Colorado Statesman
Saturday, September 27, 1919
Denver, Colorado
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THE COLORADO STATESMAN
THE JOURNAL OF THE WEST.
LABOR SHALL BE FREE
RACE COUNTRY PARTY
THE RACE PROBLEM
VOL. XXV.
THE RA
PI
THE race problem is National in scope, but its final solution must be locally determined. It is a problem of human relationship, and this human relationship is reducible in the final analysis to the one white man face to face with one Negro. The National race problem is really only a multiplication of the problem of this individual relationship.
This is why the Outlook has always insisted that the Negro problem of the South could be solved only by the South. The North can advise and aid, and that is all. Now that the North is becoming acutely aware of the fact that it possesses a race problem of its own, while the situation is reversed, the principal still remains the same. East St. Louis (an Illinois, not a Missouri, city, we ask our readers to observe) and Chicago, Washington, Knoxville, and Atlanta, to each its peculiar problem, to each its own solution. But the intensely local character of the race problem should not prevent the broadest National consideration of its causes and effects. The North can learn from the South and the South from the North. But upon each section and locality must rest the responsibility for putting into effect the conclusions reached in general discussion and study.
It is this dual character of the problem in its local and National aspects which lends peculiar interest to the proposal recently put forward by the Southern Sociological Congress, of which Bishop Theodore D. Bratton is President.
This proposal, at the suggestion of President Wilson, was laid before the conference of the Governors of the several states recently in session at Salt Lake City, Utah. The Governors' conference broke all precedents in permitting Bishop Bratton to speak at one of its sessions. The resolution which Bishop Bratton proposed was made a part of the official records of the conference, and received high praise from many of the Governors present. The resolution laid before the Governors' conference and the programme called for therein are of such merit and importance that we republish them here in full. The resolution reads:
Recognizing that the Negro is a permanent and increasingly important factor in the development of our National life, the Southern Sociological Congress considers the solution of the problem of race relations as the most delicate and difficult single task for American Democracy. We believe that no enduring basis of good will between the white and colored peoples in this country can be developed except on the fundamental principles of justice, co-operation, and race integrity. The obligations of this generation to posterity demand that we exert our utmost endeavor to preserve the purity of our democratic ideals expressed in the American Constitution as well as the purity of the blood of both races. With this belief the Southern Sociological Congress has worked out a programme for the improvement of race relations which we respectfully sub-
State Hist. & Nat Hist Soc
State House
the Only Reliable
COLOR
ACE
ROBLEM
mit to this conference of Governors in the earnest hope that this body of distinguished leaders may lend its powerful influence towards making this programme effective throughout the union.
The programme is:
First, that the Negro should be liberated from the blighting fear of injustice and mob violence. To this end it is imperatively urgent that lynching be prevented:
1. By the enlistment of Negroes themselves in preventing crimes that provoke mob violence.
2. By prompt trial and speedy execution of persons who are guilty of heinous crimes.
3. By legislation that will make it unnecessary for a woman who has been assaulted to appear in court to testify publicly.
4. By legislation that will give the Governor authority to dismiss a sheriff for failure to protect a prisoner in his charge.
Second, that the citizenship rights of the Negro should be safeguarded, particularly:
1. By securing proper traveling accommodations.
2. By providing better housing conditions and by preventing extortionate rents.
3. By providing adequate educational and recreation facilities.
Third, that closer co-operation between white and colored citizens should be promoted (without encouraging any violation of race integrity) :
1. By organizing local committees, both white and colored, in as many communities as possible for the consideration of interracial problems.
2. By the employment of Negro physicians, nurses, and policemen as far as practicable in work for sanitation, public health, and law enforcement among their own people.
3. By enlisting all agencies possible in fostering justice, good will, and kindness in all individual dealings of members of one race with members of the other.
4. By the appointment of a standing commission by the Governor of each state for the purpose of making a careful study of the causes underlying race friction, with the view of recommending proper means for their removal.
In addition to the standing commissions proposed in the foregoing programme there should be a National commission appointed by the President to serve as a unifying body to coordinate the work of the several state commissions here proposed. The work of the National Commission should in no way be permitted to conflict with the state commissions and local committees proposed in the programme of the Southern Sociological Congress. The National Commission should work with and through the state commissions rather than as a supervising and superior body.—The Outlook.
The programme is:
le People's Pa
ADO
THE JOURNAL
DENVER, COLORADO, SA
DENVER, COLORADO, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1919
Demand Federal Government Control Lynching
THE folloowing resolutions, calling for Federal intervention in states where lynching is unpunished and unchecked, were unanimously passed at a mass meeting of 1,000 persons in the meeting hall of the Society for Ethical Culture, 2 West 64th Street, New York City, on the night of September 16:
We, citizens of the United States, assembled in the meeting hall of the Society for Ethical Culture, 2 West 64th Street, New York City, on the night of Tuesday, September 16, submit that:
Whereas, John R. Shillady, Secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, was without provocation brutally assaulted in broad daylight on a main street of Austin, Texas, on August 22, 1919, the mobbists being led in person by a county officer of the state of Texas:
Whereas, Governor W. P. Hobby of Texas not only declined to remove such officer, but condoned the assault, saying that the victim was "the only offender:"
Whereas, Each week witnesses additional lynchings and mob outrages in the United States, eight persons having been publicly burned since the beginning of the year 1919 and forty-seven publicly murdered by mobs:
Whereas, Civilization in the United States is gravely menaced by the persistence, unchecked, of mob lawlessness and mob murder;
Whereas, Many states have wholly failed to take action against lynchers, Governor Bilbo of Mississippi having confessed inability in June, 1919, to prevent mob murder, the governor of Texas having approved a mob assault in August, 1919;
Be it therefore, Resolved.
That the Congress of the United States be and is herewith asked to create a special federal commission or congressional committee to investigate lynching and mob violence as a menace to national security;
That the Congress investigate every case of unpunished mob murder and assault as a failure of the states to accord United States citizens the rights and the protection guaranteed by the federal constitution;
That the Congress devise means whereby the federal government shall guarantee the processes of law and justice now denied where mob murders and assaults are permitted to occur unchecked and unpunished.
DEATH FOLLOWS WOMAN'S PLOT
Sophia Bass Entered Conspiracy With
Lover to Slay Planter.
Yazoo City, Miss., Sept. 12.—Miss Sophia Bass, who a few weeks ago entered into a plot with Renzie Smith, her sweetheart, to accomplish the death of William Jones, an aged plantation worker reputed to have money, whispered her story of sorrow for participating in the crime to a Defender reporter, who jotted down the woman's confession as she talked through the iron bars of her cell in the county jail. Her recital of the crime was jerky. She sobbed at the end of every sentence as she poured out her story of connection with the death plot. "I must have been insane," she moaned. "How did I become so foolish and let Renzie lead me into such
a thing?" the woman said.
Haunted by Crime.
She is haunted by the ghost of her crime. The slim, stately woman who stayed awake at midnight carefully planning the murder of the old plantation worker is weakening under the strain of her misdeeds. It is worry that has caused her to become but a shadow of her former self; that has made dark rings under her eyes and that has changed her once fresh and girtish complexion to one of ghastly pallor. In the hour of her greatest trial her sweetheart, Renzle Smith, is unable to console her. He is occupying an adjoining cell and facing a charge of murder.
Plot Carried Out.
It is said that Sophia Bass decoyed Jones to her home for the purpose of the murder one morning about 2 o'clock. Smith entered the house from the rear door, and as Jones seated himself at the table a shot rang out. The aged man fell across the table. Smith hastily tore two pages from a magazine lying on a table in the room and cried the paper into the bleeding wound. He then picked up the body and carried it to Jones' own door, dropping it at the foot of the back steps. The torn fragments stuffed in the wound stopped the flow of blood and left no crimson path for the officers to trail the murders. The two magazine pages were the only tell-tale evidences that led to a revelation of the crime.—Chicago Defender.
Liberian President Extols African Republic Conditions
New York, N. Y.—C. D. B. King, president-elect of Liberia, has a solution for America's "Negro problem," if such there be. He is out with an invitation to all dissatisfied Negroes in the United States to go over to his African republic and be happy.
In fact, he says, he came to America from Paris, where he was the Liberian delegate to the Peace Conference, to encourage Negro immigration to Liberia, and incidentally obtain assistance from the United States.
The Negroes in your country seem dissatisfied, he declared in an interview recently. "I do not attach blame to any one, but I do know that the opportunities for the American Negroes in my country greatly exceed those in the United States.
"We don't know what race riots are in Liberia. My countrymen run the entire government and are advancing in importance to the point where the American government has lent us $5,000,000. We have a country the size of the state of Ohio, with a population of 2,500,000, two colleges, banks and an agricultural and industrial outlook that cannot be surpassed anywhere.
"Liberians all talk English, as the country was started in 1848 by Americans as a colonization project. Our constitution is almost identical with the American constitution. Great Britain has supervised our customs for many years, following a loan to Liberia, but now we are asking for an American protectorate, in effect, that will give the United States a commercial foothold in Africa, if the American interests wish to take advantage of it." King said that he hoped to arrange with the American government for expert advisers in education, administration and the judicial branches of government to be sent to Liberia.
RACENEWS Gathered From Various Sources
Houston, Tex., Sept. 19.—Willie Whiting raised Harris county's first bale of cotton this year on his farm at Piney Point. The bale weighed 480 pounds and was graded as strict middling and sold as such. A premium of $25 was raised for the grower.
Raleigh, N. C., Sept. 19.—The oldest man in North Carolina is said to be Leonard Smith, 105 years old. Mr. Smith has lived in St. Matthews township, Wake county, the larger part of his life. He is father of eight children, forty-two grandchildren, sixty-seven great-grandchildren, and one great-great-grandchild.
man and puts him of necessity actively on the defensive.
"Those who make and execute the laws owe it to themselves and to their country as well as us to see that the Race has protection along with other citizens. It is hard for the average Negro to understand how we can spend millions of dollars and thousands of lives to help protect the lives of weaker people in foreign countries, yet fail to protect our own loyal, patriotic citizens in this country."
Seeks To Abolish Jim Crow Car
New York, Sept. 17.—Julius Rosenwald of Chicago has offered six scholarships of $1,200 each for Negro graduates of American medical schools who desire to take post-graduate work in pathology, bacteriology, physiology, pharmacology or physiological chemistry, according to an announcement here today by the general education board. Appointments to be made in 1920, will be made by a committee comprising Dr. William H. Welch, John Hopkins School of Public Health, chairman; Dr. David L. Edsall, dean of the Harvard medical school, and Dr. Victor C. Vaughn, dean of the medical depratment, University of Michigan. Abraham Flexner, secretary of the general education board, will act as secretary of the committee.
DEMANDING even-handed justice for the Negro in the United States the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People has issued a statement that the only four regiments of the American Expeditionary Forces to be cited for bravery and to receive the French Croix de Guerre were colored—the 369th, the 370th, 371st and 372nd. The statement is made on the authority of J. Howard Durkee, president of Howard University, and is corroborated by Emmett J. Scott, former special assistant to the Secretary of War.
Besides the four colored regiments to be cited for bravery a battalion of the 367th—the original "Buffaloes"—trained at Yaphank, Long Island, received French citation.
DR. MOTON DE-
NOUNCES LYNCHING
TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE, Ala., Sept. 19.—My position on the recent riots was stated in the communication which I sent to the New York World, August 2nd. In that communication I said:
"The time has come when thoughtful white and Race people allike will not tolerate wholesale mobbing of innocent Negroes because of the alleged crime of one.
"The Negro has never instigated a riot by wholesale attacks on white people. The very fact that in riots the innocent have so frequently been obliged to suffer with the guilty has created in us an aggressive and vindictive spirit which manifested itself in the riots. One of the most unfortunate things about such occurrences is that it frequently hurts the morale of the conservative, law-abiding Race
NO. 49.
man and puts him of necessity actively on the defensive. "Those who make and execute the laws owe it to themselves and to their country as well as us to see that the Race has protection along with other citizens. It is hard for the average Negro to understand how we can spend millions of dollars and thousands of lives to help protect the lives of weaker people in foreign countries, yet fail to protect our own loyal, patriotic citizens in this country."
Seeks To Abolish Jim Crow Car
WASHINGTON, Sept. 17.—Abolition of the "Jim Crow" car in interstate railroad traffic was urged to day before the House Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee. Representative Madden (Republican, Illinois), who has introduced a bill, requiring "equal rights, accommodations and privileges" for both races on railway trains, urged that it be made part of the Esch railroad bill. Several Negro spokesmen appeared with him in behalf of his plan.
"The government has no right," declared Mr. Madden, "to draft its citizens in defense of its flag and at the same time say to them that their rights are inferior to those of other citizens of the United States."
He added that Chinese and Japanese are allowed to ride on trains on equal conditions with the whites.
"You want to force the Negroes to ride in the cars with the white people, when the Negroes themselves would rather ride in separate cars than to be mixed up with white people," suggested Representative Reyburn (Democrat, Texas.)
"I deny that the Negroes themselves would rather be in a separate car," said Mr. Madden.
"I deny that you understand the Negro," Mr. Reyburn said.
Representative Sanders (Democrat, Louisiana) said white men are prohibited from riding in Negro coaches. "We of the South," he added, "contend that the Negro prefers separate accommodations. Our Negroes down South, knowing they are not welcome in the white man's coach, don't go in. You will admit that the great majority of the Negroes of the country live in the South."
"Yes, but we think they should be treated the same in the South as in the North," Mr. Madden declared.
"The Negroes are treated better in my country than in your city of Chicago," continued Mr. Sanders.
"The affair in Chicago was an unfortunate situation that nobody can explain." Mr. Madden said.
Lieut. Gregory of Howard University complained because Negroes can not have sleeping berths or meals on the trains in the South.
"You only have to walk to the Union station here in Washington to see how the 'Jim Crow' car works," he said. "Every train going to Richmond carries one. Usually the baggage car is divided in two and the Negroes must ride in one half. Half of that is given over as a smoking room. It is used as an overflow for white people from their smoking car and by the crew of the train. There is but one toilet for both sexes and conditions are filthy."
NEWS TO DATE IN PARAGRAPHS
CAUGHT FROM THE NETWORK OF WIRES ROUND ABOUT THE WORLD.
DURING THE PAST WEEK
WESTERN
At least $25,000 was obtained by a robber who bound and gagged a mail clerk on an eastbound Northern Pacific passenger train between Seattle and Kanasket, Wash.
Seth Bullock, lifelong personal friend of the late Theodore Roosevelt, is dead at his home in Deadwood, S. D., after an illness of several weeks. He was a pioneer of the Black Hills and was 62 years old.
Twelve borses were killed outright and fifteen others mutilated at Milfay, Okla., when the third section of the Ringling Bros. and Barnum-Bailey circus train was piled up when it ran through an open switch.
Robert L. Massey of Omaha, for thirty-five years in the service of the Union Pacific, and one of the best known passenger conductors on the line, was found murdered on the streets of North Platte.
Mrs. Fannie Antonie, 26, was arrested in St. Louis on a warrant issued in Kansas City charging implication in the theft of $1,000,000 worth of Liberty bonds, according to secret service men making the arrest.
John H. Suits was sentenced to one year in the county jail in the United States District Court at San Francisco following his plea of guilty to a charge of defrauding through the mails in connection with the collection of funds for the National Defense League of California.
D. A. Gwartney and Edwin Birnie, both of Long Beach, were killed when the aeroplane in which they were flying fell into a tail spin at a height of 500 feet and from 200 feet crashed to earth in a direct dive. The necks of both were broken and their skulls were crushed.
In a peculiar accident, Mrs. Haskett, wife of L. B. Haskett of Tecumseh, was seriously injured. She cranked her automobile and the brake refused to hold the car. It ran forword, knocked her down, doubled her up under the vehicle and ran over her, fracturing her back.
Twelve thousand Idaho farmers, in thirty-two counties, actively co-operated in a campaign for the destruction of ground squirrels, which resulted in a saving of $2,500,000 in cross during the year ending Aug. 1, according to the report of W. E. Crouch, in charge of rodent control work of the extension division of the University of Idaho.
Increased street car fare to 6 cents to meet demands of employés for a higher wage was defeated at the polls at Des Moines, Iowa by a majority of over 1,000. Voting was light. The 6 cent fare election came as a compromise between striking street car employés and a citizens' committee several weeks ago to maintain street car service during the Iowa state fair.
WASHINGTON
Three of the foremost leaders of organized labor, before the Senate Interstate Commerce committee, denounced in unqualified terms sections of the Cummins railroad reorganization bill which would prevent railroad workers from striking.
Francisco Villa is about to launch a campaign south of Chihuahua to avoid risking intervention by United States troops, according to information received in Washington.
That the army of 500,000 provided in the War Department's reorganization bill may be entirely too large was admitted by Secretary of War Baker before the House committee on military affairs.
Consumption of sugar in the United States for the first seven months of this year was 362,000 tons more than during the corresponding period last year, according to statistics compiled by the United States Sugar Equalization Board and made public by the American Sugar Refining Company. More wheat should be sown this fall than was the average in pre-war years, but not so much should be sown as was sown last year. This is the outstanding fall farming recommendation of the United States Department of Agriculture which is watching the changes of the world supply and demand while European countries are getting back to normal in food production and thus affecting the market for American products.
Notice of a new counterfeit $20 note on the federal reserve bank of New York, has been given by the treasury. The border of the note and the background of Cleveland's portrait are solid black, instead of having fine cross lines, and the treasury numbers are black instead of blue. Condition of the late commercial potato crop September 1st, indicated a yield of 123,518 carloads, a decrease of more than 22,000 carloads from the estimate on the same date last year, according to a report by the Department of Agriculture.
FOREIGN
The Bolshevik们 have made all preparations for the evacuation of Petrograd, according to a Helsingfors dispatch.
Belgium has agreed to the proposal of France that a French general be given supreme command of allied forces on the Rhine.
The council of five at Paris has decided to permit German representation at the international labor conference in Washington next month, according to an official cable from Paris.
The spread of gambling among the soldiers has prompted General Noske of Germany to issue an order prohibiting all gambling in barracks, caneens, mess halls, on parade grounds or in public places.
A left hand, with one finger missing, was brought to Barreal station, fifty-nine miles southwest of Juarez as proof that Epifanlo Holguin, a former Villa colonel, had been killed by one of his own men with whom he had quarreled. The deconcentration of the French army is now entirely completed, all troops except those on the Rhine having returned to their usual garrison posts. The transportation of demobilized soldiers to their homes by regular passenger trains also will be finished in a few days.
The new British profiteer act is now in effect and prices have begun to fall. A drop of $10 a ton is registered in the price of potatoes. Chickens are lower than the maximum of the food control prices. Eggs have dropped to $1.20 a dozen. California oranges are considerably cheaper, now costing "only" 22 cents each.
A peacetime army of 350,000 men and reduction of the term of military service from three years to one are recommended to the military committee of the French Senate in a report submitted by Paul Doumer, its president. Under his plan, 200,000 men would be called to the colors annually by conscription and 1,500,000 others recruited through voluntary enlistment.
The German consul general in Mexico has received information from his government that 30,000 immigrants from Germany will soon arrive in Mexico to make their future home. This is the first considerable body of Germans to come, according to advises from Mexico City, in answer to the overtures made by the Mexican government immediately after the armistice was signed.
GENERAL
Joe Burman, the Chicago bantam sensation, had a good workout for his bout with Joe Lynch in Philadelphia by beating Roy Moore in every round of a ten-round fight at Chicago.
The Sovereign Grand Lodge, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, and affiliated bodies, the Patrarchs Militant and Association of Rebekah Assemblies finished their annual convention at Baltimore and adjourned to meet in Boston next year.
The Italian auxiliary barkentine City of Biloxi, with a cargo of explosives, blew up twenty miles off Mobile bar, burned to the water's edge, and sank, according to reports reaching shipping circles at Mobile, Ala. The fate of the crew is unknown.
Control of all stock in the Ford Motor Company has been secured by Henry Ford and his son, Edsel, it has been announced in Detroit, through purchase of the minority holdings of James Couzens, millionaire mayor of Detroit and former vice president of the company.
The cost of the war to the United States in man power is now estimated officially as 116,492 dead and 205,690 wounded, a total of 322,182. These figures include losses to army and marine units on all fronts to Sept. 1. Killed in action totaled 35,585, or 11 per cent of the entire list; died of wounds, 14,742; died of disease, 58,073; died of accidents and other causes, 8,092.
Early and favorable action is expected in the Senate on the bill providing a punishment by fine or imprisonment or both for the transportation of stolen motor vehicles in interstate or foreign commerce.
Cincinnati won the toss for the opening game of the world series at the meeting of the national baseball commission at Cincinnati. The first two games will be played in Cincinnati, the next three in the American league city winning the pennant of that league, then two in Cincinnati if necessary, followed by one in the American league city. The place for the ninth game, if necessary, is to be decided by lot.
Work will be begun at once on development of a farm colony at Winslow, N. J., for returned soldiers and sailors. The organization has acquired 4,200 acres for the project. The project consists of a village of fifty houses, an inn, store and church and a tract of good forest land on which stand sturdy oaks. This property will be divided into 420 ten-acre farms on which model homes will be erected. The estimated cost of the project is $1,902,000.
In the United States there is one automobile to every eighteen persons. In Canada there is one for every twenty-five; in Australia, one for every 100; in England, one for every 268; in France, one in 402; in Italy, one in 1,002; in Mexico, one in 2,385, and in China, one in 267,207.
Five thousand well-to-do British women determin-d to obtain American husbands soon will arrive in the United States, according to a warning issue to bachelors by Mrs. S. C. Seymour of Camden, N. J., who has just returned from Europe.
Pithy News Notes From All Parts of Colorado
Western Newspaper Union News Service.
COMING EVENTS.
Crowley County Fair, Sugar City, Aug.
27-28.
Inter-Mountain Live Stock and Fair.
Grand Junction, Sept. 30 to Oct. 3.
Douglas County Fair, Castle Rock,
Oct. 7-8.
The oldest man in Colorado, William
Earl Van Etten, is dead at Boulder
at the age of 102.
Two Arkansas valley counties,
Crowley and Otero, produce 90 per
cent of the cantaloupes grown in Colorado,
and this state ranks among the
leaders in the production of cantaloupes.
A long session of a coroner's jury
failed utterly to reveal the least cue
to the identity of the persons who
lynched Gonzales and Ortez as the
murdersers of Police Officer Jeff Evans at Pueblo.
The mystery that has for several months surrounded the robberies that have taken place in Rocky Ford and Crowley is thought to have been solved by the arrest of a Syrian who has a store in La Junta.
Prof. H. S. Evans has been chosen as new dean of the school of engineering, University of Colorado, to succeed Prof. Milo S. Ketchum, who has resigned to accept a position with the University of Pennsylvania.
One soldier was so injured he died in a short time, two were badly hurt and thirteen others were more or less bruised when a large army automobile from Fort Logan, bearing members of the post baseball team, turned over in Denver.
Mrs. Cora Sulsar, about 38 years old, one of a party of tourists from Gilpin City, Mo., was instantly killed when a runaway team of mules, drawing a load of hay crashed into the automobile in which she, her husband, two children and an 18-year-old nephew were riding on the Lincoln highway.
Colorado held $9,736,992.03 in its treasury on Aug. 31, according to the report for the quarter ending on that date, submitted to Gov. Oliver H. Shoup by State Treasurer Harry E. Mulnix; the receipts during the quarter were $2,817,153.49, and disbursements were $2,130,672.24.
Fort Collins industries will receive one new unit shortly thru the filing in the secretary of states' office of articles of incorporation for the Fort Collins Pressed Brick and Tile Company. The organizers are H. G. Finley, G. H. Dixon and H. A. Myer, residents of Larimer county. The federal census bureau reported approximately 12,000 acres devoted to grain sorghums in Colorado in 1909. County assessors report approximately 250,000 acres devoted to grain sorghum this year, and an additional 100,000 acres to sweet sorghums, grown principally for stock feed.
That Salt Lake City business men expect within eighteen months to invade Routt and Moffat counties in Pullman cars over a newly built railroad to extend from Salt Lake to Craig, Colo., is the burden of an article appearing in the bulletin of the Salt Lake Commercial Club. Funds have been assured and a strong group of Utah financiers are determined to see the road through.
There has been a sharp deterioration in the condition of potatoes since the August report was issued and the indicated production is now 10,598,000 bushels. The damage was most severe in the north-central and northeastern parts of the state where irrigated potatoes suffered heavily. Non-irrigated potatoes are almost a failure. The potato crop last year was 13,083,000 bushels, according to lately revised figures.
More than 7,500 people, the largest number in the history of the association, attended the third day of the annual Montrose county fair.
The value of all farm property in Colorado at the present time is close to $1,000,000,000. In 1890 it was only $110,358,040, and in 1919 it was only $491,000,000.
The State Immigration Department has had prepared a "Wheat Map of Colorado for 1919," the first map of the kind ever made for the state. It shows the distribution of both winter and spring wheat in the state, as indicated by the reports of county assessors. A glance at the map will show where wheat is grown in Colorado and how extensively. A small symbol is used to represent each 1,000 acres of wheat grown, and the counties in the northeast corner of the state are so crowded with these symbols that there is hardly room left for the names of the counties. Four counties in this district have grown more wheat this year than was grown in the entire state in 1909, and seven counties here have about two-thirds of the state's wheat acreage.
J. Allard Jeancon, Colorado Springs archaeologist, who has been exploring the cliff dwellers' ruins in northwestern New Mexico for the last six months, has opened up 127 rooms and made discoveries of great importance, according to experts who have examined his finds.
A drive for 20,000,000 members and $15,000,000 to carry out the pencetime program of the Red Cross will be held throughout the country in the period of Nov. 2 to 11, according to announcement of representatives of the mountain division.
CENTENNIAL STATE ITEMS.
Final reports from county assessors to the State Immigration Department show 83,167 acres of beans in Colorado this year, exclusive of snap beans. This includes 71,586 acres of dry beans for market, principally pintos, and 11,581 acres of beans of various varieties for seed. This is the only important crop showing a decrease in acreage this year as compared with 1919. Approximately 252,000 acres was devoted to this crop in 1918, but the yield was unsatisfactory in many districts and the price obtained was much lower than the previous year. These two facts are the principal reasons for the low acreage this year. El Paso, Elbert and Weld counties lead in area devoted to beans, each county having in excess of 10,000 acres. Logan county and other counties in the northeast corner of the state, where large acreages of beans were grown last year, report a very light acreage this year. the land being devoted principally to winter wheat.
The condition of the apple crop in the state at this time is 66 per cent of normal, compared with 50 per cent at this time last year and an average condition of 64 per cent. The estimated production is 2,889,000 bushels, or more than 1,000,000 bushels in excess of last year's output. The quality of the fruit is good. The peach crop is being marketed rapidly and is generally of excellent quality. The production is estimated at 902,000 bushels, compared with 633,000 bushels last year. The pear crop is also good, the estimated production being 217,000 bushels, compared with 194,000 bushels last year.
Another name was added to the memorial roll of Colorado Springs when Sergt. Benjamin Harrison Bailey died from the effects of shell shock and poison gas at his home in that city. The young soldier was one of the first enlistments from Colorado Springs and served with the British before Mont-didier and with the engineers at Cambral. Time after time he escaped death by fractions of an inch until, in the closing days of the war, he was shell-shocked at the Argonne force, and while lying helpless on the battlefield became a victim of poisonous gas.
President J. F. Welborn, of the Colorado Fuel and Iron Company at Pueblo, has ordered the company mines at Sunrise, Wyo., where the bulk of the raw material used at the local plants is mined, shut down for an indefinite period. Five coal mines, employing approximately 500 men in the southern field, have also been ordered closed. These mines have supplied the local plants with fuel. There is no intention on the part of the company of closing its commercial mines at this time.
According to the county assessor's abstract of assessment Jackson county's evaluation for tax purposes this year is $5,755,455. There are 45,270 head of range cattle, assessed at an average of $44.91 per head, a total of $2,036,760, which makes the largest item on the list. There are 66,720 acres of lay land, assessed at $1,857,450; grazing land, $678,675; improvements on land, $231,215. There are 3,747 head of horses in the county, valued at $183,145.
A falling off of nearly 7,000,000 bushels in the production of corn for the state is indicated as a result of dry weather late in the season. The condition of the corn crop is found to be only 62 per cent of normal, which indicates a production, on approximately 900,000 acres devoted to the crop, of 13,950,000 bushels, compared with a production of 20,585,000 bushels on 895,000 acres last year. The acreage planted this year is the largest on record.
Mining in the La Plata district shows more activity at the present time than at any other time of the year and plans are under way in many of the properties for an all-winter operation.
Painters at Trinidad, who were prepared to go on strike for higher wages, are at work on the basis of a wage compromise reached at a meeting of employers and Journeymen and Arl. Fincher, investigator for the state industrial commission. The painters formerly received 75 cents an hour. They agreed to return to work at $87\frac{1}{2}$ cents an hour until Jan. 1, after which their wages will be 90 cents. Twenty-eight men were affected. The threatened street car strike in Pueblo was averted after an all-night session, when the employés of the company voted to accept the offer of the company for half of the 25 per cent wage increase now and the other half Nov. 10, when the city ordinance granting the company the privilege of charging 6 cents car fare in Pueblo becomes effective.
Increased traffic on Main avenue at Durango has made necessary the passing of an ordinance by the City Council preventing the parking of cars along that thoroughfare for a longer period than thirty minutes at any one time. A special traffic officer has been added to the police force to enforc the parking order.
The Industrial Sugar Company will build a $600,000 factory at Fort Lupton to care for 4,000 acres of sugar beets contracted to the company by farmers of southern Weld county. The Industrial Sugar Company is a $4,000,000 corporation organized by farmers to build beet sugar factories in northern Colorado.
"Uncle Joe" Robinson, a resident of Hugo about twenty-five years ago, died at Cheyenne Wells following a stroke of apoplexy. Mr. Robinson was one of the early Lincoln country settlers.
WESTERN BEEF CO.
Chitterlings, Pig Tails, Snouts, Ears, Pigs Feet, Neck bones, Spare Ribs Received Fresh Daily. Meats of All Kinds., Fresh Vegetables, Staple and Fancy Groceries. Prices Are Always the Lowest Free Delivery to All Parts of the City. Phone Champa 1641.
Fresh Oysters, Chitterlings, Pig T
Bones, Spare Ribs
Fresh and Cured Meats of All K
Fancy
Our Prices Are A
Free Delivery to A
Phone Ch
2048 LARIMER STREET
Opposite the
Bolden Ba
Baths,
Mas
Fresh Oysters, Chitterlings, Pig Talls, Snouts, Ears, Pigs Feet, Neck Bones, Spare Ribs Received Fresh Daily.
Fresh and Cured Meats of All Kinds.. Fresh Vegetables, Staple and Fancy Groceries.
Opposite the Three Rules.
len Barber Shop
Baths, Electric
Massages
FIRST-CLASS SERVICE
R. B. BOLDEN, Proprietor
en You Want
et, Tails, Snouts, Neckbones or Chiterlings, or
part of the hog except the squeal, go to
ST'S MARKET
When Y
The Heads, Feet, Tails, Snout
any other part of the ho
EAST'S
The Heads, Feet, Tails, Snouts, Neckbones or Chiterlings, or any other part of the hog except the squeal, go to
HAMPA PHARMACY
TWENTIETH AND CHAMPA,
Is the place to get your
CHEMICALS AND PATENT MEDICINES
WE SERVE DRINKS.
DESCRIPTIONS OUR SPECIALTY.
we will deliver the goods to all parts of the city.
JAMES E. THRALL, Propr.
PHONE MAIN 2425.
N'S FAMOUS JAZZ ORCHESTRA
AND ENTERTAINERS
THE CHAMPA
TWENTIETH
Is the place
DRUGS, CHEMICALS AT
WE SERVE
PRESCRIPTIONS
Phone us and we will deliver to
JAMES E. T.
PHONE N
MORRISON'S FAMOUS
AND ENT
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.
MORRISON'S FAMOUS JAZZ ORCHESTRA
GEO. MORRISON, MANAGER
Music Furnished
Phone Main 2707. Res. 2947
THE ATLAS DE
COURTEOUS TREATM
Leaders in
Full Line of Plough's Black
2701 WELTON STREET
THE STAR HA
Furnished for all Occasions
07. Res. 2947 Stout St. DENVER, COLO.
ATLAS DRUG COMPANY
GEOUS TREATMENT—RIGHT PRICES
Leaders in Prescription
F Plough's Black and White Toilet Articles
STREET MAIN 875
TAR HAIR GROWER
Music Furnished for all Occasions
Phone Main 2707. Res. 2947 Stout St. DENVER, COLO.
Leaders in Prescription
Full Line of Plough's Black and White Toilet Articles
2701 WELTON STREET MAIN 875
THE STAR HAIR GROWER
A Wonderful Hair Dressing and Grower
A Wonderful Hair Dressing and Grower,
One Thousand Agents Wanted. Good Money
Made. We want Agents in every city
and village to sell THE STAR HAIR GROWER.
This is a wonderful preparation. Can
be used with or without straightening irons.
Sells for 25 cents per box—One 25-cent box
will prove its value. Aly person that will
use a 25-cent box will be convinced. No matter
what has failed to grow your hair, just
give THE STAR HAIR GROWER a trial and
be convinced. Send 25 cents for a full size
box. If you wish to be an agent, send $1
and we will send you a full supply that you
can begin work at once; also agent's terms.
Send all money by Money Order to
THE STAR HAIR GROWER, Mfr.
GREENSBORO, N. C. BOX 812
We Are
Always Ready
to serve you with good printing. No matter what
the nature of the job may
be we are ready to do it
at a price that will be
Satisfactory
---
Open Daily to 830 p. m.
Sundays Until 2:00 p. m.
2300-6 Larimer Street
[Image of a silhouette of a woman with long hair.]
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One of the Most Up-to Date and Sanitary Markets in the City.
DENVER, COLO.
926 19th St., Denver
Phone Main 1481
---
Some Time
You will be in need of printing of some kind. Whether it be letterheads, statements wedding invitations or public sale bills, remember we can turn out the work at the lowest cost consistent with good work.
The Wonders
of America
By T. T. MAXEY
MAMMOTH CAVE, KENTUCKY,
Muncy CAVE, the largest of a
number of eaves in Edmondson
county, Kentucky, 1s said to be the
largest cave known, It extends for
almost @ mile below the surface of the
earth and contains about 100 miles of
pussage ways. Here are displayed
perhaps the greatest and grandest ex-
amples In the world of the wonderful
work of water In underground sculptur-
Ing.
Its discovery was another case of
the hunter and the bear—date about
1500. ‘The bear, wounded, crawled
into the cave and escaped. ‘The hunt-
er followed and discovered the cave.
A visit to this cave Is certainly a
unique and wonderful experience. No-
where else can It be duplicated. The
interior is a maze of domes, pits, halls,
chambers, pillars, temples, cascades,
caverns, crevasses, stalactites and
stalagmites, carved stone and other
characteristle and peculiar phenomena
and falrylike forms fashlonable tn
cave architecture. There are lakes and
rivers In it—one can bontride on the
Echo river for half a mile. The lofty
limestone roof, 60 feet high in places,
and the battlemented shores reflect
und magnify every sound.
The Glant’s Coffin is the largest rock
in the cave. It 1s 18 feet thick, 43 feet
long and welghs 2,000 tons. Mammoth
Dome, the largest and most impressive
of many, is 280 feet high. Many varie.
ties of animal life are found, including
eyeless fish and blind crawfish. ‘The
air is good and the temperature even—
about 54 degrees, There are several
routes through the cave, the longest re-
quiring a full day.
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK,
yo LOWSTONE, our oldest and
largest national park, ts consider-
bly larger than the state of Delaware.
Its altitude ranges from 6,000 to 11,000
feet above sea level. It contains such
4 large collection of weird and freak
natural phenomena that the visor
guins the impression the Great Creator
of all things must have roamed over
the world, collecting all the odd things
he saw, dumping them here In one
xreat disordered heap.
There are more geysers than in atl
the rest of the world put together.
‘They range from tiny openings, spout-
ing water but a few feet, at Intervals
of a few minutes, to the great giant.
larger than a well, projecting a column
of water 250 to 300 feet high, for a
period of several minutes nt intervals
of several days. There are numerous
waterfalls, the great fall of the Yellow-
stone river In the gorgeously colored,
20-mile-long Grand canyon, being 308
feet high, ‘There are many hot springs
and small lakes, also the largest lake—
Yellowstone—at {ts helght in North
America, There are several paint pots
—xreat cauldrons of blubbering, hiss-
ing mud; many steam vents and boil-
Ing pools, a natural bridge, a roaring
niountain, a mountain of volcanic
gluss, petrified trees and wedded trees.
At Norris basin 1s said to be the
thinnest known portion of the earth's
crust, Standing there, the visitor needs
no assurance that his satunic majesty
resides near by.
Yellowstone, known far and wide for
its wild flowers, ts also the largest wild
«ame preserve in the world.
THE CROOKEDEST RAILROAD IN
THE WORLD.
T= Tamalpats and Mult
Woods railway runs from Mill Val-
ley, California, to the top of Mount
Tamalpais—the guardian of our fa:
mous Golden Gate, the entrance to San
Francisco bay. ‘This minfature rail-
way is but 20 miles long. The longest
piece of straight track 1s 413 feet. It
contains 281 curves. In one place the
track parallels itself five times in a
Uttle more than 800 feet—forming an
almost perfect double bow-knot. So
crooked is this line that if all the
curves were continuous, they would
make 42 complete circles. It is one of
the most wonderful pieces of engineer-
ing on the American continent.
‘The curious looking, «l-burning loco-
motive squirms {ts way tall first, push-
ing the train up the tortuous track,
on a grade averaging six feet to the
hundred, to the summit, 2,602 feet
above the valley below.
‘The reason for it all 1s, of course,
the view from the top of this peak
which stands on the very edge of the
U.S. A. Here, the eye, in one far-
reaching sweep, commands a panorama
of mountains, forest, bay, island, city
and sea, lying between the Slerra
mountains and the Pacific ocean
which, ‘tis sald, {s not surpassed from
the summit of any other mountain
peak In the world.
- Worth mentioning in passing, too, 1s
the fact that the government record-
ing station here, shows more sunshine
per day than any other recording sta-
tion In this country.
The return trip is made by gravity
—the train coasting all the way down.
THE HIGHEST HIGHWAY IN THE
WORLD.
pms PEAK Is, without question,
the most-talked-of, most-written-
about and consequently most-famous
mountain in America. Fittingly {n-
deed has it fallen heir to the name
“Monument of the Continent.” for tt
has played an Important part In the
history ‘and romance of our fascinat
ing and wonderful West. Now its im
‘Portance as a landmark, situnted on
‘the dividing line between the grent
plains on the east and the mountain
kingdom on the west, has been for
ther increased, because of the nbility
of the public to ascend it comfortably
and quickly and enjoy the panoramic
‘View of five or six states which Is vis
ible from its snow-clad summit, 14,109
feet high,
The most marvelous highway .bulld
Ing achlevement of the age Is the con
struction of an automobile highway
from Colorado Springs and Manitou to
the summit of this peak. ‘The fearless
thought that concelved and the daring
which executed the work of building
this, the highest highway In the worl.
absolutely stun the average individual
It ts about 16 miles long, from 20 to 50
feet wide, smooth as a boulevard, ani
has a maximum grade of 10% per cent,
While this serpentine road turns
and twists and winds and zigzags up.
to an elevation seldom reached In this
world under any circumstances, the
visitor is treated to indescribable
views of {Ilimitable space and Into Im-
measurable depths and receives a_se-
ries of new thrills and sensations.
Looking up, one may see cars moving
In opposite directions on different lev:
els of this road, yet both are going the
seme way—up.
THE GALVESTON S=A WALL.
(GALES ON ks tre arent war bot
on the guif const and ranks high
as a city of delightful homes. Although
not a resort, the semitropical climate
‘attracts thousands of tourists annual
ly to her long, gradually sloping beach.
To prevent a recurrence of the ter:
rible flood of 1900, the sea wall—one
of the sights of the country—was con-
structed along the gulf side of the
city. ‘This great wall 1s 22.408 feet
long, 17 feet high, 16 feet wide at the
‘bottom and five feet wide on top. It
is built of concrete and granite and
rests on a foundation of piling, ‘These
piles are 40 feet Iong, not less than 12
inches in diameter at the small end
four rows wide, set four feet apart
‘The top of the wall Is used for a walk.
To prevent water from the gulf
flowing behind the wall and flooding
the clty during severe storms, the
grade of a large portion of the city
was raised from 2 to 17 feet. This ne
cessitated the raising of about 2,500
buildings and the readjustment of
streets, sidewalks, street car tracks.
electric lights, water and gas pipes to
the new level.
The filling-in material was taken
from the bay. The dredges, after
pumping thelr holds full, steamed up
4 canal behind the wall and discharged
their lond through pipe lnes leading
down the varlous streets. When the
work was completed the canal was
filled. The magnitude of this under-
Bee go ee a ae A a ek ae
ESTES-ROCKY MOUNTAIN NA
TIONAL PARK.
Mss’ years ago three Englishmen
hunted big game In the Rocky
mountains, ‘They had hunted In Asia,
Africa and South America, but as they
stood on the continental divide in north-
central Colorado and looked down into
Estes park It seemed to them a very
paradise on earth. One of Colorado's
most satisfying outing places ever
since that time Uncle Sam, in 1915.
proclaimed part of Estes and the ter-
ritory immediately to the west a na
tional park.
‘Only 70 miles from Denver, It Is the
most accessible to the largest number
of people of any of our great national
playspots. Here, at an average eleva-
tion of 7,500 feet above sea level, Is a
pine-scented, snow-capped —pleasure-
land—n perfectly delightful refuge of
peaceful grandeur, where one may be
out every day from May to October In
clear, bracing air, beneath a bright but
scorchiess sun and enjoy every night
the cool, refreshing sleep that only the
mountains ean induce.
Long's Peak stands sentinel over the
park, In which are lakes on which float
ice cakes In August; masses of snow
(glaciers) a mile long and hundreds of
feet thick, supposed to be older than
the pyramids of Egypt, always exposed
to the sun, far away from their start-
ing point, yet slower than a snail;
moraines-—great ridges formed by gla-
ciers which moved through the park
centuries ago; rock-walled canyons;
magnificent forests of pine and aspen;
numerous mountain-trout streams:
broad valleys, carpeted with luxuriant
wild flowers of many varieties, Includ-
ing the delicate columbine—the state
flower of Colorado.
OW ee cnt, 1919, Western Newspaper Union)
Japanese Gala Day.
Of all floral festivities, Japan's Feast
of the Cherry Blossom Is the most
generally observed. Practically evers
fown and village throughout the land
has its own particular cherry tree for
honoring at this great occasion, but
the most famous of them all is that
at Kloto. Here early in April 1s to
be seen such a sight as can be wit.
nessed nowhere else in all the world
There are seldom fewer than 1,000,000
persons present, who gather from all
parts of the empire. Everywhere Is
feasting, dancing and merrymaking.—
“Flaneur,” In Indianapolis Star.
Best Fruits of Romance.
‘A speaker was taken aback during
a Sunday school session. He had been
commenting on the blessings of matri
mony, and just to see whether or not
the class was really paying attention.
asked one girl what she considered to
he the best frults of romance. The
girl pondered a moment and then nn-
swered: “I should say the wedding
@ate avd the bridal pair.”
When 1 cannot get a dinner to sult
my taste, T get a taste to ault my
dinner.—Washington Irving,
RE.SERVING SMALL AMOUNTS OF
MEAT.
A cupful or two or any kind of well-
cooked ment may make a most tasty
\ q dish if carefully
Ef\ prepared.
(Roo f Chicken Gou
x W tash. — Cut into
a %
LS sy ice to weaium:
(eg J Ufem, siz001 uncooked po-
) ME ZRES, tatoos. Put into a
LESS trying pan two ta-
; plespoonfuls of ol-
Kf
Ss
ew
Ce
La
ive oll, and when hot add the potato
dice, Stir, to keep from burning, and
cook five minutes. ‘Then add a dash
of paprika, n cupful of boiling water,
® crushed clove of garlic, a cupful of
cold cooked chicken chopped fine, and
salt to taste. Cover and cook until the
potatoes are done, stirring frequently.
Spanish Chicken.—Make a sauce of
one tablespoonful of butter, two table-
spoonfuls of flour and two cupfuls of
water in which a little beef extract has
been dissolved. Add one cupful of
cooked chicken cut fine, one small on-
fon cut in slices and parboiled, one pl-
mento cut In bits and two tablespoon-
fuls of cooked peas. Heat thoroughly
and serve on toast.
Beef Fricadelles.—Take two cup-
fuls of cold cooked beef minced fine,
season with salt and pepper, sage,
thyme, lemon juice and grated onion.
Add half a cupful of cold botled rice,
or dry bread crumbs and one egg well
beaten, Add a Uttle water If needed,
to make a paste. Form Into flat cakes
and fry in hot fat. :
French Beef Hash.—Prepare as usu-
al, and fill a buttered baking dish or
individual dishes two-thirds full. Coy-
er the top with seasoned mashed po-
tato made very light with the white
of an egg beaten to a stiff froth. Bake
in a hot oven until the potato is puffed
and brown,
Deviled Chicken—Make a sauce of
‘salt, pepper, dry mustard, paprika,
grated lemon peel, lemon juice, Wor-
cestershire sauce and a few drops of
tabasco. When very hot, add some
cubes of cold cooked chicken and cook
until heated through. Add a table-
spoonful of butter and serve. Pork,
veal or beef may be served in the
same way.
Frankfurts sliced very thin and heat-
ed until hot may be used in place of
other meat in an emergency. Serve
with creamed or lyonnaise potatoes.
Js tt rainy, little flower?
‘Be glad of rain;
‘Too much sun would wither thee,
“Twill shine again;
‘The clouds are very thick, ‘tis true:
But just behind them smiles the blue.
SOME SIMPLE SALADS.
An ear of corn and a potato or two,
with French dressing, makes a tasty
= eee small salad. If
REN hs, sees, ot
\ \\ (
Paige serve, cut # small
RNY J tomato for ench
Sa? "
CERRY) salad into the
Pin\\ We form of a flower
BBN and sprinkle the
eS m a«aind over this;
Nye
}add a bit of bolled dressing and pince
‘the whole on a crisp lettuce leaf, Be-
hold, a salad!
Egg and Cabbage Salad.—Cook six
‘eggs hard; when cold, cut in two
Tengthwise and take out the yolks. Rub
the yolks through a sieve, season with
sult and pepper and grated onlon and
‘mix to a paste with mayonnaise.
Mold into small balls and set aside.
Shred the whites of the eggs with a
sharp knife and add twice as much
shredded cabbage. Mix with mayon-
naise; arrange on a bed of lettuce and
drop the egg balls on the salad.
Cabbage Salad.—Chop a firm head
of cabbage very fine, with one good-
sized onion. Brown a thick slice of
salt pork, cut in small dice, until crisp
‘aud brown. Pour the smoking hot fat
over the cabbage; stir and mix well,
adding salt and cayenne; taste to be
sure it is well seasoned, then pour a
third of a cupful of bolling uot vinegar
over all and garnish the top with the
bits of brown cubes. Serve at once.
Shredded Cabbage With Cream—
Shred crisp, firm cabbage as fine as
possible; let it stand In Ice water to
chill, then drain; add sweet cream,
sugar and enough vinegar to give It a
snappy flavor and serve as a salad.
Sour cream, if not too highly flavored,
may be used, omitting the vinegar.
Cabbage and Green Pepper Salad.—
Shred finely a crisp, hard head of
cabbage and mix with half as much or
less of green pepper. Serve on lettuce
with a highly seasoned boiled dress-
ing and garnish with minced red pep-
per.
Cabbage and Potato Salad.—Cut a
‘large, perfect head of cabbage Into a
‘bowl-shaped receptacle. Chop the eab-
‘bage, add equal parts of cold boiled
peta a good, well-seasoned dressing
and a finely minced cucumber and on-
fon. Fill the cabbage bowl, place in
» nest of lettuce, chill and serve.
;
Were Mag weil
Pleaseu at Her Appearance.
Jane was vusy entertaining herself
by looking at the photograph album.
Soon she came across a picture of her-
self taken when she was a tiny, bald-
headed baby, and ta all earnestness
she sald: “What a tunnin’ howely
baby I”
a
|i pe ~
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SPECIALS \ | ie
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Nn Bi Neier z
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UNION LABEL | a
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UNDERWEAR ! rb \e
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The Man’s Store } 2
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UNION LABEL UNION LABEL
FALL WEIGHT UNION SUITS MEN’S SHIRTS AND DRAWERS
Made of extra quality heavy weight ‘These splendid fall and winter weight
Egyptian yard, ecru color, most care- shirts and drawers in ecru color rep-
fully and ‘strongly finished garments resent one of the greatest underwear
thruout. A $5.00 value at the values ever offered anywhere,
aie weno wets Sea
\ ,
WE PREPAY l E CG SEND FOR OUR
PARCEL POST ) @ osc CATALOG
—a THE HOME®~ SOCIETY BRAND CLOTHES S—
16th and Champa Sts., Denver, Colo.
eee
PHONE CHAMPA 762 OPEN ALL —
Patriotic Shining Parlor and Taxi Gu.
Wn. RAMSEY, H. G. WEBSTER, PROPRIETORS
“o ao “
SO ea op oe
Res. 3022 Welton St. Phone Champa 4410
SRS
Ses SS —
Coal in the Ice Regions. ] Ingenious E>
Geologists have discovered immense | | Bitty’s mother was
sgt ta eee ens AR AER ac fe
it is now apparent that, in spite of Is e | knee before retiring,
Ice, cold and fog, Spitzbergen is a land night she was surpris
kes old a TO Se eect | FOOT COMFORT | atreaas in bea when
bilities. ‘The coal is practically all on his room to hear him re
the surface, and deep mining Is un- OR YOUR MONEY BACK “Why, son, you have
necessary. | es ete oe prayers,” she began, bi
aati Jed her: “Oh, yes, m
dt Hoven ee bie ton “tor @ | Tsai. tert in -beah te
peewee mee} 2 A havent “seen, Ellkingron £08. |) a6 ‘incomfortable: posit
Porto Rico is about 100 miles long
by 40 miles wide, and autobus lines
furnish satisfactory service in cover-
ing the parts of the country where
railways are not available. For the
benefit of tourists and others a daily
automobile service connects San Juan,
on the north, with Ponce, on the south
of the island, a run of five hours.
Language and 1ougnt.
Language is properly the servant of
thought, but not unfrequently becomes
Its master. The conceptions of a fee
ble writer are greatly modified by his
style; a min of vigorous powert
makes his style bend to his concep
tions—n fact compatible enough with
the acknowledgment of Dryden that 2
thyme had often helped him to az
idea,—Clulow.
Hadn't Fooled Helen,
Mother could not take Helen with
her when she went downtown and was
trying to slip away without her know-
ing it, so father called Helen to come
to him, when she sald, “I has to watch
muvyer, ‘cause she’s tryin’ to run'd
away.”
a
et lai ee eae
“Tt wasn't fair to mark me down
on that word in spelling,” said Jane
as she came In from school. “I had
all its letters in but I didn’t arrange
them right.”
Painful Insinuation.
Little six-yenr-old, to young aunt
showing him a family portrait: “What
a funny way that gran'pa Is dressed,
aryatie te Auntie: “That Is the way
gentlemen dressed more than a hun-
dred years ago.” Six-yenr-old: “And
‘when gentlemen dressed that way
what did -you7weare”
SANATITE
FOOT COMFORT
OR YOUR MONEY BACK
“I hayen’t seen Pilkington for a
week.” “No, he hasn't been out of
the house since his accident.” “Was:
he seriously injured?” “No, but he
feels the disgrace deeply.” “Dis-
grace?” “Yes. After living in the
heart of the city. all his life he went
to the country one day last week and
was run over by a milk cart!”
Unladylike Behavior.
Bernice was in the habit of calling
her father on the telephone. On one
particular oceasion she had ifted up
the receiver and had asked for the
number wanted. After waiting about
a minute the operator told her to hang
up because the line was busy. After
she hung up she exclaimed to her
mother, standing close by: “Oh,
mamma, the lady chased me off the
phone.”
How Character Is Revealed.
The little things that we do without
thinking are the things that tell what
we really are. We may desire to pos:
sess a character that we have not yet
attained, or we may pose for the kind
of person we are not, but our unguard-
ed movements betray us. What we are
speaks more loudly than what we
gay.
Little Things Count.
A comma is a little thing, but so is
a cinder in your eye. In the wrong
place, little things can cause a great
deal of trouble.
Wanted One of Them.
Faith, three, was watehing a elrens
parade. She stood In speechless
amazement till the enmels came in
view, their riders swaying iazily, then
turning to her mother she cried: “Ob
mother, buy me a rockingchair cow;
please buy me a rockingchair cow.”
Ingenious Excuse.
Billy's mother was particular that
he should say his prayers upon bended
knee before retiring, and one cold
night she was surprised to find him
already in bed when she stepped in
his room to hear him repeat his prayer.
“Why, son, you haven't sald your
prayers,” she began, but he interrupt-
ed her: “Oh, yes, mother, Ihave;
I said them in bed, but T got In just
‘as uncomfortable position as I could.”
Anyway, He Found It.
It was on October 12 T happened to
meet my nelghbor’s little girl on the
street during school hours. I asked
her how it happened that she was not
at school, and she looked at me with
some surprise and answered: “Why,
don't you know, it's Columbus day to-
day?” ‘Then, with seeming pity for
me in my ignorance, she added: “Co-
lumbus discovered America, Tt was
last year, I think."—Chicago Tribune.
Lily Leaves as Rafts
Down in the Madras district of In
dia there are lilies that grow leaves of
phenomenal size, Indeed, these leaves
are several fect in diameter and have
turned-up edges to form a shallow
bowl which floats on the water. The
buoyancy of these leaves is such that
they will readily carry the weight of
a small child, as shown in the accom-
panying fllustration. ‘This variety of
Ifly is known as the Victoria Regia —
Sclentifie American.
Ice Cream for Choice.
Arthur attended a children's party
at which the refreshments served were
lemonade and cookies. The hostess
saw that Arthur was not drinking his
Jemonnde, so asked him If he didn’t
care for it. “O, yes," he answered.
“Lemonade is all right, but ice cream
is my favorite.”
Building.
Our lives are like buildings going um
and every one who comes to us, whetl-
er for a prolonged stay or only for a
few moments, puts something Into the
walls or into the adornment. Our
friends, if they are worthy, exert 4
measureless Influence over us.
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
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Remittances should be made by Express Money Order, Postoffice Money Order, Registered Letter or Bank Draft. Postage stamps will be received the same as cash for the fractional part of a dollar. Only 1c and 2c stamps taken.
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PRESIDENT WILSON'S SYMPATHY FOR WEAKER NATIONS.
OH! WOULDNT it be grand if the 12,000,000 Negroes who are under America's rule in the United States could have been given the recently purchased Danish West Indies to enjoy the bliss of the League of Nations covenant and get the practical good results of President Wilson's oft-repeated expression of "America removing the yokes from the necks of subject peoples?" But, alas! we are not self-governing, and as THE COVENANT EXPRESSLY EXCLUDES INTERFERENCE WITH NATIONAL DOMESTIC QUESTIONS we can only give "a low moan and continue to bear our load." Senator Byrnes of South Carolina expressed recently that "Negroes must not expect SOCIAL EQUALITY OR POLITICAL FREEDOM in a white man's country." We wonder if he is supporting the League of Nations covenant?
PRESIDENT WILSON EXPLAINS LEAGUE OF NATIONS COVENANT
DENVER, being one of the cities on the president's list of travels, had an opportunity to hear in a fifty-minute address an explanation of the great instrument, THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS COVENANT, which is engaging the minds of the people of the United States and their representatives in Congress, as well as attracting the attention of the world as never before in its history. Engaging the rapt attention of over 15,000 people who filled the large Auditorium, the president, in a very serious and impressive manner, began to explain "the covenant," giving the assurance that it was the foundation for the liberty of mankind; in his judgment, it was almost a complete protection against war; that there was no necessity to fear America's government being subjected to a super-government as some of our senators were thinking. He emphasized that America's vote in the council of the league was equal to Great Britain in reply to the objection of six votes being given the latter nation, informing his hearers of the two branches of the league—the council and the assembly, the former necessitating unanimous voting for every active policy of the league, while the latter only provided for representation of every self-governing country or dominion and had no vote; therefore, the vote of the United States was absolutely essential to the policies of the league, and thereby it had equal power with any other member. The LABOR question came in for provisions in the covenant as, in the opinion of the president, if we do not accept the treaty labor will be regarded as a purchasable commodity throughout the world. Admitting that full duty with regard to bettering labor conditions has not been done in this country, a consolation was offered in the International Labor Conference, soon to convene, and labor here was better than anywhere else. The president, in expressing himself as being proud of being an American, declared that he never fully realized its real worth, and meaning until his recent experiences in Europe, which gave him the proof that all the great peoples of the world look to America for leadership, and in spite of the objections and criticisms of the covenant he challenges opponents to produce something to take the place of the present instrument giving satisfaction to all humanity. In concluding President Wilson said: "This nation must either accept or reject the treaty," pointing out if we accept it there would be no danger to our national safety or honor; if we reject we will be exposed to suspicion, distrust, loss of trade—in fact, we would be isolated and competing with the world at a disadvantage; we would pay the penalty for our action in not entering the reconstruction of Europe. Pleading for the children, mothers, wives, sisters, sweethearts to be spared the terrible pains and heartaches of another war, President Wilson feels he has the support of the people of the United States and promises that he will never turn back from prosecuting the cause, and he has every confidence that the people will ratify THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS COVENANT.
SCOTTS OFFICIAL HISTORY OF AMERICAN NEGRO IN WORLD WAR.
IN ACKNOWLEDGING the receipt of the Hon. Emmett J. Scott's (former special assistant to the secretary of war) official history of the American Negro in the world war, we are proud to say that this work of the author offers full and complete information of the part our men played in the great world war, as well as the great help afforded the war department by Mr. Scott in his capacity as special assistant to Hon. Newton Baker, secretary of war, and each member of our race, every home, should not be content until this work is added to the library as one of the priceless treasures of the family, to be handed down to succeeding generations, informing them of their ancestors' contribution to the successful termination of the greatest war the world had ever experienced by their defeat of an enemy that threatened the world's peace and almost succeeded in overthrowing a long-established civilization that was for the most part being enjoyed by the human family. The contents of this history cannot fail to commend itself to our people as an account of facts officially recorded from our entry in the war to our training, overseas service, actual engagements, commendations and decorations by General Pershing, commander of the American Expeditionary Forces; the French government, and specially interesting events of heroic deeds, with a chronology of the war and the famous treaty in its original and amended form, will forever leave an impression of the Negro's ability to measure up to world standards beneficial to the peoples of earth. We offer our thanks to the publishers, the L. W. Walter Co., 633 Plymouth Court, Chicago, Ill., for this complimentary copy, and are quite sure that, being the first complete official history of our part in the war and at the very moderate prices—$2.90 and $3.75 for cloth binding and full Kraft Morocco binding, respectively—there will be a rush of orders that will surprise the publishers. We congratulate the author and wish for him a longer lease of life for greater usefulness among his people and the world at large.
Wage Earners Should Be Represented on Railroad Boards of Directors
By Senator ALBERT B. CUMMINS of Iowa
The permanent railroad policy bill submitted to the senate by the interstate commerce committee has these major features: Provisions for termination of government control of the railroads; their return to private ownership and operation under rigid federal control and consolidation into region systems; prohibition of strikes and lockouts of employees; joint committee on wages; representation of employees on boards of directors.
© MARC A. TROBLE
My personal opinion is that the wage earner should be represented on the boards of directors of the railroads. Every member of this committee believes that the classified personnel should participate in the management of the railroads. By including their spokesmen among the directors their peculiar problems could be worked out by those most concerned and best informed. If this were done I believe most of their controversies would be adjusted before they reached the point of publicity.
The measure contains none of the fundamentals of the Plumb plan The Plumb plan is the soviet principle, with very little concealment. The soviet society is one in which the wage-earning class of a given industry or community exercise complete control over that industry or community. The program of the railroad brotherhoods looks to the control of the transportation industry by its wage-earning personnel.
Our industrial civilization is founded on the relationship between employer and employee, and I do not believe it can be succeeded by any other.
The plan of the brotherhoods would destroy that relationship so far as the railroads are concerned, and we cannot assume that it would be attempted only in that industry.
Shortage of Help in the Home Is Often Chargeable to the Housewife
By MRS. FRANK D. FULTON, Winnetka, Ill.
The greatest problem in relation to the operation of the home is obtaining someone to assist the housewife in doing the necessary work. Inability to obtain assistance is not because of lack of compensation nor of proper working conditions.
There are plenty of women who would be glad to work in the home if it were not for the social stratum to which they were relegated. Many excellent cooks are working in stores, shops, factories and offices because of the accepted difference in social position between girls who work in such places and girls who work in homes.
Work in the home should be classed as the highest form of employment. The making and maintenance of the home is the principal object of all men and women. The wife is responsible for the conduct of the home, the same as the husband is responsible for the conduct of his business.
The reason for shortage of help in the home is chargeable, in most instances, to the manager of the home. The man occupies a position of authority, as a rule, because of his ability to direct others. The wife is placed in charge of the home for other reasons, with the result that the foreman of the house knows less about its management and the work to be done than the employee who is assisting.
I suggest that in trying to solve the problem of assistance in the home we start by educating ourselves. The solving of the problem of how to operate the home is squarely up to the wife. To solve this problem satisfactorily she must learn to do the work in the home and in addition learn how to intelligently direct others.
We Should Leave Our Dead Near Where They Fought Their Last Fight By GEN. JOHN J. PERSHING, United States Army
We should leave our dead near where they fell.
I believe it inadvisable to return our dead from England before definite decision as to the entire question and particularly before final action in France.
I have given the entire question of our dead men thought, and my opinion is that we should leave our dead near where they fell. I am sure that this course would be fully appreciated by the allies and that our government will be given every facility for beautifying and caring for the cemeteries already established on the fields won by our heroic dead.
I believe that could these soldiers speak for themselves they would wish to be left undisturbed in the place where, with their comrades, they fought the last fight. Those who rest in England gave their lives in the same cause and their remains represent the same salvation as those who lie on the battlefields.
The graves of our soldiers constitute, if they are allowed to remain, a perpetual reminder to our allies of the liberty and ideals upon which the greatness of America rests.
I think the sentiments outlined are held by many who have given this subject thought. These sentiments should appeal to the relatives and friends.
I recommend that none of our dead be removed from Europe until their nearest relatives so demand, after full understanding of all the sentimental reasons against such removal, and further recommend that immediate steps be taken for improving and beautifying our cemeteries.
Mme. Fraya, the "Society Prophetess" of Paris—Women have acquired the taste for work and independence during the war. They will never lose it again, and will take a more and more active part in social responsibility. This will entail a complete transformation of love, marriage and the relations between the sexes, and even in the family.
Glenn E. Plumb—The railroad experience of the last eighty years shows that no railroad ever paid off an indebtedness except by creating a new indebtedness of the same or greater par value.
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COLORADO STATESMAN
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NOTICE.
NOTICE of increase of prices in every kind of printing has reached our hands from the Western Newspaper Union two weeks ago, and we are forced to inform our patrons and the public that we are compelled to raise cur rates for job printing, etc., until the normal is restored. Subscription to Colorado Statesman remains the same for yearly subscribers, but half-yearly and quarterly will be $1.50 and 75 cents respectively. We feel sure cur readers will realize that the condition is beyond our control.
Mrs. Lizzie Osborne left Friday night for Washington, D. C.
Rev. J. H. Brown, a member of the Colorado conference, Albuquerque district, left this week on a vacation. He will visit his mother in North Wilkesboro, N. C., for several weeks, and will then take up his work at Gallup, N. M.
Mrs. W. A. Slade and daughters, Misses Clara and Beatrice Montgomery, left last Tuesday for California for an indefinite visit. The young ladies have been in the employ of the Joslin Dry Goods Co. for many years.
Mrs. O. R. Bradford of Hugo, Colo., and Miss Eva Cammel have been the guests of Mrs. Lewis George of 2819 Glenarm Place. Mrs. Bradford left this week for her home. Mr. and Mrs. Bradford are numbered among the most prosperous citizens of Hugo.
Mrs. J. S. Stewart accompanied by her granddaughters, Ernestine and Josephine McClaim left this week for Nashville, Tenn., to spend the winter. The young misses will attend school waile there.
SCOTT'S OFFICIAL HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN NEGRO IN THE WORLD WAR. THE COLORADO STATESMAN, EXCLUSIVE AGENTS, Room 25, 1824 Curtis St., Denver, Colo.
P. O. Box 116.
Mrs. R. L. Phynix of 1301 Fox street, received the sad news of the death of her mother, Mrs. Margaret Terry of Topeka, Kan., who died Sept. 10th. Mrs. Phynix has the sympathy of her many friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Dunlap and son and daughter, of Colorado Springs motored to Denver last Sunday in their new seven-passenger Cadillac, to attend conference at Shorter Chapel.
Mrs. Arthur Snedden of Salida and brother Charlie Mendenhall of Salida, Colo., sister and brother of Mrs. Frank Osborne, arrived in the city Monday to attend the funeral of their nephew, Melvin Osborne.
G. T. Conley of 2427 Washington street is out of hospital after four weeks, suffering from a broken ankle, the result of a fall from a scaffold while at work on the Wheatridge school, Jefferson county. His many friends are glad to note his improvement.
THE IMPERIAL COSMUS CLUB, Denver's high class and most progressive social organization, have again demonstrated their wide awake spirit by arranging for a beautiful box party at the Roscoe Conklin Simmons lecture at the City Auditorium, Monday night, Oct. 20. Several other clubs promise to follow the lead of the Imperial Comus boys.
Dr. S. A. Huff resumed his practice after a ten days' outing in the mountains and a visit to Cripple Creek and the Pueblo Fair. The interval of rest has afforded the medico quite a recuperation to tackle his fall and winter work.
MISS REBECCA SMITH, charming caughter of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Smith of 1127 South Logan left for Chicago last Wednesday to qualify in the art of dressmaking. Miss Smith is a graduate of Manual High School and is very popular in church and social circles. She was the recipient of many gifts and best wishes from her large circle of friends. We wish her a successful career.
FOOTBALL
Fifteen kickers reported for practice last Friday evening and begun with light work. Prospects are very bright this year and the veterans, among whom are Woods, Lewis, Lindsay, Jefferson, Baker, C. Spencer, E. Spencer, Tasker and Winters, are determined to give a fine exhibition of the game as well as score a number of honors. KID BAKER.
MELVIN HOMER OSBORNE DIES
SUDDENLY.
IN the death of Melvin Homer Osborne, only son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Osborne, 3544 Tennyson Street, Denver has lost one of its most promising youths, the Denver University a student of whom it was proud, and the parents and relatives a member of the family circle whose loving memory will never be effaced during their earthly existence. Born in Denver twenty-three years ago, and receiving his education first in the public schools, graded and high, his ambition led him to enter Colorado College, Colorado Springs, where he matriculated, thence pursuing the chemical engineering course for two years and afterwards entering Denver University last fall. He won recognition as a brilliant student and was held in high esteem by faculty and colleagues. He gained honors in athletic sports and was a member of the football team for the 1919 season. By the accidental discharge of a rifle which he was cleaning and examining preparatory to a hunting trip, he was shot in the head, resulting in his immediate death at 6 o'clock last Saturday evening at his late residence. Funeral services were held last Wednesday, 2 p. m., from the Doulglass Undertaking Parlors, where every available space was occupied by the large circle of friends and acquaintances who came to pay their last respect to the deceased. Rev. A. Milton Ward officiated, while Miss Hermione Jones rendered a solo and led the singing. A delegation of D. U. students showed their grief laden condition, and the numerous associates of early scholastic days, as well as military service could not keep back the tears which overcame them. The floral offerings were numerous and beautiful and amidst the last sad rites the remains of Melvin H. Osborne were laid to rest at Fairmount cemetery. A mother, father, three sisters and other relatives survive the deceased, and the COLORADO STATES MAN extends its deepest sympathy to the bereaved family in this sad hour of their lives.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to thank our many friends for their sympathy, kindness and beautiful floral offerings during our bereavement.
MR. AND MRS. OSBORNE AND FAMILY.
DOUGLAS UNDERTAKING CO.'S
EUNERAL NOTICES.
Hall—Mae Anna,20 years; beloved daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hall, residence 1028 24th Ave, departed this life Friday, Sept. 19th, at St. Anthony's Hospital.
Funeral services were held 2:30 p.m., Tuesday, Sept. 23, from Shorter's A. M. E. Chapel, under the auspices of the American Woodmen and the different auxiliaries of the church. Rev. A. M. Ward officiated, assisted by Rev. Wilson aid Presiding Elder Pope. Interment in family plot at Riverside.
Osborne—Melvin H., 23 years; beloved son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Osborne of 3544 Tennyson Street, departed this life by accidental gun shot wound Saturday, Sept. 20th, at his home.
Funeral services were held 2 p.m., Wednesday, Sept. 24th, from Douglass Undertaking Chapel. He leaves to mourn his demise a father, mother, three sisters and a host of friends.
Rev. A. M. Ward officiated. Interment, Fairmount.
DEATHS AND FUNERALS.
The Cammel Undertaking Co.
CLARK:—Mrs. Eveline Clark the beloved mother of Messrs William Charles and Ray Clark, departed this life Thursday, September 18th, 1919. The funeral services were held from the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Clark, 3232 Franklin street, Monday, Sept. 22nd at 2 p. m. Rev. A. M. Ward officiating. Interment Fairmont family plot.
GROSS—Baby Gross, the infant girl of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gross, departed this life Friday, Sept. 19th. Interment Riverside Tuesday, Sept. 23rd, 1919.
WELLS;—Mrs. Ada Pearl Wells the beloved sister of Rev. T. E. Henderson departed this life Wednesday, Sept. 24th, at her late residence, 3250 Lawrence street. Funeral will be held from St. John's Baptist Church, 34th and Lafayette street, Sunday, Sept. 28th at 2 p. m. under the auspices of Queen Elizabeth, Temple No. 8, S. M. T.
CARD OF THANKS
WE wish to thank our many friends for kindness shown us during illness and death of our child, sister and granddaughter, Miss Joe Beatty, who passed away Saturday, September 13th, and also for the many beautiful floral designs sent.
(Signed)
MRS. LAURA BEATTY,
Mother.
MISS ALBERTA HUNTER,
MRS. SAM SHARP,
Sisters.
MRS. NANCY PETERSON,
Grandmother.
Thirty-third Session of Colorado Annual Conference
AT SHORTER. BISHOP H. BLANTON PARKS PRESIDED.
Helena Mont. News. CHEYENNE
The thirty-third session of the Colorado annual conference held at Shorter chapel last week by Bishop H. B. Parks, D. D., of Chicago, was one of the most successful ever held. The reports showed a large increase both in membership and in finances. Rev. A. M. Ward of Shorter chapel, took the lead in pastoral reports, with $552 dollars in money, an increase of $42, and Rev. A. Wayman Ward took second place with $215 dollar money, an increase of $30. Rev. I. S. Wilson of Campbell came third with $210 dollar money, an increase of $10. The Rocky Mountain district reported $1,760.75 D. M. An increase of $223.45. Among the distinguished visitors were Mrs. H. B. Parks, Revs. T. J. Ross and J. C. Caldwell, D. D., General Secretary of the Allen League, with headquarters at Nashville, Tenn. The latter brought to the conference a most instructive and inspiring message Sunday morning. Dr. Caldwell has been in charge of the young people's work for twelve years and he is being urged for the bishopric in 1920. Revs. I. S. Wilson, R. H. Harbert, John L. Williams and W. H. Prince also delivered fine sermons during the session. Bishop Parks growing popularity was evidenced by the adoption of resolutions asking for his return to the district for another quadrennium and also by the presentation of a purse of $82 by the men of the conference.
The Woman's Mite missionary society under the leadership of Mrs. Janie M. Pope held a very successful session also. $1020 was the report for the conference, which shows an increase of over 100 per cent within three years. Delegates to the connectional convention to be held next month, in Jacksonville, Florida, were elected at this session, as follows: Mrs. Janie M. Pope and Mrs. Dorcas Watson delegates, and Mesdames L. S. Wilson and Anna Hicks alternates. Revs. R. L. Pope and A. M. Ward were elected delegates to the general conference to be in May 1920, at St. Louis, Mo., and Revs. J. H. Allen and W. H. Prince, alternates. Shorter chapel did herself credit in the enter-
Helena, Mont., Sept. 15, 1919. Editor Statesman:—No doubt the many readers of your extensively read paper will be surprised at reading a letter from me from the capitol of the great state of Montana. I came here from Lewistown, Montana to attend the state fair which began the eighth and continued until the thirteenth. I had heard so much of this little city that my expectations were great, but I found conditions in a way somewhat disappointing. It is a typical western town, the new and the old, the rough and the polished, the hut and the bungalow, the skyscraper and the onestory, the educated and the illiterate, the plodding rancher and the alert business man, all brush elbows in a common melting pot and go merrily on their way. This part of Montana is a mining country interspersed with ranches, the main artery of the business district was christened. Last Chance Creek, a long, narrow, crooked street having the sinious trail of a snake, lined on each side by quited number of modern business blocks and a very large number of small business houses. There are quite a number of the race here and what I could learn in such a short space of time, they are doing well, their standing in the community being very high. I like the spirit of the people here very much. Their is a lack of friction between the races. I don't mean that prejudice does not exist because I know too well, that wherever Americans of this United States goes, the purported land of the free and home of the brave, there prejudice is found.
On my arrival here I was indeed surprised to learn that the Odd Fellows were in session, and to my infinite pleasure, too learn that there were several delegates from dear old Denver, Pueblo and Colorado Springs, so I had the pleasure of meeting George S. Contee and his amiable wife, Charley Burton, H. Nelson, W. E. Proctor, John F. Davis, W. H. Wadsworth, Thomas Douglas, John F. Davis Butte, L. C. Foreman, C. L. Ridley, H. G. Streat, Anaconda A. Stradrick Billings. I also met a Miss Rose B. Gordon of White Sulphur Springs, and A. W. Christman and wife of the Springs. Mr. Christman is one of the leading business men in his home town, conducts a show, store, buys hides and junk and has several whites in his employ as he can get no colored that will stick. He with the assistance to his lovable help meet is helping to solve the race problem. In a future letter will say more of the people I met here.
J. H. DONIPHAN.
tainment given, and the members of the conference carried away with them fond recollections of Denver. Rev. A. M. Ward, who had given 12 years of service as pastor of Denver churches, and as presiding elder was transferred and assigned to the First Church at Los Angeles, Calif., Rev. R. H. Harbert of St. John, Pueblo, was also transferred to the Southwest Missouri conference. The conference adjourned Sunday night with the announcement of the following:
Rocky Mountain District—Robert L. Pope, Presiding Elder.
Shorter Chapel—To be supplied. Campbell Chapel—I. S. Wilson. Payne Chapel—A. Wayman Ward. St. John, Pueblo—R. H. Herring. St. Paul, Pueblo—W. P. Prince, (temporarily.)
Salt Lake City,—X. C. Runyon.
Cheyenne,—J. M. Endicott.
Boulder,—C. H. Henderson.
Sheridan,—Browning C. Allen.
Crawford & Alliance,—B. H. Moore.
Grand Junction,—T. B. J. Barclay.
Casper,—J. C. Carter.
Ogden,—B. F. McCully.
Dearfield,—A. C. Murphy.
Scotts Bluff,—D. J. Smith.
Thermopolis,—W. L. N. Baker.
Rock Springs,—J. O. Minor.
Ward Mission,—T. J. Burwell.
Sunnyside, Utah,—E. Pettway.
Cripple Creek,—To be supplied.
Glenwood Springs,—To be supplied.
Albuguerque District, J. H. Allen, Pre-
Albuquerque,—John L. Williams.
Phoenix,—To be supplied.
Trinidad,—J. A. G. Grant.
La Junta,—B. Herron.
Spanish Peak Cir,—W. T. Thornton
Raton Cir,—G. R. Kirby.
Tucson,—D. R. Jones.
Douglas Cir,—S. R. Maguilnez.
Globe Cir,—To be supplied.
Gallup Cir,—J. H. Brown.
Mesa Cir,—To be supplied.
Roswell Cir,—To be supplied.
Demmings Cir,—To be supplied.
Durango Cir,—To be supplied.
THE Glemps of the Nation that was given at the Second Baptist Church Sept. 2 for the benefit of the church was a grand success. Somewhere near $50 was raised from that entertainment. Mrs. Wm. Christian, the manager of the play, deserved much credit for the way and manner she conducted the affairs. Our first snow for the winter was seen upon the earth in Cheyenne Sunday morning, Sept. 21st. The Utah, Wyoming and Idaho States Baptist Association that were to convene here at the Second Baptist Church on Sept. 25-28, has been postponed until Oct. 9 on account of the State Convention meeting on the 24th of September. Quite a number of the Cheyenne people attended the conference that met in Denver last week.
Rev. R. L. Thomas of Kansas, on his way to Seattle, Washington, stopped over a few days last week visiting with Rev. C. O. Smith, preaching at the Second Baptist Church Sunday night and Monday night and lecturing on Tuesday night.
Miss Elaine Gaskin is visiting in Denver this week.
Mr. Harold Stanley, who was hurt in a motorcycle collision about seven weeks ago is now able to be about the house.
Mrs. Pauline Sheldven has come in from her homestead to spend the winter at her home in town.
Rev. and Mrs. Baker of Thermopolis, Wyo., passed through the city last week on their way to the conference.
Mrs. J. T. Muse accidentally stepped into a hole while on her way from church Sunday night, Sept. 14th, and sprained her ankle so that she has not been able to wear her shoe for a week.
Rev. G. S. Stacker entertained for dinner Sunday, Sept 14th, Rev. and Mrs. J. M. Endicott.
Rev. J. M. Endicott had a successful year, notwithstanding that the doors of his church were closed for about three months on account of the Spanish influenza.
It is reported that Rev. J. M. Endicott, pastor of the A. M. E. Church, carried to the conference the best financial report that had ever went from the A. M. E. Church in the history of the church of Cheyenne. We are sure that the church is glad to have the return of Rev. and Mrs. Endicott, as well as their many friends.
UNSURPASSED in quality and price the LEYDEN LUMP COAL is giving the best satisfaction according to the testimony of the housewife, whose knowledge of good coal stands unchallenged. See display advertisement in this and succeeding issues giving information of price and address, or call Main 3577, W. D. McCausland, general manager, whose genial disposition and business-like quality afford pleasure to the public in their dealings with this company.
M. H.
Col. Roscoe Conkling Simmons at City Auditorium Monday evening, October 20, 1919. The greatest orator of his race and one of the greatest lecturers of the country. Press opinions credit him with the best argument for the solution of race problem in the United States. A special mission to France to study conditions of his people there has added largely to his method of solution of racial difficulties in this and other parts of the world. Governors of many states, mayors of cities, and leading government officials and statesmen have proclaimed him a great leader and are adopting his methods to ameliorate conditions between blacks and whites which will suppress riots and lawlessness in the land. Denver should turn out en masse to hear this man, who speaks to all citizens irrespective of race or color and offers the best assistance for peaceful and harmonious government and a remedy otherwise than the SHEDDING OF BLOOD for the REPARATION OF WRONG. Monday, October 20th, City Auditorium.
Colonel Simmons comes under the auspices of the Denver branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
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the foothills, only fourteen miles from Denver. Gnite mine in the world. Buy Leyden Coal and mers are always pleased. HIGH-GRADE fuel
Mined in the foothills, only fourteen miles from Denver, from the deepest lignite mine in the world. Buy Leyden Coal and be happy. Our customers are always pleased. HIGH-GRADE fuel at a low price.
The Leyden Coal Company
For Real Estate, Loans and Investments, see Frierson & Hinkle.
E. P. BLAKEMORE, Attorney and Counsellor at Law, Office, Rooms 39 and 40 Arapahoe Bldg., 1622 Arapahoe Street. Phone Champa 5450.
For employment see the Industrial Realty Co. Employment Agency, 716 East Twenty-sixth Ave. York 4561.
ESTATE OF ALICE GAYLORD, DE-CEASED NO. 22006.
Notice is hereby given that on the 20th day of October, 1919, I will present to the County Court of the City and County of Denver, Colorado, my accounts for final settlement of administration, sale and claim from all persons in interest may appear and object to them, if they so desire.
Could Drink Water.
If among the innumerable beverages of colonial times a man could find nothing to quench his thirst, he must have been hard to satisfy. The Pilgrim fathers were much distressed because they were reduced to drinking water when they came to the New World. But Higginson, of Salem, proudly told his contemporaries: "I can and oft-times do drink New England water very well."
Grease on Wallpaper.
To remove grease spots from wallpaper, sprinkle a piece of blotting paper with carbonate of soda and press it against the wall with a moderately hot iron. The blotting paper will absorb the grease, while the soda preserves the color of the paper.
---
Phone Main 3577
LUMP COAL
Every Cold Day This Winter
NET
TON
Delivery Only
in miles from Denver, from the
Buy Leyden Coal and be happy.
HIGH-GRADE fuel at a low
Coal Company
1604 ARAPAHOE STREET
SANATITE IS FOOT COMFORT OR YOUR MONEY BACK
THIS IS
Grand Opening
Week
AT
Michaelson's.
The Store of
Better Values
15TH AND LARIMER STS.
And every department is making special efforts to demonstrate that this store offers better for less head-to-foot attire for man, woman and child.
HYPNOTISM CURES
RELIGIOUS MANIA
IN MEMORY OF THE DEAD OF FRANCE
Ty cP a
Wn ey > . |
& d 5A IN ss ll
y SZ =
i ah ey ‘ eae) os sae
Beebe BH lg Ai o ee :
Pad Hf A fi ne 5 oy
] Sa BT aa a
TA eS he | ia : |
ae i WY RS ne ee :
J , bikin = Ree. uid
1s ses ay A ag ee S mae
eee pS Ae ae 3 ae
TRO Be Co ce a a & sapuees Sea
ke nA afi. en /e pon a)
5 i tae ae PF me
View of the cenotaph dedicated to the men who died for France In the
world war, now on exhibition beside the Are de ‘Triumphe in Paris.
ee
Hysterical Young Woman Saved
From Insane Asylum by
Psychic Experiment.
IS TRANSFERRED T0 ANOTHER
Young Artist Who Offers Self for Ex-
periment Is Later Relieved of
Transferred Malady by Means
of Hypnotism.
Paris.—A strange cure, of a psychic
wnature, has just been achieved before
# number of doctors and a few expert-
amenters along the lines of psychiatry.
‘The patient was a young woman of
hysterical tendency, who for seven
years had been possessed with an antl-
religious mania. During this time the
aight of « priest, the net of passing
near a church, the pronunciation of 1
religious formula all have brought on
elther attacks of violence or spells of
dumbness. The association of ideas
which precipitate these crises were of
the most fantastle kind—a piece of
white paper suggested the host, ro-
maine salad turned her mind toward
the Roman church, a glass of char-
trenge the brotherhood of Carthusian
monks. At these suggestions she
would tremble and faint, ‘To nourish
‘a patient under these conditions dally
became more and more of a problem.
Takes Extreme Measures.
In Paris lust autumn the doctors
whom her husband consulted advised
him to Incarcerate her. Deciding to
try everything else before resorting to
this extreme measure, her husband, on
the advee of an eminent chemist, final-
Jy put her under the treatment of «
well-known specialist In psyeotherapy,
M. Mangin. Six months of treatment,
consisting in psychic re-education,
elther In a state of waking or by super-
ficial hypnosis, gave only results of
abort duration, The Buster festivities
exasperated the putient to the point of
frenzy. This decided Mr. Mangin to
go to extreme measures, He began a
fireless search for a subject suitable
for the experiment of a transference
of the malady, with all its anguish and
strange manifestations, ‘This was 1
ificult task, for the subject must be
‘of such a delicate and perfect suggest-
Sbilily as to be able later to be freed in
turn from these same miseries.
Mme. Georgette Abel, a charming
young artist, offered herself for this
delicate experiment with as much
As Term in Navy Extends Pro-
fanity Decreases.
Boys New in the Service Are Most
Profane, Noted Chaplain
Declares.
Santa Barbara, Cal.—The profanity
of the average sailor—tf he is profane
at all—decrenses as his service in the
American navy lengthens, according to
Gapt. 1. W. Scott, chaplain of the new
Pacific fleet.
“The boys who have Just entered the
service are usually the most profane,”
according to Captain Scott, who has
been in the naval service 15 years, and
who Is, besides Capt. M. C. Gleeson of
the Atlantic fleet, the only fleet chap:
fain in the American navy, .
“The boys try to make the olde: men
alreudy in the navy believe they, tvo.
are old and experienced, and they
SCOUT PLANES TO
PATROL THE AIR
charity ns disinterestedness, On being
put to sleep the subject's hand was
pliced in the hand of the affiicted
woman. In a few moments the subject
underwent an Indescribable. transtor-
mation, ‘She was seized with ngoniz-
ing convulsions. ‘The patient, however,
grasped the hand of the doctor, declar-
ing with emotion that she was “lber-
uted.”
Malady 18 Transferred.
On the order of M, Mangin, the tnt-
ter uttered a stream of words touch-
ing the chureh, words which for seven
years she had refused to utter under
all kinds of compulsion. In the mean-
while, the young artist threw herself
‘on the floor and attempted to beat her
head against the wall, erying out In
the same manner in which the patient
was wont to do. ‘The latter, passing
from words to acts, touched a holy
medal, handled a erucifix and made a
short prayer, all this quietly and with-
out any hesitution, while the subject
moaned and threw herself about more
and more.
Being assured of the complete “Iib-
eration” of the former sufferer, M.
Mangin let the subject sleep while he
made suggestions of a soothing nature
to her. Then he awakene’ her. Both
women were In a perfectly tranquil
state. Since this time the young wife
goes every day to chureh. She had a
long conversation with a friend of the
think the use of profanity the surest
way to accomplish the result.”
‘The work of the chaplains In the
nayy, Captain Scott said, ts along a
“hig brother” Ine, They deliver talks
at the Sunday services aboard ship
thut might not be recognized by regu-
lar church attendants ashore. They
speak to the men In the service In
what they know are the terms of the
men in the service. They try to solve
thelr problems and to direct them to
clean thinking, clean speaking and
clean living. *
‘They urge them to industry and to
take advantage uf the advantages of-
fered for promotion.
Until three or four years ago, ac-
cording to Captain Scott, there were
only 24 chaplains in the navy. He was
one of them, having some years before
left the Yale divinity schoo! for a
naval post. In 1914, a ruling provided
for a chap‘ain to every 1,200 men, so
the number grew to 180 during the
One Legged Parrot Is
Never Peg Leg Polly
Cleveland, O.—“Come on, Pol-
ly, one-two-three-Jump, One-
two-three-Jump! One-two-three-
Jump!”
It is Dr. F. W. Shaffer, 7612
Cernegie avenue, 8. E., teaching
fA parrot to navigate on one leg.
The other leg. was amputated
after the bird caught {4s foot In
the wire of the cage aad twist-
ed the bone inte a compound
fracture,
Polly squawks as he tries to
walk, but he is progressing nice-
ly, thank you, and his physician
predicts 100 per cent navigation
within the week.
In his practice Doctor Shaf-
fer has recovered combs, nalls,
hatpins, button hooks, and—
whisper! a dinmond necklace
from the inwards of household
pets,
“But Polly probably 1s the
most interesting patient I've
ever had,” the doctor added.
writer who says that not a trace of her
former malady was visible. It ts two
weeks since the cure was wrought and
it has been perfectly maintained. As
for Mme. Abel, she 1s happler and
healthier than ever.
M. Mangin does not pretend to nnow
by what force he has accomplished
this marvelous cure. He does not at-
tempt to Interpret the facts, he only
Inquires Into them carefully and im-
partially, which is a great deal.
“very near future by Daniel C, Roper,
‘commissioner of internal revenue, and
by other government officials unless
preparations are made in advance to
defeat the twentieth century smug
glers.
_ The attention of the treasury depart-
ment was particularly directed to this
new danger of employing modern
methods in smuggling by the accident-
ul capture of an airplane that came
across the Canadian border into north-
ern New York with several cases of
contraband liquor. It was entirely
owing to an accident, however, that
this capture was made, and the off
clals of the government have no doubt
that large quantities of contraband
liquor have reached this country al-
ready over the same alr route.
Planes to Patrol Air.
‘There {s reason to believe that some
veniuresome pioneers of this new mode
of smuggling through the air have al-
ready lunded several thousands of dol-
lurs’ worth of semiprecious stones
from the topaz mines In Mexico, some-
where In the Interior of the United
States.
At any rate, the menace to the na-
tonal revenues bas become so imme-
diate that Secretary Glass has decided
that he will ask congress for transfer
of 600 airplanes and hydro-airplanes
from the army and nayy to his depart-
ment and funds enough to create an
effective alr patrol.
To Bilk Customs Revenue.
Later on he will ask also for the
transfer from the navy of a large fleet
of Eagles which were specially de-
‘signed for chasing submarines, in or-
‘der to protect the seacoasts and estu-
aries from the danger of smuggling by
submarines,
| Equipped with these two modern
craft for navigating the sea and alr,
the secretary of the treasury belleves
that he will be able to interrupt any
filicit commerce designed to defeat the
national prohibition laws or to. bilk
the government out of customs reve-
hues.
Fixed His Own Sentence.
Visalia, Cal.—Ernest Stevenson, who
was arrested on a charge of driving
his automobile while in a state of in-
toxication, fixed his own penalty when
he appeared in Judge Clack’s court.
“What do you think I ought to do with
you?” Inqulred the court. “I think six
months in Jail would be about right,”
replied Stevenson. “Well, then,” re-
Joined the judge, “let that be the pen-
‘alty.” Stevenson was taken to jail.
war, It is expected the new Pacific
fleet when complete will have 20 or 2
chaplains of various religions denom-
inations.
Captain Scott formerly we stationed
at San Francisco.
Wow! Eggs 80 Years Old.
Fayette City, Fla.—Eggs believed to
be more than eighty years old were
discovered by workmen who were max-
ing alterations {n an old homestead
here. Ths eggs were found in a nest
between the rafters on the second
floor. It is *Mought they were latd
while the house was being constructed.
‘They were blackened from the dust of
years.
Lilie a Gegtdia Gloss.
Toledo, O.—A clerk in an automobile
sales place sat at the window all day,
He noticed every woman who passed
seemed to stare at him. Flirting,
thought he, as he patted his cowlick
down and stared back. His wife
passed. She stared, too. Your win-
dow makes a perfect looklug-gluss, she
anid when she entered the store,
BOTH NEW AND OLD
TEIN ZEB TEN A A a SRS Ne
» .
To Friends and Strangers of Denver |
°
a, Attention!
1 ome EY Rte
cae T Beam |
| feeaee The Sun Beam
5 ap ,
| TB Cafe |
5 Wishes to welcome all to good home cooking }
5 and dainties of the seasons, any time from 6 j
. a, m. to 11:30 p. m. Accurate service at all
S hours; so when down town stop, give us a trial
‘4 and we will guarantee you will leave with a ,
smile.
| _ MRS. M.J. FRANKLIN & §. BOWERS, Props. 924 19th St. |
3 ap FR TS EET
Mexico a Mixture of the Ancient
and Mode.n.
Prehistoric Remains Show That the
Builders Had a High State of Civ-
ization—Native Tribes and
Races Still Exist.
What manner of folk are the Mext-
euns?
Whatever one’s views on the wisest
political course toward Mexico, it will
help in a thorough understanding of
that country to examine the rich his-
tory, the ancient civilization, the pre-
historic remains to be found among
our southern neighbors, says the Na-
tlonal Geographic society.
“Of the 16,000,000 inhabitants, two-
fifths claim direct descent from an-
cient tribes or families which are ac-
cepted as the basis of Mexican his-
tory, two-fifths are of mixed native and
foreign blood, the remainder being
classed under the common appellation
of ‘foreign.’
“Throughout much of the country,
and often within short distances of
railroads, are remnants of some of
the ancient native tribes or races, ad-
hering to customs, methods and speech
of their ancestors. Thus in Oaxaca
are the Zapotecas and Mixtecas, the
estimate for the two races being a half
million, and a government publication
mentions a dozen other families in the
‘sume state,
“In Hidalgo and adjacent states, the
Otomis; in Puebla and Oaxaca, the
Mexicanos; the predominating Mayay
In Yueatan; in Michoacan and Jalisco,
the Taraseans, and the Tlaxcalans, In
their native state, and other groups
elsewhere, still maintain the tribal in-
dividuallttes.
“Although Spanish is the language
‘of the country and much English is
spoken in the regions most visited, a
large number of the natives use only
the vernacular.
“Prescott refers to the Aztecs, Tlax-
calans and others as producers of deli-
cate fabries, colored by vegetable dyes;
Intricate designs in the precious met-
‘als, and beautiful decorations made of
feathers; numerous ruins also indi-
cate marvelous skill of ancient peo-
‘ples in stone-work, especially as the
‘tools used were obsidian or copper.
“Evidence that this deftness tn
‘handiwork has been retained appears
In the feather-work, wood-carving,
stone-cutting, etc., of the present day.
The beautiful pottery and unique
weaves of serapes, made with the
erudest appliances, and excellent fab-
rication in cast or wrought tron, fill
gree silver, etc., also bear testimony
to the skill of the Mexican Indian.
“Mexico has a wealth of archaeolog-
ical relics, remnants of an anclent cly-
lilzasion of which no well-defined trace
existe. Volumes have been written to
uemonstrate that the builders of what
are nuw ruins were of Mongolian,
Semitic, or Phoeniclan origin, but the
riddle cannot be admitted as solved.
All authorities, however, unite In
praise of the magnitude and the per
fection of workmanship shown at va-
rlous ruins found throughout the Mex-
lean territory. The region adjacent
to some of these ralses question as
to the source of sustenance for mul-
titudes which aust have then existed,
fod causes speculation upon changes
which may haye occurred in the in-
terval.
“Prominent among these ruins are
Uxmal and Chichen-Itza, in the state
of Yucatan; Palenque, in the state of
Chipas; Mitla, in the state of Oaxaca,
and Xochicalco, in the state of
Morelos.
“The pyramid of Cholula, in Puebla,
and those of the Sun and Moon, in
the state of Mexico, have also been
liberally described, but distributed
over wide areas are many other ruins
which have had but little or no inves:
tigation, and rock sculptures, images,
{dols and ancient pottery, found in
numerous localities, are the only ree-
ords of peoples whose history is un-
known and whose names even are
lost.” :
The ¥ aan \
Curtis 7 aoe ae
Park © 4 Wis.
Floral Se A ae
oe AGL,
Company eae,
FLORAL DESIGNS UTE Y
CHOICE PLANTS AND GUT FLOWERS corsisxe's. “WR
_ useage torts tC see, NN
Weatherhead Hat Co.
TELEPHONE PIONEER HATTERS
MAIN 8208 OF. THE WEST. WH
MAKE OLD HATS
Established 1876 NEW.
RENOVATORS, BLEACHERS, DYERS AND FINISHERS
Of Gents’ and Ladies’ Hats of Every Description
1624 CHAMPA ST., DENVER, COLO.
| Poro Hair Dressing Parl
SCIENTIFIC AND SANITARY SOALP AND HAIR TREATMENT
MASSAGING, MANICURING, TOILET ARTICLES
Motto—“Eficiency”
Mme. Lexie A. Brooks |
2220 OGDEN STREET PHONE YORK 5997W ;
SAARAIRARSR AAAI ARAM RA TRRATANA TAA AST RAS RAARAR ART TAR
SF
a
MOTTO: “CAREFUL DRIVING, BUT BURE”
J. V. LEWIS AUTO LIVERY
7 PASSENGER WESTCOT 6 CARS.
TAXICAB RATES:
Depot, 1 or 2 Passenger, 50c; Depot, Each Additional Passenger,
25c; One Mile Radius, 50c; Each Additional Mile, 25c.
RATES PER HOUR, $1.50 TO $2.50.
STAND:
Night—Page Pool Hall, 2710 Welton, Phone Main 2759.
Day—2450 Washington, Phone York 8601-W. |
DENVER, tot tet wet tet tet COLORADO. |
Center of Attraction.
Angelina was, of all my acquaint-
ances, the most vain, Happiness for
her seemed an Impossibility unless she
was the center of attention, So when
we learned of her coming marriage
we knew that in style and display tho
event would surpass anything that
had ever taken place in our town, and
we were not wrong in our expecta:
tions. Under a bower of roses the
happy couple had been pronounced
man and wife and the organ pealed
forth a flood of music, At this point
we were surprised to see the bride-
groom shaking hands with those near-
est him, He didn't stop there, either,
but, leaving his blushing bride to face
the audience, alone, he passed up and
down the aisles of the church greeting
all the guests !—Chicago Tribune.
a a a a — I Ta a a ee ee ce
aay ©. C. DENNIS R. F. LONG
H The New Way Shoe
fp {| Repairing Co.
ee | AND
e \ American Shoe Repairing
x b\ FIRST-CLASS WORK
y rf N Best Leather Used—Reasonable Prices
v A ge 1855 Champa St. Phone Main 8787.
~~ 1221 Sixteenth St. Phone Champa 5880.
S} opp. Golden Eagle. DENVER, COLO.
Almost Zero In Ownership.
I was entertulning little Charlotte
«me afternoon while her mother was
otherwise engaged. She asked if I had
any little children, to which I replied
in the negative. Then she wanted to
know if I had a dog, or cat, or bird,
und to all of these questions I replied
“No.” She thought a minute and then
sald: “Nuffin but furalture.”—Ex-
‘chanke:
O. E. SMITH, Manager, Res. Phone South 1608
The Market Company
Wholesale and Retail Staple and Fancy Groceries, Fish and Oysters.
Hotels and Restaurants Our Specialty. Fresh and Cured
Eastern Corn Fed Meats
Fruits, Vegetables, Poultry and Game.
‘Telephones Mat: 4202, 4803, 4304, 4305
§22-636 15TH STREET DENVER, COLORADO
Two Generations at School.
‘Two Oklahoma mothers were gradu-
ated from the Central Normal school
in Okishoma City In the same class
with their children, One had three
daughters as classmates and the other
sinod between two sons when she re
qgived her diploma.
ATTRACTIVE PICTURES ON FOOD LABELS
SOMETIMES SEEK TO DECEIVE UNWARY
m4 q
7 eB fy
| im
i TA EN
No. 1. No. 2. No. 3. No. 4.
Capacity Capacity Capacity Capacity
2 Oz 2 Oz 2 Ox 4 On
Weight of Weight of Weight of Weight of
Empty Bottle Empty Bottle Empty Bottle Empty Bottle
2 Ox 5 Oz. 8 Oz 4 Ox.
Size of Bottle Does Not Indicate Quantity of Contentse—“Thick-Skinned” Bot-
tles Have Deceived Many Purchasers.
(Prepared by the United States Depart-
ment of Agriculture.)
Misleading pictures and other de-
vices appearing on the Inbels of foods
is a form of misbranding agalnst which
housewives will do well to be on thelr
guard, say the officials of the bureau
of chemistry, United States depart-
ment of agriculture, in charge of the
enforcement of the federal food and
drugs act. Many prosecutions and
selzures are made in the enforcement
of the law to prevent this subtle form
of misbranding.
Inconsplcuous statements in fine
print are placed on the illustrated la-
bel in many instances to correct os-
tensibly the misleading features of the
picture or other device. However, as
the picture or device atracts the at-
tention at once, while the Inconspicu-
ous corrective statement can be seen
only by a most careful scrutiny of the
Inbel, the purchaser 1s certain to be
misled unless attention is directed to
the exact wording of the entire la-
bel.
The picture of an olive tree and a
map of Italy on the label of a bot-
tle of ofl Iends the average housewife
to expect an Itallan olive oil, but a
careful reading of the fine print on
the label will enable her sometimes
to discover that the bottle contains
cottonseed ofl made in America. Cot-
¢onseed ofl is a wholesome product;
fs well able to stand on its own mer-
its, and is cheaper than olive oll.
Oranges Pretty, but Deceptive.
The picture of a luscious orange on
the label of a bottle of imitation or-
angeade not only adds to the attrac-
tiveness of the label, but helps to hyp-
notize the purchaser into the belief
that he is getting the real article, not-
withstanding the fact that there is
tucked away somewhere in a mass of
fine print a little statement to the ef:
fect that this most excellent bever
age is but an imitation.
Many consumers asking and paying
for Arabian coffee accept a package
having on the label the picture of an
‘Arab mounted on a fiery steed and
imagine they are getting the aroma
of the delightful beverage of the far
East, although there is on the label
‘an inconspicuous statement that the
USE FOR MUSCADINE GRAPES
Pulp Left When Making Jelly or Grape
Juice Furnishes Idea! Basis
for Paste.
(Prepared by the United States Depart-
‘ment of Agriculture.)
All kinds of fruits make delicious
pastes which are more wholesome than
candy and which may be served in its
place. One of the best-flavored varie-
ties of frult paste is made from the
Muscadine grape. When these grapes
fre available the wise housekeeper
‘uses some for that purpose. The pulp
left when making jelly or grape Julce,
furnishes an ideal basis for the paste.
Full directions on how to make it and
different ways to utilize it may be had
by writing the United States depart-
ment of agriculture for Bulletin No.
1038.
CANNED FISH ADDS VARIETY
Plan for Housewife to Prepare and
Serve Palatable Meal on Very
‘Short Notice.
(Preparea by the United States Depart-
ment of Agriculture.)
‘With a supply of canned fish and
meats the housewife can prepare and
serve a palatable meal on short no-
tice with saving of both fuel and time.
‘They also make possible a more
varied diet, lessening the dependence
upon cured, salted, and smoked meat,
the constant and exclusive use of
which means a monotonous and less
wholesome diet.
Immense Waste of Milk.
If every home—there are 20,000,000
‘of them—should waste on the average
one-half cupful of milk daily it would
mean a waste of 2,500,000 quarts daily
—912,500,000 quarts a year—the total
product of more than 400,000 cows.
Ice and Cleanliness.
It Is common knowledge that the high-
er the temperature the quicker meat
will spoll, but the family’s supplies are
not absolutely at the mercy of the ther-
mometer. Ice and cleanliness are two
great weapons of defense.
ee in that particular package was
produced in South America.
"The picture of a maple leaf on a
can of sirup carries the fancy to the
delicious flavor and sweetness of the
product from Vermont, inducing pur
chasers to pay more than they would
pay If they noted the statement in
very small type on the bottom of the
label that the product is corn strup
flavored with cane.
| When Quantity Is Camouflaged.
‘The use of panel bottles which ap-
pear to have a capacity of four ounces
of flavoring extract, but which on ac
count of the thickness and contour of
the sides cannotbe made to hold more
than two ounces, Is an old practice to
decelve the housewife in regard to the
quantity. Even when the quallty of
contents Is marked on the bottle, the
purchaser {s likely to Judge the quan-
tity more by the size of the bottle,
which is so apparent, than by an In-
conspicuous statement, which can be
seen only by close observation.
‘A more recent device for making a
little bit of pepper or spice look like a
whole lot Is a stx-ounce tin package
with a shaker top which, because it
cannot be removed without destroying
the package, prevents the purchaser
from observing that there are only two
ounces or less in the package.
Deceptive devices appearing on the
labels of foods or drugs subject to
the jurisdiction of the federal food
‘and drugs act are in violation of that
law. The question as to whether any
given device is deceptive, and wheth-
er the deception is removed by cor-
rective statements appearing else-
| where on the label, is one to be deter-
mined by the facts In each case. Many
seizures have been effected and many
prosecutions maintained because of
the use of deceptive devices held to be
misleading. Some forms of devices,
although deceptive, which do not ap-
pear upon the labels, have been held
not to be covered by the provisions of
the federal food and drugs act.
‘Action will be taken in all cases
believed to be in violation of the law,
say the officials. In the meantime con
sumers can avold being misled by de
ceptive devices by carefully reading
the labels of all fcod and drug pack
ages.
SWEET CURDS GOOD FILLING
Home Economics Office of Department
of Agriculture Suggests Them
for Pies and Tarts.
edie ae ee
Sweet curds make a good filling for
pie or tarts, suggests the home eco-
nomics office of the department of ag-
riculture. A curd is obtained by add-
ing rennet to warm milk and allowing
the milk to stand until it hardens. The
resulting curd is then broken up and
strained. To the curd from one quart
of milk add one level tablespoonful
butter, one-quarter cupful sugar, yolks
of two eggs and a few Zante currants
or chopped raisins and a little nutmeg.
Bake it like custard ple.
or TeREss|
After peeling onions hold the hands
and knife in cold water for a few min:
utes; the smell will go.
see
To singe a chicken, hold it over a
saucer of burning alcohol. This metho¢
does not leave soot on the flesh.
oe
If files get Into the house close each
room in turn and burn a small formal
dehyde candle in each room where
they are.
eae
'To clear beetles out of cupboards
and larders, sprinkle a little benzine
over the boards and it will kill the
eggs as well as the insects.
e 8
If you have decided to paper white
washed walls you can satisfactorily
accomplish this if you wash the wall:
with strong vinegar before applying
the paper.
0.
In making biscuits, cookies or dough-
nuts the dough should be as soft as you
ean possibly handle it when turned
out on the pastry board and you wil!
have much better resuits if you har
die it sparipgly.
PRESIDENT'S TOUR
DEMOCRATIC ASPIRANTS HOPING
HE MAY IN SOME WAY HELP
THEIR AMBITIONS.
GOSSIP CENTERS ON PALMER
Attorney General Just Now Occupies
a Strategic Position—Old Politl-
cians Wonder if Bryan ‘intends to
Seek the Nomination Again.
BY EDWARD UR CLARK
Ing with interest the political effects
of President Wilson's tour through the
country, His first speech was dellv-
fered In Columbus, O. Opinion in Its
rebound from that state is being
caught by the politicians, for Ohio
holds within her borders two cand!-
dates for the presidency—Warren G.
Harding, Republican, and James M.
Cox, Democrat.
Politicians here, and _ especially
these of them who have presidential
ambitions, are wondering Just how the
winds of league favor or disfavor are
to blow from the people after the
president has completed his trip. The
wonder is if some of the politically
ambitious are to trim their sails so
as to go smoothly with the wind or,
because they think the atmospheric
conditions have set the breezes blow-
ing wrong, will attempt to beat “up
wind.”
At least four or five Democratic
candidates known to he in receptive
mood are hanging on the president's
utterances day by day as he goes
through the country, hoping that
somewhere a cheering word for their
individual ambitions may be let fall.
To these gentlemen the president's ut-
terances on the league will be mat-
ters of secondary Importance because
all of them have espoused his views
on the matter. The thing of prime
importance to them will be some pos-
sible word from the chief executive
which will indicate that he ts strong-
ly in favor of some specific national
doctrine for which one or the other of
them may have taken a stand.
Gossip Turns to Palmer.
One still hears more from the poll-
ticlans in Washington, so far as the
Democratic nomination {s concerned,
of the aspirations or supposed aspira-
tlons of Champ Clark and William G.
McAdoo than of those of other proml-
nent Democrats. Today, however, the
trend of the talk in the cloakrooms
and elsewhere {s turning to some ex-
tent to Attorney General A. Mitchell
Palmer as a posible candidate for
the Democratic nomination. Mr, Pal-
mer today Is in something of a strate-
gle position, for his work ts inti-
mately connected with the attempts
to bring down the high cost of living.
‘a subject which is pretty close to the
hearts of all people who do not happen
to be millionaires,
‘The Democrats also have taken
cognizance of a recent pronouncement
of William Jennings Bryan, Some of
the old politicians are wondering if
Mr. Bryan will try it again. He al-
ways has managed to hold on to the
affections of strong following.
Josephus Dantels, secretary of the
navy, said something a little bit cryp-
tle the other day. The Interpreters
of his utterance think that possibly
it means Mr. Daniels is in a receptive
mood.
Some of the Republican senators
seem to have approved, temporarily at
least, the ambitions of one of their
number who, It is known, would like
much to be president of the United
States. There are some rather cold
political analyzers of conditions who
say the Republican senators’ attitude
in this matter Is assumed for present
purposes only, and that later they will
part company one with another to
take positions behind what is called
the heart candidate of each one of
them. ‘This may be or may not be
true, but such a condition is not ut
all unprecedented, for this kind of
thing has been recognized for years
as belng a part of the political game.
First to Parade In Washington.
Congress in joint session 1s about
ro honod Gen. John J. Pershing. Al-
ready the bill making him a general
for life has been signed by the presi-
dent. He has been nominated. and has
been confirmed by the senate. It is
probable that congress will give him
its thanks, and present him with a
sword as a further evidence of its
recognition of his services.
There is to be In a few days a pa-
rade of the First division of the A. E.
F. in this city, It will be headed by
General Pershing, who, while not the
direct commander of the diviston, com-
manded the army of which it formed
a part. Washington has had no great
parade of troops like unto that of May,
1865, when the armies of Grant, Sher-
man and Sheridan marched up the
broad avenue in review before the
president and the commanding gen-
erals, and took two, days to complete
the mareh.
There have been several small pa-
rades recently of returned soldiers in
the town. ‘The one in which the First
division will appear will be greater
than any of Its predecessors, Wash-
ington was made so war-weary that It
never has responded enthusiastically
4s aéldlers” homeconiings: The wartorn
occasions. The press und the maga-
gers. of the parade have done all that
they could to arouse the citizens to a
sense of thelr “cheering duty.”
Fine Record of the First.
‘There Is a reason for specially hon-
oring the First division, It was the
first large contingent of American
troops to be dispatched to France,
where it went In June, 1917, under the
command of Maj, Gen. Willlam L.
Sibert, who trained the division for
six months in France, prepared It for
the front line offensive and took It
Into Its first fight, Later General Sk
bert was recalled to the United States
to become the chlef of the chemical
warfare service,
Other major generals who at varl-
ous times elther commanded or served
with the First division are: Robert L.
Bullard, W. 8. McNair, E. B. Ely, F.
W. Coe, J, W. McAndrews, Charles P.
Summerall, Frank Parker and B. F.
McGlachlin, All of these major gen-
erals will have part in the parade.
It was a part of the First division
which engaged in the first warfare on
behalf of America, as an American
fighting unit under American com-
mand. The first American blood of the
war was spilled at Seichprey, and It
came from the veins of soldiers of the
First division, Selchprey always will
be a name and a place memorable in
American history.
=The First division fought all through
the war, and it occupies a place in the
hearts of the French people from
which It never can be dislodged. ‘The
sentiment of the French for the First
regulars is felt not only because it was
the first American fighting unit to ar-
rive in France, but hecause also of Its
sterling fighting qualities displayed on
many fields,
Mental Unrest In America.
Members of the administration, and
members of congress with them, evi-
dently are disturbed over the mental
‘unrest of large numbers of the Amer-
‘ean people, an unrest which they de-
clare is hurtful and which they also
declare is the result of wartime con-
ditions. Business and labor stability,
some of these cabinet officials and leg-
islators think, cannot be secured until
mental stability has been restored.
From the viewpoint of men here,
there are two or three sharp mnnifes-
tutions of this unrest. One of them
shows Itself In the inability ut present
of a great many of the returned sol-
diers to “stay put.” As it has been
put by somebody, many of these sol-
diers want to be “where they ain't.” It
is the restlessness which has grown
out of their Ife In France; a iife of
constant excitement and movement, of
black nights under alr-raid conditions
and of the daily expectation of being
ordered here, there or elsewhere—a
condition of change which unsettled
men ordinarily stable.
Another manifestation seems to be
the desire among men and women, who
are not soldiers, to let up in their work
tnd to be temporarily, at least, un-
willing to work as concentratedly and
as long as they did prior to the break-
ing out of the war. This condition 1s
noticeable among the hitherto steady
workers of the land, and it probably
will take some thme, so men here seem
to think, to change this condition.
In part, this sort of thing {s held
here to be the result of the hard, driv-
ing work during the war, when nearly
everybody was on his mettle, Washing-
ton, however, looks with something
like concern on the evident disposition
of a part of the American world of
workers to look for a life of seml-
ease. It is recognized that only a com-
paratively small part of the men and
women of the country are affected in
this way, but, as the legislators and
others view it, the part fs large enough
to give concern,
‘Affected by Unrest in Europe.
‘This lutter condition of things Is at-
tributed by many to the unrest in cer-
| tain parts of Europe, where bolshevisin
seems to have affected the minds of
the people and to have made them be-
lieve that happiness comes from doing
| the least amount of work possible, and
| this naturally leads, so it is sald, to
“that further condition or state of mind
which makes shirkers of men and
women.
It Is recognized by the men here who
have given consideration to this condi-
tion of things that when world matters
finally settle down into something lke
normal there may be a readjustment
of mental conditions and a change in
the viewpoint of those who seem to
think Just now that work, as work, Is
not worth while.
‘There are men In different parts of
the United States who are engaged In
preaching a doctrine of “do nothing,”
or, at least, “do very little,” and telling
thelr hearers that true happiness Hes
angers: « \clegy relate taps Rep as tetera fag
~ States With Spanish Names.
‘The following state names are of
Spanish derivation: —California—hot
furnace; Colorado—color red; Florida
—feast of flowers; Nevada—snow cov-
ered: Oregon—wild marjoram.
SAYS QUESTIONS OF MORAL PRIN-
CIPLE CAN NOT BE ARBI-
TRATED.
60000 TO 70,000 EMPLOYES OWN
STOCK IN THE STEEL
CORPORATION.
Weatern Newspaper Union News Service.
New York, Sept. 26.—After being
shown a dispatch quoting John Fitz-
patrick, director general of the steel
strike, as saying the walkout would
end immediately if the United States
Steel Corporation would arbitrate dif-
terences, Elbert H. Gary, directing
head of the corporation, declared in a
statement, speaking for himself, that
he believed the board of directors “can-
‘not negotiate or confer with Mr, Fitz-
patrick or his associates.”
Mr. Gary wax shown the dispatch
, while he was attending a dinner given
here by Baron Kondo, president of the
Japan Mail Steamship Company, and
was asked to make some comment,
breaking the silence he bas maintained
since the beginning of the strike, Mr.
Gary wrote a statement while seated
at the table and then, calling the news-
paper men Into the hall, read it to
them.
“The board of directors of the
United States Steel Corporation are
the representatives of nearly 150,000
stockholders, including from 60,000 to
70,000 employés,” said the statement.
“We are their servants and are select-
ed to represent and protect their in-
terests and also the interests of all our
250,000 employés, the majority of whom
[think are not members of labor
unions,
“Moreover, I believe our corporation
s under great obligations to the gen-
eral public concerning the issues in-
volved in the pending strike. In these
circumstances, I would not at present
assume to answer the question pro-
pounded to me.
“However, I will say for myself that
questions of moral principle cannot be
srbitrated nor compromised, and in
iy opinion such questions are includ-
ed in the present unfortunate struggle.
1 also think we cannot negotiate or
confer with Mr. Fitzpatrick and his as-
sociates us union leaders concerning
our employés whom these gentlemen
have volunteered to represent.”
Mr. Gary, who was the principal
speaker af the dinner, referred in his
address to the statenrnt he had Issued,
saying: “If the strike succeeds It prob-
ably would be the heginning of an up-
heaval which might bring upon all of
hss grave and serious consequences, And
you know that the questions involved
‘ny this strike, which is led by Foster,
an acknowledged evolutionist, are
higher than the interests of the United
States Steel Corporation,
PREMIER TALKS ON TREATY.
Paris—Premier Clemenceau de-
livered his long-expected speech in the
debate on the ratification of the peace
treaty In the chamber of deputies. The
whole trend of Its arguments in favor
ot the treaty was that the treaty was
one of solidarity between allies, who,
nnited in war, must be united in peace.
Clemenceau warned the chamber that
iv it refused to ratify the treaty it
would make it an instrument of death
to France, while if the chamber rati-
fied the instrument France would be-
come imbued with its spirit, which
would mean the life and resurrection
of the country.
No Hand Grenades As Souvenirs.
Washington.—Discontinuance by the
War Department of the distribution of
the surplus hand grenades as souvenirs
will prevent the Treasury Department
from rewarding children who earned
money during vacation with a savings
bank, made from one of the weapons.
Tt was announced that certifications
‘of achievement will be substituted for
‘the banks in order to recognize the In-
dustry of boys and girls who earned
money for the purchase of war savings
stamps.
Mother Dies to Save Child.
Lake City—Mrs. Frank Stanfield,
wife of a farmer, is dead but her 2-
year-old daughter lives, becaase of
her sacrifice, When the child toddled
‘upon the Northwestern railroad tracks,
‘which border the Stanfield farm, as a
‘passenger train approached, Mrs, Stam:
field dashed forward and pushed her
‘daughter out of the train’s way. ‘The
mother, however, was caught under
the wheels of tie locomotive und
ground to death,
Recover More Money.
Chicago—With the recovering ot
$12,500 found buried on the farm of
Onuery (John) Wedja, father of John
S. Wedfa, clerk in the Chicago post
office, who is said to have planned the
robbery, the amount recovered frou
the $234,000 stolen from a. registered
shipment from the Chieago Wederal
Reserve bank to the Standard Oi Com
pany of Indiana at Whiting, Indiana,
was brought to $181,500, ‘The money
was found wrapped In old rags and
Suried in a milk can.
DR. C. E. TERRY
Physician and Surgeon, 1027 Twenty-
first street. Office hours: 12-2 p. Mir
68 p.m, and appointment. Phone
Main 2701. Residence, Champa 3303.
Dr. 8, A. Huff, physician and sur-
geon, 2538 Washington street; office
hours 11 to 12 a. m., 3 te 5 p. m-
Phone York 2313. Out of office,
Main 875, Residence Phone York
4101,
Phone Matin 8031
oe are Rant Daas York 5774W
FRANK D. TAGGART
Attorney at Law—Notary Publie
205-208 Cooper Rullding
Denver, Colorado
Office GOD 27th St. Ph. Champa 4342
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Six Years City and County Attormey
AC Russell Springs, Lokan Coumty,
Kannan
Office Mourn:
00 A. M. to 12:00 M.
00 PLM: to 4:00 P.M.
DENVER, COLO.
Phone Champa 1142 00 27th st.
Tooma, it amd 4
LEROY J. PERKINS
‘The East Denver Realty Co-
Insurance Agency
Over Atiag Drug Store Denver
Prof.
W. M. Mackey
FIRST CLASS TONSORIAL
WORK
Hair Cutting a Specialty
Satisfaction Guaranteed
Shop remodeled in latest style.
2244 LARIMER ST., DENVER
Champa
]
Rooming
House
First-Class Rooms for Rent,
Permanent or Transicat
| WM. DIXSON, Proprietor
Phone Champa 4522
2052 Champa St., Denver
JOSEPH CARTER
Express, Moving,
and Storage
COAL AND WOOD
PROMPT DELIVERY.
Phone Main 6544,
2415 WASHINGTON STREET.
WARD AUCTION
COMPANY
y Gales Dally at 2 p.m. Offloe Fur
c niture a Specialty.
} =
PRIVATE SALES AT ALL TIMES
HAVE ereseom
; gg-1723-39 GLENARM 87.68
Sta PHONE MAIN tere
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Wraps Distinguished by Elegance
J
Contributors to Success in Dress
J
Whether as the result of more general prosperity or the better education in styles of the buying public, coats and other outer garments for the coming fall and winter are distinguished by unusual elegance. That is, the fabrics used for them are appropriate and beautiful, the lines on which they are cut are graceful and dignified, and they are not overtrimmed or freakish in any particular.
There are several new cloths, including many pile fabrics, used by the manufacturers of wraps. Each has its own name and it would be burdenome to under ake to memorize them all. But they are soft, with velvet or suede finish, resembling duvetyn and Bolivia cloth which have made themselves familiar. Besides these there are the wool-furs and fur fabrics that have become important among materials for wraps. All of them are soft
Contributors to
Some clever and charming women, experienced globe trotters among them, insist that no one needs more than two suits, a good-looking frock or two, a separate skirt and a small collection of blouses to dress well enough for almost any occasion. They confide that successful dressing, with a meager outfit, depends upon choosing clothes very carefully to start with and on the possession of smart accessories of dress, more than anything else. A plain, beautifully fitted and faultlessly tailored street suit may be inconspicuous, but it becomes a background for small and exquisite accessories that lift the costume up to the plaque of distinction. Odd vests, collars and cuffs of lace, chic shoes and bags, just the right collar or fur neck piece and, most important of all, a hat that has the cachet of unusual style, lend a new air to what might be commonplace without them.
In the accompanying picture a collar and vest combination, with a shopping bag of ribbon and a hat to match the bag, challenge any suit to remain unnoticed in their company. The collar and vest are made of embroidered net in a lace edging, bordered with narrow, fine Val lace. Plain net is
and rich looking and of a texture that accommodates itself to the swinging lines of the present styles in wraps.
accommodates itself to the swinging lines of the present styles in wraps. The short jacket which has the effect of a cape, shown in the picture, is made of a taupe colored fur-fabric that resembles moleskin and is quite as warm and rich looking. The jacket sets closely to the figure and is belted in with a belt of the material that slips through slides at each side of the back and front. It fastens at the front, holding the garment snugly to place. To accomplish a graceful wrap the designer has set in shaped pieces insed of sleeves to give the capel-like effect and used a shawl collar, widened at the back to further his aims. He has turned out a charming and cozy wrap that is warm and durable, which can be bought at a price that is within reason for the woman of average means.
Success in Dress
used as a foundation for this piece. Accessories of this kind make gifts that are sure of enthusiastic appreciation from one's friends. These, and collar and cuff sets, made of durable Jaces, like cluny, Irish crochet and filet, are not to be omitted when one is reckoning with a satisfactory outfit in mind.
The pretty shopping bag is one of those which entice us to linger at the ribbon counter. It is made of narrow, heavy satin ribbon in two shades sewed together in strips that alternate the colors. It is lined with plain satin and sewed to a metal mounting with handles made of the ribbon. The rows of ribbon are stitched together with corded edges overlapping, and the bag is bound with the darker shade. In the drama of rich autumnal colors there are deep purplish reds and glowing nasturtium shades that will make wonderful bags of this kind. The hat to match has a brim and top crown of georgette crepe and the side crown banded by two collars made of satin ribbon like that in the bag.
---
NEWS and GOSSIP OF WASHINGTON
WASHINGTON.—Smuggling and rum-running on a large scale by airplane and submarine is looked for in the very near future by Daniel C. Roper commissioner of internal revenue, and by other government officials unless preparations are made in advance to
this captive was made, and the claals of the government have no doubt that large quantities of contraband liquor have reached this country already over the same air route. There is reason to believe that some venturesome ploneers of this new mode of smuggling through the air have already landed several thousands of dollars' worth of semiprecious stones from the topaz mines in Mexico, somewhere in the interior of the United States.
At any rate, the menace to the national revenues has become so immediate that Secretary Glass has decided that he will ask congress for transfer of 600 airplanes and hydro-airplanes from the army and navy to his department and funds enough to create an effective air patrol. Later on he will ask also for the transfer from the navy of a large fleet of boats specially designed for chasing submarines, in order to protect the seacasts and estuaries from the danger of smuggling by submarines.
Extra! All About the Wonderful Island of Yap
Extra! All About the Wonderful Island of Yap
WHAT about the island of Yap, in the far-away Pacific, which may become a possession of the United States as reparation for the sinking of the Lusatania, and is wanted by the American navy for a cable and wireless sta-
October, 1914. Yap is strangely old and strangely up to date. Its inhabitants are still in the stone age of progress. The natives are strict prohibitionists. Bachelor clubs closed to the women dot the islands. Food and drink and clothes all grow on trees.
"The chief decoration of the male is a string of pink shells made into a necklace, and since no man is rich enough to own such a treasure the best ones are loaned out for such a period as the wearer may choose to be dressed in the height of fashion. As there are no button holes, the man may wear two bouquets in each ear, a sort of corsage bunch in a large hole in the lower lobe and a small boutonniere in a smaller hole in the ear higher up. Shell cuffs made of conches add the finishing touch to the correct attire."
Other details given are that "large money" of the island consists of millstonelike disks of limestone from Babelthunap, 400 miles to the south, and one of these disks is four feet in diameter. Such a piece of currency may be worth 10,000 coconuts.
Slept on Outpost Duty and Pardoned; Made Good
Slept on Outpost Duty and Pardoned; Made Good
ONE of the two American soldiers sentenced to death for sleeping on outpost duty in France and subsequently pardoned by President Wilson, was killed in the great Alsace offensive in July, 1918, and the other was twice wounded and finally honorably dis-
In writing the president of the gallant conduct of the boys after the president had pardoned them, Secretary Baker said:
"You will recall that early in 1918 four death sentences were presented to you from France; two for disobedience of orders you remitted to terms of imprisonment, and two young boys, Sebastian and Cook, who were convicted of sleeping on outpost duty, you fully pardoned.
"It will interest you to know that upon restoration to duty both made good soldiers. Sebastian died in battle in the Alsne offensive in July, 1918. Cook was wounded in that battle and restored to health in time to fight in the Meuse-Argonne battle, when he again fought gallantly and was for the second time wounded. He has been now restored to health through medical attention and has been honorably discharged from the service."
"Kismet"—it is fated—says the Turk. And the great war seems to give weight to the saying.
Tercentenary of the Pilgrims in Three Countries
THE tercentenary of the Pilgrim Fathers is to be celebrated next year in England, the United States and Holland on an extensive scale. The principal Items in the overseas program are: May and June—Meeting and cere-
etc., to culminate in the sailing of a New Mayflower from Southampton and Plymouth, carrying returning American delegates, and also a British and Dutch committee, to America, via Boston, Mass.
September-October—Celebrations in America. Reception in New Plymouth, Boston, etc., followed by reception in New York and tour of the United States.
November 9-11—Celebration throughout English-speaking world in honor of the Mayflower compact and of the planting of free institutions in America.
Last Thursday in November—Universal celebration of Thanksgiving day.
December—Universal celebration, including memorial church services of the arrival of the Pilgrim Fathers at New Plymouth.
Popular celebrations during 1920 will, it is hoped, include pageants inauguration of monuments, university functions, establishment of lecture ships, scholarships, etc.
The attention of the treasury department was particularly directed to this new danger of employing modern methods in smuggling by the accidental capture of an airplane that came across the Canadian border into northern New York with several cases of contraband liquor. It was entirely owing to an accident, however, that this capture was made, and the off-
clals of the government have no doubt liquor have reached this country already. There is reason to believe that some mode of smuggling through the air has dollars' worth of semiprecious stones where in the interior of the United States. At any rate, the menace to the navy that Secretary Glass has decided to airplanes and hydro-airplanes from the funds enough to create an effective air. Later on he will ask also for the of boats specially designed for chasing scacoasts and estuaries from the danger.
Extra! All About the W
WHAT about the island of Yap, in the possession of the United States, Lusitania, and is wanted by the Ameri
w.l.f.
October, 1914. Yap is strangely old and are still in the stone age of progress. Bachelor clubs closed to the women in clothes all grow on trees.
"The chief decoration of the male necklace, and since no man is rich en ones are loaned out for such a period a in the height of fashion. As there are two bouquets in each ear, a sort of con lobe and a small boutonniere in a sm cuffs made of conches add the finishin
Other details given are that "large stoneellke disks of limestone from Babe of these disks is four feet in diameter worth 10,000 coconuts.
Slept on Outpost Duty a
ONE of the two American soldiers s post duty in France and subsequent killed in the great Alsne offensive in
wounded and finally honorably discharged. This was disclosed by an exchange of correspondence between Secretary Baker and President Wilson. Private Forest D. Sebastian of El Dorado, Ill., twenty years old, was killed in the Alsne battle. Private Jeff Cook of Lutia, Okla., aged nineteen, was wounded in the same battle, but recovered to again fight gallantly in the Argonne offensive, where he received his second wound.
In writing the president of the gallant conduct of the boys after the p Baker said:
"You will recall that early in 1918 to you from France; two for disobedient imprisonment, and two young boys, Se of sleeping on outpost duty, you fully.
"It will interest you to know that good soldiers. Sebastian died in battle Cook was wounded in that battle and the Meuse-Argonne battle, when he a second time wounded. He has been m attention and has been honorably dis "Kismet"—it is fated—says the T weight to the saying.
Tercentenary of the Pilgrim
THE tercentenary of the Pilgrim Fur England, the United States and He cipal Items in the overseas program a
A man in a boat is greeting two children on the shore.
etc., to culminate in the sailing of a
Plymouth, carrying returning Ameri-
Dutch committee, to America, via Boston
September-October — Celebrations
Plymouth, Boston, etc., followed by re
United States.
November 9-11—Celebration throu
of the Mayflower compact and of the
Last Thursday in November—Uni
December—Universal celebration,
the arrival of the Pilgrim Fathers at N
Popular celebrations during 1920
inauguration of monuments, universi
ships, scholarships, etc.
BORDER
not that large quantities of contraband
ly over the same air route.
Some venturesome ploneers of this new
we already landed several thousands of
from the topaz mines in Mexico, some-
ates.
National revenues has become so immediate
we will ask congress for transfer of 600
army and navy to his department and
air patrol.
transfer from the navy of a large fleet
ing submarines, in order to protect the
ter of smuggling by submarines.
Wonderful Island of Yap
The far-away Pacific, which may become
as reparation for the sinking of the
can navy for a cable and wireless sta-
tion? "Yap," the National Geographic society says, "the westernmost of the western Caroline islands, is situated about 500 miles southwest of Guam and 800 miles east of the island of Mindanao of the Philippine group. It has a population of about 7,090, and was the administrative center for the western Carolines, the Pelew and the Ladrone islands. The Germaus had made plans to locate a wireless station there, but were prevented when Australian troops captured the island in
and strangely up to date. Its inhabitants
The natives are strict prohibitionists.
dot the islands. Food and drink and
is a string of pink shells made into a
bough to own such a treasure the best
the wearer may choose to be dressed
he no button holes, the man may wear
message bunch in a large hole in the lower
tail hole in the ear higher up. Shell
touch to the correct attire."
the money" of the island consists of mill-
lithuap, 400 miles to the south, and one
er. Such a piece of currency may be
and Pardoned; Made Good
sentenced to death for sleeping on out-
tly pardoned by President Wilson, was
July, 1918, and the other was twice
FIGURE 10.2. A group of soldiers attacking a fortress.
president had pardoned them, Secretary
of 18 four death sentences were presented
ence of orders you remitted to terms of
obstantian and Cook, who were convicted
by pardoned.
It upon restoration to duty both made
me in the Aisne offensive in July, 1918.
It restored to health in time to fight in
gain fought gallantly and was for the
now restored to health through medical
charged from the service."
Durk. And the great war seems to give
grims in Three Countries
others is to be celebrated next year in
holland on an extensive scale. The prin-
re: May and June—Meeting and cere-
monies at Scrooby, Austerfield, Boston, Cambridge, and other places, to celebrate the origins of the Pilgrim movement.
Visit of British and American delegations to Holland (date to be fixed). Meetings at Amsterdam, Leyden, Delftshaven and The Hague, to commemorate the sojourn of the Pilgrim Fathers in Holland (1609-20) and their departure for the new world.
August 4 to September 16—Celebrations at Southampton, Plymouth,
New Mayflower from Southampton and man delegates, and also a British and Iron, Mass.
In America. Reception in New Reception in New York and tour of the Highout English-speaking world in honor planting of free institutions in America. Universal celebration of Thanksgiving day, including memorial church services of New Plymouth.
( 9 ) will, it is hoped, include pageants; city functions, establishment of lecture
THE OLD RELIABLE DOUGLASS UNDERTAKING CO. INCORPORATED AND BONDED NOTARY PUBLIC
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The V. V. Hair Goods and Millinery Store
Hats Made, Trimmed or Remodeled to Order
Mrs. G. W. Anderson, Prop.
Out of Town Orders Received.
342 N. CENTER, CASPER, WYO.
Straightening and Drying Comb,
Price $1.50.
Chas. Trotter
Telephone York 4561
R. L. Norman
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716 East 26 Avenue
DENVER, COLORADO
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716 East 26 Avenue DENVER, COLORADO
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Corner Nineteenth
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