Colorado Statesman
Saturday, April 5, 1924
Denver, Colorado
Page text (machine-generated)
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
THE JOURNAL OF THE WEST.
LABOR SHALL BE FREE
RACE COUNTRY PARTY
ST. LOUIS CITIZENS HELP THEMSELVES; GIVE $120,000
VOL. XXX
St. Louis, Mo., March 27.—(By A. N. P.)—If the world of babblers will just keep quiet for a minute, the public-spirited colored residents of this city would like to rise as one and comment on the query as to whether the Negro as a race is learing, or has learned, to look after his own—to give, even to the danger point, in support of worthy institutions dedicated to his benefit. St. Louis wants to get a word in before a final vote is taken.
This city believes the world may have heard in an off-hand way of how its Negroes rallied and subscribed $60,000 toward the $210,000 building for the Young Men's Christian Association up on Pine street. But the town is fearful that outsiders will think that grand work was a drowning-man effort, the last, fatal tug.
Its citizens are now offering for consideration and comment (and for emulation by other Negro communities) another $60,000 subscription they have made toward the establishment of the Colored Orphans' Home. Sixty thousand dollars were subscribed in a seven-day drive and over $38,000 have been paid in already. The public spirit of colored residents of St. Louis has thus made possible an institution valued at $120,000, designed to fill a charitable purpose, the taking care of the orphans of this city and vicinity.
One of the reasons St. Louis may take the lead in such affairs is probably because of the active part one of its greatest benefactors (or, rather a pair of its greatest benefactors) takes. Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Malone, the famous Poro people, never miss an opportunity to help and to boost.
The Colored Orphans' Home was established a good many years ago. It struggled along from one place to another, season after season, until its backers became seized with a desire to see the Negroes of the city get behind it and see what they could do. An appeal was made. Mr. and Mrs. Malone started the ball rolling; started it rolling toward a definite, practical goal. They purchased and deeded over to the home a $10,000 building site. That meant that other folks had to get busy. The building site cried out aloud that it wanted to be useful. Then came the giant subscription to put the site to work. Mr. and Mrs. Malone have also taken an active financial and spiritual part. Only recently the employees and students of Poro College united in an evening's entertainment, the proceeds of which went to the home.
Accommodations are now available for 100 orphans. The Home is located at the intersection of Goode, Kennerly and Cottage avenues, facing the Tandy playground and Sumner high school. It contains play rooms, manual training and domestic science department, locker rooms, laundry, store rooms, auditorium, offices, dormitories, a pure milk station, a free clinic, a circulating library, rooms for mothers, class rooms, a day nursery, and everything else to make it the equal of any such institution in America from the standpoint of service. The Home is strictly a non-sectarian, charitable institution to which all orphans, half orphans and neglected children may be sent and cared for free of charge when they have no
one to pay for any part of their maintenance. St. Louis colored citizens have made it possible, in a pure spirit of charity and self-help. Circulars addressed to some of the people who gave included this quotation: "I shall pass through this world but once. Any good thing, therefore, that I can do, or any kindness that I can show to any human being, let me do it now." And if they don't do it now, they are being urged to provide for so worthy an institution, guarantee $18,000 this year from the community chest fund, in their wills.
Roland Hayes in Recital at Queen's Hall, London
(Special from Monitor Bureau)
London, March 7.—Step by step Roland Hayes emerges from the ruck of the many good into the ranks of the few outstandingly fine artists. His recital at Queen's Hall on February 29 was the biggest thing he has done here so far. With Sir Henry Wood and the new Queen's Hall orchestra to accompany him, his pure tenor voice and refined methods held their own as easily in the large spaces as at former times in smaller halls. The ringing enthusiasm of the audience showed their opinion, and only great determination on his part kept the encores down to four. He began by singing "Endure, Endure," from the "St. Matthew Passion" (Bach); "Thy Hand, Belinda," from "Dido and Aeneas" (Purcell), and "Un' aura amorosa," from "Cosi fan Tutti" (Mozart). Rather surprisingly he did the Bach in French; a new experience but interesting. With all rough edges banished from the words, Bach's phrases flowed like liquid silver; for Roland Hayes has a breath control and production that are analogous to the effortless phrasing of a violinist. If one grants that it is permissible for a man to sing this Purcell "air," then one has nothing but admiration for the pathos and beauty of Roland Hayes' rendering. But is it permissible to wrest a soprano solo into the tenor register Purcell was always very careful over vocal color.
In the little known "Repos de la Sainte Famille," by Berlioz, Roland Hayes showed himself a master of what one may call the Fra Angelico mood. The three Shakespeare songs by Roger Quilter that followed are charming at all times, and the resonance Roland Hayes got into his voice in "Blow, blow, thou winter wind," was a well calculated contrast to the mezzo voce of the Berlioz.
But his Shakespeare readings, as well as his Mozart, had an underlying vein of sadness; like Jessica in "The Merchant of Venice," he is "ne'er merry" when he hears sweet music. Though of different races, he and she both belong to peoples who have been oppressed. Was his wistfulness the emergence of some instinctive memory?
The group of Negro spirituals that closed the concert seemed an affirm-
State Hist & Nut Mls
Society
State House
NABLE PEOPLE'S P
RADO
THE JOURNAL
DENVER, COLORADO,
White Actor Does Not Like to Play Part of Negro Hater, He Says
(N. A. A. C. P. Press Service)
New York, April 1.—Arthur Hohl, a white actor, playing in "White Cargo," recently gave an interview to the New York American in which he said he did not like the part of a Negro-hater which he had to play.
"There are some parts that won't permit a man to be democratic," said Mr. Hohl. "Here I am trying to be a good American in private life, while in Leon Gorden's new play I am compelled to imagine myself a Negro-hater eight times a week. It's inconsistent with my past life, even through the play is a powerful study of African life.
"You see, it isn't very easy for me to forget a few things about the colored race, particularly the part it played in the World War. Yes, I happened to be in it.
"I'm not anxious to tell you what I did in the war. Nor shall I tell you of what the colored troops did there. That's what we've got history books for, and if the compilers are not vehemently clannish they have set down, or will in due time, all pertaining to the heroism of the colored troops. I saw it, as did many others; I should like to remember it and I am sure others would, too.
"That is why it requires extraordinary effort to play the part I am playing in White Orange."
"But try as I might I cannot act Witzel without completely exhausting myself. I guess I'll have to get rid of this costume. 'It's part of my_service togs, worn for a whole year on the battlefield. I took it from the body of one of my colored men—a hero, of course—and it's bloodstained."
Aaron Malone Elected Delegate to G. O. P. Meet
St. Louis, Mo., April 1.—Aaron E. Malone, president of Poro College, who served as a member of the executive committee of the Republican state committee during the campaigns of 1920 and 1922, was elected recently by the Eleventh district, Republican Congressional convention as a delegate from the Eleventh district to the Republican national convention. Marion Costa, a white man, was the other delegate elected.
The delegates were not instructed to vote for the nomination of President Coolidge, but are known to be favorable to him.
The Eleventh was the first congressional district in St. Louis to elect delegates to the national convention.
ative answer. "Bear de Burden," "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot," and "Bye and Bye," were almost too tenderly poignant to talk about—even thought one wants to testify how well Roland Hayes sang them.
M. M. S.
Segregation Bill in Maryland Legislature
(Lincoln News Service)
Faltimore, April 1, 1924.—A bill has been introduced in the General Assembly attempting to legalize segregation by contract when 75 per cent. of the residents of any block in any city in Maryland agree not to sell or permit occupancy by Negroes except as servants. The bill seeks to evade constitutional barriers by a rubberlike provision applying segregation by contract among Negroes against whites as well as whites against Negroes. This will deceive no one, however. If the bill passes the House and Senate it will be fought to a finish in the courts. Negroes of Maryland are going to demand and fight to the last ditch for the same rights accorded to all citizens of choosing their own domiciles, paying for them, buying them, and occupying them. If there is any belief in the mind of any persons not of the race that they will submit to segregation of any sort without contesting it every inch of the way, those persons will need to revise their beliefs.—Baltimore Herald.
Klan Seeking to Divide Negroes
Planned Body Hostile to
N. A. A. C. P.
New York, March 28.—The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, 69 Fifth avenue, today made public quotations from Hearst's International Magazine for March, showing that the Ku Klux Klan has for some time been considering plans to set up and finance an organization within the race, which would be hostile to the N. A. A. C. P. and would divide the forces of colored people in America.
A direct quotation from a letter written by the Klan's Imperial Kleagle is given as follows in the March number of Hearst's International:
"We also have in mind, for some time in the future, for consideration the possibility of picking out the good Negroes (for there are some) and organizing them, or at least financing an organization for them, and thus split the force of the Negro itself. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People has insulted and ignored the memory of Booker T. Washington, and while I do not approve of Booker T. Washington in some ways, he was better than some of the rest of his gang. If we were to foster under cover an organization of the Negroes to honor the memory of Booker T. Washington, we would have spring up a strong organization to fight the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and you know sometimes the best policy is to divide your enemy by getting your enemy to fight among themselves."
The holding of race conferences should not be discouraged. Some of them may eventually follow up their "talk" and resolutions with a piece of real constructive work. It is doubtful, but stranger things have happened.
Colored Singer 30 Years at Fashionable White Church of New York
Colored Singer 30 Years at Fashionable White Church of New York
N. Y. Evening Post Publishes Biography of Harry Burleigh, Noted Musician
(N. A. A. C. P. Press Service)
The New York Evening Post of March 22 published a biography of the noted colored musician and singer, Harry T. Burleigh, who has just completed thirty years' service as baritone soloist at the fashionable St. George's church in Stuyvesant square. The biography recounts that Burleigh is the grandson of a slave, with Scotch and Indian ancestry. Left fatherless, the boy earned his own living until he found the New York Conservatory of Music, where he was awarded a scholarship. At the conservatory, Burleigh saw much of the noted composer, Dvorak, whose manuscripts he used to copy; and sang for him plantation songs which may have given some of the inspiration for the New World Symphony.
In 1894, Burleigh applied for a position vacant in the choir of St. George's church. He was the only Negro to apply. He got the position. He has sung there Sunday after Sunday since then. Mr. Burleigh, whose voice became widely known, recalls having sung for Prince Harry of Prussia, for paderewski, and Col. Roosevelt, for the Archbishop of Canterbury and the famous orchestra conductor, Anton Seidl.
Mr. Burleigh is best known for his arrangements of the old Spirituals and plantation songs. He received the Spingarn medal in 1917 and has received two degrees, from Howard and Atlantic Universities. On the afternoon of the first Sunday in April, St. George's program is being made up entirely of Negro Spiritualists as arranged by Harry Burleigh, in recognition of his thirty years' service.
Colored Fraternity Honors Colonel Young
Colored Fraternity Honors Colonel Young
(Lincoln News Service)
Washington, April 1, 1924.—More than 1,000 members of the Omega Psi Phi fraternity and their friends paid tribute to the memory of Colonel Charles Young, deceased member of the organization and one of the outstanding military figures of the colored race, at services held last week in Rankin Memorial Chapel, Howard University.
Chaplain O. J. W. Scott, U. S. A., retired, told of the military record of Colonel Young. He related his service from his graduation from West Point, through the Spanish-American war and the Philippine disturbances until his retirement in 1917 and his death, January 8, 1922. Alston Burleigh read a poem to commemorate the dead hero, and other appropriate tributes were paid by those who revered the memory of our greatest soldier.
NO.25.
Chairman John T. Adams Disparages Non-Partisanship
(Lincoln News Service)
(Washington, April 1, 1924.—Chairman John T. Adams of the Republican national committee has made an appeal for fuller participation of voters in party activities. In a current statement, he says: "American citizens are responsible for the character of their government, whether it be federal, state or local. Our public officials are nominated and elected by the people. It should be kept in mind that the work of getting good public officials is not all done on election day. It begins in the party primaries and conventions. This preliminary work for the coming presidential election is now well under way. In many states the dates of the primaries and conventions for selection of candidates have been set.
"It is the duty of every good citizen who wishes good government to belong to a party and to participate in his party primaries. It is his duty to see that the candidates nominated are party men who represent the party principles and who are pledged to support its policies and co-operate with its organization. Only in this manner can we have responsible party government, which is the most successful form of representative government yet devised.
"During the last few years," Chair man Adams goes on to say, "there has been a great deal of propaganda decriing party activity. There has been an attempt to make virtue of so-called non-partisanship. Instead of non-partisanship being a virtue, it is a menace. It tends to break down representative government. The need of the hour is not for less party activity, but for more of it. The underlying cause of most political evils today is the indifference of our citizens to their right of suffrage. Even the briefest study of nomination and election figures show that the majority of legal voters are taking no part either in their primaries or the general elections. Less than half the citizens of the United States voted in the presidential election of 1920. The percentage taking part in the congressional elections of 1922 was even less. Such conditions make possible a government by the minority. Representative government is not automatic. It is not self-supporting. It draws not only its authority from the people, but it draws its strength and vitality from them. Unless they participate in public affairs in an active and intelligent manner their government must cease to be representative."
Editor Fred R. Moore of the New York Age will make New York a Sahara before we get an opportunity to make a personal investigation of the anti-Volstead situation up there.
Some of the colored Ohio politicians appear to be getting off the reservation. Surely this is not because the state has no candidate for the presidency this year.
President Coolidge has politely informed the hysterical members of Congress that they were sent here to legislate rather than to investigate, and that the people of the country demand a reduction in taxes. Sure! That's what we want.
Pei o
B co.
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Short Orders at All Woks Meals Served from
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Times a. 6 A.M. to 8 P.M
Home Cooked Food. aa aaa re 924 19th St.
Best of Service. orn © Denver, Colo.
(oy
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8 eee
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17"& CHAMPA
If you are keeping
deeds, notes, bonds
or cash in your
house or your of-
fice and they are
stolen, burned,
eaten by mice or
otherwise de-
stroyed, they are
apt to be a total
loss to you because
they are not likely
to be covered by
any part of your
insurance policies.
But you can keep
all such things in
a safe deposit box
in the vaults of the
Colorado National
at a cost of less
than ten cents a
week.
You are cordially
invited to visit
these vaults and
see for yourself
how strong and
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PUBLIC TRUSTEE’S SALE
Whereas, Louis Cook, by deed. of
tust, dated the Slat day of Mareh, 1923,
Mhich ‘is recorded. in book 3105,” paise
Bes. or the records in the office of the
Cire’ and ‘Necorder, of the City. and
County of Denver Colorado, duly. con
veyed to the Pubile Trustee’ in and (or
the Cty’ and ‘County. of Denver, Colo.
thdo, the following." deseribed real
estate, inthe City und County of Den=
Ven Colorado, tocwit: Lots neven (i)
and eight Gd. block two" Gi), Went
atyviews, which | deed ‘or trust wat
Inde ‘to’ accure, Che payment of ‘one
[romiseory note of even date we sid
feed or trast, forthe. sum ‘of elzht
Hundred (80000) dollars. payable to
the urder of Suire W. Weedman, six
ind ‘twocthirds years after the "date
thereof, with Interest (hereon at six
Per cent per annum until maturity, ie
[crest payable monthly, ax in more. par=
ticularly. wet) fort in said deed of
trust, reference. to. which. Is hereby
mde for erenter certainty; and,
Whereas the anid Louls. Cook, and
ail persons ‘clniming by, through” oF
tinder hin, having defaalted: in the
fusiient_of the Installments of prinel-
hid, twenty dollars, interest, seven dol-
lirs, ‘and tases for 192% fourteen dol-
lars; and said note and trust deed hav-
Ine'neen duly: ausigned and tranaforred
to uhe undersigned, ‘Teresa: Weedinan,
Bhd she, tae the legal holder of, sald
hte, havin elected on account of nald
default to declare sald note unpaid, due
{nd payable, in the sum of seven hum
dred" (g700)" dollars. the. balance. duc
theron with interest and” taxes, as
ibove specified:
Now, "therefore, At the written re-
quest, of. ‘Theres’ Weedman, the leral
Holder “or auid. mote pursuant to law,
ithe Understened, Public. Trustee In
And for the City. nd County. of Den=
ver, Colorade, do hereby sive” notice
that Twill we ‘the hour of 10 o'clock
Inthe forenoon of
TTUBSDAY, MAY 6TH, 1924,
at the ‘Tremont street front door of the
Ghure House, in the City and County. of
Denver, Colorado, sell at public auetlon,
to the hizhest and best bidder for cash,
the naid descrihed premises, and all. the
Hight. “title sand “interest of the. said
Lewis Cook, his heirs and assiicna there=
fnfor the’ purpose of paying anid. the
Gebtednens, in the sum of $100.00, the
Mulance of the principal, and the Inter
Cnt due thereon, mt per cent per an=
hum, $7.00 for the months of February
ind 'Mareh, 1924" the taxes. for 192i in
the sum of” $14.06, as hereinabove spect=
fed the indebtedness necured by sald
ced ‘of trust, and the coat and “exs
Henves of executing thie trust, amd, will
Ucliver to" the purchaser a certificate
Sfieule as provided by law:
Dated “at Denver, Colorado, April 3,
10d
EPWARD M, SARIN,
Public Trustee In and. for the City and
County of Denver, Colorado.
First pubiieation, April f)-1924,
Last’ publication, May 3, 1824
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Surplus... seeesteeees $92,008.67
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Commissioner of tnaura
STATE OF COLORADO.
Insurance. Department.
Synopsix of, Statement. for 1923 and
Copy’ of certificate or Authority,
THR CAPITAL FUE INSURANCE
COMPANY OF CONCORD,
NEW HAMPSIURE,
Awneta ocevrrtsstrs sists +S 1p290194.96
Tampitieken 220000200000 Gaiiacae
Capttal ss. Jverecccblbbaes Bo@ioon.ee
Surplas vee US. sapoteas
STATE OF COLORADO P'S
CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORITY
Office of Commissioner of Insurance.
It 1S HEREBY CERTIFIED. That
the THE CAPITAL FIRE INSURANCB
COMPANY OF CONCORD, NEW
HAMPSHIRE,
a corporation organized under the laws
lof New Hampshire,
whose principal office ts located at
‘Concord,
has complied, with the requirements of
the nwa of Colorado appiienble to sald
Company, and is hereby authorized to
transact ‘business within ‘the State of
Eoiorado, ‘as_an insurance company, in
Accordance with its Charter or Articles
Of Incorporation, subject to. the pro-
Visions and requirements of the laws
hereot until the last-day of February,
in the year of our Lord, one thousand
fine hundred and twenty-five,
IN TESTIMONY WHERBOW, I, Jack-
‘son Cochrane, Commissioner of’ Insur-
Anco of the State. of Colorado, have
hereunto set my hand and affixed my
heal Of office at the City of Denver,
this first’ day of March, Ar D. 1924,
JACKSON COCHRANE,
(Seal) Commissioner of Insurance,
STATE OF COLORADO,
Shs yTnaurance - Department.
Synopsis ot Statement. for 1923 and
‘Copy of Certificate of Authority,
(THE CHRISTIANIA GENERAL 1N-
MUSURANCE COMPANY, LIMITED,
CHRISTIANIA, NORWAY,
Annete cetvessterssetss oes SOTO 858.98
Mabiiitien vce cel l0l2 Bear ano 01
Depowit—capital 00.2 252222 "00/000.00
Barplus ccteercolssess sees OUA@D.9T
SiATE OF COLORADO TO
CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORITY
Office of Commissioner of Insurance.
If 1S HEREBY CERTIFIED, ‘That
the CHRISTIANIA, GENPRAL INSUR-
ANCE COMPANY, LIMITED,
CHRISTIANIA, NORWAY,
a corporation organized under Ue laws
ot Norway,
whose principal office. is located at
Christiania,
has complied with the requirements of
the laws of Colorado applicable to sald
Company, and is hereby authorized. to
transact business within the State of
Colorado, as an insurance company, In
hecordance with Its Charter or Articles
Of Incorporation, subject. to the pro-
Visions and requirements of the laws
hereof until the last day of February,
inthe year of our Lord, one thousand
nine hnindred and. twenty-five,
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOR, 1, Jack-
son Cochrane, Commissioner. of Insur-
lance of the ‘State. of Colorado, have
| hereunto set my hand and affixed my
koal of office at the City of Denver,
ini first day of Maren, ALD. 1924,
JACKSON COCHRANE,
(Seal) Commissioner of Insurance.
STATE OF COLORADO,
Insurance Department.
Synopsis of Statement. for 1923 and
Copy of Certificate of Authority,
THE CONSOLIDATED ASSURANCE
COMPANY, LIMITED,
LONDON, ‘ENGLAND.
Amnete ooeecccec eee e eens s+ M2 249,590.52
Liabilities 000000000020 aiarTxaso9
Depoxtt—Capitwi 22.15... "200{000.00
Surpluw cece eT) asa766.58
STATE OF COLORADO. ~~
CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORITY
Office of Commissioner of Insurance.
IP IS HEREBY CERTIFIED, That
the THE CONSOLIDATED —ASSUR-
ANCE COMPANY, LIMITED,
a corporation organized under the laws
ef Great Britain,
whose principal. office. 1% located gat
London, England,
has complied with the requirements of |
the laws of Colorado applicable to sald |
Company, and Ix hereby authorized t
transact business within the State of
Colorado, a8 an Insurance company, in
accordance with its Charter or Arti¢les.
of Incorporation, subject to the pro~
Visions and requirements of the laws.
hereof until the last day of February. |
In the year of our Lord, one thousand |
nine hundred and twenty-five, |
IN TESTIMONY WIEREOF, 1, Jack-|
son Cochrane, Commissioner of Insur-
ance of the ‘State of Colorado, have
hereunto set my hand and affixed my
seal of office at_the City of Denver,
this first day of March, A.D, 1924.
JACKSON COCHRANE,
(Seal) Commissioner of Insurance.
STATE OF COLORADO,
Insurance Department,
Synopsix of Statement. for 1923 and
‘Cany ‘of Cartificate of Authority
UNION HISPANO AMERICANA PURE
AND MARINE INSURANCE
COMPANY,
NEW von W.-Y.
Capitan .. eer ewseccecsece sss =S00,000.00
Surplus 00020202) as 000.86
STATE OF COLORADO. =
CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORITY
Office of Commissioner of Insurance,
IT 18 HERERY CERTIFIED, That
the UNION HISPANO | AMERICANA
FIRE AND MARINE INSURANCE
COMPANY.
NEW YORK. N. v.,
‘a corporation organized under the laws
of New York,
whose principal office 18 located at
New York,
has complied with the requirements of
the laws of Colorado applicable to sald
Company, and is hereby authorized to
transact business within the State of
Colorado, as an insurance company, in
accordance with its Charter or Articles
of Incorporation, subject to the pro~
visions and requirements of the laws
hereof until the last day of February,
in the year of our Lord, one thousand
nine hundred and twenty-five.
IN ‘TESTIMONY WHBREOF, J, Jack-
son Cochrane, Commissioner of Tnsur-
ance of the State of Colorado, have
hereunto set my hand and affixed my
seal of office at the City of Denver,
this first day of Mareh, A.D. 1924.
JACKSON COGHRANE,
(Seal) Commissioner of Insurance,
STATE OF COLORADO,
Insurance Department,
Synopsis of Statement for 1922 and
Copy of Certificate. of Authority,
ST. PAUL MUTUAL HAIL AND CY-
CLONE INSURANCE COMPANY,
ST. PAUL, MINN.
Ammetn oo ecee ee eceesce ees ++ B105,719.95
Liabilities oo00 0000.22" 1h00,00
Surplus ooo 25002) tos an92s
SPATE OF COLORADO =
CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORITY
Office of Commissioner of Insurance.
If IS HERBY CERTIFIED, That
the ST. PAUL MUTUAL HAIL AND
‘CYCLOND INSURANCE COMPANY,
a corporation organized under the laws
‘of Minnesota,
whose principal office Is located at
St. Paul,
has complied with the requirements of
the laws of Colorado applicable to sald
Company, and is hereby authorized to
transact ‘business within the State of
Colorado, as an insurance company, in
accordance with its Charter or Articles
of Incorporation, subject to the pro-
visions and requirements of the Inws
hereof until the last day of February,
in the year of our Lord, one thousand
nine hundred and twenty-five,»
IN ‘TESTIMONY WHEREOF, 1, Jack-
son Cochrane, Commissioner of Insur-
Ance of the State of Colorado, have
hereunto set my hand and affixed my
seal of office at the City of Denver,
this first day of March. A.D. 1924.
JACKSON COGHRANE,
(Seal) Commissioner of Insurance.
e e e
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—— tage of our reduced price —total cost now only
$20.95. We connect it to your. boiler free of
| charge. Easy monthly payments of $1.50 with
your gas bill.
Main 4000
Public Service Company
OF COLORADO | | eas
PUBLIC TRUSTEE’S SALE
Whereas, Clyde A, Atchison, by deed
of trust, dated the 1éth day of Mareh,
1514, which is recorded In’ book. 2645,
page Tl, of the records In the office
Sethe Clerk and Recorder of the City
And County of Denver, Colorado, duly
conveved to the Public ‘Trustee in and
for the City and County of. Denver,
Colorado, the following deseribed real
Sstate in’ the City-and County or Don=
Yer, Colorado, to-wit: Lot numbered
Twenty-one (21) and the South Bight
ft. Nine inches (S0..8 ft. 9 In) of Lot
hiimbered "Twenty (20) in Block four
G), First Uist), Santa Fe Addition,
which deed of trust was made to se2
Cure ‘the payment’ of one. promixsory
note of even date with sald deed. of
trust, for the sum ‘of Nine. Mundred
($800.00) dollars, payable to. the order
of Annie 1. Malcolm, three years after
the date thereof, with interest. there=
on at six per cent per annum until due,
interest payable quarterly, ax is more
particularly set forth. in wald deed of
trust, references ‘to which Ix “hereby
made for greater certainty, and,
MA Vhereas, the sald Clyde A. Atchison,
and ail persons claiming. by, through
or-under him, having defaulted In. the
payment of the principal of sald nots,
together with interest thereon from
‘March 16th, 1925, at eight per cent, and
‘the legal holder of sald note, having
elected on account. of sald default. to
Geciare said note tinpatd, due and pay-
able,
Now, therefore, at the written re-
quest of. kKdwin N. Burdick, the legal
Holder of sald note, pursuant to law, T,
the undersigned, Pablic Trustee in and
for the City and. County. of Denver,
Colorado, do hereby give notice that f
PUL"at ne’ nour of 10 ‘o'elocke In the
jorenoono
TURSDAY, APRIL 20TH, 1924,
at the Tremont street frant door of the
Court House, inthe City and. County
of Denver, Colorado, sell at public auc=
Shear, Che, highowt and Boat bidder
fr Pear, the suid. described” premises,
and all the right, title and. Interest of
the sald Clyde A. Atehiton, ‘his heirs
And assigns therein, for the purpose of
paying the Indebtedness secured by
Sala ‘vod if trust, and the cont and ex:
Penses of executing this trust, and. w
Usliver to the purchaser a certificate
‘of ale as provided by law.
‘Slpated at Denver, ‘Colorado, March
27th, 1924.
EDWARD M, SABIN,
‘Public Trustee in and for the City’ and
County of Denver, Colorado.
First publication March. 29,. 1924,
Last publication April 26, 1924,
Careless Expressman,
A fellow sent a package of books
up to his country home tast week,
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it with care, as directed, it would
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@
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CORNER 15TH AND LARIMER.
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Where an Old Joke B-gan.
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FOREIGN
Music broadcast from Chicago, distant about 10,000 miles, was heard distinctly at Melbourne, Australia. Songs, including "Carolina in the Morning," were distinguished.
Honolulu police were sent to the various plantation districts affected by the strike of 7,000 Filipino laborers ordered by Pablo Manalipit, leader of the Filipino workers.
Dr. Zuniga Huete, chief defender of Tegucigalpa, died from wounds received in the attack of revolutionists against the city, according to advices received in San Salvador from the Honduran capital.
French archaeologists working in Syria have discovered at Saliyeh, in the Euphrates region, a Greek city founded just after the death of Alexander the Great, 2,246 years ago, and abandoned in 273 A.D., when the desert sands covered it.
A number of bridges on the main road between Longford and Athlone, in central Ireland, were blown up recently and the roads were blocked with felled trees. The Republicans disclaimed responsibility for the destruction.
Premier Raymond Poincare and his cabinet, which has been in power since 1922, resigned after being defeated in the Chamber of Deputies upon the question of pensions. He resumed the premiership two days later and has reconstructed his cabinet.
A new record for one-day shipments of coal and coke from the Ruhr basin for the reparations account since are occupation begon, was established on March 26. According to French official figures, these show that 87,170 tons of coal and 24,931 tons of coke were shipped.
Emillano Aguinaldo, famous Filipino revolutionary leader, accepted the honorary chairmanship of the Philippine independence mission, provided the mission remains in the United States permanently until independence is obtained or the impossibility of obtaining it becomes apparent. The Dawes' commission proposes to restore the finances of Germany, according to the Matin, by extremely severe control of government revenue and expenditure, by the yield of an international loan and by a partial moratorium for three years. At the conclusion of this period Germany, it is believed, will be in a position to pay about 2,500,000,000 gold marks annually.
GENERAL
Seven men are dead as the result of drinking denatured alcohol and other preparations containing alcohol at Toledo, Ohio.
Bandits entered the National Bank of Elm Grove, a suburb of Wheeling, W. Va., held up the employees, and escaped with about $55,000 in cash according to police reports.
W. B. Rood, former cashier of the Webster City, Iowa, Savings Bank, entered a plea of guilty to charges of fraudulent banking. Rood was specifically charged with receiving deposits while knowing that the bank was insolvent.
Charles Cornwell, 14-year-old white boy, who entered a plea of guilty to second degree murder charges in connection with the slaying of Jimmy Carson, 4-year-old negro at Manchester, Iowa, several weeks ago, was sentenced to life imprisonment at the Anamosa reformatory.
The Kansas City, Mexico & Orient railroad, long the dream of Arthur E. Stilwell, builder, for the shortest route from Kansas City to the Pacific coast, but which in recent years has faced a veritable death by inches from lack of financial support, was sold to the highest bidder at public auction at Wichita, Kan. Clifford Histed, general attorney for the Orient, and said to represent a group of American and British investors in the company, acquired the entire property for $3,000,000.
At San Diego, Everett Drew Clark, who has been on trial in Superior Court for several days, charged with the murder of George E. Schick, broker and real estate man, was found guilty. Life imprisonment was recommended by the jury.
New York.-The contract of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America, Inc., with Will H. Hays, which expires in 1925, was renewed for three years, extending it to March 5, 1928, the organization announced at its annual meeting.
Citizens of the United States have almost $4,000,000,000 invested in Latin America, the Department of Commerce said in announcing the completing of the first of a series of studies of Central and South American countries. The investment includes $610,000,000 in public securities and $3,150,000,000 in industries. "Our great interest in Latin-America is largely a growth of the past ten years," the department said. "Latin America, prior to 1904, was terra incognita to many Americans; now manufacturers and merchants, farmers, operators, and students are all looking for information on Latin American affairs."
Two hundred absentee ballots, stored in a vault at city hall, Council Bluffs, Iowa, were missing when election officials opened the repository to count the votes. The theft was the climax of one of the most hotly contested municipal elections in the history of Council Bluffs. The public papers of Woodrow Wilson will be published next fall, through an arrangement with Mrs. Wilson, it is announced by a New York publishing house. The edition will appear in six volumes.
AN EPITOME OF LATE LIVE NEWS
CONDENSED RECORD OF THE
PROGRESS OF EVENTS AT
HOME AND ABROAD
FROM ALL SOURCES
SAYINGS, DOINGS, ACHIEVE
MENTS, SUFFERINGS, HOPES
AND FEARS OF MANKIND
WESTERN
James Reilley of Butte, Mont., and James Wood and James Mallon, both of Anaconda, were killed, and Harry O'Malley of Great Falls was injured in an automobile accident at Helena. Shuber Helligen, 8 years old, was scaled by a lion in a small itinerent circus. When the boy went too near the animal's cage, it reached out and clawed him. Doctors said the boy would recover.
Holding up a threesome on the sixth green at Annandale (Calif.) Country Club cost Tony Laport a year's liberty. He pleaded guilty to interrupting the game of three wealthy golfers long enough to go through their pockets.
Grace Koningen, a Holstein cow, owned and bred by the Montana State College, finished a production of 32,280 pounds of milk for the year recently, which gives her the world's record as a milk producer for 10-year-olds.
Police arrested William Mathis, negro ex-convict, and a search of his home disclosed the $40,580 worth of jewelry stolen from the residence of David Keith, wealthy Lake City mining man. Mathis, on parole from the Utah state prison, is an old offender for burglary.
George Steckle, an alien, was sentenced in Municipal Court at Portland, Ore., to kiss the American flag and was fined $100 on a charge of disrespect to the flag. The fine was suspended. Patrolman W. B. Stram testified he saw Steckle using the flag as a pack rag to carry wood into his basement. Wrapped in the flag he had served in the World war, the body of Ed Lockart, notorious Oklahoma bandit, was buried with full military honors. Because of his record as an infantryman in the Thirty-sixth division in France, the local post of the Veterans of Foreign Wars decided to conduct a military funeral.
Deprived of all privileges, eight young women were in dungeons in the county jail at Los Angeles as the result of a night of rioting, in which beds and mattresses were burned, furniture smashed and the lives of matrons threatened. The riot started when matrons forced a prisoner to halt a speech on "personal liberty and pursuit of happiness," which they termed radical.
WASHINGTON
The cavalry board of the army has recommended a vacuum cleaner for the grooming of horses and mules, an innovation which is expected to have widespread effect in civilian life and among foreigners as well. It now takes twenty-four minutes to groom a horse with brush and comb, and this time will be cut down to ten minutes by the vacuum cleaner.
Adolfo de la Huerta, leader of the Mexican revolution, who was reported to have been lost at sea in an effort to reach the United States, has been located at Payo Oblspo on the Honduran border, according to a dispatch to the State Department. The information came from the American consul at Progresso, Mexico. The same telegram stated that eight of De la Huerta's cabinet members had fled to New Orleans.
The wealth of the nation is $320,803,862,000, more than one-half of which is real property and improvements. The per capita wealth is $2,918. Statistics of the country's wealth as of December 31, 1922, revealed that the total wealth increased 72.2 per cent, and the per capita wealth 49.6 per cent, in the ten years from 1912. All classes of property increased in value in the decade except livestock, which decreased 6.09 per cent. to $5,807,104,000. Taxed real property and improvements were valued at $155,908,625,000, an increase of 60.9 per cent. in the ten years; farm implements and machinery $2,604,638,000, an increase of 90.4 per cent.; manufacturing machinery, tools and implements $15,783,200,000, an increase of 159.1 per cent.; railroads and their equipment $19,950,800,000, an increase of 23.5 per cent.; privately owned transportation and transmission enterprises, other than railroads, $13,607,570, an increase of 41.1 per cent.
The Senate finance committee agreed to the repeal of the 10 per cent admission tax on tickets selling for 50 cents or less, as voted by the House, and approved with some modification the proposed board of tax appeals. The admission tax to theaters and entertainments was the first of the rate schedules in the revenue bill, aside from the income tax, taken up by the committee. Further study of the estimate and probable surplus available for tax reduction will be made before completing the various schedules.
LATE NEWS
From All Over
COLORADO
Canon City.—Local branches of the Colorado Parent-Teacher Association are arranging for the entertainment of the state Parent-Teacher Association convention here April 23, 24 and 25.
Pueblo.—G. Gerrandona is in trouble because he tore down the wrong house and B. Buckstein demands $1,050 for this building owned by him and wrecked by Gerrandona before the error was discovered.
Fort Collins.—Seventeen cars of grading equipment and material for use in the construction of the eighteen-mile extension of the Union Pacific railroad north from Fort Collins have arrived here.
Seibert.—Traffic here was hampered seriously by fifteen inches of snow, the result of the heaviest March storm in this district in the last eighteen years. Passenger trains maintained their schedule but freight and local trains were delayed or annulled. Colorado Springs.—Colorado Springs will become the headquarters for research work in tuberculosis in America, with the establishment here of the Colorado Society for Research in Tuberculosis, articles of incorporation for which were filed with the secretary of state. Denver.—Denver's assessed valuation will pass the $400,000,000 mark by a substantial margin with the compilation of the totals of assessments now being made, on which next year's tax levy will be based, it has been estimated by Clem W. Collins, manager of revenue.
Montrose.—Tony Monell of Montrose, secretary-treasurer of the State Association of County Commissioners, informed State Auditor Stong that approximately $500,000 in state gasoline tax that should be collected has never been turned over to James E. Duce, state oil inspector.
Palisade.—Joe Jim, a Ute Indian, and one of the real pioneers of this section, was buried at Palisade in a casket constructed of skins tanned by his own hands. The burial service was simple. The fashioning of the casket from the hides was in accordance with his last wishes.
Cripple Creek.—Ore of almost fabulous value is being shipped from the famous Portland mine in the Cripple Creek district, according to officers of the company, who place the net returns at $6 a pound, or $12,000 a ton. One shipment last week weighed 600 pounds, which sold at the smelter for $3,600.
Brighton.—The Windsor Farm Dairy of Denver lost a suit in the District Court here, when judgment of $8,750, in favor of John Mulder, proprietor of the Ridgewood dairy near Arvada, Colo., was given before Judge Samuel J. Johnson. Mulder fled suit against the company charging false arrest and imprisonment.
Grand Junction.—As a part of an enlarged program for advertising scenic wonders of western Colorado, motion picture films of Grand Mesa, largest flat top mountain in the world, near this city, will be taken during this summer by the Grand Junction Chamber of Commerce in conjunction with the forest service.
Canon City.—Mayor A. J. Turner, Special City Engineer Glenn I. Izzett, Alderman G. H. Smith, Frank Emmerson, Orris W. Rowe and H. G. McClivany recently made a tour by automobile inspecting the types of paving used on the streets of Colorado cities with a view of selecting a type for the new paving district recently organized and authorized by Canon City.
Pueblo.—Charged with embezzlement of government funds received through the sale of timber taken out of the San Isabel national forest, Harry Dunn, in charge of the San Luis division of the San Isabel national forest, is out on $1,000 bond pending his appearance before the federal grand jury here next month. Greeley.—Greeley High School basketball team, winner of the intermountain title by defeat of the Latter Day Salnts in Salt Lake City, will not go to Chicago to compete in the national tournament to start in that city April 1. Decision was made because Windcor High School team, winners of the state high school championship, already was in the Windy City to represent this state.
Boulder.—The executive committee of the alumni of the University of Colorado has directed the spreading upon the minutes of resolutions praising Mrs. Verner Z. Reed of Denver for her recent gift of $120,000 for the equipment of the medical school, which will, the resolution reads, "contribute to the relief of suffering in Colorado and to the discovery and application of new methods for combating disease."
Rocky Ford.—For several years there has been a growing feeling among the directors of the Arkansas Valley Fair Association that the extensive grounds which are the most accessible of any fair grounds from the center of the business district of the city, were far too valuable to lay idle fifty-one weeks in the year and be simply in use during fair week, and at a meeting held recently it was unanimously voted to conduct an amusement park at the grounds during the summer months.
Fort Collins.—The Union Oil Company of Colorado spudded in its No. 1 well near the Wellington dome a few days ago. On account of the almost impassable condition of the roads there was only a small crowd on hand and no demonstration marked the occasion. Among those present for the event was Slewers Fincher, president of the company, and former state senator from Breckenridge. This is the first development by an independent company in this field. A standard rig is being used and it is expected the well will be drilled to a depth of 4,000 to 5,000 feet or more. The new well is four miles northwest of Wellington, thirteen miles north of Fort Collins, two miles southeast of the gas well of the Union Oil Company of California and a mile southeast of No. 2 and 3 wells now being drilled. The contract for drilling the new well is held by H. C. Farley. Tom Jones is the head driller.
Boulder.—Eight per cent of the students enrolled in the University of Colorado last quarter "flunked," according to an announcement. "Of the 178 who failed, forty-six left the school voluntarily. Of the remaining 132 all were readmitted on petition except forty-four whose work had been unsatisfactory. They were advised to remain out of school for at least one quarter. The greatest number of failures was among the students of the college of liberal arts and science which has the largest enrollment. Ninety-one arts students failed, and of the sixty-seven who applied for readmission, fifteen were granted. Five failed in law and six in medics, four and three, respectively, being given permission to register again.
Boulder.—That one good ore strike is followed by others of like nature is a common observation in precious metal camps. On the heels of the $13,000 per ton gold-silver discovery by the Pherson brothers in their lease at Gold Hill, Boulder county, comes word from Nederland, a neighboring district to the south, that ore worth $256 per ton and over has been located in the Fairview property. This mine is owned by the Fairview Mining Company of Denver, with John Bergren as president and J. E. Rinehart as superintendent.
Denver.—Colorado's stock of grain March 1 was 10,620,000 bushels more than a year ago, according to the crop report of the Department of Agriculture and the Colorado State Board of Immigration. "The reserves of the four principal cereals grown in the state totaled 22,603,000 bushels, as compared with 11,983,000 last year and 15,194,000 bushels in 1922," the report says. "Corn reserves are larger than for any other grain, and more than double that of last year."
Pueblo.—Officers were elected at the annual convention of the Colorado Municipal League, now in session here. Mark B. Gill of Fort Morgan, Colo., was elected president; J. M. Jackson, Pueblo, vice president; A. M. Wilson, Colorado Springs, vice president; W. S. Wigglesworth, Durango, vice president; A. E. Penley, Delta, vice president, and H. E. Laque, Monte Vista, vice president. Don C. Sowers of Boulder was reelected secretary and treasurer.
Boulder.—Mrs. F. F. J. Buchhit, 1227 Pine street, Boulder, was instantly killed when the automobile in which she was riding was struck by the California Limited, westbound, a fast Santa Fe train, at North Guam, near Gallup, N. M., according to word received here. Her husband was riding in another machine which escaped the collision.
Pueblo.—The largest initiation ceremony in the history of Pueblo post No. 2, American Legion, took place recently when twenty-eight new members were accepted. At the same time fifty-seven new members were announced.
Arvada.—Pliny O. Clark, former mayor of Arvada and ex-superintendent of the Presbyterian hospital in Denver, who disappeared from his home last November, two weeks before Mrs. Margaret Vaughn swore out, a warrant for his arrest on charges of failure to contribute to the support of her unborn child, is now in Baltimore, Md., where he recently passed an examination for the appointment as superintendent of the Baltimore municipal hospital.
Pueblo.—Plans for the annual state Lions Club convention which is to be held in Pueblo on June 9, 10 and 11 are to make it a Colorado convention with Lions from all sections of the state learning something at least of the homes of their brother Lions and getting an insight into what their own Colorado is and has to offer.
Hugo.—Weldon H. Elliott, 70 years old, Parks, Ark., opened the vestibule door of a Union Pacific chair car near Aroyo, Colo., stepped from a speeding passenger train, and incurred a fracture of the skull which caused his death near here, as a second train was rushing him to Denver for medical attention.
Durango.—Andrew Fuller Hood, representative of La Plata county in the state Legislature, died in a local hospital following a week's illness. He was operated on for an abdominal trouble and peritonitis developed later. Canon City.—Arrangements are being made by the local branches of the Colorado Parent-Teacher Association for the entertainment of the State Parent-Teacher Association convention, which will be held in Canon City April 23, 24 and 25.
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PHONE MAIN 3203
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LYNCHING ON THE WANE
No long bowed her head in increase, bracing and mob violence went on when that it is refreshing to see a light, some slightly lifted by the encouragement twenty-eight lynchings were recorded in the previous year. While there should not be one), the figure of Churches would indicate a health an evil of purely American origin, a need world to point to us with scorn is today finding public opinion in primitive methods of alleged justice. Southern states has degenerated into decent and self-respecting society some of chance; there are deep, us reasons have been advanced for the murder and there can be no denianced to the result. It is encouraged church has at last entered the lists, and not without reason, that it has heard. The better sentiment aroused the Dyer anti-lynching bill cannot be the Negro himself has contributed a set that for twelve years has batteredable citadel of southern defiance to the world a splendid example. As a result a number of southern laws, some of them providing the county in which the outrage of a Negro recently got a verdict of dear replica of the Dyer bill and if the mob spirit. The southern white of paying taxes for the indulgence prices. The economic phase of the queen leading toward improved conditions of Negroes from the southland, that caused a labor situation in most states. The white south is faced with willing its own soil, producing its industrial plants, or treating the Negro has been the more appealing. in states—South Carolina, Alabama will by reporting no lynchings within welcome achievement well nigh still officers of the law are becoming ill, because they realize that public treatment and clamoring for law enforcement and care. It must not be with the approval of the report Churches. We must still be on gin win more and more friends to our old altogether and a proper respect honored, will it be possible to relax
AMERICA has so long bowed her head in increasing shame while the orgy of lynching and mob violence went on with unabated fury to such an extent that it is refreshing to see a light penetrate the clouds and the veil of shame slightly lifted by the encouraging report of 1923. During the past year twenty-eight lynchings were recorded as against more than twice that number in the previous year. While the number is still far too large (for there should not be one), the figures given out by the Federal Council of Churches would indicate a healthy growth of public sentiment against an evil of purely American origin, that has caused the whole of the civilized world to point to us with scorn and derision. The barbarity of a decade is today finding public opinion squarely set against its summary and primitive methods of alleged justice. A former popular holiday event in southern states has degenerated into a seriously unpopular offense against decent and self-respecting society. Such changes and reversals do not come of chance; there are deep, underlying principles involved. Many reasons have been advanced for the marked decline in the cases of mob murder and there can be no denial that all may have efficaciously contributed to the result. It is encouraging to note that the influence of the Church has at last entered the lists, for the charge has been often made, and not without reason, that it has been exceedingly derelict in this regard. The better sentiment aroused through agitation and support of the Dyer anti-lynching bill cannot be ignored in the findings and in this the Negro himself has contributed a large part. Supporting an organization that for twelve years has battered the ramparts of a supposedly impregnable citadel of southern defiance of law and justice, the Negro has given to the world a splendid example of the possibilities of united action. As a result a number of southern states have passed stringent anti-lynching laws, some of them providing that the family of the victim may sue the county in which the outrage occurred. The widow of a South Carolina Negro recently got a verdict of $2,000 under such a law. This is a near replica of the Dyer bill and if closely followed will do much to curb the mob spirit. The southern white man is not likely to relish the idea of paying taxes for the indulgence of criminal instincts and unlawful practices. The economic phase of the question has also been a material factor leading toward improved conditions in the south. The tremendous exodus of Negroes from the southland, that just now seems fairly started, has caused a labor situation in most sections that has become alarmingly acute. The white south is faced with the alternative of going to work, of tilling its own soil, producing its crops, of manning its own shops and industrial plants, or treating the Negro decently. The latter consideration has been the more appealing.
Three southern states—South Carolina, Alabama and Tennessee—joined the honor roll by reporting no lynchings within their borders during 1923. Such a welcome achievement well nigh staggers belief. What is more significant, officers of the law are becoming more active in preventing mob control, because they realize that public opinion demands it. An enlightened sentiment and clamoring for law enforcement has added weightily to official vigilance and care. It must not be supposed that our responsibilities end with the approval of the report given out by the Federal Council of Churches. We must still be on guard; we must continue the fight and win more and more friends to our cause. Only when lynching is banished altogether and a proper respect for the orderly process of the law enthroned, will it be possible to relax in our vigilance.
THE POWER OF COOPERATION
we are learning the lesson and the efforts to succeed and make definite favor. is to eliminate waste and avoid the elements sought for human betterment. nations of capital has been the ad commercial world for some years, and is mounted to astounding proportions. he was regarded as sound and real earn demands. That is to say, cap associate itself from labor and feniment that was leaning strongly cooperation. The profit sharing is hold of the commercial world. It is efficient as his interest in an indends as well as wages. this can be laid at the door of Her business institutions deem it a policy their workers the profit sharing perhaps a step forward in advance, Denver. The Public Service Co. of electric products of a vast part of reolved from this principle of cooperatingcompeting houses held sway and mistaken theory that competition long ago that we viewed a mono avoided and slain if possible, the general enemy of civilization. Many over their existence and monopolistic as aspiring politicians. But a readily the gathering clouds and approachselves. It is refreshing to recall, in the clamor a giant figure arose in the iceen, Henry L. Doherty, who was a Company that has proven such a b
where at home one of the most trite. What is possible in the business avenues with commensurate res
G RADUALLY we are learning the lesson and the benefits of cooperation in efforts to succeed and make definite progress along any line of endeavor.
The tendency is to eliminate waste and avoid the useless dissipation in the accomplishments sought for human betterment and material advancement. Combinations of capital has been the accepted slogan of efficiency in the commercial world for some years, and though abuses often crept in and greed mounted to astounding proportions in some instances, the general principle was regarded as sound and readjusted its machinations to more modern demands. That is to say, capital could not go it alone, could not disassociate itself from labor and found it expedient to respond to public sentiment that was leaning strongly toward a wider and bigger means of cooperation. The profit sharing idea, the bonus and similar plans took hold of the commercial world. It was found that the laborer became more efficient as his interest in an industrial plan multiplied and paid dividends as well as wages.
Much credit for this can be laid at the door of Henry Ford, until today few, if any, large business institutions deem it a policy of wisdom to either evade or deny to their workers the profit sharing principle in detail. In this regard, and perhaps a step forward in advance, a concrete example is offered here in Denver. The Public Service Co. of Colorado, controlling the gas and electric products of a vast part of northern Colorado as well as Denver, evolved from this principle of cooperation. It is only a few years that many competing companies held sway in this territory under the worn-out and mistaken theory that competition was the life of trade. It is not so long ago that we viewed a monoply of any character as a monster to be avoided and slain if possible, the rightful object of the big stick and a general enemy of civilization. Many bitter political battles were fought over their existence and monoplistic aggression has meant the death of many aspiring politicians. But a readjustment came. None were more alert to the gathering clouds and approaching storm than the corporations themselves. It is refreshing to recall, however, that in the very height of the clamor a giant figure arose in the field of finance, a former Denver citizen, Henry L. Doherty, who was the moving spirit in the Cities Service Company that has proven such a boon to the small investor.
Thus we have here at home one of the most trite lessons of the blessings of cooperation. What is possible in the business world can be readily extended to other avenues with commensurate results.
Cooperative Marketing
Just how far and with what degree of permanency this new idea of the cooperative marketing of crops will relieve the farmers condition and
Just how far and with what degree of permanency this new idea of the cooperative marketing of crops will relieve the farmers condition and
assure a stability of prices, is as yet problematic. Its sponsors claim great things for it, if given general application to the farm product of the country, and are profuse in figures and theory as to the wave of prosperity that will follow. So far the plan is purely experimental, yet if capital can pool its resources, labor combine its strength, all with mutual betterment, then it would seem that there would be a common ground some place where agricultural interests could assemble with profit. The cooperative marketing plan is a political football just at present and we do not predict much for its success until lifted from the realms of demagoguery.
Community Chest Idea
One of the most successful of our notice of late is to be found in the re idea in the handling of charities.
None of our recent undertakings grounded upon sound business principle from the first and we believe as strated as the only means of meeting immunity. The centralization of the ad duplication and the certain paring down toward that degree of efficiency that
The Politics
We have been inclined to exclude agencies that may find it convenientities, and more especially partisan poli ck blooded and conniving. There promise in our political life but very f ever again furnishes a brilliant example.
A recall election is in the air and ter and thrilling campaign. Denver the past, so the sensation will be no nessed a union of religions and racia against a common foe, in a battle of in the community. There is admittedly conserved can do much for the union may be only temporary and sin but the Negro must be accorded more a back wall for the politically ambit ate all the way, before and after, else of helpfulness through such a cooper
One of the most successful of cooperative plans brought to public notice of late is to be found in the rapid spread of the community chest idea in the handling of charities.
None of our recent undertakings along new paths seems more sanely grounded upon sound business principles than this. Denver caught the idea from the first and we believe as the years go on, it will be demonstrated as the only means of meeting the charitable demands of a community. The centralization of the administrative forces, the avoidance of duplication and the certain paring down of our overhead expenses all tend toward that degree of efficiency that means mutual helpfulness and profit.
The Political Phase
We have been inclined to exclude politics from the realms of those agencies that may find it convenient at times to seek cooperation. Politics, and more especially partisan politics, is held to be exceedingly selfish, cold blooded and conniving. There have been many instances of compromise in our political life but very few cases of cooperative effort. Denver again furnishes a brilliant example.
A recall election is in the air and the earliest evidences point to a bitter and thrilling campaign. Denver has known many such campaigns in the past, so the sensation will be nothing novel. Denver has never witnessed a union of religions and racial strength lined up on one side as against a common foe, in a battle of what seems to be for a right to live in the community. There is admitted power in such a union and if properly conserved can do much for the future status of the Negro. The union may be only temporary and simply to serve the present emergency, but the Negro must be accorded more than the mere opportunity to form a back wall for the politically ambitious. If we cooperate, let us cooperate all the way, before and after, else our power is reduced to the point of helpfulness through such a cooperative alliance.
BOULDER, COLO., NEWS
Rev, Wayman Ward, presiding elder of this district, was a Boulder visitor Sunday. As it was quarterly meeting, he came in the morning and spent the day in encouraging words to congregations. Communion was served at 3 o'clock and in the evening to those who could not attend in the afternoon. Rev. A. C. Jackson of the Baptist church was a Boulder visitor Sunday. They planned a program but had a song service instead in the evening. Everyone enjoyed the sermon in song. There will be a surprise party Wednesday night, the 2nd, in honor of Rev. and Mrs. Murphy, given by the members and friends of the church. After the surprise, they plan a prayer meeting.
Mr. and Mrs. Wells and Mrs. Miles, Mr. Caleb Allen's sister, of Denver, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Caleb Allen Sunday for dinner, visiting with them the day and returning in the evening. Mrs. Braxton and daughter will return to Los Angeles soon.
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Morrison are having the stones hulled for their new moss stone bungalow which they are planning to build in the near future. There was a wonderful program rendered at the Booker T. Washington Civic League meeting Thursday night. The debate was postponed until this week as some on the team could not attend. The Missionary Circle meets with Mrs. Caleb Allen Tuesday night. The Sunday School has charge of the Easter program at the Baptist church. Mr. Winn, who went home to Missouri on a visit, returned Friday and reports having a good time, only did not feel so well while away.
The young ladies of Boulder have organized a social club to be known as "Entrous Nous." The officers are as follows: Mrs. Lee Morrison, president; Mrs. C. W. Buckhalter, vice president; Mrs. Victor Grinichette, secretary; Miss Catherine Stevens, assistant secretary; Miss Ethel Townsend, treasurer; Mrs. Vincent Smith, reporter.
Ralph McVey dislocated his arm while at play Sunday evening.
COOLIDGE IS GIVEN FOUR DELE GATES OF GEORGIA "REGULARS"
Atlanta, Ga., April 3.—Four delegates-at-large to the Republican national convention, instructed to vote for the nomination of President Coolidge, were chosen Wednesday by the so-called regular faction of the Republican party in Georgia, in state convention here. Two Negroes and two whites make up the delegation.
All delegates to the Cleveland convention were instructed to support Johnson for re-election as national committeeman. The other faction of the party in Georgia, headed by J. L. Phillips, white, will hold a state convention in Atlanta April 30 to select delegates to the national convention.
The delegates chosen were Henry Lincoln Johnson and Ben Davies, both Negroes, and Clarke Grier of Augusta and Clint W. Hagar, federal district attorney, whites. The convention indorsed the appointment by Johnson, who is the Republican national committeeman from Georgia, of Manne Williams, a Savannah Negro woman, as Republican committeeewoman from Georgia.
Cheyenne, Wyo., News
The Frontier City, better known as Cheyenne, had the pleasure of having a Knights of Pythias lodge formed and set in its city by three of the grand officers from Denver—George W. Davis, G. C.; Dr. Huff, G. M. A., and R. Butler, Brig. Gen. Work of interest for the good of the order was highly appreciated in Cheyenne.
H. C. Green, W. Davis and William Burney of Cheyenne put in untiring hours to give this city a Knights of Pythias lodge.
The following officers were appointed: Walter Davis, M. of W.; Harvey C. Green, C. C.; Tilford Ashford, V. C.; Philip Balker, Prelate; Rev. S. S. Fairly, M. of Y.; Frank McComb, M. of E.; Wm. Birney, K. of R.; Lloyd
Saunders, M. of A.; Gordon Davis, I. G.; Ira Gaylord, V. G.
Keystone Lodge, K. of P., of Cheyenne, turned out 100 per cent. to give thanks to the Divine Power for the multitude of blessings they had received in the past year.
Only standing room was to be had, and beloved Bro. Rev. S. S. Fairly of the Second Baptist church preached a powerful and wonderful sermon to the Knights and friends, that sent us home with fresh thoughts and hope.
The musical selection by Mrs. Spencer Cave, Mr. Witt and Mr. Rhone made us very proud of our young talent in this city.
Mr. Walter Dean gave an address on the good of the order. Mr. Davis' address was interesting and inspiring.
Mr. H. C. Green talked on deportment of Knights. Sunday evening service will long be remembered.
The Knights thank all for the manifestation of appreciation of the order of Knights of Pythias.
SHORT CUTS
"I Am a Republican" makes a good campaign slogan.
A unit of the Ninth battalion, Ohio National Guards, is being organized in Cincinnati.
The colored farmers of Christian county, Kentucky, recently met in conference and discussed co-operative marketing.
In one of the plants of the Cleveland Hardware Company there are 442 colored and 557 white workers.
Mrs. W. T. Francis and Fred D. McCracken of St. Paul were elected delegates to the Minnesota State Republican convention.
Editor Murray of the Chronicle is giving the votaries of Boston's "high society" a series of interesting and instructive editorials.
Colonel James T. Brewington, Jr. of Chicago is a candidate for the position of Republican state central committeeman from the First Senatorial district.
Messrs. Fred M. Eu Dailey and the McMahan brothers, well-known colored contractors and builders of Knoxville, Tenn., have organized a home builders' association.
The American Colored Retail Company of New York contemplates opening a new business retail emporium on the site of the Hart Department store.
NOTICE OF ADJUSTMENT DAY
Estate of Christopher C. Hall, Deceased,
No. 32,927.
All persons having claims against said estate are hereby notified to present them for adjustment to the County Court of the City and County of Denver, Colorado, on the 27th day of April, 1924.
Administratrix.
E. P. Blakemore, Attorney for Estate
First publication, March 8, 1924.
Last publication, April 5, 1924.
Superstitions in Breeding.
The same superstititions on which the shepherds of Asia based their practices of animal breeding at least thirty centuries ago are still widely current, while the one sound principle known to the ancients, selection of the best for breeding stock, is still widely neglected.
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(Lincoln News Service)
P
Special Demonstration Vulcan Smooth-Top Gas Ranges
Here's the reason why the Vulcan makes better cooking easier: Burners are inclosed, more heat is utilized for cooking; smooth, level surface, smallest vessels may be pushed about without tipping; a single burner keeps the dinner hot.
For a limited time only we make an allowance of $10 for every coal or gas range now in service which is replaced by the Vulcan Range. Visit our Household Utilities Section during the special demonstration days. There are twenty-four styles and sizes of the Vulcan—prices range from $58 up to $208.75. Basement, 15th St.
DENVER DRY GOODS Ask us to show you the WATERSPAR TEST
THE DENVER DRY GOODS CO
Month after month a wood panel finished with Pitcairn Waterspar Varnish remains submerged in water. It is visible proof that water will not penetrate or turn this varnish white—or in any way injure the coated surface.
It tells a story of quality. It means that household accidents have no effect on furniture, floors and woodwork finished with Waterspar. Driven in rain or snow, leaky radiators, overturned glasses—any of those triffing mishaps you know so well, cannot rob Waterspar of its deep, rich, velvety lustre. Even hot dishes or scalding liquids have no effect.
We have Waterspar in just the size of can you need. Also Waterspar Colored Varnish and Enamel in eighteen attractive colors, as well as paints, varnishes and enamels for every purpose.
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Mrs. J. L. Burnett of 3412 Columbine street is on the sick list this week.
Mrs. J. W. Lewis and infant son Joele are visiting her sister, Mrs. Ben Vandyke, at Stockton, Calif.
Mrs. Frank Lenza left Friday for Nashville, Tenn., to be with her mother, who is ill.
rovia, Africa, formerly of Washington, D. C., will preside.
In order that our Bishop may as many of the citizens of Denver possible, the membership of Scott E. church are giving a banquet in honor Tuesday evening, April 5 7:30 p. m. at their church, corner Twenty-sixth avenue and Clark street, to which you are cordially vited.
Andrew Riley of 2220 Lafayette, who has been confined to his home for several days with poisoned hands, is improving.
MRS. MODENA MYERS of Detroit, Mich., is visiting with her mother, Mrs. Ladd, who has been ill for some time at 2520 Ogden street.
Famous Violin Virtuoso, Clarence Cameron White, People's Presbyterian church, Monday, April 7.
E. W. Gillum of 2012 South Grant, who has been suffering several weeks with an abscess in the head, is slightly improved.
The Owl Literary Society will be entertained by Miss Harriet Russ of 2126 Lafayette street Thursday evening, April 10.
Mrs. J. W. Marshall and Mrs. Emma Thompson of La Junta, Colo., were Denver visitors this week on a pre-Easter shopping mission.
Curtis Harris, manager and funeral director of the People's Mortuary, has been very ill for several days. We wish him a speedy recovery.
Mrs. Maud Sexton has return to the city after a brief stay in Denver on account of serious illness of her mother.
Mrs. Lillian Jefferson Smith has purchased a home and lot at 2312 O'Neal street. Mr. J. W. Overton purchased a home in the same neighborhood.
* W. H. Triplett returned home Tuesday after visiting several weeks with relatives in Arkansas, and friends in Chicago and Kansas City. He reports a delightful trip.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Gross of 2521 Franklin street entertained Sunday evening in honor of the newly weds, Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Robinson. Miss Agnes Wright, Frank Barbee and Fred Clements were other guests of the occasion.
A visitor to the U. S. from Honolulu, H. L., informs us of the brilliant financial success of Simon Smith and family who are residing in Honolulu. The Smith family are all well except Earl, who has been ill during the past year. The Smiths, who formerly resided in this city, are well remembered by our older citizens.
The St. Katherine Guild met at the residence of Mrs. Grace Myers last Saturday evening with Miss Mildred House as hostess. Dr. Robt. W. Bagnall was the honor guest and delivered a short address, following which a social hour was indulged in for a short period.
Misses Bessie Marshall, Bessie La Gras, Evarie Stuart and Mesdames McGlasson and Metoyer were hostesses to a unique and highly enjoyable spaghetti dinner last Thursday night at the residence of Miss Bessie Marshall, 2504 Lafayette. The invited guests were Richard Allen, Elbert Stuart, John Morris, Andrew Metoyer and Jimmie Gross.
The following persons who have been numbered among the sick this week are improving: Little Tracy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Tracy, of 2316 Franklin street; Mr. Ira Turner of 2526 Lafayette street, who was injured on the diner; Mr. Andrew Metayed, 2805 Gillpin street; Mrs. Ardell Ward; Baby Edward, son of Dr. and Mrs. Terry; Mrs. Fannie Simms of 1821 Marion street; Mrs. Harrison Smith of 1873 Marion; Mrs. Fleming of 2658 Humboldt, and little Emily Maxwell of 2321 Downing street.
The Lincoln Annual Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church will convene in Denver April 9 to 13, inclusive. Bishop W. M. Claire of Mon-
rovia, Africa, formerly of Washington, D. C., will preside.
In order that our Bishop may meet as many of the citizens of Denver as possible, the membership of Scott M. E. church are giving a banquet in his honor Tuesday evening, April 8, at 7:30 p. m. at their church, corner of Twenty-sixth avenue and Clarkson street, to which you are cordially invited.
Mid-West Male Quartette will appear at Cameron White Recital, Monday, April 7, People's Presbyterian Church.
Dr. Wherahiko Rawi, a native of the South Sea Islands, will preach Sunday at 11 a. m. and lecture at 5 p. m. in the People's Presbyterian church, Twenty-third avenue and Washington street. Don't miss the opportunity to hear this talented, gifted and cultured Christian gentleman. Born in the wilds of New Zealand—among a savage people—Mr. Rawi was adopted by an English lady and after a thorough education graduated with high honors and the degree of Master of Arts from Christ Church University. But his education and associations, his culture and adopted language have not taken from him the ability to describe with an enthusiastic realism born of a great love for and thoroughly intimate knowledge of these wonderful Samoan people.
Monday, April 7, Clarence Cameron White, renowned violinist, People's Presbyterian Church.
COUNCIL ORDERED TO ISSUE
PERMIT FOR NEGROES' HOME
District Judge Charles C. Butler Thursday signed an alternative writ of mandamus requiring members of the city council to issue to the United Negroes Protective Association a permit to establish an old folks' home and orphanage at 1117 Thirtieth street, or appear in court April 22 and show cause why they refuse to do so. It is the second attempt of the association to compel the council to issue the city permit.
OWL LITERARY SOCIETY MEETS
An interesting meeting was held March 27 by the Owl Literary Society. A general review of all subjects discussed in previous meetings was the feature of the evening. An interesting program was planned by the president for the next two meetings. Mr. Ben Clarke was host for the club. ELLSWORTH MERCER, Pres. LOUISE MAYSE, Sec'y.
Miss Helen Taylor, Y. W. C. A. secretary, will be the accompanist at the Cameron White Recital, Monday, April 7. People's Presbyterian Church.
THE DENVER GREY BOOK
The Denver Grey Book, which is the official colored year book, made its appearance in 1921. The 1923-24 edition is now ready for press—it will be bigger and better—containing the name and address of the head of each household. Every business and profession will be listed with phone numbers under their respective classification.
If you are in business, and haven't already arranged for advertising space you should do so at once. If you have changed address since the last issue you should call Main 1158 in order to insure correct listing.
Tickets for Cameron White Recital Monday, April 7, now on sale at Liggins Music Shop, 2603 Welton street; Negro Book Shop, 2723 Welton; Howard's Hardware Store, 739 East Twenty-sixth Ave.; Colorado Statesman's office, 1824 Curtis St., Room 25; Denver Star, 1024 Nineteenth St.
Mrs. Henry Pinn, 1861 Curtis Street. Elite Drug Co., Twenty-first and Arapahoe Streets.
FUNERAL NOTICES OF THE
PEOPLE'S MORTUARY
Lopex.—Baby; funeral was held Sunday, March 30, from residence, 3431 Kalamath. Interment Riverside, Moxley.—Lyle, beloved son of Mr. aud Mrs. Tobe Molebly, 1124 Twenty-fourth street, passed away March 27. Funeral was held March 31 from the Campbell chapel, Rev. Wilson officiating. Robinson.—Julia, Mrs., beloved wife of Mr. Harry Robinson, sister of Mrs. Beatrice McCree, passed away at St. Joseph's hospital March 31. Funeral arrangements not completed. Hartnett.—A. J., of 2911 Welton street, whose funeral was postponed awaiting arrival of Bro. Rev. H. J. Hartnett of California, will be held Sunday, April 6, from Central Baptist church, Rev. Allen officiating.
Knights of Pythias Annual Thanksgiving Ceremony Largely Attended
The brave men of Pythianism and the caurageous, stout-hearted Sisters of Calanthe were undismayed by the driving snowstorm of last Sunday, and in consequence formed one of the finest parades ever witnessed in Denver, and marched behind the stirring tunes of the now famous K. of P. regimental band to Zion Baptist Church, where a great crowd awaited them. Every detail of the annual thanksgiving ceremony was admirably carried and was participated in by Damon Lodge No. 5, Pythias No. 11, Syracuse No. 10, the Uniform Rank divisions, Hermione Drill Team, and the following Courts of Calanthe: Rocky Mt. No. 3, Columbine No. 279, and Progress No. 6. The Rev. G. R. Prince in delivering the annual sermon touched the high lights of Pythianism in masterful address, indeed the entire program reflected great credit upon this valiant fraternity that is doing so much for the betterment of civic affairs. The program as rendered was as follows:
1. K. of P. Ode, "God Bless Our Knightly Band"—By the Order.
2. Scripture Reading—Rev. I. S. Wilson.
3. Anthem--By Zion Choir.
4. Prayer—By Sir Knight Wm. R. Rhodes.
5. Proclamation—Sister Irene Fife, P. S. D.
6. Vocal Duet—Sister Delia Williams and Wm. A. Brown.
7. Remarks—Sister Annie E. Hamilton, P. S. D.
S. Instrumental Solo—Vera Wakefield.
9. Orator of the Day—Sir Knight S.
A. Huff.
10. Instrumental Selection—Josephine McClain.
11. Annual Sermon—Rev. G. R. Prince.
12. Annual Offering.
DR. ROBT. W. BAGNALL SPENDS BUSY WEEK IN DENVER
From the time of his arrival in Denver Monday afternoon, March 24, to the day of his leaving for the East on Monday of this week, Dr. Robt. W. Bagnall of New York addressed many meetings of different groups and proved one of the best informed men that has come to Denver for a long time.
He appeared in several of our local churches, addressed the Hi-Y boys and girls, also spoke at a special meeting of the City Federation of Colored Women's Clubs. He was also the principal speaker at an inter-racial conference held at the Y. W. C. A. building, 1545 Glenarm street, Monday afternoon.
Dr. Bagnall was the guest of honor at many social functions while in the city. On Saturday morning he was the guest of Dr. and Mrs. Westbrook at breakfast, Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Geo. W. Gross had him as their guest for dinner and later in the evening he was the guest of Dr. and Mrs. C. F. Holmes at a most beautiful function. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Cooper gave a luncheon in his honor Monday at 2 p. m. He left for Omaha Monday night singing well the praises of western hospitality as found in Denver.
DENVER COLORED CIVIC ASSOCIATION HOLDS ENTHUSIASTIC MEETING
On last Wednesday eve the Denver Colored Civic Association had Hon. George E. Collisson, business manager of the Chamber of Commerce of Denver, to address them.
Mr. Collisson was welcomed with a large and appreciative audience of the membership and he was listened to with marked attention.
Mr. Collisson spoke on the "Achievements of the Chamber of Commerce" and was at his best. He is an able, eloquent and forceful speaker and all who were present gave expression of great benefit and information from having heard Mr. Collisson. He is up to the minute on civic and municipal affairs and has a storehouse of valuable information. The association is anxious to hear Mr. Collisson again and a rising vote of thanks wats extended to him for his able and interesting address.
DOUGLASS UNDERTAKING CO.
FUNERAL NOTICES
Europe's Legend.
The legend concerning the naming of Europe is that a beautiful girl by the name of Europa was abducted by Jupiter, in the form of a white bull, and carried to Europe, which continent took its name from her.
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT
Estate of Nathaniel Coulton, Deceased
No. 31,1921.
Notice is hereby given that on the 20th day of May, 1921, I will present County of Denver, City and County of Denver, Colorado, my accounts for final settlement of administration of said estate, when and where all persons in interest may appear and object to them, if necessary.
E. V. CAMMEL.
Administrator.
Thos. Campbell, Attorney.
First publication, April 5, 1924.
Last publication, May 3, 1924.
-at Joslin's
Sixteenth and Curtis
Have You Seen The New Spring Blouses?
—The correct new styles, varied fabrics and lovely colors make these just-arrived Blouses unusually interesting.
—Styles—tailored, semi-tailored and more dressy Blouses.
—Materials—Silk broadcloth, mignonette, Krepe de Leen, Crepe de Chine and colorful printed crepes.
—Colors favored for Spring, Poudre blue, sheik, white, Lucille green, tan, navy and black.
Children's Waists
—Waist Suits of pajama check
material; all buttons taped.
Sizes 4 to 12 years, at 95c
Pumps
air
7
because there are not
heels.
low heels.
heels.
low heels.
Women
U
—Fine lisle Un-
ser" perfection
pink or white;
ments under arm
Girls' Strap Pumps 3.95 Pair
offered at this price because there are all sizes in each style.
—Black satin, one-strap, low heels.
—Patent leather, one-strap, low heels.
—White kid, one-strap low heels.
—Patent leather, two-strap, low heels.
—Patent leather, cut-out styles, low hee.
—Patent leather sandals, low heels.
—Gray elk sandals, low heels.
—Black kid, one-strap, low heels.
—3rd Floor, Joslin's
offered at this price because there are not all sizes in each style.
—Black satin, one-strap, low heels.
—Patent leather, one-strap, low heels.
—White kid, one-strap low heels.
—Patent leather, two-strap, low heels.
—Patent leather, cut-out styles, low heels.
—Patent leather sandals, low heels.
—Gray elk sandals, low heels.
—Black kid, one-strap, low heels.
lin's— 4
---
---
Creplette
5 95
Boys' Union Suits
—Bathing style knit Union Suits,
neck cut very low, large arm size;
open seat. Fastens on one shoulder
with buttons.
—Sizes 4 to 8 years **75c**
—Sizes 10 to 16 years **85c**
Girls' Union Suits
—Made of white pajama check with bloomer legs. Low neck, sleeveless.
A great favorite with girls.
—Sizes 2 to 12 years **95c**
—Sizes 14 to 16 years **$1.25**
—4th Floor. Joslin's—
Sizes 2½ to 7
PETER B.
CLARENCE CAMERON WHITE
VIOLIN SOLOIST
Clarence Cameron White was born in Clarksville, Tenn., but was reared and educated at Oberlin, Ohio, where he also received his early musical training at the Oberlin Conservatory of Music. After the completion of his study there he went to Washington, D.C., where for several years he was teacher of violin at the Washington Conservatory of Music and in the public schools of Washington. In 1908 Mr. White went abroad for further study and became a private pupil of M. Zacharewitsch, the famous Russian violinist, and also a pupil in composition of the late Coleridge-Tayler. During his stay in London he was first violinist of the "String Players" Club," said to be the finest string orchestra in Europe. After three years abroad, Mr. White returned to America and located in Boston, where he divided his time between teaching, concert work and composition. At present Mr. White is living at Oberlin, Ohio, devoting his time entirely to composition and concert work.
Denver music lovers will be given quite a treat at the recital of Mr. Clarence Cameron White Monday evening, April 7, at the People's Presbyterian church, corner Twenty-third avenue and Washington street, as in the special program a group contain-
at $5.95
1 they are only $5.95
3rd Floor, Joslin's
Spring Necklaces 1.25
Every One Brand New
—36 different styles and color combinations in spring's smart Necklaces. All lengths from 30-inch graduated to 60-inch even size bead chains.
—The season's newest beads—cube, melon, trepp, lantern and cabachon shapes, knotted between each bead, many with crystal rondelles. A collection of beautiful necklaces in colors of topaz, ruby, sapphire, emerald, crystal, jet and crystal.
First Floor—Joslin's
Women's Fine Lisle Union Suits
at 1.39 Fine lisle Union Suits, made with "Kaver" perfection of workmanship and fit. In ink or white; step-in style; large reinforcements under arms; flat lock seams.
Fine lisle Union Suits, made with "Kayser" perfection of workmanship and fit. In pink or white; step-in style; large reinforcements under arms; flat lock seams.
A discontinued number of Kayser Union Suits, regularly priced at $2.25 and $2.50
reduced to $1.39
4th Floor, Joslin's
ing some of the artist's compositions will be played. Denver has always measured up to such occasions and what with the premier violinist, Miss Helen Taylor, Y. W. C. A. secretary, as accompanist, and the Midwest quartet, a real musical enjoyment is in store for the public. The Rev. C. H. Uggams, who is presenting the violinist, and Hewetson Watson, our popular musician, are working very hard to insure the success of this event. A large audience should greet Clarence Cameron White.
Y. M. C. A. NOTES
With the coming in of better weather conditions, work on the new building has been resumed, as before, and is proceeding rapidly. The troubles occasioned by the falling in of the earth on the alley side, this causing great inconvenience and delay for the workers, is being overcome and men are again clearing out the pit for the swimming pool. Lumber and other materials are also being brought up, and things in general are looking good. The building committee selected the kind of brick which will be used in the building last week. It is safe to say that when completed this building will be a pride to Denver and to the colored people of the city and to the Y. M. C. A. in general. The builders feel suer that unless they are further interrupted by bad weather the brick work will be started within the next ten days.
We wish to urge upon all our people who have not yet paid their subscription to the building fund that they do so as speedily as possible. The rapid work on the new building will now quicken the need of money for continuance and completion of the work. The recital and vaudeville entertainment of the Hi-Y Club which was held at Zion Baptist Church last Friday evening was attended by a large and appreciative audience. The boys rendered a splendid program and pleased the audience very greatly. Particular mention should be made of young Miss Spratlin, who got up from her sick bed to fill her place on the program; also to the Marshall brothers who came on at the last moment to save the audience from the disappointment at the failure of the committee to secure the motion pictures. They received a great ovation at the close of their sketch.
The Pioneer Clubs held a big conclave at Shorter Church last Wednesday evening, notwithstanding the vacation week. A large number was present. The clubs are doing splendid work and are looking forward with great interest to the coming of spring. The great Eddie meetings on "Relationship" will be held today and tomorrow at the Central Christian church. On account of these meetings our regular Sunday afternoon program will be deferred. It is hoped that our men will all attend the meetings of Mr. Eddie.
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—“at least three—preferably more,” says Fashion, arming herself with these gleaming, fascinating bracelets.
—Celluloid bracelets with stones set close together, Colors of ruby, topaz, amethyst, crystal, emerald, sapphire or je.
—Make your selections while the color range is complete.
—1st Floor, Joslin's
at 1.39
THE
MAN
WHO
WAS
THE
MOST
WONDERFUL
MAN
WHO
WAS
THE
MOST
WONDERFUL
MAN
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST
SERVICES
As we are planning to leave for our new field of labor in Omaha, Neb., next week, we are extending a special invitation to our many friends to worship with us next Sabbath (Saturday), April 5, at 11 o'clock a. m. and also on Sunday afternoon at 2:30. We will hold our last service here, at which time we will be glad to see you and to have you enjoy the program of the hour. These services will be held in our new church, 2536 Ogden street. T. H. COOPWOOD, Pastor, Denver Third Seventh Day Adventist Church, 2536 Ogden street.
Sunset Lodge No. 98 meets
1st and 3rd Monday nights each month
at 2538 Washington St.
GEORGE A. LOGAN, W. M.
ISAAC HODGE, Secy.
Queen of Sheba (court No. 98 meets
2nd and 4th Tuesday nights each month
at 2444 Washington St.
Silver Cord Court No. 104 meets 2nd and 4th Thursday afternoons each month at 2538 Washington St.
MRS. J. L. BURNETT, M. A. M.
SARAH EDSON, Secy.
Nomi Court No. 99 meets 2nd and 4th Tuesday nights each month at 2538 Washington St.
LUCY A. ANDERSON, M. A. M.
IRENE PENDLEY, Secy.
England's First Railway.
The first railway in England was begun in 1825; in Austria and in France in 1828; in the United States in 1839; Belgium and Germany, 1835; Russia, 1838, and Italy in 1839.
1st and 3
#1 2538
Stone-Set Bracelets
```markdown
```
Silver Cord Lodge No. 104
meets 2nd and 4th Wednesday
nights in each month at
2538 Washington St.
REV. I. N. POWELA, Secy.
B. S.PEARS, W. M.
MAUD A. LEE, M. A. M.
BLANCHE N. HILL, S. M.
ETHEL LAYTON, Secv.
England's First Railway.
POLITICS BLOCKS NEW ALIEN BILL
CONGRESSMEN FROM THE BIG CITIES ARE AFRAID OF THE FOREIGN GROUPS.
By EDWARD B. CLARK
By EDWARD B. CLARK
Washington.—Seemingly no important legislative matter and no important "investigative" matter to come before congress this year has been or can be removed from the field of partisan politics. Partisanship has run amuck in the rooms of the investigating committees. Now it seems that politics, irrespective of party, is playing rather a high hand in immigration legislation.
The deuce of the thing, as a member has put it, is that the immigration measure has come to plague party men in a presidential year. Seemingly, if the thing could be put off until next winter, the Johnson bill, drastic as it is, would go through both houses without trouble. Now, both parties are afraid of losing votes in the presidential election if their representatives and senators shall vote a virtually absolute "keep out" clause into the immigration restriction bill.
With Fall, Doheny, Stinelair, Daugherty and some others in the limelight of unpleasant interest, congress seems to have forgotten all about the immigration legislation and the imperative necessity of doing something quickly.
The present law governing the matter will expire in a little more than three months.
Threat of Foreign Blocs.
Charges have been made directly in the lower house of congress that "foreign blocs" in an American legislative chamber are working against the interests of the country. Of course the retort has been made that the foreign blocs are really the truly American blocs, because, as their spokesmen put, they stand for that for which America is supposed to stand, the making of this land a home for the oppressed from everywhere. This has a certain kind of a sob in it which appeals to sentimentalists.
It has more than a sob in it, it has a threat in it. The New York delegation virtually solidly is opposed to the Johnson bill for restrictive immigration. Delegates from some of the other northern states having big cities within in their borders also are almost solidly opposed to the Johnson bill. It seems hardly necessary to explain the reason for the opposition. Members who represent the big city districts fear that if the naturalized foreigners in their balliwicks vote solidly against them they can't come back to Washington as members of the Sixty-ninth congress.
So-called progressive Republicans in congress are divided on this immigration subject. Some of them who are communistic in their ideas know that with unrestricted immigration they can get support for the cause of communism. Some of the others, however, have a racial feeling which they say nothing about, which nevertheless probably moves them to support of the Johnson plan.
Speaking Plainly About Races.
There has been much bitterness shown in congress because of the undoubted fact that if the Johnson measure shall become a law, the numbers of the southern and eastern Europeans who can get into the country under the present law will largely be decreased, while men and women from the northern countries can continue to come in considerable numbers.
There is considerable plain speaking about this northern and southern European matter not only in congress but from the public platforms in Washington. Men in public life here have been bold enough to say that the southern races are not wanted and the northern races are wanted. Courage seems to have come in this matter to men who some years ago didn't dare to speak their minds on the subject. Senators and representatives in congress, and public men generally who come from the states and the districts where the Nordic races are dominant, are stating their views openly.
It takes something like nerve probably for some of the men who are pressing the Johnson bill to stand up and tell representatives of certain peoples that many of their races are not up to the American standard and that the fact has been proved by the failure of those already here to progress properly along American lines. However, this thing is being said and said with freedom, and at times with abandon. It is something new to hear this kind of talk in the city of Washington.
The charge is made specifically that hundreds of thousands of immigrants that have been coming into this country for the past ten years have come here with no thought of Americanizing themselves but with the obvious intention of remaining foreign and un-American. When the day comes to debate the Johnson bill in congress there will be plain talk. Opinions will be expressed which, if voiced twenty years ago, would have been certain to defeat the speakers for re-election.
Party Leaders May Check Inquiry.
Senator Leenroot, having resigned from the chairmanship of the senate oil investigating committee because of ill health, has been succeeded by Senator Ladd of North Dakota. Nobody seems to think that the change will make the slightest difference in the general conduct of the proceedings, for it is virtually certain they will go on as they have been going unless, as is rumored pretty sharply today, there shall be inter-
ference on the part of the political leaders of the two great parties. Now there is full realization that the use of the word interference may be taken to mean that the leaders may attempt to call a halt in the march toward the truth concerning possibly guilty ones, but really it means nothing of the kind. It is pretty well understood here that some of the Democratic and Republican chieftains have come to the belief that the country is tired of an investigation which seemingly is following lines leading into the fields of innocence just as actively as it is following those which may lead into the field of guilt.
Seemingly, therefore, it may be that suddenly there will come a cessation of some of the committee's labors. An immense amount of stuff has been turned over to reveal nothing at all of pertinence to the subject of the inquiry. It is said now that some of the Democratic chieftains particularly fear there may be a reaction in the country against the methods which have been employed. To put it another way, there seems to be a growing feeling that really important things are being smothered in a feather bed of words about entirely unimportant things.
Daugherty Making a Fight.
Daugherty Making a Pictur.
Now the Daugherty inquiry is on. The attorney general elected to make a fight for his own, and it is only the truth to say that he has won personal admiration for his determination from the members of both parties in this town. The Daugherty inquiry, of course, is not supposed to be a trial, but in fact it is a trial with a majority of the investigators probably more than prejudiced in advance against the defendant in the case. However, if the facts show innocence, prejudice can do nothing because the public will make itself felt, and if there is guilt it will be brought out and everybody will forget that the majority of the investigators possibly had pre-inged the case.
No one knows yet definitely whether President Coolidge would have been better satisfied if the attorney general had followed the example of Secretary of the Navy Denby and handed in his resignation as a cabinet member. The two cases in a way are somewhat different, for the intimations in the Denby case were that he might in some way or other be connected directly with the oil lease proceedings in which negligence of duty was manifest.
On the other hand, Attorney General Daugherty's case is in a way only indirectly connected with oil leases. He has admitted that he bought oil stocks, but he has said that he bought for investment and not for speculative purposes. This brings up the old question as to whether or not it is proper for a government official, while he is a government official, to purchase or to own stock in any concern which possibly may become involved in government inquiry proceedings.
Power of the "Progressives."
So far as these investigations are concerned, it might be said in the general method of their conducting, there is proof found that the so-called progressive element in the senate holds in investigating matters something much more than that balance of power which it holds in the senate proper. While a Democrat acts as chief prosecutor in the oil investigation, his methods, so far as one can judge, are entirely approved by the progressive Republicans who also hold committee membership.
The old line Republicans who sit in the committee seemingly are content to let things go their way unchecked, but it may be that there is some wisdom in this because, as has been intimated before, the present thought, or perhaps hope, is that the country eventually will object to the outreaching committee procedures.
Announcement has been made by the two attorneys appointed by President Coolidge to look into the whole subject of oil that criminal proceedings will be brought immediately after the civil suits to set aside the oil leases. The sharp question now in Washington is, Against whom are indictments to be brought? In cases of alleged bribery there must be two parties to the temptation deal, or perhaps more. There are the bribed and there are the bribers. What are their names?
Evening Up the Chances
"I understand a party of Snake Ridgers are coming over to the Gulch to play poker."
"Yes," replied Cactus Joe. "We thought we might as well try to be a little neighborly."
"But those boys have the reputation of using marked cards."
"That's all right. If any of 'em wins we have a bundle of counterfeit money ready to pay off with."—Washington Evening Star.
Smallest Electric Motor
Ivan T. Nedland of Hillsboro, N. D., is the inventor and maker of what is said to be the smallest electric motor in the world. It is less than a quarter of an inch in length, but perfect in all details and operates faultlessly. About six years ago Mr. Nedland made and exhibited the smallest steam engine in the world that operated perfectly.
Scouts: the Right Gang
In the boy scout organization the "gang" instinct is crystallized and used for good.
Lincoln the Scout
As a youth he builted well in character and citizenship training even as the scout movement does.
NEW CABINET MEMBER NAMED
NEW YORK MAN IS SELECTED FOR POST OF ATTORNEY GENERAL
STONE IS APPOINTED
PRESIDENT COOLIDGE PICKS
HARLAN FISKE STONE TO SUC-
CEED HARRY DAUGHERTY
Washington. — President Coolidge filled his second cabinet vacancy by selecting Harlan Fiske Stone, retiring dean of Columbia University school of law, as attorney general.
Having gone recently to the Pacific coast to get a secretary of the navy in Curtis D. Wilbur of California, Mr. Coolidge turned to the Atlantic seaboard for his attorney general, and in Mr. Stone chose a present resident of New York City and a former New England farm boy. Mr. Wilbur was drawn from California's Supreme Court, and Mr. Stone is being taken from a law school and active practice.
The President selected Mr. Stone because he has known him for thirty years and has confidence in him; because he regards the New York man as possessing the desired qualities of thorough legal knowledge and administrative capacity, and because he looks upon the Columbia dean as a "$100,000 man willing for patriotic reasons to accept a $12,000 job."
Since last June, Mr. Stone has been on leave from Columbia and several months ago submitted his resignation to become effective at the end of the present scholastic year in June. During the entire period of his connection with Columbia, dating from 1890, when he became a law lecturer at the university, he has maintained an active law practice and for several years past has been a member of the firm of Wilmer, Canfield & Stone. He recently agreed, preparatory to retiring as dean, to associate himself with the law firm of Sullivan, Cromwell and Company at an annual salary reported in the neighborhood of $125,000.
The list from which Mr. Coolidge chose Mr. Stone contained also the names of Chief Justice Arthur P. Rugg of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court; Nathan L. Miller, former governor of New York; Judge William S. Kenyon of the federal Court of Appeals; Federal Judge Frank S. Dietrich of Idaho and Judge Frederick E. Crane of the New York Court of Appeals.
Only two of this list, Dean Stone and Justice Rugg, have been known personally for any length of time by the President. Whether the latter would have accepted the place is doubted by his friends; moreover the president felt that he could not go to Massachusetts for his attorney general and maintain "geographical balance." He therefore turned first to his other friend, Mr. Stone, although others on the list are better known generally to the country.
The prospective new attorney general is 52 years of age and was born on a farm near Chesterfield, N. H., the son of what Secretary Weeks described as a "tight-fisted, thrifty New Hampshire farmer." His brother was Dr. Winthrop E. Stone, president of Purdue University of Indiana, who was killed two years ago while mountain climbing in the Canadian Rockies. Mr. Stone entered Amberst College a year before President Coolidge.
Gift to Democrats Bared
Washington,—Called before the Senate oil committee, Senator Spencer, Republican, Missouri, White testified that E. L. Doheny had contributed a total of $34,000 to the Democritic campaign fund, but that Harry F. Sinclair had made no contribution. White explained that Doheny had given $900 during the 1920 campaign and $25,000 in 1921 to help wipe out the deficit resulting from the campaign. Senator Walsh, Democrat, the committee prosecutor, made it a matter of record that he regarded the testimony as irrelevant.
Four Die in Hotel Blaze
Grand Rapids, Mich.—At last four persons are dead and a dozen are in hospital suffering from burns and bruises as a result of a fire which destroyed the Livingston hotel here. Many firemen were exhausted from their all-night work in quenching the flames. The exact extent of the damage is not known, being estimated between $225,000 and $300,000 The cause is undetermined.
Withdraws Newcastle Charges
Withdraws Newcastle Charges
London.—Settlement of the Newcastle consulate dispute between Great Britain and the United States was officially made known here when the correspondence between Prime Minister MacDonald and Ambassador Kellogg on the subject was given out. Great Britain withdraws her charges against the former American consular officers at Newcastle. Ambassador Kellogg's letter briefly states the intention of the American government to reopen the consulate and appoint N. A. Smith as consul.
NATIONAL PARKS ARE GIVEN AID
NATIONAL PARKS APPROPRIATION BILL IS APPROVED BY U. S. SENATE
BUDGET BILL IS PASSED
$7,500,000 IS AUTHORIZED FOR IMPROVEMENTS AND EXTENSIONS IN NATION'S PLAYGROUNDS
Washington.—The Senate has passed the bill recently approved by the House of Representatives, authorizing the appropriation of $7,500,000 to be spent over a period of three years, for the improvement and extension of the roads and trails in the national parks, according to word from Washington. This bill, recommended by Secretary of the Interior Hubert Work, provides that the two national parks in Colorado shall be allotted a portion of this money. Mesa Verde is allotted $100,000 and the Rocky Mountain National Park $445,000. It also is provided that 5 per cent of the surplus war material granted by the secretary of agriculture by the secretary of war for distribution to the states for highway construction may be transferred to the secretary of the interior for use in the national parks.
The discussion of the bill in the committees of both the House and Senate brought out the remarkable growth in importance of the national parks. It was shown that in 1914 there were only 235,193 visitors, while in 1923 there were 1,230,886, an increase of almost a million. Indications this year point to an even greater number.
Secretary Work In recommending that the bill be passed, pointed out that since 1872, when the first national park was established—Yellowstone park—there had been appropriated for road construction in these areas only $3,504,100, of which $1,482,000 had been spent in Yellowstone.
With the number of visitors now far in excess of a million each year, the necessity of proper highways, that people may not be endangered as they motor through or put to great discomforts, has become more apparent to the federal government and, the House committee report declares, it has become a national necessity that these roads be cared for.
The committee declared that, "The national parks are a national institution, being used by citizens from every section of the nation, and are entitled to care and development as such."
The road development plan which the bill proposes to authorize contemplates reconstruction of 391.5 miles of the existing system of 1,000.5 miles of park highways, surfacing 53.6 miles of the system, and the construction of 360.85 miles of new road. At the conclusion of the three-year program there would be in the system 1,421.35 miles of roads.
Secretary Work declares that this program will bring up the condition of the roads within the parks to equal in most cases that of the roads leading to the parks, constructed in many states by the states themselves. He also said that trying to maintain the old roads in at least traversable condition has in some of the parks cost more than reconstruction would have cost. He believes that the sum of $7,500,000, small when compared to the sums spent on the general road program of the federal government, will put the park roads in a satisfactory and safe condition for motor travel.
Commons Rejects Capital Levy
London.—The house of commons after an all-night session rejected the policy of a capital levy, the chief Labor plank in the last election, by a vote of 325 to 160. Action came on a Conservative motion, designed to force the government to define its attitude on the question. John Robert Clines, government leader in the house, admitted that the Laborites could not hope for the passage of such a measure in the present parliament, but maintained that the country would ultimately be forced to it by its crushing burden of debt.
Wife of Slain Rancher Jailed
Roswell, N. M.—Frank Halsey, a prominent cattleman of Hope, near here, was shot and killed in front of his home just as he returned from Artesia in an automobile. A charge from a shotgun tore his right side away. He died instantly. Mrs. Nannie Halsey, his widow, Luther Foster and William Archer have been arrested and placed in jail at Carlsbad in connection with Halsey's death.
Mead Reclamation Commissioner
Washington—Dr. Elwood Mead, irrigation engineer of Berkeley, Calif., has been appointed by Secretary Works to be commissioner of the bureau of reclamation. Dr. Mead succeeds Dr. W. Davis, former governor of Idaho, who will become head of a new division of finance, created to separate the handling of receipts and disbursements from the engineering and agricultural divisions of the interior department.
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
M
RELIABLE chronicle of their doingsgress; a faithful miheir wants, their hoir best aspiration.
THE COLORADO STATESMAN
equaled as an adverti medium for the busi of professional men women.
excellent family joue peaking to and for m thousand colored citizen
The Mouth-Piece of the People of Colorado and the Entire West
RELIABLE 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 ORG
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THE GREAT ORGAN OF THE LABORING MASSES
Muffins
Muffins Made With One-Third Boiled Potato and Two-Thirds Wheat Flour. (Prepared by the United States Department dusted with flour and enough mor of Agriculture.)
Bran muffins are frequently recommended to persons who suffer from constipation. They may be made with either sweet or sour milk, according to what is on hand. Raisins or nuts may be included in either case. The United States Department of Agriculture gives these directions for making bran muffins in batches of twelve.
Bran Muffins.
1 cupful flour % cupfuls seeded
1 teaspoonful salt raisins or chopped nuts
% teaspoonfulsoda
2 cupfuls clean tablespoonful shortening (melted)
bran
% cupful sweetening
1½ to 2 cupfuls sour milk
1 cupful flour
2 teaspoonful salt
3 teaspoonful soda
4 cupful clean
bowl
Sift together the flour, salt and soda and mix with this the bran. Add together the sweetening, melted shortening and part of the milk; then mix with the dry materials. Add the raisins.
MAKE OLD-FASHIONED CREAM RICE PUDDING
Recipe Favored by Department of Agriculture.
(Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.)
Wash one tablespoonful of uncooked rice and add one quart milk, one-third cupful of sugar, one-eighth teaspoonful nutmeg or cinnamon and one teaspoonful of salt. Pour the mixture into a good-sized baking dish, and cook in the oven slowly for about two or three hours, stirring it frequently. If allowed to cook slowly, the milk thickens
A woman kneeling in front of an oven, holding a book.
Baking Rice Pudding.
to a creamy consistency and the rice swells to several times its original size. If double the quantity of rice is used, the mixture does not require such long cooking, as the rice in swelling thickens the liquid more rapidly, but the product is not so creamy. Often a half cupful of raisins is added to the pudding and allowed to cook down with the milk.
Demonstration Club
An excellent coat was recently made of a horsehide by a member of a home demonstration club in Oklahoma, according to a report received by the United States Department of Agriculture. All the members of the club consulted and planned with her when the coat was cut out, so that her work was a valuable demonstration to all the members.
When cutting out the coat she first laid the pattern down on the outside of the skin so as to be able to tell how the hair lay and make it all go in one direction. When the pattern had been marked at the corners with coarse needles she turned the inside up to do the cutting. A sharp razor was used for cutting the skin, as scissors will cut the hair. A five-inch border of skin was used on the bottom. The hair ran differently on this strip and the color varied slightly so that, with a turn-back collar and lapels of the fur, the coat, which she considered worth at least $50, was very attractive. The expense for tanning was $9, and there was a slight expense for sateen lining.
Veal, lamb, and goat skins can be made into very useful, attractive, and marketable articles. Veal or cowhide tanned smooth without the hair is made up effectively into coats or sleeveless jumpers with hats to match.
A Simple Cement
A cement for mending a cracked stove is made of wood ashes and salt in equal proportions, reduced to a paste with cold water. Fill in the cracks when the stove is cool. It will soon burden and may then be pollished over.
What is so rare as a day in June;
Then, if ever, come perfect days
And heaven tries earth if it be in
tune
And o'er her softly her warm ear
lays;
And whether we look or whether
we listen.
We hear life murmur or see it
glisten.
WHAT TO EAT
To practice economy, to serve variety, and to balance the daily food, is
the office of the thoughtful housewife and it
means study and careful planning.
Fish Soup—Cover the skin and bones of several fish; using fresh cod, haddock, flounder, inke trout or fresh water fish
with cold water, add one small carrot cut fine, half-cupful of celery leaves, three sprigs of parsley finely minced and cooked in two tablespoonfuls of fat; let simmer closely covered for half an hour. Strain off the liquid and to a quart of the soup or broth add one-third of a cupful of minute tapioca cooked in a pint of milk until transparent; add a teaspoonful or more of salt, one-third of a teaspoonful of paprika, one cupful of cream and one-half pound of fresh raw fish cut into half-inch cubes. Let cook over boiling water ten minutes and serve with olives. Be sure the fish is properly cooked before serving.
Chocolate Loaf Cake.—Take one cupful of sugar and the same of sour milk, one teaspoonful each of soda and salt, two cupfuls of flour, two squares of melted chocolate, one well-beaten egg and one-half teaspoonful of vanilla. Beat well and bake in a loaf forty minutes. With less flour, baked in layers, and put together with orange filling it makes a delicious cake, topped with a fudge frosting. For a simple filling use a plain boiled frosting.
Nut Mince Pie.—Mix together in the order given the following: One-half cupful of chopped walnut meats, one-half cupful each of seeded raisins, chopped apple and dark corn sirup; one-quarter of a cupful each of elder vinegar, fruit juice of any kind, molasses, one-half teaspoonful each of all-spice and cloves, one teaspoonful each of salt and cinnamon. Add enough crushed crackers to make of the right consistency and fill a pastry-lined plate. Cover with another crust and bake. This makes a large pie.
When the oldest carpet is beaten,
And the youngest spider has died,
We shall rest, and faith we shall
need it;
Lie down for a moment or two,
Till the dust on the grand piano
Shall set us to work anew.
—With apologies to R. Klinling.
Parsnips are at their best at this time of the year. Some like them cooked with other vegetables in a boiled dinner. They are well liked when cooked tender in boiling water, then skinned, cut into halves and fried brown in butter or some other sweet fat. Fritters are especially good. Cook them until tender, mash and season well, dip into a fritter batter by spoonfuls and fry in deep fat. Served with maple sirup or any kind of sweet sauce they make a most tasty entree. Cream Puff Dessert.—For an emergency dessert, if you are near enough to a fresh supply of cream puff shells and vanilla ice cream, fill the puffs with vanilla ice cream and serve them with a hot chocolate sauce. A few nuts may be added if liked.
A sauce to serve over plain vanilla ice cream, making a frozen dish a little out of the ordinary is:
College Sauce.—Take three-fourths of a cupful of sugar, one-fourth of a cupful of water, one-fourth of a cupful of seeded raisins chopped; boll together five minutes, remove from the heat and add one tablespoonful of butter and a fourth of a teaspoonful of almond.
Apple Turnovers.—Make apple sauce according to taste, season with lemon rind or cinnamon, add a small lump of butter. Roll out pastry and cut into squares. Put a spoonful of the prepared sauce on each. Pinch the edges and place in a hot oven to lake. Serve with cream and sugar.
Bacon With Corn.—Cook a dozen slices of bacon until crisp, pouring off the fat during the cooking. Remove the bacon and keep where it is warm. Use four tablespoonfuls of the bacon fat to cook one-half of a green pepper and one small onion chopped fine, for five minutes. Add two cupfuls of corn and two eggs well-beaten, salt and pepper to taste and scramble all in hot fat. Heap on a platter and garnish with bacon.
Apple Gelatin.—Soak two tablespoonfuls of gelatin in one-half cupful of cold water. Cook six tart apples with half a lemon rind, put through a sieve, add the juice of half a lemon, the softened gelatin and sweeten to taste. Serve after molding, with cream and sugar.
dusted with flour and enough more sour milk to form a batter of such consistency that it will drop but not pour from the spoon, but be as wet as possible otherwise. Bake in greased muffin pans for about one-half hour.
1 cupful flour
1 teaspoonful salt
1 teaspoonfuls
baking powder
2 cupfuls clean
brain
egg
baking powder About 1½ cupfuls
2 cupfuls clean sweet milk
bran ¼ cupful sweetening
1 egg ½ cupful sweetening
Sift together the flour, salt and baking powder; blend with this the bran and add to these dry ingredients the mixture of milk, beaten egg, sweetening and shortening. Have a thick but very moist batter, as described in preceding recipe for bran muffins. Bake in greased muffin pans in a moderate oven for about half an hour.
EMERGENCY SOUPS OF BACON AND POTATOES
Dish Can Usually Be Made of Materials on Hand.
(Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.)
Every housekeeper is familiar with the sudden and unexpected need for an addition to the menu, either to fill out a meager supply of other foods or to take care of extra persons by making everything go a little farther. A very good way to accomplish this last end is to have an appetizing and filling soup, so that by serving slightly smaller portions of meats and vegetables, another plate may be filled. An acceptable emergency soup of this kind can be made of materials usually on hand, taking only as long to prepare as sliced potatoes require for cooking—about 15 minutes. It will also supply additional meat and vegetables. The recipe has been tested by the United States Department of Agriculture.
To serve six people peel and cut up in small pieces two medium-sized potatoes and start them cooking in one quart of boiling salted water. Meantime fry two thin slices of bacon crisp; take them out of the pan, and in the same fat cook slowly two tablespoonfuls of minced onion for five minutes, or until tender. When the potatoes are done, take them out of the water and mash them, use some of the mashed potato to blend with the bacon fat and onion, gradually adding all of it, and finally the water in which the potatoes were cooked. Cut the bacon into very small pieces, add it to the soup. Season with pepper and add a tablespoonful of minced parsley if desired, though this is not absolutely necessary.
Celery, tomato, or small portions of any cooked vegetable that happen to be on hand may be added to the foundation if a mixed vegetable soup is desired, but the bacon and potato soup is appetizing without other flavor.
Waffles With Maple
Cold cooked rice can be utilized to make very delicious waffles. Of course rice may be freshly cooked for the same purpose. The batter given below is made according to directions furnished by the United States Department of Agriculture.
3 teaspoonfuls bak- 2 eggs
ing powder 1 tablespoonful
2 teaspoonfuls shortening
sugar, if desired (melted)
½ teaspoonful salt About % cupful
milk
Cook the rice until very soft and
while hot mash it to a pulp. When
cool add to it the melted shortening,
the beaten egg yolks, and three-quarters cupful of milk. Add to this the flour which has been sifted with the
baking powder, salt, and sugar. Beat
thoroughly and lastly fold in the
stiffly beaten egg whites. If necessary,
add more milk to make a batter
which will pour easily.
It is not necessary in making waffles to separate the whites and yolks of the eggs.
Easy Way With Eggs
Eggs covered with boiling water and allowed to stand for five minutes are more nourishing and easier digested than eggs placed in boiling water and allowed to boil furiously for three and a half minutes.
Thoroughly Cook an Omelet
To thoroughly cook an omelet keep shaking the pan gently and raise the cooked portions to allow the uncooked mixture to run over the hot pan.
the once of the thoughtful housewife and it means study and careful planning. Fish Soup $ _{1} $ Cover the skin and bones of several fish; using fresh cod, haddock, flounder, lake trout or fresh water fish found in the locality.
When earth's last picture is dusted,
And the floors are painted and
dried."
SEASONABLE GOOD THINGS
cooked with other vegetables in a boiled dinner. They are well liked when cooked tender in boiling water, then skinned, cut into halves and fried brown in butter or some other sweet fat. Frittiers are especially good. Cook them
The Kitchen Cabinet
(© 1924, Western Newspaper Union)
To work, to help and to be helped,
to learn sympathy through suffer-
ing, to learn faith by *perplexity,
to reach truth through wonder, be-
hold! this is what it is to prosper,
this is what is to live.—Phillips
Brooks.
TASTY GOOD THINGS
A well-baked, nicely seasoned ham is
one of the most delectable of main
dishes.
Baked Ham in
Cider. — Boil the
ham until nearly
tender; remove
the skin and cover
with a thick layer
of flour and wa-
Baked Ham in
Cider. — Boil the
ham until nearly
tender; remove
the skin and cover
with a thick layer
of flour and water;
stick in a few
ham in a roaster
cloves. Place the ham in a roaster with one pint of cider heated hot. Place in the oven and bake an hour, basting often. Serve hot for the first meal, using the cider sauce. The bone may be used after the meat has been served, to boll with a cupful of split peas and half an onion, for half a day, making a fine pea soup. The bone may be used to boll with cabbage and other vegetables for a boiled dinner.
Cottage Cheese Pie.—Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter; in it cook two tablespoonfuls of cornstarch and one half teaspoonful of salt; add two-thirds of a cupful of honey or sugar, one cupful of cottage cheese, pressed through a ricer, the yolks of three eggs, beaten light, the grated rind of a lemon. Mix thoroughly and turn into a pastry-lined plate in the same manner as for custard pie. Bake until firm. Cover with a meringue made from three egg whites beaten stiff; add four tablespoonfuls of sugar and bake until a light brown.
Oyster Salad.—Choose small oysters for this salad; if not abre to get them, cut large ones into halves. To each cupful of oysters allow crisp white celery cut into half-inch bits, sprinkle lightly with salt. Mix with this a good mayonnaise dressing; toss all together without crushing. Line a chilled salad bowl with crisp leaves of lettuce; fill with the salad and pour mayonnaise over all. Garnish with stoned olives.
Fig Cake.—Take two cupfuls of stale bread crumbs, mix two tablespoonfuls of shortening with three-quarters of a cupful of sugar, a little salt and nutmeg; stir in two well-beaten eggs and the egg crumbs. Stir four teaspoonfuls of baking powder with one cupful of flour; add one-quarter pound of figs and beat well. Turn into a loaf-shaped pan, or one with a funnel. Bake thirty to forty minutes.
To be truly happy is a question of how we begin and not how we end; of what we want and not what we have.
When there is left-over ham, material is at hand for a good main dish.
Ham Pie.—Boll, wash and season enough potatoes to nearly fill a baking dish. Butter the dish well and put a layer of the potato an inch thick in the bake
Ham Pie—Bowl wash and enough potatoes to nearly fill a baking dish. Butter the dish well and put a layer of the potato an inch thick in the baking dish; cover with a thick layer of minced ham, sprinkle with a little mustard and one-half clove of garlic, finely minced. Cover with another layer of potato, smooth and mark off in squares with a silver fork. Dot with bits of butter and bake in a good hot oven until brown.
Pigeon Cutlets.—Cut pigeons into halves, through the breast and back; simmer until tender in a little water. Press under a weight, first removing any bones which will disturb the shape; retain the leg bone. When cold egg and crumb and cook in hot fat. Serve with boiled onions, carrots or canned peas. Make a brown sauce of the broth, adding to it currant jelly. Dried mushrooms may be cooked with the pigeons, improving the flavor.
Orange Sweetbreads.—Simmer a pair of sweetbreads covered with boiling water for twenty minutes with a slice of onion, or of lemon, and one-half teaspoonful of salt. When parboiled, blanch by plunging into cold water. Remove the membranes and cut the sweetbreads into slices and cook in hot fat until lightly browned. To the pan add one tablespoonful of butter, blended with one tablespoonful of flour; to this add one cupful of chicken or veal stock and cook until smooth and thick. Season with scraped onion, a speck of red pepper, the juice and rind of half an orange and one teaspoonful of lemon juice. Remove the sweetbreads to a hot serving dish and pour round the sauce.
Fillet of Lamb.—Remove the bone from two pounds of lamb cut from the fore quarter, cut the meat into strips and pound flat. Mix three tablespoonfuls of olive oil with three tablespoonfuls of vinegar and two tablespoonfuls of minced onion and parsley. Pour the dressing over the meat and let stand over night. Serve browned in a hot pan. The bones may be cooked with vegetables, making a fine soup.
Chicken Baked in Milk.—Cut up a fat, year-old hen into pieces for frying, season well and brown in a little hot butter or fat; roll in flour and lay in a baking dish; cover with milk and bake in a moderate oven until the chicken is tender and the milk cooked down thick enough for gravy. Serve poured over the chicken.
Nellie Maxwell
PETER H.
T. G. Granberry,
President
Lady Assistant
and Soloist With
All Funerals
THE PEOPLE
Funeral Directors and
Parlors, 2713
Denver,
T. G. Granberry,
President
Lady Assistant
and Soloist With
All Funerals
W. T. Collins
Licensed Embalmer
SERVICE DAY AND NIGHT
Phone Champa 88
THE PEOPLES' MORT
Funeral Directors and Licensed Emb
Parlors, 2713 Welton Street
Denver, Colorado
Consideration for the dead.
Comfort for the bereaved.
Admittedly the largest race
establishment of its kind in the
West.
Expenses moderate.
Loyalty to the public.
Ever ready to assist the worthy.
Satisfaction guarantee
Always at your ser-
night.
Square treatment to
Employees courteous.
Economy our watch.
Service incomparable.
For Ladies' and G
H. AND
MERCHAN
Cleaning, Pressing and
Guar
517 28th
PHONE MAIN 6751
Call in and see my Fall and W
Hunt's Groc
Mr Ladies' and Gents' Tailoring
H. ANDERSON
MERCHANT TAILOR
Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing. All
Guaranteed
517 28th Street
HOME MAIN 6751 Prices reas
and see my Fall and Winter Samples now on
at's Grocery-Ma
Hunt's Grocery-Market
CORNER 30TH AND WELTON ST.
Phone Champa 3522
WE HAVE A FULL SUMMER FLOWER
Red Pitted Cherries, can ...
Try Hunt's brand of Butter.
Brer Rabbit Syrup, large, per can ...
Macaroni, Spaghetti, Noodles.
Salt Mackerel, each ...
Fresh Roasted Peanuts, 20¢
Pop Corn, the kind that pops,
Corn Meal, 10, 20
6-lb. sack Flour ...
10-lb. sack Flour ...
Apple Butter, jar ...
Don't forget we have handled and
HAVE A FULL SUPPLY OF GARDEN
FLOWER SEEDS.
Red Cherries, can
Aunt's brand of Butter, always 2c less than
Bit Syrup, large, per can
Spaghetti, Noodles, 2 pkgs. for
Kerel, each
Roasted Peanuts, 20¢ lb.; 2 for
the kind that pops, 3 lbs. for
Corn Meal, 10, 20 and 30 lb. sacks.
Flour
Bak Flour
Butter, jar
Get we have handled Whip Cream, Cott
and 400.
WE HAVE A FULL SUPPLY OF GARDEN AND FLOWER SEEDS.
Red Pitted Cherries, can .....25¢
Try Hunt's brand of Butter, always 2c less than market.
Brer Rabbit Syrup, large, per can .....60¢
Per can .....35¢
Macaroni, Spaghetti, Noodles, 2 pkgs. for .....15¢
Salt Mackerel, each .....15¢
Fresh Roasted Peanuts, 20¢ lb.; 2 for .....35¢
Pop Corn, the kind that pops, 3 lbs. for .....25¢
TELEPHONE MAIN 1511
CHARLOTTE
CAP SHAPE
Single Mesh .....
Double Mesh, 15c; two for....
TAN OFF—MADAM WAL
THE ATLAS
The Five Points
PHONE MAIN 875.
CHARLOTTE HAIR NET
CAP SHAPE AND FRINGE
sh. 15c; two for.
BUFF—MADAM WALKER'S SKIN BLEA
E ATLAS DRUG
The Five Points Postal Station.
MAIN 875. 2701
2620
"WE SELL THE EARTH."
DRUFF INVESTMENT
CHARLOTTE HAIR NETS
CAP SHAPE AND FRINGE
Single Mesh .....10c
Double Mesh, 15c; two for.....25c
TAN OFF—MADAM WALKER'S SKIN BLEACH AT
THE ATLAS DRUG CO.
The Five Points Postal Station.
PHONE MAIN 875. 2701 WELTON
"WE SELL THE EARTH."
WOODRUFF INVESTMENT
Try Us on Rentals, Insurance and Loans
J. M. Williamson, Jr., Notary Public
J. G. Woodruff, President and Manager
---
Main 1274
A. B.
S' MORTUARY
Licensed Embalmers
Belton Street
Colorado
Satisfaction guaranteed.
Always at your service, day or
night.
Square treatment to all.
Employes courteous.
Economy our watchword.
Service incomparable.
ents' Tailoring, See
ERSON
TAILOR:
Repairing. All Work
steed
Street
Prices reasonable.
Enter Samples now on display.
PLY OF GARDEN AND SEEDS.
25¢
always 2c less than market.
60¢
pkgs. for. 15¢
; 2 for. 35¢
lbs. for. 25¢
and 30 lb. sacks.
30¢
45¢
25¢ and 35¢
Whip Cream, Cottage Cheese
00.
The Curtis Park
Floral Company
Floral Designs Put Up
While You Wait
Choice Plants and Cut Flowers
Constantly on Hand
Greenhouses: Thirty-fourth and
Curtis Streets
Denver, Colo.
HAIR NETS
AND FRINGE
10c
25c
ER'S SKIN BLEACH AT
DRUG CO.
Postal Station.
2701 WELTON
2620 Welton St.
THE EARTH."
INVESTMENT CO.
---
Curtis M. Harris,
Manager
and
Director
Funeral
```markdown
```
ADAM C. G. WALKER
NE PREPARATIONS
for the
HAIR and SKIN
and
WALKER TREATMENTS
salp by efficient, willing and well trained
WALKER AGENTS
HAVE MADE THEM WORLD RENOWNED
A
WALKER AGENT
IS
YOUR NEIGHBOR
SPECIAL 6 WEEKS TRIAL OFFER
for the Scalp
Wonderful
Hair
Grower
Here are four preparations especially recommended for short, thin and brittle hair, itching scalp, baldness, dandruff and eczema of the scalp—our special trial offer—order it now.
Glossine
The Mme. C. J. Walker
Mfg. Co.
€40 N. West St.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Vegetable
Shampoo
Soap
Here enclosed is P. O. order for $1.50, please send me a 6 weeks trial treatment for my scalp.
Name
St. Add.
City
State
This Coupon Saves You Money—Use It Today
Correct styles for Easter
Caroline is a very new design by Garside.
ge or light gray suede;
sewed turn sole.
Chifton voile hosiery, in exclusive new shades, $3.50
hurst
ung
Sixteenth
and
California
INDIA HAIR GROWER
The Caroline
Spring design
In beige or light
hand-sewed tu
Chiffon voil
exclusive new
Broadhurst
B-young
The EAST INDIA
Correct styles for Easter
The Caroline is a very new Spring design by Garside. In beige or light gray suede; hand-sewed turn sole.
Chiffon voile hosiery, in exclusive new shades, $3.50
Broadhurst B-young
Sixteenth and California
The EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER
jar of EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER. The remedy contains medical proprieties that go to the roots of the Hair, stimulates the skin, helping nature do its work. Leaves the hair soft and silky. Perfumed with a balm of a thousand flowers. The best known remedy for
and flowers. The best known remedy for Heavy and Beautiful Black Eye-Brows, also restores Gray Hair to its Natural Color. Can be used with Hot Iron for Straightening.
Heavy and Beautiful Hair to its Natural Co Straightening. Price Sent by Ma
Beautiful Black Eye-Brows, also restores Gray Natural Color. Can be used with Hot Iron for ling. Sent by Mail. 50c; 10c Extra for Postage
Price Sent by Mail. 50c; 10c Extra for Postage
A terrible tragedy is reported from Suburbia. It appears that a lady recently wrote to an evening paper to say that she, at least, had found the perfect husband. Unfortunately her letter was never-published, as the gentleman in question forgot to post it.
SEND FOR THIS TO-DAY
USE ONLY
MADAM C.J.WALKER'S
WONDERFUL
HAIR GROWER
Supplied to you by
WALKER AGENTS,
Good Drug Stores and
by Mail.
THE MADAM C. J.
WALKER MFG. CO.
640 N. West St.
Indianapolis, Ind.
AGENTS OUTFIT
1 Hair Grower, 1 Temple
Oil, 1 Shampoo, 1 Press-
and Directions for Sell-
ing Oil, 1 Face Cream
Postage.
Like All the Rest.
W
Vegetable Shampoo Soap
Will Promote a Full Growth of Hair, Will also Restore the Strength, Vitality and the Beauty of the Hair. If your Hair is Dry and Wiry Try
East India Hair Grower
If you are bothered with Falling Hair, Dandruff, Itching Scalp, or any Hair Trouble, we want you to try a
S. D. LYONS
316 N. Central Dept. B.
Oklahoma City, Okla.
Piety is indifferent whether she enters at the eye or at the ear. There is none of the senses at which she does not knock one day or other. The Puritans forgot this, and thrust beauty out of the meeting house and slammed the door in her face.—James Russell Lowell.
TAFFETA FROCK FOR BRIDESMAID; FAULTLESS NEW SPRING COATS
WHEN Fashion writes "lace" in capital letters and puts emphasis on plain and printed crepes and silks, colorful taffetas and soft satins, it is easy to read "bounces," "panels" and "draperies" between the lines. These pretty playfellows of the designer's fancy always tempt it to a frolic and he cannot interpret such fascinating materials in plain, unbroken lines and devoid of any ornamentation.
Here a lovely taffeta frock is pictured which might be chosen as a
1
الفيلم
I
Taffeta Frock With Straight Bodice.
model bridesmaid's dress and then dance through the remainder of its brief and gay career. Slim youth reveals its slimness in the straight bodice and wayward youth its waywardness when the plain, straight skirt breaks into flounced panels at each side. Flat ice panels, edged with a froth of narrow lace frills, make a lovely embellishment for the skirt and the short s'evees are made of the same laces. A cluster of small flow-
THE WINTER COAT
1
M
Coats for General Wear.
ers contributes the appropriate finishing touch.
Sometimes a straight, slim dress of satin is velled on the skirt with two very full flouces of malines, or a tafeta slip gleams through a long bodice of lace with four floating lace panels hanging from it. Two of these panels at the front and two at the back almost cover the slip.
The fascinating new printed silks and crepes lure the fancy of designers in the direction of tunics and draperies and invite combinations with plain colors. In addition there are all-lace gowns and lace combined with silk, volle and crepe, giving the greatest diversity ever to the new season's dressy modes.
---
---
There is little occasion for fault finding with the styles this spring. In all outer garments they seem to strike just the right note to please American women—and there are no more discriminating judges of apparel. The attractiveness of new fabrics, a vogue for simplicity in design, and excellent workmanship are all revealed in the new coats and suits.
Two coats, for general wear, are shown here and Easter was never greeted with more excellent models. They more than vindicate the choice
I
of materials and decorations and the simple lines of the mode. One of them (at the left) of flamingo cloth in tan color, has a handsome collar of summer ermine. Flamingo cloth is a soft and rich looking material in which striped and barred patterns are made by variations in the weaving and not by the introduction of contrasting color. This cloth is adapted to self-decoration. In the model pictured a border on the front of the
3
coat shows transverse stripes and the half belt and cuffs are cut in the same way. The coat at the right is a slightly fitted model of twill cord, with tucks at the bottom. A collar and cuffs, in a light color, are overlaid with flat silk braid, matching the color of the coat. Nearly all linings are of crepe de chine and in plain colors, and buttons, having reached the irreducible in numbers, are usually large and handsome. In all coats for general wear there is much restraint in the matter of color and trimming. Colors are quiet and trimming inconsoluble. A new spring or "fern" green, however, has been introduced and quite cordially received. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. (C) 1924, Western Newspaper Union.)
---
MILK
MEN IMPROVE YOUR
Have wonderful, soft, straight, beard.
Why use hot towels and irons, why wipe in order to dress it in the position that Satin Top will straighten the worst knit as if nature did the work itself.
Satin Top is harmless.
It will not turn the hair red or leave it will not smart or burn the scalp.
It will thicken your hair and make it will cleanse the scalp and remove Satin Top straightens your hair to shine.
Men it is a wonderful product and can equal it. Call for your jar today, pleased to ship parcel post paid.
LARGE SIZE
Nature intended that every man should make bad hair good and good hair.
R. B. Bolden,
926 19th St.
Denver.
Please send me a jar of your Satin same.
Name
Address
MAKE YOUR APPOINTMENTS AT
ELSIE L.
ANDERSON'S
BEAUTY PARLOR
SCIENTIFIC SCALP AND FACIAL MASSAGE
Treatment for Dandruff, Falling MARCEL WAVING, HAIRDRESS ALL HAIR GOODS M
Hytone Hair Grower, Tetter S
Combs for Sale.
EVERYTHING STRICT
All Work Go
Phone York 7714 J.
IMPROVE YOUR APPEARANCE
wonderful, soft, straight, beautiful hair in twenties, towels and irons, why worry pressing and clipping it in the position that you desire. All straighten the worst kind of hair and give it the work itself. Work hardless. Turn the hair red or leave it colorless. Smart or burn the scalp. En your hair and make it soft and beautiful. Use the scalp and remove dandruff. Straighten your hair to stay straight. A wonderful product and there is nothing on all for your jar today, or mail the coupon parcel post paid.
LARGE SIZE JAR $1.25
Added that every man should have straight hair good and good hair better.
Come a jar of your Satin Top. I have inclos
MEN IMPROVE YOUR APPEARANCE
THE BARBER SHOP
Have wonderful, soft, straight, beautiful hair in twenty minutes. Why use hot towels and irons, why worry packing and combing your hair in order to keep it warm but not too dry, or before bed. Top will straighten the worst kind of hair and give it the appearance as if nature did the work itself.
Satin Top straight hair is a wonderful product and there is nothing on the market that can equal it. Call for your jar today, or mall the coupon and we will be pleased to ship parcel post paid.
LARGE SIZE JAR $1.25
Nature intended that every man should have straight hair. Satin Top will make bad hair good and good hair better.
for Dandruff, Falling Hair and Baldness
WAVING, HAIRDRESSING AND MAKE
ALL HAIR GOODS MADE TO ORDER
Hair Grower, Tetter Salve, Pressing Oil
Combs for Sale. Agents Wanted.
EVERYTHING STRICTLY SANITARY
All Work Guaranteed
k 7714 J.
1521 East 22
ITH'S MARK
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
SMITH'S MARKET
C. E. Smith, Prop. Wholesale and Retail Staple and Fish and Oysters. Hotels and Restaurant FRESH AND CURE Eastern Corn Fee
Miesale and Retail Staple and Fancy Gro Oysters. Hotels and Restaurants Our FRESH AND CURED ETERN Corn Fed M
Wholesale and Retail Staple and Fancy Groceries Fish and Oysters. Hotels and Restaurants Our Specialty.
Fruits, Vegetables, Poultry and Game.
TELEPHONE MAIN 8359
621 FIFTEENTH STREET DENVER, CO
C. E. TERRY, M.D.
1027 Twenty-first St. Denver
Office Phone Champa 7914. Res.
2337 Glenarm Place. Phone
Champa 3303.
Office House—9 n.
2 p. m. to
Office Phone
Residence Phone
S. E. C.
ATTORNEY-
COLORED Men wanted to qualify for sleeping car and train porters. Experience unnecessary. Transportation furnished. Write T. McCaffrey, Supt., St. Louis, Mo.
WHEN WANTING SEEDS
GO TO THE OLD RELIABLE
Colorado Seed Co.
1515 CHAMPA STREET
Near 16th
BIG CATALOG FREE
---
Licensed Embalmer and Director
Phone F414W
Lady Assistant. Polite Services
to all.
Parlors, 2745 Welton Street.
DENVER, COLORADO.
OUR APPEARANCE
beautiful hair in twenty minutes,
we worry pressing and combing your hair
that you desire.
kind of hair and give it the appearance
leave it colorless.
help.
make it soft and beautiful.
save dandruff.
stay straight.
and there is nothing on the market that
is, or mall the coupon and we will be
E JAR $1.25
should have straight hair. Satin Top
or better.
In Top. I have inclosed $1.25 to cover
g Hair and Baldness a Specialty
PRESSING AND MANICURING
MADE TO ORDER
Salve, Pressing Oil for Sale
Agents Wanted.
RICTLY SANITARY
Guaranteed
1521 East 22nd Avenue
MARKET
with, Prop.
Maple and Fancy Groceries
and Restaurants Our Specialty.
UND CURED
n Fed Meats
DENVER, COLORADO
Office House--8 a. m. to 12 m.
2 p. m. to 4 m.
Office Phone, M. 5034
Residence Phone, F591-W
S. E. CARY
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Six years City and County
Attorney at Russell Springs, Logan
County, Kansas
2640 Welton Denver, Colorado
Coal-burning kitchen ranges and candles still are made, but neither works with a valve or a switch.
The highest and lowest tide of the ocean occurs on the eastern coast of Nova Scotia in the Bay of Fundy. The range of the tide is 50 feet—that is, it rises at high tide to a height of 25 feet above mean sea level and at low tide drops to 25 feet below sea level.
Phone C-9051W