Colorado Statesman
Saturday, December 23, 1922
Denver, Colorado
Page text (machine-generated)
We Wish You a Merry Xmas and a Prosperous New Year
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
THE JOURNAL OF THE WEST.
LABOR SHALL BE FREE
RACE COUNTRY PARTY
VOL. XXIX.
DENVER, COLORADO, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1922.
NO.
M. B.
CHRISTMAS GREETINGS BY GOVERNOR SHOUP.
IN SENDING a word of holiday greetings through your excellent paper to the citizens of Colorado, let me take occasion to call attention to the fact, too often overlooked, that we are blessed here in Colorado beyond compare with a land of freedom and equal opportunity—a land where law and order prevails, where the rights of every citizen are safeguarded, and the true American can put his ideals into daily life.
These are great privileges indeed—greater than ever given to man until wrought out by the wonderful American republic; and it is well, at this season of the renewal of the Master's spirit of Good Will to all Mankind, that we recognize how much we owe to that sacred influence; because without it the much-prized condition that we now enjoy here in Colorado could never have existed.
If we but realize how much we have, especially as compared with what our forefathers had, our hearts will overflow with joy and thankfulness, and the spirit of good-will will flow out to brighten and bless the life of our fellow-men everywhere; and in return bring greater blessings to ourselves. A very Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to all!
OLIVER H. SHOUP.
CIVIC CENTER A SCENE OF BEAUTY.
than ever before, and if one will but take the time to go to the steps on the south side of the state capital and look down upon the scene, the bewilderment of charm and alluring beauty, it will carry one above and beyond the sordid reflections and contemplations of every day life. It will inspire and conjure up the true Christmas spirit. It will make one prouder of self, prouder of Denver and of humanity in general.
EACH year during the Christmas season the always beautiful civic center is transformed into a veritable fairy-land of fragrant pine trees, wreaths of holly and sparkling bulbs of every hue by the city officials, thus giving to Denver a scene of beauty and granduer unequalled in any city in America. This year the decorations are far more elaborate
DENVER, COLORADO, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1922. CHRISTMAS GREETINGS FROM THE MINISTER OF SHORTER CHAPEL, DENVER, COLORADO.
THE UNION
NCE MORE the whole Christendom gathers about the lowly manger cradle in Bethlehem. As we listen our ears seem to catch the harmonies of the angelic choir on the plain of Palestine as they sing, "Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men." How our hearts should respond with love and gratitude toward God and man at the joyous Christmas season!
As we again celebrate the birth of our Savior let us make it the occasion for reconsecration of ourselves to Him and to His service. Let us cherish His church and kingdom, let us give His word its true place in our lives and homes, and let us lay our all upon His altar.
If this greeting shall come to any who have experienced bereavement during the past year, or who are sick, or burdened, or troubled, let it speak to your heart the sympathy of the sender and above all the peace of the Christ.
To you, and to all whom you hold dear, I send my heart's greeting in His name. May your portion of the Christmas joy be truly plentiful.
Yours in Christian service,
WILLIAM H. THOMAS.
SHORTER CHAPEL NOTES.
The minister will preach the Christmas sermon Sunday morning at 11 o'clock. Subject: "If Every Day Were Christmas." Special music by the choir. At the evening service,
7:30 p. m., a Christmas pageant will be rendered by the Sunday School. Everybody is invited to hear these little ministers tell the Christmas story. If you want your Christmas to have a halo about it, attend the 5 o'clock service Christmas morning at Shorter Chapel.
SHORTER CHAPEL NOTES
The minister will preach the Christmas sermon Sunday morning at 11 o'clock. Subject: "If Every Day Were Christmas." Special music by the choir. At the evening service.
M.
CHRISTMAS GREETING. IN the happy spirit of Christmas I extend to my fellow-citizens the kindest wishes of the season. I have never been so proud of Denver in my life as I am this Christmas. In all of Denver's history I do not recall a year that has been so fruitful of blessings, so prodigal of promise as 1922. I do not have to go into detail to convey my meaning. I will but mention a few things: The Moffat tunnel, the Colorado River pact, the unequaled era of building, both as to homes and business blocks; our railroad terminal expansion and in general our preparation for 500,000 population in 1930; schools, viaducts, paved streets, sewers, bridges. It all denotes that we have civic unity, without which we cannot succeed.
Most of all I am glad because our people have been happy and prosperous and because, at this time of universal good cheer, we do not have to face a heart-saddening condition of unemployment such as Europe and some parts of America are undergoing.
As Tiny Tim said, "God bless us, every one."
D. C. BAILEY.
FIVE O'CLOCK SERVICE CHRISTMAS MORN AT SHORTER CHAPEL.
PART ONE.
1. Christmas Morn.
2. The Angels Serenade.....
...Miss Dimple Gatewood
3. Violin Solo.....Greetings Prof. George Morrison.
4. Christmas Carols.....Gruber
5. Processional.
6. Sing, Oh Sing This Blessed Morn.
7. Prelude.....E. K. Heyser
8. Sing, O Heavens.
9. Solo.....Every Valley Mrs. Lillian Pinn.
10. O, Thou That Tellest.
11. Duet....He Shall Come Down Like Rain
Misses Eula and Mary Hicks.
PART TWO.
1. He Shall Reign.
2. Scripture Lesson.
3. Offering.
4. Announcements.
5. Prof. George Morrison and Orchestra.
6. We Come.
7. Opening Doors of the Church.
8. Sleep, Holy Babe...Mrs. Mazie Wilson and Chorus
9. Final Chorus...Mortals Awake!
10. Recessional...Doxology Benediction.
FOREIGN
Stanislav Wojclechowski has been elected president of Poland to succeed President Narutowicz, who was assassinated recently.
Germany has turned over 60,000,000 marks, approximately $14,500,000, to the allied reparations committee, this sum being due Dec. 15, said a Central News dispatch from Paris to London.
Lord Curzon announced at Lausanne that the near east conference will continue, the Turks having adopted a conciliatory attitude toward the allied plan for settlement of the straits question.
Martial law became effective in Warsaw by proclamation of the cabinet. Captain Newadamski, the crazed artist who assassinated President Narutowicz, has been held for trial by court-martial.
A disturbing discovery was made in the rear of Buckingham palace, London, when a grenade bomb was found in an ash cart which had just arrived to remove the palace refuse. How the missile got into the cart is a mystery.
The strike of the dock workers in Vera Cruz was settled at a conference between representatives of the men and B. E. Hollway, general manager of the Mexican Railway and Vera Cruz terminal. The workers get a 22 per cent increase for three months.
Seven Republican irregular prisoners were executed at Mount Joy prison recently by the Irish Free State government. The men executed were former railway workers. They were arrested near Kildare for tearing up rails and threatening to wreck trains
Twelve persons were reported missing from the French hospital ship Vinh-Long, which caught fire in the Sea of Marmora. Earlier in the day the United States destroyer Bainbridge which had gone to the rescue of the French ship, had reported all on board saved.
GENERAL
A slight earthquake shock was felt in Missoula, Mont., recently. Residents were awakened, pictures shaken from walls and dishes rattled. No damage was reported. Four persons were instantly killed and another was slight injured at Port Arthur, Texas, when a street car struck the truck in which they were riding. All of the party were en route to their work. Between 600 and 700 persons, comprising the spectators in two moving picture theaters, were forced to run for safety when fire destroyed the Republic and damaged the Garden theaters in Annapolis, Md.
Twenty-two civilian employés of the Brooklyn naval base were arrested by Department of Justice agents from New York city in connection with grand jury indictments charging more than $1,000,000 worth of goods have been stolen from the base since the war. Goods stolen from the naval base included clothing, oil and other materials, according to the federal agents.
The Transportation Brotherhoods National Bank, the sixth of its kind in America, opened for business in Minneapolis recently with initial deposits of more than $40,000 during the first hour of business. The bank is capitalized at $200,000, and will be operated on a plan similar to the Engineers Co-operative Bank of Cleveland. The stock is held by members of the four transportation brotherhoods of the Northwest.
According to the annual report of the U. S. forest service, a large part of the danger to the national forests from man-caused fires is due to the seasonal influx of tourists, campers, hunters, and fishermen, and other visitors from the cities and from distant parts of the country. A national campaign of public education on the subject of forest fires is demanded if the task of protection of the vast area of the national forests, from Maine and Florida to California and Washington, is to be successfully performed.
Twenty-three of the twenty-seven persons who have been missing since the tug Reliance struck on the rocks off Lizzard island, near Sault Ste Marie, Ont., have been saved, according to reports from the tug Grey, which reached the wreck. Earlier reports said that all hope for the lives of twenty-seven vanished with the finding of two overturned lifeboats known to have carried the party.
Soldiers' bonus and highway improvement account for approximately 85 per cent of the $376,685,115.12 au85 per cent of the $376,685.12 authorized indebtedness of thirteen Middle West and Northwest states, according to reports of state treasurers from the various states. Of this amount $181,735,115 is represented in bonds or certificates of indebtedness already issued. Voters of Illinois, Michigan, Missouri, Kansas, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa and Ohio have authorized the payment of $207,705,000 to veterans of the world war, a portion of which already has been distributed. Illinois, Michigan and Missouri have provided for a system of good highways representing an expenditure of $115,000,000.
May Walker Olie Homestead, a Holstein cow owned by the Minnesota Holstein Company at Austin, Minn., has broken the world record for a year's production of butter, her figure for 365 days being 1,217.27 pounds of butter fat, the equivalent of 1,521.6 pounds of butter, according to A. L. Eberhart, president of the company and manager of a packing plant in Omaha.
Ismet Pasha has announced that the American colleges and institutions in Smyrna will be permitted to reopen under the Angora regime.
NEWS TO DATE IN PARAGRAPHS
CAUGHT FROM THE NETWORK OF WIRES ROUND ABOUT THE WORLD.
RECORD OF IMPORTANT EVENTS
CONDENSED FOR BUSY
WESTERN
Muriel Stark, aged 3 months, was instantly killed when the water jacket of a kitchen range near which her cot had been placed exploded in her home in Vancouver, B. C. The child was struck by a flying fragment of iron.
Air Mall Pilot Henry G. Boonstra, lost in a blizzard while flying with government mall from Salt Lake to Rock Springs, Wyo., was found alive and well at Rigby ranch, near Coalville, Utah, by a searching party.
William A. Farr and Rex Aylett, confessed that they were the two bandits who shot and probably fatally wounded Miss Roylance Fitzgerald on a road south of Salt Lake City as the culmination of a series of highway robberies that have terrorized Salt Lake City motorists for months past.
Capt. George MacKinnon, master of the Pacific mail passenger steamer Newport, has been accused formally of sailing away and leaving in peril the lumber schooner Svea when the two vessels collided near Port San Luis a few days ago. A complaint was filed with the federal steamboat inspectors at San Francisco by Capt. Karl Rohberg of the schooner Svea.
Eight union trainmen leaders were convicted of conspiracy to obstruct interstate commerce for their activities in connection with a strike last August against the Santa Fé railroad by verdict of a jury in the United States District Court in Los Angeles. In this strike some twenty trains were abandoned in the California-Arizona desert, leaving the passengers stranded.
WASHINGTON
Announcement was made that the Department of Justice was preparing to file a suit against the Wright-Martin Aircraft Corporation to recover a $3,601,715 war claim.
The budget bureau left out the annual item of $360,000 for free seed distribution by senators and representatives, and it was not placed in the bill by the appropriations committee.
Ed Hayes entered the headquarters of the L. W. W. in Salt Lake City and, it is alleged, at the point of a revolver held up Pat Mee, secretary of the Salt Lake City branch of the L. W. W., and Thomas Hodges, who happened to be in the room.
The Postoffice Department has estimated that a waste of $1,740,000 annually results from wrongly addressed mail. A survey* just completed reveals that the average number of letters received at postoffices daily with improper addresses was 375,381, and that the salaries of postal employés required to readdress this mail amounts alone to more than $1,000,000 a year.
The refusal of Representative Keller, Republican, Minnesota, to respond to a subpoena requiring him to give under oath the information upon which he based his impeachment charges against Attorney General Daugherty, has created a precedent of such possible far-reaching importance that the House judiciary committee decided to refer the whole matter to a sub-committee for investigation.
Three Mexicans were killed in a running fight with mounted customs inspectors and Texas rangers near Mirando City, Webb county, Texas, according to a report received in San Antonio by Deputy Collector of Customs Ed Cotulla. No member of the federal force was injured.
An attack on the Norris bill for government development of Muscle Shoals, Alabama power project, was made in the Senate by Senator Ladd, Republican, North Dakota, who also criticized the author of the bill, Senator Norris, Republican, Nebraska, for having supported the federal reserve act. Both are members of the new progressive group and also of the Senate farm bloc.
An investigation by the Senate foreign relations committee to ascertain "the true state of affairs" in Nicaragua, the facts concerning American occupation of that republic in 1910, why American forces are still quartered there, and "the connection between certain New York commercial houses and the Chamorro clan government of Nicaragua," was proposed in a resolution introduced by Senator Ladd, Republican, North Dakota.
The Senate has extended the right of world war veterans to a sixty-day preference on all homestead entry claims to Americans who served with the allied forces during the war. The measure, already passed by the House, would effect thousands of veterans in the Northwest who served in the Canadian army.
An appropriation of $32,300,000 for construction of forest roads and trail and rural post roads as authorized under the federal highway act is recommended in the agricultural bill for next fiscal year, as reported to the house.
LATE NEWS
From All Over
COLORADO
COMING EVENTS.
Jan. 13-20, 1923.—National Western Stock Show, Union Stock Yards, Denver, Colo.
Denver.—Unless the General Assembly amends the game laws at its coming session there will be an open season on male ring-necked pheasants in November, 1924. The session will present the last opportunity for legislation for protection of the birds.
Colorado Springs.—Colorado College officials denied that there was any truth, as far as they knew, in the report that President C. A. Duniway has accepted a position at Harvard and will resign here in January. President Duniway has been in the East for three weeks.
Fort Collins.—Vigorous resolutions, including one opposing the construction of the $700,000 Federal Reserve Bank building in Denver on the assertion that the amount is greater than is permitted by law, were adopted by the Colorado Farm Bureau during its annual convention in session at the Colorado Agricultural College.
Fort Collins.—The annual poultry show of the Fort Collins Poultry Association, pronounced by the Judge, James A. Tucker of Royal Oaks, Mich., as having a surprisingly fine collection of birds, came to a successful end with the Farmers' Conference and Rural Life Conference, and the four related schools conducted in conjunction.
Golden.—Bumping over a country road behind an ancient horse, distributing hooch in the manner of a milkman, was a highly profitable business until Sheriff Gary Kerr of Jefferson county arrested the alleged purveyor, James Lett, a negro. Lett was nabbed at Midway after Sheriff Kerr had carefully investigated his route and laid a trap.
Denver.—"The fact that federal reserve messengers and guards were robbed at $200,000 in the street in front of the United States mint here has led to erroneous reports that the mint itself was robbed," said Robert J. Grant, superintendent of the mint. "United States mints are not robbed. Each is like a fortress and is so heavily guarded that bandits never invade them."
Denver.—The famous show herd of A. B. Cook, banker and railroad contractor of Townsend, Mont., has arrived in Denver for the National Western Stock Show. The herd is headed by Panama 110, a 3-year-old bull, which won first in its class in aged bulls at the recent Chicago International show in a class of twenty head, and later at the show was made grand champion Hereford bull over all the winning Hereford bulls.
Fort Collins.—More money is spent for tobacco than for churches, more for automobile pleasure trips than for taxes and 83 per cent of the people have autos where but 19 per cent of the homes are equipped with bathtubs—this is the condition found at Ault, Colo, according to a sociological survey recently made public by Prof. B. F. Coen of the Colorado Agricultural College, who, with his class, made the survey of Ault the past month.
Denver.—Reduction of $129,603 in legislative appropriations for state departments for the next two years will be recommended by Governor Shoup in a message prepared in accordance with the state budget law. The governor's recommendations call for total appropriations of $4,610,330 for the executive, legislative and judiciary departments and institutions which depend on appropriations for support, as against similar appropriations of $4,739,963 made two years ago.
Colorado Springs.—Charles C. Gates of Denver was unanimously elected president of the Greater Colorado, Inc., a project intended to advance all interests of the state, at a meeting of Luncheon Club representatives of the state in the Antlers hotel here, T. C. Storer of Pueblo was elected first vice president. As Mr. Gates will leave soon for an extended trip to South America, much of the organization work and the task of getting the state-wide program under way will devolve upon Mr. Storer.
Denver. — Financial condition of farmers and stockmen is reflected in the biennial report of George Stephan, register of the State Land Board, submitted to Governor Shoup, which shows cash receipts for the office during two years of $2,053,990, or $1,106,652 less than for the preceding biennial term. Money received by the department is derived from the sale of and leasing of state lands, and in his report Mr. Stephan tells the governor that the falling off in receipts is directly due to the inability of farmers and stockmen to purchase, lease or make payments on existing certificates of purchase or lease.
Grand Junction.—One hundred and eight boys and seventy-eight girls were cured for at the State Home for Mental Defectives at Grand Junction, and forty-one boys and thirty-seven girls at the State Training School for Mental Defectives at Ridge during the year, according to a report of the board of governors of the two institutions submitted to Governor Shoup in Denver. Nine deaths took place at Grand Junction and one at Ridge during the year. The report shows an expense of $40,000 for operating the institutions.
CENTENNIAL STATE ITEMS
Roger W. Toll, superintendent of the Rocky Mountain National Park, in explaining the operation of the Federal Court decision of Oct. 2, upholding the right of the secretary of the interior to make and carry out reasonable regulations governing traffic and commercial enterprises within the national parks, declared that this measure is of great importance to the park under his superintendency. "The Rocky Mountain Parks Transportation Company, given a franchise to carry passengers in the park for hire that adequate transportation facilities may exist in the Rocky Mountain National Park, has been placed in the position of a public utility, and may be compared to a street car system in a city," he said.
Cañon City.—The first of the famous Beaver Park damage cases growing out of the floods of June, 1921, when the Shaheer dam, on Beaver creek, broke and flooded the farms on lower Beaver creek, was called in the Fremont County District Court here. The case called was that of W. S. Emerson against the Beaver Park Water and Irrigation Company. Emerson's ranch is on the Arkansas river, a short distance below the mouth of Beaver creek. There are fourteen other complainants asking damages from the same cause, the aggregate amount asked being $125,000.
Denver.—W. E. Carver was granted a certificate of convenience and necessity for the operation of an automobile passenger stage line between Denver and Steamboat Springs via Idaho Springs, Empire, Fraser, Hot Sulphur Springs and Kremmling, by the State Public Utilities Commission. The commission, in granting the certificate, ordered Carver to make monthly reports showing the number of days in which he operated his stages during the preceding month.
Greeley.—Grant Haldeman, acting for the State Public Utilities Commission, sentenced Greeley citizens to walk for 100 days. He was here to pass on the application of a bus line for the right to run its cars on Greeley streets. He decided that the company must procure a franchise from Greeley before it can maintain an application before the State Board for the right to run autos. He gave the company 100 days to get this franchise.
Denver.—Colorado's memorial window to David H. Moffat, which stands on the right of the lieutenant governor's rostrum in the Senate chamber, was unveiled recently in the presence of Governor Shoup, Carl S. Milliken, secretary of state; W. P. Robinson, chairman of the Moffat tunnel commission; A. M. Stong, state treasurer; James Williams of the State Board of Capitol Managers, and other state officials.
Boulder.—Head Coach Myron Witham of the University of Colorado has been reappointed for the coming year by the athletic board of the university. At a recent meeting here, which lasted five hours, the matter was definitely settled and a contract was handed Witham. Confidence was expressed by the athletic board in Witham as the best football coach and strategist in the Rocky Mountain conference.
Denver.—Four armed and masked bandits attacked four Federal Reserve Bank men in charge of a bank truck at the Colfax avenue entrance of the Denver Mint. They shot Charles Linton, bank guard, through the abdomen, bundled $200,000 in $5 bills into their big black touring car and fired on guards at the door of the mint. Linton died at the county hospital.
Denver.—Frank N. Briggs, president of the Interstate Trust Company, has announced that he will be a candidate for mayor of Denver at the election next spring. Although a Republican in politics, Mr. Briggs announces he will become a candidate in strict accordance with the city charter provision that the city administration shall be non-political.
Denver.—John H. Porter, 46 years old, millionaire Denver broker and member of the firm of Boettcher, Porter & Co., was found dead, with a bullet wound through his head, thirty-five miles south of Denver near the Happy Cañon road. Mr. Porter had been missing from his home, and the finding of his body ended a search in which Denver police, members and officials of the Denver Motor Club and friends and relatives had participated. Members and friends of Mr. Porter's family and officials of Douglas county, where the body was found, expressed their belief that he committed suicide in a fit of despondency over ill health, both physical and mental.
Brighton.—John Jones, negro, arrested with Fred Merchion, negro, on the charge of murdering George Miller of Denver on Nov. 23, pleaded guilty to the charge when arraigned here. Merchion entered a plea of not guilty. The trial of both men is set for Jan. 2. Resulting from the intense feeling generally aroused through the slaying of Miller in Globeville, both men were taken to the Weld county jail at Greeley for safe keeping.
Pueblo.—Increased activity at the Minnequa Steel works is in prospect as soon as cars can be secured to handle the product, according to Superintendent F. E. Parks. The rail mill, employing over 600 men, will be opened on Jan. 1, and before that time if cars can be obtained from the railr roads. Opening of the mill will necessitate reopening of an additional blast furnace which will employ several hundred men, the total to be put on in the two departments being 1,000 or more.
Phone Gallup 473
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DENVER, COLORADO
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Floral Designs Put Up
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THE CHRISTMAS STORE
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2962 WELTON
CHAMPA 3522 2962 WE
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COURTESY AND SERVICE TO ALL
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PLAN TO MEET CRISIS
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REPARATIONS.
Washington.—A plan under which an American commission would determine how much Germany should be required to pay the allies in reparations has emerged from the effort to find a way for extending American aid toward solution of the economic troubles of Europe.
Although discussions of the proposal have been kept thus far outside the formal channels of diplomacy, the exchange of views has developed a thorough understanding in authoritative circles that the United States, Great Britain and Germany are willing to assent to the creation of such a commission.
The plan now is before Premier Poincaré of France and he is expected to make a decision after conferences with industrial leaders of his own country and of Germany. It is assumed that it will be communicated later to all the nations interested in reparation payments.
Department officials made it plain that they would not be drawn into any departure from the formal terms of Secretary Hughes' brief statement, which follows:
"The Department of State cannot discuss tentative proposals which are made to it with respect to the European situation. The report that this government had presented to other governments a proposal for an American commission is unfounded. Of course, it follows that no assent of any other government to such a proposal has been received.
In authoritative quarters it was learned that before the commission proposal reached the attention of government officials, a first effort to bring the combined weight of industrial influence in the allied countries, Germany and the United States to bear on the reparations stumbling block were made nearly six months ago.
In Germany, Great Britain, the United States and France, a series of private conferences were held between important figures in the international industrial world. The movement met with stiff opposition in France at that time, but later when the council of premiers faced complete rupture in London this month, the effort was renewed with great hopes of success to find a common ground for a final reparations settlement.
The proposal to create a commission of American industrial leaders to measure Germany's economic capacity as it is today seems to have been the expression of a consensus of opinion among the business interests of all nations, that such a course would be wise, since the United States is not a participant in Germany's reparations payments. Mr. Burns' statement makes the American business viewpoint on that question entirely plain.
Taft Undergoes Operation.
Washington.—Chief Justice Taft of the United States Supreme Court is recuperating at his home here from a serious operation several days ago.
Six Indicted for New York Frauds.
Seattle, Wash.—An alleged conspiracy to steal thousands of dollars' worth of government property from the United States navy yard at Bremerton, Wash., has been uncovered by federal agents, they announced here after a federal grand jury had returned indictments charging Clifford G. Mekeel, navy army employé, and Gerald Lee Clark, Bremerton merchant, with stealing equipment from government warehouses. The specific charge in the indictments against Mekeel and Clark is the theft of vacuum tubes and radio head sets, valued at about $70.
Nine Drowned in Shipwreck.
St. Nazaire, France.—The coasting steamer Vintilis foundered with the loss of nine men of the crew after having been rammed and cut in two by the Norwegian freighter Asturias off St. Nazaire. The Vintilis, plying between Nantes and Belle Isle, had just cleared the outer harbor when she collided with the Norwegian, which was in distress, floundering in the heavy sea and trying to make St. Nazaire in the face of a terrific gale.
Fire Destroys Chicago Station.
Chicago.—Fir destroyed the Dearborn street railroad station, formerly known as the Polk street depot, and left eight railroads homeless in Chicago. The building was valued at $300,000, but would cost more than $1,000,000 to replace. Within a little more than an hour after a traffic policeman saw smoke issuing from the roof, the flames swept through the 38-year-old brick and wood structure, once the pride of railroad men, and left only a smoke-blackened brick shell
SOUTHERN
Oldest in Denver
1865 CUBTIS STREET
XMAS BICYCLES The Urdank Cycle Company
TIRES and SUNDRIES
Repairing Agents for Urdank and
Pierce Bicycles.
1719 WELTON STREET
Next to Consolidated R. R. Ticket Office
Phone Champa 2005
FREE
THIS BEAUTIFUL
HAIR STRAIGHTENING
AND SHAMPOO COMB
This Comb Is Well Worth $1.00
Solid Brass, wooden handle
8¼ inches long weight 4 ounces.
given as a present to all who take
advantage of our great
JUST WRITE TO US AND SAY:
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9 Address your letter to
THE OZONIZED OX MARROW CO.
WARSAW
ILLINOIS
WEAK WOMEN ATTENTION
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THE PELVO MEDICINE CO.
MEMPHIS, TENN.
APPRECIATION
We wish to express to you our appreciation of the business entrusted to us during the past year and to assure you that our best efforts will be extended to retain your valued patronage through the year to come.
THE ABBOTT PHARMACY
Corner 19th and Curtis Sts.
Telephone Main 7411
Denver, Colorado
For Rent—One furnished front room
for two gentlemen or man and wife.
Apply 2232 Cleveland Place. Phone
Champa 5527-W.
FOR RENT—Nicely furnished room
for gentleman in quiet family within
easy reach of two car lines. 426 Twenty-fourth street. Phone Main 7417.
No Accidents
BLE AND CONFIDEN
Organized 1908
GASAWAY WALTON, Owner
CHAS. BOMASH
CHAS. BOMASH LOAN OFFICE
"DO YOU NEED MONEY"? We loan on watches, diamonds, jewelry, suit cases trunks, Victrolas, rifles, shotguns and pistol clothing of all kinds.
on watches, diamonds, jewelry, suit cases, hanks, Victrolas, rifles, shotguns and pistols a clothing of all kinds.
We loan on watches, diamonds, jewelry, suit cases, hand bags, trunks, Victrolas, rifles, shotguns and pistols and clothing of all kinds. 1755 CURTIS STREET Phone Main 3615
GIVEN
Diam
and
Good W
FOR CHI
Do Your Sho
Every Purch
Satisf
JOS. I. SO
Corner Sixteen
GRUENguin
GIVE
Diamonds
and
Good Watches
FOR CHRISTMAS
Do Your Shopping Where
Every Purchase Must Be
Satisfactory
JOS. I. SCHWARTZ
Corner Sixteenth and Curtis
GRUENguild Watches
GIVE
Diamonds
and
Good Watches
FOR CHRISTMAS
Do Your Shopping Where
Every Purchase Must Be
Satisfactory
JOS. I. SCHWARTZ
Corner Sixteenth and Curtis
GRUENguild Watches
Your Christmas Gift
Bauris
Est.1872
Candies
Canada
SHIPPED EVERYWHERE
S. Ban Co.
2009-11 LARIMER STREET
Importers of Japanese Provision Work, Ete. Wholesale General M
of Japanese Provisions, Curios, Fine Arts, S
Work, Etc. Wholesale and Retail Dealers in
General Merchandise.
n 3570 Denw
Importers of Japanese Provisions, Curios, Fine Arts, Silk Emb. Work, Ete. Wholesale and Retail Dealers in General Merchandise.
Good, industrious men and women can make good money in a pleasant way in handling exclusive agency contract for International Distributors, Memphis, Tenn. Write them for free information about this great offer today.
---
1512 CURTIS
STREET
Tel. Main 3570
jewelry, suit cases, hand bags, shotguns and pistols and all kinds.
WE
monds
d
Watches
CHRISTMAS
Shopping Where
Please Must Be
Factory
HWARTZ
Math and Curtis
Watches
Est.1872 dies
For Rent—Furnished rooms for geni-
tion only. 2357 Ogden street.
Miss R. writes that this excuse was received by a local school marm: "Dear Teacher: Please excuse Willie's absence last Friday, as he had to go to the hospital after his sore nose."—Boston Transcript.
Phone Main 3615
DENVER
COLORADO
Denver, Colo.
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
COLUMN
EQUIPS BE
FREE
HAGE
COUNTY
PARTY
Recognized by the Retail Merchants' Bureau of the Denver Civic and Commercial Association as an advertising medium.
JOSEPH B. D. RIVERS Proprietor
P. O. Bex 116 1824 Curtis Street, Room 25 Phone Main 7417
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
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Six months 1.25
Three months .75
Reading notices, ten lines or less, 15 cents per line. Each additional line over ten lines, 12 cents per line. Display advertising, 75 cents per square for first insertion and 50 cents per square for each additional insertion.
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 1c and 2c stamps taken.
Communications to receive attention must be newsy, upon important subjects, plainly written only upon one side of the paper, must reach us Tuesdays, if possible, anyway not later than Wednesdays, and bear the signature of the author. No manuscript returned, unless stamps are sent for postage. All communications of a personal nature that are not complimentary will be withheld from the columns of this paper.
CHRISTMAS GREETINGS.
WITH unfailing regularity we have for twenty-eight consecutive years offered in the best of spirits and from the depths of our heart our greetings at this season of joy, and having another opportunity to express ourselves, this the twenty-ninth Christmastide of our existence as a news journal of Denver, and really of the West, we deem this a pleasurable duty which with our feeble efforts we delight to perform.
GRATITUDE: Being first grateful to Providential guidance for our preservation for so many years to carry on this work, with its arduous and sometimes unpleasant duties, we are not unmindful of the good will of our community, the loyalty of our subscribers, advertisers and other supporters at home, in other parts of our United States, also in foreign lands, and because of our persistence in championing the cause of right for all the people, we have achieved that measure of success which comes as a reward from the public to any news organ that stands firmly on the rock of its principles and ideals in its faithful service; and for this we are also thankful. By the ever-increasing support of the business men and women also professionals of our city; the fair and square treatment of the press by the Mayor and his valuable assistants in the personnel of our City Fathers, whose protection has strengthened us to expose and denounce through the columns of our journal the habitual wrong-doer—that menace to society, who seems to defy all law, as also to extol the virtues and principles of any citizens bent upon contributing to the welfare of the city; the justice and broad-minded action of our Chief Executive of State and his co-workers, officials of the various state departments and our legislators, in the distribution of state matters for publication, also the enacting of laws whereby the press is not curbed in giving full information to the people of all transactions of public matters; the courts and its staff of jurists with their legal and clerical assistants in the Supreme, District, County and Justice Courts—the same endeavoring and succeeding in dispensing the law with fairness to all and prejudice to none. Surely for all these things we are grateful, and to a large extent we are actuated by them to offer our Christmas Greetings, as the difficulties attendant with this sphere of public activity have not only been minimized but overcome
OUR PUBLIC RELATIONS: This fills a particular feature in our journalistic career, as in our own experience of dealing with the public we discover a right and a wrong way, and having adopted the former, we find it to our greatest advantage to practice and keep ever before us the wise saying: "However busy, be always ready to give attention to the public." That cordial, friendly spirit existing between our patrons and us, by which we have won so much of success, compels us to be always reminded of the fact of the worth of PUBLIC SENTIMENT, which, as one writer says, "Makes or breaks you," and as public sentiment or public opinion is the greatest force in the world, a quick recognition and employment of same should be entertained by all business heads and agencies. It was the great, the immortal Abraham Lincoln who, recognizing this power, said: "Public sentiment is everything. With public sentiment nothing can fail; without it nothing can succeed. Consequently he who molds public sentiment goes deeper than he who enacts statutes or pronounces decisions. He makes statutes and decisions possible or impossible to execute."
Because THE COLORADO STATESMAN assists in determining the things that are beneficial to the people of this community, state and nation, there is a co-relationship which will not easily be served, as the longer we remain on the job, the more cohesive will be the attachment between our friends—the public and ourselves. This leads us in further offering our Christmas Greetings to a quality which should be possessed by every business, great or small, both by employer and employee, and indulgence in the same cannot fail to bring that success which is permanent in its nature. We refer to the spirit of service.
THE SPIRIT OF SERVICE: Just a plain and simple definition which is found more in practice than in theory, and which has a power so effective that all others seem to pale in comparative insignificance. We can remember the very impressive words uttered not so long ago by J. F. Greenawalt, publicity manager of the Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Company, in an informal talk before the Commercial Department of the company, when he said, among other vitally interesting things: "The big thing for us is to cultivate the SPIRIT OF SERVICE, for really there is joy in serving our fellowman, whether or not the service comes back to us in material benefits." And this is why we find so much pleasure in extending our felicitations to our many friends and patrons, because year in and year out, in season and out of season, we have always dedicated ourselves to this grand and ennobling quality, and with your encouragement in the future as up to the present we will continue unostentatiously our demonstration of the same.
A WORD TO THE YOUTH: To the young and ambitious boy and girl with aspirations so lofty as to make us hopeful, that ere life shall have run its course with us, some may find pleasure in that Spirit of Service as to maintain the prestige of the COLORADO STATESMAN and keep its columns open, free and healthy for the benefit of the people. To these youths we specially offer our best wishes for the spending of a very joyous Christmastide, assuring them that great pleasures are to be found in KNOWLEDGE, and they who dedicate their lives to knowledge become habituated to pleasures which carry with them no reproach; and there is one security that they will never love those pleasures which are paid for by anguish of the heart—their pleasures are all cheap, all dignified, and all innocent; and, as far as any human being can expect performance in this changing scene, they have secured a happiness which no malignity of fortune can ever take away, but which must cleave to them while they live, ameliorating every good and diminishing every evil of their existence.
A RIGHT HEARTY GOOD WISH is therefore extended to the readers of THE COLORADO STATESMAN, also its large and influential body of subscribers, advertisers and patrons, for a Merry Christmas and a prosperous New Year, attendant with all the blessings of Yuletide and the MERRIMENT OF THE SEASON.
REMEMBER THE SOLDIER BOYS
AT FITZSIMONS HOSPITAL.
Mrs. J. H. Mosely of 2330 Marion street in charge. There can be no finer exemplification of the true Christmas spirit than this, and it is hoped that the response will even exceed that of a year ago. The boys are our own, and many of them far from home. Let none be forgotten.
The beautiful and cheering custom of providing Christmas boxes for the ex-service men at Fitzsimons Hospital, inaugurated by Mrs. Allene Cary last year, is to be repeated this year with
Greetings
A very Merry Christmas and a New Year of greater success and prosperity express but my formal season's wish to you, yet behind it there is the pure gold of genuine sincerity. Dr. C. E. TERRY
Greetings
To my many friends and clients who have made the past year the most successful of my professional career, I extend Christmas greetings and hope for you a Happy and Prosperous New Year.
Atty. S. E. CARY
CHRISTMAS GREETINGS.
WHAT means the Yuletide? What typifies the Christmas spirit, the Christmas cheer? It is the ever-recurring sentiment of UNIVERSAL GOOD WILL. It is the season when the minds of men turn toward the needs of their less fortunate brothers and sisters. It is the time when brotherhood and humanity take on new and more soulful meanings in recalling with tenderness and pathos the wonderful dreams of childhood. It is a time of joy, but not of joy for ourselves alone. There is sublimity and eminence in a joy arising from alleviating pain and succoring distress; in assuaging the pangs of poverty and in ministering unto the suffering.
With such a creed and with a heart swayed by the tenderest emotions, I extend unto all the season's greetings and an earnest good will.
DR. J. H. P. WESTBROOK.
Christmas Greeting
My good wish accompanying this Christmas and New Year's Greeting can only humbly express the measure of success and prosperity I hope for you in the coming year.
Dr. S. A. HUFF
1907 1923
The
DOUGLASS UNDERTAKING
COMPANY
2745 Welton Street
Denver, Colorado
WISHES YOU A MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
“Remember, our services are of the velvet kind.”
J. R. Contee, President and Manager
Jesse Deuglass, Director and Embalmer
COAL YOU NEED COAL
Indications Point to Scarcity of Coal and Higher Prices
OUR LIGNITE SPECIAL $6.95 Other Grades at Market Prices
Telephone Franklin 7-W. Pearl J. Porter, 2335 Glencoe
The GREAT WESTERN FUEL & HARDWARE CO
633 Fifteenth St. Main 5400-5401
ESTATE OF CHARLOTTE CLARK,
DECEASED. NO. 31,339.
Sea Varies in Salinity.
All persons having claims against said estate are hereby notified to present them for adjustment in the County Court of the City and County of Denver, Colorado, on the 6th day of February, 1923.
Different parts of the surface of the sea vary markedly in salinity, for it will increase where evaporation is great, as in the Red sea, and decrease where the rainfall is heavy, or where there is very little wind and much depression.
E. P. Blakemore, Attorney.
First publication, December 23, 1922.
Last publication, January 20, 1923.
where the rainfall is heavy, or where there is very little wind and much depression.
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Christmas Cheer
To One and All THAT it may be your happiest Christmas and that the coming year will bring you prosperity with good health, is our sincere wish.
Lewis & Son
SIXTEENTH & STOUT STS.
Store Hours: 9 a. m. to 5:30 p. m.
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THE DENVER DRY GOODS CO
EXTENDS THE
SEASON'S GREETINGS
to the subscribers of The Colorado
Statesman
Christmas Menu
OYSTER COCKTAIL
CELERY SALTED ALMONDS RIPE OLIVES
MOCK TURTLE SOUP, A LA ANGLAISE
ROAST SUCKLING PIG SPICED APPLES
OR
ROAST LONGMONT TURKEY, QUAKER DRESSING
CRANBERRY SAUCE
CANDIED SWEET POTATOES PETTIT POIS
HEARTS OF LETTUCE TH. I. DRESSING
FINGER ROLLS
CHRISTMAS CAKE ICE CREAM
ENGLISH PLUM PUDDING, HARD AND CARDINAL SAUCE
CAFE NOIR ASSORTED FRUITS
NUTS RAISINS
AFTER DINNER MINTS
NIGHT AND DAY CAFE
1865 Curtis St.
HANSEN & HANSEN
WATCHMAKERS, JEWELERS
WATCHES :: DIAMONDS
MAIN 8012. 428 SIXTEENTH STREET, DENVER, COLO.
Mrs. William Brasher of 1523 East Thirtieth avenue, who has been indisposed for two weeks, is improving, to the delight of her many friends.
Mrs. K. H. McLurkin of Pine Bluff, Ark., is the house guest of Attorney and Mrs. E. P. Blakemore, 2563 Downing street. She is here for an indefinite stay.
Mr. Lee De Priest of Chicago father of the noted politician an nancier, Mr. Oscar De Priest, of cage, is visiting his mother, Fanny De Priest, and sister, Mr. F. Smith, of 1873 Marion street family reunion dinner was given day evening by Mesdames Esse Priest and Chas. Fuller at 1847 coln street in honor of Mr. Le
MRS. PERCY PARKS of Great Bend, Kansas, is here for the holidays, and will remain a while longer as the house guest of Mrs. George Parsons, 2643 Marion Street.
Wm. A. Watkins of Chicago is in the city to spend the holidays with relatives and friends. Mr. Watkins formerly lived in Denver and has a large circle of friends here who are glad to welcome him.
Palace Dancing Academy offers Merry Christmas to its patrons and will celebrate in a big dance Christmas night, Monday, December 25. Morrison's full orchestra. Fern Hall.
Mrs. Carrie L. Smith left Monday for Los Angeles, Calif., to stay an indefinite time. She will be joined by her husband, Claude Smith, about Jan. 1st, who goes with a view to making their future home on the Pacific coast.
Mrs. Alfred Froman left Thursday for Seattle, Wash., to be at the bed side of her son, who is very ill.
H. R. Ward will leave Tuesday for Los Angeles, Calif., for an indefinite stay in the interest of his health.
I am not the only Tailor, but I am sure a world-beater for making those Beautiful Suits. A. V. Gardner, 1025 21st St. Champa 1019-W. Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing.
The Silent Five of Colorado State Teachers College will give a waffle supper Saturday, Dec. 30, 1922, at 2531 Welton street, 5 to 8 o'clock. Everybody welcome. Waffles and coffee, 25c.
JAMES M. GILLUM, aged 81 years, late of Harrisonville, Mo., passed into the life eternal last week. He was the father of our esteemed townsman, E. P. Gillum of 2012 South Grant Street, and an employee at the Woman's Club. The deceased was a Civil War veteran. Our sympathy is extended to the bereaved relatives.
Mrs. Clark Craig, one of our leading social matrons and organist of Campbell A. M. E. Church, left last week Friday for Atchison, Kansas, on receiving the sad news of the death of her brother, Martin Greenly. Our heartfelt sympathy is extended to Mr. and Mrs. Clark Craig.
The Great Christmas Fete of the Palace Dancing Academy, Monday, December 25. Fern Hall, Twenty-seventh and Welton. Morrison's full orchestra. You can't afford to miss this event.
MR. and MRS. JOHN H. SHORT of 1525 East Thirtieth avenue entertained Mr. William A. Watkins, formerly of Denver, but now of Chicago, at a dinner of fine appointments last Friday evening. The decorations, in keeping with Christmas tide, added to the already beautiful attractions of the home, and the renewal of friendship between the guest and his host contributed to making the event one of pleasant memory.
For the second time, and in consecutive years, Mrs. Hiram Gash has been notified by the Colorado National bank that she is one of the successful contestants to win $20 awarded to the twenty-five persons sending in the most successful budgets for the year, to be used by the bank in a budget folder issued for the new year. Mrs. Gash is the wife of Hiram Gash, clerk at the information desk of the Continental Oil Company, and is popular in church and club circles.
Say! What? Waffle supper.
Where? 2531 Welton street. When? December 30, 5 to 8 o'clock. For social service fund. Price, 25c.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS' MEETING
At the regular meeting of the directors of the Denver Colored Civic Association, held on Wednesday, December 20, George W. Gross was elected chairman of the board for the ensuing year.
Mr. Lee De Priest of Chicago, Ill., father of the noted politician and financier, Mr. Oscar De Priest, of Chicago, is visiting his mother, Mrs. Fanny De Priest, and sister, Mrs. H. F. Smith, of 1873 Marion street. A family reunion dinner was given Sunday evening by Mesdames Essex De Priest and Chas. Fuller at 1847 Lincoln street in honor of Mr. Lee De Priest, who is the oldest of fifteen children. Four generations of the De Priest family tree and then some more (had they been here) were seated around the aged mother, who has long since passed the century mark.
JOHN WATKINS, who succeeded the late Owen G. Caswell as headwaiter of the Catering Department of the O. P. Baur Confectionery Company, and custodian of their very valuable silver and dish room, is becoming quite a favorite with the exclusive clientele of the Baur Co., as not only has he followed in the footsteps of his predecessor, who was in a class by himself, but introduced some improved features in the handling of both private and public parties, etc. Mr. Watkins is young, intelligent and energetic, and his general civility and courtesy to the patrons of the firm lend an incentive to an increase of this phase of the business. NAT MORTON, his very able assistant, measures up in the manner of diligent service that wins the admiration of the principals of the firm as well as the patrons and associate employés, and there is every reason to feel they will continue to make good.
Palace Dancing Academy, Fern Hall, Christmas Night, December 25. Merry time for everybody. Morrison's full orchestra.
BENEFIT FOR MRS. MINNIE ROB
INSON IS GRAND SUCCESS.
The cake contest and chitterling supper given at the residence of Mrs. S. R. Abernathy last Saturday as a benefit for Mrs. Minnie Robinson, a former resident of Denver, but now upon her bed of affliction in Youngstown, Ohio, proved a huge success and a sum nearly approaching $100 was realized.
The affair was in charge of Mesdames Geo. Brooks, Frank Merriweather, J. H. P. Westbrook, Geo. Robinson, Clayton Myers and Elija Jackson. The ladies are to be commended for the excellent effort in behalf of one so deserving as Mrs. Robinson.
DENVER BRANCH N. A. A. C. P
HOLDS ANNUAL ELECTION
OF OFFICERS.
The annual election of officers of the Denver Branch, N. A. A. C. P., took place at the Negro Woman's Club Home on Wednesday night of last week, and the following officers were elected for the ensuing year: Geo. W. Gross, President.
James T. Smith, Vice President.
Executive Committee: Rev. W. H. Thomas, Dr. J. H. P. Westbrook, Mr. William Sprague, Maj. Thomas Campbell, Atty. E. P. Blakemore, Mesdames Jessie Roy, Ida De Priest, Carrie McClain, Mary L. Elliston. Reports from the Secretary and Treasurer were read, showing the large amount of work accomplished by the Branch during the past year. Committee reports showed much activity also in preventing the Ku Klux Klan from securing a charter in Colorado, having a member of the Colorado Rangers dismissed from service for brutally beating an aged Negro in Trinidad, and in combatting race discrimination in the Trinidad postoffice.
Palace Dancing Academy, in its regular Christmas event, which excels all others, Monday, December 25. Morrison's full orchestra. Fern Hall, Twenty-seventh and Welton.
Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Manley have again moved to Denver from La Junta and have purchased a beautiful home at 2740 Franklin street. Mr. and Mrs. Manley formerly lived in Denver before going to La Junta some years ago and their return will be warmly welcomed by their many friends here. Mrs. Victor Fairbanks, reported quite ill the first part of the week, is now showing much improvement.
Like waffles? Well come to 2531 Welton street December 30, 5 to 8 o'clock. Waffle and coffee, 25c.
MRS. CHARLOTTE CLARK, wife of Wm. Clark, of 2028 High St., died quite suddenly Saturday night after an illness of but a few hours. Mr. and Mrs. Clark were among our most prosperous and substantial citizens and the news of her death proved a distinct shock to the entire community. Mrs. Clark was up and apparently in good health Saturday and was preparing to go out when suddenly stricken. She lived only a few hours after the first attack. The earnest sympathy of all who knew her is extended to her grief stricken husband and surviving relatives. THE COLORADO STATESMAN offers its deepest sympathy to the sorrowing husband and other relatives.
Mrs. Jessie Roy received the sad intelligence of the death of her only uncle in Henderson, Ky., on Friday of last week.
MEN'S CLUB OF THE REDEEMER HOLDS INTERESTING MEETING.
The Men's Club of the Church of the Redeemer entertained royally Wednesday night, both from an intellectual and social standpoint, at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. W. Gross, 1627 East Twenty-second avenue. There was an unusually large attendance, brought out no doubt by knowledge of the fact that a mock trial was to be held in which the fifteenth amendment to the constitution was the victim before he bar. With Attorney S. E. Cary and Victor B. Walker on the side of the plaintiff, and Leroy J. Perkins and Geo. W. Gross representing the defense, and E. P. Blakemore as trial judge, one of the finest treats and most amusing incidents it has been our pleasure to witness for a long time, was enacted. The club is a fast growing organization and with the interesting winter's program laid out by the president, Dr. J. H. P. Westbrook, it is certain to take a new place in the social and intellectual life of Denver. Men can in no way spend a more profitable evening than that of Wednesday. We hope for many more.
GOVERNOR SHOUP AT SHORTER CHURCH.
Addresses Newly Organized Men's Club.
Shorter A. M. E. Church was crowded to the doors last Sunday as a tribute to Governor Oliver H. Shoup, who delivered a forceful and interesting address to the Men's Club of Shorter. President E. P. Blakemore presided over the meeting and seated on the platform with him were Governor Shoup, Atty. S. E. Cary, Dr. Westbrook, Jos. D. D. Rivers and Geo. W. Gross. The big Shorter Choir was at its best and in many ways it was one of the finest meetings held in Denver in years. Governor Shoup spoke upon "Citizenship," and was given close attention throughout. Atty. S. E. Cary responded to the Governor, expressing the appreciation of our group for the square deal policy always so manifest in the Governor's administration.
Mr. Quince Record, though somewhat indisposed, gave a very neat address, demonstrating once again that he is our staunch friend.
The introductory remarks by Atty. Blakemore were well chosen and timely. The one thing that added materially to the success of the meeting was the large attendance of men. Each seemed to sense the importance and significance of the occasion. Mrs. Shoup, wife of the Governor, was an interested spectator, visited the Sunday School and stood up when the names of visitors were read out. It was one of Shorter's big days, and our popular Governor added new laurels to his crown.
THE DENVER FEDERATION OF COLORED WOMEN'S CLUBS OFFICERS ELECTED.
The Denver Federation of Women's Clubs held their regular meeting Dec. 13 at the Negro Women's Club Home. The following officers were elected: President—Mrs. O. W. Glenn. First vice president—Mrs. Molly Barnes.
Britches.
Second Vice President—Mrs. Wilhelmina Hall.
Secretary—Mrs. Irene Pendley.
Assistant Secretary—Mrs. Florence Moore.
Corresponding Secretary—Miss Dar-
lone, Reese.
It was voted to give Christmas baskets to the needy families. The next meeting will be held Jan. 10 at the Negro Women's Club Home.
CARD OF THANKS.
I wish to thank my kind friends and neighbors and the Seven Day Adventist Church, also the Shorters Church for all their kindness during the sickness and death of my dear husband, Chesterly Bell, who passed away Nov. 18, 1922. This announcement was omitted, being sent to Omaha, Neb., by Mrs. Pennington and Mrs. Seamore. MRS. A. M. BELL, 1727 South Emerson.
THE OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS OF THE DENVER GAS AND ELECTRIC LIGHT CO. TAKE PLEASURE IN EXTENDING THE SEASON'S GREETINGS WITH THE SINCERE WISH THAT THE COMING YEAR MAY BRING TO YOU HEALTH, HAPPINESS AND PROSERITY.
The Denver Gas and Electric Light Company
The Denver Gas and Electric Light Company
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The years have woven a close companionship between this company and its many friends. This cordial relation prompts us to wish you a Christmas Joy and a New Year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity.
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THE OFFICE
DENVER GA
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WISH THAT T
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DAMON LODGE NO. 5, K. OF P., ELECT OFFICERS.
Damon Lodge No. 5, K. of P. elected the following officers Friday night, December 15th, for the ensuing year: J. W. Taylor, C. C. Re-elected seventh time. Wm. Stanley, V. C. K. R. & S., Reddie Stewart. Prelate, E. Pollard. M. of E., J. R. Contee. M. of F., L. Anderson. M. W., C. W. Young. O. G., Aaron Knowles. I. G., Geo. McGlasson. Representatives to Grand Lodge—J. W. Taylor, C. C.; J. R. Hanger.
Y. M. C. A. NOTES
Fifteen Hi-Y boys attended the weekly meeting of that group last week, and seven of these attended the city-wide Hi-Y Boys Brotherhood banquet at the Central Christian Church on Monday evening last. The All-Employed Boys' Brotherhood expects to get under way two weeks from now. The boys' band is doing well. Due to the holidays the band will not meet next Tuesday evening.
A larger number of the members of the committee of management attended the meeting last Sunday afternoon than on any other Sunday this season. Dr. William Baker, who was to have spoken at the meeting, met with an accident to his foot, which prevented his being present. But at 3 o'clock Dr. Massey of New York City, an old friend of the secretary, blew into the building and was immediately drafted into service. He made a fine and encouraging talk.
Tomorrow (Sunday) afternoon a Christmas program will be rendered. As a feature of the program a stereo-opticon show will be given on the "Life of Christ." It will be a beauti-
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ERS AND DIRECTOR
GAS AND ELECTRIC
SURE IN EXTENDING
MEETINGS WITH THE
THE COMING YEAR FOR
HEALTH, HAPPINESS
PERITY.
Denver Gas and
Light Company
Greetings
woven a close companionship
its many friends. This
wish you a Christmas Joy a
business and Prosperity.
BRAIN STATES TELEGRAPH COMPANY
ful spectacle. The meeting will begin promptly at 4 o'clock. Everybody will be welcome.
THE MEN'S CLUB SHORTER EN JOYS FEAST OF SEASON AND OF SOUL.
Following the successful church services of Sunday morning, at which time Gov. Shoup addressed the Men's Club of Shorter, the same organization made its official social bow to Denver on Monday night with Hon. James W. Kelly as speaker of the evening. Seated around the magnificently decorated banquet table were sixty of Denver's leading men, spell bound by one of the finest programs rendered in Denver for many months. Mr. Kelly, a leading attorney of the city, proved at once a revelation and an inspiration. His profound knowledge of the progress and advance of the Negro race from its earliest beginnings on American soil, down to today, treated in masterful logic and brilliant flights of oratory, was soulifting and instructive. THE COLORADO STATESMAN hopes Mr. Kelly be induction to repeat his address when a crowded house may greet him. We have never listened to its equal. Dr. J. H. P. Westbrook responded to Mr. Kelly as only the learned doctor can, and expressed not only surprise, but admiration for the speaker's earnestness and forceful putting of a great question. Then came Mr. Howard in a rendition of Macbeth's soliloquy and Milton Allyene in Wendell Phillips Touissant L'Overture, which was indeed a richly rendered treat. Several songs by the Glee Club, with Rev. W. H. Thomas as leader, served to enliven the occasion, while Prof. Geo. Morrison rendered two beautiful violin solos. The Ladies' Auxiliary served a beautiful luncheon. Attorney E. P. Blakemore, president of the club, acted as master of ceremonies in an admirable manner.
CHRISTMAS SERVICES AT THE
CHURCH OF THE REDEEMER.
Christmas will be celebrated at the Episcopal Church of the Redeemer with all the solemnity and devotion that characterizes both the services and congregation of this parish. In the Episcopal Church, Christmas is a
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nip between this
cordial relation
and a New Year
PHONE AND
NY
season of holy obligation and all devout and faithful churchmen are required to make their communions some time during the eight days of Christmas tide. The Christmas season will open with the first mass of Christmas Day, which will begin on Christmas Eve (Sunday night) at 12 o'clock. This is known as the midnight mass, and on Christmas day masses will be said at 7:30 and 9:00 a.m. At the midnight mass the following program will be rendered:
The Solemn Procession.
O, Come All Ye Faithful, J. Reading
Antiphon to the First Mass of Christmas ..... Gregorian Tone
Sing, O Sing This Blessed Morn, ..... Wadsworth
The Holy Eucharist.
Introit, O God, Our Governor;
Psalm 8.....Gregorian Tone
Kyrie Eleison.....Cruickshank in E
Sequence, "The First Noel".....
Traditional
The Creed.....Cruickshank in E
O Little Town of Bethlehem..Redner
Offertory, "Send Out Thy Light".....
Gounod
Sursum Corda.....Traditional
Sanctus Benedictus Agus Dei
Smart
The mass will last just one hour.
Visitors and strangers are cordially welcomed.
Come and begin the holiday right.
FUNERAL NOTICES.
The Douglass Undertaking Company.
Gunther—Earnest Gunther, late of
2125 Larimer street, passed away
Dec. 14, 1922. Funeral arrangement
not complete.
Fairbanks—Baby Fairbanks, Jr., infant of Mr. and Mrs. Victor Fairbanks, 1234 East Twenty-eighth avenue, Dec. 16, 1922.
Clark—Mrs. Charlotte Clark, the beloved wife of William Clark, 2928 High street, departed this life Dec. 17, 1922. Remains in state at residence Thursday evening and Friday 10 a. m. Funeral from home Friday, Dec. 22, at 11 a. m., the Rev. W. H. Thomas officiating. Interment Fairmount.
DR. HUFF'S office phone is
Champa 6001. And his residence
Phone York 401. When not
reach at office or call, Office
Suite 6, 5 and 7, 2701 Wetton St.
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, F531-W
S. E. CARY
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Six years City and County
Attorney at Russell Springs, Logan
County, Kansas.
2640 Welton Denver, Colorado
Res. Phone York 5774W
FRANK D. TAGGART
Attorney at Law—Notary Public
205-206 Cooper Building
Denver, Colorado
JOSEPH CARTER
Express, Moving and
Storage
Coal and Wood
2415 WASHINGTON STREET
PROMPT DELIVERY
Phone Main 6544
Our Advertising Service
Means More Sales for You, Mr. Business Man
When you begin advertising in this paper you start on the road to more business. There is no better or cheaper medium for reaching the buyers of this community.
We can also provide Artistic Printing of every description.
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W. M. Mackey
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The Letter to Santa Claus
EASTMAN KURAK CO. PHOTO
Here by the fireside sitting,
As the pictures in flames run by,
Sweet be the moments flitting,
And children, just you and II
For the love of our age is richer,
And yet—I would feel the joy
Of the love that was only a girl's dear,
For her prince, who was only a boy.
—Henry Edward Warner, in the Richmond
Times-Dispatch.
Your
Christmas Room
By MARTHA B. THOMAS
(©, 1922, Western Newspaper Union.)
THERE is always a place to which one may flee in time of need. That place is the inside of our own heads! Provided, of course, that the inside of our own heads is properly furnished with imagination and that the key is not rusted in the lock from long disuse. If you are a little lonely on Christmas eve, or a little unhappy, or a little anything that tends to tarnish the glow of the season, why not climb up to that place inside your head, rattle the lock, be quite firm with the key no matter how stubborn it is, then enter into what joy you may summon by your thoughts? Glad wishes for friends are the green wreaths we may hang in the windows of our Christmas room. Hopes for another year are the candles we light on the table. New plans are the fruit to deck the board, and very likely there will be a guest or so to share them.
Think of the Fire of Purpose you may light on your hearth!
Think of the glow and warmth it will cast over you!
Think of the castles and dreams you crowded out of your heart because you were too busy; the fine, adventurous ones; the funny ones you have laughed over all to yourself; the shy ones you would not reveal to a soul at any price. Call them all back and see what a splendid set of inspirations they are. You'll feel like a new person. And don't forget to put a present on the Tree of Faith for yourself; something you've wanted all your life. If you can't have it this year, waiting will make it more precious; and if you can (oh, think of that!) you'll be all the better prepared.
Do spend a little time in your Christmas room!
---
By Christopher G. Hazard
(©) 1922, Western Newspaper Union.
WHEN the boy passed the baker's shop on his way to school, he used to look with longing upon the display of pies and cakes and resolve in his heart that if fortune should ever bless him with means he would have enough of a feast for once. But when, in after years, he passed the same old shop and looked upon the new treasures of the old window, now with a pocketful of money, he had ceased to care for the goodies, and went on, fingling his useless coins.
What do we want now? Not what we used to want. Not more pie, not more candy, not more toys, not even more money. The old ambitions have been realized, the old goals have been reached, we have the power of which we dreamed, there doesn't seem to be anything in sight worth running after, we look out upon a splendid world with a failing desire for it, we go on by an acquired momentum rather than with zest. Still, we are unsatisfied. Yet we want something. What is it? What do we want? What could the Christmas time bring us of satisfaction?
How would you like to recover that lost art of imagination? How would a large investment in hope pay you? What would that strange power of beholding the reality and the lovelliness of a spiritual world, that mysterious power that some have, mean to you? If you could be a child again, just for Christmas Eve, perhaps, you would see the meaning of the stars that ride so gloriously upon the billows of space. You might feel called up and out by the supreme and satisfying joy that Christmas signifies.
After all, we may have gained the world and lost faith, an immeasurable loss. Only he who keeps his childlikeness—not his childishness—knows the eternal worth of time, the satisfaction of that everlasting love that faith grasps.
What a Christmas gift that would be! Was not the old colored preacher right when he sang, "All I want, all I want; all I want is a little more faith in Jesus"?
Raisin Pie.
One-half cupful sugar, 2 cupfuls seeded raisins, $1\frac{1}{2}$ cupfuls boiling water, $1\frac{1}{2}$ teaspoonful salt, 1 teaspoonful grated orange rind, 3 tablespoonfuls orange juice, 2 tablespoonfuls lemon juice, 1 tablespoonful grated lemon rind, 2 tablespoonful cornstarch, $1\frac{1}{2}$ cupful walnuts.
Cook raisins in boiling water for five minutes; pour into sugar and cornstarch which have been mixed.
Cook until thick, about five minutes. Remove from fire and add other ingredients. Bake between two crusts. Walnuts may be omitted if desired.
The finest lotion for preventing rough, red hands and chapped lips in winter is equal parts of glycerin, bay rum and arnica.
By Rannie J. Knoch,
in the Wisconsin Farmer
"Merry Christmas! Merry Christmas!
Clanga the heavy, deep-toned bell,
And all the world gives back the answer:
Christ is born, and all is well."
OVER nineteen hundred years ago
there lived in the little town of
Nazareth a humble carpenter and his
wife, Mary.
At this time the ruler of the Roman
empire, Augustus Caesar, required all
persons to pay taxes for the upkeep
of the kingdom. Joseph was a descendant of King David. Although
he was living in Galllee, the law required him to go to Bethlehem in Judea to pay his taxes.
When it was time to pay the tribute, Joseph took Mary with him on the journey to Bethlehem. It was a tiresome journey. They were very weary when they reached the little town. Joseph went to the hotel to get a room where they could rest. But poor Joseph was disappointed, for so many other people had come to the little town that day the rooms were all taken. No doubt Joseph and Mary felt lonely and discouraged as night came on. At last they went to a stable to find a place to sleep. Here in a manger the Savior of the World was born.
This was a very lowly place indeed for the Prince of Peace to be born. Prophets had been foretelling his coming for many years. People were expecting him to come, but in some very grand way. Some thought he would make the kings leave their thrones and himself be the ruler. But he came as a sweet, dear little babe.
Now, you wonder how the people heard of his birth, in those long, long ago days when there were no telegraphs or telephones? Perhaps you think so important news as this would be announced publicly by the highest officials or the richest people in town and a holiday declared.
But not so. The first news of his birth was told to people engaged in a very humble and lowly work.
Methinks it must have been a beautiful warm night. Far out on the hills of old Judea the shepherds were herding their sheep. No doubt they were talking together about the big crowd in Bethlehem that evening. Suddenly there appeared in the sky a bright light. The shepherds were afraid. An angel spoke to them and said, "Be not afraid; I bring you good tidings of great joy which shall be to all people." Then he told them that Jesus had been born in Bethlehem; that they would find him, a babe, wrapped in swaddling clothes lying in a manger with his mother, Mary.
Suddenly there appeared with the angel a host of other angels singing, "Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace good will to men."
After the angels were gone the shepherds talked over the wondrous news. Then they hurried away to Bethlehem to see if it was true. Sure enough, there were Mary and Joseph and the little babe, Jesus. They then went out to tell others.
God also told the news of his gift to the world by placing a new star in the sky. The wise men saw it and followed its shining rays until they, too, found the "Babe of Bethlehem." These wise men worshiped him and gave him gifts of gold, myrrh and frankincense.
This was the first Christmas.
CHRISTMAS IN THE AIR
BY MARY G. BONNER
THE air was keen and cold
and invigorating. The snow
was falling gently. In every
house Christmas presents were
being wrapped, cheery messages
and cards and letters were
being sent. Almost - forgotten
friends were thought of and
remembered by a card, a wish,
a small gift.
For Christmas was in the air!
(©. 1922, Western Newspaper Union.)
V
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
IIII
the Mouth-Piece of the People of Colorado and the Entire West
RELIABLE chronicle of their doings andgress; a faithful miracle their wants, their hope best aspiration.
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
equaled as an advertiser medium for the business of professional men and women.
excellent family journe speaking to and for thousands colored citizens
The Mouth-Piece of the People of Colorado and the Entire West
ARELIABLE chronicle of their doings and progress; a faithful mirror of their wants, their hopes, their best aspiration.
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
Unequaled as an advertising medium for the business of professional men and women.
An excellent family journal speaking to and for many thousand colored citizens.
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THE GREAT ORGAN OF THE BORING MASS
A woman in a kitchen preparing a meal.
Club Women and Girls Encouraged to Develop Unusual Packs of Meat and Vegetables
Club Women and Girls Encouraged to Develop Unusual Packs of Meat and Vegetables
(Prepared by the United States Department agents are "Dixie burgoo," originat
of Agriculture)
In order to use materials which grow in their own vicinity, club women and girls in the South have been encouraged to develop unusual packs of meat and vegetable or fish and vegetable combinations, in which they can incorporate home-grown garden products according to standard recipes available from the United States Department of Agriculture. Particular attention has been given to the development of dishes characteristic of certain districts or states and popular locally, which would at the same time permit the use of surplus meats and vegetables. By using recipes calling for veal or in which veal could take the place of other meats, surplus dairy calves, too expensive to feed, could be profitably disposed of. The same has been the case with cull chickens and surplus vegetables. Some of the canned "one-piece meals" taught to the club girls by extension
FAMILY FOOD NEEDS HARD TO DETERMINE
FAMILY FOOD NEEDS HARD TO DETERMINE
Farmer in Field Requires More Than the Office Man.
Important to Acquire Liking for All Kinds of Wholesome Dishes and Eating Reasonable Amount Without Being Greedy.
(Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.)
It is very hard for a housekeeper to know exactly how much of each of the food substances or nutrients her family needs or exactly how much of each she is giving them. The exact amount each person needs depends upon age, sex, size, and amount of work done with the muscles. An elderly person, or one of quiet habits, needs less food than a vigorous, young one; a large person more than a small one; a man more than a woman; grown persons more than children; and a farmer in the hayfield, a mechanic, or a football player more than a man who sits at his desk all day.
In order to calculate exactly how much starch, sugar, fat, protein, etc. (or, what is equivalent to this, how much protein and energy the family needs, one would have to know exactly how much muscular work each member performs, how much of the different nutrients each food contains, and how much each person eats. This, of course, would mean a great deal of figuring. Fortunately, such exactness is not necessary in ordinary life. If a little too much or too little of one nutrient is provided at a single meal or on a single day a healthy body does not suffer, because it has ways of storing such a surplus and of using its stored material in an emergency. The danger would come if the diet taken week in and week out always provided too much or too little of some one nutrient. Against this danger the housekeeper can more easily protect her family.
Habit and custom help greatly, because they usually are based on what the experience of generations has proved is wise and healthful, though, of course, there are bad habits and outgrown customs in food as in everything else. Good food habits include more than cleanliness and order in everything that has to do with food and meals and leisurely ways of eating. Equally important are a liking for all kinds of wholesome foods, even if they have not always been used in one's home or neighborhood, and eating reasonable amounts without being either too greedy or overdainty. Every effort should be made to train children in good food habits. If older persons have not learned them, they, too, should try to do so, for such things are very important, not only to health, but also to economy. To refuse to eat some wholesome dish simply because one is not accustomed to it may prevent the use of some very desirable and economical food. To feel that there is any virtue in providing more food than is needed shows poor taste as well as poor economy, say household specialists of the United States Department of Agriculture.
agents are "Dixie burgoo," originating in Kentucky; "pine bark fish stew" from South Carolina; "Brunts wick stew," coming from Virginia; chicken, crab and shrimp "gumbos" of Louisiana, also "shrimp jambalaya," and several combinations of vegetables with chicken, used in Oklahoma. They are put up wherever the necessary ingredients can be obtained locally. In many cases the club girls must maintain gardens to grow the vegetables they expect to can.
The home demonstration club of Pinellas county, Florida, recently reported that in one day's "canning bee" the club members had prepared 12 different products, not one of which competed with the ordinary cannery output. A South Carolina woman reported that during nine months following the first meat-canning demonstration in her district she had put up 1,600 cans of meat and vegetable combinations, and had orders for 1,000 more.
CEREALS MADE STAPLE DIET
Available Almost Everywhere, Easy to Store and Transport and Are Quite Cheap.
Cereals and cereal preparations are the staple of the diet the world over because they are available almost everywhere, are easy to store and transport, and are relatively cheap, says the United States Department of Agriculture. Cereal foods provide protein and energy in about the proportions needed by the body. Their protein is, however, of such kind that it needs to be supplemented by that of meat, poultry, fish, eggs, milk and cheese. When made from the whole grains, cereal foods also supply some mineral substances and vitamins. A diet containing large proportions of refined cereal foods must be supplemented by plenty of dairy products, vegetables, and fruits. The various kinds of cereals used in the diet differ little in fuel value; rice, wheat flour, and cornmeal, for example, all yield about 1,600 calories to the pound.
CROQUETTES ARE NUTRITIOUS
Made of Potato and Cheese They Are Easy to Prepare for Sup-
per and Luncheon.
For a supper or lunch dish that is
different, easy to prepare and serve,
and really nutritious, the United
States Department of Agriculture re-
commends the following:
1 cupful cottage ¼ teaspoonful soda
cheese ½ teaspoonful salt
2 tablespoonfuls of Dash of cayenne
chopped parsley Dash of paprika
1 cupful cottage ¼ teaspoonful soda
cheese ½ teaspoonful salt
2 tablespoonfuls of Dash of cayenne
chopped parsley Dash of paprika
1 rounding teaspoonful chopped
green pepper.
Mix these ingredients very thoroughly and form into rolls. Then imbed the rolls in mashed potatoes which have been seasoned with salt and pepper, forming a larger roll of each. Roll the finished croquettes in egg and bread crumbs and fry in a pan containing about one tablespoonful of fat, or brush with melted fat and brown in a hot oven.
Plenty of kitchen utensils are needed
for successful work.
* * * *
Mildew will disappear if you rub
the spot well with good laundry soap.
* * * *
To make fritters smooth use a tea-
spoonful of vegetable oil when mixing
the batter.
* * * *
When using barley in soup boll the
barley separately for 10 minutes before
plunging into the soup.
* * * *
Over hot turnips pour butter,
creamed and seasoned with salt, pepper
and lemon juice.
* * * *
Left-over cooked potatoes must not
be piled together, as they sour quickly.
Spread them on a large dish.
You can minimize odors and steam in your kitchen by having a hood suspended over the range connected with a flue in the chimney.
The Kitchen Cabinet
(©. 1922, Western Newspaper Union.)
A man who is willing to take another's opinion has to exercise his judgment in the choice of whom to follow, which is often as nice a matter as to judge of things for one's self.—Oliver Wendell Homes.
SALADS OF VARIOUS COUNTRIES
The following salads may be properly termed national as they are the favorite salads of the peoples in the several countries or localities, the name of which is given the salad:
Cooking
Cuban Salad.— Break fine four
dry soda crackers, shred two sweet Spanish peppers, removing the seeds and white portions. Slice one Spanish onion very thin, skin, bone and mince six anchovies and mix all together. Serve on lettuce with French dressing.
Montese Salad.—Bake four mild-flavored onions until tender, remove the peeling and put a lump of butter with salt and pepper on each. When cold cut into quarters and mix with four hard-cooked eggs cut into quarters and six sardines finely chopped after removing the skin and bones. Add parsley and mix a teaspoonful of curry in the boiled dressing or in the mayonnaise.
French Potato Salad.—Cut cold boiled potatoes into dice, add one small onion finely chopped, a few tablespoonfuls of minced chives and a tablespoonful of minced parsley. Let stand for an hour or two seasoned with a French dressing, adding a generous amount of cayenne. Serve on lettuce and top each serving with a spoonful of thick mayonnaise, sprinkled with minced chives.
German Salad With Sausage.—Boll four breakfast sausages twenty minutes, then cut in half-inch pieces. Boll one-half pound of sauerkraut ten minutes, then drain and cool and mix with the sausage. Cut two winter radishes into very thin slices and arrange around the salad, sprinkling with finely-minced shallot, pickles and capers. Serve with French dressing.
Russian Tomato and Sardine Salad.
—Arrange a bed of lettuce in a salad bowl. Peel four tomatoes of medium size, cut fine and mix with sardines chopped after the skin and bones have been removed. Place on lettuce and serve with mayonnaise or with French dressing.
Onion and Cucumber Relish.—Grate one ripe cucumber, add two large onions also grated, squeeze the cucumber dry and discard the juice; add one red pepper finely chopped, salt and cayenne to taste if the pepper is not hot enough. Add good cider vinegar to make a mixture like catsup. If bottled this will keep well. Nice served with fish.
If the power of evil has never been so manifest in the world before as it is today, the power of God has never been so apparent—John Jay Chapman.
WHAT TO EAT
There is no more attractive dish, nor one more universally liked than a
sally liked than a well-made salad. The following is good enough for any guest:
PINEAPPLE
Apple and Pine apple Salad.—Drain a can of choice tender pineapple. Boil the juice with the strained juice of a lemon, sweeten to taste. Cut the pineapple into small uniform pieces, add four sweet apples diced, sprinkle with sugar to make the mixture quite sweet, or add a cupful of finely diced marshmallows, omitting the sugar, then pour the boiled, cooled juices over the fruit and set aside. Just before serving add one cupful of finely-minced almonds which have been blanched and one pint of sweet cream whipped. Serve at once.
Welsh Rabbit.—Cut one-half pound of cheese into bits, put it into a saucepan with four tablespoonfuls of butter and place it over slow heat to melt. In another saucepan scald a pint of milk, add a beaten egg to which has been added two tablespoonfuls of flour and one-half teaspoonful of salt. Let this mixture cook, stirring until smooth then pour the milk into the cheese and beat vigorously with an egg beater then add cayenne pepper to taste. Serve on hot buttered toast or on large crackers which have been slightly browned in the oven.
Codfish Chowder.—Nothing better for a cold weather dish than this: Cut a half-pound of salt pork or less into dice, fry brown, add three sliced onions, cook until yellow, then add a quart of boiling water and four sliced potatoes. Cook until the vegetables are tender. Meanwhile soak a pound of codfish—less will do. Shred, add with a quart of milk to the vegetables and when boiling hot drop in half a dozen soda crackers. Season well with salt and pepper and serve piping hot. In most families there is never any left-overs from this dish.
Onions French Fried.—Peel onions, cut in one-fourth inch slices, separate into rings. Dip into milk, drain, dip into flour and fry in deep sat. Sprinkle with salt and serve as a garnish to a platter of meat.
Nellie Maxwell
The KITCHEN CABINET
True democracy must have leaders; and the better the leaders the better the democracy. These leaders must be men of the most gracious and sincere manners, the most cultivated imagination, the finest self-sacrifice, the highest ideals.—Edward Wilson Parmelee.
EVERYDAY GOOD THINGS
A meat loaf is enjoyed once in a while and the following is a good way to serve one:
Creole Loaf.
Take one and one half pounds of meat, pork and beef mixe!; one good-sized onion chopped, salt and pepper, and one
Creole Loaf. Take one and one half pounds of meat, pork and beef mixed; one good-sized onion chopped, salt and pepper, and one cupful of cooked oatmeal; make into a loaf, adding a cupful of tomato. Place in a baking pan and pour over the loaf another cupful of tomato and one-half of a chopped onion. Roast basting often. Thicken the gravity to serve with the meat. Bake about one-half hour in a moderate oven.
Tongue on Toast.—This makes a nice breakfast dish and utilizes the rough pieces of boiled tongue. Mince the tongue, adding a bit of onion juice, nutmeg, salt and pepper and chopped green pepper—a tablespoonful of the latter is sufficient. Prepare a rich white sauce, using half of the quantity of liquid of the broth that the tongue was cooked in, and half of milk; cook with two tablespoonfuls of flour and butter well blended, or sweet cream may be used, omitting the flour and butter; add the tongue and pour over squares of buttered toast. Serve hot.
Gateau a la Africane.—Beat three eggs, add three-quarters of a cupful of sugar and the same of flour. To the beaten yolks add the sugar, beat well, then add the beaten whites and the flour, stirring lightly; flavor and bake in patty pans. When cool, remove the centers, fill with whipped cream slightly sweetened and flavored and put together in pairs. Cover with chocolate iceing.
Sally Lunn.—Mix at night, one cupful of milk, two eggs, two tablespoonfuls of butter, one teaspoonful of salt, four cupfuls of flour and one-half cupful of good yeast. Cover closely and put to rise, giving plenty of room for rising. In the morning beat well, turn into a greased mold and bake, after rising for half an hour, in a moderate oven. This makes a delicious breakfast bread.
All day to watch the blue wave curl
and break.
All night to hear it plunging on the
shore;
In this sea-dream such draughts of
life I take,
I cannot ask for more.
—Thomas Bailey Aldrich.
MORE WITH A RAISIN
Use plenty of raisins in salads, in
sandwiches, in cakes as fillings, in
sauces, in breads
and fruit cakes.
Raisin Bread.—
Take one pint
each of water
and sweet milk,
four tablespoon-
fuls of sugar,
two teaspoonfuls
sauces, in breads and fruit cakes.
Raisin Bread.-
Take one pint each of water and sweet milk, four tablespoonfuls of sugar, two teaspoonfuls of salt, two tablespoonfuls of shortening, a cake of compressed yeast, two pounds of raisins and four pounds of flour. Mix as usual, let stand until light, knead, let rise again, make into loaves and bake in a slower oven than for ordinary bread when the loaves are a little more than double their bulk. Be sure to keep the bread all through the process of rising in a warm place, free from drafts.
Raisin Pie.—Take a pound package of seeded raisins, cut fine with shears. Beat one egg, add one-half cupful of sour cream, a tablespoonful of flour and a little salt. If the cream is not rich add a tablespoonful of butter, a little grated lemon rind. Cover with top crust and bake in a slow oven. Spices may be added if desired.
Raisin and Apple Dumpling.—Roll out a rich pastry, heap a half cupful each of chopped apple and raisins or more of apple if desired, in the center. Fold and place in a baking dish. Add brown sugar, a tablespoonful of butter and a cupful of boiling water. Bake in a moderate oven for an hour. Serve with cream.
Raisin Puffs.—Take two well-beaten eggs, one-half cupful of butter, three teaspoonfuls of baking powder, two tablespoonfuls of sugar, two cupfuls of flour, one cupful of milk, one cupful of seeded raisins, chopped very fine. Steam for one-half hour in small buttered cups.
Raisin Rolls.—Roll out a rich biscuit dough or a bread dough, spread with butter, sprinkle with sugar and raisins; roll and cut in half-inch slices. Place in a buttered baking dish and let rise, if of bread dough, until light; bake in a moderate oven. These make a good dessert served with any desired sauce.
The fruit acid, the touch of flowers like flavor and the sugary deliciousness of the whole, makes the raisin a much prized fruit. For a traveler, a box or two of raisins will prove a boone, tiding one over a hungry period when it is not always easy to get food.
Nellie Maxwell
IMPERIAL CAFE
MR. AND MRS. E. R. PAGE, PROPS.
Our Service Is Unsurpassed
715 EAST 26TH AVE.
For Ladies' aid
H. A.
Cleaning, Press
720
PHONE MAIN C
Call in and see my Fax
HOWARD
GROCERY
Fresh Veget
Fresh Home-made
Free Delivery
PHONE MAIN 6338
THE CHAM
Isle
DRUGS, CHEMIC
W
PRESCRIBE
Phone us and we will
JAMES
PHONE MAIN 2425
MADAM
Swedish
Scalp and
Phone
2444 WASHING
DENY
Ladies' and Gents' Tailoring, See
H. ANDERSON
MERCHANT TAILOR
ing, Pressing and Repairing. All Work
Guaranteed
720 EAST 26TH AVE.
ONE MAIN 6751 Prices reasonable.
d see my Fall and Winter Samples now on display.
HOWARD & HOWARD
GROCERIES AND MEATS
Fresh Vegetables and Fruits Daily
Home-made Bread, Rolls, Cakes and Pies Daily
Free Delivery to any part of the city.
E MAIN 6338 718 E. TWENTY-SIXTH AVE.
CHAMPA PHARMACY
2101 CHAMPA
Is the place to get your
ESS, CHEMICALS AND PATENT MEDICINES
WE SERVE DRINKS.
PRESCRIPTIONS OUR SPECIALTY.
and we will deliver the goods to all parts of the city.
JAMES E. THRALL, Propr.
E MAIN 2425 PHONE 8444
ADAM NICHOLS
Swedish Body Massage
Salp and Facial. Manicuring
MERCHANT TAILOR
Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing. All Work
Guaranteed
720 EAST 26TH AVE.
PHONE MAIN 6751 Prices reasonable.
Call in and see my Fall and Winter Samples now on display
HOWARD & HOWARD
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 MAIN 6338 718 E. TWENTY-SIXTH AVE.
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.
MADAM NICHOLS
WASHINGTON STREET (Up-Stairs)
DENVER, COLORADO
2444 WASHINGTON STREET (Up-Stairs)
DENVER, COLORADO
PHONE MAIN 3203
EATHERHEAD
HAT FACTORY
ESTABLISHED 1874
D WOMEN'S UNCLAIMED HATS FOR SALE—FELTS,
PANAMAS AND WHITE MILANS
T STREET
ALBANY HOTEL BLDG.
berry Taxi & Baggage Co.
OFFICE; 2713 WELTON STREET
WEAT
HAT
MEN'S AND WOMEN'S
PANAM
1722 STOUT STREET
Granberry
OFFICE
WEATHERHEAD
HAT FACTORY
ESTABLISHED 1876
MEN'S AND WOMEN'S UNCLAIMED HATS FOR SALE—FELTS,
PANAMAS AND WHITE MILANS
1722 STOUT STREET
ALBANY HOTEL BLDG.
Granberry Taxi & Baggage Co. OFFICE:2713 WELTON STREET
T
If you have a roo
TAXI RATES: $3.00
T. G. GRANBERRY,
u have a room for rent or want a room call us
TES: $3.00 per hour. DAY and NIGHT SERVICE
NBERRY, Mgr. DENVER, COLORADO
If you have a room for rent or want a room call us TAXI RATES: $3.00 per hour. DAY and NIGHT SERVICE T. G. GRANBERRY, Mgr. DENVER, COLORADO
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C. E. Weatherhead
First-Class Meals at All Hours
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT
our Service Is Unsurpassed
VE. PHONE MAIN 2759
Miloring, See
JESON
Eng. All Work
AVE.
Services reasonable.
Jobs now on display.
WARD
MEATS
Suits Daily
Ces and Pies Daily
of the city.
TENTY-SIXTH AVE.
ARMACY
our
ENT MEDICINES
SPECIALTY.
all parts of the city.
Propr.
PHONE 8444
CHOLS
Message
Meanicuring
0-J
ET (Up-Stairs)
ADO
C. B. Weatherhead
HEAD
FACTORY
S FOR SALE—FELTS,
ILANS
Appointments
Phone Champa 2220-J
[Image of a woman with short hair, wearing a light-colored dress with a high collar.]
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.
Wonderful
Nourishes and stimulates the
Tette
For Tette, Eczema
Four preparations especially recom-
tetter and eczema of the scalp. Sc
Complexion Soap Superfine
Witch Hazel Jelly Compa
World renowned and made to aid y
For Sale at Drug Store
Male Shampoo
Corpoly cleanses
and scalp.
Wonderful Hair Grower
and stimulates the growth of stubborn hair.
Tetter Salve
for Tetter, Eczema and Itching Scalp
ions especially recommended for short, thin and
ema of the scalp. Sent as trial treatment for
Soap
Superfine Face Powder
Clean
Nazel Jelly
Compact Rouge
Vanishing
med and made to aid you have a lovely, smooth
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. W.
640 N. West St.,
USE SAT
STRAIGHTEN Y
SENT ANYWHERE, MAIN
R. B. BOLDEN
CHAMP
FIRST CLASS
SATIN T
RIGHTEN YOUR OWN
YWHERE, MAIL OF EXPRESS, $
926 NINETE
The Madam C.J.Walker Mfg. Co., Inc. 640 N.West St., Indianapolis, Ind.
USE SATIN TOP
STRAIGHTEN YOUR OWN HAIR
SENT ANYWHERE, MAIL OF EXPRESS, $1.25 JAR.
R. B. BOLDEN 926 NINETEENTH STREET
CHAMPA 9051-W.
ST CLASS BARBER SH
THE BARBER SHOP
FIRST CLASS BARBER SHOP
Best Service in City
ASK FOR
Niles & Mosers
Quality Cigars
Chancellors
Cincos, 2 fo
Niles & Mosers
Quality Cigars
MAKE YOUR APPOINTMENTS AT
ELSIE L.
ANDERSON'S
BEAUTY PARLO
SCIENTIFIC SCALP AND
FACIAL MASSAGE
Treatment for Dandruff, Falli
MARCEL WAVING, HAIRD
ALL HAIR GOODS
Hytone Hair Grower, Tette
Combs for Sale.
EVERYTHING ST
All Work
Phone York 7645R
For Dandruff, Falling Hair and Baldness
AVING, HAIRDRESSING AND M
LL HAIR GOODS MADE TO ORD
Air Grower, Tetter Salve, Pressing C
Combs for Sale. Agents Wanted.
VERYTHING STRICTLY SANITAL
All Work Guaranteed
7645R 1521 East
Treatment for Dandruff, Falling Hair and Baldness a Specialty MARCEL WAVING, HAIRDRESSING AND MANICURING ALL HAIR GOODS MADE TO ORDER Hytone Hair Grower, Tetter Salve, Pressing Oil for Sale
ASK FOR
Glossine
To soften dry,
curly hair.
Hair Grower
width of stubborn, lifeless hair.
Salve
and Itching Scalps.
used for short, thin and falling hair,
is trial treatment for $1.50.
Cream Powder Cleansing Cream
Rouge Vanishing Cream
have a lovely, smooth complexion.
of Agents and by Mail.
WALKER Mfg. Co., Inc.
Indianapolis, Ind.
TIN TOP
OUR OWN HAIR
OF EXPRESS, $1.25 JAR.
926 NINETEENTH STREET
9051-W.
BARBER SHOP
Bath
Chancellors-10c
Cincos, 2 for 15
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Hair and Baldness a Specialty
PRESSING AND MANICURING
MADE TO ORDER
Salve, Pressing Oil for Sale
Agents Wanted.
CTLY SANITARY
guaranteed
1521 East 22nd Avenue
Bath
THE story of winter millinery is ended—except for those beautiful, frivolous and ephemeral affairs for dances and the theater, that are its epilogue. Designers must now turn their thoughts to spring.
The dignity and beauty of this season's shapes seemed to demand velvet and it has played the star part among millinery fabrics. A representative dress hat, shown at the upper left, in the group of four hats pictured, reveals a gracerel shine with droop-
G
THE FASHION OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
Group of Beautiful Winter Hats.
brim and soft crown. It is made of black velvet. A soft rope of ostrich flues about the crown ends in many falling plumes at the right side. Shaded ostrich in several colors is used in this way on velvet hats in colors or black. In spite of the velvet vogue, duvetine is well represented in winter hats and the model shown at the upper right has made a success. Marrow ribbon and fur contrive to adorn it with the effect of embroidery, the fur placed in ornaments at the front and sides. At the lower left, a black and white hat has a peculiar brim covered with embossed white velvet with appliques of black hatter's plush. The applique makes a background for a decoration of white bugle
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THE FASHION WEEK
I
beads in figures that conform to the outlines of the applied plush. The crown is soft and a spray of curving feathers provides the graceful trimming.
There was a time when people were not much interested in clothes for their younger girls, it was when they believed in "the awkward age." Girls were supposed to arrive at a period in their development when nothing could be made to look well upon them, a sort of pin-feather stage, and their clothes were relegated to on straight lines with knitting in points below and faced with light cushion. A narrow girdle of metal tied at the left side w loops and ends finish chine tabs, simply de needlework of colored make a pretty collar for
Julia Both
---
the ranks of unimportant things. But the awkward age, like the stone age has passed almost into oblivion. When designers began to specialize in children's apparel, they uncovered the charms of the half-grown girl. A frock for all ordinary dress-up times, and a party frock, for the younger girls, are shown here—the party frock at the right of the two pictured. This is merely a new form of the petal frock, made of taffeta silk in light colors. Fashion smiles
THE FILM OF 'THE MISSING' BY JOHN BURTON.
again on light blue, pink, illac, yellow and green taffeta for young folks, and in simple styles and lines. The party frock has a long bodice with alternating panels of plain and wrinkled silk, ending in a short peplum, cut into pointed scallops at the bottom. The bodice is sleeveless and has a bateau neck line, becoming to slim necks, with a petal finish about it. A pointed band across the top of the arm corresponds with the neck finish. The skirt is covered with overlapping strips of taffeta cut on one edge into pointed scallops. All these edges are picoted. The dress is prettyly finished with a small fancy girdle in silver. The dress at the left of brown velvetete is unusually graceful. It is cut
I
on straight lines with kimono sleeved hanging in points below the elbow and faced with light crepe de chine. A narrow girdle of metallic ribbon is tied at the left side where hanging loops and ends finish it. Crepe de chine tabs, simply decorated with needlework of colored silk floss, make a pretty collar for the neck.
Julia Bottomley
COPYRIGHT BY WESTERN NEWSPAPER UNION
Are You Tran
Accou
e You Transferring An Account?
Are You Transferring An Account?
THE approach of the New Year is a reminder to many that now is a most favorable time in which to make arrangements to transfer accounts. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK has exceptional facilities for attending to this detail for those who are making changes or are locating in Denver. Let us attend to this matter for you and relieve you of all bother or inconvenience. As a long-established bank with extensive connections and adequate equipment, we are prepared to effect transferals with the least possible delay. Bring in your passbook and we will do the rest.
The First Na
of Denver
17TH STREET
First National Bank
of Denver Colorado
17TH STREET NAT STOUT
The First National Bank
of Denver Colorado
17TH STREET AT STOUT
Safe Deposit Boxes
$5 and Up.
One Dollar Opens a
Savings Account.
New Night and Day Cafe
Night and Day Cafe
New Night and Day Cafe
New Night and Day Cafe
(Under New Management)
Meals at all hours; home cooking,
strictly first class; prices right.
Sunday Dinners served from 6 p. m.
to 8 p. m.
Private booths. Party service our specialtv.
DAVIS & HANNA. Proprietors.
Please You. Tell OTHERS: If Not. Tell US
CHAMPA 7471 1865 CURTIS ST.
When You Want
ails, Feet, Tails, Snouts, Neckbones or Chiterlings, or
other part of the hog except the squeal, for Christmas
go to
EAST'S MARKET
If We Please You. Tell OT
PHONE CHAMPA 7471
When You
The Heads, Feet, Tails, Snouts,
any other part of the hog excel
go to
EAST'S N
If We Please You. Tell OTHERS: If Not. Tell US PHONE CHAMPA 7471 1865 CURTIS ST.
When You Want
The Heads, Feet, Tails, Snouts, Neckbones or Chiterlings, or any other part of the hog except the squeal, for Christmas go to
2300-6 Larimer Street
DON'T FORGET OUR
T FORGET OUR NEW LOCATION
DON'T FORGET OUR NEW LOCATION
ESTABLISHED
1879
Stark
JEWELERS
1536 GLENARM STREET
CHRISTMAS
You will want to show your friends
good will to men
A TAILOR-MADE SUIT
WILL HELP Y
A. V. GA
Champa 1019-W
Cleaning, Pressing
CHRISTMAS DAY
want to show your friends and family that "Peace on earth
good will to men" is in the air.
TAILOR-MADE SUIT BY A. V. GARDNER
WILL HELP YOU REJOICE
A. V. GARDNER
019-W 1025 Twenty-first Street
Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing
You will want to show your friends and family that "Peace on earth, good will to men" is in the air.
A TAILOR-MADE SUIT BY A. V. GARDNER
WILL HELP YOU REJOICE
Champa 1019-W 1025 Twenty-first Street Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing
Fruit Bowl
Phone
Main 3307
JESSE DOUGLASS
Licensed Embalmer and Directer
Phone F414W
Lady Assistant. Polite Service
to all.
One Dollar Opens a Savings Account.
Phone Main 1561
Denver, Colorado