Colorado Statesman

Saturday, November 20, 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 GREAT PLAY AND A GREAT ACTOR Negro Actor One of the Greatest on the Stage-A Star in the Play "The Emperor Jones." VOL. XXVII. DOWN in Macdougall street, in the heart of Greenwich Village, the Provincetown Players are producing a play which is calling forth columns of notice from the foremost dramatic critics of New York. The play is entitled "The Emperor Jones." The star of the cast, in fact, the whole play is Charles S. Gilpin, a colored actor. The rest of the cast is white. Mr. Gilpin showed himself a finished actor in "Abraham Lincoln," which ran the whole of last season in this city. He created the role of "Custis" when the play was produced in America. So finished was his acting that, probably, not one person out of a hundred ever knew that the part was being played by a colored man. Most people took it for granted that the actor was a white man darkened up to play the part; and the newspapers never enlightened the people. In "The Emperor Jones" no such mistake is possible. Mr. Gilpin plays without any wig and with very little "make-up." The critics of New York are proclaiming his performance as one of the best ever seen in this city. For example, Mr. Heywood Broun, the dramatic critic on "The Tribune," in a review a column in length says: The emperor is played by a Negro actor named Charles S. Gilpin, who gives the most thrilling performance we have seen any place this season. He sustains the succession of scenes in monologue not only because his voice is one of a gorgeous natural quality, but because he knows just what to do with it. All the notes are there and he has also an extraordinary facility for being in the right place at the right time. Generally he seems fairly painted into the scenic design. One performance is not enough to entitle a player to the word great even from a not too careful critic, but there can be no question whatever that in "The Emperor Jones" Gilpin is great. It is a performance of heroic stature. It is so good that the fact that it is enormously skillful seems only incidental. Mr. Alexander Woolcott, the dramatic critic on "The Times," in a review of equal length says: Though this new play of his is so clumsily produced that its presentation consists largely of long, unventilated intermission interpersed with fragmentary scenes, it weaves a most potent spell, thanks partly to the force and cunning of the author, thanks partly to the admirable playing of Charles S. Gilpin in a title role so predominant that the play is little more than a dramatic monologue. His is an uncommonly powerful and imaginative performance, in several respects unsurpassed this season in New York. Mr. Gilpin is a Negro. It should be remembered that Mr. Woolcott, while he is considered one of the greatest dramatic critics in the country, is also a southerner and does not go into ecstasies over colored artists simply because they are colored. It was he who could see very little in the "Negro Players," who produced the Ridgely Torrence plays several State Hint. & Nat Hint 809. Hallie House FOR THE ONLY RELIANCE COLOR A GREAT ACTOR test on the Stage—A Star in Emperor Jones." years ago. Mr. Woolcott concluded his review as follows: The Provincetown Players have squanderously invested in cushions for their celebrated seats and a concrete dome to catch and dissolve their lights, so that even on their little stage they can now get such illusions of distance and the wide outdoors as few of their uptown rivals can achieve. But of immeasurably greater importance in their present enterprise, they have acquired an actor, one who has it in him to invoke the pity and the terror and the indescribable foreboding which are part of the secret of "The Emperor Jones." When we heard that Mr. Gilpin was coming out of the cost of "Abraham Lincoln," we regretted it. "The Emperor Jones," however, has given him the opportunity to show that he can play not only a minor part, but sustain an entire play. He is proving himself to be a great actor, and he is also demonstrating to the New York public and theatrical managers those artistic powers of the Negro which will some day be generally recognized.—New York Age. JOB HOLDERS PACK UP AND GET READY TO QUIT. Many Democrats, Big and Little, Scheduled for Slide on Republican Toboggan. Washington, D. C.—Democratic politicians now holding government jobs under the Wilson administration are packing their grips preparatory to starting away from Washington at the first opportunity after President-elect Harding is sworn in. Word has been passed along the line that Democrats not under the classified service are not wanted. Many prominent and active federal employés are scheduled for the Republican toboggan. Some of them will go before the Democrats turn loose. Here are some of the well-known men now on Uncle Sam's pay-roll, but scheduled to go: John Skelton Williams, comptroller of the currency, the stormy petrel of the Wilson administration. The law provides that the comptroller of the currency can hold on to the end of a five-year term, but the Senate has refused to confirm Williams. When the Democrats quit, Williams will readily give up and return to private life. Louis F. Post, assistant secretary of labor, will have to get out to give way for a Republican. Republican partisans of the reactionary group are eager to oust him. It is understood that Post will retire in time to save a scene. Two places now held by Democrats, register of the treasury and recorder of deeds of the District of Columbia, are demanded by Negro leaders for colored women. They were made an issue in the recent campaign. In addition to those mentioned here, several thousand more Democrats will have to move after March 4. The Will H. Hays organization is making ready to take charge of the federal pie-counter and distribute the fat places to party workers. Prominent Washington Negroes predict that there will be an unusually large demand for positions for men and women of their race. Harding will be asked to put a Negro banker on the Federal Reserve Board. The demand for offices will be far greater than the supply. materials for machinery and transportation. North and south the Negro is also learning to ally himself to his class and to protect himself through unionizing. Four thousand Negroes belong to the metal workers' union of America. The National Brotherhood of the Workers of the World, a Negro labor union, numbers 10,000 members. Sal- OHIO RACE CANDIDATES DE FEATED. Cleveland, Ohio.—In the midst of the joy over the election of Senator Warren G. Harding there is gloom here and in Columbus over the defeat of all our candidates for the Legislature. Out of six candidates in the state, only one was elected, Henry Higgins of Cincinnati, Ohio. The defeated candidates are Capt. William R. Green for the senate, Harry E. Davis and Samuel E. Woods for the house, Cleveland; Rev. G. L. Davis and Attorney Hughes of Columbus. It is the opinion of some that the white women concentrated against these candidates because the race issue had been put forward by the Democrats. The Democrats, through the official Democratic state committee, called for the voters to knife the candidates, because they claimed their election would mean social equality. If there was fear that the so-called Beaty civil rights bill would be introduced, making all discrimination in public places a crime, there seems to be little hope for those who do not care for the bill to be introduced. The Legislature is overwhelmingly Republican and the colored voters of the state have sufficient influence and determination to have the bill passed, it is declared. The defeat only has aroused all the Ohio voters to work all the harder for economic justice. Some persons are charging the Republican organizations in Cleveland and Columbus with double crossing. It is stated that it is very strange that in the republican unprecedented landslide, only the colored candidates were defeated on the Legislative tickets. Cincinnati, which is known to be more prejudiced than any other city in Ohio, backed its candidate through the organization to success. It is difficult to believe, however, that the Cleveland organization, under Maurice Maschke, who always has been known to be 100 per cent fair, would double cross with Councilman Thos. Fleming and other Cleveland leaders. Most anything is expected of the Columbus organization, as it has failed to stand the test on previous occasions. THE NEGRO A LARGE FACTOR IN LABOR. The Negro is indeed a large factor in labor. He supplies one-seventh of the workers of America. Forty thousand of the 300,000 of the coal miners' union are Negroes. One-third of the workers in America in iron and steel, as well as a large percentage of the workers in the packing industries, are Negroes. Negroes form one-half of the employés in the Chicago stockyards. They are also largely represented in building trades. One-tenth of the railway workers in this country are Negroes. It is significant that the Negro looms large in the basic industries necessary to our civilization; namely, the production of fuel, foodstuffs, ma- terials for machinery and transportation. North and south the Negro is also learning to ally himself to his class and to protect himself through unionizing. Four thousand Negroes belong to the metal workers' union of America. The National Brotherhood of the Workers of the World, a Negro labor union, numbers 10,000 members. Salisbury, N. C., has a railway union of 1,800 members. In Newport News, Va., Negroes are doing every type of work in the building of a battleship. They have two foremen receiving, respectively, $125 and $150 a week. In New York and in Philadelphia, Negroes are largely represented in the transport and stevedered unions. Garment workers of New York have about 3,000 Negro women in their union, some of whom are holding office. These figures show that not only is the Negro making good in the industries of the north, but he is also learning to protect himself from exploitation, both in the north and in the south. He is learning to fuse with his class. This makes certain his firm hold in the industrial field.—Southern Workman. THANKS FROM CHAIRMAN HAYS. Mr. Jos, D. D. Rivers, Editor Colorado, Statesman, Denver, Colo. rado Statesman, Denver, Colo. My Dear Mr. Rivers—I do not know whether they have stopped counting the votes yet or not, or whether the unprecedented majorities are still mounting higher, but I want to send this further word of personal appreciation to those who had so large a share in the achievement. The splendid victory was a victory, in large part, for the loyal, patriotic Republican press of the country. The militant manner in which the Republican press, from the metropolitan dailies to the country weeklies, co-operated editorially and in a news way with the Republican organization for months has been effective beyond description. The victory is worthy of our candidates and our cause. The responsibilities that it brings will be met with a sympathetic and intelligent understanding and discharged with a faithful execution that will keep America in her high and proper place in the world of today and tomorrow and once more bring into action those forces at home which make for the real welfare of the people and the glory of the nation. In all of this you will have a large part and I know you will strive to uphold in every worthy way the hands of that fine American, Warren G. Harding, a member of your craft. Again assuring your of the party's appreciation and my own personal sincerest gratitude for your continued generous consideration of me in all these matters, I am, with best wishes always, Sincerely yours, WILL H. HAYS. RACENEWS Gathered From Various Sources TWO REPRESENTATIVES ELECTED IN PENNSYLVANIA Philadelphia, Pa. — Two colored Americans, J. C. Asbury, insurance company president, and Andrew F. Stevens, bank cashier, were elected to the Legislature of Pennsylvania Tuesday. Both received majorities of more than 5,000. MISSOURI ELECTS FIRST LEGISLATOR St. Louis, Mo.—In the landslide Tuesday, Missouri elected her first colored man to the general assembly. He is Walthall Moore of St. Louis, who ran on the regular Republican ticket, and will represent one of the exclusive districts of St. Louis at Jefferson City. Langston Harris, who ran in another district, was defeated. FOR FREEDOM OF SOLDIERS. Leavenworth, Kan—T. W. Bell, the attorney for the imprisoned Negro soldiers in the federal penitentiary, is working hard on the case and confidently expects to win. While he has not disclosed his latest plans, he declares that he is confident he will be able to procure the freedom of the accused men. The case will be argued here within a short time. COLORED NURSES PUT TO WORK IN GEORGIA HOSPITAL. Macon, Go.—Colored nurses will be provided for the colored section of the local county hospital after the first of November. Trained colored women are making applications, but only the best equipped will be chosen from the large list of applicants to fill the places in the hospital work. VOTERS DISFRANCHISED BY WHOLESALE IN SOUTH New York. — Charging "open and flagrant disenfranchisement of colored voters in a number of states in the presidential election of 1920," directors of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People today telegraphed to Representative Isaac Siegel, chairman of the housing committee on the census, urging enforcement of the fourteenth amendment and consequent abduction of representation in southern states in which colored voters are disenfranchised. "TOUSSAINT L'OUVERTURE" $90,000 PHOTOPLAY New York. — "Toussaint L'Ouverture," the $90,000 production proposed by the Delsarte Film Corporation, will be shown for ten weeks in a large Broadway theater and simultaneously in Paris, France. Afterwards it will be released throughout NO.6 the world. Clarence Muse, the celebrated dramatic star, will play the title role. The releasing company is spending approximately $150,000 in exploitation. This is a racial achievement, as this is the first time our race actors have been featured in a super production. NEGRO WHO KILLED AGED MAN IS KILLED Jury at Sterling Deliberates Less Than Hour in the Case of Henry Conrad. Sterling, Colo., Nov. 16.—Henry Conrad, a Negro charged with manslaughter, was found not guilty in the District Court here Tuesday after the jury had deliberated on the case less than an hour. Conrad struck William Heggs, 77 years old, over the head with a hoe during a quarrel in Merino, Colo., on July 28, 1920. Heggs died two days later and Conrad has been in jail ever since that time, awaiting trial. Evidence produced at the trial, including for the most part that of the state's witnesses, showed that Conrad had taken a rifle from Heggs' son and that, to secure possession of the rifle, the elder Mr. Heggs had struck Conrad in the mouth. The evidence of the defense showed that Conrad simply raised the hoe with which he was working at the time, in a natural gesture of protection. In so doing, the hoe struck the back of Heggs' head. The younger Heggs will go to trial tomorrow on a charge of assault with intent to kill. CHEYENNE, WYO. NEWS Mrs. Otis West is seriously ill. It is hoped he will soon recover. Sergeant J. A. Jones is still seriously ill. Mrs. L. B. Mayo has received credentials from the Second Baptist Church to do local and state mission work, and to others who may be in need of such. Mrs. Mayo is an intelligent Christian lady and will find much work to be done. Local work will occupy a great deal of her time during the next few months. Mrs. Mayo will be of much assistance to the Christian and uplift work in our city. Her prayerful, affectionate and hopeful disposition endears her to all who are fortunate to meet her. The Christian citizens and the fallen creatures in our midst will learn that God has blessed our community by sending into the city a woman who stands for righteousness and moral uplift. For the 1920 Thanksgiving Feast Daddy Gobbler's Premonition WALSERS Divine Lesson in the Garnering of the Golden Grain The summer is over and the harvest is past. The sad skies, the bleak fields, the bare trees, the raw winds that whistle and groan and sob and sigh their dirges mournfully remind us that the season of fruitage has gone by and the time has come when we can only turn away, each to himself, and measure up our garnerings. Nature gives us a seed time and a harvest time. But these would be meaningless to us did she not also send a season when, at the warning touch of winter chill, we must measure our gains and consider our losses. But for the lessons of this season no man would labor; we would know naught of temperance or thrift; we would go through the bright spring only singing, and idle away the summer in dreams. So it is part of the divine plan that each of us should now go apart and carefully separate the wheat from the chaff, the flowers from the weeds, and that which is good and sound and enduring from all that perishes and taints. It is now that each must honestly examine and weigh the product of his own works. It were useless now to try to deceive even ourselves. Now, if at no other time, we see the vast difference in value between the picked fruit and the windfalls. The one heap we proudly store away, knowing it will keep sweet and whole to the winter's depths, and the other we cast aside, that it may not contaminate as it rots. It is a sad, sweet task—sweet for the counted gains, sad for the opportunities lost and to come no more. And as we garner the gains we also garner wisdom. As we separate the wheat from the chaff and the sound fruit from the windfalls, so, whether we will or not, Daddy There once did live a turkey cock, And he was very proud; And walking with his little flock He gobbled very loud. Perhaps it may your feelings shock— He lived beneath a cloud. we must in the inner consciousness separate the true from the false in principles of labor and living. No man, even of three-score—aye, four-score and ten, has ever known this law to fail in a single season. It knows no variation in all the cycles of time. But grains and fruits are not all that we are garnering. Chaff and weeds are not all we ought to separate and cast away. There are things more important still. In the storehouse of the heart and mind and soul, is it not well to seek, just as carefully, though sometimes in vain, to keep only the better, the brighter, the more enduring things? When the bleak November of life comes we shall have need of them. Dreary will be the winter to him whose granaries are empty. But drearier and more desolate still must be the winter of old age to the man or woman whose mind and heart and soul have brought from the harvest only the joys that are chaff and the virtues that are mere windfalls, attained and adhered to only through easy convenience. When that winter comes, as it must to many of us, we shall have only ourselves to turn to, and we shall find only that which we have sown and harvested in the bright spring and golden summer—the good grain, the sound fruit, the flowers, the high impulses, the sacrifices, the loves, yes, and the cheat, the chaff, the weeds, the windfalls, the hates, the jealousies, the low passions—all these and nothing more, to sustain us or to render us desolate. We may, if we will, make each day a cycle of all the seasons. We sow each morning and reap each noon and garner each evening the fruits of our living in this little day. Day by day, if we strive on in right and hope and courage, must our knowledge and our strength, and our store increase. Day by day, through many fallings and fallings, do we come nearer to the true manhood and the true womanhood.—Charles Grant Miller in the Christian Herald. Gobbler's Prem He could not speak of cranberry, Nor mention pumpkin pie Without a painful reverie, While tears stood in his eye. And sage, and summer savory, They always made him sigh. "Think and Thank" Suggested Motto for Nation Today "Think and Thank" was the motto upon the family crest of the great Hebrew philanthropist Sir Moses Montefiore. It would be an appropriate armorial motto for America today. These two little English words, differing in a single vowel, were originally identical. In the Anglo-Saxon tongue, a "thank" was a "think." Thanking comes from thinking, and thankfulness from thoughtfulness and thanks giving from thought-giving. This will be a season of unusual thanksgiving—for we are made to think as we have not been wont to think. It will be a very selfish soul that this season fails to think of the sorrows and the sufferings of others. Look back at that first American Thanksgiving. Strange skies, sparse settlements, sparse larder, savage enemy, but thankful spirit! What makes the memory of the Pilgrim so precious? His thankfulness! As Howell puts it: "It is no improper comparison that a thankful heart is like a box of precious ointment which keeps the smell long after the thing is spent." The Pilgrim and the Puritan have passed on, but they have left us a precious possession—a Thanksgiving day and the Thanksgiving spirit. Thelrs was the indomitable spirit because they "thanked God and took courage." They landed undesignedly on a "rock-bound wintry strand," but they thanked God and took courage. They found no gold, but they did find the golden grain of a first harvest and they thanked God and took courage. They found a rude wilderness, but they thanked God and took courage, and furrows were turned and towns were built and cities grew and factories flourished and culture developed and instead of a wilderness a garden blossomed and the fragrance of their memory still survives and the spirit of their grace still inspires. monition WALTERS And though in June he spread his tail, And looked illike Henry Eight, November always found him pale, Sans Delsarte in his gait, If anyone would see him quall, Just say "decapitate." at Joslin's The Children's Department —So many pretty new things have arrived lately that a visit to the department today will be very interesting—and you'll find prices in the Joslin's Children Shop to be exceptionally moderate—quality considered. Serviceable School Dresses of Navy Blue Serge —Dresses of double wrap storm serge, a number of attractive styles, sizes 6 to 14 years.....$9.95 —Dresses of fine quality French serge, some embroidered in contrasting yarns or silk, sizes 6 to 14 years.....$12.75 —Charming dresses of fine French serge—the flapper styles that girls are so fond of, Serviceable, good-looking dresses. Sizes 12, 14 and 16 years. Splendid values at.....$20.00 An All-White Middy for the School Girl —Made of good quality middy cloth, sizes S to 18 years ..... $1.69 Girls' Kimonos Plain and flowered cre 12 to 14 years Child —Splendid quality an excellent school —A shoe that will —Lace style with h —May be had in t —Sizes 5 to 8, 8½ Jo offers extraordina Practically our entire Cur —$4.00 voile curtains a $4.50 Quakercraft fillet m $6.00 Quakercraft fillet m $8.50 Voile Curtains, la pair $11.00 Voile Curtains, la pair $15.00 Quaker Net Curt $15.00 Duchess Lace C $16.50 Brussels Lace C in and flowered crepe kimonos for girls, 14 years. Children's Splendid quality elkhide uppers and excellent school shoe for the boy. A shoe that will stand scuffing and Lace style with a buckled strap. May be had in tan elk or smoke elk. Sizes 5 to 8, $ \frac{1}{2} $ to 11, $ \frac{1}{2} $ to 2. Joslin's fers extraordinary opportunities to technically our entire stock is offered at Plain and flowered crepe kimonos for girls, sizes 12 to 14 years.....$1.95 Children's High Cut Shoes —Splendid quality elkhide uppers and strong oak soles make these an excellent school shoe for the boy or girl. Joslin's Drapery Sale —offers extraordinary opportunities to economize on curtains and draperies of all kinds. Practically our entire stock is offered at Greatly Lowered Prices. These are some of the items: Curtains —$4.00 voile curtains at, pair.....$2.45 $4.50 Quakercraft fillet net curtains at, pair.....$3.50 $6.00 Quakercraft fillet net curtains at, pair.....$4.75 $8.50 Voile Curtains, lace edge, motif corner pair.....$6.00 $11.00 Voile Curtains, lace edge, motif corner pair.....$8.50 $15.00 Quaker Net Curtains, lace edge, pair.....$9.95 $15.00 Duchess Lace Curtains, pair.....$9.95 $16.50 Brussels Lace Curtains, pair.....$10.25 Suncola Cloth —Suncola cloth in blue, green, gold or brown, 36 inches wide, regularly $1.90, at, yard.....$1.25 —Suncola cloth in rose, blue, green, gold or brown, 45 inches wide, regularly $2.75, at, yard.....$2.15 Swiss —Printed Swiss, regularly 50c, at, yard.....25c —Best grade dotted Swiss, regularly 60c, yard, 37c Filet Nets —Filet Nets, regularly 70c, at, yard.....39c — $4.00 voile curtains at, pair.....$2.45 $4.50 Quakercraft filet net curtains at, pair.....$3.50 $6.00 Quakercraft filet net curtains at, pair.....$4.75 $8.50 Voile Curtains, lace edge, motif corner, pair.....$6.00 $11.00 Voile Curtains, lace edge, motif corner, pair.....$8.50 $15.00 Quaker Net Curtains, lace edge, pair.....$9.95 $15.00 Duchess Lace Curtains, pair.....$9.95 $16.50 Brussels Lace Curtains, pair.....$10.25 Curtain Voiles —Plain curtain volles, r —Fine quality band bo at, yard —Volles with figured c ecru, regularly 85c, yar Sc —Colored scrims, 36 in at, yard —Colored scrims, 36 in at, yard —Plain and fancy scrims 65c, at, yard in curtain voiles, regular 65c, at, yard... the quality band bordered voiles, regular ard... les with figured centers in white, crea regularly 85c, yard. **Scrims** oared scrims, 36 inches wide, regularly ard... oared scrims, 36 inches wide, regularly ard... in and fancy scrims, 36 inches wide, regi at, yard... —Plain curtain volles, regular 65c, at, yard... 48c —Fine quality band bordered volles, regular 75c, at, yard... 50c —Volles with figured centers in white, cream or ecru, regularly 85c, yard... 60c Scrims —Colored scrims, 36 inches wide, regularly 30c, at, yard... 17c —Colored scrims, 36 inches wide, regularly 40c, at, yard... 20c —Plain and fancy scrims, 36 inches wide, regularly 65c at, yard... 48c Scotch Madras —Scotch Madras cloth grounds with rose, blue, ularly 95c ..... —Scotch Madras cloth, $1.25, at, yard..... Madras cloth, 36 inches wide, co ads with rose, blue, green or gold figures 95e Madras cloth, 36 inches wide, regu at, yard. seventh nd artis THE JO J. STARK —Scotch Madras cloth, 36 inches wide, cream grounds with rose, blue, green or gold figures, regularly 95c .....70c —Scotch Madras cloth, 36 inches wide, regularly $1.25 at yard.....85c A. J. S A. J. STARK & CO. ESTABLISHED 1879 Stark JEWELERS TURKEY This is in accord for the past 20 And in order that t they ARE getting th ing during this week sensational values of Men's suits with two $50 and $60, for $3 Young men's suits a $27.50. And 20% off o This is in accordance with our aim for the past 20 years—a Thanksgiving in order that the people may read. ARE getting the turkey free, we are during this week—and are offering national values of the year. It's suits with two pairs of trousers, a jacket, and $60, for $39.75. ing men's suits and overcoats, many 7.50. And 20% off on all Adler College This is in accordance with our annual custom for the past 20 years—a Thanksgiving offering And in order that the people may really appreciate that they ARE getting the turkey free, we cut prices on clothing during this week—and are offering some of the most sensational values of the year. Men's suits with two pairs of trousers, also overcoats worth $50 and $60, for $39.75. Young men's suits and overcoats, many to sell at $40, for $27.50. And 20% off on all Adler Collegian Clothes Michaelson's Sixteenth and Curtis THE Joslin DRY GOODS CO. 709 and 711 Sixteenth Street Curtains Scrims Every School Girl Needs a Good Sweater A serviceable sweater in a range of popular col- s is one of the new belted models, roll collar, to roomy pockets.....$5.95 The Kind of a Sweater a Boy Likes A coat style model with a big roll collar; a splen- d sweater at.....$5.95 Children's Bath Robes Good warm blanket bathrobes for children in a easing assortment of styles and attractive color combinations. These range in price gradually from $5.95 and $5.50. A New Shipment of Children's Furs Just arrived—at Joslin's. Good quality muff and collar sets, ranging in price from $3.95, $16.75. Cut Shoes Soak soles make these ar. $3.95 Sole's— Spery Sale On curtains and draperies of all kinds. Powered Prices. These are some of the items: —A serviceable sweater in a range of popular colors is one of the new belted models, roll collar, two roomy pockets.....$5.95 The Kind of a Sweater a Boy Likes —A coat style model with a big roll collar; a splendid sweater at.....$5.95 Children's Bath Robes —Good warm blanket bathrobes for children in a pleasing assortment of styles and attractive color combinations. These range in price gradually from $5.95 and $7.50. —Just arrived—at Joslin's. —Good quality muff and collar sets, ranging in price from $3.95, $16.75. Suncola cloth in blue, green, gold or brown. 36 ches wide, regularly $1.90, at, yard.....$1.25 Suncola cloth in rose, blue, green, gold or brown. inches wide, regularly $2.75, at, yard.....$2.15 Swiss Printed Swiss, regularly 50c, at, yard.....25c Best grade dotted Swiss, regularly 60c, yard, 37c Filet Nets Filet Nets, regularly 70c, at, yard.....39c Filet nets, regularly $1.25 and $1.35, at, yard, 79c Filet nets, regularly $1.65 and $1.75, at, yd, $1.00 Liberty Nets 90c Liberty net, 36 inches wide, at, yard.....40c $1.25 Liberty net, 50 inches wide, at, yard.....55c Marquisettes Plain marquisettes, regularly 65c, at, yard.....48c Fine quality band bordered marquisettes, regu- ly 75c, at, yard.....55c Marquisette with figured centers, white, cream ecru, regularly 85c, at, yard.....60c 48-inch marquisettes, regularly $1.25, at, yd, 90c Cretonnes An attractive assortment of Cretonnes. The splendid assortment of cretonnes has been feed regularly at 75c, 85c and 95c yard, at.....65c The higher grade cretonnes in many beautiful distinctive patterns—these sold regularly at 25 to $1.75 a yard.....98c DRY GOODS CO. Denver, Colorado —Suncola cloth in blue, green, gold or brown, 36 inches wide, regularly $1.90, at, yard.....$1.25 —Suncola cloth in rose, blue, green, gold or brown, 45 inches wide, regularly $2.75, at, yard.....$2.15 **Swiss** —Printed Swiss, regularly 50c, at, yard.....25c —Best grade dotted Swiss, regularly 60c, yard, 37c **Filet Nets** —Filet Nets, regularly 70c, at, yard.....39c —Filet nets, regularly $1.25 and $1.35, at, yard, 79c —Filet nets, regularly $1.65 and $1.75, at, yd, $1.00 **Liberty Nets** —90c Liberty net, 36 inches wide, at, yard.....40c —$1.25 Liberty net, 50 inches wide, at, yard.....55c **Marquisettes** —Plain marquisettes, regularly 65c, at, yard.....48c —Fine quality band bordered marquisettes, regularly 75c, at, yard.....55c —Marquisette with figured centers, white, cream or ecrum, regularly 85c, at, yard.....60c —Sinch marquisettes, regularly $1.25, at, yd.....90c —An attractive assortment of cretonnes. —The splendid assortment of cretonnes has been priced regularly at 75c, 85c and 95c yard, at... 65c —The higher grade cretonnes in many beautiful and distinctive patterns—these sold regularly at $1.25 to $1.75 a yard... 98c --- ge, a number sizes 8 to 18 or girls, sizes $1.95 $9.95 some em- ark, sizes 6 to $12.75 the flap- Serviceable, and 16 years. $20.00 —A service ors is one two roomy The King —A coat st did sweater —Good wav pleasing us combination —These ra- $7.50. A New —Just arriv —Good qu price from m —Third Floor, Joslin's— is High C appers and strong oak sole the boy or girl. fitting and hard wear. trap. oake elk. to 2. —Third Floor, Joslin's— It's Draper mities to economize on eur- powered at Greatly Lowered Price ...$2.45 pair...$3.50 pair...$4.75 of corner, ...$6.00 of corner, ...$8.50 e, pair...$9.95 ...$9.95 ...$10.25 yard...48c regular 75c, 50c te, cream or 60c regularly 30c, 17c regular 40c, 20c ide, regularly 48c wide, cream figures, reg- ide, regularly 85c —Suncola a inches wide —Suncola a 45 inches w —Printed S —Best gra —Filet Net —Filet net —90c Liber —$1.25 Lib —Plain ma- Fine quar- larly 75c, a —Marquise or ecrn, reg —48-inch n —An attract- The splice priced regu- The high and distin- $1.25 to $1.25 Joslin P K & CO. ESTABLISHED 1879 Stark JEWELERS eys FREE Man's or young Man's or OVERCOAT our annual custom nanksgiving offering Sweater Suncola Cloth Swiss Cretonnes Denver Colorado Eternal Subject. As we watch her charming daughters and listen to their conversation we feel that, if there's anything at all in the theory of heredity, Eve must have had a hat of some kind,—Ohio State Journal. Greece and Rome in Early Days. Greece and Rome in Early Days. In the early days of Greece and Rome all the doors of dwellings opened outward. A person passing out of the house knocked on the door before opening it. Bad Economy. To save money by going without necessities is bad economy, but to waste anything lessens your wealth, the wealth of your country, and the wealth of the world. One of Nature's Acrobats. The weasel has been called the acrobat of nature, and performs every kind of acrobatic feat. The blood-thirsty little villain is no coward. It will attack human beings. The weasel can climb as easily as run and is at home on any surface. Not as Bad as They Seem. One of the comforting things that time teaches us is, that mighty few things are as bad as they look to be, or are said to be. Leaning Tower of Westminster. A curious thing is happening to the massive tower of Westminster cathedral, a landmark for miles, which is leaning. It is three feet out of the perpendicular, but does not look an eighth of an inch out from any viewpoint.—London Times. So It Seems. Women jump at conclusions and fre- quently hit; men reason things out usually and usually miss. LEWIS & SON ```markdown ``` Sixteenth and Stout Streets. Of Interest to the Woman Who Does. Fancywork 15c a Ball —This offer is timely, indeed, coming as it does long enough before Christmas to allow time for the making of lovely hand-made gifts. —There is white in all numbers and colors in Nos. 10, 30, 50 and 70. —To complete the color assortment we have added Clark's O. N. T. Crochet Cotton, all numbers in ecru only, at the same price, 15c a ball. Of Interest to the Woman Who Does. Fancywork 15c a Ball —This offer is timely, indeed, coming as it does long enough before Christmas to allow time for the making of lovely hand-made gifts. —There is white in all numbers and colors in Nos. 10, 30, 50 and 70. —To complete the color assortment we have added Clark's O. N. T. Crochet Cotton, all numbers in ecru only, at the same price, 15c a ball. Booth—Main Floor Heavy Union Suits for Girls and Boys Heavy Union Suits for Girls and Boys Priced Very Low for Saturday Girls' union suits of heavy fleeced cotton, fine weave, nicely finished and made with flat seams. The styles are high neck, long sleeves and Dutch, elbow sleeves, all are ankle length. Sizes that fit perfectly for girls from 2 to 16 years of age. —Girls' union suits of heavy fleeced cotton, fine weave, nicely finished and made with flat seams. The styles are high neck, long sleeves and Dutch, elbow sleeves, all are ankle length. Sizes that fit perfectly for girls from 2 to 16 years of age. —Size 2 suit.....1.25 10c additional charge for each larger size. —Boys' union suits of heavy weight gray fleeced cotton, fine ribbed and made with flat seams. Sizes to fit boys perfectly from 6 to 16 years of age. —Size 6 suit.....1.50 10e additional for each larger size. —Boys' union suits of heavy weight gray fleeced cotton, fine ribbed and made with flat seams. Sizes to fit boys perfectly from 6 to 16 years of age. —Size 6 suit.....1.50 10e additional for each larger size. Booth and Underwear Dept.—Main Floor Women's Wool Sport Hose Half Price Saturday A special purchase enables us to make this splendid offer. They are wide ribbed and colors are brown, oxford and green heathers. Sizes from 9 to 10.....1.25 Women's Wool Sport Hose Half Price Saturday —A special purchase enables us to make this splendid offer. They are wide ribbed and colors are brown, oxford and green heathers. Sizes from 9 to 10.....1.25 Booth and Hosiery Shop—Main Floor Odd Lot of Women's Sweaters Priced From 5.95 to 11.95 Various styles and colors of serviceable and attractive sweaters all reduced for quick clearance. Odd Lot of Women's Sweaters Priced From 5.95 to 11.95 Various styles and colors of serviceable and attractive sweaters all reduced for quick clearance. A Special Selling of the Very Popular Skirt Length Bloomer, $5.69 —When wearing one of these bloomers you do not sacrifice style for comfort. The narrow skirts fit smoothly over it and yet you have protection from the cold. —The garments we are offering in this sale are of heavy jersey in beautiful shades of emerald, purple, taupe, gray, Belgian and many others. They are trimly shirred at the ankle and have reinforced seats. They come in all skirt lengths. —When wearing one of these bloomers you do not sacrifice style for comfort. The narrow skirts fit smoothly over it and yet you have protection from the cold. —The garments we are offering in this sale are of heavy jersey in beautiful shades of emerald, purple, taupe, gray, Belgian and many others. They are trimly shirred at the ankle and have reinforced seats. They come in all skirt lengths. Petticoat Lane-Third Floor --- Store Hours, 9 a. m. to 5:30 p. m. Envelope Chemise Specially Priced at $1.98 —Made of dainty corded seco silk and fine nainsook. They are very desirable garments and will make pretty Christmas gifts. —Made of dainty corded seco silk and fine nainsook. They are very desirable garments and will make pretty Christmas gifts. Lingerie Shop—Second Floor Echo Maid Regulation Dresses for the School Girl —In a class by itself is the Echo Maid Dress. It has all the advantages of the regulation dress and yet is individual and smart. —They are of fine quality storm and French serge in navy and brown. They are middy and Norfolk styles trimmed with black, white or beautiful gold braid. —Sizes 6 to 14 years.....25.00 to 29.75 Echo Maid Regulation Dresses for the School Girl —In a class by itself is the Echo Maid Dress. It has all the advantages of the regulation dress and yet is individual and smart. —They are of fine quality storm and French serge in navy and brown. They are middy and Norfolk styles trimmed with black, white or beautiful gold braid. —Sizes 6 to 14 years.....25.00 to 29.75 Shop of Youth—Second Floor Annual Sale of Hair Bow Ribbon —The delight of the young girl's heart is heaps of lovely hair bows. —In the assortment we are offering are beautiful colored moire and taffeta ribbons very specially priced for this sale. —A wonderful collection of hair bows, tied and ready to wear. In full two-yard lengths, yard .....78c —Moire and taffeta ribbon in 5-inch width. We have all colors in this extra good quality ribbon, yard.....39c Annual Sale of Hair Bow Ribbon —The delight of the young girl's heart is heaps of lovely hair bows. —In the assortment we are offering are beautiful colored moire and taffeta ribbons very specially priced for this sale. —A wonderful collection of hair bows, tied and ready to wear. In full two-yard lengths, yard .....78c —Moire and taffeta ribbon in 5-inch width. We have all colors in this extra good quality ribbon, yard.....39c Ribbon Shop—Main Floor This Is an Opportunite Time to Buy Handkerchiefs —Our stock of handkerchiefs is complete and the prices are indeed attractive. Why not buy now and avoid the rush and worry of last-minute purchases? —A splendid assortment of women's hand-embroidered Madeira handkerchiefs with pretty scalloped borders. 89c —Women's sheer linen handkerchiefs, hemstitched and with daintily embroidered corners 65c —Men's full size handkerchiefs of pure linen to be had initialed or plain hemstitched, 59c —Men's cambric handkerchiefs with initials, 35c; 3 for. 1.00 Boys' cambric handkerchiefs with plain or fancy colored borders. 15, 25c —Boys' pure linen handkerchiefs. 39c This Is an Opportune Time to Buy Handkerchiefs —Our stock of handkerchiefs is complete and the prices are indeed attractive. Why not buy now and avoid the rush and worry of last-minute purchases? —A splendid assortment of women's hand-embroidered Madeira handkerchiefs with pretty scalloped borders.....89c —Women's sheer linen handkerchiefs, hem-stitched and with daintily embroidered corners .....65c —Men's full size handkerchiefs of pure linen to be had initialed or plain hemstitched, 59c —Men's cambric handkerchiefs with initials, 35c; 3 for.....1.00 Boys' cambric handkerchiefs with plain or fancy colored borders.....15, 25c —Boys' pure linen handkerchiefs.....39c Handkerchief Shop—Main Floor Booth Sale of Beautiful Rhinestone Bar Pins, $1.00 —Finely cut and brilliant stones set in platinoid combine to make these bar pins the loveliest you have ever seen at this extremely low price. Finely cut and brilliant stones set in platinoid combine to make these bar pins the loveliest you have ever seen at this extremely low price. Booth—Main Floor How Long Distance Service Is Constantly Guarded As carefully as the sentinel guards the camp of his comrades in time of war, we guard your telephone talks over the long-distance telephone lines. Your telephone is sheltered in home or office, but the wires connecting it with telephones in other cities and towns cross bleak mountain ranges and storm-swept prairies, subject constantly to the ravages of the elements. Day and night the wire chiefs watch the circuits, testing them, keeping them clear and preparing in cases of emergency to rush repairmen to the scene of trouble. Every morning at 6 o'clock, before the day's business begins, tests are made with delicate apparatus, and with it the place can be determined within at least 100 feet where a loose wire, a broken cross-arm or even a broken tree branch hanging in the wires, may be causing trouble. Every month repairmen go over all the circuits. Cross-arms damaged by lightning are repaired, poles or wires loosened by the wind are strengthened, broken insulators are replaced and all other needed repairs are made. Even overhanging trees are trimmed up properly. To insure the public against sudden breaking of poles, carrying down with them perhaps a score of wires, at regular intervals pole-to-pole inspections are made. Every pole is tested, decayed wood scraped away and a record of the condition of each pole placed on file so that replacements may be made as needed. Carefully, constantly and unceasingly the long-distance lines are guarded to provide immediate service. The Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Company The Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Company Gulf Stream. The gulf stream is more rapid than the Amazon, more impetuous than the Mississippi, and its volume more than 1,000 times greater. The waters are blue, and the line of junction can be easily marked by the eye. Venerate Sandal Wood. No wood is so largely used by Hindus in India as sandal wool. Whether living or dead, it has been connected with their religious ceremonies for over fourteen centuries. Many Species of Bats. There are about 130 species of bats, and these are distributed over nearly every quarter of the globe. The larger bats are found in the warmer regions. Pigmy Pigs. The smallest known species of hog are the pigny swine of Austria. They are exactly like other hogs in every particular except size, being no longer than a good-sized house rat. Consistency. Thou Art! A man laughs at woman's vanity, then straightens his tie, brushes back his pompadour, carefully adjusts his hat and walks into a soft-drink parlor—Exchange. What Makes a Book. If a book come from the heart, it will conrive to reach other hearts; all art and authorcraft are of small amount to that.—Carlyle. Helps the Circulation. One of the largest New York hotels supplies each of its guests, who average 2,000 a day, with a free copy of a morning newspaper. Parents' Caprice. It is no wonder that during infancy and early childhood life's lessons are so difficult for the small beginner when the laws which govern them must seem to him just or unjust, consistent or inconsistent, according to the knowledge or the caprice of the adult administering them. Policewomen Walk Like Men. London policewomen work in couples and have adopted the regular policeman's stride—long, slow-measured. As their work is moral suasion, they carry no weapon, but as a means of self defense they have learned jiu-tsu tricks. Warning Conveyed by Dream. Warning Conveyed by Dream. To dream you are held up by a footpad signifies that unless you use extreme caution your enemies will overthrow you. To dream you are one warns you to proceed cautiously in your business. Retaliation. "Agnes is fifty if she's a day, but she gives her age as only thirty." "Well, you can't blame her in a way. time has told on her and she's getting even by wiping off an old score."—Boston Transcript. Lost-Continent Theory Dr. William Alanson Bryan, professor of zoology and geology in the college of Hawaii, claims to have discovered traces of a 6,000-mile prehistoric bridge of land between South America and Hawaii. THANKSGIVING TURKEYS Wholesale and Retail Staple and Fancy Groceries Fresh and Cured Eastern Corn-Fed Meats. Fruits and Vegetables ARCHIE MARKET A. HASER, Proprietor 1950 LARIMER STREET DENVER Phone Main 6754 Our Hobby Is Good Printing Ask to see samples of our business cards, visiting cards, wedding and other invitations, pamphlets, folders, letter heads, statements, shipping tags, envelopes, etc., constantly carried in stock for your accommodation. Get our figures on that printing you have been thinking of. New Type, Latest Style Faces A Hot Time. Another time when a man's hot temper sometimes costs him money is when he gets so mad at his landlord he forgets how much the moving man will have to be paid.—Kansas City Star. 20 When poets indulge in flights of fancy they have the courage of their opinions - Cartons Magazine. Power of Love. Love is what makes a person at the amateur theatricals think the leading lady is every bit as good as a professional.—Ohio State Journal. Speed of a Projectile. A projectile, weighing 1,400 pounds, which is fired in 14-inch guns, leaves the gun at a speed of almost half a mile a second. At three miles the speed has but slightly slackened. Greece and Rome in Early Days. In the early days of Greece and Rome all the doors of dwellings opened outward. A person passing out of the house knocked on the door before opening it. Mozart Composer at Five. Mozart began composing at an earlier age than anybody else on record. At four he was exhibited as an infant prodigy and at five he composed concertos. When he was eleven he wrote an opera handle. Sugar From Palm Sap. In the East Indies a sugar known as jaggery is made from the sap of the coconut palm. The sap is obtained by cutting the flower spathe and the juice yields about 15 per cent of sugar. It is consumed locally and is very pure. Chemically, much of it is identical with cane and beet sugar. THE COLORADO STATESMAN CAN BE USED BE FREE BACK COUNTRY PART SUBSCRIPTION RATES. One year $2.50 Six months 1.50 Three months 1.00 MUST BE PAID IN ADVANCE. Remittances should be made by express money order, postoffice money order, registered letter or bank draft. Postage stamps will be received the same as cash for the fractional part of a dollar. Only 1c and 2c stamps taken. No discounts allowed on less than three months' contract. Cash must accompany all orders from parties unknown to us. Further particulars on application. Reading notices, ten lines or less, 15 cents per line. Each additional line over ten lines, 12 cents per line. Display advertising, $1.00 per inch for first insertion and 75 cents per inch for each additional insertion. Communications to receive attention must be newsy, upon important subjects, plainly written only upon one side of the paper, must reach us Tuesdays, if possible, anyway not later than Wednesday, and bear the signature of the author. No manuscript returned, unless stamps are sent for postage. All communications of a personating nature that are not complimentary will be withheld from the columns of this paper. THANKSGIVING. WHOEVER cannot be thankful cannot even begin to appreciate life. The privilege of living and knowing that there is a mighty universe, full of mysterious life, and that for some also mysterious but purposeful reason we form an infinitesimal but eternal part of it, is a great blessing We should be thankful for life. But the smallest favor, the most meager pleasure that we enjoy, is also a blessing, and for each and all of such blessings we should be thankful also. Life is made up of a multitude of blessings, many of which we are not disposed to recognize as such, because of our ignorance and short-sightedness. There are some ills and some misfortunes in life, for which we ourselves are not wholly to blame, but they are very few compared with our blessings. What we often call ills and misfortunes are usually blessings in disguise. The man who has not seen what he considered some great calamity turn into a great final blessing is either yet very young or very obstinate and dumb. The so-called calamity may have changed his whole course of life, compelling him to give up things on which his heart was set, yet in after years, through greater and unexpected successes, or, perhaps, through a prolonged and more useful life, made possible only by that so-called calamity, he realizes the vastness and recognizes the mystery of the blessing that was so strangly bestowed upon him. Many there are, no doubt, who take no account of such unseen guidance, preferring to credit their own personal shrewdness or to satisfy their conscience or gratify their vanity with assumptions of their great luck, for which they are not indebted. But why not remember the Source of all blessings and be thankful. For the thoughtless, as well as the mindful, Thanksgiving Day comes and brings its opportunity for a united rendering of recognition and praise unto the Author of all of the world's joys. Opportunity is one of the greatest words in the language of men. It is the beginning of the way to the expression of the highest thought and the deepest longings which the human heart and brain can possess. The opportunity to be thankful and to express that thankfulness is the greatest blessing of all. Let us not miss it. Of course, a special day for thankfulness is not altogether necessary, but the union of thought and action is in itself helpful, and the Thanksgiving festival is graciously remindful. If you have been afflicted, you have also had sympathy or pity or the promise, the hope or the realization of healing joys. If you have been disappointed or thwarted in virtuous plans or ambitions, you have also been strengthened and made wiser and more fit for higher and greater effort. If you have seen your plans prosper and rosette skies now spread over you in cheerful promise of the future, let humility and modesty, rather than pompous vanity, attend your actions and strengthen your security. If you have prospered and gained and are enjoying the fruits of ripe and well-rounded effort, remember the sunshine that lighted your way, the rain that nourished your seed, the wisdom that directed your course, the health and strength that supported and sustained you, and, above all, the ordering of the ways and of nature over which you had no control. And then, whether you are great or small, thriving or striving, well or afflicted, give thanks to God that He has guided your way and knows the value of your righteous reward. RETURNING TO EARTH. FOR the past few years the people have been living in the air with the blue sky as the limit. Extravagance, waste and reckless spending were rampant on every hand. Thrift and economy were thrown to the winds, and "Nero fiddled while Rome burned." Prodigiality was the sign written over the doorway of all government departments, and the trusted stewards of the nation, not being able to burn up the people's money fast enough, literally dumped millions in fevered, uninhabitable swamps and padded payrolls in attempting to carry out useless and unnecessary government projects. With such a wild and wantonless spirit for economy displayed at the very seat of government it was but natural that the evil would spread like an epidemic until every individual in every locality would become infected. The war-stricken countries of Europe were being drained of all their gold and the United States became, in consequence, the world's banker. Gold flowed to our shores in a continuous, never-ending stream. Riotous living and spending became the fad of the times, not only with the rich, but the laboring classes as well. Unheard of prices were demanded and freely paid for everything. Silks, furs and rare jewels were worn by everybody, from washerwoman and bootblack clear on up to the capitalist. Bellboys and elevator pilots were known to go to work in their automobiles. Hodcarriers worked in silk shirts and silk hose. Money was so plentiful that it really seemed to grow on trees and everybody had an orchard. Naturally, under such conditions, prices went up along with wages and everything else in proportion. It has been two years since the Great Armistice, and Europe has worked overtime to repair her factories, plow her fields and start again the wheels of industry and production whereby she could feed and clothe her own people rather than buying in foreign markets. Two years ago, or more, this country was the world provider. But we see things are fast changing. Europe has stopped buying and has gone to work producing. It was only the other day that Mr. Spreckles gave out the statement that sugar was bound to come down because we had millions of tons of sugar stored in this country, because Europe was not buying, and the sugar must be sold. What is true of sugar is true of many other things. We are slowly returning to "normalcy" and the signs of the times point to the passing of the joy-riding fad, the diamond craze and a speedy return to common sense living. Prices are beginning to take a tumble, and if the people will only buy gradually and economically we will see things back to earth again by next spring. War prices will soon be a thing of the past and with the reduction in the high cost of living we will be satisfied once more. The election doubtless will have an important bearing on the regulation of prices from now on. Already we see signs of the profiteers seeking cover and once the drop is started it will be hard to stop. The strain has been too much for the American people and the result of the election was proof positive that they were eager to return to the simple life they lived before the war. The day of reckoning is at hand—the accounting must be made and the result made known. The war has naturally brought about many changes which must be met by the incoming administration. It will be a long, tedious period of reconstruction and adjustment. This great work cannot be accomplished in a day—nay, not in a year. We will be fortunate if at the end of four years the government will be working on a fully reconstructed basis. We are done with extravagance and wastefulness and we welcome once more Thrift and Economy, which are the safeguards of all nations. Devoted Ones Should Be Left Where They Lie Peacefully in France. By JOHN GRIER HIBBEN, President Princeton University. I went over to the graves of our Princeton boys who fell in the war. I need not recall what the years 1916, 1917, 1918 meant to Princeton. There were many Princetonians who did not come back and our quest had to take a devious course; now to crowded cemeteries where they slept in numbers and now to little, obscure corners where two or three of them lay side by side. Mulc. Paul a. Thurzenen Our search, rewarded here and there by the melancholy satisfaction we felt in standing by the grave of one of Princeton's own, led us to Namur, Liege, Rheims, to Verdun and the Argonne, till at last we stood at the foot of the hill of Romagne and our eyes could take in the gentle incline where in a garden of green shrubbery and beds of flowers sleep 24,000 of our American dead. The national banner floats its majestic folds overhead and the peace and beauty of the cemetery, which is now American ground, are unequaled. My conviction is that these devoted ones should be left where they lie. I feel amazement when I read that attempts are still being made to bring them back. Let me say to the mourner that could he see, as I did, this beautiful "God's Acre," with its plants and flowers tended so lovingly, he would say with me that there is every reason for leaving the boys where they are and no good reason for bringing them home. I feel strongly that our Princetonians would ask to be left by the side of their comrades where they fought. Romagne graveyard is as much a monument to our country as it is to the soldiers; it is a tie between France and America. The French, in spite of volatility, are a deep feeling, loyal minded people. Wherever we went in our quest we found the same evidences of their love and gratitude. It is not in France that the name of America will ever be mentioned without affection. Public Service Is the Great Word With American Universities. By PRESIDENT M. L. BURTON, University of Michigan. The supreme duty of the universities is to get into close touch with American life at all points and give it direction, unification, and interpretation. Service, public service, is the great word with American universities. The work and teaching of the university should be unified with our primary aim in view. Some effort must be made to correlate the courses. In some way the student will be given such guidance that he will see the relation of his courses to one another, to knowledge as a whole, and to life in its most practical relationships. Quietly, but inevitably he will begin to have convictions. Laziness, mediocrity and smattering will give way to work, quality and thorough mastery of a few vital things. The curricula must be definitely directed toward community needs. In fact, this tendency is in full tide. The college of literature, science and arts is recognizing that it must serve the state through the professional training of the high school teacher. The college of engineering has seen that more emphasis must be placed upon problems of management, upon the economic side of production, and upon all those phases of engineering which make for community improvement. The school of law recognizes its obligations in adjusting the law to the changing social order. Our schools of medicine have long since shifted the emphasis to preventive medicine. The university must utilize definitely its equipment and personnel for research work in solving the problems of the state. It should be the research center of the state. The actual organization of an industrial research laboratory in co-operation with the Michigan Manufacturers' association is an illustration. Just so in every realm, the university should serve the people. With every problem of government, economics, sociology, art and education, the university should concern itself. It should become the thinking, investigating, philosophizing center of the commonwealth. Finally the university must permeate the state with knowledge. The people are literally hungry for knowledge. Great Work Done by Clubs Among Boys and Girls on Southern Farms. By FRED S. WHITLAW, North Carolina Farmer. One of the greatest movements now in progress in the South, and one which deserves the utmost encouragement from state and federal governments, is the organization of clubs among the boys and girls of the farms. The boys and girls take the keenest interest in their crops, and the competition at the various county and state fairs is so close as to make the most expert judging necessary. Asheville and western North Carolina are encouraging the formation of these clubs, and each year special prizes are awarded for the best acre of corn, the best pig and for other products. The boys start early in the year and they give their elders a close race when it comes to yield per acre. We have a county farm demonstrator, of course, and his advice is just as freely bestowed on the younger farmers as on their parents. These boys employ every aid to nature in the shape of deep plowing, proper fertilizer, selected seeds and constant labor, which combine to give them bumper crops each year. The girls contest in pig raising and in the production of butter, preserves, canned fruits and vegetables and in vegetable growing. One is surprised to see what those western North Carolina girls can produce in the way of canned food from an acre or even a half acre of ground. And at raising pigs they give the boys the closest kind of a race. As these youngsters of today are the citizens of tomorrow, this development of ability is one of the greatest assets any state can have, and should be highly encouraged. I think every state in the South, and in fact, in every other part of the United States, should encourage the farm children in work of this kind, for it means a practical insurance against a food shortage in the future. Judge John M. Kennedy, municipal court, Kansas City, Mo.—If women may vote, why shouldn't they chew tobacco? --- WANTED to place in each of the fifteen thousand homes of our people in Denver, a copy of Scott's Official History of the American Negro and the World War SCOTT'S OFFICIAL HISTORY of the AMERICAN NEGRO IN THE WORLD WAR EMMETT J. SCOTT SPECIAL ASSISTANT TO SECRETARY OF WAR A complete and authentic narration of the participation of American soldiers of the Negro race in the great fight for democracy. Illustrated with official and personal photographs of over two hundred in number, this work offers delightful reading of its 600 pages for the youth, the middle-aged and the old, and each home will add dignity and loyalty to our race and country by being provided with a copy of this commendable work. A very desirable gift in and out of season. This book is being offered at the very reasonable price of $3.00 at the office of THE COLORADO STATESMAN $3.00 at the office of Room 25,1824 Curtis St P. O. Box 116 Room 25,1824 Curtis St Arrangements can also be made over phone.Call Main 7417 PRESS COMMENT: No library is complete without Scott's History of "The American Negro in the World War," and no better legacy could be left to posterity than this great work of Negro heroism and patriotism. Japanese Holiday Goods Just Arrived From Japan THE FINEST LINE OF CHRISTMAS GOODS Some of Our Collections: Pure Japanese Silk, Kimonos, and Fancy Wearing Apparels, embroidered and drawn work, beautiful Japanese artificial flowers, embroidered screens (all sizes), China and porcelain wares, Japanese toys of all kinds, many elaborately hand worked arts and curios, Japan tea, cake and candies. We cordially invite you to visit our store and inspect the whole line of our unique display at our museum of treasures of Japan. S.Ban Company Phone Main 3570 Importers and Exporters of Japanese Goods 2009-11 Larimer St. Why not let Gardner make that last season's suit of yours look new? I would prefer making you a new suit at a reasonable price. All kinds of alterations and repairing neatly done by experienced workmen. My cleaning and pressing department turns out as good work as can be obtained in the city. A. V. GARDNER Phone Champa 1019. 1025 TWENTY-FIRST ST. OO * rs [THEO ORAD Use ; f ILLULURE EC ’ , Game Ssh woth —— Fe deca Std Po eae Deh Sea Ey Dp SPER ce Se ee Mrs. R, M, Blakey of 2858 Ogden) BOY SCOUTS ELECT OFFICE street, who has been quite ill, Is im-| ee proving, | The Booker T, Washington Dist ett of Boy Scouts of America, which Mrs. J. B. Moore returned home! Composed of all the Negro troops ‘Monday from Colon City, Colo,,, Me city, held Its annual election N where she has been several days on | 10th. Luulness, Mr, L. H. Lightner was elec chairman, Mr, A, V. Gardner, f ae vice president; Mr. O. L, Laws Mrs, Florence J. Moore of 2151 Hum-] second vice president; Mr, L. Wall boldt left last ‘Thursday evening for] iyird vice president; Mr, W. H. C! Kansas City, Mo. Oklahoma and Tex-|,er stell, fourth vice president. as, where she will spend the winter} Wiliam ‘Thomas, pastor of the A. and spring seasons. bs, Chureh; Mr, Harry Townsend, ¢ —— wide boy work secretary among ‘The public has been eagerly wait-) Colored boys of Denver and Mr. ing for the Knight Templar’s grand|H. Lightner, supreme clerk of entertainment, which will be held at|American Woodman, were elected the City Auditorium next Friday tee local counell, night, Nov, 26th, Don't fail 2B there, | ‘The district ‘has planned fa 7 ee a ee ew Eat your Thanksgiving dinner at Pope's Cafe, 2721 Welton street. ‘The generous proprietor will leave nothing undone to give the public the best the market affords, “Fatty” ee the enterprising and hustling coal and wood dealer, has purchased a truck, in which quick de- liveries can be made to any part of the city. Robert Russ left today for Rhode Island, where he will spend several weeks visiting relatives and friends. He will also visit in Chicago, New York and other eastern points before returning home. ‘The Fairbanks Hotel and Cafe, 2716 Welton, has a great treat for the pub- le on Thanksgiving day, when a sumptuous dinner will be served, ‘This popular place will be a mecca for those looking for good things to eat. S. H. Hobson left this week for his old home in Columbus, Kan., where he will spend Thanksgiving with his father and other relatives, He will also visit in Kansas City and Joplin, Mo., before returning home, Miss Frances L. Russ and Mr, Oliver W. Jackman of Los Angeles, Cal., were quietly married Wednesday after- noon at 4 o'clock at the residence of the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs, Rob- ert Russ, Rey. I. S. Wilson of Camp- bell A. M. E. chureh officiating. The Colorado Statesman joins with their many friends in wishing them a happy yoy'age on the sea of matrimony. Our famous musician, Rosamond Johnson, and his quintette of artists drew very large audiences for the Or- pheum during the week which ended last Monday. While other acts re- ceived much applause, yet the thirty minutes given to Mr, Johnson and his singers and players proved beyond a doubt that the management as well as the public were satisfied that they merited everything they received in the shape of appreciation from a Denver critical theater-going audience. Spe- cial mention must be made of the vio- linist, quite a youth who bids fair to become a great artist, also the trap- drummer who exhibited the most skill- ful performances with his instrument. Mr, Johnson was the partner of the great Bob Cole, now deceased, and is the head of the music center in New York, While here they were guests of the Fairbanks Hotel, Five Points dis- triet. Allof the Christian Science Churches in Denver are uniting in having free lectures delivered by @ member of the board of lectureship of the Mother Church in Boston, Mass., next Mon- day and Tuesday, November 22nd and 28rd at 8 p. m. in the Municipal Audi- torium. ‘The lecturer chosen for the oceasion, Prof. Hermann S. Hering, C. -§, B., of Concord, N. H., was former ly professor of electrical engineering in Johns Hopkins University, which - work he left to devote his time and energies to Christian Science work. Before becoming a lecturer, Prof. Her- ‘ing wags a committee on publication, first reader in The Mother Chureh in , Boston, and also president of The Mother Church. _ <The only Thanksgiving night dance. Where? At Fern Hall, of course. | Yes, that great, bid, wonderful dance. Come out and joint the mighty throng of joyous dancers. Morrison's augmented Second Jazz Orchestra. Plenty of good things to eat. ‘WM. KNIGHT, Mgr. ea WANTED—Rellable men and wom- en to take good positions. Industrial } Employment Agency, | 2602 Welton \ street. Phone 2807 Champa. BOY SCOUTS ELECT OFFICERS. | ‘The Booker ‘T, Washington District of Boy Scouts of America, which Is composed of all the Negro troops In the city, held its annual election Nov. 10th. Mr, L. H. Lightner was elected chairman, Mr, A, V. Gardner, first vice president; Mr, 0, L, Lawson, second vice president; Mr, L. Walton, third vice president; Mr, W, H. Ches- ter Stell, fourth vice president. Rev. William Thomas, pastor of the A. M. 1. Church; Mr, Harry Townsend, city wide boy work secretary among the colored boys of Denver and Mr. 1b. Hi. Lightner, supreme clerk of the American Woodman, were elected to the local council. Te district has planned a Boy Scouts rally at Shorter Chapel A. M. BP. Church the evening of Noy, 21st. And a district field meet Nov. 27th. We would like to have everybody in- terested in the Scout movement and desire your presence at both the pro- grams. W. H, CHESTER STELL, Publicity. | FERN HALL. Monday Night, Nov. 22. Ladies, | am spending a lot of money and valuable time trying to make good my disappointment of last Monday night, Nov. 15, Prepare your- selves for many surprises and a good time. BILLY KNIGHT, Mgr. Get your tickets for Hirman Com- manderys entertainment. Tickets now on sale at A. V. Gardner's Tailor Shop, 1025 Twenty-first street, and at the Douglass Undertaking Co., 2745 Wel- ton street. WOMAN'S DAY NURSERY ASSO- | CIATION PRESENTS BRILLIANT MUSICAL ARTISTS AT PEO- PLE’S TABERNACLE. Denver musical lovers had the pleasure of listening last ‘Thursday evening to Maud Cuney Hare, pianist, and William H. Richardson, baritone, in recital and musie talk at the Peo- ple's Tabernacle, ‘Twentieth and Lawrence streets, and the fairly 1 rge audience was well repaid in having stich an opportunity afforded them. Madame Hare is classified among the leading planists of the comtry and her rendition on this occasion made us feel she maintains the reputation, Mr. Richardson has a pleasing volee, which is very commendable. We are glad that our eastern artists are be: ginning to discover that the west also loves music and the other arts, and ‘hope that these events will lend an incentive for others to visit us. The Woman's Day Nursery Association Is doing a splendid work in this city and it would render BETTER AND GREATER SERVICE if we would be interested enough to visit or con- tribute to the best of our ability to the comfort and enjoyment of the little ones who are to Like our places. ‘The People’s Tabernacle was given free of cost by the church authorities, 4s the cause was a worthy one. Y. M. C. A. NOTES, ‘The boys are having the time of their little lives. The bad weather of the past few days has driven them on the inside, but they are so full of enthusiasm that they do not care any: thing about that. ‘They had a good meeting last, Sunday afternoon. Mr Parks was the speaker, Eighteen were present, Dr. Holmes will speak to them next Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock, On the evening of the twenty: fourth, a Thanksgiving social will be given for them, The Rev, Dr, Cox, pastor of the Christ M. E, Chureh, spoke at the men’s meeting last Sunday afternoon. His talk was exceedingly practical and helpful. The meeting tomorrow (Sunday) afternoon will be full of in- terest, It will be in honor of Thanks- giving, ‘The general subject will be: “What ‘This ‘Thanksgiving Means to the Negro,” and will be in the nature of a symposium. ‘fhe subject will be discussed from the standpoint of poli- ties, social Justice, economics and in general. Good and able speakers will represent each phase of It. ‘The meet- ing will be held at the Scott M. B. Chureh, and will begin promptly at 4 o'clock. Everybody will be cordially welcomed. MISS NETTIE PENIX HERNDON, Teacher of Piano. Results Guaranteed. Studio, 2542 Gaylord. Tel. York 4708J. - Who’s Who and What’s What mn . IT Knight Templars oy gse)| Grand Ball Zt S eal OF HIRAM COMMANDERY, NO. 20, KNIGHTS TEMPLAR, A. F. & A. M. Will Give a Great COMPETITIVE DRILL & DANCE SEE THE WELL-TRAINED TEMPLARS CORPS AND FANCY DRILL TEAM Friday, November 26, 1920 AT CITY AUDITORIUM Prizes for Best Drilled Team and Also Waltz Dancers This promises to be the GRANDEST entertainment of the season MORRISON’S AUGMENTED ORCHESTRA WITH THEIR FAMOUS JAZZ ADMISSION $1.00, INCLUDING WAR TAX COMMITTEE—Frank S. Reed, Chairman; Andrew F. Riley, L. M. Stamps, John H. Gardner, John M. Anderson. CAMPBELL A. M. E. CHURCH, Cor, Twenty-third and Lawrence St. Rey, I. 8. Wilson, pastor; residence, 1218 Twenty-third street, Phone Matn At 10:00 a, m,, Sunday Sehool. At 11:00 a, m., preaching by the pastor. At 6:30 p, m., Christian Endeavor. At 7:30 p. m. preaching by the pastor, Mid-week Meetings. . Monday, 8:00 p. m,, church confer- ence. Wednesday, 8:00 p. m., prayer and class. ‘ ‘Thursday, Thanksgiving day, union of churches at Campbell; preaching by Rev, Strippling, 11:00 a, m. Last Sunday evening the Golden West Quartet made its first. public appearance, in which it satisfied the congregation with three Jubilee num- bers. ‘The election of officers will be held Monday evening. ‘The reorganization of the choir will take place in a week or two. Many of the members have left the city. Anyone wishing to become a member will send In their name, ‘The choir meets every Friday night. CHURCH OF THE REDEEMER, EPISCOPAL. ‘Twenty-second Ave, and Humboldt St. “Stir up” Sunday, Nov. 21st. Morn- ing prayer, 11 o'clock a. m, Sermon subject, “Nothing Lost.” ‘The last Sunday of the Christian year. Good music, Cordial welcome. THE CAMMEL UNDERTAKING CO. Funeral Notice. _ Bettes—Freeman, Mr., departed this ee Noy. 11 at his late residence, 705 B street, Salida, Colo, at the age of 65. His remains were shipped to Pueblo for interment in Roselawn, Nov. 15. FUNERAL NOTICE. Douciass Undertaking Company. Jackson—Mrs, Mable, 38 years, de- parted this life Nov, 5th at St. Paul, Minn, Body arrived Sunday accom: | panied by sister, Mrs. Lois Sands. Funeral service was held Wednesday, Noy. 17th, 2 p. m, from residence, 1304 Fox street. Rev. P. J. Price offic- jated, Interment in family plot at Fairmount cemetery. Atkins—Mrs. Ester, 23 years, be- loved wife of J. Atkins, devoted daugh- ter of Mrs, Alice Hill, departed this life Sunday, Nov. 14th, Service was held 8 p. m, Thursday, Nov. 18, Rev. I, S, Wilson officiating, after which body was accompanied by mother to Roxton, Texas, for interment, ‘Lege—Sims, 49 years, departed this life Noy, 16th at residence, 3114 Wal- nut street, Rev, L. J. Waters in charge, Funeral notice later. THANKSGIVING AFTERNOON. Thursday afternoon matinee will be held at Fern Hall, This dance is mainly for the younger set of dancers, but grownups may attend also, Good music. W. KNIGHT. Mgr. PLEASE REMEMBER. Owing to the continuous in- crease in the price of print paper and cost of labor we are forced to increase our prices for subscription to The Colorado Statesman to new subscribers, beginning October 15. One year subscription, $2.50; six months, $1.50, and three months, $1.00, We promise our patrons the usual good service and quality news, and ask them to govern themselves accordingly. WATCH FOR THE KNIGHT TEM- PLAR. Hiram Commandery No. 20, Knights ‘Templar, are preparing to give one of the most brilliant and spectacular com- petitive drills and dance of the season, November 26, 1920, at the City Audi- torium. Rule of the Road. There is some conflict of opinion about the rule of the road. In the matter of the walking public, the rule in England has always been “keep to the right.” In France it has always been “keep to the left,” and those who have spent the best part of the Inst five years on the continent have got into the way of keeping to the left, In driving this is reversed, and some difficulty was experienced by those who had been brought up upon the old adage, “When you go left you go right, ‘and when you go right you go wrong,” in driving—Christian Sclence Monitor, Had Enough of That Number. A North Carolina man whose auto- mobile license was numbered 18 sent {t back to the secretary of state with fa letter saying: “The rst day I rode with it, I lost $13, and the second day I lost 13 Inches of skin off my leg. Please send me a safer number.” He got it. Gicsenas: Com wren. It was the privilege of a factor of the Hudson's Bay company, who did not care for the facilities at hand, to order for himself a wife through the company, whfeh provided all of life's necessities to those of its agents who made proper application, One such transaction 1s noted in an old receipt book of the company as follows: “Re- ceived one wife in falr condition; hope she will prove good, though she fs certainly a rum one to look at.”— World's Work. Picturesque Custom. A unique and picturesque custom tn Korea is the handing down of a fam- fly bat from father to eldest son. This hat, made from the hair of family an- cestors, is a priceless possession, and ts so carefully handled that it does not wear out for generations. Wanted Prolonged Stay. Much to his delight, Bennie had bees allowed to spend the night with hii grandmother. Next morning when th time came for him to return home hi said: “Grandma, I am not ready t go home yet. I want to stay two al nichts.” Gutvionentals.. ‘Want and wealth equally harden the human heart, as frost and fire are both alien to the human flesh, Farnine and eluttony alike drive away nature from tw beret af man.—Theadore Marker, Important Consideration. When naming young son, parents should insure his future happiness by. selecting fnitials that will make a@ “pretty monogram. pS For Neat Clean Transient Rooms see Mrs. W, Cowan, 2824 California Street. | Bhoke Champa S400. , ee he ee E : La LS Neg any HARVEY G. WEBSTER PATRIOTIC SHOE SHINING PARLOR 526 Welton St Phone Main 219¢ ei C i CHING LAAUELLAXGZ Las L. DS (60 ea Assure the Success of the Thanksgiving Feast eee A Lisk Roaster will enable you to Q Pik os bh roast as well as the most famous chef. 2AY r,s The original Self-Basting Roaster is Sp the Lisk. It has a patented concave top, on the under side of which the vaporized juices of the roast condense and drip down upon the meat. This bastes the meat continuously, making it ten- der and juicy It is made of seamless steel, heavily enameled. The ends are rounded and there are no seams or crevices—cleans like china. We shall be pleased to explain just how they work, and show you the various sizes. Basement Have your dolls repaired now and avoid the rush that will come nearer Christmas. A little later you will find it almost impossible to find the repairs you need. Dolls are repaired in the order received: Basement Free Embroidered Initials or Name up to ten letters on any Selling regularly as follows Women’s, 40¢, 50¢, 65¢ each. Men’s, 50¢, 75e, 85e, $1.00, $1.25, $1.50 each — \ A REMARKABLE SALE OF N > 1 ~ | Men’s eS Sh a ——_— oes At $5.95 Pair (Discontinued Lines) These Boots are remarkable, indeed, at this special price. There are just 350 pairs in this specially assembled group. Some of the boots were formerly marked as high as $12.50. Shown in tan ealf and black kid. The shoes in tan calf are made over comfortable English lasts. Black kid in foot-form shape with medium toe; a sensible last of style and comfort Men’s Shoe Shop—Main Floor FREE LECTURE Zon” CHRISTIAN SCIENCE _BY- Prof. Hermann S. Hering, C. S. B., Of Concord., N. H., A member of the Board of Lectureship of the Mother church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass. Denver Municipal Auditorium, Monday and Tuesday, November 22nd and 23rd, 8 p. m. All Are Welcome. | The George Bell Company (Incorporated) LAPIDARIES, CUTTERS OF GEMS AND MANUFACTURING JEWELERS 437 Seventeenth St. Denver, Colorado Office 600 27th St. Ph, Champa 1142 ATLORNEY-AT-LAW Six Years Clty and County Attorney at Russell Sprinien, Logan County, eannan Office Howrs— 100 A. MH. to 12:00 M1, 2100 1 Ms to 4100 Ps. DENVER, COLO. FOR RENT — Five unfurnished rooms at 1923 Clarkson street. If you are in need of toad of kind- ling cheap, call Champa 3490. | Lo Do! Cs J Ne couRSE IN HAIR“BEAUTY CULTURE MAILED FREE UPON RECEIPT or YOUR NAME 4x0 ADDRESS “SEND NO MONEY" THE OZONIZED OX MARROW CO. 46 W. KINZIE ST. CHICAGO,ILL.| DR, CLARENCE FP. HOLMES, JR, IS.. DDS. Invites the public of Denver to Inspect his modern, electrically cauipped dental sulte, 2602 Wel- ton St Hours 94, m, to 12 noon; 1'to 6 p.m: evenings and Sun- days by “appointment. Office | phone Champa 2807, Residence Phone Champa 1536, DR. WESTHROOK, Physteinn fad Surgeon, olfice 26° Good Tock, ieth and) Larimer | Sts. Phone Main 5595, Hours 10 to ihn tot and 7 to 8 p.m. Residence 2555 Glenarm place. Phone Champa 614%, Hours at residence by appointment, | Call Physicians and Surgeons’ Tele- phone Exchange: “Main 1624 ight ov day. Tray examina- tion and treatments a specialty, DR. HUFINS office phone In | Champa. CoOL And his cresi- 4 dence, Phone York 4101. When hot reached at office or home, 4 call ‘Atins Drug Co. Main 875. 3 Office hours, 11 to 12 am, and { 3 to 5 p.m. : Fe ek ee eee eel See ee CS ON COW a TN em Ne 4 ©. 8. TERRY, M.D. é 3 1027 ‘Twenty-first St. Denver 4 Office Phone Main 2701, Hours 4 12 te-2 and 6 te & p.m. or by 4 appointment: Res, 2237 Glen 4 arm Place. Phone Champa 3303. 4 Te ee ee ee eee eee HFFHHFFF ++ SoSH Sooo oH o+ oes f BP BLAKEMORE, b Attorney and Connsettor at Law Office, Rooms 29 and 40 Arape- | hoe. Tide. 162" "Arapahoe St. Phone Champa 5450. Bieta Ak he STR ee Rak Beg : Ghe 3 3 WARD AUCTION ; : | COMPANY 3 Galos Dally at 2 p.m. Office Pum 4 niture a Specialty. ? — ; PRIVATE SALES AT ALL TIMES : ee : HAVE MOVED TO— i 96" 1723-39 GLENARM 8T.-@@ PHONE MAIN 1676. 3 teettseeseeees Phone Main 8036 Res. Phone York 6774W FRANK D. TAGGART Attorney at Law—Notary Publie 206-200 Cooper Building Denver, Colornio JOSEPH CARTER Express, Moving, and Storage COAL AND WOOD PROMPT DELIVERY, Phone Main 6544, 2415 WASHINGTON 8TREET, i a) fea sy -3. = 3 ag q Fo g I - tm ga 7E = 2 e He r BR = : 4 So the People May Know that you are in busi- ness, come in and let us show what we can do for you in the way of attractive cards and letter heads.Good print- ing of all kinds is our specialty and ifwe can- not satisfy you we don’t want your business. That’s Fair. Isn’t It? Pithy News Notes From All Parts of Colorado the City Council of Loveland plans to improve the public library, parks, streets and alleys. Work has been started on the par- ish house of St, Nicholas church of Platteville. The building will cost $7,750. A swing that went wrong, while John L, Lemons of Denver was chop- ping wood, led to his death in St. Luke's hospital. The final chapter was written in Denver's tramway controversy when the striking car men voted almost unanimously to return to work, Grand Junction police believe that the bank bandits who were killed near Colorado Springs recently were the ‘same men who operated successfully in this district, Daye Williams, negra, on trial in the District Court before Judge J. A: Park for the murder of John Shan- non on July of this year, has been found guilty of voluntary manslaugh- ter by the jury. One of the largest ranches in the Pike's Peak ‘region, the former Zanger ranch, has been sold by its present owner, Jonathan Bingham, to H. D. Richeson and others. The ranch consists of 920 acres. Completing her record With a pro- duction of 10,686.6 pounds of milk and 620.87 pounds of fat, Rainbow's Ro- sette, 811286, owned by the Agricul- tural College here, is now champion of her class in Colorado. Her record was begun at 4 years and 8 months of age. ©. M. Johnson, 50, a Cherokee In- dian who shot and killed his 25-year old wife after they had quarreled, his head, at his home at Cedars, was found dead with a bullet hole in near La Junta, Julian Whatley, father of Mrs. Johnson, is_mtssing and it is believed he killed Johnson. Police have started a search for Whatley. The gates of Denver were thrown open amid a rousing welcome by the city's leading eitizens and representa- tives of more than twenty civic organ- izations to the Park-to-Park trail blaz- ers to-celebrate the completion of the dedication of “America’s master high way,” 5,500 miles long, connecting eleven national parks and unsurpassed for scenic grandeur, A road project calling for the ex- penditure of $57,500. for the con- struction of one and three-tenths miles of concrete road between Den- ver and Boulder creek has been sub- mitted to the United States bureau vf public roads for federal aid. The road is'to be eighteen feet wide. If approved by the Washington office, construction will begin at an early date. K. V. Kyrklund of Colorado Springs, retired boatswain in the United States navy, received one of the thirteen distinguished service medals which have been awarded in that branch of the service. Kyrk- lund is credited with having saved the lives of about 11,000 American soldiers and sailors while ser\'ng aboard the U. 8. 8. Downs, a torpedo boat destroyer. Eight new military units, includ- ing a tank corps company, equipped with fifteen tanks, a squadron of thirteen airplanes, a combat engi- neering battalion, a squadron of cav- alry, two batteries and one regiment of field artillery and a medical corps regiment, have been allotted to Colo- rado temporarily under the new re- organization plan of the National Guard, according to announcement made by Adjt. Gen, W. A. Spangler. ‘The Great Western Sugar Company paid beet growers in Logan county $2,500,000. This is the ‘highest amount ever paid in that district. Fire of an unknown origin destroyed the Currie fruit canning factory, one of the largest canning plants in. the West, at Grand Junction. ‘The loss is estimated at $100,000, according to of- ficials of the company. ‘The fire started in the elevator shaft. ‘The structure was three stories high. ‘The factory employed 200 persons, mostly girls, It had just finished canning to- matoes and had started on the apple crop. About $10,000 worth of apple butter was ruined. Out of 13,250,000 acres of nation- al forest land in Colorado, only 144 acres were burned over by forest fires in the season just ended, ac- cording to Wallace Hutchinson of the forestry service. The cost of fighting the fires, 118 in number, was $481. ‘Timber destroyed amounted to 371,- 000 board feet, worth approximately $1,113. Seventy-eight per cent of the fires were less than a quarter of an acre in extent. ‘The record is con- Teg ne Woe ee ese Te when |. cOmM- CENTENNIAL STATE ITEMS. CALSER BNCIVSlS Se era, Ne Deroerats will have eleven of the thir- ty-flve senators, ‘The Republicans have twenty-four members, or exnetly the two-thirds needed whenever it is found expedient to make use of the safety clutch or emergency clause, The program will most likely call for some changes In the constitution and a two- thirds majority Is needed to submit constitutional amendments to the vote of the people, In the House the Re- publican majority Is even greater than in the Senate, With two districts yet to be heard from, the Republicans have fifty-five seats and the Democrats only eight. Even should the two unreport- ed districts go Democratic the Repub- licans have eleven more than a two- thirds, majority. Of the. sixty-three members whose election Is sure, twen- ty were members of the Twenty-second General Assembly. Growers of sugar beets in northern Colorado delivered upward of $14,- 000,000 worth of beets in October to factories of the Great Western Sugar Company, according to a statement issued by the company. ‘This is a |new record for the northern fields and means that practically 90 per cent of the crop was harvested and delivered last month. Checks for payment of the crop have been dis- tributed to beet growers as follows: ‘Fort Collins, $2,045,000; Loveland, | $1,125,000; Longmont, $1,750,000; Fort Magan, $1,400,000; Greeley, $1,550,000; Windsor, $1,550,000; Sterling, $2,505,000; Eaton, $1,910,- (000; total, $13,835,000, ‘The Board of County Commission- ers, after thoroughly investigating the proposed route of the new auto high way up the west side of Grand Mesa, the 10,800-foot tableland east of Grand | Junetion, have declared themselves in | favor of the road being built at the Ce possible time, as it will mean one of the greatest drawing cards for | tourists in the west. ‘The climb would | be nearly as great as the climb from | Colorado Springs to the summit of Pike's Peak. W. R. Freeman, receiver for the | Denver & Salt Lake’ Inilroad, an- | nounced that the shops and buildings /at Utah Junction, burned at a loss of | $3,000,000 will be rebuilt at onee, ‘The work of reconstruction will begin as | soon as the debris of the fire is cooled enough to permit, ‘There was no in- terruption of passyiger or freight service because of the fire. The City Council of Colorado | Springs has adopted a budget for [1921 which will require a tax levy of 10.7 mills, or three-tenths of a till less than that of this year. The levy will yield $407,932. The re- mainder of the $705,758 needed to |operate the municipal government | will come from the receipts of va- rious departments. Colorado Rangers from Denver were called to Cafion City to safeguard against a mutiny of prisoners in the state penitentiary which was threat | ened after a trio of convicts beat into | unconsciousness Niek Bickaback, & prisoner whom they feared would “squeal,” and Neal Robertson, a bur- glar, had sealed the high prison walls jand fled to freedom. Just two years after the Highty- Ninth Division, which included hun- dreds of Colorado men, halted its ad- vance through the Argonne forest on the banks of the Meuse river, the work of gathering material for a writ- ten record of the famous fighting unit has been completed, and print- ing of the history of the division has been started in Denver. ‘The Bank of North Fork at Hotch- kiss has received a new burglar-proof safe for keeping its finances intact. ‘The old safe was shattered by bank robbers month ago when they escaped with about $10,000 in vayi- | ables. ‘The bank authorities deemed Jit best to spend the money for a | burglar-proof affair. Sixteen persons were injured, none seriously, when three cars of west- bound Denver & Rio Grande train No. 15 overturned near Grand Yal- ley, forty-four miles from Grand | valley, The injured were taken in {charge by Miss Helen Baylis, Red Cross nurse of Palisade, Colo. a passenger. Seyen of the national Greek-letter sororities of the University of Colo- |rado have nominated candidates for the combined Vanity Pair contest and subscription campaign that has been instituted by the 1921 Colorndoan staff, ‘The remaining organizations are expected to make nominations soon. In common with prices in general, the useful metals are quoted lower ar the Atlantic seacoast, with a very Benes eee a ena ame fk geaw ee The KITCAEN CABINE 1528 ———=THE=— COLORADO STATESMAN (@, 1020, Western Newspaper Union.) In life there's many a pleasure, ‘A bliss for every bane, Ay, measure take for measure, ‘There's more of Joy than rain, In thinking, yes, and drinking Great solace there may be; And a sweeter draught Was never quaft ‘Than just a cup of tea, SEASONABLE RECIPES. ORAL AOLMY | | | | The Mouth-Piece | | of the People of | , ; Colorado and the | } Entire West | : | ae A RELIABLE chronicle of their doings and progress; a faithful mirror { ; of their wants, their hopes, their best aspirations. | R ) ‘ ——— ‘ . | THE | R ‘ | COLORADO | ) ‘ | STATESMAN | a : Unequaled as an advertising medium for the business of professional men and ; women. : ares | , | ; An excellent family journal ) speaking to and for many ) thousand colored citizens. | Be ee a eS a Bree a eye ean awn Tea ‘ ! TWO DOLLARS A YEAR 2 , === ) ‘ , ‘ . THE GREAT ORGAN Pears will be in the market untll Thanksgiving time and after. One of the preserve com- aE: binations — which jaw will be new to ea ise i) Pineapple and bday 4 Pear Cunserve.— SY Cy of fruit allow a three-fourths of a Rae > DRGHS UE SURE, See ee of a cupful of boiling water, Dissolve the sugar in the water and let it heat to the bolling point, Cut the pears In halves, lengthwise. Remove the cores and skin and add to the hot sirup; let cook until the pears are tender. Add, for each pound of pears, one can of pineapple, the slices cut in quar- ters; add the sirup from the can and cook until the fruit ts transparent. Can and seal as usual, Pineapple Cream.—Boll one-third of fa cupful of sugar and half a cupful of grated pineapple, juice and pulp, until ft makes a soft ball In cold water, Pour in a fine stream on the white of one egg beaten stiff. When cool fold in one cupful of cream beaten light, add a tablespoonful of lemon juice and fill the mold, chill and let stand until firm. Plain Sponge Cake.—Beat the whites of three eggs until stiff and the yolks until thick. Into the yolks gradually bent one cupful of sugar, add one tablespoonful of lemon juice and two tablespoonfuls of cold water. Fold in the whites and one cupful of sifted flour alternately. Bake in a tube pan thirty to forty minutes. Smile, and while you smile another smiles; And by and by there's miles of smiles, And life's worth while because you ‘smile.”” “THE TURKEY OF THE SEA.” ‘Tuna fish has been called “the tur- key of the sea” and it Is easy to imag- ine when eating the dell- cate flavored fish, that It , is a near relative to the = turkey or chicken, Tuna RENMBH fish, taky white and de- VRS licious, may be used in ify nearly all recipes where { the meat of poultry 1s used. A enndwich which is Bi | aa “4 ie suited for dark breads may be pre- pared as follows: Make a paste of three hard-cooked egg yolks, two tablespoonfuls of butter; add one-half cupful of tuna, one-half teaspoonful of dry mustard and one teaspoonful of chopped capers. Chop the whites very fine and add. If the mixture seems dry add a little vinegar and olive oil. Tuna Souffle—Melt two tablespoon- fuls of butter in a saucepan, add three tablespoonfuls of flour, one-half teaspoonful of salt, cayenne to taste, three-fourths of a cupful of milk, cook until thick, add three well-beaten yolks and one cupful of tuna, Cool. Add the stiffly beaten whites, turn into a buttered baking dish and bake for half an hour in a moderate oven. Serve at once. Tuna Salad.—This salad is as de- Neious as any ‘chicken salad. Several hours before it is to be served mix three cupfuls of tuna, one cupful of diced celery, one bard-cooked egg chopped, one green pepper shredded, and one-fourth of a eupful of French dressing. Just before serving add one- fourth of 2 cupful of chopped olives and one cupful of thick mayonnaise dressing over the top. Tuna Chop Suey.—Put one table- spoonful of butter in a frying pan, add one cupful each of celery and onion, one pound of fresh pork cut in bits; cover with one cupful of water, a can of mushrooms and the liquor from them. Cook slowly for one hour, add one cupful of chopped peanuts, one cupful of tuna flaked, salt and pepper. Cook one-half hour longer and serve. Tuna in Peppers.—Cut the stem ends, removing the veins and seeds of six green peppers. Soak the peppers In cold water, beat four eggs slightly, add one cupful of milk, two cupfuls of tuna and one cupful of bread erumbs, salt and pepper. Pack the mixture Into the peppers, sprinkle buttered crumbs over the top and brown in the oven, Serve piping hot. Tuna Loaf.—Beat one egg until light, add one cupful of bread erumps, one cupful of sweet milk, salt, pep- per, onion Juice and one cupful of flaked tuna. Press the mixture into a buttered loaf pan and bake’ twenty. five minutes. Garnish with — hard- cooked eggs and serve with drawn but- ter sauce. Tuna Sandwiches.—One cupful of flnked tuna, two tenspoonfuls of creamed butter, one teaspoonful of Temon Juice, one teaspoonful each of minced tarragon, chervil and gherkins, Mix well, adding a Gash of paprika and salt If needed and spread on yery thin-buttered bread. The recipes given above call for canned tuna. If the fresh is used tt | will, of course, be cooked first. C. V. FAIRBANKS FIRST CLASS MEALS SERVED HOME COOKING Phone Main 4843 J. GIBS Phone Main 4843 J. GIBSON SMIT Art Dealer 1638 Tremont St. PHONES: DENVER D The Not as Old Undertow HOME IN 2418 Welton St., Denver Motto: Service, efficient out. Consult us. We can Your cares and sorrows a LICENSED EMBALM LAID E. V. CAMMEL, PRESS DENVER WESTER SES: DENVER, CHAMPA 2077; PUEBLO, DAY OR NIGHT. The Cammel Undertaking Company HOME FUNERAL PARLORS. On St., Denver. 945 Routt Ave., Pueblo. Service, efficiency and modern condition alt us. We can save you time, worry and sorrows are treated as though they were USED EMBALMERS, FUNERAL DIRECTOR LADY ATTENDANTS. Cammel, PRESIDENT AND GENERAL MAN DENVER AND PUEBLO. STERN BEEF PHONES: DENVER, CHAMPA 2077; PUEBLO, 864. DAY OR NIGHT. Motto: Service, efficiency and modern conditions throughout. Consult us. We can save you time, worry and money. Your cares and sorrows are treated as though they were our own. LICENSED EMBALMERS, FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND LADY ATTENDANTS. E. V. CAMMEL, PRESIDENT AND GENERAL MANAGER, DENVER AND PUEBLO. WESTERN BEEF CO. Open Daily to 830 p. m. Sundays Until 2:00 p. m. Fresh Oysters, Chitterlings, Bones, Spare Fresh and Cured Meats of P Our Prices Are Free Delivery Phone 2048 LARIMER STREET Opposite THE CHAM TWENTI Is the DRUGS, CHEMICAL WE PRESCRIPT Phone us and we will de JAMES PH Prices Are Always the Lowest Free Delivery to All Parts of the City. Phone Champa 1641. ER STREET DENY Opposite the Three Rules. CHAMPA PHARM TWENTIETH AND CHAMPA, Is the place to get your S, CHEMICALS AND PATENT MEDIC WE SERVE DRINKS. PRESCRIPTIONS OUR SPECIALTY. and we will deliver the goods to all parts of JAMES E. THRALL, Propr. PHONE MAIN 2425. 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. THE CHAMPA PHARMACY 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. I PRACTICAL PLUMB Jobbing Promptly Attended tion and Sewer 2018 CURTIS STREET. A F Black and Ane a Full Line of MM BUT WE K Jones West Atl P. H. BALFE MICAL PLUMBER.—LICENSED DRAIN LA entply Attended to—Special Attention Given ion and Sewerage—All Work Guaranteed. S STREET. DENV PRACTICAL PLUMBER.—LICENSED DRAIN LAYER. Jobbing Promptly Attended to—Special Attention Given to Ventilation and Sewerage—All Work Guaranteed. 2018 CURTIS STREET. DENVER, COLO. Black and White Reme Line of MME. C. J. WALKER'S To BUT WE KNOW YOU WILL LIKE es West Hair Pomade Be Atlas Drug Co. St Pho IBERRY TAXI COM Office 2741 Welton Street. 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 Co. 2701 Welton St Phone Main 875 GRANBERRY TAXI COMPANY Office 2741 Welton Street. GRANBERRY TAXI COMPANY Office 2741 Welton Street. OFFICE PHONE CHAMPA 87 Quick and prompt Service Day and Night. Call Us for S 0.1 Out-of-Town Trips. Prompt Service Day and Night. Call Us for S oil Out-of-Town Trips. Quick and prompt Service Day and Night. Call Us for Special Rates go Out-of-Town Trips. Telephone Main 207 2701 Welton St OFFICE PHONE CHAMPA 87 Fairbanks Hotel and Cafe (Formerly Barnes Hotel) 2716 Welton St., Denver, Colo. N SMITH Dealer Denver HAMPA 2077; PUEBLO, 864. OR NIGHT. ERAL PARLORS. 945 Routt Ave., Pueblo, Colo. and modern conditions through- have you time, worry and money. gated as though they were our own. FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND ATTENDANTS. NT AND GENERAL MANAGER, AND PUEBLO. ```markdown ``` One of the Most Up-to-Date and Sanitary Markets in the City. Tails, Snouts, Ears, Pigs, Feet, Neck Received Fresh Daily. Kinds.. Fresh Vegetables, Staple and Groceries. Always the Lowest All Parts of the City. Champa 1641. THE THREE RULES. PHARMACY HIGH AND CHAMPA, face to get your AND PATENT MEDICINES DRINKS. IS OUR SPECIALTY. of the goods to all parts of the city. THRALL, Propr. MAIN 2425. Residence Phone Champa 328. -LICENSED DRAIN LAYER. -Special Attention Given to Ventila- -All Work Guaranteed. DENVER, COLO. A FULL LINE OF White Remedies J. WALKER'S Toilet Articles W YOU WILL LIKE Hair Pomade Best. Drug C. Phone Main 87 TAXI COMPANY 1 Welton Street. and Night. Call Us for Special Rates -Town Trips. N. FAIRBANKS Denver Though Just as Reliable DENVER, COLO. OFFICE PHONE CHAMPA 5960 FOREIGN The city magistrate and the chief of police of the native city of Shanghai have issued an edict against the extravagant styles now being worn by Chinese women. It warns against aping foreign styles, with the display of ankles and bare arms. Erivan, capital of the Armenian republic, has been evacuated, communications between the great railway junction of Alexandropol and Tiflis, capital of Georgia, having been cut, completely isolating Armenia from the outside world. The postal convention making all the countries of North, Central and South America and Spain one postal territory was signed by the delegates of Spain, the United States and the other countries concerned at Madrid. The convention, which also provides for free transport of correspondence from any signatory nation to another signatory nation, will come into force Jan. 1 next. The treaty concluded by the Italians and Jugo-Slavs at Rappallo settling the dispute over Flume and other territory on the Adriatic littoral has been approved by the United States, Great Britain and France, Premier Giolitti announced. Under this agreement Flume is to be an independent state and Italy relinquishes her claim to part of Dalmatia, which will be annexed by Jugo-Slavia. A commercial treaty will be negotiated later. A young man, wearing the uniform of a French lieutenant, recently obtained 786,000 francs (nominally about $157,000) from the French ministry of finance on presentation of a payment order purporting to have been issued by the quartermaster of the army of occupation at Mayence. The order proved to be a forgery. The police arrested Henri Platel, 21 years old, a tailor. They say Platel confessed to the crime, adding: "Some say it is hard to obtain money from the government. It's easy." The defeat of the Venizelistas in the Greek elections leaves the Lloyd George cabinet in England as the only war government in Europe which has survived the world conflict. Russia is not taken into consideration, as the soviet regime at Moscow has not been recognized by the allied powers. The war governments of the following European nations have fallen: France, Italy, Belgium, Portugal, Germany, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria and Serbia. The war government of the United States also has gone by the defeat of Governor James M. Cox, who was pledged to carry out the policies of President Wilson. GENERAL "School Week" will be observed throughout the nation the week of December 5-11, as the Commissioner of Education is designating the first full week in December as "School Week." Six firemen were seriously injured in Milwaukee in a $400,000 fire which gutted a four-story building occupied principally by the Milwaukee Seed Company. The firemen were injured when the rounds of an extension ladder collapsed. A prison guard and a convict were shot and two other guards badly beaten at the Missouri state penitentiary at Jefferson City, Mo., when four convicts made an unsuccessful attempt to fight their way to freedom. The men were captured before they could get outside the prison wall. Chicago's police force today was given the biggest shakeup in its history by Chief Charles C. Fitzmoorris, recently appointed to succeed John L. Garrity, whose resignation was requested by Mayor William H. Thompson. Abolishment of the special squads did away with the homicide squad, the bomb squad, the rifle corps, the burglary squad, the "fliver details" and numerous other special organizations created by Garrity. Mrs. George A. DeButte, 58, wife of the president of the Melbourne Savings Bank at Marshalltown, Iowa, was burned to death in the furnace at her home. After missing her, Mr. De Butte began a search and found his wife's body wedged in the furnace door. She had been ill for some time and is believed to have committed suicide. Declaring that the Navy Department would "go the limit" to uphold the authorities of the Naval Academy at Annapolis in their efforts to stamp out hazing at the institution, Secretary Daniels announced that instructions had been issued that no hazing would be tolerated and that any member of midshipmen would be dismissed if necessary to end the practice. Three years ago Miss Anna Nyquist, whose home is in Stambaugh, Mich., began a training at Augustana hospital in Chicago. She became a graduate nurse. After receiving her diploma, she entered the elevator, fainted and fell forward. Before the operator could stop the car, the beam at the top of the elevator door had crushed her head. She died a few minutes later. The driver of the wagon which drew the explosive which killed thirty-seven persons and wounded hundreds, Sept. 16, last, in Wall street, remained in the vicinity for forty-eight minutes afterward, the Evening World declared in presentation of evidence in its "solution of the explosion mystery." Ownership of $1,300 in gold, found on a farm near Greensboro, Ind., six months ago by Levi Todd, a 15-year-old boy, was settled in the Circuit Court by Judge Gause deciding that "finders are keepers." LATEST NEWS EPITOMIZED 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 Fire, which swept the department store district of Sacramento, Calif. caused a loss estimated at $1,500,000. Four firemen were injured fighting the flames, one perhaps fatally. The robbers who pillaged the Bur- lington railroad's transcontinental fast mall at Omaha and secured loot vari- ously estimated at from $20,000 to $1, 000,000, have dropped completely out of sight. High rents caused two southern California partors, the Rev. M. C. Deweese of a Los Angeles Methodist church and the Rev. Warren Elsing of a Presbyterian church at Van Nuyss, a suburb, to move their families into their churches. Bloodhounds from Albion, Neb., have been used in an effort to run down Dennis Chester, who escaped from a Burlington train near Broken Bow, while en route from Great Falls, Mont., to Kansas City, where he is wanted in connection with the shooting to death of Florence Barton, daughter of a wealthy shoe manufacturer. The loss in the Burlington mail car robbery at Council Bluffs, Iowa, will total at least $3,500,000, it was made known when additional postoffice officials came to assist in investigations and a check of the insurance on the pouches was made. The sack which was found had been ripped open contained $800,000 in government bonds, the investigators said. Mrs. Mildred Harris Chaplin, motion picture star, again became Mildred Harris, Judge York at Los Angeles granted her a divorce from Charlie Chaplin, world famous screen comedian. An agreement, by which she will receive approximately $200,000, was approved by the court. It provided that $50,000 should be paid to her at once and $57,500 within one year. The settlement agreement specifies she shall not use the name of Chaplin professionally. In the midst of a traffic jam with hundreds looking on, Dewey Morgan, jitney driver, was shot to death on Kansas City's busiest corner. V. P. Miller, jitney passenger, has been arrested and has admitted the shooting; Morgan was shot five times in the back. Miller told police he shot Morgan because the latter had lured his wife from her home. Police had difficulty in saving Miller from the crowd, which threatened lynching; Morgan owned several livery and jitney motor cars. Miller drove one of these cars for Morgan at night. WASHINGTON The internal revenue bureau confirmed reports that a crusade against home brewing of alcoholic beverages is planned by the government's prohibition enforcement agencies. John Burke, treasurer of the United States, a former governor of North Dakota, has submitted his resignation to become effective Jan. 1, when he will become president of an automobile body manufacturing company. The Japanese population of the three Pacific states—California, Oregon and Washington—has increased at a lower rate since 1910 than it did between 1900 and 1910, figures announced by the census bureau show. In Hawaii, however, there was a decided increase and nearly half the total population of the islands is made up of Japanese. An insurance policy on the life of a person who commits suicide is payable, if all conditions of the policy are complied with, the supreme court ruled at Washington, in sustaining lower court decrees in a suit brought against the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company by Isabel H. Johnson, beneficiary under a policy obtained by her husband. The 1919 death rate in the death registration area of continental United States, embracing 31 per cent of the total population, was shown in statistics made public by the Census Bureau to be the lowest recorded for any one year. The rate of 12.9 per 1,000 of population showed a drop of 5.1 per 1,000 from the unusually high rate of 1918, resulting from the epidemic of influenza. Home-brewing was brought actively under the prohibition ban when it was learned that enforcement officials had ruled against the sale of hops and malt to others than bakers and confectioners. Great secrecy surrounded the prohibition bureau's action. Orders withdrawing from service twenty ships totaling more than 70,000 tend weight tons, have been issued by the shipping board. They will be tied up at Norfolk, Baltimore and on the Pacific coast. The largest vessel withdrawn is the Western Scout, 8,422 tons to be tied up at Baltimore. 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 1950 Larimer Street The Curtis Park Floral Company FLORAL DESIGNS PUT UP YOU CHOICE PLANTS AND CUT GREENHOUSES: Thirty-Fe TELEPHONE, MAIN 1511 Weather S al pany DESIGNS PUT UP WHILE YOU WAIT NTS AND GUT FLOWERS CONSTANTLY ON HAND USES: Thirty-Fourth and Curtis Streets MAIN 1511 DENVER, COLO atherhead Hat 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 DEMVER, COLO Weatherhead Hat Co. TELEPHONE MAIN 3203 Established 1876 RENOVATORS, BLEED Of Gents' and L 1624 CHAM Poro Hair SCIENTIFIC AND SANIT MASSAGING, M Mme. L 2220 OGDEN STREET DVATORS, BLEACHERS, DYERS AND FINISH Of Gents' and Ladies' Hats of Every Description 1624 CHAMPA ST., DENVER, COLO. Go Hair Dressing Par FIC AND SANITARY SCALP AND HAIR TR MASSAGING, MANICURING, TOILET ARTICLE Poro Hair Dressing Parlors SCIENTIFIC AND SANITARY SCALP AND HAIR TREATMENT MASSAGING, MANICURING, TOILET ARTICLES Mme. Lexie A. Brooks DEN STREET PHONE YO 1 C. E. SMITH, M. The Man Wholesale and Retail Staple Hotels and Restaurant Eastern Fruits, Vegetables Telephones M 622-636 15TH STREET C. E. SMITH, Manager, Res. Phone South 1608 800 e Market Company and Retail Staple and Fancy Groceries, Fish and s and Restaurants Our Specialty. Fresh and C Eastern Corn Fed Meats Fruits, Vegetables, Poultry and Game. Telephones Main 4302, 4303, 4304, 4305 5TH STREET DENVER, CO Wholesale and Retail Staple and Fancy Groceries, Fish and Oysters. Hotels and Restaurants Our Specialty. Fresh and Cured PHONE MAIN 3023 John K. Rettig EATS, FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIE John MEATS, FANCY 186 Corner Nineteenth MEATS, FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES Inteenth Dene Phone Main 6758 IE MARKET ail Staple and Fancy Groceries fish and Oysters WHILE WAIT FLOWERS CONSTANTLY ON HAND North and Curtis Streets DENVER, COLO ```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 UNITARY SCALP AND HAIR TREATMENT MANICURING, TOILET ARTICLES Motto—"Efficiency" PHONE YORK 5997W C. C. DENNIS R. F. LONG The New Way Shoe Repairing Co. AND American Shoe Repairing FIRST-CLASS WORK Best Leather Used—Reasonable Prices 1855 Champa St. Phone Main 3737. Manager, Res. Phone South 1608 Market Company Meats and Fancy Groceries, Fish and Oysters. Us Our Specialty. Fresh and Cured Corn Fed Meats Tables, Poultry and Game. Main 4302, 4303, 4304, 4305 DENVER, COLORADO RES. PHONE GALLUP 942 Ann K. Rettig NCRY AND STAPLE GROCERIES 1864 CURTIS STREET Denver, Colo. Denver, Colo. DENVER, COLO. Denver, Cole. Industrial Realty Company and Employment Agency Sales, Rentals and Investments a Specialty Charles Trotter, President R. L. Norman, Treas. & Gen. Mgr. Emanuel Lewis, Vice-Pres. Dr. C. F. Holmes, Secretary Phone Champa 2807 2602 Welton Street Phone York 3786 720 East Twenty-sixth Avenue Is offering the best creations in their fall and winter opening at Five Points District WM. WILSON, Prop. LADIES’ AND GENTS’ TAILORING Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing Work Called for and Delivered H. ANDERSON, Tailor and Manager DENVER, COLO. POLK’S CAFE Our Motto: Courtesy, Celerity, Cleanliness. Sunday Dinners a Specialty. Luncheonette ae Soda Fountain MUSIC. Open from 6:30 a, m. to 11:00 p. m. 2721 WELTON ST. Sige “GTR S I ey Q E Oj Om pas Oe ate \S apy/ YOUNG MAN! Think This Out WHY is it the boss sidesteps union men when pro- motions are made? ISN’T THIS THE ANSWER: The employer wants the FIRST CALL on the man he trusts as superintendent or foreman; and, he knows that a union card man reports FIRST to his WALKING DELEGATE. Think this out ’ THE EMPLOYERS’ ASSOCIATION HERBERT GEORGE, President. oye fa Aiding Nature in Her Work | (0 repair the damage done by destructive forces is a process of no short time. But to prevent these bad effects is but | the routine of a few precious moments. In either case, Madam C. J. Walker’s Superfine Toilettes stand ready to aid you in the task at hand. FOR PREMATURELY OLD COMPLEXIONS— Madam C. J. Walker's Vanishing Cream Superfine Face Powder (white, rose-flesh, brown) Compact Rouge TO PREVENT THE ON-RUSH OF OLD AGE— | Madam C. J. Walker's Cleansing Cream Witch Hazel Jelly Floral Cluster Tale The Madam C. J. Walker Mfg. Co. | 640 North West Street Indianapolis, Ind. Makers of 18 superfine preperations for the hair and skin MODES FOR FORMAL EVENING WEAR he \ = 8 > x aa ro \ ( oo) . 2 /\s = Dy tp Pay i) iN eg . pS \ sie A\ \ weep aie \\ i Ai the SEK Greys... SSeS aoe: with black or brown or gray net. Tne nets are embroidered with narrow ribbon flowers or little festoons of silk floss, Then there are beautiful black chantilly dresses unadorned ex- cept for girdles of ertificlal flowers or a corsage of them. Keeping them company, there are handsome velvet gowns mostly in black, dark brown or dark blue. A magnificent example of the velvet gown appears in the picture at the left. A few beads pick out the Ines of the embroidery on the bodice, but silk floss gives sufficient brightness to the embroldery that covers the back and reappears on the front of the skirt. Ribbon and yelvet in a contrasting color make the odd decoration on the velvet frock at the right. This is a simple but very original design, in which narrow ribbon fringe and nar- row ribbon, outlining and joining the curious lect motifs present something entirely new. It has a low-neck bod- ice with a pretty chemisette of georg- ette and Is made in bright blue velvet. iegeraass is no getting away from the tact that there is an all-pervad- ™g glitter in the displays of dresses for formal evening wear. It is a much Lespangled mode and the only thing that saves It from being tawdry fs the discrimination that designers use in choosing color according to the amount of spangled surface in the dress, and In toning down colors with black. Only in oll white, all black or combinations of the two, they sallow themselves dresses entirely covered with sequins. But when colored sequins are used they appear in panels or irregular bor- ders with black, as sapphire blue se- quins with black satin and Ince, or henna sequins with derk brown net or satin, Beads also help out In this frosty sparkle that has settled on win- ter apparel—and they have made thelr appearance even on street clothes. In the widst of so many dazzling ri- vels an evening gown that {s quite without sparkle Is Ilkely to achieve much distinction, There are to be found among the displays, beautiful silks or metal tissue dresses, velled LAC UTC INIDVULT UVULITCS aa a | pe ee ress Le Papas Va ES STNG rt r IA « SOON Osa T bad? Se ae Tare BRS Ge NERS RET. Kee, SLY Li SERED (8 jf Te RY ea il ~ =—& SN stitches, the ends of the cord finished as pictured. A curved instead of a straight mounting Is used for the bag at the right. Cellnlofd and metal mountings come in a yarlety of colors and de- signs. Plain ribbon with a floral em- broldered design makes this pretty bag and the same ribbon Is fashloned into conventional rose surrounded by rose leaves, that Is set at the cen- ter of the bag. Its handles are made of narrow but heavy faille ribbon. ‘The remaining bag is a dignified af- fair in black and silver brocaded rib- bon gathered about a disk of narrow silver ribbon and has a silver mount- ing suspended by a silk cord. ‘The ribbon counters display their usual array of dainty lingerle bows and rosettes, garters, hair ribbons, sachet bags, covered hangers and shoe trees, tles, corsage flowers and bou- tonnieres, and besides these personal belongings there are many beautiful furnishings for the seeker after gifts. By Seas in song are making their holiday pilgrimage to the ribbon counters just now, looking for suggestions for gifts. There ts a long Ust of handsome and dainty articles made of ribbon on display, with bags of many kinds maintaining thelr place as the favorite. Shopping bags con- sume more yards of ribbon than any ‘other one of the innumerable things ‘that are made of It, for these bags are more decorative and more serviceable than almost any other kind. ‘Thelr richness appeals to women and thelr Individuality. Purchasers pick out the style of bag they like, select the rib- bon and mounting that pleases them most, choose a proper lining and put them together in a way to suit them- selves. If they need any coaching those who sell the ribbons are there to help them out. ‘Three handsome bags as shown in the picture are fine examples of rib- bon work. Plain satin and metallic brocaded ribbon are used for the bag at the left of the group. It 1s made py gathering the brocaded ribbon along {ts edges and sewing these gathered edges to @ panel of the plain ribbon. For decoration a heavy silk or tinsel cord 1s applied in a loose knot and sewed flat to the bag with invisible pe Sri " 4.R.CONTEE, Pres. and Mgr. Phone Main 6123—Day or Night Residence Phone York 7992 THE OLD RELIABLE DOUGLASS UNDERTAKING CO. INCORPORATED AND BONDED NOTARY PUBLIC si es FRANK 8. REED, Py a8 _-___blcensed Embalmer and Director ce te ae 9 Lagy insalttant Petite Service NS) Pariors, sian ele neck DENVER, COLORADO, ch re eh a eM Phe 8 REE fs er, ee ARPT iy L | an ‘erate oe i: i ee ee : . al al + oe F r Se | Pt F —_ ey XY | m” wha XN Vay F ae | Y | se a eee | mg «2 Py th + eS r cee ees ace a Ca ee EAS i em oe - ee c Bolden Barber Shop Baths, Electric Massages FIRST CLASS SERVICE R. B. BOLDEN, Proprietor 926 19th St., Denver fee \ ag reek REF THE V. V. ee Uomo Transformation and Switches <i fuer Made to Order Se 4) And All Kinds of Hair Good: Wy, = MRS. G. W. ANDERSON a wy) Fermerty of Denver a 218 N. CENTER ST., CASPER, WYO. Ss _ TF wala en eWWi 'W. K. HUNT : = Everything for the Dinner : : iN Oy : = Hee Vane Besa F : ae : = GROCERIES and MEATS : = We also have, Oysters Grapefruit : : Good Sweet Spuds and Chickens. : = Plum Buddinpsessscce.f-co00t oicenta 2.) a2 as os BOSCAIS BMince Maat, sc.ves tesco se Son = FRUIT, CRANBERRIES, CIDER, ETC. : = GIVE US A TRIAL 5 $2962 Welton St Phone Champa 3522 5 ZAARRARARAAARARARARARARARARARARARRANAAARARARARARAIS WVU UU UU UV UVUU UV UU ULV VUVVUNG VU VVTEWV CT VT VOT TO OOOO-O-4 |A Wonderful Hair Dressing and Grower A “Wondexeal\ Mele “Dreaning’ aoa Geeten One Thousand Agents Wanted. "Good Som: ley Made. We want Agents in every city | : and village to sell THE STAR HAIR GROW- HR. This is a wonderful preparation. Can be used with or without straightening trons. Sells for 26 cents per box—One 25-cent box ; will prove its value. Any person that will luse a 25-cent box will be convinced. No mat- ter what has failed to grow your hair, just ‘ sive TRE 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 : jand we will send you a full supply that you lean begin work at once; also agent's terms : Send all money by Money Order to GREENSBORO, N. C. BOX812 -