Colorado Statesman

Saturday, June 26, 1920

Denver, Colorado

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SUBSCRIBE FOR THE ONLY RELIABLE PEOPLE'S PAPER IN COLORADO "THE COLORADO STATESMAN" THE COLORADO STATESMAN THE JOURNAL OF THE WEST. LABOR SHALL BE FREE RAGE COUNTRY PARTY COLORED BOY SCHOLAR Harry Spencer Blackiston Become Out by University COLORED BOY GREATEST SCHOLAR OF ALL TIMES Harry Spencer Blackiston Becomes Greatest Scholar Ever Turned Out by University of Pennsylvania. HAS NO EQUAL IN HISTORY BY AN OLD-TIMER Amidst the halo of glory surrounding the one hundred and sixty-fourth annual commencement of the University of Pennsylvania last Wednesday, the outstanding and most glorious feature of it all, was the fact that Harry Spencer Blackiston, a colored boy, was proclaimed the greatest of all scholars who have ever graduated from that institution since its foundation. On Blackiston was conferred the highest literary degree of the University—that of PH. D. (Doctor of Philosophy), and with it goes the honor of being the youngest man upon whom this honor has been conferred since the opening of that institution. Blackiston having just passed out of his twenty-second year. Has No Equal as Winner of Scholar- Harry S. Blackiston, after graduating from the Central High School in February, 1913, matriculated in the course of Arts and Sciences at the University of Pennsylvania in the following September, at the age of sixteen years. At that time he became the recipient of the William P. Henze Scholarship, 1913-17, and the Mayor's Scholarship, 1913-17. As an undergraduate he specialized in German and Latin. During the course of the academic year, 1916-17, he was awarded the George Schleicher prize for German conversation, by virtue of which he received a silver medal along with $15 in gold; and he was also given honorable mention in a prose Latin essay contest. In June, 1917, the degree of Bachelor of Arts (A. B.) was conferred upon him. About the same time he received a university scholarship in German for the ensuing academic year, 1917-18. In September, 1918, he was enrolled in the graduate school at the aforementioned institution, delving intensively into the study of German and Latin, and receiving the degree of Master of Arts (A. M.) in June of the following year. At this time he won a Harrison scholarship in German, together with an additional stipend of $100. He continued his research work for the next two years at the same institution, winning a university scholarship in the year 1919; and now at the age of only twenty-three years he becomes the recipient of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), thereby being the youngest in the history of the university to receive such a degree. Blackiston is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James H. Blackiston of 1830 Fitzwater street. Other colored graduates from the university were M. Russell Nelson, M. D.; Raymond Alexander, B. A., and John Wiseman, B. A.—Philadelphia Tribune. And what individual race, people or nation would not be proud of this great scholar who has given the proof that the Author of creation does not discriminate in the endow- VOL. XXVI. state Hint. & Nat Hint 508. State House FOR THE ONLY RELIANCE COLOR GREATEST OF ALL TIMES es Greatest Scholar Ever Turned y of Pennsylvania. ment of large mental powers to entertain and maintain the larger and higher sphere of education, preparing man for that greater usefulness to his fellow man that will eventually break down the bars of cruelty being meted out to a class of human beings, as well as eradicate the germ of lawlessness which is attempting destruction to our great and universally accepted civilization. We venture to say that not only in the history of Pennsylvania University but in all educational records the world over, we have never read of such qualifications at such an early stage of life. We are more than proud of Mr. Blackiston and offer our congratulations to our distinguished scholar, his parents, the University of Pennsylvania and the city of Philadelphia. We can well remember LeRoy Locke of Philadelphia, winner of the Cecil Rhodes Scholarship a few years ago, representing Harvard, who went abroad and now is a member of the faculty of Harvard University. And now that these instances, besides others, prove the falsity of mental inferiority of the black race to others, let us keep in our memory the wonderful achievement of this youth Blackiston who has climbed the ladder of education fame, setting a high standard for our boys and girls who with perserverance and encouragement will reach the goal in safety. We are quite sure that this special addition to the educational world will find that environment among his people that will hinder him from being victimized by the tempting offers that may come from the other side and that our honoring and respecting him for his great and extraordinary achievement which we feel is unprecedented, we may rally to his banner and assure him of that true and loyal support which is necessary to his permanent success. On behalf of Colorado we again extend our best wishes. Editor. FOURTH GREAT PRIZE OFFER A TRIP TO THE CONVENTION The Madam C. J. Walker Manufacturing Company offers to all its regular certified agents an opportunity to win a free trip to the fourth annual national convention, which meets in Cleveland, Ohio, August 12th, 13th and 14th, inclusive. A free trip to the convention will be given for the ten best articles on "How I Succeerer as an Agent of the Madam C. J. Walker Manufacturing Company." Any agent is privileged to enter this contest. All that is required is a brief, concise statement of not more than 500 words, telling how such agent has succeeded in the matter of handling the Madam C. J. Walker preparations. Contest open from June 1st to July 25th, inclusive. Address all manuscripts to Contest Editor, Madam C. J. Walker Manufacturing Company, 640 North West Street, Indianapolis, Ind. DENVER, COLORADO, SATURDAY, JUNE 26, 1920 ADVANCEMENT ASSOCIATION OFFERS AID TO MINNESOTA GOVERNOR The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, with headquarters at 70 Fifth avenue, New York City, today wired Governor J. A. Burnquist of Minesota offering assistance in the apprehension of the men who broke into the jail at Duluth last night and seized three colored men, accused of connection with the attack on a white girl in that city yesterday, and lynched them. The Association advised Governor Burnquist, who besides being governor is also president of the St. Paul Branch of the Association and one of the staunch supporters of its work, that it was willing to do anything in its power with its 328 branches and membership of 100,000 to help in running down the lynchers through its staff of investigators. The Association's telegram to the governor read: Hon. J. A. Burnquist, governor, State Capitol. St. Paul, Minn.: "National Association Advancement Colored People offers all possible assistance in apprehending murderers who battered down doors of jail at Duluth last night and lynched three Negroes accused of conection with attack on girl. Prompt apprehension and rigorous punishment of lynchers of Negroes and of the law of the State of Minnesota will have wholesome and salutary effect throughout the nation. As governor of state and president of St. Paul Branch of National Association for Advancement Colored People, may we urge you use every power at your command prevent further disorder and arrest lynchers. Commend action sending troops. Advise us if we can be of assistance. Can furnish staff investigators if needed. James Weldon Johnson, Field Secy, National Association for Advancement of Colored People. CHEYENNE, WYO, NEWS Boy Scouts farewell Tuesday night, the 29th inst., at City Auditorium. Please procure your ticket and be there as your presence and assistance means so much to our boys who are leaving the next day for London, England. Mrs. Florence Moore and Mrs. Mary Burton entertained Mrs. Florence West of Pennsylvania and Sergt. Richard Moore of Camp No. 21, Aurora, at a motor party to Colorado Springs last Sunday. The party consisted of Mrs. Florence J. Moore, Mr. Mary Burton, Mrs. Florence West of Pennsylvania, Sergt. Richard Moore and Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Lewis. All had quite an enjoyable time in the hills of Manitou. At the regular weekly meeting of the Cheyenne Civic League of Colored People on Thursday evening, June 17th, Mrs. Daisy Thompson read an original paper on "World Problems." Mrs. Thompson's paper embraced the many problems which confront the nations and races of the world, and reviewed the causes of the World war, follows a synopsis of the closing lines of her "World Problems: "We are not here threatened with Bolshevism with the same degree of seriousness as other nations, despite riots and strikes we have to suppress. But let us not delude ourselves with the idea that the time is remote when dissatisfied people the nation over, even though their first ef- forts be characterized with failure, enjoying the sympathy if not support of people whose patience is exhausted, present to us a problem far more serious than the abstract problems that have carried our minds 3,000 miles away. Our future problem is no international question, and yet it is a world problem for it crops out and shows its head above the head and shoulders of the government of every nation of this earth, and this problem requires that each country first masters itself, fights its home battles, wages its future war on selfishness, greed, imposition, inequality and injustice, so that it can hold out to all who are its citizens justice, brotherhood and freedom of life. Therefore, bend your energies and direct your resources to make your nation a decent place to live in, and then the world will be." Mrs. H. Robinson has recovered from recent illness. Mrs. Bessie Brown returned from California to attend the funeral of her father at Idaho Springs. Mrs. Clarence J. Toliver has returned from a trip to Denver. Mrs. A. Palmer and son have returned to Cheyenne after an absence of seven months. LEWISTON, MONTANA, NEWS Publisher Statesman—Perhaps a few lines from this bustling little city might prove of interest to the many readers of your always newsy sheet. Just now Fergus County, of which this burg is the county seat, is enjoying a wave of excitement and prosperity on account of oil being discovered only a few miles from here. Hundreds of oil men throughout the country are passing through here daily and going out to the fields. Oil men representing all the big companies from Wyoming, Colorado, Texas, Kansas, Oklahoma and Pennsylvania are here. Occasionally I see a familiar face from dear old Denver, Queen of the Rockies. During the past four months the Milwaukee Railway has brought out hundreds of the Race to work on sections, some with families. They receive good wages and apparently they are satisfied to remain here for a while at least. They hail principally from Kansas City, Omaha and Chicago. In same towns out here they are quite a novelty, no Negroes ever having been in these places before. Some children never, having seen so many different colors in such small groups, look at them in open-mouthed astonishment and ask their mothers, "Mamma, what kind of a colored woman is that?" A Minneapolis trade excursion came here a few weeks ago, a "Get Acquainted" crowd. It was a fine crowd of business men and a swell train of thirteen cars. I met several of the porters and waiters, among the number George F. Gillison, well known in Denver, where he made his stamping grounds a few years ago around the colored districts. No doubt many gay females in the vicinity of Lincoln, Clarkson, etc., remember Gillison. He is the same old George, a little bit gray but bright of eye. The Baptists and Methodists have small missions established here. Services are held once a week by resident ministers from Great Falls, Mont. The ministers are Rev. D. L. McGriff, Baptist, and Rev. R. H. Johnson, Methodist. There are only about 50 of us here, and like all Westerners, very few are religiously inclined. It keeps us busy trying to meet Mr. High Cost of Living, but with health and good luck we hope to pull through. For a change I rather like this part of Montana. There are many openings here and there is no reason on earth why anyone cannot make a success. The people are very liberal.—J. H. Doniphan. RACENEWS Gathered From Various Sources Wichita, Kan., June 14.—Because colored children won most of the events in last year's athletic meets, Superintendent Mayberry, white, issued an order eliminating them this year. Upon protest of the colored parents it was rescinded by the School Board. Gastonia, N. C., June 14.—Miss Maggie Ross, a member of one of the oldest white families in the state of North Carolina, died here recently and the reading of her will last Monday reveals that she left the bulk of her large estate to Negroes. Mitte Bell Hudson, colored, is bequeathed one half of the $75,000 estate. The balance was divided among colored friends of the deceased and the local colored churches. ALL PULLMAN MAIDS TO BE NURSES AIDS Mrs. Mable Fitts, 166 West 141st street, who has been in the employ of the Pullman Company for fourteen years as a lady's maid on sleeping and parlor cars, is the first colored woman to be trained and employed as a nurse's aid by that company. After taking an eight weeks' course in home hygiene, first aid and care of the sick under the Red Cross nurse training department, Mrs. Fitts was sent as a nurse's aid on a thirty-day transcontinental tour with that organization from San Francisco. It was upon Mrs. Fitts' suggestion that E. F. Cook, superintendent of the New York district Pullman service, decided to have all lady's maids in the Pullman employ trained as nurse aids. Mrs. Fitts, from her long experience, was convinced that the nurse's aid course given to Pullman lady's maids would not only increase their usefulness personally but would also substantially improve the Pullman service. Mr. Cook heartily approved the suggestion.—New York Age. FIRST WOMAN INTERNE AT FREEDMEN'S HOSPITAL Washington, D. C.,—Dr. Carrie Pine Sutton of San Antonio, Texas, the only woman graduate of the 1920 class of Howard University Medical College, is awarded, by the General Education Board, for excellent scholarship, the Rosenwald Fellowship of $1,200, that she may pursue graduate research work in the field of medicine. Miss Sutton is the first woman to win an internship at the Freedman's Hospital. Miss Sutton, as a member of the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, has held the highest office of that college organization, and is vice president of her medical class. The list of those selected for internes for the year 1920-21 at Freedman's Hospital follows: Miss Carrie Jane Sutton, Luther Ovid Baumgardner, George Emmet Bell, Joseph Hunter Brooks, Louis D. Chubb, James Taylor Davis, Philip Arlis Hilton, Willis C. Johnson, Charles Terrel Lunsford, John Patterson, Sampson, Jr., Orville Roslyn Sheffield and Armen G. Evans. TWELVE NEGROES SIT ON JURY St. Louis, June 14.—For the first time, perhaps in the history of the country, twelve colored men were selected to serve on a jury here. Cases have been known when three or four members of the jury in a single case were colored, but there is no record of more than six colored men serving on any single jury. The case was that of Henry Dailey against Laurel Shelby, on a writ of replevin and was set before Justice McChesney. The men selected were: Jesse Crow, Wm. Moran, M. Brookfield, Market H. Higgins, W. H. Murphy, John Carmichael, Joe Box, I. A. NO. 37 Smith, A. Seay, Benj. Hollway and R. E. Harris. After the jury had been selected and were in their places it was found that the counsel for the plaintiff was not in court and the case was continued. Colored jurors were first introduced in the Justice of Peace courts through the influence of Constable Charles A. Turpin during his term in the Fourth District Court. Joseph Furling, counsel for the defendant, stated that in his more than forty years' practice as a lawyer he had never before seen a complete colored jury. Justice McChesney declared that all persons concerned in the case were colored and it seemed to him perfectly fair and proper that colored jurymen should make the decisions. WOODLAND,CAL.. NEWS Mrs. S. Wright and Miss J. Gales were visitors in Sacramento, Calif., Sunday. Mrs. J. H. Wilkinson went to Stockton, Calif., Sunday, returning Sunday night with her son, Master Malvine, who has been in Stockton with his grandmother for the past two months on account of ill health. He is now completely recovered and quite a husky looking lad. Mr. Wilkinson, the husband of Mrs. Wilkinson and father of the boy, with their daughter, Miss Corinne, met them in Sacramento Sunday night to accompany them home to Woodland. Mrs. L. O. Gaither and Mrs. M. F. Gaither of Esparto were here Thursday visiting with relatives and friends. Mr. O. H. Earl, one of our prosperous citizens and contractors, has the contract for two of the largest grain and fruit warehouses of Yolo county, and works quite a number of men. Mr. and Mrs. Earl are nicely fixed for evening drives. They have one of the fastest driving mares in the county, and a fine top buggy, and a big Maxwell automobile. Mrs. Earl thinks the horse is rather fast for her, especially when a piece of paper blows in the streets or road. Hence she is now learning to drive her auto. The big rally at the Second Baptist Church started Monday night and will close Sunday night, June 27, 1920. Mrs, M, F, Gaither, state president of the Northern Baptist Association, has returned from her official trip to Oakland, Calif. THE LITTLE OL' HOME PAPER When you're feelin' kind o' lonesome An' the atmosphere is blue; When life's no bed of roses. FOREIGN ‘One hundred cases of cholera have deen discovered im Southern Japan, s6me vietiins of the disease being found at Tokio, The Poles have repulsed atrong en: emy attacks in the region of Sinigat Szaozina, inflicting considerable losses upon the Bolsheviki, aecording to an Official statement on the fighting op: erations issued at Warsaw, Four people Were drowned when thelr automobile ran off the ferry at Latelier, forty miles south of Winnl- peg, Into the Red river, ‘The dead are Joseph Knisely, aged 45; hts son, aged 5; Thomas Bennet, 27 und Miss Edua Scott, 22 An automobile exreying the assist- ant director general of the royal Irish constabulury and four constables was atticked with revolver fire and bembs in Dublin, Assisnint Director General Roberts was shot In the bead, but Is expected to live. ‘The chifuffeur was shot in both less. ‘Three million persons in France are estimated to be suffering from “war tuberculosis consumption — resulting directly from war etuses, including polson gus, poor nourishinent and nery- ous shock, Mortality Is expechatly sig: nificant among Infants born in the families of French soldiers who fought through the war As an example of the strict vigilance of the German customs officers in or- der to save their country from being drained of valuables, the Handelsblad says that 7,000,000 marks’ worth of diamonds and 600,000 marks have been confiscated at Bentheim, the Duteh frontier station, within the last two weeks, Heroic work by the officers and crew of the American steamer West Jester outside Yokohoma harbor re: sulted in saving the Japanese steamer Kiyo Maru, with seventy passengers from South America on board, from possible total destruction by fire, It is announced in advices received from Kobe, whither the Kiyo Maru was hound. A band of nearly a bundred outlaws who declared themselves to be Bolshe- vists, seized trading posts at Anadyr, Siberia, and confiscating supplies and stock, brought down the wrath of the natives, who organized, attacked and drove off the Reds after killing seven: teen of their number, according to ud vice brought to America by the Rus sian schooner Behring. Approval of a credit amounting to 8,000,000,000 marks will be asked of the new reichstag, aecording 10 an of- ficlal news bulletin Issued at Berlin. This money would be used to meet urgent emergency expenditures, ‘The ministry of finunee will also be ealled upon to mobilize a credit of 5,000,000, 000 marks to meet current obligutions xrowing out of the Versailles peace eiae be GENERAL Suit to recover inheritance and In. come taxes of 100,000 paid from the estite of Mrs. Potter Palmer have been filed in Chicago by Honore and Potter Palmer, Mrs. Patmer’s sons, An announcement has been made that the marriage of Miss Helen ‘Taft daughter of Mr and Mrs, Wiliam Howard Taft, to Frederick J. Manning Will take plice at Murray Bay, Can- ada, July 15, Fred Steffler, Anderson, Ind, charged with transporting a stolen au- tomobile across a State line, was given five years In prison by Judge Landis in Chicago, ‘Two companions were given six months’ sentences, Frank de It. Storey, a New York lawyer, convicted of criminally receiy- Ing several thousand dollars’ worth of stolen securities, wax sentenced to Sing Sing prison for two and one-half to five years ut hard labor. Storey, de- seribed as a “Dr, Jekyl and Mr, Hyde,” who associated with honest men by day and crooks by night, automatically is barred from prifcticing his profes sion, John B, Leikauf, who died at Mont clair, virtually willed his wife to his brother in the document just filed, He provided that Mes, Lulu Leikuuf, his widow, Will lose the income from $40, 000 if She marries any other than “my beloved brother, George L, Leikaut.” The brother resides in the testator’s home, A record in collecting fines for vio- lution of the Volstead act was made in New York when $20,000 was taken from bartenders and saloonkeepers: in penalties of from $15 to $250 exch, re- cently, Federal Judge Hand offered to let off with fines all first offenders who would plead guilty. to violations prior to June 8 when the Supreme Court declared the prohibition meas: ure constitutional, ‘The Public Utilities Commission at Chicago has granted the People’s Gas Light and Coke Company an increase to $1.15 per 1,000 cubic feet for gas with a minimum charge ef 60 cents ‘The present rate Is 85 cents. ‘The or der of the commission says It costs: the company 96.5 cents to make each 1,00 fect of gas, and that the loss of 114 per 1,000 under the present rate amounts to $10,000 per day. After experiments listing over a pe riod of three months, the Stamscott company of Hopewell, Va., announced that a new process of making papet pulp from cotton fiber had been devel oped and that manufacture of the pulp ‘in quantities would be started soon, Losses estimated at $1,200,000 were caused by a fire which destroyed the plant of the Santiago Electric Light, Railway and Power Company at Ha. vana, according to @ dispateh from that city. Virtually all the: rolling stock and electrical supplies of the comnany were burned: . FROM TELEGRAPHIC REPORTS THAT COVER THE WEEK'S EVENTS. KEEPING THE READER POSTED ON THE IMPORTANT CURRENT TOPICS. Western Nowepaper Union News Servies. WESTERN Born a slave in 1843, Alec Taylor, negro, died at Ardmore, Okla, at the age of 167. ‘Two proved cases of bubonic plague have been discovered in the republic of Salvador. ‘The Central American nations are deelired to have ordered quarantine against Sulvader, A disease, diagnosed by state off ciuls as anthrax, during the past week hus caused the death of $2,000 worth of livestock belonging to a farmer liv: ing near Beatrice, Neb, Steps to check Its sprend have been taken, The proposed Hudson bay trade route, designed to relieve traffie con gestion during the heavy anny! movement of grain from the West, hits been pronounced feasible by the spe cial Senate committee appointed to in vestigate the project. “Thad to do it; he had made seyeral tMireats against my life,” was the only explanation James Wolff, a farmer, would ive for shooting and killing Owar Erwin, also a farmer, near Bar: ton, 2 small mountain settlement about thirty miles east of Albuquerque, N. M Fire at the New Jdria quicksilver mines in San Benito county, Calif. whieh are said to produce nearly all of the quicksilver supply in the United States, destrayed the reduction plat, machinery and several homes at Hal lister, Calif, ‘The loss is estimated at $100,000, i A letter mailed Jan 1, 1918, has been returned to the writer, E, S. Heroder, an attorney at Kansas City, after rest: ing nearly seven years in the mail chute of the New York Life building. ‘There was a fire in the building the lust day of December, 1912, and the let ter was dropped in the damaged mail chute a day later, It was found when the chute was repaired, and because the address was illegible was returned to Mr, Heroder. ‘Phe fight to preserve the great tim: Her lands of Oregon is on, Reflected sunrays by day and direct searehtight nis by night will help to fight Ore xon's forest fires this summer, A huge searchlight Will have a point of van tage on Willamette Heights, from which point it will flash “heliograph” signals throughout the night to the sumnmit of Larch mountain, where for estty observers will carry on “helio zraphie” conversation with observers at Salem, Silverton and other forestry See ae WASHINGTON Withdrawal of four of the six de- stroyers now at Mexican gulf ports has heen ordered by the Navy Department A number of changes In rules re- garding the departure of aliens from this country will be made by the State Department with the discontinuance, June 30th, of the office of foreign per: mits and) the concentration of such work in the division of passport con- trol, Alien enemies are to be allowed to depart from the United States to ull countries, with certain exceptions, without permits, and it will no longer be necessary to bave permits to leave the United States by way of the Mexi- can and Canadian borders, American mining interests already are demonstrating w feeling of confi- dence in the declarations of the de factor government of Mexico by great- ly increased activities in the states of Sonora and Sinaloa, said a report re ceived at Washington from the Amer- jean consul at Nogales. In an effort to obtain better fitting uniforms for American soldiers, more than 100,000 men in the army have had their measure taken, the War De- partment announced, The measure hients were said to form the most com prehensive survey ever made for tailor ing purposes and will be made availa- Mle to the clothing trade Distribution of 4,765,000 Vietory medals to members of the army, navy and marine corps who were in service between April 6, 1917, and Nov, 11, AMIS, has been started, In addition to the medi! itself, the War Department has authorized the issuance of thir- teen “combat or major operation clasps” and a “defensive sector clasp” +o be worn on the ribbon with the med- al, and five overseas service clasps for troops not entitled to the battle insig- pin, Purchase of 1,700,000 ounces of sil- ver at $1 an ounce for delivery at Phil- adelphia, and San Francisco bas been announced by the director of the mint, This makes @ total of $200,000 ounces acquired by the government under the authority of the Pitunan act this mont, Under a War Department order -wenty-three officers holding the emer- feney rank of inajor generul have been ‘educed to brigadiers or colonels, and ixteen officers now brigadier generals sro reduced to ranks ranging from hajor to colonel. Pithy News Notes From All Parts of Colorado I. P. Beckett of Great Divide has been appointed postmaster at Craig to succeed V, ©, Ledford, who hus re- signed. Arthur ©, MeClung, « rancher living fifteen miles south of Yuma, died of Injuries recelved when he was kicked by a horse recently. Joseph Bell of Sterling, Colo, a Bur- Mngton bridge worker, was killed by a bolt of lightning near Lysite, Wyo. during « thunderstorm, George Fitch of Denver, who was for several years teacher of science at the Golden high school, has been appoint 6d superintendent of schools of Golden to succeed W. HL. Simons. ‘Two persons were killed and several tnjured in a wreck of Santa Fé pas- senger train No, 4 near Rene, twelve miles south of La Junta, Over thirty oussengers were injured. Jobn ‘Tretia, an employé of the Wolf Park mine, was fined $100 and costs in Justice of the Peace Court at Canon City for having given away liquor at the marriage celebration of his daugh- ter, Berthoud pass is open to. automobile tfavel, Rabbit Eur puss is still snowed in and Is not expected to be opened for a& month, ‘The Midlind trail west of Kremmling is passable, but in very poor condition, The Loveland Stock farms of Mount Pleasant, Towa, have purchased a white shorthorn heifer from the Max Well-Miller Cattle Compuny of Steam- heat Springs to use in its show herd ‘Whe price paid was $1,800, Accidentally coming into” contact with a high voltage power line carry- Ing 22,000 volts of electricity. Austin Dowd, 26 years old, 1 resident of Crip- ple Creek, and an employé of the Ar- kansas Valley Light and Power Cont- pany, was instantly killed at Cripple Creek Members of the Colorado State Pie men’s Association have filed with Sec retary of State dames P. Nokand a pe tition, signed by 28,000 persons, for an initiative measure providing for the Installation of the “double platoon” system in all of the paid municipal fire departments in Colorado, ‘Whe original plow used to lay out the Greeley townsite in 1870 and por- trayals of incidents in the history of the “colony” were conspicuous inthe historical pageant during the two-day festivities in celebration of the found- ing of Greeley by Horace Greeley, fa- nious editor of the New York ‘Tribune. Miss Mable Gillings, age 24, of $111 West Thirty-sixth avenue, was probit bly fatally injured, and five other Den- ver girls were hurt when an automo- bile In which they were riding was overturned on the Denver and Colo- nado Springs road, Miss Gillings suf- fered a fractured skull and a broken shoulder, Miss Carrie Shore, 20 years old, of Parshall, Colo, was killed, and Miss Hannah’ Pettingell of Hot Sulphur Springs, Lieut, Harold Beaton and Axel Peterson of Parshall were slight: ly injured when the touring ear driven hy Lieutenant Beaton plunged into a gulch on the Dillon mail road, six miles south of Kremmling. Boys hunting for frogs near Craig discovered what they believed was a doll floating In the water, ‘They: in- vestigated and hauled the supposed ‘doll ashore, ‘They were shocked to find it was a dead infant about 7 “weeks old, ‘They notified the authort- ‘ties und the coroner held an inquest. Coroner J. G, Clayton said that the ‘baby was probably dead before being placed in the branch of Fortification “creek, Colorado's financial balance June 1 was $11,120,627.77, according to the quarterly report of State ‘Treasurer Harry E. Mulnix, Of this amount $3, G88.219.45 Is on deposit in 260 banks throughout the state, ‘The balance is invested it the various state funds, OF these the school fund hus $6,187,784.72 and the compensation insurance fund has $769,150.84, ‘The total valuation of Colorado's public utilities is $229,195,120, a de- crease of $2,582,010 from the 1919 as: sessed valuation, according to a report hy the Colorado State Tax Commission, ‘The decrease is due largely to the fact that the assessments of several rail- roads have been greatly reduced dur. ing the last year and through railroads having af combined valuation of $170, 970 having been dismantled within the last year, ‘The value of the Mountain States ‘Telephone and ‘Telegraph Com- pany was fixed at $12,545,870, an_in- crease of $225,000 over the 1919 valua- tion, while the entire assessed. valua- tion of all of the telephone companies operating in the state was fixed at $12,982,050, or an Increase of $259,250 TRE REA CENTENNIAL STATE ITEMS. first rust infected barberry — busher were found near Loveland, Colo, These bushes were mostly stall seed ings which had come up after the larg- ve bushes had been eradicated. New gprouts were found arising from roots left iu the ground when the other bush es were dug up, ‘These small burberry plants, which were scattered over a considerable area in the anldst of a rich farming district, were heavily Infected with the rust and will in all probabil. ity be the starting point of a local or perhaps a widespread epidemic of wheat rust this summer, Inheritance tux collections from June 1 to 15 total $12,382 from twenty- three estates, according to astute: ment made by the inheritance tax de- partment. ‘This brings the aggregate for the biennial period to $1,071,080.90. The three largest payments were col- lected from the estates of Samuel W. Eckman, $4,209.19; Harootune Bnfia- jlan, an Armenian importer of Persian and Oriental rugs, $274.77, and Jos ephine Buernard, $1,506.65, All were residents of Denver. Complete reports on the acreage of crops in cultivation this year had been received by the State Imigration De- partment from eight counties on June 20, and partial reports from all coun- fies in the state where agriculture is followed, but ten, Word has been re- ceived from all counties but two that the collection of agricultural statis: ties is well under way and will be completed in all except a few mown- tain counties by July 1. ©. G. Sutton, who has been making arangements for a “wild west show" at Fort Collins July 5 and 6, announced that he has signed up fifteen wild horses from the Buckeye ranch and fif- teen bucking horses of the orig: inal variety from various — places, Four strings of relay mounts have been entered, and Mr, Sutton says that he will have a full program of first-class events booked before the end of this month Upwards of 93,000 acres of Jand in southeastern Colorado in the Lamar land district hus been thrown open for homestenders by the seeretary of the interior, under the 640-acre stock rals- ing homestead law, ‘These lands are already covered by applications of 200 residents of this district, Pursuant to applications received 4,520 acres in the Sterling district has been similarly epened for settlement Motorists who visit Colorado this suinmer will find in the San Isabel National Forest, lying thirty-five miles of Pueblo and ‘Trinidad, an attractive vacation land in which there are un- surpassed opportunities for outdoor life and enjoyment, Nowhere will the “motor gipsy” encounter such a dl versity of seenie splendor as is found in the new playgrounds which are be Ing developed on this forest. A gift of $800,000 from the general board of education (the Rockefeller fund) to Colorado College toward an endowment of $1,000,000 for the per manent increase of silaries of the col lege faculty has been announced by President ©, A. Duniway. ‘The Larimer County Purebred Live- stock Associntion has re-elected oF ficers for the coming year, ‘They are J.D. Pancake of Loveland, president; S. H. Clammer of Fort Collins, vice president, and Ehner Johnson of Fort Collins, vice president, John W. Galbreath, 50, lessee of the Franklin mine, near Idaho Springs, was killed by a premature explosion 01 dynamite while. at work, Galbreath was working alone and the body was not found until next morning, Otte Matzen, 45 years old, well: Fnown Phillips county farmer, was in- stuntly killed and his three children were knocked unconscious by a bolt of lightning near their home at Holy: oke, Copy for the 1920 edition of the Colorado Year Book is nearly all in the hands of the printer and the Tmntui- gration Department, which issues the book, expects to receive it from the press about the middle of July. [t wil be somewhat larger than the 1919 edi: tion and will be the most complete general book of statistical and other official Information on the state of Colorado ever published, Good heavy horses for farm work are at a premium In some sections Buyers state that when a reasonably good heavy horse Is for sale he must be taken for there is a large number of buyers on the waiting list for such horses. City users of horses are get tng at wits ends to know what to dc for good horses. ‘The farm is not pro- Thalia them ns formebiy- aud: they.can: Colorado and the | Entire West A RELIABLE chronicle of their doings and - progress; a faithful mirror _ of their wants, their hopes, | their best aspirations. : , THE ! | ; Unequaled as an advertising © } medium for the business | ' of professional men and | | women. | : . — : An excellent family journal | : speaking to and for many | : thousand colored citizens. ! [et eee et ae | TWODOLLARSA YEAR | | ————————SSSSSSSSsssss ‘ : THE GREAT ORGAN | ———_—— OF THE —————_ | LABORING MASSES § THE COLORADO STATESMAN CABIN MILLS DE FAIR COLORADO PARTY JOS. D. D. RIVERS..... Proprietor P. O. Box 116..... Phone Main 7417 SOUTHERN REPRESENTATION. IN THE recent Republican national convention at Chicago the following resolution was presented to the committee on resolutions by the leaders of the race in attendance at the convention: "We charge that the ratio of representation of the several states in Congress and in the electoral college is wholly disproportionate under state laws regulating the right of suffrage. We, therefore, favor such federal legislation as will reduce the representation in Congress and in the electoral college of all states where the right of suffrage is denied to any person eligible to vote under the constitution of the United States in the proportion which such numbers of persons shall bear to the whole number of inhabitants so eligible to vote in such state." We regret to learn that the committee on resolutions of a Republican convention was not brave enough to meet such just and humane resolution face to face and present it to the convention for a decision once for all. This question has arisen in every national convention since 1876 and causes more or less friction and dissatisfaction, not only among a large part of the white Republicans, but among all the Negroes generally. At every national convention the Negro is found fighting and appealing to his party for a square deal. We are taunted with the fact that we do not and cannot elect a Republican ticket in any of the southern states. Why taunt the southern Negro thus for the failure and neglect of the party itself? We say to the Republicans of the North that if you throw around and give the Negro the same protection at the polls in casting a free and untrameled ballot in the South that is guaranteed in the North every southern state will reward the Republican party next November by electing a solid delegation in the next Congress and a few governors and senators. If the committee on resolutions refused to adopt the above resolution, which is identical with Section 2 of the fourteenth amendment to the constitution, because they think they can possibly break the solid South, they have another thought coming. Every presidential election sees the South just as solid as the rocks of Gibraltar, and all that catering to southern prejudice is foolish and childlike. We take this moment to disabuse the feeble-minded Republicans in the party that they can never break the solid South. Greater men than of today in former times have tried it and failed and fallen. It is not only un-American to the Negro and the Republican party in the South to permit this wholesale and infamous disfranchisement to continue, but it is unjust to the Republicans north, east and west. It will ultimately undermine the great Republican party if a check is not put upon the system now in vogue in those states by Congress. The one just and practical method of eradicating the evil is clearly set out by the above resolution which was presented to the committee on resolutions, viz.; "to reduce the representation in Congress and in the electoral college of all states where the right of suffrage is denied to any person eligible to vote under the constitution of the United States." Surely, if Mr. Gompers and his great labor organization, the American Federation of Labor, are broad and wise enough to wipe out the color line in their organization, the Republicans ought to be just and honest enough to enforce the constitution of the United States and declare unequivocally against the disfranchisement of persons who are legally eligible to vote. The action of the national committee in unanimously passing a resolution admonishing the "illy-whites" in the South against holding the party conventions in places where the Negro was not admitted is an admission of injustice and unfair tactics and a warning. We insist that if Senator Harding should be elected this fall, together with a Republican Congress and Senate, the first duty of the Republican party will be to act positively in the matter of lynching and disfranchisement. LEARNING A TRADE THAT every young colored man should learn some kind of a trade, or become efficient and useful at some one thing, is vitally important to the future growth and development of our race. There was a time when the young man was discouraged in learning a trade of any kind because the labor unions absolutely barred him and shut the door in his face. But time changes all things, and now that the great American Federation of Labor has let down the bars and wiped out the color line we hope to see the young colored men who are inclined towards fitting themselves for the different skilled trades taking up their inclinations with more hope for success. We have known many efficient young tradesmen who were forced to follow other lines of employment because of the fact that they were barred by union labor generally. This condition prevailed largely in the North, but in the South it was just the reverse. There the Negro was the general utility man, and we found many skilled mechanics there doing all kinds of work, under very trying conditions, at much lower wages than was paid for the same work in the North. Here in Denver we have had several good engineers, carpenters, electricians, plumbers, bricklayers and fine mechanics who were forced to go south or give up their trades because of the bar against them by the unions. But now it is different and we anxiously await the test to see if the declaration of the American Federation of Labor is really genuine and if the organization will actually back up their position so recently taken on the color line. We believe them to be sincere in their position, because it is not only right and just, but wise and statesmanlike. We hope to see the young men who have in the past been nothing but poolroom loungers and sidewalk nuisances turn to account this new and vast opportunity. The young man who fails to learn a trade or fit himself now for something useful in life will find himself in his old age a worthless wreck and a charge upon his friends and the community. The field is open to him and it is up to him to take hold now and blaze the way for the next generation. We are told that Opportunity passes each man's door but once and if you fail to welcome her in she passes on to the next door, never to return again. It is a fact that if there were sufficient Negro mechanics and skilled tradesmen there would be many more large openings for them, because they are preferred more than the foreign workmen. This is our opportunity and we must prepare for it and hold it. "Excess Profits Tax Is Indirect Tax of the Most Insidious Kind." By L. F. LOREE, New York State Chamber of Commerce. The effect of excess profit taxes on business enterprises and on the high cost of living is so evident as to require little explanation. We have the word of former Secretary Glass that this tax encourages "wasteful expenditure, puts a premium on overcapitalization and a penalty on brains, energy and enterprise, discourages new ventures and confirms old ventures in their monopolies." What further need be said in condemnation? J. B. H. It may be appropriate, however, to indicate the fact that as the commodity or raw material passes from the planter, or grower, or producer to the factor, and so on to the manufacturer, the jobber, the wholesaler and retailer, each process of distribution witnesses an addition to the cost at each stage of progress, of an indeterminate amount more than sufficient in the estimate of each intermediary to cover his excess profits tax and that all of these increases are included in the price paid by the consumer for the finished product. These added costs have no legitimate relation to original cost. As an example of one of these costs, the head of an important manufacturing enterprise has recently stated that his corporation paid in one year to the federal government taxes in a sum more than double the nominal profits retained by the company, more than five times the sum distributed in dividends to the investors whose capital it utilized, and nearly two-thirds the total amount distributed to the workers by way of wages, and this may be considered typical. The excess profits tax is an indirect tax of the most insidious kind. The laborer, the clerk, those dependent on small incomes from investment, and all whose earnings are less than the exemption allowed under the law, are not taxed under the law. Few of them realize that they are taxed at all. This entire class, however, as well as others with larger incomes, pays a heavy toll each day for the necessities of life and would, if it realized the fact, be among the strongest advocates of excess profits tax repeal. It follows naturally that to the extent excess profits are assessed, our export tax is penalized. The products of the manufacturer and of the farmer cannot so readily be sold abroad in competition with those of other countries if their prices are inflated under operation of an excess profits tax. Markets secured during the war are in danger of being lost to the American exporter through the effect of the excess profits taxes. Prevent Decay of Teeth by Teaching Children to Keep Mouths Clean. Definite and practical plans for instructing children in the technic of caring for the teeth have been worked out during the last six years, particularly in Bridgeport, Conn., where twenty-six hygienists are engaged in the education of 20,000 children in the public and parochial schools in the problems of mouth hygiene. During the five years ending January, 1919, this service had reduced the number of retarded children (those who were required to take a year over) in the eight grades of the grammar school just fifty per cent. The cost of re-educating these children equaled 42 per cent of the entire budget in 1912, and was reduced to 17 per cent in 1918. During this same period and apparently as a result of this service, communicable diseases were wonderfully reduced. The figures for diphtheria were changed from 36 per cent to 18 per cent, for measles from 20 per cent to 4 per cent, for scarlet fever from 14.1 per cent to 0.5 per cent. There is good reason to believe that the establishment of this school of dental hygienists is the beginning of an educational campaign which will be far-reaching in the improvement of the health of the nation. Teeth are preserved; healthier bodies and minds are developed; much of constitutional diseases is prevented. Could there be a finer public service? Chicago has over 300,000 children in the grade schools. A few years ago members of the Chicago Dental society examined the mouths of about 80,000 children and found fully 95 per cent in need of dental service. It is impracticable to supply dental service to adequately meet this demand. The record of the dental hygienists in the Bridgeport schools has, however, pointed out a thoroughly practical solution which is a much more rational method—that of preventing decay by teaching the children to keep their mouths clean. It seems so certain that this service will soon come to be a part of the training of the children in our public schools that the establishment of a school for the training of women hygienists is likely to be an important factor in the furtherance of the general child welfare movement. Bureau of War Risk Insurance Faces Its Big Task With Confidence. Bureau of War Risk Insurance Faces Its Big Task With Confidence. It is not to be denied that ex-service men and women dealing with the bureau have had just reason to criticise and to complain by reason of the bureau's apparent neglect to respond promptly and accurately to all communications addressed to it. Any ex-service men or women who are members of any local post of the American Legion, Veterans of the World War, or any ex-service man's or woman's organization and who themselves may have been responsible for the organization of such post, will appreciate some of the bureau's problems, but it is to be remembered that the bureau deals with more than four and one-half million ex-service men and women. A typical day's mail in the bureau would take a local post or a state executive department of any of the ex-service men's organizations several years to handle. Of course, in this regard, achievement is to a large extent contingent upon the numerical strength of personnel engaged in the task, and yet the bureau's personnel has been cut from seventeen thousand to ten thousand, and will be reduced still further, even though the volume of business handled by the bureau is as great as it ever was. The bureau, however, faces the problem of its future accomplishment with complete confidence that the determined aid and earnest endeavor of the personnel at its command must win the approval and endorsement of the ex-service man whose welfare constitutes the object of its existence. WEEK-END SPECIALS IN THE BASEMENT STORE --- Men's Furnishings Basement Bargain Store. Fine gauge Black Cotton Half Hose with white split feet, also fancy elox, striped and checked effects on black, gray and champagne grounds; regularly 35c. 29c Pair, or 6 Pairs for $1.65. FOUR-IN-HANDS FOR 35c. Tubular Woven Reversible Four-in-Hands in washable silk finishes, fancy striped and figured effects. MEN'S CHECKED NAINSOOK UNION SUITS. Checked Nainsook Union Suits in athletic style—sleeveless, knee length, closed crotch, web in back.....$1.35 Men's Corduroy Trousers, in dark, medium and light colors; regularly $7; Thursday special.....$5.75 Men's Khaki Pants; Thursday special.....$2.45 Boys' Knicker Suits with two pairs of trousers, in cassimeres, cheviots and tweeds; trousers full lined; Thursday special.....$13.95 Boys' Sport Blouses in light and dark patterns, regularly $1.50; Thursday.....$1.15 Windsor Ties; Thursday special.....18c Boys' Wash Suits in a large variety of light and dark colors.....$1.89 and $2.89 SALE OF MEN'S HANDKERCHIEFS. 500 dozen Men's Cambric Handkerchiefs with $\frac{1}{4}$-inch hems, some slightly soiled—12$\frac{1}{2}$c each, $1.45$ dozen. 50c VEILING. YARD 25c. Plain and Fancy Veilings, in brown, navy, taupe and black. 200 DOZEN SLIP-ON VEILS, TWO FOR 25c. Black, taupe, navy and brown. SALE OF PEARL BUTTONS, 10c CARD. Four to twelve on a card, assorted sizes. WOMEN'S SAMPLE NECKWEAR. Regularly priced from 75c to $1.25. Sale price.....49c Dainty neck fixings in new and unusual styles. Collars, Runners, Vests and Collar and Cuff Sets. WOMEN'S CHAMOISETTE GLOVES, 89c A special offer in Women's Fabric Gloves in brown, white, mastic, black and gray; some slightly imperfect. Basement. These are the Low Shoes now in demand—Pumps and Oxfords of fine white canvas in smart-looking styles. Ten attractive styles are represented in all sizes. Plain Canvas Pumps with French heels and turn soles. Canvas Oxfords with low or high heels, turn soles or welt soles WHITE CANVAS HIGH SHOES Attractive styles for women and misses, hand-turned soles; pair ..... $3.95 Basement Store. Seek the Higher Life. Whatever you do, be greater than your calling; let your manhood overtop your position, your wealth, your title. Masterful living, constant growth toward a higher life, are the great ends of human existence. Your calling should be the great school of life, the great man-developer, character-builder, that which should broaden deepen and round out into symmetry harmony and beauty all the God-giver faculties within you.—Orison Swett Marden in Chicago News. A. E. H. To Clean Brass Articles Do not throw away squeezed lemons; use them for cleaning brasses and dish covers. Put a pinch of whiting on the article to be cleaned, and rub it in well, using the lemon as a sponge. You will be surprised to see how much dirt you can remove in a very short time and with little trouble. Brasses cleaned in this way keep clean longer than when done with ordinary polish. Figures in the Moon. Some keenly discerning people see a woman alongside the man in the moon and account for her presence there by her churning on Sunday while the "old gentleman" chopped the wood. A pretty eastern fancy is that the figure in the moon is that of Ina, who weaves the clouds into white cloth and who sent her husband back to earth by the rainbow ridge in order that death might not defile her heavenly home. MISS NETTIE PENIX HERNDON, Teacher of Piano. Results Guaranteed. Studio, 2542 Gavlord, Tel. York 4708J. PTHE COIODANG\S iS , “4 (THE COLORADG\97x AL Len) of Sat ‘eazy a see? 5 4 Bs] Va ree} pile rg eas MG ns ST z hE A ecth oN AB io ee eA = CS Kae RE bee ———4 > Soe pa —— Mrs, M, 8. Mansfield and son, W. B.] con was served. The dining room we Mansfield of Dallas, Texas, are the} bewatitaliy decorated with red rose guests of Mrs, 'T, F, MeGinnis of 2022] made by Mrs, Woodraff. The brie Welton Street, wore a beautiful white georget Sees trimmed with dainty white braid, ay Ges, Morrison, bimseifand Peoriess| With, thin she wore a most extn Orchestra will play at Fern Hall,| 0") 91 11" BE leubaah peg en Monday night, June 28, ie BE ad oe hushed tats ae ea “di sutiode re pearls, gift of the groom, Mr, Cox we Mrs, J.T. Hammond and little daugh-| # Yer Prominent business man of H ter, ‘Thelma, of 1625 South: Lincotn | “ty. The bride was for more tha Street, ave returned from a fone] Het yeurs w teacher In one of months’ vialt in Phoenix, Arie, ana] eeclne public schools of Birminghas How Angeles; Gallf, Ala, They reached Denver Suridi morning, June 13, 1920, after eigl iat days on the road, The couple wi Mrs. Alice Greenwood of La/make Denver their future home. Grange, Ga., arrived in the city Fri- ————— day and will visit several weeks with DR. CLARENCE F. HOLMES, JR. her son and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. B.S. D. D. S. Wm, Greenwood, 225 West 11th ae ee Ave. Invites the public of Denver to ii Mr. and Mrs, Frank Osborne of 3544 Tennyson street, wish to an- nounce the marriage of their daugh- ter, Gladys Bell, to Mr. Wm, Linzy, September 8th, 1920. Mr, and Mrs, Edward C. Davis have moved into their own home, 1009 Twen- ty-sixth Avenue, ‘They are among our well respected and progressive eltizens, and the Colorado Statesman offers best wishes for their future success, ‘That the Men's Club of the Chureh of the Hbly Redeemer is proving its worth to the community will be seen at the Lawn Social to be given free of charge at 2427 Ogden Street next Tues- day, June 29th, All friends invited. Our popular Denyerite who has been a member of the metropolis in the per- son of John Hardy, was seen by Mr. Rivers, who says he looks every inch a mun and is not failing to represent the West in the great metropolitan center. Mrs. N. J. Skillern, one of the lead- ing and most popular matrons of our city, has just returned from a three months’ visit to Los Angeles and other California points, Mrs, Skillern looks in the best of health and is loud in her praises of the people of the far West “and their hospitality, Walter FE, Huntley returned from Ogden, Utah, after an absence of eight months |-oking in the best of health, Mr, Huntley's opinion of our people in the great state of Utah is very encour: aging, as he informs us that there Is aplenty of work and the workman Is well paid for his services. Professor Valaurez Spratlin left last week, Thursday, for Los Angeles, Call fornia, to visit with his grandmother He will return to Denver prior to his departure for Bluefields Institute West Virginia, where he has been teaching the Languages and Mustc since last September. Mrs, Cleter Blackwell and Mrs, Cecil Martin were the guests of Mr. and Mrs, J. L., Martin of 2348 Walnut street for a few days. ‘Chey were royally enter- tained and were given sight-seeing trips in Denyer and other amusements by their host. ‘The visitors left for Pueblo, thence to Hot Springs, Ark., their home. Editor Rivers is making up for his years of absence from the Bast. He is now in Washington and will visit Bal- timore and Philadelphia and New York before returning. “I am having the time of my life,” said the Editor in his communication, and he begs to be re- membered to all the friends and pa- trons of the Colorado Statesman. Ardentis Fields, cousin of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Williams of 2913 Glen- sirm Place, is here for the summer, Mr, Fields is a junior of the University of Wisconsin where he is taking a scien- tifie course, In the capable hands of Miss Laverne Williams, Mr. Fields is beginning to be popular with the younger set and will soon be acquaint- ed with the town in general, Mr. and Mrs. J. G, Woodruff gave for Mr, Albert Cox and his bride of Birmingham, Ala,, a brilliant surprise party Wednesday afternoon, June 16, 1920, at their beautiful home at 2931 Marion Street. Those present to wel- come the strangers were Mr, Tommy Anderson and wife, Mr. Robert White and wife, Mrs. B. W, Washington and daughter, Mr, ©. H. Hamerter, brother of the bride, Mr, Hamerter presented the bride with a beautiful string of beads which she received with so inuch gratification, After many beau- tiful selections on the piano by little Miss Washington, a five-course Junch- con was served, ‘The dining room was beautitaliy decorated with red roses made by Mrs, Woodruff, The bride wore « beautiful white georgette trimmed with dainty white braid, and with this she wore a most exquisite bunch of pink sweet peas and her bridal gift of a string of French pearls, gift of the groom, Mr, Cox was a very prominent business man of his city, ‘The bride was for more than three yeurs a teacher in one of the leading public schools of Birmingham, Ala, ‘They reached Denver Suriday morning, June 13, 1920, after eight days on the road, ‘The couple will make Denver their future home, DR. CLARENCE F. HOLMES, JR. B.S, D. D. S, Invites the public of Denver to in- spect his modern, electrically equipped dental suite, 2711 WELTON, SUITE 1.2, HOURS 9 A. M, TO 12 NOON; 1 TO 6 P. M. Evenings and Sundays by appointment, A CORRECTION. In our last week's issue Mrs. J. B. Moore was reported as being chairman of the reception committee given for the graduates at Zion Bap- tist church, instead Mrs. Frances Davis was chairman. Y. M. C. A. NOTES. While the croquet fans have played many games up to this time, the tour- nament for the season was formally opened last Wednesday evening by Adolphus and Leslie Lightner on the one side, and George ©, King and Law- rence H. Lightner on the other, Promptly at 7 o'clock the players stood facing each other in their re- spective corners of the court, King and his partner had had considerable practice already, and knew — the grounds and the quality ef the mallets and balls, It was the first thne the other pair had been on the grounds this season; therefore they were put at quite a disadvantage, thus causing the game to be rather one-sided; those thrilling plays, so common to players of their kind, were lacking, Nevertheless the large crowd whieh athered to witness the opening ef the series greatly enjoyed it, Other gumes, were set for a few days later. At present King and Sims are engaged in a life and death struggle for the mastery, ‘The honors are rather even just now, and it will doubtless take the work of the whole season to deter mine who is the better, Blakemore and Bennett are also contending; and then there are lesser lights, and also some greater. Preparations are being made for a series of social affairs which are soon to come off, The first will be in the form of a social to the hoys next ‘Tues- jay evening, the 29th, from 7:30 to 9:30 o'clock. CAMPBELL A. M, E. CHURCH. Rev. |. S, Wilson, Pastor; Res. 1214 Twenty-third Street. Phone Main 1312, On account of painting and cleaning the church all services will be held ai Dainia hall at ‘Twenty-seventh and Arapahoe Streets until farther notice: ‘The reopening Is hoped to be had on the second Sunday in July, in whieh the new. pews will have been installed. ‘The following services for Sunday will be held: 10 a, m.—Sunday School. 11. a. .m.—Preaching by the pastor, Subject, “The Last Days of Moses.” 6:45 p. m.—Christian Endeavor. 8p. m.—Preaching by the pastor: Subject, ‘Jonas’ Commission.” Prayer and Class Meeting will be held in. the lecture room at Campbell at 8p. m., Wednesday. ‘Trustee Helpers will meet with Mrs. Stewart, 2229 Cleveland Place, Friday, 8 p.m. Lawn Fete at Campbell this Satur: day evening, June 26, 8 p. m. Our fourth and last quarterly meet Ing will be July 4th, Dr. Pope, presiding elder, will be present and will preach morning and evening, Rey. Henderson of Boulder will preach the communion sermon, Miss Lillian Brooks of Oklahoma City, Okla,, was united with the church lage Sanday FUNERAL NOTICE. Douglass Undertaking Co. ‘Turner—Mary Jane, 85 years, be- loved sister of Mrs, Sands, residence 1204 Fox street, departed this life June 18th, Funeral services were held 2 p. m, ‘Thursday, June 24th, from resi- dene. Rey. P. J. Price officiated. Th- terment at Fairmount cemetery. Miss Lena M. Lewis has been com- missioned a notary public. She can be found at Lawyer Blakemore's of- fice, rooms 39 and 40, 1622 Arapa- hoe street. ( (EN KITCHEN I\ [O See 'D) PA Time Is money! Yen, and time cocte money; Ie rather an expensive ar ticle to ome people GOOD THINGS TO TRY. Several years ago prune whip wa a common dish well iked; here int good recipe to re “TS vive: me Prune Whip.— Take = three-quar ters of a pound of prunes, stew and when sof Ses put through a col i “>. > ander. Add four | See tablespoonfuls of sugar, the whiter of four eggs well beaten and one-balt cupful of nut meats, Add the sugar then the nut meats, then the prunes. folding all carefully into the eggs. Flavor with vanilla or serve with whipped cream flavored to taste. Tapioca Pudding—Take one-fourth of a cupful of tapioca, cover with cold water and soak over night; drain well Beat the yolks of two exes with one half cupful of sugar and one-fourth teaspoonful of salt; add this to tap foca and return all to the double boil er. Cook three minutes, stirring con. stantly. Remove from the fire and add the stiMy beaten whites; flavor to taste. Oatmeal Cookies —Take a secant cup ful of lard and ‘wo cupfuls of suxar cream together, add one cupful of sour inilk, three eggs.beaten, four cupfuls of oatmeal, one teaspoonful each of cinnamon, soda and salt, one cupful each of nuts and raisins, four cupfuls of flour, Mix the raisins with the flour. Drop from a teaspoon on bak ing sheets, Bake in a moderate oven Maple Sponge—Boll two cupfuls ot brown sugnr and one-half cupful of not water to a sirup. Soak one-balt package of gelatine in one and one half cupfuls of colt water. Bent the whites of two ezgs until stiff, add one ‘eupful of pecan meats. Soak the gel atine while the sugur is boiling, ther beat well. When the gelatine begins to stiffen. adh! the yeaten whites « the eggs. Serve with whipped cream Marshmallow Pudding—Tike on tablespoonful of gelatin soaked in one-half cupful of cold water; add one: half cupful of hot water, Beat the whites of four eggs and into this beat dissolved gelatine a few drops at # time; add gradunily one cupful of su gar. Drain a ean of grated pineapple and beat into the mixture, Color one: half pink, the other sny desired color. Mold in cake pans. Serve with whipped eream, | Cherry Olives—Fill a can with per fect cherries, well washed and un stemmed. Fill the can with the bes! of vinegar and water, equal parts; add a teaspoonful of salt and seal. ‘These will keep until used and are a most ap | petizing accompaniment to any toast Human life, modern human life, Is complex. Grass maintains a cow, but the cow Is not of a sprightly. Intell Kence, neithe- ix the sheep. A hanoful Of dates feeds the Arab, a cuchmber the ‘Turkish porter, a strip of Faw blubber the Eskimo! but the needs of civilization. call for other faculties than are possessed by. these.—Helen Campbell. A SYMPOSIUM OF SALADS. For a good salad which will take but a short time to prepare, try this new cabbage combination: Te WARY Cabbave Salad.—Shre« . A a firni hend of cabbase NH A i ter it stand in ents Q3 water until crisp, then 7 drain well and toss on & fi: a towel to remove ll AN) water, Dice marshina! Jows, and — pineapple pe nee eae aa a Dil and add to any good salad dressing iid whipped eream und pour aver the calhage. Combination Salad.—Take one en selope of gelatine, add one-half cuptu of cold water, then pour the juice from femal! enn of pineapple heated aver che softened gelatine, add the grater pineapple, juice of two lemons. one ‘onpful of sugar, one medium-sized on fon and. two, cucumbers put throu) ihe meat grinder: mix all together and mold. Serve on head lettuce with viayoutalse: Pineapple and Pear Salad.—l.ny » alice of pineapple on lettuce and hall 4 pear on this with blanched almonids tot in quarters nnd stuck Into the jwin to simulate a prickly pear. Serve with this a good dressing mixed with creany Sprinkle with yellow cheese. finely grated. : Peach Salad.—Lay one-half peach in fn nest of head lettuce, hollow side up Cut long, thin strips of white celery Sha fasten the ends In the peach tr took likea handle, Fill the peach with salad made of white grapes, cherries nuts, marshmallows cut fine and» tiimisching cherry on top. ‘The frult should be mixed with a thick, rich dressing. Another Pineapple Salad.—Take on large can of pineapple, drain the Juice Beat two eggs. add three tablespoon fuls of sugar and two tablespoonfuls 0° cornstarch well inixed. Mix and stir into the heated Juice. Put Into a dow tte peller and cook until thick. Dice pineapple and stir into it before it i> ita gold. Juat before serving add + pint of cream whipped stiff, one-fourt! ping pound of deed marshtnuliows 11! Me capsule of cantmeniaa: This 1¢ ee Neh (th SeEWEABACERDUAIY. By ane Wheel TESTES TER TE TESTES ZEEE TEN TES TD TE TE RN ESR SS REN A a 4 i 1 The bigger and broader attitude which the present growing Colored Civie Association is § | taking in Denver means a new era in dealing with the increasing population of the race in { the Rocky Mountain West. ye 4 Since the close of the Great War, the influx of our people into Colorado, together with the & 1 expanding home population, faces us with a problem we cannot afford to ignore. * i To deal adequately with the situation, the Denver Colored Civie Association has em- J barked upon a gigantic membership campaign drive, which has for its goal 500 members by y 4 the end of July. § { These men, plus additional members later obtained, from time to time, will direct Negro & { effort into the proper channels, for the great xood of all citizens. b The purpose is to unite the progressive element in the West into a larger and better cite @ — izenship, to increase its worth toward the goal of civie betterment, and to get behind, unit- § 4 edly and with whole-souled spirit, every movement that makes for a Bigger, Better, Greater § { Denver. i We number now in our membership some of the most influential colored citizens in § G Colorado. We're going to get every colored man who believes in himself, in his race, in his J community, in his country. : =o Wa MM? MEL? MOREA YS? $7 Wer eA NN aX TAXT TOVNT@NNT@NITOW O\s OOO TOTO. CHRONIC GROVENHDS . . - 8v Hendrix. 4 (Sees or ; pie jo (elt ’ f ao R m5 Ay, -A6 Ce) & & Cay B) 7 "| 2 if | rn a iateeciangieeie | AC ‘ | N. A. A. C, P. SPECIAL GENERAL MEETING THIS EVENING SCOTT M. E, CHURCH. All members of the National Assoct- ation for the Advancement of Colored People, as well as the public, are cor- dially invited to attend a special meet- Ing of the Association at Seott Chureh, ‘Twenty-sixth Avenue and Clarkson Street, to hear the report of the ses- sion recently held at Atlanta, Ga, Good news relative to RACE UPLIFT AND PROGRESS will be told, and encour- agement and Inspiration given to en- hance the growth and interest of the great propaganda of the organizition. With pleasure we note the renewal of the subscription of Governor Shoup and other prominent citizens to the As- sociation, A large attendance is ex- pected at 8:15 o'clock this evening. ‘Take cars 23 or 28 to Clarkson Street ‘or Five Points, walking one block north or east. | Modern furnished room for gentle- man, close in. 2356 Glenarm place Phone Main 8383. Dr. Huff's office phone is Champa 6001. And his residence, Phone York 410!. When not reached at office or home, call Atlas Drug Co., Main 875. Office Hours 11 to 12 a. m,, and 3 to 5 p. m. E. P, BLAKEMORE, Attorney ané Counsellor at Law. Office, Rooms 39 and 40 Arapahoe Bldg., 1622 Arapa- hoe Street. Phone Champa 5450. “Electoral College” Properly speaking, there ‘sno sich Institution as aa electoral callege The electors, who are voted for hy the people, meet In their reswwetive states and cust thelr vores for president and vice president These are sented and sent by specint messenger to the vice president of the United States seting nis speuker of the senate He delivers: them to the spenker of the house. who, nthe presence of both houses af con: rress assembled, epens the vole und declares the resnit Avocado Rich in Fat The nvoendo or alligator pear con- tains as mueh norritiens fat as does ordinary cream, sometimes as high: as 20 per cent. As Ht contmins little starch or sugar it might prove valu- able In the die of dinheries if it did aon eeghat alae inpinieh AN INTERNAL VAPOR BATH FOR THE HEAD, NOSE, THROAT AND LUNGS ‘wOTHING TO. e e Co OREATUE VICTORY VAPOR BALM vi Guaranteed 2 ee sbanLe.rauenicaL Satisfactory * ro ra exon sk or SO Lh aaa ae an ot FEN Qala VAY Sc: a ool Genin cnc oo Tennent eee ec 7 PP AN RY Ra Cents As Feel NN SMA? | Bronchitie com RRA VON le a, COUr ter NUON Die REE SSE Ot EM EE: ~ xs MAT ena OR MARRY RO RAE Ht Dr. Westbrook, physician and sur geon, office 25 Good block, 16th and Larimer streets. Phone Main 5595 Hours 10 to 11 a. m,, 2 to 4 and 7 to 8 p. m. Residence 2555 Glenarm place. Phone Champa 6148, Hours at residence by appointment. Call Phy sicians and Surgeons’ Telephone Ex change. Main 1624, night or day. X— Ray examination and treatments a specialty. For Rent—Three rooms, partly furnished, 976 Santa Fe Drive. I. H. Harper. FOR RENT—13-room, modern flat, 5 rooms upstairs and 7 rooms on first floor. Apply 1923 Clarkson street. Will rent separately. For employment see the Industrial Realty Co. Employment Agency, 716 East Twenty-sixth Ave. York 4561. > Women’s Red Cross Shoes Pumps and Oxfords, the reason being lates hipments, and price healthy and normal conditions. “WMrchadlsows- 15TH AND LARIMER STS. EVERYONE can have abuadance of Thick, Beautiful, Glowey Hatr 7 Sutherland Sisters Hair Grower Grew this Hair £9 he f° gs: Lite @ | ie BRIE 3 i) poi é | ie Fiat dull e 5 ir F 3 BORA 3 | = CNA B a a a! CU gd 2 Raion \ e Mall ey E x oe " g 2 GeMegoe|\ 4 oan g eae 2 RU |) 8 3S TRAC stad me ey sa ta a Berea ip we me TU ‘ ia " ata | hig! iy i my cated | PAA an Bs LE a aie Se eee Sarah Sutherland SCALP CLEANHA, the Great Dandraft HSP'SEE copoctan tune so\eanal If You Value Your Hatr and Ita Hensty | YORVER SUTHERLAND SISTERS GoD aecaewe Mor Gale by ail .Dicputd mains Depit Soca Seven Sutherland Sisters 242 BRADHURST AVE., N. Y. CITY . DR. C. E. TERRY Physician and Surgeon, 1027 Twenty first street. Office hours: 12-2 p. m. 6-8 p. m., and appointment. Phone Main 2701. Residence, Champa 3303. Phone Main 8036 Res. Phone York 5774W FRANK D. TAGGART Attorney at Law—Notary Public 205-206 Cooper Building Denver, Colorado Office 609 27th St. Ph. Champa 1142 S. E. CARY ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Six Years City and County Attorney At Russell Springs, Logan County, Kansas Office Hours: 1:00 A. M. to 12:00 M. 2:00 P. M. to 4:00 P. M. DENYER, COLO. Phone Champa 1142 609 27th St. Rooms 3 and 4 LEROY J. PERKINS The East Denver Realty Co. and Insurance Agency Over Atlas 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 JOSEPH CARTER Express, Moving, and Storage COAL AND WOOD PROMPT DELIVERY. Phone Main 6544. 2415 WASHINGTON STREET. The WARD AUCTION COMPANY Sales Daily at 2 p.m. Office Pursuit a Specialty. PRIVATE SALES AT ALL TIMES HAVE MOVED TO- 1728-39 GLENARM ST. PHONE MAIN 1675. ORIENTAL RESTAURANT Chop Suey, Noodles and Short Orders Phone Champa 113 1848 Arapahoe ARE YOU GUILTY? A FARMER carrying an express package from a big mail-order house was accosted by a local dealer. "Why didn't you buy that bill of goods from me? I could have saved you the express, and besides you would have been patronizing a home store, which helps pay the taxes and builds up this locality." The farmer looked at the merchant a moment and then said: "Why don't you patronize your home paper and advertise? I read it and didn't know that you had the stuff I have here." MORAL—ADVERTISE --- Words That Made Men Free IN CONGRESS. JULY 4. 1776. The unanimous Declaration of the thirteen united States of America. OUR COUNTRY DATE OF INDEPENDENCE DEMANDS FITTING CELEBRATION. We are told by historians that Bjorne Hergulfson, an adventurous Icelander, was the first to see this continent. This was in the year 986 and the land he saw was believed to be Nantucket, Nova Scotia and Newfoundland. Lief Erickson, in the year 1000, in Bjorne's ship, set sail for Greenland, landed in Newfoundland and later in Nova Scotia and still later on the shores of Massachusetts bay. The claim is made that he was the first paleface to set foot on the American continent. Descendants of Columbus strenuously deprecated the importance of the discoveries of "Eric the Red," but the Americanist society declares that Columbus himself knew of the voyages and settlements of the Norsemen, having informed himself thereof when he visited Iceland in 1477. Be that as it may, Columbus has the advantage of tradition, of familiarity, of the facility with which an at least apparent connection is established between the man and what came after him. On June 24, 1497, John Cabot, an Englishman, saw the dismal cliffs of Labrador. That was 14 months before Columbus, on his third voyage, came in sight of the mainland of South America. Amalric was the name which compacted the old ideal of heroism and leadership. It meant "the man who ruled because he labored for all." This name the Norman French shortened to Amaury. In Italy the name suffered euphonic changes and it became Amelrico, but the juxtaposition of the two consonants "l" and "r" presented a difficulty in pronunciation and the "lr" was changed to "rr" and finally to one "r." Down the centuries the name remained, and from Amelrico Vespucil game the name of the new world. The Mayflower cast anchor in the waters off Cape Cod on November 21, 1621. The Pilgrims finally decided on Plymouth as the spot for settlement. The first settlement had been established, however, at Jamestown since 1607. Its early record was one of continuous misfortune—from an oppressive government to famine and Indian massacre. The first legislative assembly convened July 30, 1719. On July 4, 1776, the Declaration of Independence was agreed to and Matthew Thornton affixed his signature to the engrossed copy. On January 18, 1777, an authentic copy with the names of the members of congress was ordered and a copy was sent to each of the United States to be placed on record." This great state paper, "unequaled in eloquence and dignity," was the product, largely, of Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin, and it is said Thomas Paine, Franklin's friend, wrote he first draft presented to congress. From that time to this the people of the United States of America have celebrated the anniversary of their independence. Emerging, with colors triumphant, from participation in the World war, the Stars and Stripes have taken on added luster and today they float over the happiest and most prosperous people on the earth. Suggestion for the Rejuvenation of the Historic Tocsin That Rang Out Liberty's Triumph. Shall the Liberty bell ring out once more? Ever since 1843 it has remained mute—and for good reason. When it was being rung on February 22, 1843, the crack in it, which had appeared some eight years before, so increased as nearly to destroy its sound. Ever since that time it has silently held its post at the head of the stairway in Independence hall in Philadelphia, where it has received the reverential inspection of thousands of Americans. The original bell was cast in England in 1752, and was cracked soon after it was brought to America. It A Smaller Bell Inside of the Liberty Bell Could Be Rung. was recast in Philadelphia, more copper being put into the composition. But it cracked again while being tolled in memory of Chief Justice John Marshall in 1835; and the crack extended, as has been said, in 1843. Here is a suggestion. Why not place within the Liberty bell a second smaller bell which can be rung? The proportions of the original bell permit of this, and it will be, in fact, a cover or jacket for the sound-giving bell. Surely this generation ought to see the historic bell swinging once more as joyous peals "Proclaim Liberty Throughout All the Land Unto All the Inhabitants Thereof," as the inscription on the bell reads.—Popular Science Monthly. Kosciuszko Doubly Welcome. At those times, when the United States fought for its independence, any experienced soldier who had come to this land to fight for its freedom was cordially welcomed, and the more so Kosciuszko, one of the best students of the highest military institution, acquainted with modern strategic sciences, was especially desirable. VALLEY FORGE LITTLE VILLAGE BEARS A NAME THAT IS IM MORTAL. While Washington's troops starved or died of fever or gangrene at Valley Forge the enemies of his own household were not ashamed to play politics for the downfall of their commander even at the risk of losing their common cause. Lafayette, hot with indignation, writing to his well-loved chief December 30, 1777, said, with the restraint that good taste put upon a well-bred allen pen: "I see plainly that America can defend herself if proper measures are taken; but I begin to fear that she may be lost by herself and her own sons." And Washington, with his never-failing courage and with a cheerfulness he could not have felt, replied: "We must not, in so great a contest, expect nothing but sunshine. I have no doubt that everything happens for the best, that we shall triumph over our misfortunes, and in the end be happy; and then, my dear marquis, if you will give me my company in Virginia, we will laugh at our past difficulties and the folly of others." So wrote the man who, in dead of winter, commanded an army without a quartermaster general, for that creature of congress had ceased to function the previous summer. Congress, calmly aware of Washington's inevitable plight, appointed no successor till March of the following year, when, no thanks to the politicians, the exertions of Nathaniel Greene, Robert Morris and "Mad Anthony" Wayne—the fearless leader who said he would rather go into battle than witness the sufferings of the men in his camp—supplied cattle and clothing and brought the starving command back to life. Sir George Otto Trevelyan, nephew and biographer of Lord Macaualay, in his brilliant and sympathetic history of our war for independence, says that this village in the Pennsylvania hills "gave a name to what, as time goes on, bids fair to be the most celebrated encampment in the world's history." On a bare hillside, surrounded by open fields, and miles from any considerable settlement, stands, almost completed, an exquisite, little gray Gothic chapel. It is not a village church but a national Valhalla. It is an edifice of unusual beauty. Pennies of school children, patriotic societies and descendants of colonial families—all had a part in building it. It is dedicated to the memory of Washington and of those who suffered with him on the hills and in the fields round about.—Saturday Evening Post. H Consult us; we can save you time, worry and money. Two expert licensed embalmers, lady attendant and funeral director. IN UNION THERE IS STRENGTH. Incorporated for $15,000, under the laws of the State of Colorado; an partnership to establish a manufacturing plant in connection with their present business, in order to supply the offices which they are establishing in each of the State where the population will warrant. They have some stock on sale yet. For full particulars, call or write—E.V. CAMMEL, President. 2418 Welton Street, Denver, Colo. WESTERN BEEF CO. Waterlings, Pig Tails, Snouts, Ea , Spare Ribs Received Fresh Meats of All Kinds.. Fresh Veget Fancy Groceries. Prices Are Always the Delivery to All Parts of the Phone Champa 1641. GREET Opposite the Three Rules. en Barber Baths, Electric Massages Fresh Oysters, Chitterlings, Pig Tails, Snouts, Ears, Pigs Feet, Neck Bones, Spare Ribs Received Fresh Daily. Fresh and Cured Meats of All Kinds. Fresh Vegetables, Staple and Fancy Groceries. FIRST-CLASS SERVICE R. B. BOLDEN, Proprietor THE CHAMPA TWENTIETH Is the place DRUGS, CHEMICALS A WE SERVE PRESCRIPTIONS Phone us and we will deliver to JAMES E. TH PHONE N NAMPA PHARMA TWENTIETH AND CHAMPA Is the place to get your CHEMICALS AND PATENTS WE SERVE DRINKS. SCRIPTIONS OUR SPECIAL will deliver the goods to all NAMES E. THRALL, Proprietor PHONE MAIN 2425. R. B. BOLDEN, Proprietor 926 19th St., Denver 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. P. H. H. PRACTICAL PLUMBER.— Jobbing Promptly Attended to—S tion and Sewerage— 2018 CURTIS STREET. The Star Pressing Best of Service—All Work C and D 1935 Goss Street. S. SMITH AND C. W. B A FULL Black and White Ane a Full Line of MME. C. BUT WE KNOW Jones West Ha Atlas D P. H. BALFE PLUMBER.—LICENSED DRUG attended to—Special Attention and Sewerage—All Work Guarantee EET. The Star Clear Pressing Co. All Work Guaranteed—Cru and Delivered. AND C. W. BUCKHALTER, PRACTICAL PLUMBER.—LICENSED DRAIN LAYER. Jobbing Promptly Attended to—Special Attention Given to Ventilation and Sewerage—All Work Guaranteed. 2018 CURTIS STREET. DENVER, COLO. The Star Cleaning & Pressing Company Best of Service—All Work Guaranteed—Clothes Called for and Delivered. S. SMITH AND C. W. BUCKHALTER, Proprietors. A FULL LINE OF and White Re of MME. C. J. WALKER WE KNOW YOU WILL I West Hair Pomade Atlas Drug Co. Black and White Remedies Ane a Full Line of MME. C. J. WALKER'S Toilet Articles. BUT WE KNOW YOU WILL LIKE Jones West Hair Pomade Best. Atlas Drug C. Patronize Our Advertisers ers The They are all boosters and deserve your business. Has Your Subscription Expired? Come in and renew it next time you are in town. come in and renew it next time you are in town. Telephone Main 207 2701 Welton St ```markdown ``` One of the Most Up-to-Date and Sanitary Markets in the City. Dalls, Snouts, Ears, Pigs Feet, Neck Received Fresh Dally. Dads.. Fresh Vegetables, Staple and Proceries. Always the Lowest All Parts of the City. Impa 1641. DENVER, COLO. Three Rules. rber Shop Electric sages A PHARMACY AND CHAMPA, to get your AND PATENT MEDICINES THE DRINKS. OUR SPECIALTY. the goods to all parts of the city. IRALL, Propr. MAIN 2425. Residence Phone Champa 828. BALFE LICENSED DRAIN LAYER. Special Attention Given to Ventilac All Work Guaranteed. DENVER, COLO. For Cleaning & ing Company Guaranteed—Clothes Called for delivered. 678 Boulder. UCKHALTER, Proprietors. White Remedies J. WALKER'S Toilet Articles. YOU WILL LIKE Our Pomade Best. Drug Co. Phone Main 875 The Better the Printing of your stationery the better the impression it will create. Moral: Have your printing done here. Want Something? Advertise for it in these columns Phone Main 875 COMMUNITY CANNING KITCHEN REDUCES WORK IN HOME AND SAVES MUCH WASTE COTTON MILL Community canning kitchens are no longer in the experimental stage, but are established and highly regarded institutions in the many localities which have had the wisdom and foresight to erect them. Fruits and vegetables have the unfortunate habit of coming into their fullest-bearing right when the season is hottest and the housewife busiest. The added task of putting up the winter's supply of fruits and vegetables seems often "the last straw" to the already overburdened woman. Yet there is much more fruit ripening in the garden than can possibly be used while it is fresh. So she gets out her cans. Most women freely admit that canning is not particularly hard work in their products to be canned at a price per can or that in which bers work in groups on special with the help of modern large equipment, saves garden p which would otherwise waste the housewives of the locality not time or strength to can the conserves food for those who are able to conserve for themselves relieves the pressure of work home at a busy season. Various types of canning k are in use today in different places the country. The successful one be adapted to the needs of the city. Usually much more is in one of these kitchens than theills interested in it can use, customary to sell this surplus a Floor Plan of a Well-Designed Community Kitchen—The Various Operations Follow in Consecutive Order Around the Room, Eliminating Any Retracing of Steps. itself. The difficulty is, it must be sandwiched in between numerous regular tasks. Help Difficult to Obtain. It is almost impossible nowadays to obtain help in the home; so, especially in those homes where there are small children, as much work as possible must be sent out to relieve the burdens of the housewife and mother. A community canning kitchen, either of the type to which members may bring COOL AIR IN CELLAR MAY DO WORK OF ICE Most Essential Part of Keeping House in Summer. Miniature Iceless Refrigerator is Made by Inverting an Unglazed Earthenware Flowerpot in a Dish Pot of Water or Pan of Water. Keeping food cool is an essential part of summer housekeeping. With ice and a well-made ice chest, difficulties are few, but without them other methods are necessary. We must have a cool place for storage if we are to have good meals made up of foods properly kept and appetizingly served. When ice is not available we can use devices which make cool air—cold water and evaporating water do the work of ice. We can usually count upon finding cool air in the cellar, and it is valuable indeed if clean and well ventilated. But one housewife immediately says, "I am too busy to use my time carrying the food up and down those cellar steps." Every housewife, but how about a $zimb wafter on which the food could be sent to and from the cellar? A shaft made of boards and plaster and extending from the cellar through the roof by way of the kitchen or pantry is another device which has proved useful in some parts of the country for using the cool air of the cellar. Wire or perforated shelves are fitted into the shaft and a door opens from it. As the air in the upper part of the shaft grows warmer the cold air from the cellar is drawn up and the constant upward movement of colder air cools the food on the shelves. An iceless refrigerator which depends on the rapid evaporation of The KITCHEN CABINET While the kitchen is the stomach of the house it is as essential to have rightly understood and managed as it is to have the stomach so cared for. Sham Tarties—Beat the whites of three eggs very stiff, add six heaping tablespoonfuls of cane sugar, one-half tablespoonful at a time, beating well between each addition of sugar. With the first half of the last tablespoonful of sugar add one-half tablespoonful each of cream of tartar and vanilla. Drop on oiled paper with plenty of space between, pull up little points to make the surface rough and bake in a slow oven one hour. Serve with one-half pint of cream whipped, flavored and sweetened, to which is added three or four slices of pineapple, three bananas cut in dice, maraschino cherries and nuttures. Mix all together and serve over the tarties. This recipe makes seven. Coffee Cake.—Cream one-half cupful of butter and add gradually one cupful of sugar and two beaten eggs. Beat well, add one cupful of chopped raisins, one teaspoonful each of cinnamon, mace and cloves, one-half cupful each of molasses and strong cold coffee, one-half teaspoonful of soda dissolved in one teaspoonful of boiling water and two cupfuls of flour. Bake in a moderate oven. Blackberry Cake.—Take six eggs, two cupfuls of sugar, one cupful of butter, one teaspoonful each of cloves, allspice and cinnamon; add two cupfuls of blackberry jam, four cupfuls of flour and three teaspoonfuls of baking powder, one cupful of milk. Mix as usual and bake in a moderate oven. A little sun, a little rain, A soft wind blowing from the west— And woods and fields are sweet again, And the warmth within the mountain's breast. A drink which is a full meal and one which is good for young on old is— Chocolate Egg Nog. Beat the white of one egg with two teaspoonfuls of sugar and one teaspoonful of cocoa. Scald two cupfuls of milk and pour over the beaten yolk of egg. Beat half of the first mixture into the second, add a pinch of salt and pile the rest of the white on top of the glass. This makes two glasses. Cornmeal Muffins.—Take one and one-half cupfuls of cornmeal, add three tablespoonfuls of sugar and a teaspoonful of salt; add six cupfuls of boiling water and one and one-half tablespoonfuls of butter, cook in a double boiler an hour and a half. Turn into a mixing bowl, cover with a little water to keep the top from hardening and let stand over night. In the morning add one and three-fourths cupfuls of flour, three teaspoonfuls of baking powder and one egg well benten. Bake in muffin pans in a hot oven. Date Bars.—Take one cupful each of washed dates cut in halves, nut meats broken, sugar and flour, two eggs, half a teaspoonful of salt and one-half teaspoonful of baking powder. Beat the eggs, add the dates, nuts and sugar, then the flour sifted with the salt and baking powder. If more moisture is needed add a few drops of milk. Bake in a sheet and cut in strips. Strawberry Whip.—Take one quart of juicy berries, stir in one cupful of sugar and fold in the stiffly beaten whites of three eggs. Heap in sherber glasses and serve with a spoonful of whipped cream on top. This may be served on shortcake or hot baking powder biscuit. Peas in Ramekins.—Take a can of peas or fresh cooked peas, rub through a sieve, add two tablespoonfuls of melted butter, one-fourth of a cupful of milk, one tablespoonful of flour, one teaspoonful of salt, two well-buttered ramekins. Set in a pan of hot water, cover with buttered paper and bake until firm. Meat Dumplings.—Season one cupful of chopped meat with two drops of tabasco sauce, salt, pepper and a little onion juice. Slift together three-quarters of a cupful of flour, one and one-half teaspoonfuls of baking powder and a little salt. Beat one egg until light, add to it two tablespoonfuls of milk and stir into the flour mixture. If this is not moist enough, add more milk. The dough should be quite stiff. Stir the meat into this and frp by spoonfuls into boiling stock; cook tightly covered ten minutes. Use their products to be canned at a fixed price per can or that in which members work in groups on special days with the help of modern large-scale equipment, saves garden products which would otherwise waste because the housewives of the locality have not time or strength to can them. It conserves food for those who are unable to conserve for themselves, and relieves the pressure of work in the home at a busy season. Various types of canning kitchens are in use today in different parts of the country. The successful one must be adapted to the needs of the locality. Usually much more is canned in one of these kitchens than the families interested in it can use. It is customary to sell this surplus and use the proceeds toward paying expenses. Some working capital is needed at the outset for the purchase of adequate equipment. Expenses for rent, fuel, salaries, raw materials, and miscellaneous items, too, must be met for some time before returns can be realized from the products canned. It is therefore necessary to make definite plans for financing the kitchen, based on a careful estimate of probable expenses. Community kitchens have been financed in various ways—for example by school boards, by boards of trade, by business men's associations, by loans from banks or from individuals, and by membership fees. Direct gifts from individuals or a small group of persons is, perhaps, in the end, the least satisfactory method. The membership-fee iden is the best in the opinion of the United States department of agriculture, which is advocating community canning kitchens. The selection of a building and its equipment should be considered jointly, for the type of equipment frequently depends upon the sort of building to be used. Since a primary object of the community canning kitchen is to secure the best returns for the time, effort, and capital invested, the use of modern labor-saving equipment, thoroughly adequate for the kind and volume of work to be done, will prove economical in the end. water for its cooling action is described in "Farm Home Conveniences," Farmers' Bulletin 927, United States department of agriculture, Washington, D. C. The use of a fireless cooker as an iceless refrigerator is discussed in it, too. A miniature iceless refrigerator, useful where only small amounts of food need to be cooled, is made by inverting an unglazed earthenware flowerpot in a dish of water. Food may be kept cool also by placing the dish in cold water and changing the water as it becomes warm. To keep food cool when ice is not available takes ingenuity and care. But others have done it, so why can not you? Household Questions Vinegar can be used as a substitute for brandy in sauce. As spring comes on be sure to serve a salad once a day. Mouse holes should be covered with tarred paper. The mice will desert these entrances. In cleaning brass knobs on doors or furniture, put a pasteboard collar round the neck of the knob to keep the polish off the paint or varnish. For making cloths hot and moist for applications, place wet cloths in top of a steamer or double boiler, which obviates the necessity of any wringing. When making a meat pudding, if a small piece of crust about the size of half a dollar is cut out in the bottom of the basin the pudding will take one and a half hours less to cook. A FEW NICE CAKES. makers are those who are making cakes often. Prince of Wales Cake. —White Part—Take the whites of three eggs, one-half cupful of butter, one cupful of sugar, one-half cupful of cornstarch, one cupful of flour, one-half cupful of sweet milk, two tablespoonfuls of baking powder GOOD THINGS FOR ANY DAY. Chocolate Egg Nog.—Beat the white of one egg with two teaspoonfuls of sugar and one teaspoonful of cocoa. Scald two cupfuls of milk and pour over the beaten yolk of egg. Beat half of the first a teaspoon for drooping the dumplings, and eight minutes will be sufficient time for cooking. Serve with a highly seasoned tomato sauce. Rabbit in Jelly.—Disjoint the rabbit; add salt and pepper and barely water to cover the ment; cook rapidly for five minutes, then simmer for several hours. Slip all the meat from the bones and remove the fat. Dissolve half a box of gelatin in a cupful of cold water; add this to the water in which the rabbit was cooked. There should be three cupfuls. Add the gelatin to the strained broth. Chop the meat, season well and mix all together. Place in a mold to become firm. "Women are far more conservative than men, and this fact, to which most close observers bear witness, has very plain reasons for its existence—being due absolutely to the narrow, unvarying range of the duties in which they are held." THE FAMILY FOOD Here is a salad combination a little out of the ordinary, but very tasty: Frozen Cheese Salad. —Cream two neufchate cheeses and beat in one pint of cream. Add a small bottleful of olives chopped, a few broken nut-meats and one cupful of diced chicken. Mix well and pack in a mold in ice and salt to make firm. —Cream two neufchatch cheeses and beat in one pint of cream. Add a small bottleful of olives chopped, a few broken nut-meats and one cupful of diced chicken. Mix well and pack in a mold in ice and salt to make firm. Date Cake.—Wash one package of dates and remove the stones, cut in half and cover with one cupful of boiling water. After standing a few minutes add two tablespoonfuls of butter, one teaspoonful of soda, one cupful of sugar, and one and one-half cupfuls of flour mixed with one cupful of pecan meats. Bake in a one-loaf bread pan forty-five minutes. This makes a nice pudding for the second day. Serve it with a hard sauce. Love Knots.—Take one egg, beaten light, four tablespoonfuls of thick cream, three tablespoonfuls of sugar, a pinch of salt, vanilla to flavor and flour to roll. Knead very stiff. Roll out, cut in narrow strips, tie in knots and fry in deep fat. Roll in sugar while hot. Date Strips.—Beat the whites and yolks separately of two eggs. Add three-fourths of a cupful of sugar, three tablespoonfuls of flour, two tablespoonfuls of baking powder, one teaspoonful of vanilla, one cupful each of chopped dates and nuts, then add the whites of the eggs folded in lightly. Spread very thin in a buttered pan and bake twenty minutes in a moderate oven. Let cool in the pan. Cake Tarts.—Bake angel food cake in muffin rings or in gem pans. Cut the cakes when cool and scoop out the center. Fill with whipped cream and crushed sweetened strawberries or chopped nuts. Tripe With Chili.—Have the tripe cooked until well done. Cut in fine strips three or four inches long. Heat some sweet fat in a frying pan. Add a small onion cut fine, fry until a light brown, then add two heaping teaspoonfuls of chili powder. Let all simmer for a few minutes to season and serve hot. "I take it that knowledge is a pretty poor commodity of itself and by itself. A ship doesn't sail by its cargo. The truths that are not transplanted into lives are dead truths." EVERYDAY GOOD THINGS. A good dish of well-made hash is a most acceptable food, in spite of the so-called boarding house hash. Corned Beef Hash.—Take two cupfuls of corned beef chopped, one cupful of boiled potatoes chopped. Corned Beef Hash.—Take two cupfuls of corned beef chopped. one cupful of boiled potatoes chopped. one small onion minced, salt and pepper to taste. Melt one tablespoonful of fat in a frying pan, add the onion and when soft add the meat and potatoes with a little of the broth left from cooking the meat. Cook over a slow fire until a crust is formed on the bottom. Fold like an omelet on a hot platter. Garnish with parsley. Corn Flake Drops.—Beat the yolks of two eggs and add one cupful of sugar, one teaspoonful of vanilla, one-third of a teaspoonful of salt; add the stiffly beaten whites, one-half cupful of coconut and four cupfuls of corn flakes. Drop on greased baking sheets and bake in a moderate oven. Blitz Kuchen.—Cream one-half cupful of sugar, the yolks of four eggs well beaten, four tablespoonfuls of milk and one cupful of flour sifted with one teaspoonful of baking powder. Beat well and pour into two layer cake pans. Beat the whites of the eggs until stiff; add one-half cupful of sugar. Spread this over the cake dough; sprinkle almonds cut in thin slices. Bake in a very slow oven. When cool put the layers together with an orange cream or with the following: Pastry Cream.—Beat the yolk of one egg, mix one-half cupful of sugar with three tablespoonfuls of cornstarch, add to the egg one tablespoonful of butter, a pinch of salt and one pint of boiling milk. Cook until the cornstarch is well cooked. Cool and use for cake filling. Flavor with vanilla. Chicken Pie.—Take the portions left from a stewed or roasted fowl, add gravy and broth to half filt a deep baking dish. If there is not enough chicken use a little veal and veal broth. Season well and cover with small baking powder biscuits. Bake in a hot oven and have the chicken boiling hot before putting on the biscuits. Bake until the biscuits are brown. ARCHIE MARKET Wholesale and Re Hotels and Fresh and Cuc Fruits, Vege wholesale and Retail Staple and Fancy Grocery Fish and Oysters Hotels and Restaurants Our Specialty Fresh and Cured Eastern Corn-Fed Meats Fruits, Vegetables, Poultry and Game FREE DELIVERY Primer Street Denver S al pany DESIGNS PUT UP WHILE YOU WAIT FLOWERS AND CUT FLOWERS CONSTANTLY ON HAND USES: Thirty-Fourth and Curtis Streets MAIN 1511 DENVER, COLO atherhead Hat 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 FREE DELIVERY 1950 Larimer Street Denver, Co The Curtis Park Floral Company FLORAL DESIGNS PUT UP YOUR CHOICE PLANTS AND CUTTING GREENHOUSES: Thirty-Feet TELEPHONE, MAIN 1511 Weather TELEPHONE MAIN 3203 Established 1876 RENOVATORS, BLEED OF Gents' and LADIES 1624 CHAIR Poro Hair SCIENTIFIC AND SANITARY MASSAGING, M Mme. The Curtis Park Floral Company FLORAL DESIGNS PUT UP WHILE YOU WAIT CHOICE PLANTS AND CUT FLOWERS CONSTANTLY ON HAND GREENHOUSES: Thirty-Fourth and Curtis Streets TELEPHONE, MAIN 1511 DENVER, COLO Weatherhead Hat Co. ADVOCATORS, BLEACHERS, DYERS AND FINISHERS Of Gents' and Ladies' Hats of Every Description 1624 CHAMPA ST., DENVER, COLO. No Hair Dressing Pad ATIC AND SANITARY SCALP AND HAIR TREATMENT MASSAGING, MANICURING, TOILET ARTICLES RENOVATORS, BLEACHERS, DYERS AND FINISHERS Of Gents' and Ladies' Hats of Every Description 1624 CHAMPA ST., DENVER, COLO. SCIENTIFIC AND SANITARY SCALP AND HAIR TREATMENT MASSAGING, MANICURING, TOILET ARTICLES Mme. Lexie A. Brooks OPEN STREET PHONE YO 2220 OGDEN STREET 1 C. E. SMITH, M. The Man Wholesale and Retail Stores Hotels and Restaurants Eastern Fruits, Vegetables Telephones 622-636 15TH STREET C. E. SMITH, Manager, Res. Phone South 1600 The Market Company and Retail Staple and Fancy Groceries, Fish and Bis and Restaurants Our Specialty. Fresh and Eastern Corn Fed Meats Fruits, Vegetables, Poultry and Game. Telephones Main 4302, 4303, 4304, 4305 5TH STREET DENVER, C Wholesale and Retail Staple and Fancy Groceries, Fish and Oysters. Hotels and Restaurants Our Specialty. Fresh and Cured PHONE MAIN 3023 John K. Rettig EATS, FANCY AND STAPLE GROCER John MEATS, FANCY 180 MEATS, FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES teenth 12 --- Corner Nineteenth Phone Main 6758 ail Staple and Fancy Groceries fish and Oysters restaurants Our Specialty ed Eastern Corn-Fed Meats tables, Poultry and Game FEE DELIVERY WHILE WAIT FLOWERS CONSTANTLY ON HAND North and Curtis Streets DENVER, COLO head Hat Co. ```markdown ``` PIONEER HATTERS OF THE WEST. WE MAKE OLD HATS NEW. LEACHERS, DYERS AND FINISHERS Ladies' Hats of Every Description AMPA ST., DENVER, COLO. For Dressing Parlors NUTRARY SCALP AND HAIR TREATMENT MANICURING, TOILET ARTICLES Motto—"Efficiency" PHONE YORK 5997W C. C. DENNIS R. F. LONG The New Way Shoe Repairing Co. AND American Shoe Repairing FIRST-CLASS WORK Best Leather Used—Reasonable Prices 1855 Champa St. Phone Main 3737. Manager, Res. Phone South 1608 Market Company Free and Fancy Groceries, Fish and Oysters. Mets Our Specialty. Fresh and Cured Corn Fed Meats Potatoes, Poultry and Game. Bain 4302, 4303, 4304, 4305 DENVER, COLORADO RES. PHONE GALLUP 942 n K. Rettig ENCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES 1864 CURTIS STREET Denver, Colo. Denver, Colo. DENVER, COLO. Denver, Colo. Chas. Trotter Telephone York 4561 INDUSTRIAL R SALES, RENTALS, INVESTME 716 East 26 Avenue GRANBERRY TAX Office 2741 Welte OFFICE PHONE CHAMPA 87 Quick and Prompt Service Day and Night 0.1 Out-of-Town SALES, RENTALS, INVESTMENTS EMPLOYMENT GRANBERRY TAXI COMPANY Office 2741 Welton Street. OFFICE PHONE CHAMPA 87 OFFICE PHONE CHAMPA 5960 Quick and Prompt Service Day and Night. Call Us for Special Rates 0.2 Out-of-Town Trips. Mary C. Bun Scientific Chir LICENSED BY THE STATE BOARD 2190 S. Delaware LICENSED BY THE STATE BOARD OF MEDICAL EXAMINERS 2190 S. Delaware DENVER, COLO. TOURING CARS AND LIMOUSINES TAXI DAY OR N Blue Streak Taxi Co. City or Mountain Trips Stand: 2713 We Phones: Champa Main 579 Consolation. From the agony column: "Young man, recently rejected, desires apartments adjoining those of young couple possessed of a baby that cries all night, causing father to promenade in pajamas; good loud swearer preferred."—Boston Transcript. THE GREATEST AUTHORITY IN THE WORLD PRESCRIBES CUSHMAN'S MENTHOL INHALER DR. J. LENNOX BROWNE, OF LONDON. FOR COLDS IN HEAD, CATARRH, SORE THROAT, LA GRIPPE, HEADACHE, OR ANY HEAD OR THROAT DR. Brown is Senior Surgeon to the Central London Throat and Ear Hospital. He declares himself in a recent medical trial to be a specialist. The vapor of Menthol checks in a manner hardly less than marvelous, acute Colds in the head. For an forms of nasal congestion, the natural breathway, he prescribe Cushman's Menthol inhaler to the extent of hundreds per annum. A CHRONIC DISEASE LURKS IN EVERY BAD COLD Then why do you go on in a deluded way trying to wear out your misery when Custumis are sick? No sickening or nauseating drugs to debilitate your system. Only a refreshing and healthful aid to you. Indispensable in traveling. Public singers and Speakers use it. If the greatest aid in strengthening the throat. INFLUENZA! DR J. H. SALISBURY, a distinguished physicist of New York said the physical is particularly destructive to the life of the Influenza bacillus! SEA'SICKNESS! Dr. Bresley Thorn, in communication in the London Lamenet, says: "I have found Cushman's Menthol Inhaler exercises a marked beneficial effect in Sea Sickness and especially in the headache and vertigo, which are actual vomiting reactions passed off." The most refreshing and healthful aid to HEAD-ACHIEF sufferers. Bittersleep to the sleepless Relieves nausea and nervous Pressure. Take only CLUSHMAN'S 50% at drugsurgery, or mailed postpaid on receipt of price. Write for Book on Monument and testimonials. 1200-722-2222, ind., or No. 342 Dearborn Street, Chicago, IL. Has this been remarked to you on account of premature gray hair, or do you keep yourself looking young? You can easily do so with VAN'S MEXICAN R HAIR COLOR RESTORO This meritorious preparation restores the gray hairs to their original color. You will be highly pleased with the results, if not your money returned. At all dealers $1.00 per bottle. THE KELLS COMPANY NEWBURGH, N. Y. DISTRIBUTORS Dent's Condition Pills A marvelous tonic for dogs that are all out of sorts, run down, unthrify, with harsh staring coat, materated eyes and high colored urine. There is nothing to equal them for distemper and debilitating diseases. You will notice the difference after a few doses. A drug goes to by THE DENT MEDICINE CO., NEWBURGH, mail, fifty cents. A practical treatise on dogs and their training (60 pages fully illus.), mailed for libr Phone South 3329 WOLF TAXI SERVICE DAY OR NIGHT Stand: 2713 Welton St. Phones: Champa 762 Main 5791 Res. Champa 678 75 YEARS IS A RECORD TO BE PROUD OF Brown's Herbal Gintment a prescription of DR. O. PHELPS BROWN has been on the market for over seventy five years and during this period has been a wonderful blessing in the healing of Burns, Bruises, Cuts, Sores, etc It has been handed down from one generation to another, and we receive numerous letters praising this standard preparation, for instance a woman writes "Dr. O. Phelps Brown in her household as long as I can remember could not get along without it" Get a jar to-day and keep in your home foe an emergency For sale at all dealers 30 and 60 Cents. The KELLS COMPANY NEWBURGH, N. Y. FOR GOUT, & RHEUMATISM, TRY "CHEWALLA" MANUFACTURED BY MARGUERITE R. WHANN San Francisco P. O. Box 55 New Orleans P. O. Box 835. Save Pennies Waste Dollars Some users of printing save pennies by getting inferior work and lose dollars through lack of advertising value in the work they get. Printers as a rule charge very reasonable prices, for none of them get rich although nearly all of them work hard. Moral: Give your printing to a good printer and save money. Our Printing Is Unexcelled condition Pills are all out of sorts, run down, untrifly, with warts and high colored urtica. There is nothing to stabilizing diseases. You will notice the diffe. ENT MEDICINE CO., NEWBURGH NEW YORK their training (60 pages fully illus.), mailed for lib OFFICE PHONE CHAMPA 5960 L I MODISTES and dealers have been casting about for a name suited to those luxurious looking sport clothes that are made of silks and used for informal but smart wear. They have been called "country club" clothes, but that high-sounding title is too narrow, while country wear is misleading, since the town is even more familiar with this order of apparel than the country. So far nothing has succeeded in taking the place of "sport clothes," which includes everything that is made for resort and pastime wear and worn almost anywhere. A chic and handsome outfit of this kind is illustrated here. The always popular and always useful skirt of white wash satin makes a good beginning for it and a white tricolette blouse gives it an added luster. It is one of those slip-over, kimono-cut affairs that make one wonder why anything less simple is ever worn, they are so graceful. Disks in the material appear to be woven in. In a sort of knitted stitch resembling drawn work. Medallions of coarse lace might "Why Veil the ANY sophisticated and up-to-date young woman of today stands ready to answer the question quoted above, and the bard of Avon might not ask it if he were living in these times. Vells of the kinds we have now are very kind to the roses that bloom behind them and to the eyes that shine through them. It is the mission of some of them to heighten the charms they cover or to fix attention on them, and of others to soften or obliterate defects. Others still do not vell the face at all, but add the grace and life of flowing lines and the tone of fine face to the costume. Small face vells do their bit in preserving neatness and add this unfalling charm to the street costume, and they are required also to be becoming. In face veils there are varieties that are so fine that they are almost invisible and color is an important item in choosing them. The most popular patterns are in heavier threads and in large meshes, usually hexagonal or diamond shaped, but to be found in round, square and oblong mesh as well. Dots are less favored than small, odd figures or an embroidered lace pattern and nearly all veils have a border of some kind. Each of the three veils pictured is a type and of each type there are many varieties. Black, bright navy, brown, beige, tan and gray are fashionable colors in mesh veils; there is greater variety of color in chiffon veils, but they are another story. The veil with diamond-shaped mesh and border of plain chiffon, in the --- be set in plain tricollette and outlined with buttonhole stitch, to get this effect. To emphasize its practical side a costume of this kind employs white canvas shoes and plain silk stockings, and to show allegiance to art, it is finished with an unusual hat. A small Breton sailor covered with white satin has an old appliqué pattern in petals for trimming and a very long white silk tassel falling from the crown. The costume is white from head to heels and its wearer a joy to look upon on midsummer days—a joy that many will share, for dress of this kind is at home on the streets. Two-piece suits of white wash flannel and of white Jersey cloth are made on simple and severely tailored lines, and answer the same demands as the costume pictured. They are only practical for out-of-the-city, because they must be immaculate to be attractive, and spend much of their time at the cleaners, but they are immensely smart. Rose's Bloom?" group above proves quite generally be- coming. Often the band is brought up close about the throat and sometimes it covers the chin. A lovely veil of black chantilly, covering a wide- brimmed straw hat, forms a hat trim- ming and a fascinating background for a fair face which it is not intended to cover. An embroidered pattern appears in a fine veil with hexagonal mesh having a deeply scalloped border and a floral pattern wandering over it. Vells are to be selected with as much care as hats for an immense amount of time and thought are given to making them becoming. Julia Bottomly Double panel shadowless petticoats of white silk have deep ruffles with hemstitched hem, sometimes done in pointed lines instead of straight. These semi-tailored petticoats are particularly practical as well as smart. Bright Shoes for Sports Wear. Bright red leather slippers are a Paris mode, and smart American women have already taken to bright colored shoes for sports wear. Large Taffeta Hats. Large taffeta hats trimmed with leather are the newest thing in the millinery shops. --- --- THE WONDERFUL ART OF HAIR GROWING A Complete Course by Mail or Personal Instruction. The Peerless Walker System, Ready MONEY and the Doorway to Prosperity. MADAM C. J. WALKER. President of the Madam C. J. Walker Manufacturing Co. and the Lelia College, 660 North West Street, Indianapolis, Ind. IS YOUR HAIR SHORT, BR FALLING If so, try Madam C. J. Walker' THEMME. C.J.WA UR HAIR SHORT, BREAKING OFF, THIN OR FALLING OUT? try Madam C. J. Walker's Wonderful Hair Grower. ME. C.J. WALKER M'F'GCO. IS YOUR HAIR SHORT, BREAKING OFF, THIN OR FALLING OUT? If so, try Madam C. J. Walker's Wonderful Hair Grower. THEMME. C.J. WALKERM'F'GCO. 640 North West Street, Indianapolis, Ind. A SIX WEEKS TRIAL TREATMENT Sent to any address by mail for $1.50. MME. C. J. WALKER. Send sta m Write for terms. Why not let Gardner make yours look new? I would prefer making you price. All kinds of alterations are experienced workmen. My cleaning and pressing d work as can be obtained in th A. V. GA may not let Gardner make that last season's suit of look new? Should prefer making you a new suit at a reasonable kinds of alterations and repairing neatly done by need workmen. Cleaning and pressing department turns out as good can be obtained in the city. A. V. GARDNER Sent to any address by mail for $1.50. Make all Money Orders payable to MME. C. J. WALKER. Send stamp for reply. AGENTS WANTED. Write for terms. Why not let Gardner make that last season's suit of yours look new? I would prefer making you a new suit at a reasonable price. All kinds of alterations and repairing neatly done by experienced workmen. My cleaning and pressing department turns out as good work as can be obtained in the city. A. V. GARDNER Phone Champa 1019. STAR HAIR GROWER A Wonderful Hair Dressing and Grower THE STAR HA THE STAR HAIR GROWER A 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. Any 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 Work a Specialty. Prompt Service Jobbing Work a Specialty. P MARCCO & MAAS CARPENTERS AND BUILDERS Phones: Shop, Main 1636; 1021 21ST STREET REAL ES A Home in Chey Phones: Shop, Main 1636; Residence, York 2451. STREET DENVER, COLO. REAL ESTATE--- home in Cheyenne Wyoming I have a number of modern homes for sale in various locations in the city. Prices reasonable. Good terms. Write or call. FRANK S. REED, Licensed Embalmer and Director Lady Assistant. Polite Service to all. THE WONDERFUL ART OF HAIR GROWING A Complete Course by Mail or Personal Instruction. The Peerless Walker System, Ready MONEY and the Doorway to Prosperity. A Diploma From Lelia College of Hair Culture is the Magic Key. 1025 TWENTY-FIRST ST.