Colorado Statesman

Saturday, July 31, 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 RACE COUNTRY PARTY NATIONAL RECONSTRUCTION A BIG JOB FOR A BIG MAN THE great political conventions of all the parties are over, they have announced their platforms and named their candidates and the many defeated aspirants are rubbing their eyes and scratching their heads, still wondering how it all happened. Reading the literature of all the parties we find that each party feels that it has presented to the country the most acceptable platform and the ideal man for the people for the presidency. But, aside from the party standard bearers, which, of course, the man, must be taken into serious consideration and the party platforms, the people must not lose sight of the real meaning of the coming election, regardless of who the successful candidate may be. Upon the next national administration will devolve the greatest task that this nation has had to face since the Civil War. Therefore in view of the great task of reconstruction facing the nation as a result of the colossal world struggle wherein so much damage was wrought and human lives sacrificed, it becomes of the greatest importance to the American people to scrutinize carefully and study closely the character and temperament of the man to be entrusted with the destinies of our nation for the next four years. For, after all, the man at the helm is what counts. He must be first of all honest and candid with the people. He must have the necessary executive experience, intelligence and political foresight to guide the Ship of State through the many new channels of the old sea of diplomacy. Conservative to a degree, but not narrow nor reactionary. He must be a man who will not be carried too far off at sea by the politicians, nor too high up in the heavens by the glamour of his office, but one who will ever keep his feet on terra-firma and his hand on the throttle. The league of nations is, of course, a serious and weighty question to be considered because of the representations made to the European nations by the present administration; but we feel confident that in this matter there will be a way out of the difficulty that will satisfy all Europe and leave this country unimpaired in its relations with foreign nations. What most we are interested in is the internal readjustment at home. There are many great questions that must be adjusted, such as the currency, the railroads, immigration, and food and fuel, and biggest of all, the labor situation. These things must be taken up without delay, and settled in a broad, just, fearless and statesmanlike manner, or else the country will face a revolution that may spell disaster. Let us not forget that there is a destructive Bolshevist propaganda at work here, creating a wide-spread feeling of unrest and dissatisfaction. That propaganda must be suppressed by the steady hand of the government and the unrest and doubt and disgust dispelled. The same tests that must be applied to the selection of the man for president should be made in the selection of all our senators and congressmen. For without patriotic, fearless, big constructive men in both senate and congress it matters not how good a man you may elect as your president, or upon how good a platform he was VOL. XXVI. elected he will be hampered in executing the will of the people. A big, patriotic, constructive congress can make a big president of a poor man. But a weak, timid, vacillating, half-patriotic congress can kill a big man, and make a poor president. DR. MOTON'S OWN STORY BOOKER T. WASHINGTON'S SUCCESSOR HAS REMARKABLE CAREER. (By Frank P. Chisholm) "FINDING A Way Out" is a most moving human document. It holds, grips and thrills one as it relates the circumstances of Robert Russa Moton's rise from plantation boy step by step until he not only takes the place of Booker T. Washington as principal of Tuskegee Institute, but becomes a leader in many movements for the uplift of his race. Principal Moton traces his ancestry back to an African prince, who while selling captives to the slave traders was himself captured and sold in Virginia. The story leads through plantation days with their joys and sorrows to the author's own school days, early manhood and later responsibilities. The narrative comes down to the immediate present, giving Dr. Moton's observations and ideas on the economic situation n the south with intimate glimpses of his life as principal of Tuskegee Institute. The book illuminates that period in American history known as "after the war"—a period difficult to make clear to school boys and girls studying the Civil War and one that is almost unimaginable to any person who has not traveled through the south and lingered long enough to observe for himself plantation life with its mansion house, cabins, fields and black laborers with their manners and customs. In an exceedingly unobtrusive way the book reveals the man through his wonderful achievements—his kindly spirit, warm sympathy, optimism, tact, determination, patience, simplicity, skill in surmounting difficulties, policy of fair play, sympathy with universal democracy and his keen sense of humor. His success came gradually, without blare of trumpets and in consequence of no conspicuous acts. The memories of thirty years of friendship and association with Armstrong, the founder of Hampton, Frissel, Armstrong's successor and Booker T. Washington are drawn upon again and again in the course of the autobiography. The friendship and teachings of these great men influenced and shaped the life of heroic service given by the writer. The letter of Colonel Roosevelt, Booker Washington's friend, here published for the first time, is of intense interest. In short, terse sentences, Colonel Roosevelt leaves no doubt in the mind of the reader that he believed that Principal Moton was the DENVER, COLORADO, SATURDAY, JULY 31 1920 VOTERS ARE URGED TO REGISTER CHANGE IN THEIR ADDRESSES VOTERS ARE URGED TO REGISTER CHANGE IN THEIR ADDRESSES Those who have moved from the precinct where they last voted and who wish to vote at the primary and November elections are urged by the election commission to register their change of address at the Courthouse within the next few days. This, according to J. H. Hamilton, secretary of the commission, will relieve congestion during the regular registration period, from August 16th to September 11th, both dates inclusive. Those who have not registered in any precinct may register at the Courthouse during the regular registration period. To be eligible to vote in the approaching election, the voter must have been a resident of the state for one year, of the county ninety days and of the precinct ten days. IF NOT REGISTERED, YOU ARE DISFRANCHISED IN NOVEMBER ELECTION man to succeed Mr. Washington. Significant also is Mr. Washington's own very high opinion of Principal Moton, which is here quoted at length from Mr. Washington's "My Larger Education." The story is not in any sense controversial. It is largely personal. In these days of extreme radicalism, it is welcome because it brings a message of hope, optimism and social sanity and presents a brilliant example of patient devotion and common sense applied to "finding a way out" of difficulties and race prejudices. The author's convictions on the race problem, on their more hopeful and helpful side are plainly suggested on many a page. He throws illuminating sidelights upon the conditions and problems of his race in America. He does this with a total lack of hysteria and in the spirit of human brotherhood and service. The Principles of inter-racial co-operation and consecration are the principles which seemingly will actuate him in his work at Tuskegee. Toward all opportunities denied his race, his attitude is one of patience but of untiring persistence. One of the most interesting chapters deals with Principal Moton's trip to France during the war when President Wilson sent him there on a special mission. The concluding chapter "Forward movements in the South" has to do with the more constructive aspects of race relations. In the twelve chapters Principal Moton records "Out of Africa," "On a Virginia Plantation," "Through Reconstruction," "Doing and Learning," "A Touch of Real Life," "Ending Student Days," "Black, White and Red," "With North and South," "From Hampton to Tuskegee," "At Tuskegee," "War Activities," "Forward Movements in the South." The volume carries a convenient index. It is easy to read and is highly informing and inspiring. "Finding a Way Out" may be read and studied with profit by every colored American who desires to achieve and be useful. The autobiography is published by Doubleday, Page and Company, New York. KEEP MILK SWEET AND BUTTER HARD WITHOUT USING ICE OR CELLAR. Large Stone Jar Packed in Heavy Bed of Sand Which Is Kept Moist Will Relieve Any Housewife of Her Worries. During hot weather the housewife who has neither ice nor cellar finds great diffuculty in keeping milk sweet and butter in good shape. The following method, suggested by Fred G. Person of the Colorado Agricultural College, if used, will be of considerable assistance in this diffuculty. Pack a large stone jar, three, four or five gallon capacity, in a box of wet sand, having the sand five or six inches thick under and around the sides of the jar. Place a tight cover over the jar and box and set in the shade. Milk and butter that is placed in this jar will keep in excellent shape for some time. Keep the sand thoroughly wet, as this is the important factor. CANNED FRUITS AND VEGE TABLES ALWAYS COME IN HANDY IN WINTERTIME. Housewives Usually Glad to Prepare Winter Supply of Garden Stuff If Men Will Only Raise It. Preparedness should be the watchword of the home as well as of the farm and of the nation. The home should at all times be prepared to meet any condition or necessity which arises. This requires looking ahead at all times and preparing for the future, as well as taking care of the present and its needs. Sufficient unto the day may be the evil thereof, but not the needs. The home which is managed in a businesslike manner is the one in which the future is looked out for as much and as carefully as is the present. When vegetables and fruit are put up, canned and preserved during the seasons of plenty and an overflowing abundance, it is easy for the wife to keep the table filled with an abundance of the good and the healthful things of life. But where nothing is put away during the spring and summer for the winter, she finds it difficult and expensive to keep the table properly supplied during that time. And it is more than probable that you will not have the variety of things to eat during the winter that you have during the growing months of the year when these things can be gathered fresh. If the men folks will make it possible for the women folks to prepare for the winter table needs, they will do so. And both parties to life's partnership will benefit from the preparedness. See that each season there are plenty of garden vegetables and fruits to meet the needs of the season of freshness and leave a surplus for canning and preserving, and the women of the home will see that canning and preserving are done.—The Farming Business of Chicago. The State Agricultural College at Fort Collins will send you free Government bulletins on Canning. Send your name and address. CHEYENNE, WYO, NEWS DR. LEROY BUNDY addressed a fair sized audience at the A. M. E. Church on Wednesday evening, July 21st. Dr. Bundy's "message of peace" was interesting and an inspiration indeed to those who attended. He gave a true account of the East St. Louis riot and the causes which lead up to it. Mr. C. H. Calloway of Kansas City, Mo., introduced the doctor and spoke of the doctor's love for his race and for justice to all mankind. At the close of the meeting a free-will offering was collected and presented to Dr. Bundy to assist him in his effort to secure justice in the Illinois courts. It is a regrettable fact that Dr. and Mrs. Leroy Bundy and Mr. C. H. Calloway were not properly entertained during the day of their mission to our city; such a thing must never occur in our city again, poor entertainment to visitors casts a false reflection upon our hospitality. Cheyenne citizens are noted for their hospitality. The Civic League or the Ladies' Searchlight Club will gladly co-operate with any one to honor any distinguished visitor. It is unjust to our civic organizations to have distinguished men or women enter our city unheralded. When such men as Dr. Bundy visit a city the civic organizations should be asked to take full charge of his entertainment. Men who are sent by the Church; the officers of the Church should see that proper entertainment is provided. Pat Dyer and Mrs. Tutie Mundy of Casper, are in the city. Mrs. Virginia Elliot of Kansas City, is a guest of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Jefferson. Mr. Wm. Smith of 623 W. 19th Street, is making improvements on his home. Dr. and Mrs. LeRoy Bundy and Mr. C. H. Calloway abode over night in the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Jefferson. The true spirit of Wyoming hospitality is personified in Mr. and Mrs. John A. Baker. Mr. Baker is a native son. His life and fortune is bound in the welfare of his family, state and community. To really know Wyoming hospitality is to visit the Bakers in their home. On Wednesday night, July 21st, at the conclusion of Dr. Bundy's address a few select friends of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Baker were invited to their home to meet the honored guests of the evening. The honored guests were Dr. and Mrs. LeRoy Bundy and Mr. C. H. Calloway. It was a most successful entertainment. The honored and invited guests held a true love feast. Current topics were discussed, songs were sung, and recitations and toasts to the host, hostess and friends. The guests departed feeling that Wyoming is the state of possibilities and the Bakers are the fairy god and goddess of the west. Other invited guests were "Grandna" Hopkins, Mr. and Mrs. George Randall; Mrs. Daisy Thompson, Mr. Phillip Baker, Mr. Walter Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Will Redd, and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence J. Tolliver. NO. 42 TWO SOUTHERN GOVERNORS REPLY TO ADVANCEMENT AS- THE National Association for the Advancement of Colored People with headquarters at 70 Fifth avenue, New York city, today made public replies to telegrams sent to Governors Bickett of North Carolina and Hobby of Texas with reference to lynchings in those two states recently. One Negro was lynched at Roxboro, N. C., on July 7 and two brothers were lynched at Paris, Tex., on July 10. The association wired both governors asking them what steps would be taken to arrest and punish the lynchers. Governor Bickett replied that he had already offered a reward of $400 each for the arrest and conviction of the lynchers, adding that this was the limit allowed him by the state and he was horror-stricken on account of the awful crime. Governor Hobby of Texas advised that "Lamar county and Texas are amply able to take care of situation without suggestions from the outside." In commenting on the two messages, James Weldon Johnson, field secretary of the Advancement Association, said: "The reason why Texas has had seven lynchings this year and North Carolina only one can easily be seen when the attitude of their respective governors is contrasted. In the Texas affair where two colored boys were lynched, later developments threw grave doubt as to their guilt of the crime of murdering their landlord, with which crime they had been charged. As long as recalcitrant reactionaries like Hobby of Texas are in office, lynching will continue. Some day soon America is going to realize that she must intervene in Texas as well as in Ireland. "In the North Carolina case, the white employer of Ed Roach, the Negro lynched, has given a signed statement to the press that Roach was at work at the time the criminal assault took place, for which crime Roach was killed by a mob." Governor Bickett in his statement said: "... I beg to say that I am calling upon the solicitor of the district in which the lynching occurred to take every possible action to apprehend the guilty parties. I am also offering a reward of $400 for each party apprehended and convicted. This is the limit I am permitted to offer by the laws of this state. It is not necessary for me to say to you that I am horror stricken on account of this awful crime." Governor Hobby's telegram read: "The occurrence at Paris is deplored by the citizens of our state, but Lamar county and Texas are amply able to take care of situation without suggestions from the outside." FOREIGN A motor truck fell 250 feet over a precipice at a small village near Santender, Spain, killing its three occupants. Emperor Yoshihito of Japan, accompanied by the empress, has left Tokio for the imperial summer residence at Nikko. The general strike declared in Rome in consequence of fighting between tramway workers and street crowds has ended. Work has been resumed in all industries. An attempt to reach North Point and thus complete the Danish exploration of North Greenland, will be made by Lange Koch, the young Danish scientist and Polar explorer, this summer. Prince Ferdinand is in Santiago, Galicia, where, in the king's name, he made the traditional offering of gold in the cathedral where the body of St. James the Greater is interred. He was accompanied by several Spanish nobles. The Canadian fishing vessel Giffen, was destroyed by fire off Graham Island, near Prince Rupert. Three men aboard had time only to lower a dory in which they rowed 24 hours to a sand pit where they were given food. Lieutenant Shirase Sho, who attempted to reach the South Pole in 1907, has asked the Japanese diet to appropriate $100,000 for an aerial expedition to the Antarctic. He thinks naval aviators can reach the pole by taking to the air after going as far south on steamers as possible. All officers of the army as constituted under the regime of President Carranza will be accepted by the government of Provisional President de la Huerta for its army, because of their technical knowledge, according to a war department announcement at Mexico City. Only those officers involved in the Madero assassination will be rejected. Troops of General Wu Pei Fu are close to Peking on the southwest, but everything is orderly. Traffic wifi Tien Tsin has been interrupted for several days. Tung Chu, where looting and disorder was reported Sunday, is said to be quiet. The detachment of American marines sent to bring out American residents, if necessary, is remaining there as a precautionary measure. GENERAL A bounty of 5 cents for each rat dead or alive, was declared by the city of Philadelphia in connection with a movement by health officials to prevent the entrance of bubonic plague to that city. Amesoli Patasoni of Lawrence Kan., who at 19 is leading contestant for the honor of representing the United States in the distance races in the Olympic games at Antwerp this year, is a full blood Zuni Indian. E. H. Murdock, prominent in Cincinnati's business and club life, and said to be the father of the "more daylight" movement in America, died at Balti more, a few hours after having under gone an operation at the Johns Hopkins hospital there. He was 58 years old. Suddenly stricken by appendicitis Herman Carlson, a coal passer on the Stockholm, of the Swedish-American line, was rushed to an operating table while the ship was stopped in mid ocean for two hours. The liner drifted while Dr. Moritz Simon, the ship surgeon, performed the operation Carlson was reported rapidly recovering when the steamer arrived in port at New York. Raymond West of Philadelphia was instantly killed and Bentley Hoffman of Fishing Creek village, near Cape May, N. J., fatally injured when they kicked what appeared to be an empty three-inch shell. The shell exploded with disastrous results. The men uncovered the shell near the Bethlehem Steel Company's proving ground, near here, while on a fishing trip. Word has been received at the office of the Poland China Journal at Kansas City, Mo., that "The Yankee," a Poland China boar owned by W. L. Ellsworth & Sons of Goldfield, Iowa, and purchased for $40,000, is dead. Six men—representing themselves as federal prohibition agents, entered the home of W. S. Ireland, a manufacturer in St. Louis, Mo., and after blowing the safe, escaped with cash, jewelry and papers valued at $13,000. Archbishop Daniel C. Mannix of Australia, on a tour of the country, said he would have to rearrange his itinerary as a result of Premier Lloyd George's announcement that he would not be allowed to land in Ireland. The prelate had planned to sail for Queenstown. There was a real "kick" in a "corpse" found by prohibition agents in a hearse passing through Seymour, a suburb of Greenwich, Conn. The agents, undaunted by the figure of a man, clothed in clerical robes, seated beside the driver, halted the hearse and pulled out the coffin. They found the coffin filled with spirits—yes, 500 gallons of spirits. The driver and clerical assistant were arrested. Andy Deuser, aged 12, of Indianapolis, is in the detention home, at his own request, and his mother, Mrs. Rose Deuser, and brother, Louis, 20, face charges made by neighbors that the boy had been chained to a post in the barn and made to stand there for more than fifteen hours as punishment for running away. His chums released him by filing the chain. Cook county has filed suit against William Hale Thompson, mayor of Chicago, to collect $246.05 in paid personal taxes for the years 1915 and 1916. --- COLORADO STATESMAN FROM TELEGRAPHIC REPORTS THAT COVER THE WEEK'S EVENTS. OF MOST INTEREST KEEPING THE READER POSTED ON THE IMPORTANT CURRENT TOPICS. Western Newspaper Union News Service. WESTERN A masked bandit armed with a rifle robbed four automobile stages en route to Yosemite National park near Fresno, Calif., and obtained $350 in money. The Mouth-Piece of the People of Colorado and the Entire West A bank, three hotels and two dry-goods stores were destroyed by fire which swept three blocks of the business district of Desdemona, in the Texas oil fields. Rates for gas, following purchase of the plant by Omaha, were increased from $1.25 per 1,000 feet to $1.35. The net rate for prompt payment will be $1.25 instead of $1.15. Nearly half a million border permits and identity cards, entitling holders to cross to Mexico, were issued at El Paso, Tex., during the first year of prohibition in the United States. President Wilson has commuted the sentence of eleven years' imprisonment imposed in 1917 upon Mrs. Idell Kennedy of Los Angeles, for violation of the espionage act, provided she is committed to an institution for the insane. Nearly 2,000 persons, watching fire destroy the warehouse of a Minneapolis brewing company, were so interested they forgot to turn in an alarm. Damage estimated at $15,000 was done before firemen discovered the blaze. A RELIABLE chronicle of their doings and progress; a faithful mirror of their wants, their hopes, their best aspirations. Patrolman C. R. Westcott, of Portland, Ore., while following a suspected robber, was held up by the man and relieved of his automatic pistol. The officer, had just rounded a corner in pursuit of the suspect when he was commanded to throw up his hands. Westcott declares that after taking his automatic the man laughed and walked away. WASHINGTON Air mail service from New York to San Francisco will be inaugurated in September, Assistant Postmaster General Praeger announced at Washington. Total newsprint production of ninety leading mills of the country for the first six months of 1920 was 759,624 tons, according to a report of the federal trade commission in Washington. During a similar period last year, seventy-four mills produced 671,141 tons, the report said. Of this year's production 697,290 tons was standard newsprint. THE COLORADO STATESMAN An increase of about 3 per cent in freight traffic on the railroads of the country during the first two weeks of July as compared with the same period in 1919 has been reported by the commission on car service of the American Railway Association. Loaded cars numbered 1,597,295 against 1,553,071 for the same two weeks of 1919 and 1,769,242 for the similar period of 1918. Bids on one iron and one wooden steamer were accepted today by the shipping board at Washington. The iron steamer, the Irls, now at San Francisco, was sold to Swayne and Hoyt of San Francisco, who bid $96,100 for her. The Irls formerly was a navy tender. The wooden steamer is the Fort Seward, on which the Fort Steamship Company of New York, bid $210,000. Each vessel is of 3,500 dead-weight tons. Unequaled as an advertising medium for the business of professional men and women. The American Legion's plans to assist in the distribution of Victory medals now being issued by the War Department remains as outlined in press dispatches published throughout the country. The federal trade commission has announced it had refused application from the Western Association of Roll Steel Consumers for issuance of a complaint against the United States Steel Corporation in connection with the practice of figuring steel prices f. o. b. the mills, Pittsburgh. The decision means that as far as the commission is concerned there will be no change in the practice of using Pittsburgh as a base rate point. An excellent family journal speaking to and for many thousand colored citizens. Adoption of a more liberal policy with regard to exports, is planned by the Japanese government, according to reports at the department of commerce. While retaining export control of certain commodities, the government, owing to the recent commercial and financial crisis, has decided to relax export embargoes and license restrictions. Products affected include paper, fertilizers, rice, wheat, barley and cotton yarn. TWODOLLARSAYEAR The nation's greatest tax bill—$5,410,284,874—was collected during the fiscal year ending June 30. Official figures show that the tax paid exceeded all estimates, by approximately $300,000,000 and was nearly 75 per cent larger than the total paid in either of the war years of 1918 or 1919. All postmasters and postal employees are warned to "refrain carefully from engaging in pernicious political activity during the political campaign" in an order issued by Postmaster General Burleson. Consult us; we can save you time, worry and money. Two expert licensed embalmers, lady attendant and general director. IN UNION THERE IS STRENGTH. Incorporated or $15,000, under the laws of the State of Colorado; are preparing to establish a manufacturing plant in connection with the present business, in order to city in 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. Cow Dials, Snouts, Ears, Pigs Feet, Neck Received Fresh Daily. Bands.. Fresh Vegetables, Staple and Groceries. Always the Lowest All Parts of the City. Tampa 1641. DENVER, COLO. Three Rules. Barber Shop Electric Messages ESS SERVICE Fresh Oysters, Chitterlings, Pig Tails, Snouts, Bones, Spare Ribs Received Fresh Fresh and Cured Meats of All Kinds.. Fresh Fancy Groceries. Our Prices Are Always the Free Delivery to All Parts of the Phone Champa 1641. 2048 LARIMER STREET Opposite the Three Rules Bolden Barber Baths, Electric Massages FIRST-CLASS SERVIC 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. A PHARMACY AND CHAMPA, to get your AND PATENT MEDICINES THE DRINKS. OUR SPECIALTY. ing goods to all parts of the city. MIRALL, Propr. MAIN 2425. THE CHAMPA PHARA TWENTIETH AND CHAMPA Is the place to get your DRUGS, CHEMICALS AND PATENTS WE SERVE DRINKS. PRESCRIPTIONS OUR SPECI Phone us and we will deliver the goods to a JAMES E. THRALL, Pro PHONE MAIN 2425. 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. BALFE PRACTICAL PLUMBER.—LICENSED D Jobbing Promptly Attended to—Special Atten- tion and Sewerage—All Work Gu 2018 CURTIS STREET. The Star Clea Pressing Co Best of Service—All Work Guaranteed— and Delivered. 1935 Goss Street. S. SMITH AND C. W. BUCKHALTE LICENSED DRAIN LAYER. Special Attention Given to Ventilat- all Work Guaranteed. DENVER, COLO. R Cleaning & g Company Guaranteed—Clothes Called for delivered. 678 Boulder. BUCKHALTER, Proprietors. PRACTICAL PLUMBER.—LICENSED DRAIN LAYER. Jobbing Promptly Attended to—Special Attention Given to Ventilation and Sewerage—All Work Guaranteed. 2018 CURTIS STREET. DENVER, COLO. Best of Service—All Work Guaranteed—Clothes Called for and Delivered. S. SMITH AND C. W. BUCKHALTER, Proprietors. A FULL LINE OF Black and White R Ane a Full Line of MME. C. J. WALKIE BUT WE KNOW YOU WILL Jones West Hair Poma Atlas Drug White Remedies J. WALKER'S Toilet Articles. YOU WILL LIKE Our Pomade Best. Drug C. 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. 2701 Welton St Phone Main 875 Patronize Our Advertisers The Better the Printing The Better the Printing of your stationery the better the impression it will create. Moral: Have your print ing done here. Want Want Something? the --- B. B. BOLDEN, Proprietor Telephone Main 207 2701 Welton St They are all boosters and deserve your business. Come in and renew it next time you are in town. One of the Most Up-to-Date and Sanitary Markets in the City. 926 19th St., Denver Residence Phone Champa 328. Phone Main 875 Advertise for it in these columns Capitol Petroleum TO OUR STOCKHOLDERS AND THE PUBLIC: The Capitol Petroleum Company started out in a small way by drilling in the shallow territory of Nowata County, Oklahoma, and continued drilling and acquiring property in the shallow fields of Oklahoma and Kansas until the number of wells drilled and purchased in these shallow fields equals thirty-nine. The company then acquired 6,000 acres of leases in the Panhandle, Amarillo, field of Texas. There the company started drilling a deep test well about Sept. 1st, 1919. The well is now very near to first pay sand, according to the logs of other wells drilled in that field, and this sand should be reached in a week or ten days. It has been a very hard struggle to get this well drilled, owing to the quicksand in this field, but perseverance finally won, and the indications are that the company will get a good well here. The company still has left about 3,000 acres of leases surrounding this well. The company went into the Mexican field something over a year ago and acquired acreage by lease and in fee amounting to 1,475 acres. A test well was drilled on the Panuco river which came in a good well, and which is now waiting for transportation facilities. Plans have been under way for about a month past to arrange to market this oil, and arrangements completed to the extent of leasing a barge which is to be conveyed between Tampico and Panuco by one of the big oil companies. Our manager in Mexico, Mr. Guthrie, has arranged to have two 15,000-barrel tanks erected at the well, these tanks to receive the oil from the well, and from which the boat will be loaded. He has also completed arrangements to start another well in the vicinity of the one drilled. A contract was entered into by the company with representatives of the Swedish Syndicate whereby the Capitol Company has leased part of its acreages to the Swedish people, and receive in return a cash bonus and a small percentage of oil which they obtain by drilling. The funds received from the Swedish Syndicate are to be used in completing transportation facilities for the Capitol Petroleum Company, and getting a transportation system in operation. The company recently acquired 2,000 acres of leases in Parker County, Texas. A deep test well is now being drilled here and indications are very good for oil. The company has other leases in various sections, some of which are considered very valuable, but upon which the company has not yet drilled. We are of the opinion that you would not be interested in a detailed statement of all the leases and acreage controlled and owned by the company at this time, but that you are more especially interested in what the company is doing in the way of operating. The company has paid six small dividends, which funds were derived from the sale of the oil and gas from the shallow wells in Kansas and Oklahoma, and from the sales of leases. Financial statement below: FOR GOUT, & RHEUMATISM, TRY "CHEWALLA" MANUFACTURED BY MARGUERITE R. WHANN San Francisco P. O. Box 55 New Orleans P. O. Box 835. Among old laws against kissing those of Iceland appear to have been the most severe. Barbishot was the penalty laid down for kissing another man's wife, either with or without her consent, and the same punishment was enforced for kissing an unmarried woman against her will. GENERAL STATEMENT YOUR GETTING OLD 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 Historian Married Seven Times. One of the best-known examples of a much-married man is afforded by Sir Gervale Clifton, the historian of Jamaica, who married seven times, five of the brides being domestic servants from his own household. His matrimonial ventures all turned out happily. Brown's Herbal Ointment 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, Brinises, Cuts, Sores, etc. It has been handed down from one generation to another, and we receive numerous letters praising this standard preparation, for lustanted and humane written WY. O. Phippe, Brown's Precious Herbal Ointment has been in our 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. Along the Orange river natives have an ingenious way of producing "milk." After cutting the top from a coconut they place it over ashes so that the warmth may cause the fat and "butter" contained in the husk to be absorbed by the milk; this changes the milk's quantity and gives it a palatable taste. CENTENNIAL STATE ITEMS The Colorado State Fair is in no sense an experiment. It is a solid, substantial, permanent state institution. The grounds, the buildings and all belong to all the people of the state. Every taxpayer, every citizen is a part owner in the state fair; and each person who says or does something for the good of the fair, does it for himself—his own individual interest. Last year's was the first fair that was really under complete state control and ownership, and the increased interest in it was manifest to a wonderful degree. The people in every section of the commonwealth demonstrated their appreciation of it as a state institution, and so pleased were all with the great show, that many persons from the remotest parts of Colorado began right then to work for the betterment of the 1920 fair. Spotlight horse racing will be one of the great novelty features at this year's Colorado State Fair. Night racing on the great half-mile track, with powerful searchlights following the racers all the while, will be one of the most exciting events imaginable. Besides the racing and the fireworks each night, there will be a number of other track events, particularly in front of the grandstand and bleachers and on the infield. The fair commissioners are determined that the night show will be just as interesting as many attractions, brilliant illuminations and searchlights can make it. And this means every night of the fair. A new program each night. Will Akin, a retired farmer living at Fort Collins, narrowly escaped death when an automobile which he was driving slipped from the highway at the end of Fall River road, northwest of Estes Park, and fell 150 feet below, crashing against a tree, entirely demolishing the machine. Akin and several members of his family had gone out for a drive, but when they reached the end of the road Akin found it difficult to turn the machine around. After the family had gotten out of the machine, Akin attempted to turn it around, and when doing so the car slipped from the road and crashed down the embankment. It takes a whole year to make a state fair. In fact it takes a number of whole years to make a state fair. Before the gates closed on the 1919 state fair, the officers of the Colorado State Fair Commission were planning and working for the fair which will open on September 19, 1920. Every day since that time they have been working and planning to make this year's fair so much better than last year's big success, that there will be no comparison. An abandoned illicit still, one of the largest in the state, was seized by Sheriff Burt Jones in a log cabin built especially for the purpose in a secluded spot on Genesee mountain, within a few yards from the Lookout mountain road. A large quantity of mash, nearly decayed, was also seized. Sheriff Jones declared that the still was abandoned several months ago and that the last tenants have left the county. Residents are up in arms over the brutal murder of Mrs. A. Torez, the wife of a beet field worker and the mother of seven children, who was killed at Swink. Felicio Nufiez, a Mexican laborer, who is known as "Smokey," is believed to have committed the deed, and after a search of hours by Deputy Sheriff C. L. Miller and a posse of citizens was captured and is now in the jail at La Junta. After a sensational chase through the business section of Englewood, followed by a pursuit over wheat fields and irrigation ditches, Sheriff E. F. Burden of Arapahoe county, shot and perhaps fatally wounded Hugh B. Dobbs, 23, an escaped convict. He was shot in the left leg. Dobbs was given first aid in a farmhouse near Englewood, and later removed to the hospital at Littleton. The body of Joe Dutcher, who was drowned during the high water when he tried to cross the Dolores river, was found this week near the intake of the Dolores water system, where it had lodged for several days. The old-time cancher was drowned when the stream was a torrent. The body was searched for to no avail. It had drifted about four miles. The Community Society, composed of the leading women of Kremmling, has offered to raise a fund for repairing the streets, and the offer has been accepted by the town trustees, who appropriated $200 for the purpose, provided $200 additional can be raised. Concrete crossings will be put in at the principal street intersections. Plans for a consolidated school district in Jefferson county have been accepted by Mrs. Mary C. C. Bradford, state superintendent of public instruction. The building will be erected at a cost of $70,000. Seven teachers will be employed. According to figures compiled by the American Contractor, Denver is one of thirty-one cities out of a total of 199 that showed a gain in building for June over the same month last year. Fort Collins Commercial Club reports a busy month in June, figures indicating this having just been compiled. The office received 1,763 telephone calls, 1,254 callers and 662 visiting tourists during the month. Forty-two letters of inquiry concerning Fort Collins were answered. A new and uniform system of bookkeeping for all state departments and institutions and all county offices under the direction of the state auditor will be established shortly, according to announcement made by State Auditor Stong. © A.D. & C. Style, Wear, Fit Some men—especially young men—buy clothes for their style. Some buy them for their economy—long wear. Some for good fit. Whatever you want in clothes—style, long wear, good fit—you'll get it here, because we sell Society Brand Clothes They're expertly designed, tailored by hand, of all-wool fabrics. You'll recognize their quality from whatever angle you look at your clothes-buying. Our great Clearance Sale, now in full swing, offers most extraordinary values. THE MAY CO. A marvelous tonic for dogs that are all out of sorts, run down, unhurtly, with squalor. You will need to be a bit patient, and you will be equal them for distemper and debilitating diseases. You will notice the dither, at drugsists or by **THE DENT MEDICINE CO.** NBWBURGH, central,onta at drugsists or by **THE DENT MEDICINE CO.** NBWBURGH, central,onta HARVEY G. WEBSTER PATRIOTIC SHOE SHINING PARLOR 1526 Welton St Phone Main 2196 Dent's C A marvelous tonic for dog harsh staring coat, mater squal them for distemper once after a few doses. At drugstores or by THE mail, fifty cents. A practical treatise on dog 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 The Court of Lions is the most famous court of the Alhambra, in Spain. It takes its name from 12 white marble lions from whose mouths streams of water flowed into a central alhambra basin. Mrs. Orna McCormick left for Pueblo last Thursday on a ten-day visit. Hiram Gash is enjoying a well-earned vacation. Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Hammond have purchased an apartment house at 2818 California street. nished and is the result of persistence and untiring efforts to join the rest of Denver home owners. The editor was entertained at last Sunday at the residence of and Mrs. J. T. Hammond, 1625 S. Lincoln. A very enjoyable time spent, the sumptuous and well- Sam Brannum, an employé of First National Bank, is enjoying his annual vacation. Mrs. Maggie Rickman and Mrs. Hunter Paige, of Newton, Kansas, were visitors in the city this week. Miss Carrie Weisiger of Frankfort, Ky., is visiting her cousin, Mrs. Lottie Robinson of 2520 Ogden street. Mrs. Cleo Mayo, of Des Moines, Iowa, is the guest of Mrs. J. W. White of 1402 East Twenty-fourth avenue. Mrs. J. E. Wicks and children of Greenwood, Miss., are in the city, the guest of Mrs. Wm. Griggle of 2801 Gillip street. Mrs. R. J. Gray and son of Springfield, Mo., are in the city, the guests of Mrs. J. F. Shelbun, 2420 Welton street. Mrs. F. D. Johnson of Greenville, Miss., is spending the summer in the city, the guest of Mrs. L. J. Brown, 2452 Glenarm Place. Mrs. S. A. Anderson of 1815 35th Street, left this week for Kansas City, Mo., to be at the bedside of her daughter, who is very ill. Dr. P. E. Spratlin was operated on last Sunday for appendicitis, at the hospital, and at this writing is doing nicely. Mrs. Joseph Tompkins of 2512 Glen- arm Place is at the sick bedside of her father, Benjamin English, at Oskaloosa, Kan. Mr. F. R. Johnston of Baltimore, Md., is a recent arrival in the city. He is staying at Mrs. Nelson's, 2710 Williams. Mrs. T. G. Butler of Guthrie, Okla., wife of a wealthy farmer, is the house guest of Mrs. R. M. Tombs, at 1625 S. Lincoln. The Colorado Statesman congratulates our fellow Denverites for the "Own Your Home" spirit which is now in evidence. Mr. Earnest Howard, our expert carpenter and contractor, has been awarded the contract to repair Zion Baptist Church. Messrs. Woolridge and F. A. Baker, employés of the Consolidated Railway Ticket offices, are the recipients of the latest salary increase. See their smiles! Mrs. Frank Burnley, daughter of Mr. Alfred Froman, was operated on Sunday for appendicitis, and is doing nicely at this writing. Miss Lulu McKnight of Topeka, Kan., is visiting with her uncle and aunt, Rev. and Mrs. D. E. Over of Twenty-sixth Avenue and Marion Street. Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Gash of 1840 Marion street are the proud parents of a fine bouncing boy, born Wednesday, July 28. Mother and son doing nicely. Mr. George, of 2622 Marion Street, received the sad news of the death of his wife's father last week. Mrs. George was at his bedsde a few days before the end. Lieut. Chas Holmes dropped in from Colorado Springs for a few days which he spent delightfully with Mr. and Mrs. Orna McCormick of 3010 High street. S. H. Baxter, our popular townsman, has purchased a nice home at 2249 Lafayette Street. Mr. Baxter is one of our hard-working, thrifty and painstaking members of this community and deserves credit. Mr. Clarence Balthrop of Kansas City, Kan., is visiting for a few weeks with Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Lawson, popular and well-respected pioneer residents of 1360 Hazel Court. Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Robinson have purchased a beautiful home at 2520 Ogden street. The same is well fur- nished and is the result of persistent and untiring efforts to join the ranks of Denver home owners. The editor was entertained at dinner last Sunday at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Hammond, 1625 South Lincoln. A very enjoyable time was spent, the sumptuous and well-prepared meal having just met ye editor's appetite. Complimentary to Mrs. Estelle R. Smith of Birmingham, Ala., who is the house guest of Mrs. E. M. Reeves, Mrs. Allen M. Webb entertained at a very informal reception in her home at 142 Byers place, Monday afternoon from 4 to 6. Mr. S. McMillan of Chicago has purchased a beautiful home, nine rooms, all modern, at 2734 Williams street. He has resolved to permanently locate in Denver, and we welcome this addition to our large and representative body of home owners and taxpaying citizens. Mr. Le Ray Carroll of Tulsa, Oklahoma, is visiting in the city for a few days. He speaks very commendably of our people's progress in the great oil city which has increased in population to a very great extent. There are two newspapers and they are doing real livewire business. "The Oklahoma Sun" and "The Star" are the names of the news organs. Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Hammond of 1625 South Lincoln entertained the following children Saturday, July 24, in honor of the seventh birthday anniversary of their little daughter, Thelma: Irene Peach, Pearl Clark, Harry Marshall, Carrie Bivens, Treeman Davis, Henry Williams, Jual Peach, Helen Williams and Annie Williams. Miss Thelma received many beautiful presents from her little friends. Mrs. Dellans, accompanied by her daughter, Miss Willmer Dellans, and Miss Johnnie Mae Moore, her niece, arrived this week from Corsicana, Texas, and are the guests of Mrs. Baker, their sister and aunt of 1344 Kalamath Street. The younger relatives are delighted with Denver, having visited before, and under the guardianship of their cousins, Messrs, F. A. and Bennie Baker, leading social celebrities of the Queen City of the Plains, will have a very enjoyable summer vacation. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Carter, Sr. mother and father of our popular citizen, Eugene Carter, employe of the Denver Athletic Club for several years, are here to spend the summer with their son and his wife at their beautiful residence, 2452 Lafayette Street. "Gene," as he is generally called, intends to give his parents a taste of western hospitality by the series of entertainments that are being arranged and a great treat is in store for them. Mr. and Mrs. Carter are residents of Galesburg, Illinois. THE RISING SUN. The Colorado Statesman takes this opportunity to congratulate Editor Cate of "The Rising Sun" of Pueblo, and Mr. D. Wellington Berry, Manager of the Western Publicity Bureau, upon their most excellent and creditable Denver Booster edition of The Rising Sun of last week. It was very artistically and neatly put up and will go far toward advertising our city and Colorado. ANNOUNCEMENT At a meeting of the Hays Republican Club April 30, 1920, I was chosen to represent the colored people of Denver county in the fall campaign. I wish to announce to the public that my hat is in the ring as an aspirant to the State Legislature, and if fortunate enough to be placed on the ticket in the convention, I will ask the support of the general public in the primary election. I am 100 per cent Republican, 100 per cent American, 100 per cent Race woman. MARY E. HOLMES. 2139 Curtis Street. OVERSEAS VETERAN RETURNS TO DENVER Mr. Clifford D. Jackson of Indianapolis, Ind., who served eleven months in France with the 366th U. S. Infantry, who was sent to Denver by the government upon his return to this country to pursue his vocational training as a journalist has been sojourning in Silver City, New Mexico, the past six weeks. Mr. Jackson, upon returning to Denver reports a very pleasant and interesting trip and contemplates remaining in Denver for some time. He is a member of Lodge No. 11, K. of P., and attached to the office of The Colorado Statesman. WILLIAMS SINGERS GOING TO AUDITORIUM Yielding to a popular demand, the famous Williams Singers will appear at the Auditorium instead of at the Zion Baptist Church on the night of August 16th. Just the Garments You Will Need for the Rest of the Summer Are Included in This Final Clearance Sale of Women's & Girls Apparel The smart suits, distinctive coats and wraps, and the chic frocks and blouses that are remaining in the season's stock are on sale, all of them at unusually reduced prices. 400 garments—including women's and misses' tailored suits, coats, capes and wraps, street and party dresses, leather coats, blouses, girls' and junior misses' coats and dresses, will be One-Half Price and Less. The entire remaining stock of apparel is to be on sale Monday morning at One-Third, One-Half and Less. Making the prices for Tailored Suits...$19.75 to $79.50 Coats and Wraps.....$15.00 to $97.50 Dresses and Gowns.....$9.75 to $125.00 Satisfactory Specials in the Junior Misses' Department Cravenette Tweed Coats, sizes 8 to 10 years; regularly worth $15. Special ..... $5.95 White Middy Blouses, sizes 6 to 36; regularly worth $3.60. Special at ..... $1.95 Gingham Dresses, sizes 8 to 17; regularly priced $6.75. On sale at ..... $3.95 Sateen Bloomers, sizes 6 to 20 years; usually priced $3.95. On sale ..... $1.95 Wool Serge Bloomers, sizes 6 to 20 years; regular price $7.95. Reduced to ..... $5.95 Khaki Bloomer Play Suits, sizes 6 to 14 years; regularly priced from $5.00 to $5.50. Special at ..... $3.95 THE HARDING-COOLIDGE REPUBLICAN CLUB RECEPTION On last Tuesday evening President L. R. Hubbard threw open the doors of the Harding-Coolidge Republican Club to the public. There were two thousand or more enthusiastic Republicans who visited the headquarters during the evening and expressions of confidence in the success of the party were heard on all sides. The headquarters are located at 1725 Tremont Place and the suite of rooms are beautifully and artistically decorated with American flags. The doors are never closed and all are welcome to the headquarters, and especially all visitors from out of the city. HUNDREDS TO ATTENDE BIG BAPSTIST PICNIC. Many tickets have already been sold for the big picnic and outing which will be held at Bergen Park, over Lookout Mountain, under the auspices of the Baptist churches of the city on Thursday, August 5th. From present indications hundreds of Denverites will take advantage of the occasion to spend the day in the mountains and enjoy themselves. The trip is to be made by autos and this feature has proved to be one of the most popular in connection with the entire affair, many persons having expressed their satisfaction over the plan. The automobiles will leave the Central Baptist Church at 8:30 on the morning of August 5th, and all who hold tickets have been urged to be on hand promptly. Because of the rapid sale of the tickets throughout the city it is also urged upon those desiring to attend the picnic to secure their tickets as soon as possible so that there may not be a delay in starting from the Central Baptist Church. The churches under whose auspices the picnic is being given are planning a most enjoyable occasion for all who wish to attend. WATCH THE STATESMAN FOR FURTHER ANNOUNCEMENTS The Daniels & Fisher Stores Co. CAMPBELL A. M. E. CHURCH. REV. I. S. WILSON, Pastor. Cor 23d and Lawrence Sts. Res. 1218 23d St. Phone Main 1314. 10:00 a. m. Sunday School. 11:00 a. m. Preaching. 6:45 p. m. Christian Endeavor. 8:00 p. m. Preaching. Mio Week Meeting. Wednesday, 8:00 p. m. Prayer and class. Thursday, 8:00 p. m. Missionary. Friday, 8:00 p. m. Trustee Helpers at 2515 Curtis street, Mrs. Givens. Last Sunday morning and evening Dr. T. M. Davis of Fresno, Calif., preached two great sermons. His text in the morning from John 17, "The Manifestations of the Power of God." In the evening his text Ps. 119:18. After these two great sermons Mr. Chas, W. Young and Mr. R. S. Luckett from the First A. M. E. Church of Memphis, Tenn., were united with the church. Among the visitors present were Mrs. Lillian Horn, Mrs. Barnes, Mr. W. Monroe Trotter of Boston, Mass., and Mr. Baldwin of Boston, Mass. IN MEMORIAM In loving but sad remembrance of our dear father, Stephen I. Bennett, who died July 13th, 1900, and our dear mother, Eliza Bennett, who died July 21, 1908. Sleep on dear parents and take your rest, God called you home, He thought it best; He saw your suffering here so great, And opened wide the golden gate. MRS. WM. A. WATKINS, Chicago, Ill. BENNIE BENNETT, Denver. LAURA CARR, Denver. WHITSEL — Roberta, 1 year, 9 months, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Whitsel, residence 2657 Larimer Street, departed this life July 25th. Services were held at 2 p. m., Tuesday, July 27th, from Douglas Chapel. Rev. P. J. Price officiated. Interment Riverside. FOR SALE — Eight-room modern house, $3,500, at 2610 Lafayette street. Apply at Colorado Statesman office, 1824 Curtis street, room 25. A Silk Sport Skirts White Wash Skirt Density of styles, made of Gabardine and to 36 waist. Reduced to $3.95 to $9.75. Tub Frocks 1/4 Leaf A stock of mid-summer wash dresses or or plain voile, and gingham. All of them o n style. $6.75 to $35.00. Swim! In a Daniels and Fisher Bathing Suit ing suits, pure wool, guaranteed colors, i nisses and girls. Reduced for the first less. FIRST GRAND BAY Under the Auspices of THE DAUGHTER THURSDAY, AUGUST 5TH Music by Morrison's Full Orchestra d Colony Hall Admi ork 3496 W 720 D ILSON & HARV Service Tailoring Comp dies' and Gents' Tailoring, Cleaning, Pressi Repairing. Work Called for and Delivere erson, Tailor and Manager. Service Phone e Service Taxi Safety First of Fantasi, Kumsi Kumsa, Tricolette and Baronette Satin Usual prices, $25 to $49.50. On sale at One-Half Price. White Wash Skirts in a diversity of styles, made of Gabardine and Surf Satin. Sizes 25 to 36 waist. Reduced to $3.95 to $9.75. Tub Frocks 1/4 Less The entire stock of mid-summer wash dresses or organdie, figured and plain voile, and gingham. All of them cool and individual in style. $6.75 to $35.00. All bathing suits, pure wool, guaranteed colors, in sizes for women, misses and girls. Reduced for the first time, One-Fourth Less. FIRST GRAND BALL Given Under the Auspices of THE DAUGHTERS OF ISIS THURSDAY, AUGUST 5TH Music by Morrison's Full Orchestra WILSON & HARVEY Service Tailoring Company Ladies' and Gents' Tailoring, Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing. Work Called for and Delivered. Harvey, Proprietors. DE V. V. Hair Goods and Milline ts Made, Trimmed or Remodeled to W. Anderson, Prop. Down Orders Received. Center, Casner, Wyo. The V.V.Hair Goods and Millinery Store 720 East Twenty-sixth Avenue Baronette Satin. Half Price. kirts e and Surf Satin. $9.75. Less s or organdie, fig- them cool and in- usher's uit colors, in sizes for the first time, One- BALL DRAUGHTERS OF ISIS WITH chestra Admission 50c 720 East 26th Ave. ARVEY Company Pressing and Delivered. DENVER, COLO. Phone York 3496 W axi Co. THE DENVER DRY GOODS CO. FIRST WEEK OF The Denver's Great August Furniture Sale One of The Denver's Old-Time Furniture Sales. Wherein THE PRICE OF EVERY PIECE OF FURNITURE IN THIS INCOMPARABLE STOCK IS LIBERALLY REDUCED. In The Famous Sale You Have Unrestricted Choice From Very Much the Largest Furniture Stock in the Central West, Including Thousands of Dollars' Worth of New Stock Just Arrived—Nothing Is Reserved; Make Selections Now for Later Needs—Only a Moderate Advance Payment Is Required. To any who do not know The Denver we offer our assurance that this sale is an absolute and decisive markdown of every furniture piece in our immense stock. The regular price tags are not removed or changed. We simply attach beside them our red tags, showing sale prices. These are removed when the sale closes, and the regular prices again prevail. There are Over 6.500 Different Pieces of Furniture on Our Sale Floors for Selection. BEST QUALITY IMPERFECT AXMINSTER RUGS, SEAMLESS 6.0x9.0, regularly $47.50, sale..... **$41.75** 9.0x12.0, regularly $85.00, sale..... **$74.50** Oriental Rugs all reduced $ 3 3_{3}^{1} \% $ Lace Curtains and Draperies OUR ANNUAL STOCK REDUCING SALE FOR JULY AND AUGUST Our entire $100,000 stock of up-to-date Lace Curtains, Draperies, Fabrics, Cedar Chests, Screens, Lamps, Lamp Shades, Lamp Shade Trimmings, etc. Nothing is reserved excepting the Brunlin Window Shades. CHRONIC GROVCHES by Haile T. Hendrix. ```markdown ``` Japanese Grass Rugs 6.0x9.0, regularly $8.75, sale...... 8.0x10.0, regularly $12.00, sale...... 9.0x12.0, regularly $15.00, sale.....$ Crex, Double Warp Grass 4.6x7.6, regularly $12.25, sale...... 6.0x9.0, regularly $17.75, sale.....$. 8.0x10.0, regularly $24.25, sale.....$. 9.0x12.0, regularly $27.50, sale.....$ BEST QUALITY IMPER 6.0x9.0, regularly $47.50, sale...... 9.0x12.0, regularly $85.00, sale..... 6.0x9.0, regularly $8.75, sale.....$5.00 8.0x10.0, regularly $12.00, sale.....$8.00 9.0x12.0, regularly $15.00, sale.....$10.00 Crex, Double Warp Grass Rugs Japanese Jute Rugs 4.6x7.6, regularly $26.50, sale.....$. 6.0x9.0, regularly $42.50, sale.....$. 9.0x12.0, regularly $57.50, sale.....$. 9.0x12.0, regularly $85.00, sale.....$ 4.6x7.6, regularly $26.50, sale.....$23.00 6.0x9.0, regularly $42.50, sale.....$37.50 9.0x12.0, regularly $57.50, sale.....$49.50 9.0x12.0, regularly $85.00, sale.....$75.00 Brussels Rugs 8.3x10.6* regularly $40.00, sale ..... $36.00 9.0x12.0, regularly $45.00, sale ..... $40.50 11.3x12.0, regularly $55.00, sale ..... $43.75 Royal Bengal Rugs Best Reproduction of the Orient 4.0x7.0, regularly $78.75, sale.....$3 8.3x10.6, regularly $228.00, sale.....$1 9.0x12.0, regularly $255.00, sale.....$2 L PRINTED Best Reproduction of the Oriental. 4.0x7.0, regularly $78.75, sale.....$68.75 8.3x10.6, regularly $228.00, sale.....$197.50 9.0x12.0, regularly $255.00, sale.....$220.00 PRINTED Our August Sale of Oriental and Domestic Rugs and Linoleums Our Annual August Sale, embracing practically every article floor covering, at a saving in price which we do not believe will be possible to duplicate during the year. An Underpricing Event of Interest to All Enterprising Housekeepers. Oriental and Domestic Rugs and Linoleums Our Annual August Sale, embracing practically every article of floor covering, at a saving in price which we do not believe it will be possible to duplicate during the year. An Underpricing Event of Interest to All Enterprising Housekeepers. Rattan Fiber Rugs 6.0x9.0, regularly $15.00, sale.....$12.00 8.0x10.0, regularly $22.00, sale.....$18.00 9.0x12.0, regularly $25.00, sale.....$20.50 Axminster Rugs $9.65 6.9x9.0 at ..... $44.50 $14.25 7.6x9.0 at ..... $57.75 $19.75 8.3x10.6 at ..... $60, $65, $72.50 $21.25 9.0x12.0 at ..... $65, $70, $77.50 PERFECT AXMINSTER RUGS, SEAMLESS ..... $41.75 ..... $74.50 Royal Wilton Rugs $23.00 $37.50 $49.50 9.0x12.0, regularly $145.00, sale..... $75.00 ..... $112.50, $125.00 and $135.00 9.0x12.0, regularly $145.00, sale...... .....$112.50, $125.00 and $135.00 Wool and Fiber Rugs ...$36.00 7.6x9.0, regularly $18.00, sale.....$15.00 ...$40.50 8.3x10.6, regularly $22.50, sale.....$18.00 ...$43.75 9.0x12.0, regularly $25.00, sale.....$20.50 s Rag Rugs mental. 6.0x9.0, regularly $15.00, sale.....$10.00 ...$68.75 8.0x10.0, regularly $23.00, sale.....$16.50 ...$197.50 9.0x12.0, regularly $30.00, sale.....$20.00 ...$220.00 Small sizes less 15%. 7.6x9.0, regularly $18.00, sale.....$15.00 8.3x10.6, regularly $22.50, sale.....$18.00 9.0x12.0, regularly $25.00, sale.....$20.50 Rag Rugs 6.0x9.0, regularly $15.00, sale.....$10.00 8.0x10.0, regularly $23.00, sale.....$16.50 9.0x12.0, regularly $30.00, sale.....$20.00 Small sizes less 15%. LINOLEUMS INLAID $2.35 quality $2.50 quality $3.00 quality [Illustration of a large, ornate wooden door with intricate ironwork and decorative moldings, set within a building with a stone base and a decorative portrait of a man in a suit. The building is labeled "MUSEUM."] DVCHES by Haile T. Hendrix. AB-SO-LUT-LEE NUTHIN' DOIN'! 1/2 OF 1%!! 'ATS ALL! Pithy News Notes From All Parts of Colorado Western Newspaper Union News Service. Another municipal election has been called at Colorado Springs September $, when $84,000 in bonds for paving re to be voted on by taxpayers. Word has been received from Los Angeles of the death of William H. Noel, formerly a widely known Denver business man and a resident of Denver for many years. Death followed an operation. While on a fishing trip at the head-waters of the Rio Grande, thirty-one miles west of Creede, Mrs. George Foster, 45, the wife of George Foster of Colorado, was drowned in a reservoir. The body was recovered from the deep water below the dam. Preliminary arrangements are being made for a big picnic and barbecue to be held at Eldorado Springs by the American Legion on Saturday, Aug. 21. According to E. J. Huff, who has charge of the arrangements, several special trains will be run to accommodate the several thousand persons who are expected to attend. Although Denver has shown a steady increase in population, the school census for the current year shows a decrease of 8,000 as compared with that of 1919, according to figures made public by the state superintendent of public instruction. This year the school census returns only 52,539 as of school age, while last year there were 60,453. A number of office buildings are to be rented by the Boulder school board to take care of the overflow from the Boulder schools this fall. The auditoriums of the Whittier and University Hill schools will likely be converted into classrooms. These changes are made necessary by the prospects for a record-breaking attendance. Weld county farmers will be paid $13,416,571 for their beet crop this fall, according to estimates made after a careful check of the sugar factories within the county and those factories in surrounding counties which have contracted acreage in Weld. Weld county thus faces one of the most prosperous years in its history. Work upon the compilation of the Colorado statutes, authorized by the Twenty-second General Assembly in its regular session, has progressed to a state where the revision commission is getting ready to commence printing their report for consideration by the next General Assembly. Contracts for the printing will be let within the next few days. J. F. Vallery, assistant general freight agent, Denver, and E. E. Young, superintendent at McCook, visited Akron and looked over the wheat fields recently and expressed themselves as surprised at the vast area and the quality of the grain. The crop, which is the biggest and best in the history of Washington county, is now being harvested. Archibald Chisholm, 53, of Denver, an inmate of the State Insane Asylum at Pueblo, fell from a third-story window of the institution. His neck was broken, and he was dead when attendants reached him. Chisholm had been an inmate of the institution for several years, and not being violently insane, was appointed "trusty" some time ago, and allowed the freedom of the grounds. One of the most disastrous fires in the history of northern Colorado completely destroyed the plant of the Farmers' Union Milling and Elevator Company at Milliken. The fire broke out during a heavy thunderstorm. The mill was operated by electric power and it is believed that lightning struck the wires. The total loss is estimated at $125,000, only $67,000 of which was covered by insurance. Vocations for girls should be considered with relation to home making, said Prof. J. Adams Puffer, field secretary of the National Welfare League, in an address under the auspices of the summer school of the Colorado Agricultural College at Fort Collins. The road between Denver's city limits and Arvada will be paved with an the next few months, if a project submitted by the state to the federal roads bureau is approved. The project calls for the paving, in concrete, of one and a half miles at an estimated cost of $59,900. Twenty thousand dollars per mile, or $30,000 in all, is asked of Uncle Sam through the roads bureau toward defraying the expense, the state to stand the balance. Colorado gains the first important railroad construction since the return of the rail lines to private ownership, according to word received that the project for the construction of a line from Garden City, Kan., to Trinidad, Colo., through Bacca and Las Animas counties, will be undertaken by the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fé railroad this year, and that the 200 miles of new trackage will be completed in time for the spring movement next year. Registration has opened at the Young Women's Christian Association, in Denver for the second annual industrial conference to be held at Estes Park, August 6 to 16, under the auspices of the West Central Field division of the organization. The conference will be open to young women engaged in business in Kansas, Wyoming, Colorado and Utah, and it is expected that about 300 will be present. Since May 22, sixty-three marriage licenses have been taken out in Larimer county. Fifteen suits for divorce have been filed in the sametime. Harding & Coolidge REPUBLICAN CLUB Every Republican in Colorado is not only invited to join, but is urged to join this club. Get in early and become identified with this great movement. LYNDON R. HUBBARD, President. 1725 Tremont St., DENVER. HARDING AND COOLID Headquarters, 1 Name ... Residence ... Telephone No. Business or Occupation... You assume no financial obi Can you assist by giving so Michaelson's CORNER 10TH & LARHER Denver $150,000 STOCK UNLOADING SALE HARDING AND COOLIDGE CLUB OF COLORADO Headquarters, 1725 Tremont St. Name ..... Residence ...... Telephone No..... Business or Occupation..... Can you assist by giving some of your time? Every department in the store is cutting prices to cost and less than cost to dispose of the merchandise on hand for a general clean-up. This is the time to buy anything and everything in the way of wearables for man, woman or child. Dr. Westbrook, physician and surgeon, 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 Physicians and Surgeons' Telephone Exchange. Main 1624, night or day. X—Ray examination and treatments a specialty. MISS NETTIE PENIX HERNDON, Teacher of Piano. Results Guaranteed. Studio, 2542 Gaylord. Tel. York 4708J. E. P. BLAKEMORE, Attorney and Counsellor at Law. Office, Rooms 39 and 40 Arapahoe Bldg., 1622 Arapahoe Street. Phone Champa 5450. DR. CLARENCE F. HOLMES, JR. B. S., D. D. S. Invites the public of Denver to inspect 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. For employment see the Industrial Realty Co. Employment Agency, 716 East Twenty-sixth Ave. York 4561. Modern furnished room for gentleman, close in. 2356 Glenarm place Phone Main 8383. LOOK out for the Grand Entertainment of the Masons, Labor Day. People Read This Newspaper That's why it would be profitable for you to advertise in it If you want a job If you want to hire somebody If you want to sell something If you want to buy something If you want to rent your house If you want to sell your house If you want to sell your farm If you want to buy property If there is anything that you want the quickest and best way to supply that want is by placing an advertisement in this paper The results will surprise and please you MAIL TO THE AGE CLUB OF COLORADO 725 Tremont St. igations by signing this card. time of your time? EVERYONE can have abundance Of Thick, Beautiful, Glossy Hair 7 Sutherland Sisters Hair Grower Grew this Hair SEND 25c. FOR TRIAL SIZE OF BOTH SCALP CLEANER, the Great Dandruff Remedy. It removes the dandruff germ from your skin. If You Value Your Hair and Its Beauty Try SEVEN SUTHERLAND SISTERS Once-Why not now? For Sale by all Drillugs and Dept. Stores Seven Sutherland Sisters 242 BRADHURST AVE., N. Y. CITY 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 OTHER THROAT TROUBLE DR. Brown is Senior Surgeon to the Central London Throat and Ear Hospital. He decries the need for more empathic terms as follows: "The vapor of Menthol checks in a manner hardly less than marvelous, acute Colds in the head. The vapor of Menthol obstruction to the natural breathway, I prescribe Cushman's Menthol inhaler to the extent of hundreds per annum." MEN'S INKLEAR will relieve you instantly. Men's cleaning or nanseating drugs to debilitate you. Healthful health aid to you. Indispensable in traveling. Public singers and Speakers use it and find it the greatest aid in strengthening the throat. INFLUENZA DR J. H. SALISBURY, a distinguished physician of New York, said: "Inhaled Menthol is particularly effective to the life of the influenza bacillus." SEA-SICKNESS! Dr. Besley Thorn, in communication in the London Lancet, says: "I have found Cushman's Mutation Under exercises a marked benefit after Winna Sea-Sickness and, especially in the headache and vertigo, which remains after the actual vomiting and retching passed off." The most refreshing and healthful aid to HEAD-ACTE sufferers. Brings sleep to thaliephes. Believes Insomnia and Nervous Frostation. Known to be foiled with wordless simations. Take only CUSHMAN'S 50c, at drugs, or mailed postpaid on receipt of CUSHMAN DRUG CO., Vineennes, Ind., or No. 324 Dearborn Street, Chicago, Ill. FOR RENT—13-room, modern flat, 5 rooms upstairs and 7 rooms on first floor. Apply 1923 Clarkson street. Will rent separately. The KITCHEN CABINET For each soul has one inner room Where all alone it seeks the grace To struggle with the sharpest woe, Its hardest destiny to face; To lift the duty that it fears, To love, to trust, through every doom. And not the nearest, dearest heart Goes with it to that inner room. —Anonymous. Office 609 27th St. Ph. Champa 1142 S. E. CARY FOODS FOR HOT WEATHER. When preparing the breakfast coffee on a hot morning, add enough to make two or three extra cupfuls, which may be served for dinner at night, iced, or for a cool drink at noon. There are so many kinds of cool drinks, from iced ten, coffee and cocoa, to all the fruit juices which LEROY J. PERKINS The East Denver Realty Co. and Insurance Agency Over Atlas Drug Store Denver Prof. W. M. Mackey To make leed coffee, take the beverage of the usual strength served when hot, add ice and sugar and cream as desired for each glass. A chicken sandwich with a dish of head lettuce with a French dressing, or a more elaborate Thousand Isle dressing, makes a meal with a glass of chilled milk or leed tea, which is sufficiently satisfying for the most exacting appetite. Lemon Sirup.—Grate the rind of one lemon, add the juice of six, with four cupfuls of sugar and two cupfuls of water. Boil all together for ten minutes; cool and put into a bottle in the chest. When serving, pour a little of the sirup into a glass, add chipped ice and fill the glass with cold water. This is such an easy way to have lemonade always ready to serve. Gelatin Pie.—Bake a flaky crust on the bottom of a pie plate and, when cool, stir in a pint of any flavored gelatin, beaten until foamy and thick. Cover with whipped cream and serve cut in the usual way. Let stand on ice to become firm and ice-cold before serving. JOSEPH CARTER Express, Moving, and Storage Gelatin Ph the bottom cool, stir in atin, beaten Cover with cut in the us to become serving. Velvet Sh three lemon Velvet Sherbet.—Take the juice of three lemons, two cupfuls of sugar, a quart of rich milk and the grated rind of one lemon. Stir until the sugar is dissolved, then freeze as usual. This makes a most delicious frozen dish. Tomato Salad.—Arrange one thick slice of tomato for each cover on heart leafs of lettuce. Over the tomato heap very finely minced celery, cucumber and onion which has been mixed with a French dressing to marinate. Top the salad with a small spoonful of mayonnaise and serve at once. The WARD AUCTION COMPANY heap very fin ber and only with a Free Top the sale of mayonna Labor is is nothing, achieve not without wo DISHE Labor is man's great function. He is nothing, he can be nothing, he can achieve nothing, he can fulfill nothing, without working.—O. Dewey. When making cake for company try the following: PRIVATE SALES AT ALL TIMES Cake Stand 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 would 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 marsh and then said: milk, beating them add the with the ba stiffly beaten Bake in a l Pineapple try and line following: pineapple, ter, the yolk of powdered and butter the yolks and the meringue or they may and the p cream. Imperial of a cupful scalded milk one-third of one-fourth of water. Add salt and one flour. Cove. In the mornings two-thirds the rings a minutes in a Maple P slightly and of hot maple mixture the heat at pint of cream in a mold. Let stand the Mint Sang of mint with into a glass Add four tails and fill the charged water strain into a nished with ODD WED A young ture marriage pupil of his The couple in tennil milk, beating and mixing until smooth, then add the half cupful of flour sifted with the baking powder. Fold in the stiffly beaten white the last thing. Bake in a loaf. Pineapple Ple.—Prepare a rich pastry and line a pie plate. Fill with the following: One cupful of shredded pineapple, one tablespoonful of butter, the yolks of two eggs, one cupful of powdered sugar. Beat the sugar and butter to a cream, add the beaten yolks and the pineapple. Cover with a meringue prepared from the whites, or they may be added before baking and the pie served with whipped cream. Imperial Muffins.—Add one-fourth of a cupful of sugar to one cupful of scalded milk. When lukewarm add one-third of a yeast cake dissolved in one-fourth of a cupful of lukewarm water. Add one-half teaspoonful of salt and one and one-fourth cupfuls of flour. Cover and let rise over night. In the morning fill the buttered muffin rings two-thirds full. Let rise until the rings are full then bake thirty minutes in a hot oven. Maple Parfait.—Beat four eggs slightly and pour on slowly one cupful of hot maple sirup. Cook until the mixture thickens then remove from the heat at once. Cool and add one pint of cream beaten until stiff. Put in a mold, and pack in ice and salt. Let stand three to four hours. Mint Bangaree.—Crush three sprays of mint with a lump of sugar. Put into a glass half full of cracked ice. Add four tablespoonfuls of grape juice and fill the glass to the brim with charged water. Shake thoroughly and strain into another glass. Serve garnished with a sprig of mint. DDD WEDDING ARRANGEMENTS. A young professor of physical culture married a beautiful and athletic pupil of his in the suburbs of Paris. The couple appeared before the mayor in tennis costume, and after the ceremony the wedding party sat down to breakfast on the banks of the Seine. Hardly was the coffee finished than, on a given signal, the whole party retired and reappeared in bathing costume. Later the couple started on a bicycle tour for a honeymoon. ing costume ed on a bl 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 8086 Res. Phone York 5774W FRANK D. TAGGART Attorney at Law—Notary Public 208-206 Cooper Building Denver, Colorado ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Six Years City and County Attorney At Russell Springs, Logan County, Kansas Office Hours: 9:00 A. M. to 12:00 M. 2:00 P. M. to 4:00 P. M. DENVER, COLO. Phone Champa 1142 600 278 St. Rooms 3 and 4 FIRST CLASS TONSORIAL WORK Hair Cutting a Specialty Satisfaction Guaranteed Shop remodeled in latest style. 2244 LARIMER ST., DENVER COAL AND WOOD PROMPT DELIVERY. Phone Main 6544. 2415 WASHINGTON STREET. The Sales Daily at 2 p.m. Office Furniture a Specialty. HAVE MOVED TO-- 1723-39 GLENARM ST. PHONE MAIN 1678 "Why don't you patronize your home paper and advertisement? I read it and didn't know that you had the stuff I have here." MORAL—ADVERTISE two or three extra cupfuls, which may be served for dinner at night, iced, or for a cool drink at noon. There are so many kinds of cool drinks, from iced ten, coffee and cocoa, to all the fruit juices which one may put up at home, in the market. DISHES FOR OCCASIONS. White Cake.—Take one and one-half cupfuls of sugar, one-half cupful of butter, one cupful of milk, the whites of four eggs, and two teaspoonfuls of baking powder sifted in one-half cupful of flour. Cream the sugar and butter and add one and one-half cupfuls of flour alternately with the Leave to me the humming Of my little hive; Glad to earn a living— Glad to be alive! - Lucy Larrein QUICK SOUPS. There are many occasions when a quick soup is a great convenience. A stock pot is help ful but not necessary and for a small family not practical. A good soup stock can be made of beef extract and vegetable tables of which rues sn pr mo tra the following is good Slice a large onion into a deep granite dish, add a slice of turnip cut fine, a large carrot sliced, three stalks of celery, including the tops, three dozen peppercorns, six cloves, a stick of cinnamon, three bay-leaves, the same of parsley, sage, thyme and summer savory. Fill the pan with cold water, bring to the boiling point and simmer slowly until the vegetables are well cooked—about one and one-half hours. Strain through a coarse muslin and measure the liquor. For each quart add one teaspoonful of beef extract. Dissolve the extract in a little of the soup stock and add to the rest. Boll up once and serve. From this stock aspic jelly may be prepared by using gelatin. For corn soup add one cupful of cooked corn that has been pressed through a sieve to six cupfuls of the stock. Carrot soup may be prepared in the same way, using one cupful of minced carrots put through a sieve after cooking. Beans, peas, cabbage, onion or any vegetable may be used in the same proportion. Split Pea Soup.—Soak one cupful of split peas over night and boil until tender, then drain. Add a sliced carrot, a sliced onion, and half a turnip. Brown the vegetables in a little butter, cover with beef stock, boil up rub through a sieve and re-heat. A ham bone or a little piece of salt pork may be cooked with the soup. Peach Soup.—Peel, stone and cut fine a quart of peaches. Break three or four of the stones, pound the kernels fine and add to the peaches, with sugar to taste. Cover with orange juice and one teaspoonful of almond extract; let stand one hour, then put on ice and serve very cold in sherbet cups, with cracked ice. SEASONABLE DISHES Of course there is nothing nicer in than corn cooked on the cob and eaten from it with a bit of butter and a dash of salt; but for variety corn may be served in many substantial dishes, furnishing a main dish for the meal. Squaw Dish. — Some time when you cannot think of what to eat. with a bit of butter and a dash of salt; but for variety corn may be served in many substantial dishes, furnishing a main dish for the meal. Squaw Dish. — Some time when you cannot think of what to eat cut the corn from half a dozen ears, put into a frying pan two tablespoonfuls of bacon fat and when hot turn in the corn. Stir and cook, adding salt and pepper, adding more bacon fat if needed. Canned corn is very good served in this manner. Raspberry and Currant Soup.—Bring to the boiling point two cupfuls each of raspberry and currant juice, sweeten to taste, thicken with three teaspoonfuls of arrow root, smoothed in a little cold water. Add one tablespoonful of lemon juice and serve cold. Any fruit such as cherry, strawberry, pineapple or rhubarb may be prepared for a cooling fruit soup. Ginger Punch.—Take a half-pound of Canton ginger, chop, add three tablespoonfuls of slurp. Cook together and cool one quart of water and one cupful of sugar 15 minutes with the ginger added; cool, strain, add one-half cupful each of orange juice and lemon juice and one quart of ginger ale. Chill and serve. Lemon Soup.—Add the juice and grated peel of a lemon to four cupfuls of water. Bring to the boiling point and thicken with three teaspoonfuls of arrow root mixed in a little cold water. Cook until smooth, cool and serve with cracked ice and bits of candied ginger in each glass. Date Crumbles.—Take two eggs well beaten, one cupful of sugar, one tablespoonful of flour, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, one cupful each of chopped dates and walnut meats. Mix all together and spread on two greased ple tins. Bake in a slow oven three-quarters of an hour. Crumble and serve in tall glasses topped with whipped cream, or mix with whipped cream and serve. Nellie Maxwell THERMOMETRIC SCALES. The scale employed by a thermometer is indicated by one of the initial letters, F., C., R., or by the name. Fahrenheit, Centigrade, Reaumur. The degrees of one thermometric scale are readily converted into those of another. Following is their relationship: 180 degrees F. equals 100 degrees C., equals 80 degrees R. Therefore 1 degree F. equals five-ninths of a degree C., equals four-ninths of a degree F. The KITCHEN CABINET If we trod the deeps of ocean, if we struck the stars in rising. SEASONABLE GOOD THINGS Soup is seasonable the year round in any climate. The following will be found one quite worth while: Royal Soup. Soak one cupful of bread crumbs in one-half cupful of milk. Add the yolk of three Royal Soup. Soak one cupful of bread crumbs in one-half cupful of milk. Add the yolks of three hard-cooked eggs rubbed through a sieve and the breast of a stewed chicken, also rubbed through a sieve; add three and one-half cupfuls of stock, highly seasoned, one and one-half cupfuls of scalded milk, and two and one-half tablespoonfuls each of flour and butter cooked together. Season with salt and pepper. Pressed Beef Flank.—Wipe, remove superfluous fat and roll a flank of beef. Put into a kettle cover with boiling water and add one tablespoonful of salt, one-half teaspoonful of peppercorns, a small piece of bay leaf and the bone of a shank of veal. Cook slowly until the meat is very tender. There should be very little liquor in the kettle when the meat is done. Arrange the meat in a deep pan, pour over the liquor, cover and press with a heavy weight. Serve cold. Chicken a la Stanley—Melt one fourth of a cupful of butter, add one large onion thinly sliced and two broilers cut in pieces for serving. Cover and cook slowly for ten minutes, then add one cupful of chicken stock and cook until the meat is tender. Remove the chickens, rub the stock and onions through a sieve and add one and one-half tablespoonfuls each of butter and flour cooked together. Add cream to make the sauce of the right consistency. Season with salt and pepper. Arrange the chicken on a serving dish, pour around the sauce, and garnish the dish with sliced bananas dipped in flour and sautéed in butter. Boiled Dressing.—To one cupful of peatten eggs, a mixture of white and yolk, add an equal quantity of mild vinegar. Cook over hot water till thick. Season when ready to use. Will keep for weeks in a jar well sealed and placed in a cool place. If we have whispered truth, Whisper no longer; Speak as the tempest does, Sterner and stronger. —John G. Whittier. SUMMER MEATS. Chicken, veal, sweetbreads and lamb are the summer meats most commonly liked and served. Broiled Chicken.—Clean a tender chicken and split it down the back. Break the joints, take out the breast bone, wipe clean, sprinkle with salt and pepper and rub with soft butter. Broil and Broiled Chicken.—Clean a tender chicken and split it down the back. Break the joints, take out the breast bone, wipe clean, sprinkle with salt and pepper and rub with soft butter. Broil and serve with melted butter. Breaded Veal Cutlet.—Have the cutlets less than an inch thick; parbull and drain, then cool. Season with salt and pepper, dip in beaten egg and crumbs and fry until brown. Serve with tomato sauce or with a border of green peas. Chicken Gallosch.—Cut into dice two medium sized raw potatoes. Put into a fryingpan two tablespoonfuls of olive oil and when hot add the potato slice. Stir to keep from burning and cook five minutes. Then add a dash of paprika, a cupful of boiling water, a crushed bean of garlic, a cupful of cooked chicken chopped fine or a can of boned chicken; salt to taste. Cover and cook until the potatoes are done, stirring frequently. Mayonnaise is a salad par excellence, but a tasty substitute can be prepared from corn oil, using the same method of mixing. The secret of a good mayonnaise is freshness of the egg and well-chilled ingredients and utensils. Drop a fresh egg yolk into a well-chilled bowl placed in a pan of ice water: add a half teaspoonful of salt, a teaspoonful of powdered sugar, a pinch of mustard, a dash of cayenne and a tablespoonful of lemon juice. Beat well before adding any oil, then but a few drops at a time, beating well between each addition. Thin the mixture with vinegar or lemon juice, adding more oil until three-quarters of a cupful has been used. Mayonnaise to be good should be thick and creamy. When serving it in the salad it may be blinned with cream. Necie Maxwell Wood Fibers. The common ideas concerning wood fibers are not justified by the extended tests of the United States forest products laboratory. Each species of wood does not have its characteristic fiber length, but a greater difference may be found between the fibers of an individual tree than between the average lengths in different species. The length of fiber does not seem to affect the strength of the wood, as the longest fibers often belong to the weakest material. ARCHIE MARKET Wholesale and Retail Staple and Faney 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 YOU CHOICE PLANTS AND CUTS GREENHOUSES: Thirty-Fe TELEPHONE, MAIN 1511 Weather TELEPHONE MAIN 3203 Established 1876 RENOVATORS, BLUE Of Gents' and L 1624 CHAM Poro Hair SCIENTIFIC AND SANITARY MASSAGING, M 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. ATORS, BLEACHERS, DYERS AND FIN Gents' and Ladies' Hats of Every Descript 1624 CHAMPA ST., DENVER, COLO. Hair Dressing Pa AND SANITARY SCALP AND HAIR T MESSAGING, MANICURING, TOILET ARTIC 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 N STREET PHONE Y 2220 OGDEN STREET 1 Best Leather Used—Reason 1855 Champa St. Phone DENVER E. SMITH, Manager, Res. Phone South 1600 Market Comp and Retail Staple and Fancy Groceries, Fish and Restaurants Our Specialty. Fresh and Eastern Corn Fed Meat Fruits, Vegetables, Poultry and Game. Telephones Main 4302, 4303, 4304, 4305 H STREET DENVER, C. E. SMITH, M. The Marri Wholesale and Retail Stores Hotels and Restaurants Eastern Fruits, Vegetables Telephones 622-636 15TH STREET Wholesale and Retail Staple and Fancy Groceries, Fish and Oysters. Hotels and Restaurants Our Specialty. Fresh and Cured IHONE MAIN 3023 John K. Rettig TS, FANCY AND STAPLE GROCER John MEATS, FANCY 180 MEATS, FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES eenth 4 --- Corner Nineteenth THE MARKET Small Staple and Faney Groceries Fish and Oysters Restaurants Our Specialty Red Eastern Corn-Fed Meats Tables, Poultry and Game FEE DELIVERY WHILE WAIT FLOWERS CONSTANTLY ON HAND urth 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 NUTIARY 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 Basket Company Free and Fancy Groceries, Fish and Oysters. Tats Our Specialty. Fresh and Cured Corn Fed Meats Potatoes, Poultry and Game. Main 4302, 4303, 4304, 4305 DENVER, COLORADO RES. PHONE GALLUP 942 an K. Rettig ENCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES 1864 CURTIS STREET Denver, Colo. Denver, Colo. DENVER, COLO. Denver, Colo. Quick and Prompt Service Day and Night. Call Us for Special Rates on Out-of-Town Trips. LICENSED BY THE STATE BOARD OF MEDICAL EXAMINERS 2190 S. Delaware DENVER, COLO. AN INTERNAL VAPOR BATH FOR THE HEAD, NOSE, THROAT AND LUNGS V. V. B. VICTORY VAPOR BALM NOTHING TO SWALLOW JUST BREATHE IT IN Guaranteed Satisfactory or Money Refunded 50 Treatments 50 Cents At All Drug Stores HAY FEVER ASIMPLE, PRACTICAL COMMON SENSE TREATMENT FOR Catarrh Hay Fever Sneezing Cold Asthma Bronchitis "Flu" COPYRIGHT THE UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK Seventeenth and Stout Streets. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM. No Library is complete without a copy of Scott's Official History of the Illustrated with over 200 personal and official photographs, this work gives a complete and authentic account of American soldiers of the Negro Race in the war. See photograph of HENRY JOHNSON, who saved a whole battalion by killing 4 Germans and wounding 22. Red Cross Nurses, Colonel Hayward's "Hell Fighters," The Buffaloes and other pictorial effects. 600 pages of history made by the Negro. Secure a copy now and leave a legacy to your pos tity. Price, $2.90. Postoffice Box 116. 1824 CURTIS ST., ROOM 25. Chas. Trotter Telephone York 4561 INDUSTRY SALES, RENTALS 716 East 26 Avenue GRANBER OFFICE PHONE CHAMPA 87 Quick and Prompt Service Phone South 3329 LICENSED BY THE 2190 S. Delaware AN INTERNAL VAPO Guaranteed Satisfactory or Money Refunded 50 Treatments 50 Cents At All Drug Stores 4% PAID ON SAVINGS NATIONAL BANK ORDERS "The NATIONAL BANK For SAVINGS" THE UNITED Seventh MEMBER No Library is con OFFICE PHONE CHAMPA 5960 You cannot tell by the attitude of either Mr. Robinson or Mr. Noel (who have charge of our Savings Department) whether the customer they are waiting on has a bank balance of $5 or $5,000.00. J.C.A.CO. Late Summer and Its Brides A RIBBONS have always played a prominent part in the apparel of women, but they were never so important as they are now. Their manufacturers look to the ingenuity of designers of dress accessories, of millinery and of innumerable pretty furnishings to extend the demand for their products, and these designers have accomplished more than was expected of them. The beauty of the ribbons themselves, proves an inspiration and they have long since ceased to be used merely as decorations. In millinery they make entire hats and have for several seasons, so that the ribbon hat has an established place which it will continue to fill. By way of showing what can be done with it in the hands of artists, several stars in our American firmament of dress creators have embodied ribbons in summer frocks—and in all sorts of frocks—for morning, afternoon and evening. The results were Late Summer ALTHOUGH tradition gives June the preference for summer weddings and October proves to be the bride's next choice, no month is entirely forsaken by them. The maid that decides for late summer has some advantages, and among them is the chance to profit by the experience of June brides when she chooses her wedding gown. There were so many innovations in the gowning of this year's brides, great costumers made excursions away from the traditional all-white and gave us white with silver, white and gold and even wedding wells in pale gold. It is for the bride of tomorrow to say whether she will regard these new ideas with favor or fix her allegiance upon the all-white bridal costume. Experimenting with the wedding vell brought out some new and ingenious adjustments of it and also the vell of chiffon instead of tulle. Premet gave to this particular June a chiffon vell embroidered in silver roses and edged with pearl beads, clinging to the head and revealing the uncovered face through a slit at the front. The bride shown in the picture has chosen this madonna-like draping of the vell, but clings to traditional orange blossoms in wreaths that encircle her head. Her frock of chiffon is laid in deep tucks below the hips, caught up a little at the sides and embellished with occasional clus- so good that the idea will carry over—we shall find ribbons in the styles for fall. It was at its best in summery afternoon and evening dresses and an adorable example for either afternoon or evening wear appears in the dress illustrated. It is of lace flouncing, on a net foundation, with very wide and very soft satin ribbon forming part of the bodice and skirt drapery. The ribbon is shirred in four little tucks at the front and in a single shirring at the side where it forms full pannlers and falls in two long ends from under them. A few little blossoms made of narrow ribbon and having millinery centers, find a resting place on the flouces, and the same blossoms set in a border and rows on a filmy parasol make it a sister to the lovely frock. After the accomplishments of these artists in summer frocks, curiosity makes whatever they will present for fall already interesting to the fashion reporter. and Its Brides ters of orange blossoms set on the tucks. Never were bridesmales more dainty clad in fanciful and gay colors than those who ushered in the brides of June. Taffeta and organdie made a majority of their flowerlike frocks, and they were designed with exhaustless ingenuity. The petal frocks and apron frocks, many frills and lovely embroidery made the achievements of the designers seem to excel all efforts of other Junes. The bride of late summer may follow these precedents. A dignified costume for a wedding guest finds place in the picture shown here. In dark blue georgette and cream-colored lace it is brightened by a corsage of flowers and a hat of cream georgette and black velvet ribbon. It offers a suggestion for the youthful looking mother of the bride. Not many brides will choose other than all-white for their own costumes, and not many will resist the gay and beautiful colors that are fashionable for their maids, together making a blithe cortege. Julia Bottomley Novel Trimming. An ordinary overblouse is trimmed with checked gingham. 100 AM ordered how you might increase your you might have a head of long, and a smooth, lovely complexion? ordered how you might increase your you might purchase pretty cloths, vacations and purchase a home? for our solution of these problems. Dept. 12, C. J. WALKER MFG. CO. --- Have you wondered how you beauty; how you might be wavy hair and a smooth Have you wondered how you income so that you might take annual vacations an Write today for our solut Dept. THE MADAM C. J. W Have you wondered how you might increase your beauty; how you might have a head of long, wavy hair and a smooth, lovely complexion? Have you wondered how you might increase your income so that you might purchase pretty cloths, take annual vacations and purchase a home? Write today for our solution of these problems. Dept. 12, 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 work as can be obtained in the A. V. GA ardner make that last season's suit of making you a new suit at a reasonable iterations and repairing neatly done by d pressing department turns out as good tained in the city. GARDNER 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. THE STAR HA HAIR GROWER THE STAR HAIR GROWER A Wonderful Hair Dressing and Grower A Wonderful Hair Dressing and Grower. One Thousand Agents Wanted. Good Money Made. We want Agents in every city and village to sell THE STAR HAIR GROWER. This is a wonderful preparation. Can be used with or without straightening irons. Sells for 25 cents per box—One 25-cent box will prove its value. Any person that will use a 25-cent box will be convinced. No matter what has failed to grow your hair, just give TEE 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 Order to THE STAR HAIR GROWER, Mfr. GREENSBORO, N. C. BOX 812 REAL ESTATE--- in Cheyenne Wyoming modern homes for sale in various locations reasonable. Good terms. Write or call. John A. Baker REAL EST A Home in Chey I have a number of modern home in the city. Prices reasonable. John A. Phone 6 REAL ESTATE--- A Home in Cheyenne Wyoming I have a number of modern homes for sale in various locations Phone 616-W --- --- MADAM 640 North West Street, Phone Champa 1019. A 418 West Seventeenth Street FREE COURSE IN HAIR AND BEAUTY CULTURE MAILED FREE UPON RECEIPT OF YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS "SEND NO MONEY" THE OZONIZED OX MARROW CO. 46 W. KINZIE ST. CHICAGO, ILL. FRANK S. REED, Licensed Embalmer and Director Lady Assistant. Polite Service to all. Indianapolis, Ind. 1025 TWENTY-FIRST ST. CHEYENNE, WYOMING Dr. Huff's office phone is Champa 6001. And his residence, Phone York 4101. 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. For Neat Clean Transient Rooms see Mrs. W. Cowan, 2824 California Street. Phone Champa 3490. Until the middle of the sixteenth century the poorer class in England used rude skewers of wood as pins, while the more fortunate had pins made of gold, silver and brass.