Colorado Statesman
Saturday, July 15, 1922
Denver, Colorado
Page text (machine-generated)
SUBSCRIBE FOR THE ONLY RELIABLE PEOPLE'S PAPER IN COLORADO "THE COLORADO STATESMAN"
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
THE JOURNAL OF THE WEST.
LABOR SHALL BE FREE
RAGE COUNTRY PARTY
NATION-WIDE MEETING OF TEACHERS AT HAMPTON
Nineteenth Annual Meeting of the National Association of Teachers in Colored Schools, July 26-29.
EDUCATION MAKES PROGRESS
Inter-racial Co-operation and Present Educational Needs Will Be Discussed.
VOL. XXVIII.
NATION-WIDE MEE
TEACH
Nineteenth Annual Meeting
of Teachers in Colore
EDUCATION MA
Inter-racial Co-operation and
Will Be
By Wm. Anthony Aery.
HAMPTON, VA., July 15—The National Association of Teachers in Colored Schools (H. L. McCrorey, Charlotte, N. C., president, and R. S. Grossley, Jackson, Miss., executive secretary) will hold its nineteenth annual meeting at Hampton Institute, July 26-29, in conjunction with the summer school of over 600 teachers, and will have as its central theme "Inter-racial Co-operation and Present Educational Needs."
The Hampton Institute program will include seven general sessions and sectional meetings for those who are especially interested in private colleges, land-grant colleges, grammar schools, high schools, rural schools, and social service.
Reports will be given at the afternoon session of July 26 on educational conditions in each state. W. T. B. Williams of Tuskegee Institute, vice chairman of the association's executive committee, will give a general survey of educational conditions and Dr. H. L. McCrorey of Biddle University will deliver the president's annual address.
At the opening meeting a physical education demonstration will be given by summer-school students, under the direction of Charles H. Williams, head of the department of physical education for boys at Hampton Institute.
Principal Gregg of Hampton will deliver an address of welcome and Dr. J. A. Gregg of Wilberforce will respond for the visiting teachers. Dr. W. T. Holmes of Tougaloo College will speak on "Recruiting for the Profession of Teaching;" Miss Lucy A. Laney of Augusta, Ga., "The School as a Center of Community Interest;" John W. Davis of Institute, W. Va., "Ethics of the School Craft;" N. C. Newbold of Raleigh, N. C., "North Carolina's Educational Program."
James Weldon Johnson of New York, secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; Dr. Alfred Lawless, Jr., of Atlanta, Ga., representing the American Missionary Association; Dr. Robert R. Moton, principal of Tuskegee; Miss Carrie Alberta Lyford, director of the Hampton Institute Home-Economics School, and Dr. John Preston McConnell of the State Normal School at East Radford, Va., will be the speakers on the programs for July 27.
On July 28 some time will be given to a discussion of "The Student Activities under the Y. W. C. A." The Rev. Channing H. Tobias will speak on "The Educational Program of the Y. M. C. A." The afternoon of this day will be spent on an outing.
At the evening meeting on July 28 the Rev. Dr. James E. Gregg, principal of Hampton Institute, Miss Hallie Q. Brown of Wilberforce, O., and Dr. James Hardy Dillard of Charlottesville, Va., will deliver addresses.
Major Allen W. Washington, commandant of cadets at Hampton Institute, will make reservations in the Institute dormitories in the order of delegates' applications.
State Hist & Nat Hist
Society
State House
FOR THE ONLY RELIANCE
COLORA
STING OF
MERS AT HAMPTON
of the National Association
d Schools, July 26-29.
AKES PROGRESS
1 Present Educational Needs
Discussed.
NEGROES OPEN COUNTRY CLUB NEAR NEW YORK.
New York, July 11.—Shady Rest, a country club and golf course for colored people, is the latest addition to the suburban delights of Greater New York. The club at Westfield, N. J., is surrounded by a cottage colony, which is rapidly being extended by newcomers from the "black belt" of Harlem. The place claims the distinction of being the first Negro country club in the United States.
Howard Professor Takes Advanced Degree at Catholic University
Washington, D. C., July 14.—Prof. George Morton Lightfoot, well known scholar, educator and editor, of the Howard University faculty, has satisfied the requirements of the Catholic University of America for the Master's Degree in Classical Philology. In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree, he presented a forty-eight page thesis on "The Question of the Origin of the Roman Satire," in which discussion he makes a survey of the lengthy and ingenious debate which has continued almost without cessation for over a half century. After a thorough investigation of the various claims of priority in producing satire, Professor Lightfoot established his conclusion that "the Romans were first to produce and to develop the satire as a separate and distinct type of literary expression.
Professor Lightfoot's conclusion follows his own diligent search for evidence through the original works of the classical writers. He presents his evidence with a prospectus of the various theories and his own invetable conclusion. His discussion is sure to be received as a distinct contribution to the solution of the perplexing literary problem to which so many scholars have given attention.
In fulfilling the requirements for this advanced degree, Professor Lightfoot exemplifies the modern tendency of college professors to receive academic recognition of their professional growth. One of the chief delights of the college professor is his own professional growth. In fact, part of his remuneration lies in that happy reflection that his incentives to self-culture and scholarship are numerous and constant. His own industrious search after knowledge and consequent contribution to educational thought should be recognized. The advanced degrees help in a measure, to serve this purpose, and are sure to be inspiring to fellow professors and to students.
Professor Lightfoot is a product of the Preparatory Department of Howard University. His college career was spent at Williams' College. His suc-
cessful scholarship at Williams won him a teachership in the Preparatory Department of Howard University and later he was given a teaching place in the college where he has been employed ever since as Professor of Latin Language and Literature. In this position he has distinguished himself as a thorough and pre-eminently successful teacher. For the past two years he has edited the Howard University Record, giving the publication a well-earned reputation among college and university periodicals, and making it one of the most effective means of continuous communication between the university and alumni.
Desecration of "Deep River"
Just a few days ago Mrs. Jessie Andrews Zackery, soprano, the first colored girl to be booked in the various Fox theaters of Greater New York, as a singer of classic, operatic and semi-classic numbers, was asked by the Fox management to include "Dear Old Southland" in her program for the current engagement which she is filling, her second, by the way, in these houses. Mrs. Zackery declined to accept the suggestion and gave her reasons in no uncertain manner. Upon their insistence that this number be used, she explained that its derivation from the sacred "Deep River" theme made it impossible for her to go so, and when they continued to urge, she sang the original arrangement by Burleigh that they might judge for themselves.
After hearing Burleigh's "Deep River," the Fox management wanted no more to have the syncopated version, but to the singer's surprise, requested her with sincerity and earnestness to use the Burleigh number instead. And she is doing so. Last week, this week and next week the audiences in the Fox theaters have had and will have the unusual experience of hearing this colored girl sing "Deep River," a Negro Spiritual, and they have shown the utmost and heartiest appreciation of its beauty and pathos.
There are primitive and crude folk work songs, play songs, love songs and dance melodies in such ample quantities that Negro composers can well find scope for fullest expression of their desire to transcribe race music into modern forms, even into jazz, without having to transgress upon the outpourings of the racial heart when it was wrung and torn with sorrow and distress.—New York Age.
Negroes Organize National Bank
Chicago, July 7.—The only national bank in the United States in which all stockholders and officers are colored men and women opened Saturday, at 3201 South State street. It is the Douglas National Bank.
Anthony Overton, head of the Overton Hygienic Manufacturing Company, is president. Other officers are Maj. R. R. Jackson, Second ward alderman, vice president; the Rev. J. W. Robinson, pastor of St. Mark's M. E. Church; S. A. T. Watkins, attorney; Dr. E. S. Miller, and George Rambo, directors.
The permanent home of the bank is to be at Thirty-sixth and State streets, where it will occupy a four-story building to be erected later.
DENVER. COLORADO. SATURDAY. JULY 15 1922
N. A. A. C. P. Protests Lynchings After Respite Granted by Georgia Governor
How two young colored boys, James Harvey and Joe Gordon, who were accused of attempted criminal assault while on a hiking tour through Georgia, were tried, convicted, and sentenced to death, and then lynched after Governor Thomas W. Hardwick had granted a respite of thirty days, was revealed here today when the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People made public a letter to Governor Hardwick. The letter, signed by James Weldon Johnson, secretary, recites the facts given above, pointing out that both of the youths came from respectable families, and that the Advancement Association had investigated their case, secured convincing proof of their innocence, employed counsel, which counsel had presented the facts to the governor which gave him sufficient ground to delay their execution, set for June 30. A mob, determined not to be cheated of their prey, had seized the boys and lynched them at Lane's Bridge, Georgia, on July 1.
The association's letter calls upon the governor to institute action against Deputy Sheriff J. R. Tyre, who allowed the prisoners to be taken from him as he was carrying them from Jesup to Savannah for safe-keeping, and against Tyre and his immediate superiors for furnishing so inadequate protection to the men in view of the feeling against them. It also emphasized the fact that evidence against the men must have been indeed slight if he as governor had seen fit to grant the requested respite. This action was particularly urged in view of Governor Hardwick's recent public declaration that there would be no mob rule in Georgia while he was governor.
N. A. A. C. P. Warns Republican Leaders
The reports of an all-night conference in Washington at the home of Senator Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts on July 6 of Republican leaders in the Senate, at which it was decided that the Anti-Lynching Bill, the ship-subsidy, and other pending measures should not be acted on during the present session of Congress brought prompt action from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Upon receipt of reports of the conference, James Weldon Johnson, secretary of the association, wired Senator Lodge, Senator James E. Watson of Indiana, Senator William M. Calder of New York, Senator Medill McCormick of Illinois, Senator Samuel M. Shortridge of California, and other Republican leaders that if such a report were true, it would be a very serious matter and one which colored voters would bitterly resent.
Mr. Johnson pointed out that the political effect would be worse than if the bill had been allowed to die in committee, that some plausible excuse could have been put forth had the committee found insurmountable difficulties in reporting the bill on account of constitutional questions, but, "now that the committee has decided to report the bill, a decision in conference on the part of Republicans, in the Senate, to abandon it, without any attempt to
pass it, could not be justified upon any grounds whatsoever." Finally, he stated, the decision is solely and squarely up to the Republican majority to pass the bill.
Mr. Johnson is holding himself in readiness to go to Washington at any time to do all that can possibly be done to prevent any unfavorable action that may be attempted.
Robert Russa Moton
Robert Russa Moton
"JUST A BLACK MAN"
We should praise a fine quality in the Devil. And that is no apology for praising one of the many fine qualities in Robert Russa Moton, for he has no resemblance whatever to the Devil. But he is a good example of the man whose superfine qualities are likely to be sometimes discredited simply because somebody disagrees with him about something else. All men who attain any position above the ordinary suffer this disadvantage in some degree.
We like to talk about people when we can say fine things about them. We hate to talk about them when we can't. We could talk much about Dr. Moton, for we know him well and esteem his fine qualities. One of the best of these is what we might call his GROUP CO-CONSCIOUSNESS. He feels that he is one of the people whom he calls "my people." He is desirous that whatever good is in him may be placed on the credit side of his people's account.
This is illustrated by his recent experience in the streets of New York City. He reached out his strong black arm and saved a white woman from the danger of being run over by a taxicab. That is nothing strange for a black arm to do. Black arms always come to the rescue, regardless of the color of the party needing help. But according to the New York World, when this rescuing black man was asked for his name, by an observant policeman, who wanted to report the deed with due credit, the colored hero replied merely, without giving his name: "Just say a Black Man did it." And the capitals are ours, not the World's, for there must have been a capital feeling in the heart of Moton. Modest as he is, he could not overlook the interesting elements of this situation.
Yes, "a black man did it." If it had been a crime, it would not have been necessary to request them to say that it was a "black man."
We have met a number of colored people who seemed to think it desirable to be "the only Negro," the "first (and probably the last) colored person to do so-and-so," the "exception," or the "although he-is-colored," etc.
But R. R. Moton is "just a black man" and we like him for it. And we recommend that we substitute for "the only Negro" "just a black man." And Moton is right, for that act of rescue is just-like-a-black-man. That is the way black men act. The opposite action is the "exception." We only wish that black women were equally as likely to meet help, courtesy and protection from the average white man. New York City. WM. PICKENS. —New York Age.
Colored Women Most Beautiful
New York, July 3.—Dr. Frank Cane has recently called attention to the work of Miss May Craemer, the noted
NO 39
Major Moton Wins Hero's Fame in New York City
Major Moton Wins Hero's Fame in New York City
New York, July 1.—Treading the traffic during Fifth avenue's most crowded hour, a woman was confused and stopped directly in the path of swiftly moving automobiles. Crowds on the sidewalks looked on with horror or turned away from what appeared to be an inevitable fatality, but one man dashed through the vehicles thronging the street, seized the woman by the arm and dragged her back to safety.
Dazed by her sudden and unexpected delivery from death or serious injury she failed to thank her rescuer. A traffic man was more alert. He stopped the man after he had taken a dozen steps and asked his name.
The stranger, who was a Negro, turned.
Are you going to arrest me," he asked.
"No," said the officer. "That was a brave act and I want to report it."
"Just say that a black man did it," and turned away.
He was Dr. Robert Russa Moton, successor of Booker T. Washington as head of the Tuskegee Institute, major in the American army during the war, and one of the foremost figures of his race in America.
Likens Mme. Talbert To Mme. Galli- Curci
Likens Mme. Talbert To Mme. Galli- Curci
New York, July 3.—Mme. Cole-Talbert, one of the chief artists to record for the Black Swan Records, recently scored such a big hit before a large white audience in Detroit that Rex G. White of the Detroit News made favorable reference to this wonderful singer in the following fashion:
"Florence Cole-Talbert, declared by many to have a voice rivaling Galli-Curci, was the star of the evening. This brilliant singer found difficulty in getting away from her audience although she obliged with four numbers. . . . Her voice is a soprano of great range and sweetness, her vocal flexibility is marked and gives ease and clarity to her utterance. She made a tremendous hit with her audience."
That the music loving public appreciates high class music as well as "blues" is being evidenced by the big demand made since June for "The Bell Song" and "The Kiss" which numbers Mme. Talbert recorded for the Pace Phonograph Corporation.
sculptress and her comment on why she choose a Negro female figure for her heroic statue symbolizing the New world. Dr. Crane reports Miss Craemer as saving:
"I believe that the most beautiful women in the world, spiritually and physically, are to be found among the colored women in the states of America. That is why I choose the figure of a Negress to symbolize the new world.
"It was the deep mystic beauty in the eyes of the southern mammies that first attracted in Virginia. There is more spirituality shining out of the eyes of these colored women than can be found in any race of white women on the earth.
"The marvel to me is how the beauty of the colored woman has for centuries escaped artists and sculptors. She is more beautiful in face and form than the white woman."
FOREIGN
It is impossible for Great Britain to remit the reparations payment due her from Germany in favor of France, even to settle the indemnity problem, Premier Lloyd George told the House of Commons.
A proposal providing for the payment of all the remaining cash installments due this year provided Germany is granted a moratorium of at least two years was brought to Paris by German representatives.
King Fuad I of Egypt intends to visit the United States as well as Europe in his tours this year, in order to acquaint himself with the new movements of the world and so be better qualified to govern his people wisely.
The reparations plan prepared by the French Minister of Public Works Le Trocquer provides for improvements in the Rhone river costing 3,250,000,000 francs, the Truvere river 210,000,000 francs and the Dordogne 200,000,000.
The Americans are being secretly murdered by the Turks in Asia Minor and reports then circulated that they died of typhus and other diseases, according to J. Herbert Knapp, civil engineer of Los Angeles, who has arrived in London from Constantinople after three years in the Turkish interior.
Dr. Sun Yat-Sen, deposed president of South China, sailed into Canton harbor aboard the gunboat Wingfung, escorted by two cruisers and one destroyer, after bombarding the Macao forts, two miles below the city. Sun declared he would not again bombard the city proper.
Thirty persons were killed or injured by the explosion of a depot of ammunition supplies at Groden, near Cuxhaven, Germany. The initial explosion caused others. Railroad traffic has been suspended because the embankment in the neighborhood was badly damaged. A gigantic colonization plan, which would make the Mennonite movement of 20,000 people almost insignificant in comparison, is being formulated in Mexico. If carried to completion the plan will give homes to millions of suffering Russian and Polish Jews. It is proposed to colonize the persecuted Jews of Europe on vast tracts of land in Mexico.
GENERAL
The California State Federation of Labor has invoked the injunction against the new minimum wage law reducing the wage of minors and women workers from $16 to $15 a week.
Champion Jack Dempsey and Harry Wills, through their managers, have signed a contract in New York City to box for the world's heavyweight championship at a time and place to be named later.
Three persons killed, at least two others so badly injured that their recovery is doubtful and property damage that may reach $3,000,000 was the toll of storms and a tornado that swept parts of South Dakota and Nebraska recently.
James H. Wilkerson, a Chicago attorney, has been nominated by President Harding to be United States district judge for the northern district of Illinois. He succeeds Judge K. M. Landis, who resigned to become high commissioner of baseball.
Governor Hardwick of Atlanta, Ga., has declared that unless the Ku Klux Klan discards its masks and removes all secrecy about its membership that he will ask the Legislature to "take strong steps to make the wearing of masks a crime" in Georgia.
More than 1,250,000 workers are idle in the United States because of strikes, officials of the department of labor have estimated. Four strikes of major importance are in progress. They are coal mines, 400,000 bituminous and 200,000 anthracite; railroad shopmen, 400,000; textile workers, New England, 80,000; garment workers, New York City, from 10,000 to 20,000.
M. P. Kinkaid, member of the House of Representatives from the Sixth Nebraska district, died in Washington. The death of the Nebraska congressman occurred at Garfield hospital and resulted from a complication of diseases from which he had been ill since early in May. Funeral services were held at O'Nell, Neb., his home.
Panic reigned seventy-five feet under ground when fire started on a subway express in New York City. Deadly gas filled the ten cars when guards attacked the blaze with fire extinguishers and about 150 men, women and children were overcome by the fumes before they were taken through the darkened tube to outlets and were lifted to the street, two levels above the express tracks.
Slight danger of a serious epidemic of black rust exists in the spring wheat states of Minnesota and North Dakota, unless weather conditions from now until harvest are unfavorable, according to Donald G. Fletcher, federal plant disease expert, who recently ended a crop inspection trip across the two states. Little damage has been done thus far by rust, Mr. Fletcher said his observations revealed.
Seven persons were injured, six severely and three probably fatally, when the second section of Santa Fé train No. 4, eastbound Chicago Limited from California, ran into an open switch and crashed into a train of loaded freight cars at Bururton, Kan., fourteen miles east of Hutchinson. Union textile operatives emplied by the Merrimack Manufacturing Company at Lowell, Mass., walked out when they learned that a 20 per cent cut was effective. The company employs about 2,000 workers, most of whom are union members.
AN EPITOME OF LATE LIVE NEWS
CONDENSED RECORD OF THE PROGRESS OF EVENTS AT HOME AND ABROAD.
FROM ALL SOURCES
BAYINGS, DOINGS, ACHIEVE
MENTS, SUFFERINGS, HOPES
AND FEARS OF MANKIND.
WESTERN
A lone robber locked Miss Susannah Fair in a closet of her home in Los Angeles and made off with jewelry and other valuables which Miss Fair told the police were worth about $25,000. He locked a maid in the closet also.
The Union Pacific railroad will at once begin the construction of a thirty-five-nile branch line into Utah to tap the rich section in southern Millard county and the surrounding territory, according to an announcement made at Union Pacific headquarters in Omaha.
Verna Smith, daughter of Lee Smith, who shot and killed his parents-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. M Kimmons, and then shot himself at the Kimmons home in Eureka, Calif., told the police that she leaped thirty feet from a window of the home to the ground to escape being killed also.
J. Lester Gaskill of Long Bench, Calif., and Earl Furry of Oakland, Calif., committed suicide in a rooming house in Salt Lake City by using the same pistol. The bodies were found in adjoining rooms. Each left a note addressed to their respective mothers, saying that broken health prompted the act.
Complaint has been filed with the Department of Justice in Washington in behalf of producers and shippers of the Pacific coast against the alleged activities of the Southern Pacific railway in endeavoring to "create sentiment and action against the decision of the Supreme Court ordering dissolution of the partnership of that road with the Central Pacific."
Suffering from broken bones and possible internal injuries. Miss Anna Sellan of San Francisco died while en route to a hospital following an accident at Huntington Beach, near Los Angeles, when she was struck by a landing passenger airplane. The young woman was coming out of the surf when the big plane swooped down to the beach to take on passengers.
WASHINGTON
Górozave, the Mexican bandit active recently in the Tampico oil region, has threatened to blow up oil pipe lines and pumping stations unless he receives a payment of 15,000 pesos, according to a message from Consul Shaw at Tampico to the State Department, reporting information received from the British-owned La Corona Company. The company said that Górozave was making his headquarters at the Pecare camp.
Charles A. Ritzman, general manager of the Disco Lighting Company of Detroit, and a former captain in the army, was sentenced in Criminal Court to eighteen months in the penitentiary for accepting a bribe of $800 to influences his action in connection with the purchase of skid chains for the army while acting as officer in charge of the maintenance division of the motor transport corps during the war. He noted an appeal and was released under bonds of $3,000.
United Mine Workers' representatives after considering the coal strike arbitration plan presented by President Harding summoned the general policy committee of the union to Washington to pass finally upon the proposal.
The Republican agricultural tariff bloc got another setback in the Senate, losing 33 to 24, its fight to make dutiable imported vegetable oils, used in the manufacture of uonedible products. The Senate then, without a roll call, approved rates of 3 cents a pound on cottonseed oil and soya bean oil, and 4 cents a pound on coconut oil and peanut oil, where such oils enter into the manufacture of edible commodities.
The Court of Appeals has denied the application of Charles W. Morse, his three sons and eight others jointly indicted for conspiracy to defraud the government in connection with war contracts, for a special appeal from the decision of the District Supreme Court overruling demurrers filed against the indictment. The Court of Appeals held that no emergency existed for granting a special appeal in the case.
General improvement in crop conditions along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts and in the Northwest, east of the Rocky mountains, was noted by the Agricultural Department in its crop summary for the last half of June, made public in Washington. "Throughout the corn belt," the department's observers found, "small grains were more or less injured by the unusual hot and dry weather, as were also some crops in parts of the mountain and Pacific coast regions. Irrigated crops were not so much effected."
Pithy News Notes
From All Parts of
Colorado
COMING EVENTS.
Sept. 25-30—Colorado State Fair, Pueblo.
July 25-28—Frontier Days Celebration, Cheyenne, Wyo.
July 19-21—Cattiemen's Days, Gunnison.
Aug. 2-4—Stampede, Monte Vista.
Aug. 25-Sept. 1—Larimer County Fruitland, Oakland.
Sept. 5-8—Arkansas Valley Fair, Rocky Ford.
Sept. 5-8—Boulder County Fair, Longmont.
Sept. 5-8—Intermountain Fair and Stock Show, Grand Junction.
Sept. 5-8—Phillips County Fair, Holyoke.
Sept. 5-8—Washington County Fair, Altoona.
Sept. 12-15—Delta County Fair, Hotchkiss.
Sept. 12-15—Weld County Fair, Greeley.
Sept. 12-15—LaPlatta County Fair, Durango.
Sept. 12-15—Logan County Fair, Sterling.
Sept. 13-16—Baca County Fair, Springfield.
Sept. 13-16—Adams County Fair, Brighton.
Sept. 14-16—Conejos County Fair, Mesaasas.
Sept. 14-16—Elbert County Fair, Keysor.
Sept. 19-22—Western Slope Fair, Montrose.
Sept. 19-22—Trinidad-Las Animas County Fair, Trinidad.
Sept. 20-21—Kiowa County Fair, Eads.
Sept. 20-22—Rio Grande County Fair, Dial Norto.
Sept. 21-22—Pueblo County Fair, Goodpasture.
Sept. 21-23—El Paso County Fair, Calhan.
Sept. 21-23—Lincoln County Fair, Hugo.
Sept. 20-23—Huerfano County Fair, Walsenburg.
Oct. 3-6 Kit Carson County Fair, Burlington.
Oct. 3-5—Douglass County Fair, Castle Rock.
Colorado Springs.—Caesar R. Helbing, fireman, was killed when guiding the aerial in the department to a small fire here.
Fort Morgan.—Fort Morgan's school board is posting notices for a special election of the electors of the district for the authorization of the purchase of a site for a new high school building.
Yuma.—A petition has been filed with the county clerk and recorder of Yuma county to call for an election to vote on the question of moving the county seat from its present location at Wray.
Longmont.—John Gasper, 30 years old, died in the Longmont hospital of wounds received during a fight at his home, six miles east of here, when state rangers attempted to arrest him on a bootleg charge.
Boulder.—Every state in the Union except three is represented in the student body of the summer quarter of the University of Colorado, according to figures announced here. Three foreign countries are represented. Denver.—Mrs. John Leyden, mother of Leo Leyden, Denver soldier who was killed while serving in the army during the World war, and for whom the post was named, unanimously was elected president of the woman's auxiliary of Leo Leyden Post No. 1 of the American Legion at a recent meeting here.
Denver.—The purchase for $60,000 of the Palisade Light and Power Company by the Grand Junction Gas and Manufacturing Company was announced by H. P. Waterman, vice president of Hendrie & Bolthoff, former owners of the plant. The plant in Palisade was built by Hendrie & Bolthoff in 1910.
Trinidad.—Endorsement of adjusted compensation legislation for ex-service men and pledge of support to all service men who may be candidates for political office, regardless of party affiliation were contained in resolutions adopted at the closing session of the fifteenth annual meeting of the United Spanish War Veterans.
Pueblo.—The fire in the San Isabel forest near here was a very small affair and will not in any way prevent the holding of the big outdoor picnic for the Colorado Editorial Association July 21 and 22. Preparation is being made by the Pueblo Commercial Club for a great reception to the Colorado editors. Cañon City.—Arrangements have been perfected by the Agricultural College at Fort Collins, the Fremont County Poultry Association, the Cañon City Chamber of Commerce and the county commissioners of Fremont county, whereby a poultry testing and egg-laying station for the state of Colorado is to be established at Cañon City.
Boulder.—Another mountain climber went to his death in an effort to scale the treacherous third flatiron on Green mountain. It is the first fatality in three years and is one of a long list of victims claimed by the giant monolith in its history. The body of John E. Fitzgerald, 19 years old, of Tulsa, Oklahoma, was found crushed and mangled at the base of the wall of rock.
Monte Vista.—Monte Vista is extending an open-hearted invitation to all Colorado to come to the fourth annual stampede down San Luis way next month. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, Aug. 2, 3 and 4, are the dates of the fourth annual stampede and rodeo.
Denver.—Late reports indicate that the Moffat road will be open for through traffic between July 15 and 20. This means that the Routt county coal mines will resume operations at once, and will be good news to both coal miners and consumers.
Denver.—Reports received by the State Immigration Department from county assessors up to July 1 indicate that the acreage devoted to potatoes in Colorado this year will be by far the largest ever grown in the state, possibly as much as 50 per cent greater than that for 1921, which was the largest ever reported up to that date. Reports are now complete from 26 counties, showing 78,712 acres of potatoes. The same counties last year reported 50,693 acres. This is an increase of 55 per cent for these counties, which includes Weld, Alamosa, Conejos and Garfield among the commercial potato-producing counties. Nearly every county for which a complete report has been received shows an increase in acreage over last year, while Weld county, which reports the largest acreage in the state, has reported nearly 38,000 acres, compared with 24,000 acres last year.
Every newspaper man in Colorado, especially those publishing country papers, should arrange to attend the State Editorial meeting at Pueblo, July 21 and 22, Friday and Saturday. This will be perhaps the most important meeting the association has held in years because of the fact that the matter of a field secretary will come up, and it is hoped, decided. Besides, the Pueblo Commerce Club and all Pueblo papers have united in a big program for the entertainment of the visitors. Publishers should make arrangements now to go. Work ahead far enough to leave the office in charge of the help for those two days. The meeting will be worth your time.
Fort Collins,—Ground has been broken for the new $117,000 chemistry building for the Colorado Agricultural College, President Chas. A. Lory turning the first spade of earth. Prof. L. D. Crain, Prof. S. L. MacDonald and Prof. E. B. House, members of the building committee, also each turned a spade full of earth. With Professor House at the transit, Dr. G. H. Whiteford set the first stake, and the other three corner stakes were driven by Professor Crain, A. A. Edwards, president of the State Board of Agriculture, and Professor MacDonald.
Cripple Creek.—A rich surface strike of gold ore is reported made on the Axtell claim, lying between the Wild Horse mine on Bull Hill and the Jerry Johnson mine on Tenderfoot hill, by Zol Cain, a well-known prospector, who has been operating under an agreement with the United Gold Mines Company. The discovery was made at a depth of six feet and the vein matter, which at present lies within the oxidized granite formation, returns on assay tests more than twenty ounces to the ton.
Greeley.—A mother, her 12-year-old son and year-old baby were injured, but escaped death miraculously when a twister completely wrecked their home near Buckingham. John Biggs, the father, was in a barn milking when the whirlwind blew up. The wind became so intense that he was prevented from running to his family, and as he watched, the housew as lifted from its foundation, carried sixty feet and dropped on the roadside.
Colorado Springs.—Remarkable presence of mind saved the life of Mayor John B. Paulson of Manitou. In crossing the Colorado Midland terminal tracks near Manitou, Paulson observed a west-bound train only a few yards from him. He leaped to the cowcatcher of the engine as the train struck his motor. Clinging to an iron brace Paulson saw his car knocked to splinters and strewn along the track. He was only slightly shaken up.
Denver.—Fire which developed in the Moffat railroad shops at Utah Junction, two miles north of Globeville, destroyed a large part of the plant. The road carried $20,000 insurance on the buildings burned, it was said.
Denver.—Eastern Colorado farmers are begging for harvest hands and have appealed to the United States employment service in Kansas City, through Secretary of State Milliken for hundreds of men, it was announced here. This appeal was made in strong competition with Kansas farmers, who also are demanding harvest hands, and following prospects that Colorado's wheat crop will be the best in years.
Cisco.—A vein of what is declared to be the richest calaverite quartz discovered in the Cripple Creek district was found in the Portland mine at the 2.600-foot level, according to a recent report. The vein is thought to be a continuation of the ore found at the 2.450-foot level, but is declared richer and stronger. It is said to be the most important discovery that has been made in the Cripple Creek district in a number of years.
Pueblo.—William Marmaduke, 15-year-old son of Dr. C. V. Marmaduke of the Minnequa hospital staff, was perhaps fatally injured when he fell over a cliff at Beulah, a mountain resort near here, and suffered two broken arms and a fractured skull.
Greeley.—The charred body of Thomas G. Meeker, Lucerne farmer, was found under the exhaust pipe of a big gasoline engine on the Walter Carlson farm at Lucerne, five miles north of Greeley recently, by Carlson. The clothing was burned from the body and the flesh over the chest and abdomen badly scorched. Physicians who were called said that Meeker had probably died from asphyxiation from gasoline fumes. When last seen by Carlson Meeker was apparently in good health. The gas engine was used to drive a big irrigating pump.
The D. P.
Baur Confectionery
Company
Established 1872
Caterers and Confectioners
1512 CURTIS ST. DENVER, COLO.
HOWARD & HOWARD
GROCERIE
Fresh Vegetable
Fresh Home-made Bread
Free Delivery t
PHONE FRANKLIN 1552
GROCERIES AND MEATS
Fresh Vegetables and Fruits Daily
Home-made Bread, Rolls, Cakes and Pies
Free Delivery to any part of the city.
FRANKLIN 1552 718 E. TWENTY-SI
OW BROTHER
Wall Paper & Paint
1747 ARAPAHOE STREET
ENCY FOR PROOF PRODUCTION
GROCERIES AND MEATS Fresh Vegetables and Fruits Daily Fresh Home-made Bread, Rolls, Cakes and Pies Daily Free Delivery to any part of the city. PHONE FRANKLIN 1552 718 E. TWENTY-SIXTH AVE.
CLOW
Wall Paper
1747 ARA
AGENCY FOR
CLOW BROTHERS Wall Paper & Paint Co. 1747 ARAPAHOE STREET
Manufactured by Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co.
---
Residence Phone, York 7616-J Shop Phone,
RED HOT SHOE
REPAIR FACT
COOPER AND JEFFERS
Only Colored Shoe Repair
Denver.
HAND MADE SHOES TO
Work Called for and Desired
Work Neatly Finished
2536 Washington Street.
THE CHAM
210
Is the e
DRUGS, CHEMICALS
WE SEE
PRESCRIPTION
Phone us and we will deliver
JAMES E
CHAMPA PHARM
2101 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 o
JAMES E. THRALL, Propr.
IN 2425
THE CHAMPAPHARMACY
2101 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 PHONE 8444
C. V. FAIRBANKS —Proprietors— N. FAIRBANKS
HOME COOKING
HERE IT
Jazz is being taken from me
caught it and am putt
SUIT
RE IT IS
ing taken from music, but I have
at it and am putting it into
SUITS
Just r
—1,000
son's I
of W
your
and se
A. B. CLOW Gallup 3841-R
WINDSHIELDS
MIRRORS
BIES AND MEATS
Tables and Fruits Daily
Bread, Rolls, Cakes and Pies Daily
to any part of the city.
718 E. TWENTY-SIXTH AVE.
BROTHERS
er & Paint Co.
RAPAHOE STREET
PROOF PRODUCTS
WINDOW GLASS
OIL AND TURPENTINE
MAIN 3091
MAIN 3091
Shop Phone, York 8390-J
RED HOT SHOE
REPAIR FACTORY
COOPER AND JEFFERSON, Props.
Only Colored Shoe Repair Shop in
Denver.
HAND MADE SHOES TO ORDER.
Work Called for and Delivered. All
Work Neatly Finished.
Denver, Colo.
IMPA PHARMACY
1011 CHAMPA
the place to get your
HLS AND PATENT MEDICINES
SERVE DRINKS.
MONS OUR SPECIALTY.
deliver the goods to all parts of the city.
E. THRALL, Propr.
PHONE 8444
—Proprietors— N. FAIRBANKS
FAIRBANKS CAFE
First Class Meals Served
2444 Washington St., Denver, Colo.
R, THE TAILOR
1025 TWENTY-FIRST
WALLACE CLOW
South 1514-W
PHONE 8444
Just received 1,000 of the season's latest styles of Woolens for your inspection and selection.
TRACK WORKERS TO JOIN STRIKE
SHOPMEN WILL NOT RETURN TO WORK UNTIL "JUSTICE IS DONE."
PREPARE PEACE PLAN
U. S. LABOR BOARD PREPARES
NEW PLANS FOR
PEACE.
Cincinnati, Ohio.—T. C. Carroll, president of the General Chairmen's Association of the Maintenance of Way Brotherhood, announced here on leaving for Louisville that he carried in his portfolio requests from a majority of the general chairmen of the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Shop Laborers that he call a meeting of the General Chairmen's Association at which plans could be perfected to call off the job 400,000 maintenance of way workers.
Chicago.—E. F. Grable, president of the United Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employés and Railroad Shop Laborers, arrived in Chicago from Kansas City and held a midnight conference with B. M. Jewell, head of the striking shopmen.
In commenting on a statement made by T. C. Carroll, president of the general chairman's association of the track workers, that a majority of the general chairmen of the brotherhood favored a walkout of the 400,000 maintenance men, Mr. Grable said that he was having a hard time keeping his men at work.
Mr. Grable added, however, that the general chairmen had no power to call a strike. All they could do would be to recommend such action, he said.
The railway shopmen's strike will not be called off, and the men will not be ordered back to work "until justice has been secured," B. M. Jewell, head of the railway employees' department of the American Federation of Labor, said, in a statement replaying to the rail executives' ultimatum.
The rail executives suggested that the strike be called off and the men return to work, after which differences might be taken up before the United States railroad board. Mr. Jewell intimated that the reason the executives refused to meet shopcrafts officers in an effort to mediate the strike, as had been suggested, was that the railways hope to destroy the employees' organizations. At the labor board it was announced that an effort might be made along new lines to settle the strike, but no details were given. After rail executives had refused to meet shopcrafts representatives, board members announced that the executives who refused to confer did not speak for the individual railroads, and intimated that a new plan of settlement might be based on this fact.
U. S. Troops Ready in Texas
Washington.—President Harding has taken the first step toward backing up with the military arms of the government his proclamation warning striking railway shopmen against interference with the transportation of interstate commerce and the malls. Instructions were sent at his direction to Maj. Gen. John L. Hines, commanding the Eighth army corps area at San Antonio, Tex., to prepare a sufficient force of troops to give adequate protection to the lines of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas railroad which have been attacked by striking shopmen, particularly at Denison, Tex.
Ford to Establish Plants in Mexico.
Washington.—The Ford Motor Company plans the establishment of a large plant for the assembling of its cars in Mexico, according to official advises received here from Mexico City. Representatives of the company, the advises stated, recently conferred with authorities of the state of Coahuila and business interests of Saltillo with a view to the possible selection of Saltillo as the location for the proposed plant.
No Coal Strike Solution.
Washington.—Although the anthracite operators have submitted what President Harding is said to regard as a complete acceptance of the government's offer of arbitration in the coal strike, the situation with regard to the bituminous operators and the miners' union continued under a cloud of uncertainty with both sides pursuing a policy obviously disturbing to administration officials.
The Hague.—The Russian delegation has issued a statement that the conference was definitely over. Maxim Litvinoff, head of the soviets, said he planned to leave for Moscow.
Refuses to Call State Troops.
Dallas, Texas.—State troops will not be ordered out to protect property of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas railroad in Texas "at this time," Gov. Pat M. Neff said here, after reading the telegram of Secretary of War Weeks, relative to the railroad strike situation at Denison. "In view of the statement of the sheriff of Grayson county (that troops are not needed at Denison), and all other things considered, I am not going to order out troops at this time."
M.
Isn't it terrible * * *
to have to * * * *
face that * * * *
mountain of * * * *
washing * * * *
not only Monday * *
morning, but * * * *
every Monday * * *
morning? * * * *
Ss-sh—Don't you * *
do it. Don't * * * *
slave at the tub * * *
this hot weather. * * *
Let an * * * *
Electric Washing * *
Machine do the * * *
work. You * * * *
can have one * * * *
now by * * * *
calling up * * * *
Main 4000. * * * *
Ask to have a * * *
Demonstration * * *
at your home. * * *
WATCH OUR SHOW
WINDOWS.
Now's the time to buy new Lighting Fixtures while we are making an allowance on your old fixtures for new ones.
The Denver Gas & Electric Light Co.
NOTICE OF ADJUSTMENT DAY.
Estate of Basil Hill, Deceased.
No. 29910.
All persons having claims against
said estate are hereby notified to
present them for adjustment in the Coun-
tity of the City and county of
Denver, Colorado, on the 8th day
of August, 1922.
First publication 8th of July; last publication 5th of August, 1922.
FREE
THIS BEAUTIFUL
HAIR STRAIGHTENING
AND SHAMPOO COMB
This Comb Is Well Worth $1.00
Solid Brass, wooden handle
8 1/2 inches long weight 4 ounces.
given as a present to all who take advantage of our great
BIG OFFER NO. 1144
JUST WRITE TO US AND SAY:
I would like to get a hair straightening and shampoo combs free. Send me particulars regarding your No. 1044 offer.
Be sure and write your name and address plainly, and full particulars will be sent you. Do not wait, write-to-day for this offer will not last long. We are doing this to advertise Ford's Hair Pomade and Ford's Hair Straightening and Shampoo Combs.
Address your letter to
THE OZONIZED OX MARROW CO.
WARSAW - - - - ILLINOIS
Michaelson's
Corner 15th and Larimer Streets
OUR COMPARISON SALE.
Is now in progress—the title tells the story—everybody holding sales so are we, and we ask you to compare our offerings, our values, with any advertised or shown elsewhere and it is safe to say that you will find here better for less. The entire stock, in every department, reduced for a season's end complete clearance.
Head-to-foot Outfitters for Man, Woman and Child
Celebrating Our 30TH MILE POST Along the Highway of Value Giving
If you buy clothes on Style and Value, these splendid garments will surely make a hit with you. Choose from high-grade fancy Stylpus Suits and other quality makes. Latest shades and models. Blue Serges and other seasonable fabrics.
Reduced from $40 26
Reduced from $40 26 Reduced from $65
Cool Two
$13.50 You will need one or more Palm Beachers before summer is over. Better take advantage of this extra ordinary value. All wanted colors. All GENUINE Palm Beach.
$17.50 colors. Finely tailo man.
Khaki Trousers $1.70
Khaki Trousers $1.70
These tough-wearing and fine-looking trousers are made of good quality Khaki. Cuff bottoms. Well fitting. Ordinarily sold for $2.50.
SOME OF THE OUSTAN
INCLUDED IN OUR SALE
SOME OF THE OUSTAN
INCLUDED IN OUR SALE
Snappy
section will convince you that these hats
mes of unusual merit. Included are all of
his finest Braid straws, Imported Sennits,
Brands and Fancy Brands. All latest shades
les. (Pannanas and Bangkoks not included
price.)
Beautiful
SOME OF THE OUSTANDING TOGGERY VALUES INCLUDED IN OUR SALES FESTIVAL SPECIALS
$3.75
An inspection will convince
are values of unusual merits.
Cotrells, finest Braid straw
Split Braids and Fancy Braid
and styles. (Panamas and Ba
at this price.)
Beau
An inspection will convince you that these hats are values of unusual merit. Included are all of Cottrell's finest Braid stroves, Imported Seenns, Split Braids and Fancy Braids. All latest shades and styles. (Panamas and Bangkoks not included at this price.)
Beautiful Silk Shirts
This group includes finest Jersey's, Silk Broadcloths and Crepe de Chines. Neckband styles. Every shirt carefully made in every detail. An offering that warrants the purchase of a full season's supply. $8.50 values.
GENUINE
$1.50
Value B. V. D. Athletic
PAJAMAS
$2.35
Cool, handsome pajamas, made of fine basket weave.
MEN'S HOSE
Standard make good cotton hose. All colors, all sizes. 35c values 20c
A pair ...
V. D. Athletic
---
Ctt
Cettrells
---
Northward Flow of Rivers.
Many rivers flow north for part of their course, but because most of the rivers of the central part of the United States are tributaries of the Mississippi, and because of the wedge shape of the continent, not many rivers have a general northerly course. The principal rivers which flow north are: Champlain river and Lake Kanawha river, Red River of the North, St. Mary's river, Kootenai river in part and San Joaquin river.
In the upper Amazon there is an interesting tribe., which, in its division of work, is reminiscent of the guilds of the Middle ages. One portion makes clothing and nothing else; another one is purely agricultural; another devotes its time and labor to the construction of weapons, and so on. Their pottery, however, is the most notable of their productions. Some of these jars are extremely large but very thin, although strong and durable. Some of the smaller vessels are almost as thin as paper.
---
$5.50-$7.50 Values
$3.75
An ins
are ya
Cottre
Split I
and gt
PAJAMAS
ras cloth. Plain colors-
blue and tan. Trimmed
with silk frogs. A regular
$3.50 value.
A well-made Fruit of the
coolest fruits usually
sells for $1.50.
STORE HOURS:
8:30 a. m. to 5:30
p. m.; Saturday
till 6 p. m.
Habits of the Birds.
Most birds' families do not keep together, but scatter upon leaving the nest. But the bluejay, bluebird, the kingbird and a few others less generally known live together the greater part of the year, says John Burroughs.
Drilling Glass.
Make a solution of one ounce of camphor, one and one-half ounces spirits of turpentine and three drams of ether. Keep the end of the drilling tool wet with this solution. After the point comes through to the other side, put the glass in water and then proceed more slowly or drill from other side.
Take Time to Enjoy Walk.
One fault in those who walk for pleasure is hurry. Why hasten as if to catch a car? Why strive to be first at the goal—and miss the joy of the eye? Walk leisurely, not dawdling, but steadily, and thus enjoy the quiet and the change of environment. —Detroit Free Press.
Your choice of the house of Cottrell's finest suits. Stein-Bloch and Goodman & Suss models included. The feature styles of the country's foremost clothing makers. Splendid Blue Serges, smooth and unfinished Worstedes, plain weaves, stripes, shepherd checks, mixtures—in plain or belted models.
Two-Piece Suits
$17.50 Nowhere else at this price will you find Palm Beach Suits so well tailored, now where else will you find so many smart styles and a size for every colors. Finely tailored. man.
$25.00 At a price that coupl
$1.70 White Flannel and Silk Stripe
Cool Two-Piece Suits
THE OUSTANDING TOGGERY VALUES IN OUR SALES FESTIVAL SPECIALS Snappy Straws
Snappy Straws
utiful Silk Shirts-
Athletic Union Suits. N'S HOSE KNIT TIES
MEN'S HOSE
Standard make good cotton
hose. All colors, all
sizes. 35c values 20c
A pair ......
Fine $1 silks in plain colors
and novel two-tone
effects. All colors 65c
All sizes. A pair...
Splendid full-fashioned
heel. All colors forced
heel and toe. Plain
colors. Regular $1.50 85c
value. A pair.....
ttrells 621 Sixteenth St.
---
Reduced from $65
Division of Labor:
A host of popular and desirable models are here for your selection. Fine light and medium weight fabrics-including Blue Serges and fine Worsteds. Included are many Stein-Bloch and Goodman & Suss garments. Many have two pairs of trousers—others are four-piece combination (extra knickers for hiking or golf).
$25.00 Our finest Mohair, Gabardine and Tropical Worsteds, Comfortable, stylish, light - weight suits for summer wear. Especially priced for our Sales Festival. At a price that couples economy with quality
The very thing for hot days and summer vacation wear. At this Sales Festival price you'll find all-wool flannel, heavy weight plain white serges, white serges with silk stripe and fancy pin stripes. Hand-tailored and shrunk.
VALUES SPECIALS
At this appealing price you'll find a most complete assortment of latest Sennit Yachts in all dimensions. You'll find a style that will become your type. Excellent quality. Character workmanship.
shirts $ 75
At this price you'll find the kind that pleases the eye and are in accord with your sense of saving. Imported Ponges, White Japs and White Jersey Silks. Engagement rings. White and Silver Silks in neat patterns. Collar attached and neckband styles. A full $7.50 value.
SATISFACTION
OR
YOUR MONEY
BACK
In Libya, smoking, drinking and dancing are forbidden by the Senussi law. The great difference between the Senussi towns and any other desert city is, therefore, the entire absence in the former of the cafes which usually form the center of life and amusement. The whole life of an Arab town goes on within the high, impenetrable walls.
Mother (at phone, giving order to
grocer and scolding baby in mischief)—Send me a pound of fresh—baby!—butter and—stop that!—two dozen fresh eggs—or mother'll spank you—the last you sent were stale—you naughty boy!—Boston Transcript
Someone says: "In private, watch your thoughts; in the family, watch your temper; in company, watch your tongue." That is mighty good advice, and we are not hurting it any when we add, "and in a crowd, watch your watch."—Boston Transcript.
streets are longer than the average.
$ 43.50
KNIT TIES
Extra heavy fashioned silk knit ties that will give excellent service and retain their shape. An extraordinary value $3.50 $2.65
Fashioned Knit Silks in the Cathedral Stitch and all the latest fancy mesh weave. Plain colors and two-tone effects 90c
Dull Arabian Towns.
Domestic Medley.
Admonitory
$33.50
Reduced from $50
$8.50
$3 to $3.50 Values
$1.15
UNDERWEAR
Fine Crepe Madras Athletic Union Suits. Full cut and well 80c tailored
Good quality shirts for business wear. Made of Fruit of the Loom, fancy Madras fabrics and Campus Cloth; $2 and $1.65 $2.50 values ...
SATISFACTION
OR
YOUR MONEY
BACK
The wolverine does not hibernate during the winter months, and in this it agrees with other representatives of the family to which it belongs, says the American Forestry Magazine. It does not climb trees, although there are many stories afloat that this animal is a tree climber.
Removing Splinters.
Sometimes a splinter gets under the nail so solidly that it is difficult to draw out. If a cold water bandage is put around the top of the finger and kept wet and cold it will in time loosen the splinter and minimize the danger of festering.
Roofs Thatched But Town Is Modern.
In the thatched-roof homes of Tacolban, on the little Philippine island of Layte, the electrical idea shines brightly every night, for most of these homes are electrically lighted, and the town, with a population of 12,000, has its electric light and power plant with three $22\frac{1}{2}$ kilowatt generators. The streets are bright at night.
THE COLORADO\394 STATESMAN:
| Z
THE COL nimist C4 fo
See ZS Oe
an ae] eT ————_
i ——_— A ps SS
te eadigee OL + Bi AG ag [eel
Say Og Sere i sae eee ean
ai Mi cis ta eG beet
zt Be Oleg 7 an as =
Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice in the City of Denver, Colo.
Recognized by the Retail Merchants! Bureau of the Denver Civic and Commer-
cial Association as an advertising medium.
JOSEPH DD. REVERS occas PRODECCOF
F. 0. nox 116 1824 Curtin Street, Room 25 Phone Main 7417
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
MUST BE PAID IN ADVANCE
A i a soe es
| 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 fractional part of a dollar. Only lc and 2c stamps taken.
SER a SS Se ee
» Reading notices, ten lines or less, 15 cents per line. Each additional line
over ten lines; 1 cents per line. Display advertising, 75 cents per square for
first insertion and 50 cents per square for each additional insertion.
TO WORK OR NOT TO WORK—THAT IS THE QUESTION.
RESIDENT HARDING'S proclamation setting forth the government’s
P position in the railroad strike and calling for the aid of all good citi.
zens in upholding the law has the proper ring and should go far to-
ward bringing about a settlement of a situation daily growing more irrt-
tating to the American public. And while it may be said that proclama-
tions settle labor disputes only in rare instances the President's deter-
mined spirit manifestly foretells sterner methods if that is found neces-
sary. The American public is surely fed up sufficiently on strikes, and
public opinion in the aggregate is a powerful factor in the final adjust-
ment of all questions no matter how perplexing. It goes without argu-
ment that-any set of men possess the indisputable right to decline to work
under conditions regarded as distasteful to them, but at the same time it is
equally,beyond argument that any given number of men possess the right
to enter upon the same work if to them the conditions are wholly accepta-
ble, That all who so choose to enter upon this work will be protected and
kept free from molestation by the strong arm of the government if need be
is the suggestion carried in President Harding's proclamation.
No sensible American citizen will deny to organized labor every right
it is entitled to under our system of government. Organized labor, how-
ever, is not endowed with divine rights in that it may menacingly say who
shall and who shall not work, The transportation problem is one vital to
the very life of the nation. Prosperity will be far and indefinitely re-
moved if the blood veins of the nation be clogged by a general tie-up of
its transportation systems. This the President knows; this all labor, or-
ganized and otherwise, knows. Nothing can be gained by adding vastly to
the vexing unemployed situation. And if men be found who are seeking
work and will work. then they should be secure in the knowledge that the
American government will back them up in their laudable purpose. We
yead in the dispatches Wednesday that a former Colorado radical who kept
labor in a constant turmoil by ceaseless preachments against the capitalistic
class, and who was banished from this country as an undesirable, had be-
come a Russian Rockefeller through ofl manipulations in that country.
The information may not be without value to other agitators who find our
system of government objectionable to them. Russia may after all serve
as an acceptable asylum to those who condemn wealth in this country. We
can spare them eyen at the risk of their joining the plutocratic circles in
Soviet Russia.
‘The entire labor upheaval in this country, however, affords an excel-
lent opportunity for our great industries to try out the truly American
plan of giving employment to all in any line who may be desirous of work-
ing without the slightest regard to race, nationality or color. It is com-
ing to a showdown sooner or later, and the sooner the better. There is
more than passing significance in an editorial appearing in one of our
dailies which we quote with pleasure:
“Government will have failed, assuredly, if it cannot protect life as
well as mails and bring to speedy justice all who attempt to tamper with
rail service in any way. ‘The publie will indorse every effort made to pre-
vent and suppress violence. Citizens have on more than one occasion
watched with impersonal interest bitter conflicts between employers and
employés, but they cannot maintain such an attitude in a struggle between
a@ mere organization of men, no matter how large, and the government.”
THE COMING CAMPAIGN,
HE nation is now practically upon the eve of another political com-
T paign so general in its scope as to not only affect the political status
of almost every state in the Union but will also have an important
bearing upon the party control of Congress. Two years ago the Demo-
cratic party was swept from power by an avalanche of votes unprecedented
in our nation’s history and our own state of Colorado strengthened its Re-
publican leanings by a most astounding majority. However two years is a
woefully short space in the government affairs of a nation, and Harding's
reign has not brought us to the point of normalcy as rapidly as we had
hoped. But we believe that decided progress has been made toward a re-
turn to prosperous times that would be materially checked were the present
Republican majority wholly wiped out and a Democratic Congress put in
power to hamper the administrative program. ‘That there is more than
the usual amount of discontent and unrest sweeping the country at this
time cannot for a moment be denied. The party in power can overcome
and appease much of this discontent and unrest by taking decisive action
on some of the more important legislative matters before it. We believe
it will be very unfortunate if the Republican party enters the approaching
campaign with nothing more tangible than apologies and explanations. The
tariff bill, the soldiers’ bonus bill, the anti-lynehing bill and ship subsidy
measure are all troublesome children whose cries should and must be
heeded. However, the Republican party has in the past always arisen in
its wisdom and might to the importance of every occasion and we believe
it will do so at this time. Just at present the country is a seething caul-
dron of unrest, with strikes and disturbances arising from strikes being
recorded daily. Organized labor is in an ugly mood and assumes a threat-
ening attitude. The farmer, stockman and mining man are protesting
present conditions, These are conditions that will formulate the issues
for the coming campaign. In Colorado there is an early struggle on for
political mastery in the next election. So far the Republican party holds
the vantage ground and may again be returned the victors if care is used
in the selection of candidates. The Republican party if it would be suc-
cessful this fall must enter the campaign upon a fearless, out-spoken “LAW
AND ORDDPR"” platform, During the Shoup administration our state has
been singularly free from serious labor troubles. We believe that a goodly
majority of our citizens will endorse heartily this phase of the administra-
tion, if no other. There is a great crop of candidates for office springing
up in all parties, Apparently there is going to be plenty of opposition and
this always makes for a spirited compaign. It is not the purpose of the
COLORADO STATESMAN to attempt to select candidates at this time. Our
‘concern is confined to party success and the prevalence of the principles of
law and order. Still a word to the colored vote would hardly be amiss.
Already we are hearing of possible candidates for the Legislature. This is
proper, and we hope our group will be represented upon the Republican
ticket this fall. Again we have no candidate to offer, but advise strongly
against the foolish methods of two years ago when three of our race en-
tered the primaries. The only possible result followed and got on one on
the ticket in a year when a nomination proved equivalent to an election.
Let us work with might and main to have representation in the next
Colorado General Assembly, but let us work intelligently and not with cer-
tain suicidal methods.
A GOOD CITIZEN PASSES AWAY.
After a protracted illness extending
over a period of nine months, Mr.
Frank Andrus Joslin, secretary of the
Joslin Dry Goods Company and one
of the most widely known business
men of the West, died at his home,
1740 Franklin street, early Monday
morning, Mr. Joslin was distinctly a
pioneer citizen of that type that
brought to him a host of loyal friends
both in his private life and among his
business associates, Coming to Den
ver in 1872, with his father, John J.
Joslin, the grand old man who but re
cently celebrated his ninety-third
birthday, he at once entered the busi-
ness life of this city by aiding in or-
ganizing the Joslin Dry Goods Co.
This highly reputable firm has grown
to be one of the recognized institu:
tions of the West, to which all Denver
points with pride, Despite the neces.
sary exactions of his large business
affuirs, Mr. Joslin devoted much time
to the work of the Associated Char-
ities and was its secretary for ten
years. The COLORADO STATES.
MAN offers its sympathy to the aged
father, to his family and surviving
i relatives.
Williams Jubilee
Singers Delight
Large and Critical
Denver Audience at
City Auditorium
‘The world-famous Williams Jubilee
singers honored Denver with their
presence and the rendition or a pro-
gram that the very large and critical
audience greatly appreciated by their
response, as evidenced in the patron-
age of the parquet and boxes, which
were sold out before the performance,
and the first baleony and mezzanine
being filled to capacity, as also the
generous applause which culled for
many encores,
‘This aggregation of sinkers is with-
out doubt one of the best in the coun-
try, and the impressions made by the
delightful harmonies produced from
this octette of musicians cannot fail to
establish the fact that besides nature's
endowment to them in the wonderful
art, they have carefully studied under
capable instructors and have reached
such an efficient standard as to matn-
tain 2 reputation world-wide in form,
and to eater to successful events, one
of which it was Denver's good fortune
to have on last Tuesday evening.
A representative audience greeted
the singers, a large percentage being
White, and the program was listened to
swith that rapt attention common to
musie lovers whenever they are
charmed.
The program opened with the
“Bridal Charms,” from the “Rose
Maiden,” by Cowen, the rendition of
which brought out the ability of the
singers for the classical; then came
the Negro spiritual, “Couldn't Hear
Nobody Pray,” proving the wonderful
effective powers of musical harmony
among our people, A number of other
“spirituals,” quartet for male and fe-
male voices, also a musical sketch,
“Going Back to Swanee,” enlivened
the evening's entertainment, and again
the people of Denver expressed their
satisfaction and pleasure over the op-
portunity afforded them of hearing the
Williams Singers again.
Mrs. Hattie Johnson was accompan-
ist, and the famous basso, Mr. Crabhe,
with their associates, Mesdames.
Greene, Kennedy, sopranos; Madame
Edmondson, 2 Colorado product, and
the contralto of the company. Messrs,
Killebrew, Johnson and the “inimita-
ble” Chas. P. Williams were well re-
ceived. ‘The Rev. D. B. Over, pastor
of Zion Baptist Church, through whose
indefatigable efforts and energy it was
made possible to bring these singers to
Denver, must be commended for his
civic pride and contribution to our mu-.
sic-loving community. |
c. M, E. CHURCH.
Reverend C. E. Chapman, Minister;
Residence, 2926 Glenarm Place;
Phone Champa 4879.
Services every Sunday in the Y. M.
©. A. building at 2800 Glenarm Place.
Sunday School, 9:45 a, m. Praise
service and preaching 11 a. m.
Praise service and preaching at 8
p.m,
A cordial invitation to everybody. A
hearty welcome awaits.
———— eee
Se
ESTATE OF LOUIS BENTLEY, DE-
CEASED. No. 0/428.
All persons having claims against
said estate are hereby notified to pre-
sent them for adjustment in the County
Court of the City and County of Den-
Yer, Colorado, on the 16th day of
August, 1922,
JONATHAN R. CONTER,
Administrator,
Thos. Campbell, Attorney.
First publication, July 1, 1922,
Last publication, July 28, 1922,
————$—$<$<——
SSS SS SS
Sixteenth and Stout Streets. Store Hours—9 a. m. to 5 p. m.
Ee REL aaa britete eek te omen ete
Special!
White Cloth, values to $8.50..........0.00c0e0e 0+ + B49
White Kid, values to $10.00.......... 00000000 +++ BB95
White Buckskin, values to $12.00..............+--- $8.95
Only the finest quality of materials in their respective
grades are in these shoes.
All new and good fitting styles.
Also Misses’ and Children’s White Oxfords at....... $2.95
Shoe Shop, Main Floor.
Ruffled Organdy Flouncings a Yard, 98c
Full length Organdy Dress Flouncings of excellent quality, in
ruffled and tucked styles; 3 and 4 rows of ruffles and to be had
in white and all the season’s popular colors.
3% yards will make an unusually attractive summer frock.
For Friday and Saturday morning at but a fraction of their
regular selling prite—a yard.......cscsecsceccessccsccecsees SOG
Lace Shop, Main Floor.
Ribbons in a Mill End and Remnant Sale
‘Mill ends of Sankanac Satins, in all widths, desirable shades; a
YATE oor eeesceeceeecessssessceccesscccccrccssecssss ++ BG tO BOG
Remnants in Velvets, Satins and Novelties greatly reduced.
Messalines in 7 and S-inch widths; a yard..................$1.00
Best Quality Wash Satans, in best shades, slightly soiled, 4 to 3-
yard lengths; 5-inch to 8-inch widths, a yard.........40¢ to 98c
Every one of these items is less than half price.
Ribbon Shop, Main Floor,
Pre-Inventory Sale of Curtains and
Draperies
WINDOW CURTAINS
$1.85 Hemstitched Marquisette Curtains in ivory or ecru; a
Gal sate is eee cores cae eee ene BSS
$2.85 Hemstitched Marquisette Curtains with lace edge; a
DOE oes ecccececncsseweccccccceersessctetesccsesesece EOS
$1.50 and $2.00 Sectional Lace Curtaining, in filet net and scrim
weaves, Cach SeCtiOn.........ssssercccerccsescdsccreeness STOO
$2.00 and $3.00 Imported Sectional Duchesse Lace, each section
EST Teer eae eats AEs < GAO,
CURTAIN AND DRAPERY MATERIALS
25c Curtain Marquisette, short lengths only, a yard..........15¢
60c Curtain Voiles, cream and ecru, a yard..................356
S5e Cretonnes, light and dark colors, a yard..................506
| Estimates Cheerfully Given
On All Upholstery Work
Drapery Shop, Fouth Floor
Specials in Rugs
$50.00 9x12 Bigelow Axminster Rugs.....................$42.75
$45.00 8.3x10.6 Bigelow Axminster Rugs.................. $39.75
$19.25) OX12 Wither Hage). tess se ta ons tos oe oes sictian ne AsS |
$12.50 Gx Fiber’ RUgS.......60.ccceeecee cco eeccien sone ss SRD
Rug and Carpet Shop, Fourth Floor.
ee
————— JORRING
CHEYENNE
WYO., NEWS
Mr. George 2. Wibecan, Grand Ex-
alted Ruler of I. B. P. 0. B, W., was
the honored guest at a reception given
by Frontier Lodge No. 285 on Monday
evening, July 10th, Mr. Wibecan is
the first Grand Exalted Ruler to visit
the Rocky Mountain states. He will
travel to the Pacific coast visiting the
various lodges. Mr. Wibecan brings a
message of cheer to brother Elks thru-
out the grea. West. He is one of the
many great men who are of the herd,
who are benevolent, kind and helpful
to fellow men. ‘The leadership of such
a man is commendable to any race or
class. Many months have passed since
this city has had the pleasure of en-
tertaining such a grand good fellow as
Brother Wibecan,
When the Herdsman entered the
state of Wyoming he was met by Ex-
alted Ruler John A, Baker and offi-
cers of Frontier Lodge, who know well
how to make one feel the true spirit
of the West. ‘The reception Monday
evening was one never to be forgotten.
‘The Elks and many friends of the
order who attend the Hiks’ excellent
entertainments spent the evening with
songs, speeches and dancing. Mr.
Wibecan was presented with a gavel
by Frontier Lodge. Mr. Baker made
a commendable presentation speech,
receiving a cheerful response by the
eminent guest.
Rey. I. N. Whitten has tendered his
resignation to the Second Baptist
Church, effective August Ist. Rever-
end Whitten has a host of friends in
this city, who will regret his depart-
ure, During the year he has pastored
in our city he has done wonderful
work for the cause,
Many children attended the commu-
nity picnie on July Fourth by the
Civie League of Colored People.
Mr. Geo. Ballanger, Wiley Hill and
several others have been advanced to
machinist since July 1st. These men
haye been employed by the Union Pa-
cifie and are competent and trust-
worthy.
Mr. and Mrs, Geo. Randall have sold
their beautiful home for $6,000 cash.
‘The Randalls will depart our city
about August Ist and will probably re.
side in Denver, Colo.
PUBLIC TRUSTEE’S SALE.
Whereas, The O'Malley-Kelly Oil and
Auto Supply Company, by deed of trust
dated the 8th day of August, 1921,
which is recorded in book 3365, page
68, of the records in the offic: of the
Clerk and Recorder of the City and
County of Denver, Colorado, duly con-
veyed to the Public ‘Trustee in and for
the City and County of Denver, Colo-
rado, the following described real
Jestate in the City and County of Den-
| ver, Colorado, to-wit:
| that part of lot twenty (20), block
nine (9), Highland Park, and a part of
lot thirteen (13), Keith's Resubdivision
of a part of Block nine (9), Highland
Vark, described as follows:
On'a line drawn from a point on the
east boundary line of said lot twenty
(20) 130 feet north of the southeast
corner of said lot, thence northwesterly
toa point on westerly boundary line of
said lot thirteen (13) 120 feet north-
easterly from southwesterly corner of
said lot thirteen (18), thence bezinning
at a point on said described line 35 feet
northwesterly from easterly boundary
line of said lot twenty (20), thence
northwesterly along said described line
to Its Intersection with westerly bound-
ary line of said lot thirteen (13), thence
southwesterly along said Westerly
boundary line of lot thirteeh (13) to
southwesterly corner of sald lot thir-
teen (12) thence southeasterly and east-
erly along southwesterly and southerly
line of said lots thirteen (13) and
twenty (20) to a point 50 feet west of
southeast corner of said lot twenty
(20), thence northeasterly to place of
beginning except that part of lot twen-
ty (20), block nine (9), Highland Park
and part of lot thirteen (13), Keith's
Resubdivision of parto f block’ nine (9),
Highland Park, described as follows
On a line drawn from a point on east
boundary line of said lot twenty (20)
130 feet north of southeast corner of
‘said lot twenty (20), thence northeast-
erly to a point of beginning on wester-
ly “boundary line of said lot thirteen
G8) 120 feet northeasterly from south-
westerly corner of said lot thirteen
aa):
Beginning at a point on the line
go determined 35 feet _ northerly
from east boundary line of said lot
twenty (20), thence _ northwesterly
along said line so determined 63 59-100
fect to its intersection with westerly
boundary line of said lot thirteen (13),
thence southwesterly along said west-
erly boundary line of said lot thirteen
(3) 6% feet to a point 12814 feet
northeasterly from southwesterly cor-
ner of said lot thirteen (13), thence
southeasterly 6914 feet to a point 15
feet southerly of place of beginning,
thence northerly 15 feet to place of be=
ginning, which deed of trust was made
to secure the payment of two promis-
sory notes of even date with said deed
of trust, for the sum of Twenty Thous-
and and no-100 Dollars ($20,000.00),
Payable to the order of John T. Berry,
doing business as Home Oil & Supply
Company, one note due on or before
November 8th, 1921, and the second
note due on oF before August 1st, 1823,
after the date thereof, with interest
thereon at 8 per cent per annum until
paid, interest payable monthly. as. is
more particularly set forth in sald deed
of trust, reference to which is hereby
made for greater certainty, and,
Whereas, The said The O'Malley-Kel-
ley Oll and Auto Supply Company and
all persons claiming by. through or un-
der it, having defaulted in the payment
of said principal sum and interest, and
the leral holder of said notes, having
elected on account of said default to
declare said notes unpaid, due and pay=
able,
Now, therefore, at the written re-
quest of John T. Rerry, doing business
at Home Oil and Supply Company, the
legal holder of said notes, pursuant to
law, I. the undersigned, Public Trustee
in and for the City and County of Den-
ver, Colorado, do hereby tive notice
that T will, at the hour of 10 o'clock in
the forenoon of
\, TUESDAY, AUGUST 8TH, 1922,
At the Tremont street front door of
the Court House, in the City and Coun-
ty of Denver, Colorado, sell at public
auction. to the hichest and best bidder
for cash, the said described premises,
and all the richt, title and Interest of
the said The O’Malley-Kelley Oil & Au-
to. Supply Company, its successors and
assigns therein, for the purpose of pay=
ing the Indebtedness secured by ‘said
deed of trust, and the cost and expenses
of executing this trust. and will deliver
to ‘the purchaser a certificate of sale
as provided by law.
aputed at Denver, Colorado, July 7th,
1922.
EDWARD M. SARIN,
Public Trustee in and for the City and
‘County of Denver, Colorado.
First publication, July Sth. 1922.
Last publication, August 6th, 1922.
JOBBING
ES PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO
Ebert 3
A P. H. BALFE
TIN — PRACTICAL
PLUMBER
VINAY__/
Yi)
Lippe LICENSED DRAIN LAYER
Special Attention Given to VENTILATION AND
SEWERAGE, All Work Guaranteed
Phone Main 207 1907 Arapahoe St. Denver, Col~
—————————————————
STRAIGHTEN YOUR OWN HAIR
SENT ANYWHERE, MAIL OF EXPRESS, $125 JAR,
R. B. BOLDEN 926 NINETEENTH STREET
PHONE MAIN 4052 DENVER, COLORADO.
Ai Ao Beles bettanet. iit, asst:
; EB apne Saale | ee
es te Oy Aaa Tole adh few x 9 at £|
<P aay oo yye Bo earn Ye
meen Pe egal NG es Re Fo
Ei > a ogee pot | |
= ee ee
Ce BO eet FS Se
ee
Sone We CEE ee Sa SS es
ey ae aes Sa ae
Ww = 2 a AS Se Sig =
Se ag rs eS Sed Reed
ee a. ae aS
FIRST CLASS BARBER SHOP
Best Service in City Bath
Jimmy Gross is hitting 'em high while on his vacation.
William Spriggs has returned to his desk at the Continental Oil Company after enjoying a two weeks' vacation.
John Goffe, popular citizen and better known in the plastering and calcium trades, is seriously ill at St. Luke's Hospital.
MRS. HATTIE BRUCE of West Thirty-sixth street, Los Angeles and formerly a citizen of Denver many years, is one of the very piling matrons and large property owners of the great western city. She be remembered as the mother of bert, Calbert and Otis Bruce, who ably assisting their mother in enterprises. We congratulate our verites for their efforts and ach
Mesdames Marthenia Bowman and Grace Wyatt of Chicago, sisters of Mr. and Mrs. John Watkins of 2419 Humboldt street, are here for their summer vacation.
Mr. Warren Edwards of Kansas City, Mo., is in the city the guest of his son, J. H. Edwards, 1334 So. Acoma street. Mr. Edwards expects to remain during the summer.
W. A. Stevens, a leading citizen of Helena, Ark., arrived in the city last Friday for an indefinite stay. He is the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Boyle, 715 East Twenty-fourth avenue.
Quite a number of our people are taking advantage of the summer course at the University in Boulder. This speaks well for their educational progress and augurs a successful future for the race.
The Bon Viviants met with Albert Fisher, 2710 Williams street, last Tuesday for their regular monthly dinner. Mr. Orestes Murphy, a former Denver citizen, but now a strong booster for Los Angeles, and Mr. Fred Trusty of Minneapolis were the visiting guests.
PROF. FRED JOHNSON, principal of the High School at Fort Smith, Ark., is taking a special course at the Colorado University in Boulder. He is accompanied by his wife, who is also engaged in the teaching profession. While in Denver they were the guests of their friends, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mitchell, 2744 Marion street.
A jolly picnic party complimentary to Mrs. Mary Stark, a charming Dallas, Tex., matron, who is spending the summer in Denver, was given at Rocky Mountain Lake, Friday. Those attending were Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Gross, Mrs. Kathryn Ridgeway, Mrs. Colla Payne, Miss Marie Stark and James Gross.
MISS ELIZABETH E. HOPKINS left this week for a month's vacation in Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvania. She is a deserving employé of the Public Trustee office in the city and county of Denver, serving in the capacity of deputy public trustee under Hon. E. M. Sabin, who occupies the chief official position in this department.
A. E. SHARP, former Denver citizen, is here from Colorado Springs in attendance at the Grand Lodge session of the Knights and Daughters of Tabor. Mr. Sharp is making good at the Springs during the past five years and always has a warm spot in his heart for Denver.
Mr. Clarence F. Holmes, Sr., was host to a most enjoyable "stag" Thursday night in honor of his old-time friend and running mate, Orestes Murphy, who stopped over in Denver for a short visit with friends on his way from Los Angeles to his old home, Danville, Ky.
Mrs. Bertha Jones of 2451 Lafayette street, entertained at a 6 o'clock dinner Sunday evening in honor of Mr. J. B. Barbee, who is leaving the city for an indefinite time. Covers were laid for eight, and among the guests were his mother and sister, Miss Rosa Barbee, a teacher in the Kansas City schools. The novelty of the dinner was Mrs. Jones' using her calling cards as place cards.
Among our recent visitors were Dr. C. A. Terrell and Rev. and Mrs. Wm. Bivins of Memphis, Tenn. Dr. Terrell is the founder and surgeon-in-chief of Jane Terrell Hospital. Rev. Bivins has for years pastored St. John Church, with more than 1,200 members. All were the guests of their old friend, Dr. S. A. Huff.
C. A. ALLEN, a very progressive citizen of Boulder, Colo., begs to be remembered to his many friends in Denver. In conversation with the editor, who paid him a visit recently, the latter was pleased to discover that Mr. Allen is now a home owner and also the possessor of other property in Boulder. He is hoping to purchase in Denver also.
MRS. HATTIE BRUCE of 1600 West Thirty-sixth street, Los Angeles, and formerly a citizen of Denver for many years, is one of the very pleasing matrons and large property owners of the great western city. She will be remembered as the mother of Gilbert, Calbert and Otis Bruce, who are ably assisting their mother in their enterprises. We congratulate our Denverites for their efforts and achievements wherever they go.
The Carnation Art Club proved themselves second to none as entertainers in their reception given last Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs William Barnes, 2749 Lafayette street Two hundred guests were happily received, and what with the decorations, including the club colors, beautiful musical strains and dainty refreshments, an enjoyable evening was spent by all and the club was acclaimed among the best entertainers in the city.
One of the smartly appointed affairs of last week given in honor of Mr. Wibecan of New York City, Grand Exalted Ruler of the Elks, was the elaborate six-course dinner given by Mr. and Mrs. John Levell at their cozy home, 2536 So. Broadway, Saturday, 6:30 p. m. The table was appropriately and beautifully decorated with the Elks' colors and cut flowers, and the guests were delighted with the strains of sweet music from their player piano while they ate. Mr. and Mrs. Levell are generous entertainers and the dinner was exceptional to a degree. The invited guests were Mr. George Wibecan, New York City, Exalted Ruler of Elks; Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Blakemore, Mr. and Mrs. Victor B. Walker, Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Miller, Major Thos. Campbell and Editor Jos. D. D. Rivers.
ORESTES MURPHY of Los Angeles, Calif., arrived here last Saturday on a visit to his daughter, Miss Georgie Murphy, also his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. James Root of 2217 Clarkson street. Mr. Murphy is popular with Denver folks, having been a resident here for several years and made many friends. Before returning home he will visit friends and other relatives in Chicago and Kentucky.
John Watkins, employé of the O. P. Baur Catering Company, returned last week after an absence of three weeks in San Francisco, Oakland and Los Angeles, where he met a number of former Denver residents and friends in enjoying his vacation. While in Los Angeles he was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Clark, well known in Denver social circles. Mr. Watkins was accompanied by his wife and son, and were the honored guests at many attractive entertainments offered by Denver friends and California acquaintances. They are loud in praises of the hospitality and general treatment to visitors, and are impressed with the success already achieved as well as the great possibilities in store for our people. Mr. Watkins brings best wishes to us from former Denverites.
Another of our talented musicians has resolved to do something for our community in its music-loving features, and in the person of Miss Dimple Gatewood, a capable, conscientious and reliable citizen and artist, a development of the musical qualities in our people in Denver will be very noticeable within a comparatively short time.
Miss Gatewood studied in Denver in her early life, and became a pupil of Prof. Carl R. Diton. a graduate under Letchetisky, Berlin, Germany. She was assistant teacher at Haven Institute and Bennett College, Greensboro, N. C. She is a fine accompanist and has had extensive experience in orchestra work. Her announcement appears in this issue of THE COLORADO STATESMAN, and we wish her every success and the patronage she deserves.
REV. W. H. THOMAS IN LINE FOR BISHOPRIC.
"Coming events cast their shadows before." The familiar expression that may be applied to the pastor of Shorter Church, who to all appearances seems to be in line for elevation to the episcopate, if meritorious services to the several flocks he has pastored, and the denomination he is serving count for reward. THE COLORADO STATESMAN is on the qui vive.
PETIT GIVEN LIFE SENTENCE
William Petit, recently convicted in the West Side Court of murder in second degree on the charge of having killed William Wigley in his barber
shop on Welton street some months ago, was given life sentence in the penitentiary by Judge Charles Butler last Tuesday.
SHORTER CHAPEL NOTES.
The minister will preach at Shorter Chapel at both services Sunday. The morning subject will be "Bus-i-ness versus Hol-i-ness," and the evening subject will be "What Is It to Be a Christian." The music will be furnished by the choir. Strangers given a cordial welcome. Watch for the particulars of our annual picnic which will be held at Smith Mills.
MERIT WINS PROMOTION.
Mrs. Marian Bryant, Talented Race Woman, Given Management of White Institution.
When Mrs. Marian Bryant, formerly of Colorado Springs, entered the employ of the exclusive and fashionable Radiant Beauty Shop at 1546 Welton street something over two years ago, the owners at once took notice of her superior knowledge and exceptional business tact. By slow degrees and in just recognition of her ability, Mrs. Bryant has been promoted from time to time until she was recently given the entire management of the place, a distinction without precedent in Denver. Mr. and Mrs. Bryant have purchased two ideally located lots near the City Park and have begun the erection of a handsome bungalow of the most modern type. We are proud to record such worthy additions to the business and social circles of our city.
This Tells the Story
MADAME
T. D. PERKINS
SCIENTIFIC SCALP
SPECIALIST
THE WOMAN WHO WAS THE LADY OF THE WORLD
MADAME F. D. PERKINS (Copyright, 1910) Beautifying, cultivating and growing the hair; stops falling hair; split ends cured; dandruff and scalp scurf removed; causes the hair to grow soft, long and straight from the bulbs. First treatment shows wonderful results.
Have place for six new customers just now. Call in person if you live in Denver; write if out of the city, enclosing 4 cts. postage. Alcott Station, Box 5, Denver, Colo. West Thirty-fifth Avenue between Vrain and Wolf Streets, North Denver. Car 16 to West Thirty-fifth and Tennyson, walk two blocks west.
Office hours every day except Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. No phone calls answered; call in person.
More than ten thousand women using these treatments through mail. Write today.
Miss Gatewood, popular pianist with Junior's Orchestra, is taking a limited number of piano and vocal pupils at the Musisians' Union rooms over the Atlas Drug Store, corner 27th and Wetton. Entrance on 27th street side. Hours, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Phone, Studio, Main 3547; Residence, Champa 7338.
--The Joslin Dry Goods Co.--
CLEARING OUR STOCKS
LOW SHEET
Boys' and Girls' Pumps
—It’s an opportunity to bring mothers down on
ways need so many shoes—and when our regu
obtainable at prices like this, it certainly is the
—Children’s patent colt instep strap pumps,
hand-turned soles and nature-shaped toes;
sizes 5 to 8 at, pair.....$1.65
—Brown and patent colt one and two-strap
pumps; sizes 8½ to 11, at, pair.....$1.95
—Brown calfskin strap pumps, nature-
—Third Floor,
CLEARING OUR STOCKS OF ALL CHILDREN'S LOW SHOES
Boys' and Girls' Pumps and Oxfords
—It's an opportunity to bring mothers down early Friday morning—because children always need so many shoes—and when our regular, reliable, standard quality low shoes are obtainable at prices like this, it certainly is the time to get a supply.
—Children's patent colt instep strap pumps, hand-turned soles and nature-shaped toes; sizes 5 to 8 at, pair.....$1.65
—Brown and patent colt one and two-strap pumps; sizes $8\frac{1}{2}$ to 11, at, pair.....$1.95
—Brown calfskin strap pumps, nature-
shaped toe; sizes $11\frac{1}{2}$ to 2, at, pair..$2.65
—Patent colt strap pumps, wide and medium toes; sizes $11\frac{1}{2}$ to 2, at, pair..$2.95
—Play sandals, brown and elk—
—Sizes up to 11, at, pair.....$1.35
—Sizes $11\frac{1}{2}$ to 2, at, pair.....$1.65
—Third Floor. Joslin's—
Framed Pictures at $1.95
—Pictures which, if bought in the regular w would sell at $5.00, $7.50, $8.50 and some as h as $10.00.
—They have heavy gilt frames and natural nut frames—wide variety of chromos—woodla scenes and reproductions.
—Three sizes—25x30 inches, 22x26 inches a 19x23 inches.
ight in the regular way, $8.50 and some as high frames and natural wal- of chromos—woodland inches, 22x26 inches and
—Pictures which, if bought in the regular way, would sell at $5.00, $7.50, $8.50 and some as high as $10.00.
—They have heavy gilt frames and natural walnut frames—wide variety of chromos—woodland scenes and reproductions.
—Three sizes—25x30 inches, 22x26 inches and 19x23 inches.
—Just the frames and the glass used in these pictures are hardly ever obtainable at this price, $1.95.
—First Floor, Joslin's—
LEATHER SWAGGER BAG
at $1.85
USUAL $3.95 AND $4.95
—Splendid values in the most wanted styles.
—Spider calf in gray or brown.
—Walrus and crepe seal bags in black.
—Tooled leather bags and ooze cowhide bags.
—Small styles and large bags. A good assortme
select from.
AGGER BAGS
1.85
AND $4.95
st wanted styles.
wn.
s in black.
oze cowhide bags.
gs. A good assortment to
—Splendid values in the most wanted styles.
—Spider calf in gray or brown.
—Walrus and crepe seal bags in black.
—Tooled leather bags and ooze cowhide bags.
—Small styles and large bags. A good assortment to select from.
—First Floor, Joslin's—
TAXI Yell C
Oldest in Denver -- No Acciden
QUICK, RELIABLE AND CO
1865 CURTIS ST. Organized
Yell CHAMPA CHAMPA
-- No Accidents -- No
BLE AND CONFIDEN
ST. Organized 1908 D
---
A
TAXI Yell CHAMPA 26 NIGHT & CHAMPA 410 DAY TAXI
Oldest in Denver ::- No Accidents ::- No Fines for Speeding
```markdown
```
of operating a confidence game before Judge Francis E. Bouck in the West Side court yesterday. The two were alleged to have defrauded a Negress, Ada Craig, of her savings thru a "pocketbook" game. Geary was sentenced to a term of one to five years. Wilson was given an indeterminate sentence.
ELKS GRAND EXALTED RULER
VISITS DENVER.
During the past week, Denver has been favored with the visit of one of our most distinguished leaders, the Hon. George E. Wibecan, lawyer and Grand Exalter Ruler of the I. B. P. O. Elks of the World. Mr. Wibecan arrived last Thursday evening and was entertained at banquet at the Fairbanks Restaurant by Exalted Ruler, Lawyer E. P. Blakemore, of Mountain Lodge No. 39, of Denver. The banquet party comprised prominent Elks and friends, Mr. Victor Walker, Grand Esquire of Elks and prominent in Denver social circles, introduced the distinguished guest to the banquet party. Remarks of welcome were fittingly expressed by Dr. McClain and Mr. H. Haines. On Sutarday, the members of Mountain Lodge took their Grand Exalted Ruler on a trip through the mountains, and on Sunday he was chosen as the principal speaker at the men's meeting at Shorter Chapel. He delivered one of the most masterly addresses that has ever graced the rostrum at Shorter's and which will be long remembered by thousands who heard him. Lawyer Blakemore then took the visitor to see the educational institutions at Boulder. He left Denver for the Pacific coast on Monday morning.
---
---
Sixteenth and Curtis
HON. GEORGE E. WIBECAN,
GRAND EXALTED RULER
OF THE ELKS PAYS VISIT
Hon. George E. Wibecan, grand exalted ruler of the I. B. P. O. E. of the W., was the honored guest of Denver for several days last week.
Mr. Wibecan incurred a very painful injury during his tour of Oklahoma that necessitated the use of crutches to get about while here. Notwithstanding this handicap, however, he proved one of the best mixers and biggest men intellectually that has visited Denver in a long time. Last Sunday morning he delivered a powerful address at Shorter Church before a capacity audience. His visit to Denver is certain to be of great value to Elkdom and he may be assured a warm welcome any time he may choose to return.
Mr. Wilbecan was the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. Victor Walker during his stay here and was the recipient of many notable social favors.
NEGROES SENT TO PRISON FOR
CONFIDENCE GAME.
George Geary and Walter Wilson, alleged Negro confidence men, were sentenced to the penitentiary and the reformatory, respectively, when they entered a plea of guilty to charges
OF ALL CHILDREN'S
JOES
Hips and Oxford
early Friday morning—because children al-
r, reliable, standard quality low shoes are
time to get a supply.
shaped toe; sizes 11½ to 2, at, pair...$2.65
—Patent colt strap pumps, wide and med-
ium toes; sizes 11½ to 2, at, pair...$2.95
—Play sandals, brown and elk—
shaped toe; sizes 11½ to 2, at, pair.. $2.65
—Patent colt strap pumps, wide and medium toes; sizes 11½ to 2, at, pair.. $2.95
—Play sandals, brown and elk—
—Sizes up to 11, at, pair..... $1.35
—Sizes 11½ to 2, at, pair..... $1.65
Joslin's—
LITTLE GIRLS
ARE
CHARMING
IN THESE
DRESSES
HAMPA 26 NIGHT &
HAMPA 410 DAY TAXI
No Fines for Speeding
NFIDENTIAL SERVICE
1908 DENVER, COLO.
---
Denver, Colorado
They're made with as much care concerning the style touches that a little Miss between 6 and 14 years needs to make her charming—as are her mother's frocks.
Gingham Dresses with a little hand-embroidery and a piquant collar—linene dresses combined with contrasting color in new and smart effects. Chambray dresses—cool and very attractive.
You can just imagine how happy the different little girls who are to be their owners will be when they get them. Reasonably priced for such splendid dresses—
-Third Floor, Joslin's-
OBITUARY RECORD.
The Cammel Undertaking Co.
The Cammler Uncle Takahiro
Steward—The funeral of Mr. Samuel Steward, who departed this life at his late residence, 2522 Glenarm place, was held from the parlors of the Cammel Undertaking Co., July 1st. Interment at Riverside, Rev. Choran officiating.
Marshal—Mrs. Elizabeth Marshal, the beloved mother of Mr. Sanford Marshal and Mrs. Louisa Davenport, departed this life at a local hospital, July 4th. The remains were forwarded to San Diego, Cal., accompanied by the son, Mr. Sanford L. Marshal of 2550 Clarkson street.
Holmes—Baby Holmes, the infant of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Holmes, departed this life at the residence of the parents, 1200 West First avenue, Sunday, July 9th. Services from the Cammel parlors, Tuesday. Interment, Riverside.
DOUGLASS UNDERTAKING CO.
FUNERAL NOTICES.
Powell—Samuel C. Powell, late of 2507 Clarkson street, passed away on July 7, 1922, leaving to mourn his demise a loving wife, a daughter and son, a number of relatives and friends. The remains were accompanied to Savannah, Mo., for burial by his son, C. Powell, July 9, 1922. Harris—Jerome Harris died very suddenly July 11, 1922, aboard a Union Pacific train en route to Denver. Mr. Harris was late of New Orleans, La. Funeral arrangements not complete.
Bees cehchchescoebebescsesesese os seooomooscHesoescsss
TAFFETA FROCKS HOLD OWN;
febesesesesesesesesesnsesesesesasrsnseseseuesesesescupseaeseaeseaeseae
TPAPEPTA frocks have many rivals | milliner braids, ‘They are made over
this summer, what with the flare | flexible foundations usually, although
for organdie (its nearest of kin) and| sui frames are also employed and
fin unshaken, devotion to crepe for often brims are rigid but the crowns
both afternoon and evening frocks, | soft, Women have shown an appreci-
But the liking for fabric-made trim-| ation of adaptable shapes, that 1s,
mings on the gayer dresses, and the] those in which the brim Is flexible
Adaptability of taffeta to this style of | enough to be changed a little to suit
trimmings, have strengthened {ts | the wearer's face, and this is one rea-
gause. Where color counts most, as|son for the popularity of light sum
oY PIX®
ty, fe Ch 4 Meroe i
a Ve His) Ae ip. ad f
eg V/ AVS eo NY Af
mA iy We
CMI |S
> ins ee aes Rie
HA AES
TEA Gee te \
Nyaa Weve: oh
alte “a a io ae
| eg P oe Ct
) oy Ij Lf
Pretty Gowns for Afternoon.
‘In evening frocks, taffeta is at Its best | mer felts. For
and in the changeable weaves there | are almost unriy
seems to be nothing that quite equals | be turned up o
it In beanty. In plain and in change- | demands.
able weaves taffeta serenely bids The hats sho
goot-day to summer afternoons and | tured above nia:
meets Its fair rivals In evening frocks | time hats.” The
without finding comparisons odious. tween the sports
Changeable weavea in the high col- | street hat—whic
ors are made up simply—the simpler | the summer time
the better. Sometimes they are with-| the top of the
out any adornment, as in the case of | rough, soft, silk
the frock at the left of the two ple- | great favorite, s
tured of changeable petunia-colored | Workroom-made
Blk. Such frocks focus the eyes on | foliage are sewe
thelr elusive and shifting colors. But The smart, so:
the new medallion rosettes of narrow | low It, is cove
ribbon, that seem to catch the colors | stitchery of co
nnd group them together, make a mar- | cobweb and flor
velous decoration for them. A large |It has a rigid
Medallion with streamers of narrow | edge. The hat
Lee eae
a aN)
A po SPE |
[se ot mel |
OE nie : ? i, <I]
CegrrEe ae
a a - bk} oe <=)
j ie fre ee eecaeenti
| greed A ania Pt
| Vie a . ae
J FS =
Er gee Nl ae
ore sett Pid Pie eS eee
te ee eee SR
A 7 We oN a
“a By KEN
h 2 “oe if é ~y*
: im a 2
ae ee 2 eye Ae ‘
Nj } _ a en sy a
a, * ; : 4 eee) |
& A aS PD pnt I Py
get = pg Neg) f
oe ig
Hats for Out-Dooring.
plaited ribbon, in turquoise, magenta,
petunia and silver, placed on a
ehangeable petunia taffeta frock, was
jamong jthe early Imports and it re-
affirms Ane French mastery of color.
| The black taffeta at the right of the
eture has a highly lustrous surface
hich picks up and plays with the
ight. It Is an Interesting design with
puffs over the hips and on the
fileeves and an embroidery of black
lk and silver thread, which help to
Ponte It a sparkling dress,
In the assemblies of hats for sports
pastime wear, what are known
fabric hats, if wo include summer
Yel, outnumber those of straw and
milliner~ braids. They are made over
flexible foundations usually, although
suf frames are also employed and
often brims are rigid but the crowns
soft, Women have shown an apprecl-
ation of adaptable shapes, that 1s,
those in which the brim Is flexible
enough to be changed a little to sult
the wearer's face, and this is one rea-
son for the popularity of light sum
mer felts. For real sports wear they
are almost unrivaled, as the brim can
be turned up or down as the light
demands.
Tue hats shown in the group pic-
tured above niny be classed as “pas-
time hats." ‘They occupy a place be-
tween the sports hat and the tailored
street hat—which they supplement in
the summer time, A flexible model at
the top of the group is made of a
rough, soft, silk-fiber braid and is a
‘great favorite, shown in many colors.
‘Workroom-made ribbon flowers and
‘foliage are sewed flat to Its crown,
"The smart, soft hat ot the left, be-
low it, is covered with, satin with
stitchery of colored silk thread in
cobweb and floral designs all over it.
It has a rigid brim with upturned
edge. The hat at the right Is made
on a similar foundation, but employs
an out-dooring silk crepe both as a
covering for the frame and for the
trimming which Is made of crepe-
covered cord. Knitted silk and an
gora yarn make the jaunty off-the
face model that strikes a new note,
and o light felt shape, adorned with,
cut-out felt squares in a darker color,
shows Its eligibility to the family of
pastime hate, although it may not be
classed among fabric hats,
pe Som ty
eae ‘SRPOYT BY FEETINNS RENTTPAPER UREN.
LAKES TO-OCEAN
WATERWAY PUSHED
MIDDLE WEST 1S DETERMINED
THE ST. LAWRENCE PROJECT
SHALL DE REALIZED,
CHANCE FOR TRADE OFFERED
Opposition of Atlantic Coast States
Congressmen May Be Removed by
Votes for Ship Subsidy, Which They
Especially Desire,
ber nthe igen math da ci 8
Washington.—It seems that Interest
in the St. Lawrence river waterway
which, If ever opened, will connect the
Middle West directly with the Atlantic
ocean IS not to be alowed to languish.
‘The people of sume 18 states in the
central purt of the country are deter-
mined fhat the waterway shall be
built, and they are fortunate in having
the Hurding administration on their
side, The present hitch in getting the
enterprise under way is due to the
unwillingness of the Canadian govern-
‘ment to enter into a treaty with the
United States, which would be the first
step In the great enterprise. The State
department believes that the attitude
which the Canadian government has
assumed for the time being 1s due to
Cunadian polities, and that within the
next few months it will be pogsible
for Canada and the United States to
make a treaty.
Obviously there Is a fine opportunity
for the international waterway crowd
in the Central West to do some trad-
ing in the congress with the ship sub-
sidy crowd in the Kast. One public
man suggested that if there is trading
there will be some fighting between
the two forces. ‘The Central West is
8 good deal more Interested in the pro-
posed waterway than in ship subsidy.
while the Atlantic coast states are not
only not interested in the success of
the St. Lawrence waterway, but are
openly opposing the enterprise. ‘This
eastern crowd wants ship subsidy
above everything else at the present
time, There is a good deal of talk
behind the scenes among the middle
westerners to the effect that if the
eusterners expect to get their subsidy
bill through the congress they must
withdraw their opposition to the deep
waterway project. As yet, there are
ho indications of a compromise be-
tween the two forces.
Recommended by Joint Commission.
The supporters of the waterway
project are encouraged by the report
of the International Joint commission
on boundary waters, representing the
United States and the Dominion of
Canada, which says that the St, Law-
rence project is entirely feasible.
This commission studied the project
for about two years. It agrees with
Charles Evans Hughes, secretary of
state, that the United States and Can-
uda should enter into an agreement by
way of treaty for the proposed {m-
provement,
‘The international commission also
recommends that the new Welland
ship canal be embodied in the scheme
and treated as a part of it. Other
recommendations by the commission
are ns follows:
That there shall be an exhaustive
investigation of the extent and char-
acter of the dumnge through tlowage
involved in the plan of development
finally adopted.
‘That, assuming the adoption of the
plans of the engineering board, or of
other plans, also involving a readjust-
ment of the Ipternutional boundary,
In order to bring each of the power
houses on its own side of the hound-
ary, appropriate steps be taken to
transfer to one country or the other,
as the case may be, the slight acreage
of submerged land involved.
Navigation and Power Works.
That such “navigation works” as do
not lie wholly within one country, or
are not capable of economic and effi-
cient construction, maintenance and
operation within one country as com-
plete and independent units, be main-
tained and operated by a board, here-
inafter called the international board,
on which each country shall have
equal representation,
‘That such “navigation works” as Me
wholly within one country and are ca-
pable of economic and efficient construe
tion, maintenance 2nd operation by
the country in which they are located,
be subject to inspection by an inter-
‘national board to insure economy and
efficiency.
That “power works" be built, in-
stalled and operated by and at’ the
expense of the country In which they
are located.
That the cost of all “navigation
works” be apportioned between the
two countries on the basis of the bene-
fits each will receive from the new
waterway—provided, that during the
period ending five years after comple-
tion of the works, and to be known
as the construction period, the ratio
fixing the amount chargeable to each
country shall be determined upon cer-
tain known factors, such as the devel-
oped resources and forelgn and coast-
wise trade of each country within the
territory economically tributary to the
proposed waterway, every five years
thereafter, and based upon the freight
tonnage of each country actually using
the waterway during the previous five-
year perio,
‘That the cost of “navigation works”
for the combined use of navigation
and power over and above the cost
‘ef work n<“essary for navigation alone
if the country will buckle down
to u study of the proposed ship
subsidy legislation for a period of
four or five weeks, congress will not
| hesitate to pass a subsidy bill, Mem: |
| bers of congress who favor the legisla:
tion agree with the spokesmen for the
administration, while senators and
representatives who are opposed to
the legislation belleve that full and|
free discussion throughout the coun:
try will result In congress’ refusing to
pass the administration subsidy bill
or any other subsidy bill at this time. |
On one thing everybody agrees and It)
is that aothing but good can come
from public discussion of the bill,
The decision of the administration |
to let the subsidy bill rest in the house
of representatives for ut least a month
while the folks buck home are con-|
sulted means, of course, that the lets
lators have some serious misgivings
about the advisability of rushing sub-
sidy legislation through at this time,
Even ff the house, after having sound-
ed out public sentiment, should pass
the administration bill there would
be no assurance that the senate
would accept it. There will be no op-
portunity for senators to go home in
order to sound out public sentiment;
they must stay around and deal with
the tariff and the bonus.
Must Consider it, Says President.
Congress is now fully informed as
to the President's destres in regard to
the subsidy legislation. He does not
Intend to use a club to get the legisla-
tion through, but he fs determined, and
has so informed the congresstonal
leaders, that this congress must deal
with the subject at this session, The
President has never said and appar
ently has no thought vf saying that
he would call an extra session of
the present congress if it should fail
to enact subsidy legislation after hay-
ing considered the subject. What he
has sald and what he continues to say
with some emphasis 1s that {f con-
gress should adjourn without taking
up the subject he would call it back,
‘The members of the house are cud-
gelling their brains for the right thing
to say about subsidy when they get
back home. The subject has never
been particularly popular in the cen-
tral west and indeed outside of the|
coast states has never appealed in a
large way to voters. It is brought
forward this year with some complica-
tions that have not accompanied it on
former appearances. It is Impossible,
for instance, to consider it without
taking Into account the pending tariff
legislation as well as the proposed
bonus legislation. Representatives
realize that when they face their con-
stituents and attempt to convince
them that ship subsidy would be a
ood thing, they will be called on to
explain why congress seems deter-
mined to enact tariff legislation that
would seemingly make the mainte
nance of a large merchant marine uy
necessary.
Representatives also realize that
their constituents are likely to ex-
press the view that If congress is to
authorize the payment of a large
bonus to the men who served in the
World war, that will be about enough
drain on the public treasury, without
reaching in for some $40,000,000 or
$50,000,000 for the benefit of ship
owners.
Tariff May Block It.
It may turn out that the tariff wall
which congress seems determined to
put up will be the greatest obstacle
In the way of ship subsidy legisla-
tion. The position of the United
States as a debtor nation was far
different from what it Is today as a
creditor nation, Many persons say
congress in making # tariff has not
taken this changed situation into ac-
count.
President Wilson in his message to
congress in December, 1919, reminded
the legislators that “anything which
would tend to prevent foreign coun-
tries from settling for our exports by
shipments of goods into this country
could only have the effect of prevent-
ing them from paying for our ex-
ports and therefore of preventing the
exports from being made, The pro-
ductivity of the country, greatly stimu-
lated by the war, must find an outlet
by exports to foreign countries, and
any measures taken to prevent im-
ports will Inevitably curtail the ex-
ports, force curtailment of produc-
tien, load the banking- machinery of
the country with credits to carry
unsold products, and produce indus-
trial stagnation and unemployment.”
‘There is no prospect of tariff legis-
lation being sidetracked. Sooner or
later—before the end of thts session
—the President will sign a tariff bill,
and so the senators and representa:
tives who are pledged to vote for
ship subsidy legislation have got to
explain to their constituents why it
ag RAC ge a A Ses Aa REN
Cae)
ae
The Mouth-Piece
of the People of}
Colorado and the}
_ Entire West |
ABELIABLE chronicle
of their doings and
progress; a faithful mirror
of their wants, their hopes, }
their best aspiration. :
THE
Unequaled as an advertising
medium for the business
of professional men and
women. F
| An excellent family journal
_ speaking to and for many
| thousand colored citizens. |
|
| $2.00 A YEAR :
$1.25 SIX MONTH
$.75 THREE MONTH |
THE GREAT ORGAN }
a Ge TY 2 :
It's No Excuse.
- Rev. William Norman Guthrie
whose “prismatic sermons” are the
talk of New York, inveighed at a din
ner party against the extravagancet
of the rich.
“In times like these,” he said, “the
extravagance of upper Fifth avenue it
really appalling.”
“But upper Fifth avenue is so very
very opulent,” said a Philadelphie
matron, “Why shouldn't you be ex
travagant when your income Is two o1
three millions a year.”
“My dear lady.” returned Doctor
Guthrie, “would you excuse your cool
for oversalting ~our dinner because
he had a superabundance of salt?"—
Rehoboth Sunday Eerald
1027 Twenty-first St. Denver
Office Phone Main 2701. Hours
appointment. Res. 2337 Glenn-
arm Place. Phone Champa 3303.
DR. HUFF'S office phone is Champa 6001. And his residence Phone York 4101. When not reached at office, call Home, call Champa Main 875 Office Suite 5, 6 and 7, 2701 Welton St. over Atlas Drug Store. Office hours, 11 to 12 a. m., and 3 to 5 p. m.
Office House—9 a. m. to 12 m.
2 p. m. to 4 p. m.
Office Phone, M. 5034
Residence Phone, F501-W
S. E. CARY
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Six years City and County
Attorney at Russell Springs, Logan
County, Kansas
2640 Welton Denver, Colorado
Phone Main 3036
Res. Phone York 5774W
FRANK D. TAGGART
Attorney at Law—Notary Public
205-206 Cooper Building
Denver, Colorado
Express, Moving and Storage
2415 WASHINGTON STREET
PROMPT DELIVERY
Phone Main 6544
Prof.
W. M. Mackey
FIRST CLASS TONSORIAL
WORK
Hair Cutting a Specialty
Satisfaction Guaranteed
2244 LARIMER ST., DENVER
DON'T FORGET US When you need anything in the line of neat and attractive Printing.
不详辞
ORIENTAL RESTAURANT
Our Hobby
Is Good
Printing
Ask to see
samples of
our businesscards,
visiting
cards,
wedding
Printing Ask to see samples of our businesscards, 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
```markdown
```
LARGE POTATOES MAKE BEST CHIP
New Tubers in Spring and Summer Should Not Be Used Before the Skin Sets.
BIG ESSENTIALS FOR SUCCESS
No Apparent Advantage in Salt Water Bath Sometimes Recommended— High-Grade Cottonseed Oil
(Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.)
Any woman can prepare excellent potato chips at home if she will observe a few fundamental rules, says the United States Department of Agriculture. To make a good crisp chip she must first select mature potatoes, high in starch. Large or medium-sized round, smooth potatoes with shallow eyes are least wasteful to prepare and make the best-looking chips. Varieties of the Irish Cobbler and Green Mountain groups, according to locality, have given satisfactory results in respect to the quality and quantity of chips produced.
New potatoes in the spring and summer do not make good chips. They should not be used before the skin sets. Manufacturers who use pota-
A woman cutting a piece of meat.
Mechanical Slicer Is Preferable to Knife Slicer.
toes in large quantities prefer old stock. A waxy or soggy potato is also undesirable for making chips. A variety should be selected that is known to be mealy when baked or boiled. The raw flesh should be firm and crisp when sliced. The size and shape of the potato do not affect the cooking quality, but they influence the quantity and appearance of the chips.
Essentials for Success.
When a mechanical vegetable peeler is used, round potatoes are less wasteful than long ones. Deep eyes cause waste, difficulty in paring, and make rugged-looking slices. A mechanical slicer is preferable to knife slicing because it is important to have the chips of uniform thinness, and each slice evenly cut. Otherwise the chips cook unevenly.
After a study of various practices with regard to preparing and cooking the sliced potatoes, it was found that there was no apparent advantage in the saltwater bath sometimes recommended, nor in the extra work involved in a hot-water bath followed by drying between towels. Cutting the potatoes into even thin slices with an accurately adjusted vegetable slicer, soaking them thoroughly in clear water after an initial bath of cold running water, draining, and frying them in a clean, high-grade fat at a high temperature were found to be essentials in producing crisp, high-quality chips.
Cottonseed Oil Is Best.
Many fats, including lard, lard and suet mixture, lard-like vegetable fats, cottonseed, corn, peanut and coconut oils, were experimented with for frying the chips. Olive oil was considered too expensive for ordinary use and was not tried. The most satisfactory medium was found to be a high-grade cottonseed oil, which was clear, blond, and practically flavorless. Its initial cost was lowest and there was a minimum of waste in cooking. 'A comparison of chips fried in different fats demonstrated its superiority in behavior during cooking and in the flavor of the finished product.
The lard and the lard-suet mixture imparted a flavor or after-taste that was unpleasant to some people and left a cloudy coating on the chips that made them less attractive than chips with the clear yellow-brown gloss resulting from frying in oil. All the vegetable oils and compounds were more satisfactory than the animal fats. The liquids were more convenient than the semi-plastic compounds for use in quantities. They were also less expensive and less wasteful. No fat with a smoking point of less than 220 degrees C. (428 degrees F.) is desirable for frying potato chips. Overheated fat is unwholesome and imparts a
scorched flavor to food cooked in it. Approximately one-half pound of oil is necessary for each pound of chips produced.
How to Fry Potato Chips.
The best results are obtained when the sliced potato chips are washed in running cold water under a faucet for at least an hour and soaked in cold water several hours longer. The water in the pans should be changed until the last wash water is practically free of starch. The slices need not be dried before immersion, but as much water as possible should be shaken off. When the oil reaches 210 degrees C. (410 degrees F.) a basket of raw sliced potatoes is lowered into the fat, and stirred constantly with a long-handled spoon. The object of the hot water bath sometimes recommended is chiefly to coagulate the protein in the potatoes, and this result can be obtained equally well by heating the fat to a point just below smoking before the slices are put in.
When the slices are crisp and brown, in from three to five minutes, the frying basket is raised and drained, and the chips spread on brown paper to dry. While still warm they should be sprinkled lightly with salt. Chips prepared in this way should keep sweet for weeks in moderate temperatures.
The oil should be reheated to 410 degrees F. after each batch of chips is removed. The best way to determine the temperature is by means of a thermometer. If chips are made frequently the oil should be renewed from time to time. The frying pan and basket should be deep rather than wide and made of iron or steel which is not affected by high cooking temperatures. Tin or enamel-ware pans are not safe to use.
BISCUIT DOUGH USED IN VARIETY OF WAYS
BISCUIT DOUGH USED IN VARIETY OF WAYS
Can Be Modified in Baking Cookies or Tea-Cakes.
Three Good Variations of Recipe as Recommended by the Department of Agriculture—Many Fruits Are Useful.
(Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture)
The ingenious housekeeper will find that plain biscuit dough, which is cheap and filling, can be modified in a variety of appetizing ways for use like cookies or tea-cakes. The standard recipe for biscuits calls for the following ingredients:
2 cupfuls sifted flour. 2 tablespoonfuls % teaspoonful salt. shortening.
2 teaspoonfuls bak- ½ to % cupful liquid powder.
$ \frac{3}{4} $ teaspoonful salt. shortening.
2 teaspoonfuls bak- $ \frac{1}{4} $ cupful liquid (milk, water, or equal parts of each).
Here are three good variations of this recipe, recommended by the United States Department of Agriculture:
Pin Wheels.
Add 2 tablespoonfuls sugar to plain biscuit dough and an extra tablespoonful of flour if needed. Roll to $ \frac{1}{4} $ - inch thickness. Brush over with melted butter and sprinkle with fruit (currants, raisins, dates, or citron), or with cinnamon and sugar alone. Roll like a jelly roll and cut off pieces $ \frac{1}{2} $ inch in thickness. Bake same as biscuits.
Coffee Cake.
In the recipe for plain biscuits add 2 tablespoonfuls of sugar to the dry ingredients and one egg, well-beaten, to the liquid and mix as usual. Roll or pat into a sheet $ \frac{1}{2} $ inch thick and place in greased pan. Dot top with bits of butter and strew with sugar and a little cinnamon. Bake in rather hot oven. This dough may be baked in two sheets and used for shortcake.
Dutch Apple Cake.
Prepare dough same as for coffee cake. After placing in pan, cover top with tart apples sliced 1/4 inch thick, set close together and slightly overlapping. Strew generously with sugar, dust with cinnamon and dot with bits of butter. Bake in a moderate oven until apples are very tender.
Other fruits, such as sliced peaches, plums, raspberries, cherries, and stewed dried fruits may be used in place of the apples in this recipe.
All Around the House
A little lemon improves pineapple preserve.
After-dinner coffee should be made
double strength.
* * * *
A teaspoonful of baking powder will
make fudge more creamy.
* * * *
A cabbage leaf is an excellent medi-
dium for cleaning greasy tinware.
* * * *
Grease spots on wallpaper should
be rubbed with camphorated chalk.
* * * *
Never cook stews too fast or the
meat will become hard and tough.
* * * *
Boil a new clothesline. This will
prevent it from stretching and make
it last longer.
* * * *
Let potatoes lie in cold water for a
while before paring them if you wish
them to be white.
A good remedy for a cut is raw starch. It should be wetted and applied thickly as soon as possible.
* * *
Add vinegar to the water in which table glasses are rinsed; it will give an extra brilliance to the polish.
Copyright, 1922, Western Newspaper Union
The business man, lawyer, physician, priest or poet who earnestly tries to serve his neighbors will earn both money and real happiness. But the man who works for money alone gets that for which he works—nothing else.
THE WHOLESOME APPLE
"An apple a day keeps the doctor away," says the old saw. The following recipes are all worth keeping for future use:
Apple Sauce Cake.
Take one cupful of brown sugar, one-half cupful of butter or lard, one cupful of unsweetened apple sauce prepared from sour cooking apples and put
Apple Sauce Cake.—Take one cupful of brown sugar, one-half cupful of butter or lard, one cupful of unsweetened apple sauce prepared from sour cooking apples and put through a sieve, one cupful of chopped raisins, two teaspoonfuls of cocoa, two cupfuls of flour sifted with two teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Bake one-half hour in a shallow dripping pan. Serve with hot sauce if for dessert. Sauce—Boll two cupfuls of granulated sugar, one cupful of water until a sirup is formed, add a tablespoonful of butter and a grating of lemon rind for flavoring.
Whole Wheat Pudding—Take two cupfuls of whole wheat flour, half a cupful of molasses, one chopped apple, one-half of a teaspoonful of salt, and one-half teaspoonful of soda, steam two and one-half hours. Serve with a plain sauce made with one cupful of sugar, two tablespoonfuls of corn starch, a bit of salt, one cupful of boiling water; cook until smooth, add two tablespoonfuls of butter and lemon juice and rind to flavor.
Apple Whip—Cook five apples into apple sauce, adding as little water as possible. When well cooked press through a colander and add one-half cupful of sugar. To this add the unbeaten whites of two eggs. Whip with a Dover egg beater until the mixture is light and stiff. Add a bit of vanilla or orange or lemon flavoring. Serve in sherbet cups topped with a maraschino cherry.
Apple Pudding.—Cut a few apples to cover the bottom of a baking dish; cook in a little bolling water until the apples are partly done. Drop over the top a soft drop batter and bake in a quick oven. Sugar and lemon rind may be added to the apples just before putting on the batter. Serve with a lemon sauce, using a tablespoonful of butter, one of flour, a half cupful of sugar, one-half cupful of water and enough lemon juice to flavor. If the rind is not used in the apples as flavoring add it to the sauce. Serve all hot.
The heart of man is a small world in which awhile the soul must dwell, and in this earthly habitat create a future heaven or hell.
MORE EVERYDAY DISHES
The following one-dish dinner will be found most satisfying:
Prepare a rich biscuit dough;
line a deep pie plate with the mixture, rolling it about one-half inch thick. Put in a layer of good fresh steak cut in
Prepare a Rich biscuit dough; line a deep pie plate with the mixture, rolling it about one-half inch thick. Put in a layer of good fresh steak cut in dice, season with salt and pepper, add a layer of onions and potatoes and put on the top crust, leaving a vent for the steam to escape. There will be no need for moisture as the vegetables contain plenty. Bake an hour in a moderate oven; longer will not injure it. When the food seems well cooked, remove from the heat, wrap in a cloth and steam in a cool place for ten minutes; this softens the crust and makes the dish more palatable. Serve hot in pie shaped pieces.
With this dish a dish of dandelion greens washed and crisped in water and served with hot bacon fat and vinegar, makes a well balanced meal, sufficiently nourishing to sustain a working man. With this meal a dessert of apple sauce and dark whole wheat bread, and a cup of tea or coffee will be all that is needed for dessert.
Liver en Casserole.—Take a pound or more of liver, cut in slices and simmer for ten to fifteen minutes in salted water; drain and chop fine, mixing well with salt and pepper to season. Add one tablespoonful of onion also chopped. In the bottom of a well greased casserole place one-half cupful of washed rice, one carrot chopped and spread over the rice; over this spread the liver and the liquor, two cupfuls, in which the liver was cooked. Spread two tablespoonfuls of butter over this dish and bake in the oven for an hour. Add one-half cupful of rich milk or cream and remove the cover; let cook for a few minutes, sprinkle with parsley and serve.
If cottage cheese needs to be increased in quantity add a stiffly beaten egg white with some cream.
Apple Sandwich.—Spread whole wheat bread with butter, then add chopped apple mixed with chopped nuts.
San Francisco Pralines.—Take two cupfuls of brown sugar, three-fourths of a cupful each of roasted almonds and pecans, one cupful of water. Boil the sugar and water to the soft ball stage, stir in the nuts and pour into patty tins, well greased, to mold.
Nellie Maxwell
"It's Signs That Make a Business"
Shop Near Five Points
2421 WASHINGTON ST.
Resi
2841 CALD
Phone Gallup 473
CAMPBELL BROTHE
COAL
COMPANY
Phone Gallup 473
AMPBELL BROTHE
COAL
COMPANY
Wholesale and Retail
HAY, GRAIN, COAL,
SUPP
Office: 1401 W. 38th Ave.
Phone Ch
WESTERN S
COM
WARM AIR
REPAIRS FOR ALL FURNA
CHIMNET
Y, GRAIN, COAL, WOOD AND POULT
SUPPLIES
1401 W. 38th Ave. Yards: 1400 W.
HAY, GRAIN, COAL, WOOD AND POULTRY SUPPLIES
Office: 1401 W. 38th Ave. Yards: 1400 W. 32d Ave.
PHONE CHAMPA 7889
TERN SHEET MET
COMPANY
WARM AIR FURNACES
FOR ALL FURNACES—SHEET MET
CHIMNEY STACKS
REPAIRS FOR ALL FURNACES—SHEET METAL WORK
CHIMNEY STACKS
920 NINETEENTH STREET
The Curtis Park Floral Company
FLORAL DESIGNS PUT UP WHILE YOU WAIT
CHOICE PLANTS AND CUT FLOWER
GREENHOUSES: Thirty-Fourth a
TELEPHONE. MAIN 1511
C. E. Weatherhead
PHONE
WEATHER HAT
MEN'S AND WOMEN'S UNCLASSIFIED
PANAMAS AND
1722 STOUT STREET
C. E. SMITH, Manager
The Market
Wholesale and Retail Staple and
Hotels and Restaurants Our
Eastern Cor
Fruits, Vegetables,
Telephones Main 48
622-636 15TH STREET
S
l
bany
SIGNS PUT UP WHILE YOU WAIT
HATS AND CUT FLOWERS CONSTANTLY ON HAND
AGES: Thirty-Fourth and Curtis Streets
MAIN 1511 DENVER. COLO
erhead C. B.
PHONE MAIN 3203
EATHERHEAD
HAT FACTORY
ESTABLISHED 1923
WOMEN'S UNCLAIMED HATS FOR SALE
PANAMAS AND WHITE MILANS
STREET ALBANY HO
E. SMITH, Manager, Res. Phone South 160
e Market Comp
and Retail Staple and Fancy Groceries, Fish
and Restaurants Our Specialty. Fresh and
Eastern Corn Fed Meat
Fruits, Vegetables, Poultry and Game.
Telephones Main 4302, 4303, 4304, 4305
STREET DENVER,
The
Curtis
Park
Floral
Company
FLORAL DESIGNS PUT UP WHILE
YOU WAIT
CHOICE PLANTS AND CUT FLOWERS CONSTANTLY
ON HAND
GREENHOUSES: Thirty-Fourth and Curtis Streets
TELEPHONE. MAIN 1511
DENVER. COLO
WEATHERHEAD
HAT FACTORY
ESTABLISHED 1874
MEN'S AND WOMEN'S UNCLAIMED HATS FOR SALE—FELTS,
PANAMAS AND WHITE MILANS
1722 STOUT STREET
ALBANY HOTEL BLDG.
Wholesale and Retail Staple and Fancy Groceries, Fish and Oysters.
Hotels and Restaurants Our Specialty. Fresh and Cured
...
---
Residence
2841 CALIFORNIA ST.
callup 473
BROTHERS
AL
PANY
WOOD AND POULTRY PLIES
Yards: 1400 W. 32d Ave.
SHEET METAL
COMPANY
FURNACES
CES—SHEET METAL WORK
STACKS
DENVER, COLORADO
ERS CONSTANTLY ON HAND
and Curtis Streets
DENVER, COLO
ERHEAD
FACTORY
MED HATS FOR SALE—FELTS,
WHITE MILANS
ALBANY HOTEL BLDG.
Res. Phone South 1608
et Company
Fancy Groceries, Fish and Oysters.
Specialty. Fresh and Cured
In Fed Meats
Poultry and Game.
02, 4803, 4804, 4805
DENVER, COLORADO
Phone Main 3737
Satisfaction Guaranteed
THE NEW WAY SHOE
REPAIRING
C. C. Dennis, Proprietor
1855 CHAMPA STREET
Denver, Colo.
C. B. Weatherhead
[Picture of a woman with a white headband and a white dress. She is looking slightly to the right of the frame.]
CONSTANT CARE—NOT LUCK
Human history and experience have taught us that many persons believe that a head of naturally long and beautiful hair, a healthy scalp and a lovely smooth complexion come from luck, but they do not. Constant care and the frequent use of preparations of proven merit are the secrets.
Use Madam C. J. Walker's
Vegetable Shampoo
Pure, thoroly cleanses
hair and scalp.
Glossine
To soften dry,
curly hair.
Wonderful Hair Grower
Nourishes and stimulates the growth of stubborn, lifeless hair.
Tetter Salve
For Tetter, Eczema and Itching Scalps.
Four preparations especially recommended for short, thin and falling hair,
tetter and eczema of the scalp. Sent as trial treatment for $1.50.
Complexion Soap Superfine Face Powder Cleansing Cream
Witch Hazel Jelly Compact Rouge Vanishing Cream
World renowned and made to aid you have a lovely, smooth complexion.
For Sale at Drug Stores, of Agents and by Mail.
Vegetable Shampoo Glossine Pure, thoroly cleanses To soften dry, hair and scalp. curly hair. Wonderful Hair Grower Nourishes and stimulates the growth of stubborn, lifeless hair.
For Tetter, Eczema and Itching Scalps.
Four preparations especially recommended for short, thin and falling hair,
tetter and eczema of the scalp. Sent as trial treatment for $1.50.
Complexion Soap Superfine Face Powder Cleansing Cream
Witch Hazel Jelly Compact Rouge Vanishing Cream
World renowned and made to aid you have a lovely, smooth complexion.
For Sale at Drug Stores, of Agents and by Mail.
Free Booklet—Write To-day
The Madam C. J. Walker Mfg. Co., Inc.
640 N. West St., Indianapolis, Ind.
CHARLOTTE HAIR NETS
CAP SHAPE AND FRINGE
Single Mesh ..... 10c
Double Mesh, 15c; two for..... 25c
TAN OFF—MADAM WALKER'S SKIN BLEACH AT
The Atlas Drug Co.
The Five Points Postal Station.
PHONE MAIN 875. 2701 WELTON
GRANBERRY TAXI AND BAGGAGE CO
Office 2741 Welton Street.
The Madam C.J.Walker Mfg. Co., Inc. 640 N.West St., Indianapolis, Ind.
CHARLOTTE HAIR NETS
CAP SHAPE AND FRINGE
Single Mesh .....10c
Double Mesh, 15c; two for.....25c
TAN OFF—MADAM WALKER'S SKIN BLEACH AT
The Atlas Drug Co.
The Five Points Postal Station.
PHONE MAIN 875. 2701 WELTON
GRANBERRY TAXI AND BAGGAGE CO Office 2741 Welton Street.
1
OFFICE PHONE CHAMPA
OFFICE
PHONE
CHAMPA
87-88
quick and Prompt Service Day and night. Call Us for Special Rates on Out-of-Town Trips.
If you have a room for rent or want a room call us.
NO CHARGE FOR THIS INFORMATION
Under New Management
Quick and Prompt Service Day and night. Call Us for Special Rates on Out-of-Town Trips. If you have a room for rent or want a room call us. NO CHARGE FOR THIS INFORMATION
Fruit Basket
DAY AND NIGHT CAFE
Roy Maxwell, Proprietor
1365 CURTIS STREET DENVER
Strictly First-class, Well-seasoned, Home-cooked
Foods and Pastry Served at All Hours.
Give us a trial.
Strictly First-class, Well-seasoned, Home-cooked Foods and Pastry Served at All Hours Give us a trial.
MILLINERY
Have your old hat changed to a new one. Mme. M. A. Lee, 2735 Welton Street, keeps latest style of hats on hand, and takes pleasure in showing you her display. Give her a trial.
IF YOU WANT SERVICE
bring your clothes for Remodeling, Cleaning and Pressing.
See
W. C. LEE
Have your old hat changed to a new one. Mme. M. A. Lee, 2735 Welton Street, keeps latest style of hats on hand, and takes pleasure in showing you her display. Give her a trial.
IF YOU WANT SERVICE
bring your clothes for Remodeling, Cleaning and Pressing.
Sole Manager. Phone Champa 6728.
IMPERIAL CAFE
MR. AND MRS. E. R. PAGE, PROPS.
```markdown
```
First-Class Meals at All Hours OPEN DAY AND NIGHT
Our Service Is Unsurpassed
PHONE MAIN 2759
715 EAST 26TH AVE.
THE WORLD'S FINEST HAIRDRESSER
send $1.00 and we will send you a full supply that you can begin work with at once: also agent's terms. Send all money by money order to THE STAR HAIR GROWER MF'R., P. O. Box 812, Greensboro, N. C.
YOUR PRINTING
In
A Valuable Asset
of Your Business
We Help Our Customers to Success
With Presentable,
Profitable
PUBLICITY
Save Pennies Waste Dollars
Some users of printing save pennies by getting inferior work and lose dollars through lack of advertising value in the work they get. Printers as a rule charge very reasonable prices, for none of them get rich although nearly all of them work hard. Moral: Give your printing to a good printer and save money.
The first cooked dish of which any record exists, according to one writer, is the red potpourri of lentils for which Esau sold his birthright. This form of food is still very common in both Germany and France.
AFARMER carrying an express package from a big mail-order house was accosted by a local dealer.
Boy Versus Monkey.
It would not be difficult for a boy to outrun a monkey on the level, but there is one species of monkey known as the Potos monkey, built something like a greyhound, which can lope along at 18 miles an hour.
"Why don't you patronize your home paper and advertise?" I read it and didn't know that you had the stuff I have here."
Rubber Gloves.
Rubber gloves will last much longer with proper care. After wearing them, wash out and thoroughly dry with a soft cloth. If the hands perspire, dust talcum inside the gloves. As soon as you notice a tear, patch it with adhesive.
The Springs of Art.
The great human reservoirs, from which the world draws its masterpieces of art as thoughtlessly as it draws a cup of water from the faucet, are fed by many subterranean springs which flow spontaneously, freely, irresistibly, always giving, joyous to be giving, without price, but not without much cost to the owner.—William Howe Downes.
Reading With a Purpose.
But having decided that a book is worth reading, you must cease to judge it while you read it; you must let it happen to you, or your opinion of it will not be worth having nor will you make any progress in the experience of literature or of any kind of art.—A. Clutton-Brock.
WANTED
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
OFFICIAL HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN NEGRO IN THE WORLD WAR
EMMETT J. SCOTT
SPECIAL ASSISTANT TO SECRETARY OF WAR
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 over two hundred in number, this work offers delightful reading of its 600 pages for the youth, the middle-aged and old, and each home will add dignity and loyalty to our country by being provided with a copy of this comprehensive 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 STATES MARKET
O. Box 116
Room 25, 1824 Curtis St.
arrangements can also be made over phone. Call Main 740-222-2222.
PRESS COMMENT: No library is complete without Scott's history of "The American Negro in the World War," and no better way could be left to posterity than this great work of Negroism and patriotism.
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
SCOTTS 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
THE COLORADO STATES MAN
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.
W. K. HUNT
2962 WELTON
We Handle the Windsor Nu-Roll All Flavors
WE HAVE SPRING CHIX FROM THE PANCH EVERY SATURDAY; ALSO FRESH VEGETABLES, BERRIES AND WATERMELON.
FROM THE DAY; ALSO
ERRIES AND
WE HAVE SPRING CHIX FROM THE RANCH EVERY SATURDAY; ALSO FRESH VEGETABLES, BERRIES AND WATERMELON.
We Now Handle Fresh Dressed Chickens
Can Please You
COURTESY AND SERVICE TO ALL
---
1910
WANT
to place in each of the fifteen those
Denver, a
Scott's Official Book
American Negro
World
SCOTTS OFFICIAL
AMERICA
THE WORLD
EMMETT
SPECIAL ASSISTANT
A complete and authentic narrative
American soldiers of the Negro re-
mocracy. Illustrated with office
of over two hundred in number,
reading of its 600 pages for the
the old, and each home will ado-
race and country by being provi-
mendable work. A very desirab-
This book is being offered at t
$3.0
at the off
THE COLORADO
$3.00
at the office of
P. O. Box 116
Arrangements can also be made
PRESS COMMENT: No library is
History of "The American Negro in the
legacy could be left to posterity than
heroism and patriotism.
CHAMPA 3522
WE HAVE SPRING RANCH EVERY S FRESH VEGETABL WATERMELON.
---