal or external strife. We agree with Edward B. Clark of Washington, who in his recent article, states very clearly, "Preparedness, as it is put here by its proponents, means getting ready to shoot the man who goes at you from the front, and at the same time to take care that somebody else does not shoot you from the back." He goes on to say, "Preparedness folk here are none too well satisfied with the actions of the administration, and they see in the present apparent official apathy with which plots against our peace and our property are regarded a fear based on politics. Preparedness is going to be an issue in the next presidential campaign, and if preparedness against "un-Americans" at home be added there will be a better chance of standing well with the people. It is a case of patriotism versus politics. The party that chooses patriotism is likely to get the best of it." Such an expression from a real American as Mr. Clark can find lodgment only in the hearts of men of his type who feel that patriotism is the virtue and essence of inhabitants true to a country's cause, and the Colorado statesman can emphatically assert that in its continuous endeavors to call the attention of the officials to the wisdom of sharing their confidence with the nearly 12,000,000 of dark-skinned people in this country, that no phase of treachery has ever been discovered among us from the years of our residence here, but rather a helping hand in the development and prosperity of the United States, nobly defending her against all comers, our priceless pearl being—America First. "To thyself first be true."
Future of America in Hands of Mothers
By Madison C. Peters, New York
There never was a truer saying: "Like mother like son." Sir Walter Scott's mother was a superior woman—a lover of poetry and painting.
Byron's worst enemy was his mother—proud and ill-tempered. She reviled him as "a lame beast." He replied, "I was born so, mother."
Ruskin acknowledged without stint the debt he owed to his mother's love and care of him in a system of education, though puritanically stern, founded on high principles of wisdom and righteousness.
Napoleon's mother not only possessed a superior mind and deep piety, she was a heroine who could look in the face of physical danger without winking.
The mothers of Patrick Henry, Daniel Webster and Henry Clay were distinguished for their conversational powers. The mother of Wesley was distinguished for her intellectual powers and executive ability, so that she has been called "the mother of Methodism."
The debt which the United States owes to the mothers of its good citizens cannot be expressed either in words or in figures. It is a debt on which the republic can only pay the interest—interest that exists in the manifestation of an ever-increasing reverence for American motherhood; for with all its magnificent resources, and with its $200,000,000,000 of wealth it is too poor to make even a feeble attempt to pay the principal
Mothers have trained our statesmen. Washington was only eleven years old when his father died, leaving his mother, Mary Washington, with five children to educate and direct. The little manual in which she wrote all her maxims of religion and morality was preserved by Washington as one of his most valued treasures, of which he says: "Was consulted by me many times in after life." A French general, on retreating from the presence of Mary Washington, remarked: "It is not surprising that America should produce great men, since she can boast of such mothers."
How Lincoln reverenced his mother is told by all his biographers. He imputed his best qualities to inheritance from Nancy Hanks.
General Grant's mother went into a room at a certain hour of each day during the war to pray for her Ulysses.
The future of America is in the hands of the mothers. In her office the mother holds the key of the soul; she it is who stamps the coin of character and it is to her America is indebted for her great men.
Malay Language Popular in East Indies
By Commander H. G. Steyn of Holland
One might think that Spanish or Dutch would be the trade language of the East Indies, but the fact is that the Malayan language is the tongue in general use all through the East Indies. I spent about eight years in the Orient, traveling in all parts of the East Indies, and in nearly all the islands the language used was the Malayan. Even in New Zealand and Australia the Malayan language is used to a large extent among tradesmen of different nations.
The island of Java is the most important in the East Indies. It has a population of nearly forty million people, though it is the fourth in size of that group. Borneo is the largest, Sumatra next, and Celebes third. The richness of the soil and the variety of the industries make Java the most important. Batavia, the seaport and capital of Java, has about twenty-three thousand Europeans in its population. It is a pleasant place to live, though the climate is always warm.
There are many things to interest one besides the study of the life and habits of the people. Pearl fishing off the island of New Guinea is a wonderfully interesting sport. New Guinea, until the European war began, was divided among the Dutch, Germans and English, but the British have taken the upper half of the eastern part, which belonged to the Germans.
Latest Styles for Men's Wearing Apparel By Ilyby T. Angell, Birmingham, Ala.
Everyone knows that the styles for women's wearing apparel are originated in Paris. Nearly every garment a woman wears is a Paris creation or a copy of the Parisian style.
In the case with men it is different. The styles of all the clothes of the menfolk in vogue here are originated in this country. When it comes to men's clothes the foreign countries cannot show us anything.
Of late years the styles as originally designed by Americans have become popular in nearly all of the foreign countries among the best dressed men, and I expect to see the men of nearly all nations copying our styles in the near future. This winter the clothes of the gentlemen will be cut pretty much on the same order as they were last season. Tight coat, trousers and vest will be in vogue again. No padding and very little stiff lining. This style has met with favor all over the country, and the men have become accustomed to the snug-fitting, padless, lightweight suits.
Some tailors are of the opinion that there will be a shortage of woolen fabrics on account of our not being able to obtain the necessary dyes from Germany. I believe, however, that there is a sufficient lot to supply the demand for the coming winter.
Momentous Hours in Life of Race By Rev. William E. Donaldson, Chicago
The times or hours especially designated were: The hour when "God breathed into man's nostrils the breath of life and man became a living soul," and man was created; the hour when, under the influence of the tempter, our representatives doubted the accuracy or justice of the divine command not to eat of the fruit of the tree in the midst of the garden. Doubt led to their disobedience; that disobedience was sin, and sin brought punishment and a definite change of man's position on the earth.
The hour when joy came into the world through the announcement of the birth of Jesus Christ. The hour when Jesus proclaimed his mission to the world and illustrated that fact by bestowing rich blessings on mankind.
The hour of suffering in Gethsemane, the hour of the death on the cross, the hour when he was placed in the tomb, the hour when he came forth from the tomb, when he revealed himself to his disciples, and the hour of his ascension.
Around these hours are gathered the events that have meant more for us than we have recognized. May that life be studied more carefully by all men.
Bless the children, it is a delight to hear them sing, even when they are out of tune.
Future of America in Hands of Mothers By Madison C. Peters, New York
Malay LanguagePopular in East Indies By Commander H. G. Steyn of Holland
Latest Styles for Men's Wearing Apparel By Irby T. Angell, Birmingham, Ala.
Momentous Hours in Life of Race By Rev. William E. Donaldson, Chicago
27 Varieties PIANOS All Prices $5 Down and per Month CASSELL BROS. SIXTEENTH STREET AT BROADWAY
HAVE YOUR CLOTHES CLEANED, PRESSED, REPAIRED, ALTERED AND DYED AT THE
Mutual Tailors and Cleaners
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CALL MAIN 8519
EXTRA SPECIAL Egg beater and cream whip combined, an indispensable article for the kitchen.
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CARSONS
732-36 FIFTEENTH STREET (AT STOUT)
Chattanooga, Tenn, Oct. 24.—Rob Reed, Colored, was fined $10 and costs last Saturday by Judge Fleming and bound over to the grand jury on charge of carrying a pistol. Reed had pulled the gun out of his pocket and was showing it to a cabman in his own yard when arrested by Capt. Harris, who was passing. On account of the man's good reputation and the fact that he was on his own premises when carrying the pistol, the judge made the fine smaller than usual in "pistol toting" cases.
ATLAS DRUG CO., 26TH AND WELTON AND 2701 WELTON ST.
The Atlas Drug Co. now handles a full line of Madame C. J. Walker's toilet requisites.
FIRE CAPTAIN'S STATEMENT
CAPT
Akron, O.—Ethel Black, a young Colored girl of Akron, entered high school last month at the age of 12 years. She was the youngest and only colored pupil in her class of 38 members. Her very conscientious work for the past year was especially lauded by the faculty, owing to the fact that, in spite of a long absence from school on account of illness, her general average was 94 per cent. She was also chosen as class soloist.
CAPT. F. M. HITE
Nashville Fire Department
ROMAN CHEMICAL CO., Nashville, Tenn. :
Dear Sirs: Having taken your medicine with such kind of care, I am now up on me. Several years ago my physicians treated me indigestion and liver trouble, and was later told by them that I was ill. I was given a course of medicines, with no results. Two weeks ago my condition was such that I was forced to allow the physicians to take my medicine. I was told that an operation would be the only relief for me, that I would be in a coma and needed to go to an infirmary, but a friend heard of my intentions and advised me not to go to the hospital. I thought the use of your Remedy, I took a bottle which swiped the contents of my bottle and now up and able to perform my duties. Symptoms on rising in the morning, and gas on my stomach, sluggish on rising in the morning, and gas on my stomach,
Poisonous Muchrooms.
Of the 159 kinds of mushroom fungi listed by the department of agriculture 72 are described as poisonous.
NEGRO YEAR BOOK
Should be in the home of every Negro. It contains the achievements, the industries and activities of the race. Every phase of the economic life of the Negro is discussed. It is a compendium of useful knowledge, a ready reference book of 450 pages. Order one today. Copies for sale at the Statesman office, 1824 Curtis street. Room 25.
I write this hoping it may reach some person who is suffering from an attack and liver trouble. An employed by the Nashville b.c. Department, and will always recommend your medicine.
Bower's Preparation $1.00)
Mailing Charges Prepaid. Address, with Price
ROMAN CHEMICAL CO.
South Station Nashville, Tenn.
J. H. DONIPHAN, General Agent. 1721 Marion St.
LEARN THE RETAIL CUTS OF BEEF
HIND QUARTER
ROUND
Rump
1 Rump
Round: rump & shank off.
2 Round steak, first cut.
3-13 Round steaks.
14 Round steak, last cut.
15 Knuckle soup bone.
16 Pot roast.
Hind shank.
17, 18 Soup bones.
19 Hock soup bone.
LOIN
1 Buff-and sirloin steak.
2 Wedge-bone sirloin steak.
3, 4 Round-bone sirloin steak.
5, 6 Double-bone sirloin steak.
7 Hip-bone sirloin steak.
8 Hip-bone porterhouse steak.
9-15 Regular porterhouse steak.
16-18 Club steaks.
FLANK
1 Flank steak.
2 Stew.
FORE QUARTER
RIB
1 11th & 12th Rib roast.
2 9th & 10th Rib roast.
3 7th & 8th Rib roast.
4 6th Rib roast.
CHUCK
1 5th Rib roast.
2-9 Chuck steaks.
10-13 Pot roasts.
14 Clod.
15 Neck.
PLATE
1 Brisket.
2 Navel.
3, 4 Rib ends.
FORE SHANK
1 Stew.
2 Knuckle soup bone.
3-6 Soup bones.
Retail Cuts of Beef.
LARGE majority of meat consumers have no knowledge what-ever of the food value of meat from different parts of the carcass, but make their selections of meat solely according to habit or fancy. In fact, little accurate data along this line has hitherto been available to those who wished to buy meats on a rational basis. As a result, a few well-known cuts are generally in demand, and the remainder of the carcass is a "drug on the market." To such an extreme has this condition developed that a portion of the carcass (loin and ribs), forming only about one-fourth of its weight, represents nearly one-half of its retail cost. In view of the large place which meat occupies in the American diet, amounting to nearly one-third of the average expenditure for all food, the importance of an intelligent understanding of the subject on the part of the consumer is readily apparent.
Not only are the foregoing statements true of meat producers and consumers essential to the entire beef-cattle industry, on the one hand, and the economic welfare of the beef-eating public on the other, that a more intelligent understanding of the different cuts of meat be acquired by consumers generally. An increased demand for those portions of the carcass which are now difficult for the butcher to dispose of would contribute largely toward a more stable condition of the trade and thus enable the producer to operate with greater confidence and economy. At the same time it would effect a tremendous saving to the consumer himself by more nearly equalizing the market values of the various cuts and by enabling the retailer to operate with a smaller margin of profit, thereby helping to solve the high cost of living, in so far as meat is concerned.
Loin steaks average 59 per cent lean, 32 per cent visible fat, and 9 per cent bone. Sirloin steaks in general contain a greater proportion of lean and smaller proportion of fat than porterhouse and club steaks. Rib roasts contain, on the average, 55 per cent lean, 30 per cent visible fat, and 15 per cent bone. The various cuts made from the
LOIN
CHUMP
END
LOIN
BEST
END
SADD
LEG
BREAS
SHANK
TROTTERS
Retail Cuts
LOIN
CRUMP
END
LOIN
BEST
END
SADDLE
NECK
SCRAG END
HEAD
SHOULDER
LEG
BREAST
SHANK
TROTTERS
CHANK
TROTTERS
Retail Cuts of Mutton.
round average 65 per cent lean, 18
per cent fat, and 17 per cent bone.
Round steak contains 74 to 84 per
cent lean, the rump roast 49 per cent,
round pot oast 85 per cent, and soup
bones 8 to 66 per cent.
A fairly accurate sun dial has been invented that can be held in the hand and adjusted to tell the time in any latitude. Rubber tubing can be kept from deteriorating when not in use by storing it in water to which a little salt has been added. Cannon loaded with sand have been found effective in breaking up swarms of locusts that frequently appear in Costa Rica.
FROM ALL PARTS
69 per cent lean, 19 per cent fat, and 11 per cent bone. The shoulder clod contains 80 per cent lean and only 5 per cent bone.
The various plate cuts—brisket, navel and rib ends average 51 per cent lean, 41 per cent fat, and 8 per cent bone.
From the proportions of lean, fat and bone of different cuts, their relative economy at retail prices may be determined. The net cost of lean meat is an approximate index of the relative economy of steaks and roasts, since they are purchased and used for
HEAD
NECK
CHUCK
MIDDLE RIB
CLOD
BRISKET
SHIN
HEAD
NECK
CHUCK
MIDDLE RIB
PRIME RIB
SIRLOIN
RUMP
MITCHBONE
CLOD
BRISKET
THIN FLANK
FLANK
BUTTOCK
LEG
SHIN
the lean they contain; but in comparing boiling, stewing and similar meats the cost of gross meat, or fat and lean combined, should be more largely considered, because the fat is more completely utilized, as in the case of meat loaf, hash, hamburger, and corned beef.
One of the most important points to learn is the way the meat is cut up and how the different cuts should be cooked. In a side of beef we have first the neck and shoulder clod, the latter a good, solid cut of meat particularly good for beef a la mode; then come the five chuck ribs and the meat from the under side of the animal, the flank, plate, navel and brisket, the latter used mainly for corning; next to the chuck come the
NECK
SCRAG END
HEAD
SHOULDER
HANK
TROTTERS
prime ribs for roasting; then the striolin for steaks and roasts; the rump for steaks, roasts and stews; the round for stews and hamburg steak; and the shin for soup. Under the ribs lies the filet, a tender strip of meat which has never been exercised
It used to be compulsory in England that the dead should be buried in woolen shrouds. This law was introduced in order to encourage the manufacture of woolen cloth within the kingdom.
Princess Shakovskaya is the only woman aviator in the great war. She is said to be in active service at the front in East Prussia. At first her application was rejected because of her sex, but she demonstrated that she could manage a flying machine as well as a man and was finally accepted.
---
Another Diagram Showing Cuts of Beef.
in the living animals to make it tough; but this is lacking in the flavor to be found in the toucher outs
Now, in the matter of cutting beef, many butchers differ as to method, and it will repay one to make a survey of butcher shops in her own and neighboring localities. Having visited them all, noticed the degree of cleanliness with which the meat is handled and made a comparison of cuts and prices, as well as quality, the housekeeper can then make her choice of shops and patronize the one at which she gets the best value for her money. A butcher is ordinarily willing and glad to instruct his customers in the different cuts of meat, to suggest economies and methods of cooking best adapted to each cut. He usually possesses a good deal of knowledge concerning cooking and seasoning, and will be glad to impart this knowledge to any customer who seems to want it. For instance, one butcher will suggest what he calls a "blade roast" in place of a prime rib roast, a cut which has a blade of gristle between the meat and the outside fat. This he will trim out, bone and roll the meat, giving a solid roast, without waste, and the balance of the meat around the ends of the bones can be utilized for stewing or casserole cooking. He will recommend: fancy rolled brisket for corning instead of the more expensive cut from the rump, which, while certainly tender and well flavored, has a large amount of waste. He will tell you, when you order hamburg steak, to add a half cupful of breadcrumbs and two or three tablespoonfuls of water to your hamburg steak to make it lighter and improve the flavor. All these hints have been gleaned from women who were interested in the subject of marketing and were not afraid to let the butcher know it.
Having decided upon the shop, make it a point to learn all the cuts of meat the butcher has, as butchers differ, as before suggested, in the way they cut the meat. There is a wide divergence in the way the rump of beef is cut, for instance, and the way in which lamb and veal are cut up is also a matter of the butcher's opinion. To illustrate, one butcher in a small town cut lamb chops from the forequarter, the first being frenched, and those near the shoulder, which he called rack chops, being sold at a less price, for stewing or
RIME
RIB
SIRLOIN
RUMP
MITCHBONE
FLANK
BUTTOCK
THIN FLANK
LEG
braising. Not a block away was a butcher who sold the entire rack, from the first chop up to the shoulder, as French chops, at 35 cents per pound, and recognized no difference in the quality of the meat. There is also another point to consider, and that is the way the meat is trimmed, some butchers trimming closely before weighing, in which case the meat may be well worth a cent or two a pound more, and others weighing first and trimming afterward.
Marketing should be done in person. To this rule there is no exception. It is for the purchaser herself to see whether the chops be large or small, the slice of ham of the proper cut and thickness and what the proportion of waste in the piece of meat she is purchasing. It is too much to expect of a busy marketman, who has hundreds of customers, to put himself in the place of such a customer and give her exactly what she would have selected herself. The only sure way of getting exactly what is best for each particular family is for the housekeeper herself to inspect and select the meat and see it cut off.
As to the purchasing of pieces of meat which will answer for more than one dinner, such as roasts, it should be found from experience just how many pounds are needed for the two or three meals to be supplied, and that much always purchased. It is sometimes economy to buy a large cut of meat. A small roast costing 60 or 75 cents might be enough for only one dinner, where a larger one, costing $1, would furnish meat for two dinners at an average cost of 50 cents, a saving worth while. it has been found better economy by experienced cooks and caterers to plan the left-overs in this way than to buy whatever the marketman offers, and then utilize any left-overs there may be. The same rule applies to chicken or any other sort of meat.
Idaho Has a Seaport.
The completion of the Cellio canal, on the Oregon side of the Columbia river adds Idaho to the list of states having a seaport. It is now possible for stern-wheel river steamers to pass from the Pacific ocean to Lewiston, at the head of navigation on the Snake river, a distance of 480 miles.
Inspiration is the soul of achievement, the primal motive of creation, the beginning of masterpiece. Selected.
Inspiration
SUFFRAGE LOSES IN THREE STATES
McCALL WINS IN MASSACHUSETTS.—REPUBLICANS GAIN CONGRESSMAN IN N.Y.
WETS WIN AGAIN IN OHIO
PROGRESSIVE CANDIDATE IN MASSACHUSETTS RUNS BEHIND PROHIBITIONIST.
Western Newspaper Union News Service
ELECTION RESULTS.
NEW YORK—Amendment defeated.
MASSACHUSETTS — Amendment defeated; total vote 162,351 for, and 294,954 against measure.
PENNSYLVANIA — Amendment defeated by 150,000.
Governors.
KENTUCKY—Partial returns, 92 out of 119 counties: A. O. Stanley, Dem., 113,075; E. P. Morrow, Rep., 99,749.
MASSACHUSETTS — Samuel W.
McCall, Rep. elected; total vote, McCall
235,305. Walsh 228,942.
MARYLAND—E. C. H. Harrington,
elected over O. E. Weller by 5,000 to 7,000 majority.
MISSISSIPPI—Theodore G. Bilbo,
Dem. elected, with little opposition.
VIRGINIA—"Drys" will control next Virginia Assembly.
Congressmen.
NEW YORK—Three Republicans elected.
PENNSYLVANIA—One Republican elected.
Municipal Ownership
DETROIT—130 precincts: 18,570 votes for purchase of street car lines, 19,967 against; 60% vote needed to carry measure
Pueblo, Colo.—Single tax was knocked out in Tuesday's election by a margin of more than 200 votes, according to unofficial totals from all thirty-five precincts of the city.
Fort Morgan, Colo.—G. M. Patterson, present mayor, was re-elected.
Cheyenne, Wyo.—R. N. Lafontaine was re-elected mayor over Peter S. Cook by 185 majority, receiving 1,249 votes to Cook's 1,064. Enos Laughlin and John A. Martin were elected commissioners.
Republicans made gains in four states in the elections held Tuesday. They added a governor in Massachusetts, made general gains in New Jersey and Kentucky and won an additional congressman in New York. Maryland returns indicated that the Democrats had gained a governor.
The voters of the Empire State gave suffrage emphatic denial in the voting A majority of well over 200,000 New Yorkers voted against the proposed amendment to the state constitution to this end. At the same time they defeated even more unecucivally the proposal to adopt a new state constitution. The vote against this measure was estimated to be at least 250,000. Republicans retained their majority in the assembly, naming 98 of the 150 members. They also won all the congressional elections, made necessary by deaths in three districts—the Twenty-sixth, Thirty-first and Thirty-sixth.
Pennsylvania administered another severe defeat in the aspirations of women to exercise suffrage. The majority against this measure was estimated at 150,000. The Republicans elected a mayor of Philadelphia—Thomas B. Smith.
The voters of Massachusetts denied women the right to vote by a majority of 132,602. Samuel W. McCall (Republican) defeated Gov. David L Walsh (Democrat) in the race for the governorship. Mr. Walsh was seeking re-election for a third term. It was apparent also that the Republicans had elected the whole of the state ticket below governor. The Republicans, furthermore, gained twelve seats in the Legislature. The Progressive vote in the state was almost negligible, but the Prohibition candidate for governor got a comparatively heavy vote.
Democrats Elect Maryland Governor.
In Maryland, another state electing a governor, incomplete returns indicated a Democratic victory. E. C. Harrington was leading the Republican nominee, O. E. Weller, by a margin which indicated a final majority of from 5,000 to 7,000. The county vote was very late, Albert C. Ritchie (Democrat) for attorney general was far ahead of the ticket in Baltimore and the Legislature doubtless will be Democratic. Prohibition measures were voted upon in Ohio and Virginia.
The returns from the first state showed the defeat of the measure by a majority of about 40,000, while Virginia, on the other hand, elected a state Legislature pledged to enact measures in 1916 prohibiting the sale of intoxicants.
In New Jersey the next House of the Assembly will have thirty-seven Republicans and twenty three Democratic members. The Republicans gained two state senators in Tuesday's contest and the next State Senate will be: Republicans, 13; Democrats, 8
The Curtis Park Floral Company
FLORAL DESIGNS PUT UP WHILE YOU WAIT
CHOICE PLANTS AND CUT FLOWERS CONSTANTLY ON HAND
GREENHOUSES: Thirty-Fourth and Curtis Streets
TELEPHONE, MAIN 1511 DENVER, COLO
The Champa Pharmacy
Twentieth and Champa,
Is the place to get your
DRUGS, CHEMICALS AND PATENT MEDICINES
WE SERVE DRINKS.
Prescriptions Our Specialty.
Phone us and we will deliver the goods to all parts of the city.
JAMES E. THRALL, PROPR.
PHONE MAIN 2425.
1004 Nineteenth Street, Corner of Curtis
FINE WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS COORS' CELEBRATED BEER ON TAP
When You The Heads, Fe Neckbones or other part of squeal, go to
When You Want
When You Want
The Heads, Feet, Tails, Snouts, Neckbones or Chiterlings, or any other part of the hog except the squeal, go to
East's Market
The
WARD AUCTION
COMPANY
Sales Daily at 2 p.m. Office Furniture a Specialty.
PRIVATE SALES AT ALL TIMES
HAVE MOVED TO—
1723-39 GLENARM ST.
PHONE MAIN 1675.
THE BEST ICE CREAM AND CANDIES AT
O.P. BAUR & CO.
CATERERS AND
CONFECTIONERS
Phone: 168.
1512 Curtis Street, Denver, Colo.
DO IT NOW Subscribe for THIS PAPER
---
DENVER
Want Feet, Tails, Snouts, Chiterlings, or any the hog except the
2300-6 Larimer Street Phone Main 1461
J. H. Biggins
GENERAL FURNITURE REPAIRING
AND UPHOLSTERING.
WORK GUARANTEED.
1417 East 24th Avenue, Denver, Colo.
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.
COLORADO
The HOME BEAUTIFUL Flowers and Shrubbery Their Care and Cultivation
THE FLOWER MARKET
A Fine Display of Asters.
FUN AND MONEY IN ASTERS
Asters should be started in the house. Two hundred seedlings can be started in one cigar box, which is a most convenient shape and size for standing on the window sill.
Fill boxes to within one-half inch of the top with a loose loam. It is always well in sowing seeds in boxes to sift the top layer. Make four trenches the length of the box. Place seeds in trenches and cover.
Before watering cover with a cloth. A strip torn from a coarse linen towel is good. Water thoroughly. The cloth will prevent the water from washing out the seeds the first time you dampen them and subsequently will prevent rapid evaporation.
Don't neglect the potted plants; water well and shade from the afternoon sun.
When shade is recommended, darkness or dense shade are not meant. All plants require a good light.
Many plants will bear strong skylight that would be badly damaged if set in strong sunshine.
For potted plants that must have sunshine, set the pots in a jardiniere.
THE TREE
Don't Forget the Potted Plants—Water Well and Shade From Afternoon Sun.
or set in a box with a packing of moss around them to encourage moisture.
Root geranium slips now, if you want winter bloomers. Keep growing thrifly and pinch off all buds.
Do not make the mistake of rooting for winter bloomers plants that bloom only in summer. Some geraniums bloom more freely than others.
Plants that are not growing need no fertilizer.
Large pots for foliage. Small pots for flowers. Plenty of sunshine for geraniums.
If soil in the bulb pot in the cellar seems dry, moisten moderately, but don't keep wet or the bulb will rot.
Work every day to keep the plants comfortable. They are like children. Don't let the insects get at them if you love them.
By LIMA B. ROSE
HOUSE PLANTS
If possible, set the box where it will have bottom heat for three or four days, and be sure to keep moist, when, if your seeds were fresh, you will find the rows all cracked open and the green seed leaves peeking out. Remove cover and take away from heat immediately. Place in a strong light.
These directions you will find applicable to all small seeds, vegetable as well as flower. Never forget to water, however, and keep covered with cloth until removed to the window. Do not let them grow long stems. Spindling seedlings are a calamity.
When the plants have their fourth leaf, transplant to flat an inch apart each way. These transplantings cause a wonderful root development, which tells later in the quality of bloom.
Leave fuchsias in the cellar until March.
Be ready for the cold days. They are at hand.
Keep window garden clean. Remove dead leaves, scrub pots, shower foliage. Keep window glass clean.
MAKING MOST OF THE PHLOX
By L. M. BENNINGTON
Nearly everyone can grow phlox and have what is regarded as great success, yet few, even among professional gardeners know how to coax the greatest growth and beauty out of this plant.
Hardy phlox can be transplanted at any time, preferably in the fall or early spring, by dividing old clumps, or they can be grown from seeds planted very shallow as soon as they are ripe. When allowed to become dry they are more or less disappointing in germination, so that we may say that division is the best method. If string divisions are taken early in April and planted about 15 or 18 inches apart and the tops are pinched back when about 4 inches high to make them spread and not more than two or three growths are allowed, they will give a very large head of bloom with a maximum of florets. Give clean culture and an occasional dressing of manure or manure water.
By this method of culture the phlox becomes an exceptional flower when compared with the big clumps that most people allow to grow. To get best results they should be planted new each fall or spring and give plenty of water while in bloom. When big masses of plants are desired, about one-third of the stems should be pinched back. This will produce a much longer season of blooming.
SOME TIMELY HINTS
In grafting, the greatest care should be observed that scions are not taken from trees infested with San Jose scale or that are in any way diseased.
Do not set out evergreens in the fall. Have them delivered as early in the spring as possible and make the ground ready now.
In order to obtain the largest blooms on your chrysanthemum plants, pick off all but the large central bud and do it as soon as the buds begin to show.
After the drain tile has been put in, crushed rock, gravel or coal cinders will keep the ground in good condition.
Do not be in a hurry to mulch the strawberry beds. Wait until a good stiff freeze comes along.
After the bees have been safely housed in a dry cellar, with the bottoms of the hives resting on pieces about two inches thick, do not disturb them until spring.
GET RID OF THEM
House plants that are buggy and shaggy and refuse to improve should be thrown out. They are an eyesore. Better demolish the window garden than to rack nature with the victims of ignorance or neglect
EXPANDING PROSPERITY
MANY INDICATIONS THROUGH
OUT STATE OF COLORADO.
Denver Has Net Gain of Thirty-two Families in Month and Other Cities Have Grown.
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
Denver—There are many indications of expanding prosperity in Denver and the state.
Transfer companies moving families into Denver report that 157 families came to Denver last month, and 125 moved out, making a net gain for the month of thirty-two families.
Estimates of population just completed by the Bureau of Census in Washington show Denver to have a population of 253,161, an increase of 39,780 since the census of 1910. Other cities in the state of more than 8,000 that show material increases are Boulder, Colorado Springs, Fort Collins, Greeley, Pueblo and Trinidad.
Increased prosperity in the mining regions is shown in the fact that the Colorado Power Company is furnishing 20 per cent more current in the mining regions than ever before. The unusually sunny weather and the deferred frost has doubled the anticipated yield of potatoes in the Greeley district, and has matured the corn crop and largely increased other crops, including the content of the sugar beet over the expectation thirty days ago. Railroad prosperity is indicated in the fact that every available engine on the Trinidad division of the Colorado & Southern is in use. Reports from Salida on the third division of the Denver & Rio Grande show that freight of all kinds is increasing and that all crews are working. Heavy stock shipments are being made from practically every stock raising center in the state.
The number of telephones now in use in Denver has increased from 37,100 to 41,600 since Jan. 1, 1914, another gratifying indication of prosperity. Telephone collections are better than at any time since 1912.
Many Accidents Under New Law.
Denver. — Charles W. O'Donnell, chief of the claim department of the State Industrial Commission, reported that since the beginning of the enforcement of the workmen's compensation insurance law there had been 3,275 accidents in industrial concerns, carrying workmen's insurance in stock companies or at their own risk and that there had been 162 accidents in concerns protected by the state insurance fund. The total number of claims upon which compensation will be paid is estimated at 324. There were twenty-five deaths. Adjustments have been closed on 1,839 accidents. Compensation has been paid in eighteen cases.
J. S. McGinnis Quits State Board.
Denver.—J. Stanley McGinnis, secretary of the State Board of Immigration, tendered his resignation, to take immediate effect. Following the appointment of H. U. Wallace of Boulder as the third member of the board, the members met and organized, planning the work which they will carry on during the year. Of the $15,000 appropriated for the board, $9,000 was set aside to pay off back claims against the bureau which have been pending in some instances for nearly a year. The remaining $6,000 will be used in a constructive campaign to encourage immigration.
Medical Bill Case Record Presented.
Denver:—That the Supreme Court will be called upon to determine whether the medical practice act passed by the last Legislature is subject to the referendum is indicated by the filing of a record of the case as heard before Judge Butler in the Denver District Court. Judge Butler overruled Secretary of State Ramer, who had refused to accept the referendum petition on the bill, and decided that the measure should be referred.
WILL Wipe Out Colorado's Debt.
Denver.—The state of Colorado will be able to pay all its debts and at the end of the present administration's term, a year from January, have $125,000 left, according to Harry E. Mulnix, state auditor, following a meeting of the state auditing board. The administration, he said, would pay all new bills contracted and appropriation bills and practically $97,000 worth of former administrations.
State Will Sue Cheesman Heirs.
Denver.—A claim for $10,524.06 will be filed against the estate of the late Walter S. Cheesman of Denver by State Inheritance Tax Appraiser Leslie Hubbard, who charges that this amount was due the state as interest, but never paid, when a settlement of the inheritance tax against the estate was effected June 3, 1912, after five years of litigation.
Colorado Made Goods for Carlson
Denver.—"You fellows give me a list of goods made in Colorado and I will tack that list up in the kitchen and whenever we want anything, Mrs. Carlson and I will buy Colorado made goods." Governor Carlson ended an address before the Colorado Manufacturers' Association in the above language and it was fully five minutes before the cheering ceased. The governor was discussing the results that will come from all the people in Colorado buying Colorado-made goods.
Keep your heart open to the pleasures of generosity. Economy and prudence will put it in the power of the generous to give.
The measurements of heaven and earth are so very different that the things which seem to us only vexious interruptions of our day's work, may be the greatest tasks given to our bands for the day.
GOOD EATING.
We may tire of various dishes, but breads are the standard which will always have a wet come; here is a new one:
Honey Bread.—Dissolve one yeast cake in one cup of scalded and cooled milk, then add one
Honey Bread.—Dissolve one yeast cake in one cup of scaled and cooled milk, then add one half a cupful of butter, a tablespoonful of sugar, a teaspoonful of salt, one beaten egg and three cupfuls of flour; beat three minutes; add more flour to knead; let stand to rise. Knead again, roll out and spread with half a cupful of walnut meats chopped, a cupful of honey and a quarter of a cupful of raisins chopped, all well mixed before spreading. Then roll and place in a pan to rise; bake in a moderate oven.
Tea Cakes.—To a cupful of scalded milk add four tablespoonfuls of butter, two tablespoonfuls of sugar and a teaspoonful of salt; when lukewarm add a yeastcake dissolved in two tablespoonfuls of cold milk, one egg beaten, and three cupfuls of flour. Cover and let rise until double its bulk; cut down, rise again, then fill muffin pans two-thirds full. Let rise and bake in a hot oven.
Waldorf Oysters.—Peel and cut in thin slices half of a Spanish onion, fry brown in a tablespoonful of butter. Stir in a tablespoonful and a half of curry powder and another tablespoonful of butter. Pour on gradually a cupful of broth, cover and let come to a boil. Peel and chop a small sour apple and grate half a cocanut. Put into the pan with the other ingredients and cook until the cocanut is tender. Mix a tablespoonful of flour with a little stock, add to the mixture; season with salt and pepper and cook five minutes. Put a cupful of strained tomato into a saucepan with fifty oysters, their liquor and half of the milk of the cocanut. Simmer until the oysters are curled. Add to the first mixture with a tablespoonful of lemon juice, then turn the curry on to a hot dish, garnish with croutons and serve with a separate dish of boiled rice.
It can never be too early or too late to encourage the habit of observation; nor can we ever become too wise to be taught by influences which all created things are designed to exert upon the mind.
SEASONABLE DISHES.
Oysters are now on the market, and though expensive for a daily diet will be most welcome as an occasional dish.
Poached Oysters on the Half Shell.—Butter as many scallop shells as there are individuals to serve; put into each shell six oysters with their own liquor, sprinkle with salt and pep-
be most welcome as an occasional dish.
Poached Oysters on the Half Shell.—Butter as many scallop shells as there are individuals to serve; put into each shell six oysters with their own liquor, sprinkle with salt and pepper, paprika, tomato catchup and a drop or two of tabasco sauce. Put a few bits of butter here and there on the oysters and set the shells in a dripping pan, then into a hot oven. Serve as soon as the oysters look plump and the edges are curled. Toast points or brown bread and butter sandwiches will be good to serve with these. Set the shells on paper doilies on plates to serve.
Baked Whitefish, Oyster Sauce.—Split the fish and lay open with the skin-side down. Season with salt and pepper, and place in a baking pan on a bed of diced pork. Bake in a quick oven, brushing it over once or twice with beaten egg and milk while cooking. Just before serving cover with buttered crumbs and bake until brown. Serve with oyster sauce.
Oyster Sauce.—Parboil a cupful of oysters in their own liquor, drain off this liquor into a cup and fill the cup with cream. Make of this a white sauce, season well with salt, pepper and celery salt, pouring a little of this over the fish, send the remainder to the table in a bowl to be served with it.
Creamed Fish Flakes on Toast.—Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter, add two of flour and mix well, then add a cupful of milk and a few dashes of red pepper. Add a can of fish flakes and let stand over the heat while toast is being prepared. Butter crisp rounds of toast and dip the edges in boiling water, then pour over the fish sauce.
Nellie Maxwell
Do Your Share.
This world needs the efforts of everyone. There is no reason why the burdens of life should be shouldered by a few. Unless you intend to do something that will make people think better of you there is no reason why you should inhabit this sphere.
Shifts of Politics.
No one objects to going into office on political account, but when a man is asked to step out for the same reason, he gets cross.—Philadelphia Press.
Do You Know That-
The COLORADO STATESMAN
IS PREPARED TO DO ALL KINDS OF
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 We Will Give You Satisfaction
Prices as Reasonable as Those of Any Job Office in Denver
The Colorado Statesman
Room 25
Phone Main 7417
[Name]
INCORPORATED AND BONDED
RESIDENCE PHONE YORK 7992
FRANK S. REED,
License Embalmer & Director
Lady Assistant
Polite Service
to All
THE HORSE WALKING CARriage
Parlors, 1830 Arapahoe Street
Denver, Colorado
TOM LEWIS, Prop
TOM LEWIS, Prop. DENVER, COLORADO. The Marian Hotel
JOHN H. HARRIS
The Only Colored Hotel in Denver
Annex Cafe
Short Orders at All Hours
Chinese Dishes of All Kinds
1835-37-39 ARAPAHOE STREET.
OMS PHONE MAIN 7413
PRIVATE DINING ROOMS PHONE MAIN 7413
YOUMAN FUR CO.
MANUFACTURERS OF
The Finest Furs In the West
STYLISH AND RELIABLE FUR GARMENTS
Customers Treated with Uniform Courtesy
FURS REMODELED
BLOOMSBURY
Fair Prices, Best Work, Finest Materials,
Correct Styles
422-424 FIFTEENTH STREET.
Denver, Colo.
DIRECT FROM FACTORY TO YOU
SAVE MIDDLE MAN'S PROFIT
No Home Complete Without One
The Wonder Davenport Bed
You cannot tell that a bed is concealed in this handsome piece of furniture.
Three pieces of furniture for the price of one. A luxurious davenport by day, a cedar wardrobe, your clothing, a comfortable bed at night. Turn your parlor or living room into a bed room in a moment's notice. No worry or crowding when the unexpected guest arrives. Saves rent, space and work. One easy movement converts same automatically from davenport into bed. So simple a child can operate same. Has cedar wardrobe for extra bedding and your clothing, roomy and dust proof. Keeps your clothing free from moths and insects.
ONLY davenport made with French see BedCedar wardrobe. We manufacture these in many designs and styles. Write for our catalogue with factory prices.
Address the Office
THE WONDER RED MANUFACTURING CO.
Dept. A-28, NASHVILLE, TENN.
HALL & EDWARDS
THE COAL MEN
Coal, Wood and Express
COAL, 20c PER SACK, OR 6 SACKS FOR.....$1.00
KINDLING, 10c PER SACK, OR 12 SACKS FOR $1.00
COAL $3.95
HALL & EDWARDS THE COAL MEN
COAL, 20c PER SACK, OR 6 SACKS FOR.....$1.00
KINDLING, 10c PER SACK, OR 12 SACKS FOR $1.00
PER TON AND UP
PROMPT DELIVERY TO ANY PART OF THE CITY
FRANK HALL AND T. A. EDWARDS, Proprietors.
Phone Main 8559
521 TWENTY-EIGHTH STREET, Between Glenarm and Welton, DENVER.
PROMPT DELIVERY TO ANY PART OF THE CITY FRANK HALL AND T. A. EDWARDS, Proprietors.
521 TWENTY-EIGHTH STREET, Between Glenarm and Welton, DENVER. Cassell Bros., the old reliable music FINE FURS.
Cassell Bros., the old reliable music firm of the West, is offering the best bargains in pianos and player-pianos during the fall season. Purchases on the monthly payment plan of five dollars cannot be surpassed. See Cassell's first and be convinced.
bargains in pianos and player-pianos during the fall season. Purchases on the monthly payment plan of five dollars cannot be surpassed. See Cassell's first and be convinced.
Fair prices, best work, fine materials, correct styles. You can ask no more, and we give you no less at the Youmans Fur Co., 422-424 Fifteenth St., phone Main 8045, Denver, Colo.
THE FLOWER
An exquisite afternoon gown combining crepe, Georgette, taffeta and chiffon, all in the color known as wistaria, might be just as pretty developed in others of the fashionable colors. But it could not be prettier. In a season when one is almost be wildered by the diversity of style here is a gown to swear by. It is excellent in lines and composition and it is adorably refined.
The moderately wide skirt is laid in plaits about the waist at the sides and back, with the front left plain. The plaits are not stitched down, except at the waist line, where the skirt is joined to a plain blouse of chiffon. A very wide border of taffeta, finished with a three-inch hem, is set on at the bottom. Above this, at an interval of three inches, a second band of taffeta appears. It is about four inches wide and finished with a narrow machine-stitched hem at each edge.
The sleeves of chifon are cut full at the top and narrowed from the elbow down. They are long and close fitting about the wrist, terminating in
Something New in Neckwear
L
In neckwear the introduction of black velvet or black satin, with sheer white fabrics, has brought about some very beautiful novelties. Many of these are in the effect of the choker collars, like those so fashionable on coats and cloth gowns. Others open at the front in a narrow V, like those shown in the picture.
The high-necked models give opportunity for a becoming management of lines to adapt the collars to either the long or short neck. In one model, called the "Brinkley," in honor of the famous Nell, there is a high collar of black satin laid in irregular folds and wired to stay in place. It is lengthened into points at the front, and these points extend below the line of the neck. This satin band opens at the front in a V, in which the points do not quite meet at the bottom. It overlaps a crushed band of very sheer organdie which extends across the front space. A full jabot of the organdie, with woven-in border and hemstitched edges, is set on to this band. It falls in an especially charming cascade from the base of the high collar. Another high collar, with jabot attached, employs black velvet ribbon with organdie. A wide band of or
---
a small shaped cuff piped at the end with the taffeta. A narrow taffeta band combine, them at the wrist, and they wrinkle along the arm in a way that is very soft and pleasing to the eye.
The collar is a band of taffeta embellished with a simple pattern in embroidery. This embroidery reappears on the over-bodice of taffeta at the waist line.
The over-bodice is a seamless model which fastens at the back, where it narrows to a wide girdle with ends that make soft, hanging loops. Its edges are finished with a narrow piping of the taffeta.
No gown could present more useful features to the needlewoman who is considering the remodeling of a last year's dress. Narrow skirts may be cut up into borders and bandings to use on the crepe or satin or light wool fabric for this year's skirt. And from last year's bodice, by one of the several jumper patterns to be had of pattern companies, an over-bodice for this year's gown may be made.
L
gandie has pointed tabs with hem stitched edges set on at the front and back, at its upper edge. The lower edge is finished with a narrow hem stitched hem. The band, above the hem, is laid in fine plaits.
A band of velvet ribbon is sewed along the top of the collar under the tabs. A plaited jabot falls from under its lower edge at the front. It is edged with an effective pattern in fillet lace, and is graduated in width to fall in a point extending nearly to the waist line.
The collars pictured here are of or gandie finished in one case with hem stitching and in the other with both hemstitching and lace. They are so clearly set forth by the photograph that descriptions are not needed.
Woolen Flowers Retain Favor.
Woolen flowers, used by the milliners all summer on straws and linen and silk, are reappearing on velvet and felt and fur, and flatly applied conventionalized flowers of other materials are also liked.
You Will Be Delighted With Our Service As We Look After The Little Things That Count. LADY ATTENDANT.
THE CLASSROOM
A high class Pool and Billiard room. A supberb Gymnasium and in fact everytning that goes To make up a FISRT CLASS RESORT. RICHARD FRAZIER, Manager 2014 Champa Street. Denver, Colorado PHONES: MAIN 2274 & 2275
Ca be rented for Private or Public Parties, Dances or gatherings of any nature, with first-class Accommodations. Phone M. 2860
Social Dances
MONDAY NIGHT. MORRISON'S ORCHESTA
THURSDAY NIGHT WEBSTER'S ORCHESTRA
Admission 25c
R. L. PHYNIX, Manager
THE SEWING MACHINE
W. CAMBERS, 1023 Eighteenth Street.
MEN'S SEWED SOLES .....75c
LADIES' SEWED SOLES .....60c
NAILED SOLES, 50c and 60c.
PHONE CHAMPA 2077
E. V. Cammel, PRES. @ MGR. You Will Be Delighted With C Little Things That Count. LAD
CURTIS M. HARRIS Assistant Manager and Funeral Director OFFICE AND PARLORS
Rocky Mountain
A high class Pool and Billi- sium and infact everytning the CLASS RESORT.
2014 Champa Street.
PHONES: MAI
FERN
2711 West
Ca be rented for Private or gatherings of any nature, dations. Phone M. 2860
Social
MONDAY NIGHT. MON
THURSDAY NIGHT W
Admissi-
R. L. PHYN
While You Wait.
FACTORY SHOP
W. CAMBERS, 102
MEN'S SEWED SOLES .....
LADIES' SEWED SOLES .....
NAILED SOLI
DR. WESTBROOK
SUITE 25 GOOD BLOCK,
16th and Larimer Streets
Phone Day and Night Main 5595
2818 Arapahoe street, 7-room, bathroom, summer kitchen. Barn, cellar, furniture; $2,000. Eugene Roth.
DAY OR NIGHT
CAMMEL AND CO.
The Progressive
Funeral Directors
WE TAKE GREAT PRIDE IN THE
FACT THAT WE ARE "THE LEAD
ING FUNERAL DIRECTORS."
WE CAN FURNISH ELEGANT
ROLLING STOCK. AUTOS IF
PREFERRED.
With Our Service As We Look After The
LADY ATTENDANT.
Auto for Hire
Director
2807 WELTON ST. DENVER
Mountain Athletic Club
In the Billiard room. A supberb Gymna-
ning that goes To make up a FISRT
RICHARD FRAZIER, Manager
Denver, Colorado
MAIN 2274 & 2275
N HALL,
Welton Street
Free or Public Parties, Dances or
ure, with first-class Accommo-
60
Real Dances
MORRISON'S ORCHESTA
T WEBSTER'S ORCHESTRA
ission 25c
LYNIX, Manager
We Use Best Leather.
HOE REPAIRING
5, 1023 Eighteenth Street.
.75c
.60c
SOLES, 50c and 60c.
JOSEPH CARTER
Express, Moving,
and Storage
COAL AND WOOD
PROMPT DELIVERY.
Phone Main 6544.
2415 WASHINGTON STREET.