Colorado Statesman

Saturday, July 26, 1924

Denver, Colorado

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SUBSCRIBE FOR THE ONLY RELIABLE PEOPLE'S PAPER IN COLORADO "THE COLORADO STATESMAN" THE COLORADO STATESMAN THE JOURNAL OF THE WEST. LABOR SHALL BE FREE RAGE COUNTRY PARTY VOL. XXX DENVER, COLORADO, SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1924 NO. 41. GRAND LODGE KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS FOR COLORADO AND JURISDICATION CLOSES IN BLAZE OF GLORY GRAND LODGE KNIF FOR COLORADO TION CLOSEST GLO Declared by many to have been the greatest grand lodge session in its history and beyond question the most harmonious, the Knights of Pythias of Colorado and jurisdiction, brought their epoch-making session to a close last Friday night in a banquet of exceptional brilliancy, at Zion Baptist church. Denver was proud to be host to the grand fraternal order whose history dates back to the days of chivalry. A fine body of men, brave men indeed, came in large numbers to represent their respective lodges. They found Denver ready and willing to extend a warm welcome on every hand and they left Denver, pleased and impressed with the genuiness of her hospitality. An open meeting on Wednesday night at Zion brought out a fair crowd to hear a splendid program, at which Mayor Stapleton was the principal speaker. Grand Chancellor Geo. W. Davis, read his annual address to the grand lodge delegates at this time and it was an address full of helpful suggestions and advice. The climax of the week came with the banquet of Friday night, in which the fondest hopes of its sponsors were surpassed. Covers were laid for 250, but it was soon found that this number would be far exceeded and hurried arrangements were made to care for the overflow. A more dignified, good natured body of well-groomed men and handsomely gowned ladies has never been held in Denver. Dr. T. E. McClain, bon mot par excellence, was toastmaster and quite royally he did his part. There being no formal program, speakers were called upon from all sections, with the result that many good speakers were heard and a local coloring injected into a great state gathering. It was a magnificent K. of P. love feast such as we hope will be repeated by men of our fraternal bodies. The election of officers resulted as follows: GRAND LODGE OFFICERS: George W. Davis, Grand Chancellor; J. L. Hill, Grand Vice-Chancellor; Samuel Nelson, Grand Prelate; J. A. Weddington, Grand Master of Exchequer; H. B. Fox, Grand Keeper of Records and Seals; S. A. Huff, Grand Medical Director; Leonard J. Harris, Grand Lecturer; Ben Hatcher, Grand Marshal; Thomas Prothro, Grand Master-at-Arms; G. E. Reddick, Grand Inner Guard; G. F. Gratton, Grand Outer Guard; Thos. Campbell, Grand Attorney; J. W. Taylor, Grand Trustee; E. J. Kittrell, Grand Trustee; John W. Hardy, Grand Trustee; L. G. Payne, Fifth Member Enowment Board; W. H. Bess, Supreme Representative. Atty, S. E, Cary—Supreme Representative The next meeting of the Grand Lodge will be held in Cheyenne, Wyoming in 1925. State Hist & Nat Hist Society State House Mrs. Boyd Leaves a $22,000 Estate D. C. Society Woman Killed in Auto Wreck, Leaves All Washington, D. C., July 15.—Letters of administration on the estate of the late Mrs. Cordelia Syphax Boyd have been granted by the Probate Court to her daughter, Mrs. Edna Boyd Gary. Mrs. Boyd, the victim of a Fourth of July auto accident, died intestate. Her daughter, Mrs. Garey, is her sole surviving heir at law. The estate is valued at approximately $22,000. The total amount of indebtedness of the deceased, according to the petition for letters of administration, is less than $900. The estate consists of the premises at 208 S street, N. W., valued at $12,000, of which Mrs. Boyd was the owner in joint tenancy with her daughter, Mrs. Gary; $7,000 in cash on deposit in a local bank; an equity of $1,200 in a note of $3,600 secured by a deed of trust on the Whitelaw hotel bearing interest at 6 per cent and payable in 1925; a cash deposit of $200 made as part payment by Mrs. Boyd on the purchase price of 1505 Swan street, N. W., and household furniture. The approximate total valuation of her personal property is $9,900. The petition for letters of administration was filed on July 11, by Attorney R. R. Horner for Mrs. Gary. France Honors African Dead Rheims, France, July 13.—Inaugurating a monument today to the Negro troops in the Great War, Gen. Archinard praised their courage and the exalted part they took in the final victory. He replied to the German campaign against the colored troops, saying: "Our black sharpshooters conducted themselves like good Frenchmen, showing themselves worthy of fighting by our side. "They were terrible to the Germans," he continued, "because they regarded the Germans as savages fighting with disloyal arms and devastating everything from love of evil. Our sharpshooters fought well for France, because she treats them with humanity and justice, on the same footing as her other citizens. Edouard Daldaler, Minister of the Colonies, said that 800,000 black troops fought for France, and 30,000 were killed on the battlefield. BLE PEOPLE'S PA ADO THE JOURNAL DENVER, COLORADO, DENVER, COLORADO, SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1924 Fisk University Now Possesses Huge Endowment, Largest In America for School for Education of Negroes Fisk University Now Possesses Huge Endowment, Largest In America for School for Education of Negroes Nashville, July 17.—Combpletion of the first million-dollar endowment fund ever to be established at a college for Negroes was announced today by Dr. Fayette Avery McKenzie, president of Fisk University; which began its career in an army barracks in Nashville procured by General Clinton B. Fisk in January, 1866. This fund has been made possible by matching a conditional offer of $500,000 from the General Education Board of New York. Among those contributing are the Carnegie Corporation of New York, which gave $250,000, and John F. Slater Fund of Charlottesville, Va., the J. C. Penney Foundation of New York and prominent individuals in New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, Cleveland and Boston. Anticipating the successful completion of the $1,000,000 endowment fund, the citizens of Nashville organized this spring to raise a supplementary fund of $50,000 for Fisk. This is the first time that any such sum has been contributed by any southern city for any type of Negro education. Among the leaders in this local campaign are bankers, business men, educators and clergymen. The endowment fund, the income of which is to be applied exclusively to teachers' salaries, is conspicuous recognition of the leadership which Fisk has achieved in meeting the growing need for higher education for the 11,000,000 Negroes of the country according to Paul D. Cravath, the internationally known lawyer of New York, who is chairman of the Board of Trustees and whose father was a founder of Fisk and served as its president for twenty-five years. Wm. H. Balden is in charge of raising the funds. 210,000 Colored Voters in Pa. Chicago, July 18.—The migration from the South is not only causing the Southern white people sleepless nights on account of labor shortage, but it is also making politicians sit up and take notice of this new force in political circles. The migration has swelled the voting strength of Negroes in localities where their votes will be counted. It is believed that colored voters will play an important part in the coming presidential election. How will the Negro vote is becoming an important question. Roscoe Simmons makes this declaration: "The Negro voters in Indiana number 63,000; Illinois, 127,000; Ohio, 87,000; Iowa, 35,000, and Pennsylvania, 210,000. According to this report Pennsylvania leads by several thousand. New Law Hits Our Federal Workers Washington, July 18.—Approximately 8,000 members of our race who are civil service employees here are more or less disturbed over the recent passage of the reclassification bill designed to promote salaries and improve conditions of civil service employees. Contrary to the previous bill, which limited employees only in position and which made it possible for a long service messenger to receive a high salary, under the new classification act the employees are paid strictly in accordance with he capacities they fill. Although the new act increases salaries slightly it places a dead line on earning capacity of employees of color due to the difficulty to place members of our race in civil service positions above that of messenger. Colored Man to Teach New York High Schools Colored Man to Teach New York High Schools Willis Huggins Named; Sails to Study in Paris and Oxford University By Lester A. Walton. New York, July 17.—Among the 250 receiving appointments to teach in New York high schools at the beginning of the next scholastic year was one Negro, Willis N. Huggins. His appointment makes the sixth member of his race to teach in the local high schools. He will instruct European history. Mr. Huggins is a native of Selma, Ala. After supplementing his normal training at Selma University with two years' special training in technical subjects at Armstrong Technical School, Washington, he came to New York in 1911, entering Teachers College, Columbia University, from which he was graduated in 1914 with the degree of Bachelor of Science in Education. The following year he received the Master of Arts degree. For five years he was a teacher in the public schools of Chicago, coming to New York in 1922. He has been teaching defective children in the day elementary schools and in the evening elementary schools among the foreign born. The new appointee will sail for Europe, July 2, on the Paris to take work in French history and literature during July at the University of Paris and to take a vacation course in mediaeval and modern history of England and Western Europe in August at Oxford University, England. The Hal Roach Studio seems hard put to it these days. Ernest Morrison, nationally known as "Sunshine Sammy" has left the lot. Mr. Morrison, Sammy's father, refuses to give any information other than to say that Ernest will be featured in his own company. The "Our Gang" comedies will be as a ship without a rudder without Sammy. N.A.A.C.P.WRITES THIRD PARTY ASKING DECLARATION ON NEGRO Urges Progressives to Act Against Discrimination New York, July 11.—Following is the text of the letter sent by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, in 15th Annual Conference in Philadelphia, to the Third Party Convention in Cleveland: To the Cleveland Conference for Progressive Political Action, Gentlemen: The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in Fifteenth Annual Conference, speaking for a large portion of the thinking Negroes of America, takes this opportunity to lay before your conference certain considerations touching the Negro race. The political power of Negroes has greatly increased owing to the continuous migration of black working people from the disfranchising South to the industrial centers of the North. Any political party which aims to attract the votes of Negroes today must first convince them of its determination and ability to forward their industrial and political and social emancipation. This emancipation involves the same problems of labor and wage, of monopoly and privilege, of effective industrial democracy, which face all labor classes the world over. Eighth Convention of Walker Agents to Meet in New York City Gala Time Planned August 13th to 17th Indianapolis, Ind., July 17, 1924.—The Eighth Annual Convention of Madam C. J. Walker Agents will meet August 13th to 17th, inclusive, in the magnificent Abyssinian Baptist church, New York City. Advance rangers indicate that this will be the most important meeting in the history of this, the world's largest organized group of Negro business women. And aside from the usual routine of business, new legislation governing the conduct of their estate filishments and the usual advanced instruction in Beauty Culture, the agents will make a pilgrimage to Madam Walker's Grave at beautiful Woodlawn Cemetery and will select But the American Negro has in addition to these another and more subtle and more dangerous problem, that of discrimination to keep him out of the unions; discrimination in the unions after he has joined; discriminations of all sorts to deprive him of earning a decent livelihood. It is this widespread and determined race discrimination that is alienating the Negro vote from the progressive liberal and labor vote, and is furnishing the capitalists free of charge not only cheap and increasingly efficient and non-union and union-hating labor, but also a large and growing vote in the main industrial center of the country. We appeal to the Cleveland Conference for Progressive Political Action to take such enlightened and farsighted steps against race and color discrimination as will enable us to appeal to our people in behalf of the liberal and labor parties of the nation, without being faced by the present incontrovertible fact that these very persons are today greater enemies of our right to earn decent bread and butter than the captains of Monopoly and Privilege. John Mitchell Will Reopen His Bank at Richmond, Virginia John Mitchell Will Reopen His Bank at Richmond, Virginia Richmond, Va.—According to action taken by the State Corporation Commission on July 9, granting a charter to the Virginia Mechanics Bank, with a capital stock of $25,000—$100,000, John Mitchell, Jr., will soon have his bank reopened. Receivers of the closed Mechanics' Bank are co-operating to protect the interest of depositors in that institution and this action by the Corporation Commission follows a report made by the A. M. Pullen Co., certified accountants, auditors for the receivers, who made an exhaustive examination of the bank's condition at Mr. Mitchell's expense. Judge William A. Moncure, presiding in the Chancery Court, certified to the charter, which was taken to the desk of the State Corporation Commission, and latter granted by that body. The incorporators under the new law are Roscoe C. Mitchell, Henry Mallory, Sr., Drs. Albert A. Tennant and J. O. Dawson, C. A. Cobb, A. G. Thompson and W. E. Brown. Competent colored accountants are now being employed for the reopening of the banking institution in its building at Third and Clay streets. Eighth Convention of Walker Agents to Meet in New York City Gala Time Planned August 13th to 17th Indianapolis, Ind., July 17, 1924. The Eighth Annual Convention of Madam C. J. Walker Agents will meet August 13th to 17th, inclusive, in the magnificent Abyssinian Baptist church, New York City. Advance arrangements indicate that this will be the most important meeting in the history of this, the world's largest organized group of Negro business women. And aside from the usual routine of business, new legislation governing the conduct of their establishments and the usual advanced instruction in Beauty Culture, the agents will make a pilgrimage to Madam Walker's Grave at beautiful Woodlawn Cemetery and will select a costly mausoleum to be later erected and dedicated to her memory. The officials of the company will be present, a brilliant public-program will be rendered; the annual award of $1,650 in prize money will be made by the company to its agents and the winners in their grand trip to the Holy Land Contest will be named and their prize checks exhibited. For a day the delegates and friends will be the guest of Madam A'Lella Walker at Villa Lewaro, her mansion at Irvington-on-Hudson. To interspere the business sessions, New York has planned a full program of entertainment for the visitors including a moonlight boat ride up the picturesque Hudson river, a series of programs, parties, sightseeing trips, shopping tours and the like, such as New Yorkers alone can plan. The convention will close on Sunday, August 17, with memorial services for the late Madam C. J. Walker conducted by one of the race's renowned divines. A gala time is planned and agents from as far away as Jamaica, West Indies, will attend. Approximating the attendance of domestic and foreign delegates, Mrs. Violet D. Reynolds of this city, secretary of the convention, said: "Considering New York's wonderful sights, its advantages as a vacation city, and that our agents have enjoyed a very good business year, we expect no less than several hundred delegates at the convention." Advance announcements state that headquarters for the convention have been established at the Walker Beauty Salon, 110 West 136th street, where all inquiries should be sent. Mme. Walker's Daughter in Suit for Divorce Mme. Walker's Daughter in Suit for Divorce Los Angeles, Calif., July 18.—A suit for divorce has been filed against Dr. Wiley Wilson, proprietor of a large sanitarium at 138th street and Seventh avenue, New York, by his wife, Mrs. Lelia Walker Wilson, daughter of Mme. C. J. Walker and her to a $1,000,000 estate left at the death of her mother. The marriage of Dr. and Mrs. Wilson was one of outstanding spectacles of national society. It has been stated in the divorce complaint that affluence caused an alienation of affections. FOREIGN SRW ND SOP Ste RCO Oe Imperial University of ‘Tokio, The buildings were largely destroyed by the earthquake and fire of Sept. 1. It 1s reported in London that Prime Minister MacDonald and Premier Her- riot have made a personal agreement not to allow the conference on the Dawes plan to break up until a full accord has been reached. ‘The United States, by completing its tennis triumph, not only made a clean sweep of all of the major branches of the Olymple competition, but rolled up a point total which clinches the all-around championship of the games. ‘The Brazilian revolution ts slowly being crushed by starvation, accord- ing to a communique Issued by the Brazilian embassy In Washington. A blockade thrown acound the rebel Imes by government forces which has cut all rebel supplies, including food- stuffs and ammunition, the commu- nique stated. Baron Evence Coppee, one of the wealthiest manufacturers in Belglum, was acquitted of the charge of having supplied coal and other goods to the Germans during the occupation of Bel- gium In the war. The trial began May 21 and the baron, because of poor health, was allowed to reside In a clinfe under police guard during the proceedings. ‘The ministry of commerce reports a marked increase in the number of bankruptcies In Germany, especially of unlimited partnerships. During June the number of such failures was three times that of the May figures. A constant decline in the labor market in Berlin is reported by the Berlin labor office. ‘The total number of un- employed registered in Berlin is nearly 93,000, President Cosgrave of the Irish Free State intends to dissolve the gov- ernment within a fortnight and hold a new election, It was announced ut the headquarters of Eamonn De Va- lera, Irish Republican leader. In Dublin the Valernites intend to wage a vigorous campaign, the announce- ment added, but concluded that the Free State supporters would win a majority in the new dail. GENERAL Every church should have a fund for purehasing space in the newspupers, and should advertise in the daily or weekly papers, “regularly, persistently, and consistently,” Rey. J. ‘T. Brabner Smith of Chieago told preachers at- tending the summer school at Garret Biblical Institute, Carl C. Magee, editor of the New Mexico State Tribune at Albuquerque, was found guilty of contempt of court before Judge D. J. Leahy and sen- tenced to from three to six months in the county jail. Magee was immedi- ately taken to the Jail, where he start- ed serving hs sentence. Magee was adjudged gullty on three citations. Governor Hinkle immediately par- doned Magee. ‘The offer of thirty-six leading grain firms of the Northwest to sell 1,062 country elevators, twenty-two Minne- apolis terminals and twelve Duluth terminals to the American Farm Bu- reau Federation has been formally submitted to the directors of the new $26,000,000. grain siles corporation at Chicago. The proposal of the old line elevator companies which —contem- plates turning over the entire hold- ing of the biggest grain firms in the Northwest to the farm organization cannot be considered by the farm bu- reau federation, as such, according to word recelved at Minneapolis from Chicago, as it is a non-profit co-oper- ative association, In marked contrast to the air of in- difference manifest in the Chicago courtroom by Nathan Leopold, Jr., and Richard Loeb, was the anguish and suffering portrayed on the faces of thelr relatives who saw them plead gullty to two erimes, each punishable by death. Nathan Leopold, Sr., father of one of the boys, and Foreman Leo- pold, young Nathan's brother, repre- sented the Leopold family, while next to them sut Jacob Loeb, uncle of young Richard, and Allen Loeb, Rich- ard’s. brother. Six sults, each asking $10,000 dam- ages from Rosetta Duncan, musical comedy stur, and her brother, Harold, were filed by Edward J, Carmody, town attorney for Cicero, a suburb of Chleago, in behalf of Chief of Police ‘Theodore Svoboda and Policemen Ben- Jamin Delaney, Charles Steinke and Charles Widlock, all of Cicero. ‘The action 1s an outgrowth of the alterea- tion between the Duncans and the Cic- 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 The Associated Motion Picture Pro- ducers of California, representing sev- enteen producing companies at Los Angeles, controlling 95 per cent. of all pictures in that section, 1s on record for purity in pictures. Jack Dempsey’s famous right arm, the one that has contributed so heay- lly to his world heavyweight pugilistic crown, is out of commission following fn automobile accident near Los An- geles, according to attending physl- clans. FB. W. Helwig, 80 years old, retired city treasurer of Lincoln, Neb., was found dend on the floor of a light well nine stories beneath the window of his room in a hotel at Los Angeles. A note he left in his room indicated, the coroner said, that he had committed suicide by Jumping from the window. He had been in iil health. Favoring the preservation of the battlefield of Saratoga, where the greatest battle of the Revolutionary war was fought, the council assem- bled at the thirty-fifth annual con- gress of the Sons of the American Revolution in Salt Lake City signified Ita intention of furthering the move- ment to purchase outright the land so that it might be preserved to the na- ton. Stocks of 1923 wheat on hand in east- em Washington and northern Idaho are worth $1,500,000 more now than at the season's low price level, due to the recent rise in prices, according to Wal- ter J. Robinson, manager of the Wash- ington Whent Growers. He estimates that there are between 5,000,000 and 6,- 000,000 bushels of wheat held over. The new crop is not being sold, Mr. Robin- fon says. Operating officials of the Western Pacific and Southern Pacific railrouds are ready to put into effect, August 1, the agreement by which the tracks of the two companies from a point east of Winnemucca, Nev., to a point west of Wells, Nev. will be used as one double track system, For the Iqst few months thousands of men have been employed by the railroads to im- prove the rondbeds and prepare con- nections for the new system of traffic. Mayor James A. (Jim) Johnson of Great Fulls, Mont., backer of the Dempsey-Gibbons battle for the heavy- weight champlonship of the world, ts sitting on top of the world now, hav- ing drilled in the second big gusher for the week in the Kevin-Sunburst oil field, the Johnson-Sunburst-Corey No. 2, at 1,526 feet. ‘The well was drilled under control head, and Is held under quarter control, being estimated ag a larger well than the Shoshone No. 4, which came in last week for something like 10,000 barrels per day. WASHINGTON The thanks of the Chinese people for remission by the United States of the Chinese Boxer Indemnity pay- ments was expressed to President Coolidge a few days ago by Liang Shih-Y1, former premler of China, who called on the President, aecompanted by Chinese Charge d’Affaires Kwiat. Senator Walsh of Massachusetts re- signed as chairman of the Democratle senatorial campaign committee and was succeeded by Senator Jones of New Mexico. Strenuous efforts have been Inunched In the LaFollette-Wheeler presidential camp to swing the American Federa- tion of Labor vote behind the pro- gressive ticket this fall, Nayy ships desixned to safeguard the passage of the army world flyers from Europe to the Labrador coast will be in position by Aug. 1 ready to render assistance in any emergency. The departure of the flyers from England before that date Is not ex- pected here, despite reports to the contrary. Announcement was made by the In- terlor Department that eleven claims of different Denver concerns and indt- viduals are among the thirty-six re- celving favorable recommendation from the land office commisstoner to the secretary of interior in the matter of adjudicating claims filed on lands in the Red river oll district bordering on Oklahoma and Texas, Arrests by the police for prohibition law violations in Washington during the Last fiscal year totaled 13,955, Maj. Daniel Sullivan, head of the police de- partment, reported to the elty ecommis- sioners. ‘The number was 1,207 more than for the previous year, The umount of liquor seized was less by about 4,000 gallons. Robert Yellow ‘Tall, Crow Indian, of Lodge Grass, Mont., on the Crow In- LATE NEWS From All Over COLORADO ae saat ee en ever Aue i628. Eis sue Arkansas Valley Yair, Otero Co, Rocky Ford, J. 1.’ Miller,’ weca—Bept. J Bayfield Fatr, Bayfield, A. F. Hop- Der, Pres.—Sept, 18-20, Houlder County Falr, Longmont, C. B, Rue, Sec,—sept. 2 to 5. Cattlomen’s Day, Gunnison, Kather- tne Gardner, Sec—July 16. to” 18. Colorado ‘State Fair, Pueblo, D. A Jay, Manawer, Sec—Sopt, 22 to ‘at. onejos County Fair, Manassa Crowley County Fair, Mra. % B Richards, Sec.—Aug, 27 ‘to 29. Delta ‘County Tair, Totchklasy A. M. Minton, Sec.—Sept. § to 12. Douglas County Fair, Castle Rock, BLA. Reeves, Sec-—Oct, 2 to 4. Elbert County Fatr, Matheson Bl Paso County Fair, Cathan, D. EB. Nance, Sec.—Sept. 29-86—Oct. Grand County Fair, Kremmling Huerfano County Fair, Walsenburs, C.0."Unfug, Sec. kit Garagh County Fatr,, Burlington, i. Hoskins, Sec.-Oct. ‘1-2-8-4. ‘Kiowa County Yair, Bada, J.C. Mil- ep, Beo.—Sept. 1-12-13. Larimer County Fair, Loveland, W. L, “Warnock, Sec—Aug. 26-27-28-29, Lincoin County Fair, Hugo, G. W. Hicks, Sec— Logan County Fair, Sterling, J. H. 1Kng, Sec—Sopt. 9to | 12. Mesa County Fair, Grand Junction, J. F. Schultz, Bec.— yploffat County Fatr, Cratg—Sept, 12- Northern New. Mexico Fatr, Raton, E.D, Reynolds, Sec—Sept. 9 fo 12. Phillips County Fait, Holyoke, F. 5. Brolliar, See.— Pueblo County Fair, Goodpasture, H. P, Bornacheim, ‘See.—Bept. 18-19. Routt. County Pair, Hayden, 8. A. Btoddard, Sec—Sept, 9-10-11, Saguache County Fair Ski Hi Stampede, Monte Vista, M. T. Hancock, See.—July 20-81. Trinidad-Las Animas County. Faly Trinidad, Chas, Bailey, Sec.—Sept. 16 Washington County Fair, Akron, Robert W. Vance, 'Sec-—Sept. 4 to 6. Weld County Fair, Greeley, C. W. Menry, Sec.—Sept, 9 to 12. || Western Slope Fair, Montrose, J. J. ‘Tobin, See.—Sept, 16 to 19, Central. Colorado | Fair, Colorado Springs. R. W. Lewis, Sec—Sept. 17- 18-18-20, Fourth Annual Pike's Peak Rodeo, Colorado Springs—Aug.. 12-18-14, ‘Western Slope Pair, Montrose, J. J. ‘Tobin, Sec.—Sept. 16-19, | Eastlake-—The bodies of Frank ‘Schkut, 14, and his brother, Vernon, 12, sons of Bronislaw Schkut, a beet- tender employed on the ranch of Louts Dirks near Eastlake, who were accl- dentally drowned in East Lake, were recovered after a search extending over several hours. Colorado Springs. — Still another mountain highway Is planned for the Pike's Peak region. Spencer Penrose and his associates announced that within a few days work will begin on a graveled toll road, nine-tenths of it dlusted out of solid rock, to the sum- mit of Cheyenne mountain. ‘The road, eight miles long, will be completed by June 1, 1925. The cost will be $350,- 000. La Junta.—Earl McGraw, a young Jeweler, may lose his right foot as a result of a most peculiar accident at Holbrook lake. A party of young men were in the lake bathing, and they were having some sport with a ‘motorboat. Young McGraw was at the jrear of the boat when a member of ‘the party started the motor. Me Graw's foot was caught in the pro- peller, and it was so badly cut and brulsed that {t may have to be ampu- tated. Idaho Springs.—In ground heretofore unexplored, L. C. Hayes, a ploneer prospector and_miner of the Idaho Springs district, has “yeated an ore vein from which several sumples test- ed at the Ermlich laboratory in Den- ver return fourteen ounces in gold and nine ounces In silver to the ton, equal to $205.41 at the sampler, wnere the ore will be sold. Hayes is gradually developing his gold-silver find, which seems to grow wider and more valua- ble as distance 1s gained from the point of discovery. Boulder—Thirty-three arrests for violations of the traffle laws and or- dinances requiring tall lights were made by the Boulder police Sunday, July 13. Loveland.—Loveland will spend in the neighborhood of $300,000 for the construction of a new pipe line from the source of the water supply In the mountains to Loveland. Colorado Springs.—J. 0. Williams of Washington, D. C., chief of the bureau of animal husbandry, Department of Agriculture, and Maj. Charles L. Scott of the United States army remount service, will act as Judges In the sec- ond annual horse and colt show to be held at the Cheyenne Mountain Coun- try Club Aug. 1. Seventeen events are provided for in the program, to the winners of which handsome prizes and trophies will be awarded. ‘The pres- ence in Colorado Springs of the re- mount service headquarters for this district assures many blooded entries, while horses will be seen from such farms as that of Maj. Henry Leonard of Colorado Springs and Washington, D. ©, Bryant Turker, R. P. Lamont, and others. CENTENNIAL STATE ITEMS pe tg - T. G. Granberry, W. T. Collins tens Ldcensed Embalmer iy tant and Soloist ‘WithSERVICE oe Ae All Funerals jone Champa THE PEOPLES’ MORTUARY | Funeral Directors and Licensed Embalmers Parlors, 2718 Welton Street Denver, Colorado Consiacragion, for the dead. Satisfaction guaranteed. 0 or the bereaved. ris Admittedly” ‘the “largest | race Aiwayal at) sour pervick | Ser, ice cere eee of its kind in the square treatment, to all. cn egterirseers Economy our watchword, Ever ready to assist the worthy. Service incomparable. drilled by the Union Oll Company of California on the Mitchell place, one mile south of the discovery gas well, came in a few days ago with a flow of kas estimated at approximately 80, 000,000 cuble feet a day. So terrific was the pressure of the gas that the water which had been run into the well for its full depth of 4,200 feet In an attempt to overcome the gus pressure, was blown 150 feet In the air. The re- port caused a great flurry of excite- ment. At the time the well blew itself in the drillers had Just removed the tools from the hole and were standing near the rig. One of the drillers sud- denly heard a nolse issuing from the casing. The nolse was soon apparent to everyone and within a few minutes water was ronning from the top of the easing, being forced out by the gas pressure from below. Fort Collins —C. L. Hover of Long- mont was elected president of the Colorado Farmers’ Congress to suc- ceed Dr. I. L. Gotthelf of Saguache. H. B. Teller of Byers was chosen first vice president, Mrs. W. W. Tay- lor of Fort Collins, second yice presi- dent, and Roud McCann of Fort Col- lins, director of extension of the Colo- rado Agricultural College, secretary and treasurer. Those appointed to the executive committee were as fol-| lows: Denver district, D. W. Thomas of Denver; plains district, C. E. Col-| Ins of Kit Carson; northern district, R. M. Haythorne of Eaton; western district, TR. F. Rockwell of Paonta; southwestern district, Dayid Hulls of Mancos; San Luis district, Dr. I. L, Gotthelf of Saguache; northwestern district, R. S. Elting of Hot Sulphur Springs; Arkansas district, Mrs. Wal- ter Marriott of Pueblo. Denyer—Funeral services for Harry, H. Tammen, one of the owners of the Denver Post, was held last Tuesday | afternoon at his home, 1061 Humboldt street. The funerul was pubile. ee Jal was at Fairmount. The active pall-| bearers were: W. C. Shepherd, Charles A. Bonfils, Carl Litzenberger, F. W. Feldwisch, Samuel Fry, Joseph H. Langer, Louls Levand, Josiah Maloney. J. Ogden Armour of Chicago, a close personal friend, who accompanied Mr. Tammen on his return trip from a Bal- timore hospital three weeks ago, and Mrs, Armour, arrived in Denver to at- tend the funeral, It is estimated that Mr. Tammen's estate will be more than $6,000,000. Besides a half ownership in the Denver Post and the ownership of the H. H. Tammen Curio Company, Mr, Tammen was a heavy Investor in government securities. Palisades.—Earl Swisher, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Swisher of Palis- ades, and graduate of the Untversity of Colorado in June, has salled from San Francisco for Canton Christian College, Canton, China, where he has accepted appointment as instructor in the department of history. Mr. Swish- er is the first graduate of the untver- sity to be appointed to the college, which is the leading Institution of higher learning in South China. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Taylor of Colorado College are also members of the staff at Canton. Miss Josephine Earley Budd, for the last year student secre- tary of the Y. W. C, A. at the univer- sity, has been appointed to work in the Middle school at the college, and will devote a good part of her time to the young women of the student body. Denyer—Announcement of a read- fustment at Cheyesne of air mail schedules to go into effect Aug. 1, whereby Denver mail will be enabled to reach Chicago in twelve hours and New York In twenty-four, was made by Luther K, Bell, special assistant to the postmaster general in charge of the traffic division of the air mail service, Who urrived in Denver to con- fer with Postmaster Frank L. Dodge and local business men on the new schedules. Telluride.—When their automobile plunged from the road on Keystone hill, near Telluride, and fell 500 feet down the hillside, Miss Katherine Me- Donald, city treasurer of ‘Telluride, was killed and Mrs. M. A. Lynch was. ‘injured, perhaps fatally. Three other women were thrown from the machine as it started to fall, but were only slightly Injured. Miss McDonald and Mrs. Lynch were thrown practically all the way down the hill, The car, wrecked, came to rest In a huge tree overhanging the San Miguel river. Ac- cording to the other women in the machine, Miss McDonald, who was driving, halted to allow another car to pass, Her brakes falled to hold and the car slipped backward over the sdge of the road, Fort Morgan.—The declaration of a For Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailoring, See H. ANDERSON MERCHANT TAILOR Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing. All Work Guaranteed 517 28th Street PHONE MAIN 6751 Prices reasonable. Call in and see my Fall and Winter Samples now on display. SESSSSLELIS SESSILIS LESSEE Ta aaa aaa aaa Tae eat as es ete e eee e oer Wm. K. HUNT’S m. ° CORNER 30TH AND WELTON ST. Phone Champa 3522 Chicken Feed BUDS. 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The Five Points Postal Station. | PHONE MAIN 875. 2701 WELTON tact ithaca raided ete bbe hh bb’ Main 1274 2620 Welton St. ‘WE SELL THE EARTH.” WOODRUFF INVESTMENT C0. Try Us on Rentals, Insurance and Loans ° J. M. Williamson, Jr., Notary Public i J. G. Woodruff, President and Manager | WASHINGTON SIDELIGHTS Shenandoah to Have Greatest Air Radio Urge Education for "Back-to-Nature" Slight Decrease Is Noted in Employment U. S. Pours $75,000,000 Into Road Funds WASHINGTON - The most powerful radio transmitting station ever taken aloft will be on board the navy dtl- be on board the navy dirigible Shenandoah when she joins the Atlantic fleet to co-operate in war maneuvers and later crosses the continent for similar work with the Pacific fleet. According to officers, the set will have a greater range than the wireless of any of the world's great passenger ships. The set is now being completed in the radio division of the naval experimental and research laboratory in Bellevue, near here. To make room for it the engine was removed from the control car of the Shenandoah during repairs made necessary by her runaway flight, and an entirely new intersection designed to replace the old motor cabin. An effective sending range of 1,000 miles was the minimum requirement set for the navy's radio engineers when they were told to build the new wireless plant. That was the least they were to do. What they have done, according to the giant airship's officers, is to turn out a set that under the most favorable transmitting conditions will have an ether reach of between 4,000 and 5,000 miles. Compared with the 400 or 500 mile range of the dirigible's present set, EDUCATIONAL forces throughout the country have been called upon to enlist in the out-of-doof program mapped out at the sessions of the Out Door Recreation conference called by President Coolidge. This was brought out by the resolutions submitted by the committees appointed by Theodore Roosevelt, assistant secretary of the navy, who presided at the Washington sessions. With the appointment of an executive committee the organization became a permanent body. The membership of this committee is: Chauncey J. Hamlin, New York, chairman. Dr. John C. Merriam, California, vice chairman. Dr. George E. Scott, Illinois, treasurer and chairman finance committee. Dr. Vernon Kellogg, California, secretary. Walter F. Martin, Washington, D. C. John Barton Payne, Illinois. Mrs. Jane Deeter Rippin, New York. Charles Sheldon, Washington, D. C. Mrs. John D. Sherman, Colorado, president of the General Federation of Women's Clubs. George Shiras III, Michigan. James E. West, New York. The American Nature association of Washington is leading in this campa- gnal, and in co-operation with Mrs. John D. Sherman, the newly elected DECREASES of 5.2 per cent in employment and of 2 per cent in the pay roll totals for this year were found by making a comparison of employment reports compiled by the United States Department of Labor from a survey of 5,772 establishments in 46 industries taken in April, 1923, and the same month this year. The statistical reports cover 2,045,195 employees in April, 1924, and show their earnings amounted to $54,934,432, while in April of last year there were 2,158,055, whose earnings amounted to $56,043,735. Gains in employment were reported in only 13 of the 46 industries. Gains in the earnings of employees were reported in 20 industries. "The iron and steel industry gained 8.7 per cent in the number of employees and 17.5 per cent in earnings," the departmental report states."Among industries which gained both in numbers of employees and pay roll totals were the cement, sugar refining, electrical goods, automobiles, book and job and newspaper printing, and sawmills and millwork. These increases, however, are considerably smaller than those in the steel industry. Referring to the wages and hours in THE agricultural appropriation bill signed recently by the President provides federal aid for the fiscal year 1925, which began July 1. The bill authorizes the secretary of agriculture to apportion to the states immediately the $75,000,000 authorized by the post office appropriation act of June 19, 1922, and appropriates $13,000,000 to be immediately available, the remainder to be made available in later appropriations. The apportionment is made to the states on the same basis as for preceding years, except Hawaii is for the first time admitted to a share, which is on the same basis as for the states. This has been provided for in an act of the present session of congress. Illinois receives $3,203,867.99 of the fund. Since 1916 a total of $540,000,000 has been made available by previous acts of congress, and the bureau of public roads, which administers these funds, these figures are impressive. Long-distance sending will be taken care of by means of a tube transmitter, operating on a wave-length range of 500 to 1,500 meters. For shorter ranges the new wireless equipment includes an auxiliary transmitter with a minimum range of 500 miles. This transmitter operates on comparatively low power by resorting to high frequencies. It works at 3,000 kilocycles on a 100-meter wave length. A six-kilowatt generator, driven by a special gasoline motor, supplies alternating current for the main transmitter and direct current to replenish the plant's storage batteries and to light the ship. The batteries also furnish "juice" for starting the generator motor. In case this breaks down in flight the batteries have sufficient reserve power to operate the auxiliary transmitting set for some time in addition to keeping necessary lights burning. Perhaps the most remarkable feature of the Shenandoah's new equipment is her radio compass. So far as is known it is the first radio compass to be installed on a lighter-than-air ship and is said to be without counterpart in all the radio world. It operates over a wider band of wave lengths than any similar instrument ever built. president of the General Federation of Women's Clubs, the association is carrying on a campaign of education to this end. Mrs. Anna Botsford Comstock, the leader in nature study instruction in the United States, directs the nature study lessons for the association. In commenting on the work of the conference, Charles L. Pack, who is chairman of the committee on state parks and forests, says: "The call of President Coolidge came at an opportune time. As never before, millions are now getting into the out of doors and closer to nature. These millions must be educated, not alone to the wonders of nature, but as to the direct bearing nature has upon their daily lives. Extreme need of education to halt the destruction of nature's wonders is shown by the estimates that predict three million automobiles will be sold in 1924 and only twelve million books. That means only one book to every twelfth family. It also means that thousands of newcomers will take to the road. The committee on formulation of an educational program for outdoor recreation pointed out the need of a campaign to make known and advertise to the American public those facilities in the nature of parks, forests, rivers, lakes and playgrounds which are available or may be made available in the future. the iron and steel industry, the federal review states: "While the eight-hour turn has been adopted as the standard working time for all employees in some entire plants and in certain department divisions in other plants, the twelve-hour shift still prevails to a large extent. Some employees also work seven days a week. "Earnings of these employees per hour have increased 15 per cent in 1924, as compared with 1922, although they are still 26 per cent below the peak of high-wage rates of 1920. As compared with 1913, an increase of 70 per cent is noted in the 1924 figure, while earnings per hour have doubled since 1910. "In the United States the total number of children from ten to fifteen years of age reported as engaged in gainful occupations in 1920 was 1,060,858, representing 8.5 per cent of all children in that age period, as compared with 1,990,225 or 18.4 per cent in 1910; 1,750,000 or 18.2 per cent in 1901; 1,503,771 or 18.1 per cent in 1890. "This increase was general throughout the country and was more marked for boys than for girls. Only six states showed an increase in the number of children gainfully employed." reports the status on May 31 as follows: Completed, 32,009 miles; under construction, 17,000 miles; approved for construction, 2,518 miles, and $33,106,125 available for new projects. Practically all of the old funds and the entire amount of the new funds have been or will be expended on the federal aid highway system of the United States. This system, provided for by the federal highway act of 1921, consists of approximately 170,000 miles of roads, and has been designated by the states and approved by the federal government. At the beginning of 1924 it was estimated that 60,000 miles of the system had been surfaced, about 8,700 miles graded, leaving 110,000 miles to be surfaced. Some of this work had been done by the states independent of federal aid. To surface the remaining 110,000 miles by 1934 will require an annual program of 11,000 miles ALONG LIFE'S TRAIL By THOMAS A. CLARK Dean of Men, University of Illinois. (@, 1924, Western Newspaper Union.) HOME-COMING I HAVE never been away from home a great deal. A week at some distant relative's or a summer engaged in recreation or employment with strangers has made up the tale of my separation from my family. I remained in the home of my childhood until I had made a home for myself. But even these short separations from home have given me an appreciation of the joy of getting back. I rushed everywhere in and out of the house to note the changes that had taken place during my absence. I visited my old familiar haunts, I looked up my old companions, and I snuggled down in my special corner with a book in my hand and another sitting by, both of us happy over the reunion. It was great to be home again! How much more so to those who have been away for a longer time and at a greater distance to return to the home fireside. Home-coming is for all of us, and should be more or less a sentimental time. We appreciate the comforts and the privileges and the delights of home the more by being separated from them for a time. It is another case of absence making the heart grow fonder. The absence and the home-coming, too, often give one a clearer appreciation of the obligations and responsibilities one should have toward home. Home-coming is a pleasure because it gives opportunity to talk over accomplishments, to stimulate ambition and to fire the imagination of the younger and less experienced members of the family. We have been out in the world even though it may be for so short a time, we have seen new sights, we have done wonderful deeds, we have tried our wings and have found them strong. We have experience behind us, and we are eager to confer its benefits upon the less sophisticated members of the family. Sometimes there is the selfish son who sees in home-coming only a time for pleasure, for self-gratification, for intemperate indulgence in eating, drinking and sleeping. He gets out of the family everything that it will give. He contributes nothing to its happiness or to its progress; he looks out only for what he can get to satisfy his selfish desires. His return is not looked for with joyous anticipation; his going is relief. Home-coming for all of us should be a time of renewing old acquaintances, of visiting old scenes and old friends, of stimulating old idols. There are the younger children to drink in the tales of adventure and accomplishments out in the real world, and to be stirred and stimulated by them. Those who come back may get pleasure; they may give help and encouragement. If their object, however, is only selfish gratification, the satisfying of old appetites, then it were better they did not come at all. PAINTING THE LILY I HAVE often felt that perhaps flowers have a kind of conscious feeling of their own beauty and that possibly, like young girls, they would like sometimes to touch it up. Perhaps the tilly sighs for a lipstick or a box of rouge. Of course a young girl likes to look pretty; it is a feeling quite human. It gives her self-respect and makes her feel more comfortable to know that she is well groomed, and becoming dressed, and it gives her a sense of satisfaction to realize that her friends, both male and female recognize her attractiveness. Not even a savage puts on her simple costume carelessly. I have never quite understood, however, why the modern girl has so little faith in the effectiveness of youthful natural beauty—why she would take a perfectly fine complexion or a beautiful head of hair, and daub the one with parti-colored cosmetics like a Hottentot unless—I hate to think it—she is determined deliberately to attract attention to herself at any cost. Of course she must follow the fashion, changing as it is. She cannot have her skirts trailing when other girls have theirs at the shoe tops or at the knees; she cannot wear puffed sleeves when her friends are eliminating that part of their garments entirely; she cannot wear her hair down her back straight or in curls when "cootie cages" are in style, but she can be conservative. She does not need to make herself seem either freakish or extreme. She should give some thought to fitness. I met a little girl yesterday morning when I was on the way to my office. Her hair, straight as an Indian's naturally, was crudely curled until it stood out like a bunch of wire; her face flamed unnaturally as if she had been cooking doughnuts over a hot kitchen stove in the summer time. Her open-work silk stockings through which a sharp wind was blowing were quite in contrast to her heavy fur coat, the collar of which was thrown open exposing a rather wide expanse of chilly bony chest. Perhaps she was comfortable, undoubtedly she was stylish, but pretty—not even to her family. She was grotesque, she was a caricature of youth, she was a ill-daubed up with paint by the crudest band. She looked like a hareback rider at the circus. I could only laugh and then feel sorry. She was a perfectly nice girl spoiled. TEN KILLED AT GRADE CROSSING DRIVER OF MACHINE FAILED TO SEE EXPRESS AND DRIVES IN FRONT OF TRAIN LIMITED HITS TRUCK SOME OF BODIES ARE MANGLED BEYOND RECOGNITION IN CRASH Oak Harbor, Ohio.—Ten persons were killed and ten others were injured, some seriously, when a New York Central passenger train crashed into an automobile truck at a grade crossing outside this village. The dead: Mrs. Bern Cook, 40; Mrs. Mabel Wold, 38; Forest Croninger, 14; Viola Croninger, 10; Olga Pratt, 17; Milan Schaaf, 12; Holdon Huffman, 14; Elda Olds, 14; Geraldine Schimf, 14, all of Attica, Ohio. George Spangler, 30, Willard, Ohio, driver of the truck. There were twenty-six persons in the truck. They had been on a day's outing at Sand Beach, on Lake Erie, and were returning to their home when the accident occurred. The force of the collision carried the wreckage of the truck 300 feet down the railroad tracks, hurling bodies in every direction. County officials began an investigation in an effort to attach blame for the accident. They learned, it was said, that the truck had been brought to a stop at the Locust street crossing to permit a slow moving freight train to pass. When the freight train had cleared the crossing, it was said, the truck driver drove onto the tracks and into the path of the oncoming passenger train. The truck is said to have been returning with a load of young people from an outing in the woods. Officials at Toledo, Ohio, said the driver of the truck left the wheel and looked both ways of the track. A train was passing on the eastbound track, but the driver failed to see the fast train which was bound for Toledo. The party was from Attica, Ohio, and was returning from an outing at Locust Point, near Oak Harbor. The train struck the truck squarely in the middle and hurled the occupants more than 100 feet, it was said here. Some of the bodies are said to have been mangled almost beyond recognition. Colorado Gas Well Ignites Fort Collins, Colo.—Two workmen were injured seriously and five others received painful burns when the Mitchell well, fifteen miles from here, caught fire with a violent explosion. The force of the explosion knocked a number of the crew in the immediate vicinity of the derrick to the ground and set fire to their clothing by blowing the flames in all directions. The workmen plunged into the "slush pit," a drainage pit dug near the well to drain off surplus water, and extinguished the flames from their clothes. The cause of the fire is undetermined. Mail Box Robbers Held in Jail Chicago,—Calvin Pearce, Salt Lake City, Utah, and Mrs. Freda Dingley, Yakima, Wash., were sent to the Dakalk county jail after arraignment before United States Commissioner James R. Glass on charge of stealing from private mail boxes in Chicago and various western cities. Brazilian Rebels Refuse Armistice Santos, Brazil.—The Sao Paulo revolutionists are reported on reliable authority to have failed in efforts to enter into negotiations with the Brazilian government relative to an armstice, President Bernardes having announced that the rebels must face penalties of the Brazilian laws. The president of the foreign Chamber of Commerce of Sao Paulo acted as intermediary for the revolutionists, who demanded that in addition to an armstice the government give a guarantee that no reprisals would be taken and that the revolutionists be restored to their original status. Rail Express Workers Get Increase Chicago.—More than 70,000 railway express workers were granted pay for time and a half for all overtime worked after eight hours, in a decision handed down by the United States Railroad Labor Board. The order, directed against the American Railway Express Company, becomes effective Aug. 1, 1924. Under existing rules the employees were given time and one half overtime pay only after nine hours. Fayette Wins $10,000 Race Kalamazoo, Mich.—Fayette National, owned by Guttstein Brothers of Milwaukee, won the first $10,000 purse of the season on the grand circuit by annexing the Kalamazoo Exchange Club event for 2:08 trotters in straight heats over the Recreation Park track. The winner, a top-heavy favorite, driven by McKay, was not driven out to win but was able to take the lead and hold it to the finish in each mile without being seriously challenged by the other ten starters in the event. CAPTAINS OF ADVENTURE By ROGER POCOCK Copyright by Bobbe-Merrill Company A TALE OF VENGEANCE A.D.1840 In the days of the grandfathers, say one hundred years ago, the Americans had spread their settlements to the Mississippi, and that river was their frontier. The great plains and deserts beyond, all speckled now with farms and glittering with cities, belonged to the red Indian tribes, who hunted the buffalo, farmed their tobacco, played their games, worshiped the Almighty Spirit, and stole one another's horses, without paying any heed to the white men. For the whites were only a little tribe among them, a wandering tribe of trappers and traders, who came from the Rising Sun Land in search of beaver skins. The beaver skins were wanted for top hats in the Land of the Rising Sun. These white men had strange and potent magic, being masters of fire, and brought from their own land the fire-water and the firearms which made them welcome among the tribes. Sometimes a white man entered the tribes and became an Indian, winning his rank as warrior, marrying, setting up his lodge, and even rising to the grade of chief. Of such was Jim Beckworth, part white, part negro, a great warrior, captain of the Dog Soldier regiment in the Crow nation. His lodge was full of robes; his wives, by whom he allied himself to the leading families, were always well fed, well dressed and well behaved. When he came home with his Dog Soldiers he always returned in triumph, with bands of stolen horses, scalps in plenty. Long afterward, when he was an old man, Jim told his adventures to a writer, who made them into a book, and in this volume he tells the story of Pine Leaf, an Indian girl. She was little more than a child when, in an attack of the Cheyennes upon the village, her twin brother was killed. Then, in a passion of rage and grief, she cut off one of her fingers as a sacrifice to the Great Spirit, and took oath that she would avenge her brother's death, never giving herself in marriage until she had taken a hundred trophies in battle. The warriors laughed when she asked leave to join them on the war-path, but Jim let her come with the Dog Soldiers. Rapidly she learned the trade of war, able as most of the men with bow, spear and gun, running like an antelope, riding gloriously; and yet withal a woman, modest and gentle except in battle, famed for lithe grace and unusual beauty. "Please marry me," said Jim, as she rode beside him. "Yes, when the pine leaves turn yellow." Jim thought this over, and complained that pine leaves do not turn yellow. "Please!" he said. "Yes," answered Pine Leaf, "when you see a red-headed Indian." Jim, who had wives enough already as became his position, sulked for this heroine. She would not marry him, and yet once when a powerful Blackfoot had nigh felled Jim with his battle-ax, Pine Leaf speared the man and saved her chief. In that engagement she killed four warriors, fighting at Jim's side. A bullet cut through his crown of eagle plumes. "These Blackfeet shoot close," said Pine Leaf, "but never fear; the Great Spirit will not let them harm us." In the next fight, a Blackfoot's lance pierced Jim's legging, and then transfixed his horse, pinning him to the animal in its death agony. Pine Leaf hauled out the lance and released him, "I sprang upon the horse," says Jim, "of a young warrior who was wounded. The heroine then joined me, and we dashed into the conflict. Her horse was immediately after killed and I discovered her in a hand-to-hand encounter with a dismounted Blackfoot, her lance in one hand and her battle-ax in the other. Three or four springs of my steed brought me upon her antagonist and, striking him with the breast of my horse when at full speed, I knocked him to the earth senseless, and before he could recover, she pinned him to the earth and scalped him. When I had overturned the warrior, Pine Leaf called to me, 'Ride on, I have him safe now.'" She was soon at his side chasing the flying enemy, who left ninety-one killed in the field. In the next raid, Pine Leaf took two prisoners, and offered Jim one of them to wife. But Jim had wives enough of the usual kind, whereas now this girl's presence at his side in battle gave him increased strength and courage, while daily his love for her flamed higher. At times the girl was sulky because she was denied the rank of warrior, shut out from the war-path secret, the hidden matters known only to fighting men. There is no space here for a tithe of her battles, while that great vengeance for her brother piled up the tale of scalps. In one victorious action, charging at Jim's side, she was struck by a bullet which broke her left arm. With the wounded arm nursed in her bosom she grew desperate, and three war "Please!" he said. riors fell to her ax before she fainted from loss of blood. Before she was well recovered from this wound, she was ailed again, despite Jim's pleading and in defiance of his orders, and, on an invasion of the Cheyenne country, was shot through the body. "Well," she said afterward, as she lay at the point of death, "I'm sorry that I did not listen to my chief, but I galanced two trophies." The very rescue of her had cost the lives of four warriors. While she lay through many months of pain, tended by Jim's head wife, her bosom friend, and by Black Panther, Jim's little son, the chief was away fighting the great campaigns, which made him famous through all the Indian tribes. Medicine Calf was his title now, and his rank, head chief, for he was one of two sovereigns of equal standing, who reigned over the two tribes of the Crow nation. While Pine Leaf sat in the lodge, her heart was crying, but at last she was able to ride again to war. So came a disastrous expedition, in which Medicine Calf and Pine Leaf, with fifty Crow warriors and an American gentleman named Hunter, their guest, were caught in a pit on a hillside, hemmed round by several hundred Blackfeet. They had to cut their way through the enemy's force, and when Hunter fell, the chief stayed behind to die with him. Half the Crows were slain, and still the Blackfeet pressed hardly upon them. Medicine Calf was at the rear when Pine Leaf joined him. "Why do you wait to be killed?" she asked. "If you wish to die, let us return together. I will die with you." They escaped, most of them wounded who survived, and almost dying of cold and hunger before they came to the distant village of their tribe. Jim's next adventure was a horsestealing raid into Canada, when he was absent fourteen months, and the Crows mourned Medicine Calf for dead. On his triumphant return, mounted on a plebidle charger the chief had presented to her, Pine Leaf rode with him once more in his campaigns. During one of these raids, being afoot, she pursued and caught a young Black-foot warrior, then made him her prisoner. He became her slave, her brother by tribal law, and rose to eminence as her private warrior. Jim had founded a trading post for the white men, and the United States pald him two thousand dollars a year for keeping his people from slaughtering pioneers. So, growing rich, he tired of Indian warfare, and left his tribe for a long journey. As a white man he came to the house of his own sisters in the city of Saint Louis, but they seemed strangers now, and his heart began to cry for the wild life. Then news came that his Crows were slaying white men, and in haste he rode to the rescue, to find his warriors besieging Fort Cass. He came among them, their head chief, Medicine Calf, black with fury at their misdeeds, so that the council sat bewildered, wondering how to sue for his forgiveness. Into that council came Pine Leaf. "Warriors," she cried. "I make sacrifice for my people!" She told them of her brother's death and of her great vengeance, now completed in that she had slain a hundred men to be his servants in the other world. So she laid down her arms. "I have hurled my last lance; I am a warrior no more. Today Medicine Calf has returned. He has returned angry at the follies of his people, and they fear that he will again leave them. They believe that he loves me, and that my devotion to him will attach him to the nation. I, therefore, bestow myself upon him; perhaps he will be contented with me and will leave us no more. Warriors, farewell!" So Jim Beckworth, who was Medicine Calf, head chief of the Crow nation, was wedded to Pine Leaf, their great heroine. Alas for Jim's morals, they did not live happily ever after, for the scalawag deserted all his wives, titles and honors, to become a mean trader, selling that firewater which sapped the manhood of the warrior tribes, and left them naked in the bitter days to come. Pine Leaf and her kindred are gone away into the shadows, and over their wide lands spread green fields, now glittering cities of the great republic. Comfort for "Redtops" Science has come to the rescue of the red haired—the science of patient observation, comparison and psychological correlation. Its decree should forever silence the flutterers. The possessor of brilliant locks also possesses above the average of those not so blessed the following qualities: physical well-being, conscientiousness and intelligence. That's the trinity for this life of ours, and the "nonreds," instead of deriding their better endowed fellow mortals, ought to prefer that their own topknots might acquire a firelike luster—Reading Tribune. Destruction of Forests Fire loss in the forests of America each year covers a total area more than eight times that left devastated in France at the end of the great war THE COLORADO STATESMAN LABOR SHALL BE FREE BACS COMMITTED PARTY JOS. D. D. RIVERS....Proprietor 1824 Curtis Street, Room 25 Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice in the city of Denver, Colorado. Recognized by the Retail Merchants' Bureau of the Denver Civic and Commercial Association as an advertising medium. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year ..... $2.00 Six Months ..... 1.25 Three Months ..... .75 Payable in Advance Reading notices, ten lines or less, 15 cents per line. Each additional line over ten lines, 12 cents per line. Display advertising, 75 cents per square. A square contains ten agate lines. It occasionally happens that papers sent to subscribers are lost or stolen. In case you do not receive any number when due, inform us by postal card and we will cheerfully forward a duplicate of the missing rumber. All communications of a personating nature that are not complimentary will be withheld from the columns of this paper. Communications to receive attention must be news, upon important subjects, plainly written only upon one side of the paper; must reach us Tuesdays, if possible, anyway, not later than Wednesdays. Remittances should be made by Express Money Order, Postoffice Money Order, Registered Letter or Bank Draft. Postage stamps will be received the same as cash for the fractional part of a dollar. Only 1-cent and 2-cent stamps DEATH OF H. H. TAMMEN IN A WAY, the late H. H. Tammen, one of the owners of the Denver Post, was not known to a large circle of Negro citizens, but those who intimately knew of his friendship, will sincerely mourn his death. Mr. Tammen was of the type that fully exemplified the true Westerner. To some, he appeared at first difficult of approach, yet once close to him, one found a man truly human, benevolent and kind. Be it said to the honor of his memory however, that whatever seemed rough and unsympathetic was simply of the exterior, for deep in the heart of H. H. Tammen was a vast deal of the milk of human kindness that broadened into unaffected philanthropy and mercy. He was a much loved man and will be missed by men, women and children of all races. SOME USES AND MIS-USES OF POWER ONE of the very commendable undertakings of an organization in Denver, some time ago, was to take up with local daily papers the question of a more decent treatment of the Negro in dealing out news items of any character. It has long been a devout wish and hope of our people that the time would come when bold, glaring head lines would herald any crime or suspected crime, committed by a Negro, while meager space, if any at all, would be given to our achievements. In an initial effort to organize an inter-racial commission in Denver last spring this question was first to be brought up as presenting a very grave aspect. All agreed that something should be done to bring about a changed policy, and so a committee consisting of members of both races were appointed to hold interviews with the managers of Denver's daily papers. We have heard very little of the committee's activity, but a striking lesson of the past week would indicate that something worth while has grown out of it. On the front page of the pink edition of an afternoon paper last Saturday, appeared the simple notice that a "young man had been lynched." Nothing was said of color (except vaguely in the news column) nothing of the "black brute," nor did any thing appear about the "best citizens" leading the mob. This is indeed a decided change in policy and one that should bring letters of commendation, not only from the organization that was instrumental in bringing about the change, but from every Negro organization in Denver. A long step will have been taken toward a more cordial relationship when influential daily papers cease playing upon the passions and inflaming the mind of one race against another. So much for the criminal side of the question; now for the side of our achievement. Last Sunday a leading Race pastor of one our strong churches preached a remarkable sermon on "Co-operation and the Discipleship of Man." News of this sermon reached the ears of the reporters of our morning daily paper and a request was made for the manuscript. Our Race pastor yielded with some reluctance, recalling the fate of some of our attempts for better things in the past. But the change in policy already attributed to an afternoon paper had evidently spread to the other, and so on Monday morning appeared a full text of the splendid sermon, delivered on Sunday to a highly intellectual audience. The power of the press is one readily admitted by all, either for good or evil. We are glad to note this encouraging sign of the times, as assuring a better understanding and finer appreciation of our status as citizens. OUR POLICY IT IS not possible in the stress of a red hot political campaign such as the state and nation will witness this year for a newspaper of the standing and influence of the COLORADO STATESMAN to escape being a part and parcel of it. Nor have we any desire to do so even were it possible. Issues must be met and candidates must be scrutinized with due care and we shall not at any time shrink from a responsibility so clearly ours. There is every possibility that the columns of this paper will be sought by men and women of varied political beliefs and creeds as a medium through which to present their cases to the reading public. The COLORADO STATESMAN invites all such and will assure a square deal policy to all, reserving however, the journalistic prerogative of expunging any sentiment or expression bordering upon personalities or unfair criticism. We will also hold to our inalienable right to give expression to our own views on matters affecting the public weal. In many respects the approaching campaign will arouse deep animosities as already fore-shadowed by the deliberations of national and state conventions already held. We hope our own assembly of Aug. 6 will be singularly free from it. Certainly no great good can come to either party or candidate that indulges in it. The right to a full, free expression of views can in no sense be questioned, but the better part of wisdom would suggest that everyone stand upon their own merits and not attempt to stand upon the presumed lack of merit of others. So with this declaration of our policy we trust we can enter the campaign with a full appreciation of what will be expected of us and just what we will offer in turn. Within the editorial columns of a paper may be found the thing an editor believes in, guided sagely by what he thinks is best for the general good. A political campaign had best be fore-gone if out of it there does not spring an honest, conscientious effort to better the conditions of the people. It cannot always be said that there is any direct air line to such a super-human achievement and for this reason many different avenues are opened up and political parties of widely divergent views come into being. All will have followers, all will have adherents, and sometimes in the heat of conflict our zeal overcomes good judgment. But every man has a right to his views to the point when he does not trespass upon the rights of others and, it is in recognition of this principle that the columns of this paper will be thrown open as a great public forum, that the mass of voters may read and judge for themselves in the selection of those deemed best fitted to guide the destiny of state and nation. All Signs Point to Reorganization of American Bar Association All Signs Point to Reorganization of American Bar Association WE WELL know that with all their ability along professional and business lines the lawyers of the United States have neither a complete nor an effective organization. Admittedly the American Bar association possesses only a small fraction of the strength and influence it should have. It is made up of individuals only and lacks the power that it would possess if it were backed by the force of the state bar associations throughout the nation. There is in fact no bond between the state organizations and the American Bar association. The latter can act in the various states only through its own organization and its individual members. The local associations are not its agencies nor do they have any voice in its management. We have, therefore, various state groups going their own way, unrelated and with no bonds between them, and a national association independent of state organizations, isolated so far as they are concerned and made up of individuals only. The mere statement of these facts shows at once the utter lack of coherence of the bar as a whole. All signs point to the reorganization of the American Bar association in the near future so that it will be truly representative of the state associations as well as its own members. The necessities of the present situation demand it. There is no harm in dreaming, occasionally at least, and it is pleasant to imagine a national body vitalized by all the state organizations and those in turn composed of all the lawyers, in their respective states. Such an association and only such an association would represent the entire bar of the nation. It would put the profession in the position it is entitled to occupy—a position of great dignity and power. Then indeed we might hope to accomplish the purposes for which lawyers meet and organize—to promote reform in the law, to facilitate the administration of justice, to elevate the standard of integrity, honor and courtesy in the legal profession, to encourage a thorough and liberal legal education and to cultivate and cherish a spirit of brotherhood among all the members thereof. "That Prefix 'Super' Has Suffered Rare Punishment Since Radio Came—" By J. II. MORECROFT, Institute of Radio Engineers Was there ever an art which called forth as many unpronounceable and unintelligible names as has radio? This failing for coining names, sometimes simple and sometimes complex, for tubes and circuits originated at a certain laboratory in Schenectady about 12 years ago, according to our recollection. These Greco-Schenectady names, as Dr. De Forest aptly characterized them at the time, were not as bad as they first sounded, because they were at least coined by men who knew some pailology. The names of sets and circuits which descend today on a startled world surpass one's powers of pronunciation and analysis alike. One firm kindly condescends to translate its name into ordinary English for us, so we at least know what the names are intended to convey, but many others remain outside our vocabulary, and in despair we have decided not to attempt to keep up longer with the word coiners. That prefix "super" has suffered rare punishment since radio came into its stride—overworked so much that nowadays unless a set is super something or other no one pays any attention to it. And the situation has its serious side, as well as comic; many times lately we have been asked by enthusiastic newcomers in the radio field about the relative merits of the super-diddle-daddle and the super-daddle-diddle and have had to confess that we didn't even know what they were. Wherewith our reputation has straightway fallen to less than nothing! "He knows the theory," say our inquirers, "but he doesn't know how it is applied." Won't the word coiner take a few days off? Cosmetics, Invariably Harmful to the Complexion, on the Increase is alarmingly on the increase. There is great danger in this practice, inasmuch as poisonous substances are prevalent in face powders, hair dyes, depilatories, hair-smoothing preparations and other common beautifying agents. The employment of cosmetics, unfortunately, has become more and more common. What once was considered poor form is now the mode with the average woman, certainly in cities. Most women paint; all of them use powders of different types. The average woman uses at least some of the long list of cosmetics, and yet many of these women are unaware of the danger they are incurring. In the first place, there is the purely mechanical obstruction effected by creams, powders and rouges employed on the face. The pores in our skin were intended by nature to serve as lubricating and excretory ducts. If these are constantly shut off, the obstruction alone is bound to injure any skin. Then we have the specific chemical action, depending on the susceptibility of the patient and on the strength and durability of the application, along with the character of the nostrum applied—mercury, arsenic, etc. "Make Your Home Comfortable, Devote Yourself to It as a Hobby" By ARNOLD BENNETT, in Woman's Home Companion. And now, lastly, some will say to me: "Why all this preoccupation with material things? If the making of a perfect home is to be our hobby, must we not soar above the material plane? Are not behavior, tact, mutual comprehension, loving-kindness, the proper utilization of leisure hours—are not these things necessary to the perfecting of the home? Ought we not, as true lobbyists, interest ourselves in the sentimental side?" The answer is in the affirmative every time. But if you go further and say: "What is an easy chair compared with a kind word?" then I affirm that the easy chair counts. It is easier to say a kind word from an easy chair than from an uneasy chair. It is more difficult to quarrel in a warm room than in a cold, in a ventilated room than in an unventilated, in a beautiful room than in an ugly, at a good meal than at a bad. A home, like a human being, has a body as well as a soul. And the soul that despises the body is silly. Who can be virtuous with a boil on his neck? Who can be happy with chilblains on his toes? Make your home beautiful and comfortable, devote yourself to it as a hobby, and give it a fair chance to express yourself and your belief in the virtues of tact, understanding and kindness. The moral is clear. THE FORD SEE HUNTER FIRST 2707 Welton St., Phone Champa 9583J Representing Walker Bros. Motor Co. Authorized Ford and. Lincoln Dealers, 2985 Federal Blvd., Phone Gallup 260 We also have or can get it, practically any make of used car from $100 up. Very attractive terms. Best bargains. Come and see Hunter, Phone Champa 9583-J. Creo Cafeteria Cafe and Meals Under New Management W. F. TURNER, Prop. FIRST CLASS SERVICE Short Orders at All Times. Home Cooked Food. Best of Service. Regular Meals, 35c. Sundays, 50c. Open from 6 a. m. to 12 night. 2709 Welton St. Dewey C. Bailey En- people must be adequately safe-guarded Dewey C. Bailey Enters Race for Mayor Issues Statement Setting Forth His Platform Dewey C. Bailey Enters Race for Mayor Issues Statement Setting Forth His Platform "I believe in the use of the recall of public officials when necessary; it is the law. In the enforcing of the Volstead act; it is the law. I believe in religious freedom, and equal rights without regard to race or color. It is a part of the constitution of the United States, and guaranteed by the statutes of the state of Colorado, and good law. "If the recall law is not approved by certain people they should amend or repeal it by submitting their case to the voters. Pledges Economical Government, Lower Taxation, Law Enforcement and Equal Rights for All, Without Regard to Race or Color "A mayor must have full co-operation from the city's employees, and he cannot succeed unless he has the force and individuality to compel unity of action between the different departments, and between each of its members; he and they must realize that all are employees of Denver, and that the people's interests should be protected first. DENWEY C. BAILEY, former mayor, became a candidate for mayor on the unexpired term of Benjamin F. Stapleton, Monday morning, when he filed with the city election commission a petition nominating him for mayor and asking that his name be placed on the ballot for the election scheduled for Aug. 12. "I have not, nor will I promise any office or appointment, privilege or emolument for support. In my appointments, politics, religion, race or color will have no place-ability and a willingness to work, and a record for loyalty and honesty will count." The petition was presented to the commission by Mr. Bailey himself shortly before 10 o'clock. It contains slightly over the 100 signatures required by the city charter. Altogether, more than 4,000 citizens had petitioned Mr. Bailey to become a candidate. Mr. Bailey's petition is the second to be filed with the elections commission. Stapleton's name will go on the ballot automatically, unless he should decide not to make the race again. Stapleton, under the recall law, ceased to be mayor the moment the elections commission held the petitions recalling him sufficient. He is now acting mayor, and will be so until his successor has been elected and qualified. Simultaneously with the filing of the nominating petition, Mr. Bailey issued a statement to the people of Denver setting out the policies which he will follow if he is elected mayor. Re-establishment of a responsible and efficient government, reduction of taxation, curtailment of bond issues and construction of a new city and county building without further taxation or bond issues are the principal planks in the platform upon which he will appeal to the voters. Mr. Bailey announced that no time would be lost in getting his campaign under way. Frank Ladd, former city building inspector, is in charge of Bailey headquarters in the Patterson building and will conduct the campaign. Charles W. Cochran, former secretary of the City Civil Service Commission, has been named head of the speakers' bureau. Arrangements are now being made for a large number of meetings in every section of the city. Mr. Bailey, in unequivocal terms, comes out in favor of the recall. He also announces his belief in "religious freedom and equal rights without regard to race or color." Statement Sets Forth Platform Mr. Bailey's statement follows: "To my Fellow Citizens: At the same time plans are being perfected for a city-wide organization, the object of which will be to get every voter registered and to the polls on election day. This organization will extend into every one of the city's 211 precincts. "I have been petitioned to become a candidate for mayor of Denver by thousands of our most substantial and best citizens and for the following reasons and in deference to their wishes I shall enter the contest: "First: To again establish a responsible, economical, representative, efficient and business government at the city hall that will champion the cause of the whole people against the greed of the few. 6006 BLOOD TABLETS are safer than 606. Money back guarantee. Price $2. Particulars free. Welch Medicine Co., Atlanta, Ga. "Second: To reduce taxation in Denver so as to more equitably balance the earning power of our people and business conditions now prevailing throughout the entire country. DREAD MASON Making and Repairing Musical Instruments Violins Our Specialty 2214 Larimer St., Denver "Third: To curtail further bond issues in Denver; the city and county of Denver has now obligated itself to pay some time in the future about $40,000,000 principal, and will pay nearly as much again for interest. It is time to stop. "Fourth: To begin and build a city and county building at the Civic Center without further cost to the taxpayers, without more bonds or tax levies. "There are many other reasons which will be advanced during the campaign, particularly matters relating to the corporation franchises soon expiring, in which the interests of the Mrs. Frank Turner of 2229 Clarkson street, who has been ill for two weeks, is much improved. Mrs. Fox of Edgewater, the mother of Mrs. Belle Payne, is quite ill at her home. Mrs. Etta Lucille Wilson, daughter of Mrs. Lucille Wilson Porter and granddaughter of our popular towns man, Jas. H. Gibbs of 2419 Clarkson St., became the bride of Mr. Garlan Austin on July 5, when they were united in holy wedlock by the Rev. C. H. Uggams, pastor of the People! Mrs. Arthur Newsome of Akron, Colo., arrived in the city Monday. She is the guest of her cousin, Mrs. E. S. Wright, of 2432 Emerson street. Harry Barbee returned Wednesday from Chicago, where he was called to attend the funeral of his brother, Charles Barbee. After an illness of several weeks Robert Watkins, an employee of the Denver and Rio Grande Western R. R. Co., is able to be up and walk around the house. Mrs. Bessie Balliff of Benton Harbor, Mich., sister of Mrs. Barbee and Mrs. Lightner, who has been seriously ill, is getting along nicely. Mrs. T. E. McClain met with quite a painful accident last Friday by cutting her eye with a curtain rod. She is getting along nicely. Mrs. Carrie Steele McClain returned home Monday after an extensive trip through the East, visiting Philadelphia, Washington, Baltimore, New York and Atlantic City. Mrs. Allie Spencer of 2819 California street, received the sad news last week of the death of her sister, Mrs. Williams, who died in Kansas City, Missouri. Mr. and Mrs. William Morrison and Mrs. Smith of Los Angeles, Cal., who have been in Colorado for a few weeks are visiting with Prof. and Mrs. George Morrison. They are the recipients of many social events. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Blanchard recently moved into a lovely new home of seven rooms at 3720 Lafayette St. They have as their house guests Mr. and Mrs. Hobbs of Kansas City, Mo., who have come to Colorado for an outing of two weeks or more. Mrs. Fannie Winn arrived home last Friday from Austin, Texas, where she has been at the bedside of her mother, who was quite ill but is improving. Mr. Robert W. Collier of Baltimore, Md., is in the city visiting his sister, Mrs. Nettie Boalware of 2414 California St., who has been quite sick. Mr. Collier is employed in the Balto. Post Office and an active member of Bethel A. M. E. Church. The Mountain States Motor Club will give its annual basket picnic and outing Colorado Day, August 1st at Fillius Park in the Denver Mountain Parks. Every owner of a car is invited. Bring your family, friends and a basket. The Club leaves from Roy Groomer's Garage near Shorters church at 9 a. m. Official route is Golden road and Mt. Vernon road to Fillius Park. Mrs. Josephine Evans of Joliet, Ill., is visiting with her sister and brother, Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Stephens of 1022 E. 19th Ave. She will be here for ten days, leaving afterwards for her home via Emporia, Kansas. Professor W. E. Day, principal of the Sapulpa city schools, Sapulpa, Okla., accompanied by Prof. J. H. Hines, principal of the East Waco school, Waco, Texas, arrived here last Tuesday, en route to California points. They were in residence with Mrs. Martin at 2248 Clarkson St. Attorney and Mrs. I. H. Spears of Tulsa, Okla., after spending a few days in the city last week left for Salt Lake and Los Angeles. They were accompanied by Mrs. S. E. Berry. According to them, the people of Tulsa are rapidly restoring their losses and are holding their own in the commercial world. Mrs. Marshall and her sons Harry and Walter of 2541 Clarkson St., rising musicians who left here recently for a tour of the West and Northwest are making very good impressions in the various cities they are visiting. They are being highly entertained and banqueted in response to the musical program they are engaged in. --- Mrs. Etta Lucille Wilson, daughter of Mrs. Lucille Wilson Porter and granddaughter of our popular townman, Jas. H. Gibbs of 2419 Clarkson St., became the bride of Mr. Garland Austin on July 5, when they were united in holy wedlock by the Rev. C. H. Uggams, pastor of the People's her husband is popular in fraternal Presbyterian church, at the pastor's residence, 2543 Welton St. Mrs. Austin is well known in motor circles being one of our best lady drivers, while orders. That Denver now boasts of a Colored automobile salesman is something that commends itself to the new and progressive element among us, whose determination is to win on merit and prove beyond a doubt our ability to accomplish things. In this end succeeding issues will be seen the advertisement of Mr. Hunter, only colored representative of the Walker Bros. Motor Co, and as it starts, "See Hunter First," anyone wishing to do justice to him and entertaining pride in one's ability to do should give him a chance to demonstrate by purchasing from and through him. Mr. Hunter's office is at the Five Points Business District. The Forty-eighth Grand Lodge of F. and A. Masons, Colorado Jurisdiction, will be held at Cheyenne, Wyo. August 10-13 inclusive. The committee of Arrangement, under the able leadership of W. H. Davis is working hard to make this session the best in the history of the lodge. Cheyenne citizens, usually famous for their hospitality and their ability to accomplish things invite all Denver to come and spend a real good time and participate in the monster program prepared for them. OKLAHOMA GIRLS MAKE RECORD MOTOR TRIP TO DENVER Mrs. Bernice Miller Wilson, Miss Mae Miller and Mrs. Golden Miller Hoskins, sisters, and members of one of Oklahoma's oldest and most respected families, reached Denver Monday evening at 9 o'clock after what is believed to be a record motor run from Oklahoma City to Denver. Leaving Oklahoma City Sunday morning, they pulled into Dodge City, Kansas, before dark of that same day, where they spent the night. On Monday morning at 6 o'clock they started for Denver and reached here as above mentioned, with an actual running time of 29 hours, from the capital of Oklahoma to the capital of Colorado. They have rooms with Mr. and Mrs. Geo. W. Gross, 1627 East Twenty-second avenue. THE DENVER COLORED CIVIC ASSOCIATION WILL ENTERTAIN FRIENDS AND VISITORS ON AUGUST 14, 1924 AT THE ARMORY OF THE STATE SCHOOL OF MINES IN GOLDEN, COLORADO. A GRAND PROMENADE AND SOIREE ON THE EVENING OF AUGUST 14, 1924, from 8:00 p. m. to 12:00 p. m. will be tendered to the friends and visitors by THE DENVER COLORED CIVIC ASSOCIATION. This is the first annual outing by the association and the officers have selected the most ideal spot in Colorado for this Breezy Promenade at the foot of Lookout Mountain in the spacious and commodious ARMORY at the State School of Mines, where on the third floor of this, the largest hall in the state, you can reach out of the window and break off an icicle from the craggy rocks of Lookout Mountain, or scoop up a hatful of frozen snow from the white-capped top of the world. WHAT A SENSATION! WHAT AN EXHILARATING THRILL!! When the guests begin to get too cool from playing in the ice and snow in August, there will be GAINES' FULL ORCHESTRA and plenty of hot coffee to warm them up. The State Armory is but a half a block directly ahead of where the cars stop in Golden. Special car service has been arranged to accommodate all who desire to go on the Interurban, cars leaving the loop every 15 minutes from 8:00 p. m. to 12:15 p. m. and returning from Golden at 12:15, discharging passengers at Twenty-seventh and Welton streets. For the information of those who take the trip in their autos they will have newly paved asphalt road from Denver to Golden. Two thousand invitation to this unique Mis-summer Soiree are now in course of preparation and will be distributed to the members of the association in a few days who will mail them to their friends and all out-of-town visitors who are in the city. There will be good music and refreshments in abundance. FUNERAL NOTICES Douglass Undertaking Company "OUR MOTTO: "FOR THE SAKE OF HUMANITY" National Identification Bureau "ASK US" PROFESSOR AND MRS. GEORGE MORRISON HIGHLY ENTERTAIN BROTHER AFTER TWELVE YEARS ABSENCE. "And the home shall be filled with joy and mirth As are found in the pleasures of earth." The surprise sprung by Prof. and Mrs. George Morrison of 2558 Gilpin St., is a proof beyond doubt that MERIT WILL ALWAYS TELL, and those whose good fortune it was to be present last Monday evening at the home of the Morrisons, can declare that from midnight to the wee small hours of the morn—"Joy reigned supreme" in the entertainment of their older brother, William, his wife and mother-in-law, Unmistakably, the Morrison boys (as they are generally spoken of) have been famous in the Mid-West for many years, and the cities of Denver, Boulder, Cleyenne and others have always contributed their share of praise for their efforts; but they had to launch out to be taught the lessons of the school of experience, and having thus achieved, they have made great impressions at all points of musical America. To give a detailed account of what transpired at the beautiful home of Prof. and Mrs. George Morrison would be "to gild refined gold or paint the lily," (as the poet puts it) but George, as we call him, is never lacking in anything his ambition and aspiraton offer, to present the best and most that within his power lies, so that in the impromptu celebration of his elder brother and family, he (to use the famous New York expression) "strut your stuff Miss Lizzy" and from the chorus of commendation of the brothers, the unusual geniality and hospitality of Mrs. George Morrison and her mother Mrs. Eva May, they cannot help from being termed true representatives of our people in art and everything pertaining to their intellectual and social development. But the hosts actually paled into comparative insignificance when music, games and cards winding up the twenty-first century refreshments which made us feel—"It was well we lived in the days of Prohibition or else"—that the enjoyment was added to and the George Morrison orchestra of Denver climaxed the situation with "Auld Lang Syne" in a manner never to be forgotten, for the "old lore" was much in evidence from classical, to sentimental to jazz, to (who said when the lights went out?) special early morning permit when one keeps within the boundaries of the time. Time and only time will bring back to our memory the day when our fathers, yea our parents catered to us, and the only result from the enjoyment engaged by their friends in the splendid manner of entertainment can be—that the old established family of Morrison Bros. from Boulder Frat. to Denver progressives must be impressed that are long we are bound to reach that goal by which recognition will be given for talent. Mr. Morrison's brother and family cannot help from taking with them to their home in Los Angeles the beautiful reminiscences of Denver and the associates and friends they met, and Mrs. Basket mother of the Morrisons cannot but be impressed with the fact—"That success comes to those who wait." Besides the usual jolly companions of the hosts and social set of Denver, the following out-of-town guests were: Mrs. Alice T. Baskett (mother of the Morrisons), Mrs. Reona Allen and Jack Morrison of Kansas City, Mo., Mr. and Mrs. George Q. Hanks of Washington, D. C., the Misses Fields, Hunter and Grant, Kansas City, Mo.; Mrs. Thornton of Joliet, Ill.; Mrs. Smith (mother of Mrs. Wm. Morrison) of Los Angeles. MORTUARY RECORD The Cammel Undertaking Co. Chavis - Grogre, the infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Antonia Chavis, departed this life Friday, July 18th. Funeral services Saturday from the residence, 900 Waze St. Interment Riverside. Marker - Eliza Eliza5eth, the beloved granddaughter of Mrs. Eliza Davis of 2549 Glenarm Place, departed this life Monday, July 21st, at her residence. Funeral arrangements not complete. HEAR THE GRAND MASTER OF ODD FELLOWS The Grand Master of Odd Fellows will arrive in the city next Friday and will give a grand lecture to all Odd Fellows and Household of Ruths at 2800 Welton street, Friday evening, August 1, at 8 o'clock. All members are urgently requested to attend. Carl Wilson, P. S. C. A. Burton, P. G. M. PEOPLE'S MORTUARY FUNERAL NOTICES Pulliam—Felix B., passed away at Fitzsimons General hospital July 21. Funeral services were held Wednesday, July 23, from the Post chapel. Interment, Fairmount. Simmons—Tom, brother of Clyde Jenkins, passed away July 22 at Fitzsimons General hospital. Remains were shipped to Atlanta, Ga., for burial. Shorter Excursion a Great Success Dome Rock Captured by a Merry Throng It was a jolly, good-natured crowd of between 500 and 600 persons on pleasure bent that defied the threatening weather conditions of Thursday morning and journeyed to beautiful DOME ROCK for a perfect day's outing. Ten coaches were filled to the brim when the SHORTER EXCURSION train pulled out of the Union Station, carrying young and old with food-laden baskets, and a spirit of gayety well worthy of the occasion. The day passed without an unpleasant incident of any character. Denver citizens who have come to look upon Shorter's annual excursion as their only care-free day of the year, were out in vast numbers and though a little tired out when home was reached, all pronounced it such as day as they had earnestly wished for. THE OFFICERS OF SHORTER are deeply grateful to the public for its generous patronage and the manner in which every one sought to contribute to the success of the outing and takes this opportunity through the columns of the COLORADO STATESMAN of giving public expression to the same. SHORTER CHAPEL NOTES Twenty-third and Washington Streets Lawn social Thursday, July 31, by the Helping Hand at the residence of Mrs. M. Martin, is your opportunity to meet the summer visitors. Sunday, August 3, is the fourth and last Quarterly Meeting for the conference year. The new Presiding Elder, Rev. I. S. Wilson, will be in charge. Love feast on Friday night. Friends who wish to contribute to the dollar money fund will find special friends' envelopes with the ushers. Sunday night is All States Visitors' night with a splendid program of music and greetings from our talented visitors. The roll of each state will be called to see which state has the largest representation present. Program begins at 7:45 p. m. Monday night at 8 o'clock will see the closing program and exhibition of the Vacation Daily Bible School. The children have some very splendid handicraft work on exhibit. The public is invited. Tuesday night is the occasion of the initial recital of one of Denver's own sons, Aristide G. Chapman, lyric tenor, under the auspices of Shorter Choir. Every race-loving individual will be present to encourage this young man, of whom all of us may be proud. The choir covered itself with glory in Boulder last Sunday when they sang for the Allen Chapel rally at the high school before a large audience of both races. Several cars of friends motored up with the choir and pastor. The picnic to Dome Rock on Thursday was all that heart could wish. Those who waited for the real picnic were not disappointed, but were rather surprised at the exceptionally good time enjoyed. ADVENTIST LECTURES TOWN TALK The West Indian Evangelist is delivering God's last message of mercy each night at Twenty-sixth and Ogden streets, in the S. D. A. church. He convinced his largest audience last Sunday night on "What happened in Heaven in 1844 as foretold by Daniel, the prophet, was the beginning of the 'Investigative Judgment.'" When it will end no one knows, but all must now "Look to Jesus" for victory over sin to be ready for Revelation 22:11 and 12. Hear him Sunday night and each night this week. Estate of Louis W. Wilson, Decensed No. 34459 All persons having claims against said estate are hereby notified to present them for adjustment in the County Court of the City and County of Denver, Colorado, on the 2nd day of September, 1924. MRS. DOVE W. PIERCE, Executrix. Thos. Campbell, Attorney. First publication July 19, 1924. Last publication August 16, 1924. 1027 Twenty-first St., Denver Office Phone Champa 7914. Res. 2337 Glenarm Place. Phone Champa 3303. HAVE BETTER HAIR EVERYBODY Likes TO LOOK THEIR BEST WELL GROOMED HAIR ADDS A GREAT APPEARANCE APPEARANCE BY USING FOUR'D HAIR POMADEAN DOPFORD' ING AND HAMPOO COMBS, STUBBORN, HARSH, SNARLY & COMES COMES, SOFTER, STRAIGHTER MORE HAIR ADDS A GREAT DEAL TO PERSONAL APPEARANCE. BY USING FORD'S HAIR MADEE AND DRAFTED HAIR STRAIGHTENING AND SHAMPOO COMBS, STUBBORN, HARSH, SNARLY & BURR. CORNES SOFTER, STRAIGHTER MORE PLIABLE, AND EASIER TO DRESS AND PUT UP IN ANY STYLE THE LENGTH OF ALLAYING DANDRUFF AND LOCAL SCALP TROUBLES. For Sale By Drugists & Dealers In Toilet Articles. Be sure you get the genuine Fords' Manufactured only by THE OZONIZED OX MARROW CO. MARSWAN ILLINOIS Send for a book telling, how to take care of the hair and complexion, it is free. IN THE LEWIS AUGUST HOUSE CLEANING SALE COATS an Coats in a Reco OATS and SUIT Coats in a Record Price Cut COATS and SUITS Smart Top Coats, $10 Formerly priced $25 to $29.75 Of downy wool and plain and checked sport lined throughout. 111 Dress and Sport Dressy Co Coats $19.75 Models of ri Of downy wool and plain and checked sport fabrics. Silk lined throughout. Formerly priced $39.75 and $75 Models of twill and sport fabrics. Navy, gray, tan and sport mixtures. Some with trims of summer fur, others with braid or self-material. Sizes from 16 to 44. Suits at Clearaway Prices Suits at Clearaway Prices Smart Tailored Suits, $19.75 Formerly Priced $34.75 to $59.75 Plain twill, hairline stripe, su gray and tan. Also sport models, in the sport fabrics. Misses' and Women's Appar LEWIS Colorado's Home Store, SI es' and Women's Apparel Shops—Third EWIS & SO Colorado's Home Store, Sixteenth at Stout Misses' and Women's Apparel Shops—Third Floor LEWIS&SON Colorado's Home Store, Sixteenth at Stout Street Forty-Eighth Grade of F. & A. M. COLORADO JURISDICTION will Wyo., August 10-13 Inclusive. Lodge of Sorrows, Sunday August 7:30 p. m. Open Grand Lodge Monday, Augu at EAGLE'S HALL, Monday evening, City-Eighth Grand Lodge of F. & A. Masons OLORADO JURISDICTION will be held at C. August 10-13 Inclusive. ledge of Sorrows, Sunday August 10, A. M. E. m. ten Grand Lodge Monday, August 11, enter GLE'S HALL, Monday evening, August 11. Forty-Eighth Grand Lodge of F. & A. Masons COLORADO JURISDICTION will be held at Cheyenne, Wyo., August 10-13 Inclusive. Lodge of Sorrows, Sunday August 10, A. M. E. Church 7:30 p. m. Open Grand Lodge Monday, August 11, entertainment at EAGLE'S HALL, Monday evening, August 11. Short Sessions on Tuesday. "LET 'ER BUCK." .FRONTIER PARK, TUESDAY AFTERNOON. On Wednesday evening at Eagles Hall, "Days of old Cheyenne." Souvenir prizes for the best Cow Girls, Indian Maids and Cow-Boys, etc. LET 'ER BUCK." .FRONTIER PARK, TU RNOON. Wednesday evening at Eagles Hall, "Day one." Souvenir prizes for the best Cow Girl and Cow-Boys, etc. "LET 'ER BUCK." .FRONTIER PARK, TUESDAY AFTERNOON. On Wednesday evening at Eagles Hall, "Days of old Cheyenne." Souvenir prizes for the best Cow Girls, Indian Maids and Cow-Boys, etc. COMMITTEE ON ARRANGEMENT W. H. Davis, Chairman. W. H. Redd, Secretary. Benjamin Davis, Poole Turner, Spencer Caves and Tillford Ashford. W. H. Davis, Chairman. Benjamin Davis, Poole Turner ford Ashford. HEAR! HEAR! "THE LAST MESSA TO A DOOMER AT THE SEVENTH D CHURC 26th and Ogden, Each Nigh West Indian E See the Wonderful Pictures trate each s "THE SPIRIT AND BR HEAR! HEAR!! HEAR! THE LAST MESSAGE OF MESSION TO A DOOMED WORLD" BY THE SEVENTH DAY ADVENTION CHURCH And Ogden, Each Night at 8 O'clock, West Indian Evangelist The Wonderful Pictures which are used to trate each sermon. THE SPIRIT AND BRIDE SAY COM --- HEAR! HEAR!! HEAR!!! AT THE SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH 26th and Ogden, Each Night at 8 O'clock, by the West Indian Evangelist See the Wonderful Pictures which are used to illustrate each sermon. "THE SPIRIT AND BRIDE SAY COME!!" NOTICE OF ADJUSTMENT DAY Estate of Mary Foreman, Deceased. No. 34,369. All persons having claims against salt estate are hereby notified to pres- ent the notice to the Director of the City and County of Denver, Colorado, on the 19th day of August, 1924. MRS. FAIRFAX B. HOLMES, Executrix. Thomas Campbell, Attorney. First publication, July 5, 1924. Last publication, August 2, 1924. Nicely modern furnished rooms for rent. Mrs. M. Mackey, 2230 Ogden St. Phone Franklin 2771-J. Nicely modern transient furnished rooms for rent. Apply Mrs. Josephine Graves, 2250 Cleveland Place. Phone Champa 2037W. --- and SUITS cord Price Cut Dressy Coats, $39.75 Models of rich charmeen, twill Fashona. Tans, navy, brown or black. Dressy Coats, $49.75 Formerly priced up to $79.75 Charmeen, twill, gerona; expertly finished; richly trimmed with fancy folds, pin tucks, braid or fur. Suits at $34.75 Formerly Priced $59.75 to $125.00 A few three-piece costume suits; others plain tailored in. navy, and black twill Not all sizes in all styles. Reparel Shops—Third Floor S & SON Sixteenth at Stout Street Grand Lodge A. Masons TION will be held at Cheyenne, e. y August 10, A. M. E. Church day, August 11, entertainment evening, August 11. day. FRONTIER PARK, TUESDAY at Eagles Hall, "Days of old for the best Cow Girls, Indian AR!! HEAR!!! MESSAGE OF MERCY RED WORLD" DAY ADVENTIST ARCH night at 8 O'clock, by the Evangelist es which are used to illus- n sermon. BRIDE SAY COME!!" NOTICE OF ADJUSTMENT DAY Estate of Harry W. Clay, Deceased. No. 34.536. All persons having claims against suit estate are hereby notified to pre- sent them in custody to the Court. Court of the City and County of Den- ver, Colorado, on the 12th day of August, 1924. ANNIE CLAY, Administratrix. E. P. Blakemore, Attorney. First publication, July 5, 1924. Last publication, August 2, 1924. Modern furnished rooms for rent at 2248 Clarkson St., phone Champa 1205J. Dinners served daily at 5 p. m. Sunday dinners at 2 p. m. MRS. M. MARTIN, Prop. Join the N. A. A. C. P. NOW. --- Something to Think About By F. A. WALKER mother's Co Mother's Cook Book --- A PRICELESS TREASURE WITHIN your house of clay there is a rare treasure, worth more to you than all the wealth of the world. This remarkable jewel, which you have never seen, is you, yourself, hidden all the time from your most searching gaze. Even by looking into a mirror, you can not glimpse its form or discern its beauty, though at every moment of your life you are conscious of its existence. This wonderful gem, this spark of enduring vitality, controls your thoughts, stirs your emotions and bestows happiness or wretchedness. it leads you to destiny. In the twinkling of an eye it is capable of arousing the fondest love or the most despicable hate. It may be generous or selfish, noble or mean, brave or cowardly, but whatever its nature, its erratic moods are beyond all human understanding, never comprehended except darkly, from one moment to another. To know yourself is to spend a lifetime $15^{\circ}$ the quest and fall at the end, yet the quest is worth making. You may be among the world's greatest philosophers, but be as ignorant of yourself as a wooden spoon. You cannot say with certainty whether in battle you would be a coward or hero, forgive an arch enemy or destroy him, hide yourself if suddenly impoverished, or face the jeers of former associates. Some time ago, a woman who had shot Hors in the jungles of Africa, fainted before a group of smiling friends who had come to hear her lecture. Their beaming faces and shining eyes were more overpowering to her than the crouches and charges of snarling wild beasts. Her soul was suddenly palsied, her house of clay crumbled. You are robust and lustrous today. Reflections of a Bachelor Girl By HELEN ROWLAND THERE are only 13 original jokes, but every man seems to fancy that he married one of them. Every woman knows that a man is a little bit out of his mind when he proposes marriage to her, but her vanity won't permit her to admit it, by offering him a chance to escape. Why will a college boy waste weeks in working up an effective "line," when the little ones, "How beautiful you are!" and "I love you!" which grandfather used, are still the most thrilling in the English tongue? Silence is the lace curtain, through which a wise woman peeps out at men, without permitting them to see her undraped thoughts or to satisfy their curiosity about mental furnishings. When a man can't find anything around the house to improve, criticize or "sympathize," for a whole week, he begins to think that his "morale" is weakening. An innocent young man should be perfectly sure of his heart before he gives it into a strong woman's keeping, in these days. He may never get it back again! As long as a man can make a woman cry, he can dictate terms to her; but no sane man was ever so foolish as to argue with a smiling woman. Let us have enough strength to be permanent, and to be long and the might, both to be queer. SEASONABLE DAINTIES A VERY attractive and tasty dish which may be served for an occasion is: Pimento Bisque. Put through a riceer one can of plentoes (six); add two teaspoonfuls if salt, one-half teaspoonful of tabasco sauce, one-half cupful of cream and three pints of nicely-seasoned chicken stock. Let come to the boiling point and season; serve in cups. Aspic Jelly. This is used in so many ways that a good recipe is a great comfort. Take one quart of well-sensored soup stock, three tablespoonfuls of gelatin, the juice of a lemon and a few grains of tayenne. Stir in the slightly-beaten egg whites and pour into mold to chill and become firm. This may be used as tarnish for various dishes. Ginger Ale Salad. Soften one-fourth of a package of gelatin in one-fourth of a cupful of water. Let stand over hot water to dis- but tomorrow you may be weak and dull. The dominating power within you has temporarily lost its force. Without it you are nothing but dust, blown hither and thither by the winds. Judgment cannot be sure, faith cannot be strong, nor life itself made to function as it should, unless the jewel you are carrying with you shall be kept as clear and bright as the stars of the firmament. (© by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) MEN YOU MAY MARRY BY E. R. PETSER Has a man like this proposed to you? Symptoms: His broad A trombones and halls the rosy dawn and dewy eye! He likes you because your A is natural and he knows his is flat and often narrow! His clothes are entirely Britishly cut, his spirit is In England, though his forefathers are gathered here. He is no athlete, yet, when in America, he can still "take the train." His climbing, however, is a miracle to see! IN FACT The social trapeze is never still from his activities. Prescription to the bride: Teach him the real who's who. THE CREAM IN SOME MILK WILL NOT RISE TO THE TOP. (@ by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) SCHOOL DAYS Cop MAMES IT TO BROOM THERE'S ONLY ROOM COMFORTANT FOR JUST ONE— YOU AIN'T GITTIN' VERY WET — YOU'RE RIGHT UNDER THAT LIMB — DANT RAINH HEEM HAND, NATHW- ITS JUST A SNOWEL THEM WAS THE HAPPY DAYS — Copyright- Marriage is the point at which some women stop kissing—and begin hissing. A man never suffers until love is quite dead; but it is the death throes of a romance which torture a woman. After the funeral, she can be so resigned and serene that she almost enjoys her "grief." (© by Helen Rowland.) solve. Add a grating of lemon rind, one and three-fourths cupfuls of ginger ale. Turn into molds to chill and set. Serve very cold on heart leaves of lettuce with a highly-seasoned mayonnaise dressing, to which three tablespoonfuls of cocktail dressing has been added. Tomatoes Stuffed With Beans. Cut a slice from the top of four tomatoes, remove the pulp and invert to drain. To one and one-half cupfuls of good baked beans add one onion, a tablespoonful of chopped parsley—the onion should be either grated or chopped—one-half cupful of nuts, two tablespoonfuls of celery, chopped, and salt and pepper to taste. Mix all together and add a bit of French dressing or mayonnaise to molten; fill the tomatoes and put a small spoonful of salad dressing on top of each filled tomato. Green peppers filled with baked beans moistened with catsup or cream, if liked, and baked until tender, make a very tasty luncheon dish. Neville Maxwell (©. 1924. Western Newspaper Union.) ```markdown ``` 1-2-5 Henri Matisse The young lady across the way says Turkey certainly ought not to be recognized by the civilized world until she has punished all those responsible for the Herrin massacre. (© by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) Will Be Wasted Anyway "Captain, I am afraid of seasickness. What food shall I eat?" "The cheapest!"—Kasper (Stockholm). USUALLY DO. I expect to spend my vacation at a couple of hotels. Do they do you good? They certainly do. I expect to spend my vacation at a couple of hotels. Do they do you good? They certainly do. If He Remembers By DOUGLAS MALLOCH I KNOW how men will praise him know How great the honors he will bear; Still but a boy, I see the glow Of many laurels he will wear. Forevermore before his eyes Straight down his path a beacon glances: I know the height he will arise, If he remembers Mother's dreams. I know how men will come to him In quest of counsel in their need; The way of life is often dim, And feet will stumble, hearts will bleed. But he will wisely speak and well, A shepherd heart to countless herds, Yes, he eternal truth will tell. He shall have strength when men are weak, And consolation in his cares, Know where to turn and where to seek, If he remembers Mother's pray'rs. I know the height he yet will win. One thought will save him, one that can: Friendship and Wisdom The amity that wisdom knits not folly may easily unite—Shakespeare POINTS ON KEEPING WELL Dr. Frederick R. Green, Editor of "Health." (©. 1924, Western Newspaper Union.) SUNLIGHT WE ARE just beginning to appreciate the value of sunlight as a health-producer. The ancient people worshiped the sun, which they recognized as the source of all energy and life. Modern science is proving what the ancient civilizations believed. King Tut has had more front-page publicity in the last two years than any living man. His name is known today to ten times as many people as ever heard of him while he was alive. King Tut was a sun-worshper, as were many of the people of his day. The Greeks took sun baths regularly. The Romans knew that sunlight is of benefit in healing sores and infections and in maintaining health. Pliny, the Roman historian, writes that his aged friend Spurina na kept himself youthful by taking an hour's sunbath every day. When civilization moved from southern to central and northern Europe, people wore heavy clothing and lived in houses and forgot the value of sunlight. Dr. Rollier of Switzerland reports remarkable cures of tuberculosis in children by the use of sunlight. Dr. Lo Grosso, medical director of J. N. Adams Memorial hospital at Perrysburg, N. Y., gets wonderful results in bone and skin tuberculosis by undressing the children and keeping them in the sunshine and fresh air. Even in winter the children wear nothing but overshoes to keep their feet dry and caps to protect their heads and ears. Dr. Lo Grosso says, "With the exception of one or two isolated hospitals we are neglecting the greatest of all healers, the sun. Our eyes are cast down, whereas healing is from the skies." Sunlight kills disease germs in a short time. The more sunlight we have in our houses the healthier we are. The more we get out in the sunlight the healthier our bodies will be. Exposure of the skin to sunlight lowers blood pressure, increases the depth of respiration, dilates the blood vessels and brings the blood to the surface. The number of blood corpuscles is increased, as well as the power of resisting disease. This remedy must be used with common sense. A sunburn is just as painful and as bad as any other kind of burn. Don't go out the first day the bathing beaches are open and lie all day in the sunlight. Don't try to get the tan in a few days of summer vacation that should have accumulated all through the year. Get the good effects of the sun without the bad effects. Get outdoors every day all the year round, especially in the summer, and get the benefit of the healing and stimulating effect of sunlight—the source of all heat, light and life in the universe. WHY RISK LIFE TO SAVE 5 MINUTES? PUNCTUALITY is a virtue. But even virtue can be carried too far. Samuel E. Freundlich, sixty years old, had been employed by one firm for over thirty years and in all that time he had never been late. He lived at Rosehill, a Chicago suburb, and took the 7:06 a. m. train every morning. The other day he was a few minutes late and reached the station just as the train was pulling out. He ran to catch it, jumped for the platform, missed it and went under the wheels. He lost both of his legs and probably his life. We are all creatures of habit. Regularity and punctuality are highly commendable characteristics. But they aren't worth risking your life for. It's better to break your record than to break your neck. Be on time, by all means, but when an occasional miscalculation makes you a few minutes late, don't risk your life in order to maintain your record. Men who are sixty years old haven't any business running after trains, anyhow. It's all right for the boy or the young man. But the muscle fibers of the heart are like rubber. When you are young they can stretch, even beyond the ordinary, without permanent injury. But by middle life the heart muscle is like old rubber. It's all right as long as you don't put an unusual strain on it, but if it's stretched, it's apt to break. Men and women over forty-five, and especially over fifty, should avoid sudden, extreme and unusual exertion. If the heart muscle is not diseased, it's fully equal to the ordinary, everyday strain which is put on it. But sudden and severe exertion may cause serious if not fatal consequences. Unusual exertion increases the rate and force of the heart's action. The heart is like a rubber ball. If it is overstrained, it stretches. This may cause acute dilatation of the heart, sometimes severe enough to produce death, or it may result in stretching the valves of the heart so that they never work properly thereafter. Many serious heart conditions have their origin in some unusual exertion, which is often unnecessary. If you are middle-aged or past, don't run after street cars or trains. Wait until the next one comes, even if you are a little late. This may require five or ten minutes' waiting, but it may mean several years longer life. THE COLORADO STATESMAN DII the Mouth-Pier the People Colorado and the Entire West RELIABLE chronicle of their doings gress; a faithful min heir wants, their ho r best aspiration. THE COLORADO STATESMAN equaled as an advertis medium for the busi of professional men women. excellent family jour peaking to and for m housand colored citizen The Mouth-Piece of the People of Colorado and the Entire West A 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. $2.00 A YEAR $1.25 SIX MONTH $.75 THREE MONTH THE GREAT ORGAN OF THE BORING MASS THE GREAT ORGAN OF THE LABORING MASSES We are always looking for something different in sandwiches, for without them a lunch is not very satisfactory. BREAD Winnebago Sandwiches. — Grind a fresh young carrot or more, depending upon the amount of filling which one needs for the sandwiches. A cupful of ground carrot will make filling for a dozen small sandwiches. Add a stalk of celery and a small green onion; all may be ground together. Mix with a good mayonnaise, a tablespoonful or more of chopped nuts and salt and cayenne to taste. This makes a moist filling which does not soak the bread, and if a leaf of lettuce is added, will be rich in vitamins. Russian Sandwiches.—Mix one cream cheese with one-fourth of a teaspoonful of salt, one teaspoonful each of chopped olive and green pepper, one pimento, one egg, hard-cooked and chopped; molsten with mayonnaise and spread on whole wheat bread. Tongue and Ham Sandwiches.—Put through the meat chopper equal portions of ham and tongue, both cooked. Season to taste with salt and pepper and spread between slices of buttered bread, either rye or white. Chilaly Sandwiches.—Cook two tablespoonfuls of green pepper, finely chopped, with one and one-half tablespoonful of onion, also chopped, stirring constantly. Add one-half cupful of canned tomato, three-fourths of a pound of soft cheese, three-fourths of a teaspoonful of salt, two tablespoonfuls of cream and one egg slightly beaten, with cayenne to taste. Date Nut Bars.—Beat two eggs until light, add one cupful of sifted brown sugar, one cupful of chopped nut meats, one cupful of chopped dates, five tablespoonfuls of flour, one-half teaspoonful of baking powder, a few grains of salt. Mix well and bake in pan 7 by 10 inches. When cold sprinkle with powdered sugar and cut in bars one inch wide by two inches long. In life's small things be resolute and great. To keep thy muscles trained, knowest thou when fate Thy measure takes or when she'll say to thee: "I find the worthy; do this thing for me!" —Emersom HOT WEATHER GOOD THINGS There is nothing that so touches the spot as a refreshing drink on a hot day. The following is a famous punch which will be cherished when once tried. MILK Giron's Punch. — Boll together to a thick sirup, three cupfuls of sugar and two cupfuls of water, cool partially and add two cupfuls of strawberry juice, one cupful of pineapple juice and one-half cupful of orange juice with the same of lemon juice and a quart of cold water. Chill for several hours, then serve in a punch bowl poured over a quart of orange water ice. Lemon Velvet.—Take three-fourths of a cupful of water, one-half cupful of sugar, one-half teaspoonful of gelatin, and one tablespoonful of water, three tablespoonfuls of lemon juice. Stir the sugar and water until well mixed, boil gently for three minutes. Soak the gelatin in the cold water, add to the first mixture and stir until dissolved. Cool, add the lemon juice and freeze. This amount will serve two; multiply it by two or three for a larger family. Orange Eggnog.—Beat one egg, add a pinch of salt, two teaspoonfuls of sugar, one-half cupful of orange juice, one-fourth of a cupful of milk and a grating of orange rind. Strain into a glass after beating well and sprinkle with the grated rind. Chill all ingredients before serving. Cantaloupe Cup.—Chill small melons, cut in halves, remove the seeds and fill with vanilla ice cream, garnish with small pieces of candied ginger or browned almonds. Fruit Punch.—Shred four oranges and two lemons, add two cupfuls of water for each cupful of pulp, sweeten with a sugar slurp. Serve with a pint of grape juice added with chipped ice. Chocolate Eggnog.—Add a beaten egg to the chocolate milk shake, beating all with an egg beater. Serve with sandwiches or crackers. Raspberry and Currant Frappe.—Boll one quart of water and one-third of a cupful of sugar for ten minutes; then add one and one-third cupfuls of currant juice, two-thirds of a cupful of raspberry juice and freeze. Asparagus, green peas, beans or carrots, if left over from a meal, may be washed from the sauce and used in salads. Nellie Maxwell CHEF'S KITCHEN Conveniently Arranged Kitchen Helps Housekeeper. The kitchen is the workshop in most farm homes. In it the housekeeper and her helpers prepare the food for the family, and from it as a center carry on most of the other housework. More and better work can be done in a well-lighted shop arranged for the comfort and convenience of the workers and equipped with good tools than in a dark shop where much time must be spent in unnecessary steps and energy wasted with scattered equipment. Business men have found this a sound principle, and it should be applied to the farm kitchen so that the housekeeper can do her work more quickly and with the least fatigue. Ample Protection Afforded Against Moth Injury. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) Chests made of the heartwood of red cedar in good condition and thoroughly tight are effective in protecting fabrics from clothes moths, it has been found by the United States Department of Agriculture, provided proper precautions are first taken to beat, brush and sun all articles before they are placed in the chest. Experiments with cedar chests from the time of manufacture until they were one year old indicate that chests which are cared for properly will retain indelinitely their value as protectors against moth ravages. Since it is the odor of red cedar which is effective against moths, it is recommended that in using cedar chests for the protection of fabrics, carpets, furs, and other clothing special care should be taken to prevent andue escape of the aroma from the chests. The chests at all times should remain tightly closed except when clothing is being removed or placed in them, which should take as little time as possible. Aside from their value in killing young clothes moth larvae, cedar chests are so tightly constructed that adult moths or millers cannot gain access to them except when they are open. This is not true of the average trunk in which clothing is stored. Cedar chests do not kill the adult moth or miller, its eggs, or its worms or larvae stage after the worms have become one-half or full grown. This is not of great importance, however, for if clothing is thoroughly crushed, beaten, or sunned before it is placed in chests, as it should be under any condition of storage, all the larger worms are removed and many of the eggs killed. The main point to remember is that cedar chests will kill newly hatched and very young larvae before they will cause damage, and if clothing is stored in chests after it has been thoroughly cleaned for storage, with especial attention to the brushing out of all seams, pockets, or folds, and the removal of grease spots and other stains, the chests will act as certain protectors. As it is only the worm or larva stage of the clothes moth that can injure clothing, it is very important that the older worms, which are not so easily killed, be removed by brushing and sunning before the clothing is put in chests. When clothes moth larvae become half to full grown they have usually fed so much upon a garment that their presence can be easily detected. For this reason, if the careful housewife will so thoroughly clean, brush and sun her articles that she is unable to notice any larvae after a careful inspection of her garment, she may rest assured that it will remain protected against moth ravages if she immediately places it in a good cedar chest. If clothing is cleaned, brushed, and sunned with great care it will remain unmolested by moths if tightly rolled with naphthalene and wrapped in two thicknesses of paper. One pound of fresh naphthalene placed in any chest constructed as tightly as are cedar chests will protect clothing just as well as cedar chests. Baked Bananas Baked bananas served with raisin sauce makes a good dessert, suggests the United States Department of Agriculture. Select firm bananas. Remove the skin and split lengthwise. Place in a pan and coat over with corn sirup. Bake until the bananas are soft. Serve hot with a raisin sauce made as follows: Mix the cornstarch with a little cold water, blend with other materials, except the vanilla, which should be added just before serving. Cook 15 minutes. VARIOUS DISHES FOR USE OF SOFT JELLY Supplies Sweetening and Fruit Flavor in Punch. (Prepared by the United Department of Agriculture.) When a batch of jelly has for some reason failed to set as firmly as one would like, there are still many uses for it. A glassful of soft fruit jelly in a punch supplies both sweetening and fruit flavor. A few spoonfuls of soft turt jelly beaten into whipped cream gives a delicious flavor. Tarts filled with the jelly and baked are good for dessert. The jelly can be used as a sauce for blanc-mange, hot cakes or ice cream. It may be served with cream cheese or cottage cheese for lunch. With hot bread or in sandwiches the jelly is as useful as if it were firm, and for jelly roll or layer cake it is easier to spread than a stiff jelly. Mixed with coconut the jelly Fruit Punch Is Delicious. may be used to line a dessert mold, adding both to the flavor and appearance of the dish, says the United States Department of Agriculture. Delicious confections can be made of cubes of overstiff jelly. By using toothpicks to handle them they can be dipped into sweet chocolate melted over hot water, and set on paraffin paper to harden. Special chocolate for candy-coating may be purchased in most grocery stores. To Remove Tarnish From Connet, Brass and Bronze The tarnish on copper, brass and bronze is copper carbonate. It may be removed by friction or dissolved in weak acids. Rottenstone mixed with oil to a creamy consistency is the common substance used on these metals. After this cleaner has been applied the metal should be polished with a soft cloth. A final rubbing with dry rottenstone or whiting will give the metal an even brighter luster. Oxalic-acid solution, buttermilk or vinegar, especially when warmed, quickly dissolves the tarnish on these metals. All traces of these cleaning agents must be removed, however, or the metal will tarnish again very quickly, says the United States Department of Agriculture. Washing the metal in water, drying it and rubbing it with dry whiting is usually effective. The whiting not only takes up moisture, but pollishes by friction. Preserve Eggs in Lime If water glass is not obtainable for preserving eggs, lime solution may be used, says the United States Department of Agriculture. It is not considered so good as water glass, as in some instances eggs preserved by this method have tasted slightly of lime, although at other times limewater has proved entirely satisfactory. To preserve with lirae, dissolve 2 pounds of unslaked lime in a small quantity of water and dilute with 5 gallons of water that has previously been boiled and cooled. Allow the mixture to stand until the lime settles, then pour off and use the clear liquid. Place clean, fresh eggs in a clean earthenware crock or jar and pour the clear limewater into the vessel until the eggs are covered. At least 2 inches of the solution should cover the top layer of eggs. The KITCHEN CABINET (©, 1924, Western Newspaper Union.) Would you throw away a diamond because it pricked you? One good friend is not to be weighed against the jewels of all the earth. If there is unkindness between us let us come face to face and have it out. Quick, before love grows cold.—Robert Smith. COOLING FRUIT DRINKS Fruit juices, slightly sweetened and served in small glasses half-full of crushed ice, may be served preceding a formal dinner. The juice of one fruit or a combination that blends may be used. 300 A plain sipru to use for sweetening drinks of fruit juice, cocktails and punches, if often served, will be found very convenient. Put into a saucepan one cupful of sugar and one cupful of water; stir until the sugar is dissolved, then boil gently for eight minutes. Pour into a glass jar and set away for use when needed. This is much better for sweetening lemonade or orange juice than sugar. Pineapple Mash.—Take one quart of water, two cupfuls of sugar, two cans of grated pineapple, the juice of six lemons, one cupful of ice water, three pints of ginger ale, or ice water or soda water; mint and maraschino cherries. Boll together for ten minutes the sugar and water, add the pineapple and lemon juice. To one pint of the mixture add one cupful of ice water and freeze until firm. Chill the remainder of the mixture. Just before serving, strain into a punch bowl; add the ginger ale and the frozen mixture, removed from the freezer with a scoop. Garnish with mint leaves and cherries. Serve in tall glasses. Strawberry Cocktail.—Take one fourth of a cupful each of grapefruit juice, fresh strawberry juice and one half cupful of charged water, one tablespoonful of lemon juice, three tablespoonfuls of sugar; mix in a cocktail shaker. Put crushed ice in four cocktail glasses; pour in the mixture and serve at once. Pineapple-Grape Juice Punch.—Boll one cupful of sugar and two cupfuls of water five minutes; add two cupfuls of canned pineapple, finely chopped, the juice of two lemons and one pint of grape juice. Chill and strain into a pitcher over pieces of ice. Just before serving add a pint of chilled water. Wouldst thou fashion for thyself a seemly life? Then do not fret over what is past and gone; And splite of all thou mayst have left behind Live each day as if thy life were just begun. CHERRY TIME Did ever any one know of a better pie than cherry pie? Is so let us hear about it. The cherry pie always has been, is and ever shall be the pie par excellence. The luscious, julcy, fine-flavored fruit is universally well liked. E The more juice that can be kept within the limits of the crust, the better the pie. Tastes differ as to the seasoning of cherry pie. Sugar to taste, a bit of butter and the delightful flavor of the cherry itself is the way most cooks prepare this dessert. The cherries are pitted and juice and all poured into the crust, adding a tablespoonful or two of flour to slightly thicken the juice. There are several methods of keeping the pie from boiling over and wasting its juice. One is to use a paper funnel made of a piece of rolled writing paper, thrust into the opening in the top of the pie; another and better way is to bind the edge of the pie with a two-inch strip of old muslin, wrung from cold water. This makes a good seal and if removed as soon as the pie is taken from the oven will come off without marring the crust. Spiced Cherries.—Spiced cherries are a delicacy which add to any menu. The proportions are the same used for any spiced fruit: seven pounds of fruit to five of sugar, three tablespoonfuls each of stick cinnamon and whole cloves tied in a small bag and cooked for a few minutes in a pint of vinegar, then all cooked together for an hour and a half very slowly, stirring often to keep them from burning. For those who enjoy the fresh fruit, pit the cherries and add an equal measure of sugar, stir until the sugar is well dissolved, then can in small cans and set in the back part of the ice chest. Cherry Olives.—Fill jars with fine fruit on the stem, fresh and unbrushed; fill the jar with strong vinegar and waer in equal parts; add a tablespoonful of salt to a quart jar and seal. These are delicious to serve in winter with meats. Chocolate Milk Shake.—In a tall glass put two tablespoonfuls of finely shaved ice and three tablespoonfuls of chocolate sirup. Add slowly two-thirds of a cupful of milk, stirring until smooth. Top with a spoonful of ice cream or whipped cream. Nellie Maxwell THE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION The St. Rose Branch of the Holy Name Society, Springfield, Kentucky the oldest Colored Holy Name Society in the United States. Many of the members of this society will take part in the National Holy Name Rally to be held in Washington, September 21st, next. More than 200,000 Catholic Men will take part in this great demonstration which will be the largest in the history of America. The Colored Catholic Men will play an important part in this great demonstration which will commemorate the 650 th anniversary of that organization. HOWARD & HOWARD GROCERY Fresh Vegeta GROCERIES AND MEATS Fresh Vegetables and Fruits Daily Free Delivery to any part of the city. MAIN 6338 718 E. TWENTY-SIXTH AVE. CHAMPA PHARMACY 2101 CHAMPA Is the place to get your S, CHEMICALS AND PATENT MEDICINES WE SERVE DRINKS. PRESCRIPTIONS OUR SPECIALTY. and we will deliver the goods to all parts of the city. JAMES E. THRALL, Propr. IN 2425 PHONE 8444 THE CHAMBER 23 Is the DRUGS, CHEMICAL WE S PRESCRIPTION Phone us and we will deli JAMES I THE CHAMPA PHARMACY Is the place to get your DRUGS, CHEMICALS AND PATENT MEDICINES WE SERVE DRINKS. PRESCRIPTIONS OUR SPECIALTY. Phone us and we will deliver the goods to all parts of the city. JAMES E. THRALL, Propr. C. E. Weatherhead PHC WEAT HAT HIGHEST QUALITY RE MEN'S A 1722 STOUT STREET Granberry Ta OFFICE; 27 EATHERHEAD HAT FACTORY ESTABLISHED 1924 T QUALITY RENOVATING AND REMODELING OF MEN'S AND WOMEN'S HATS T STREET ALBANY HOTEL BLDG. berry Taxi & Baggage Co. OFFICE; 2713 WELTON STREET We Move and Store Furniture I have a room for rent or want a room call us DES: $3.00 per hour. DAY and NIGHT SERVICE NBERRY, Mgr. DENVER, COLORADO WEATHERHEAD HAT FACTORY ESTABLISHED 1874 Granberry Taxi & Baggage Co. OFFICE; 2713 WELTON STREET If you have a room in TAXI RATES: $3.00 per T. G. GRANBERRY, Mgr. If you have a room for rent or want a room call us TAXI RATES: $3.00 per hour. DAY and NIGHT SERVICE T. G. GRANBERRY, Mgr. DENVER, COLORADO Woodcut P. H. BALFE PRACTICAL PLUMBER LICENSED DRAIN LAYER Special Attention Given to VENTILATION AND SEWERAGE. All Work Guaranteed Main 207 1907 Arapahoe St. Denver, Col- FORGET US We Are Always Ready Special Attention G SEWERAGE. Phone Main 207 1907 DON'T FORGET US Special Attention Given to VENTILATION AND SEWERAGE. All Work Guaranteed Phone Main 207 1907 Arapahoe St. Denver, Gof- When you need anything in the line of neat and attractive Printing. NIZE OUR ADVERTISERS PHONE MAIN 6338 PHONE MAIN 2425 Phones: CHAMPA 86 87 88 PHONE 8444 C. B. Weatherhead We Move and Store Furniture JOBBING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO PRACTICAL PLUMBER to serve you with good printing. No matter what the nature of the job may be we are ready to do it at a price that will be Satisfactory The EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER If you are bothered with Falling Hair, Dandruff, Itching Scalp, or any Hair Trouble, we want you to try a 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 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 Black Hair to its Natural Color. Straightening. Price Sent by Mail. 5 y and Beautiful Black Eye-Brows, also restores Gray to its Natural Color. Can be used with Hot Iron for lightening.ice Sent by Mail. 50c; 10c Extra for Postage Price Sent by Mail, 50c; 10c Extra for Postage --- 4 WANTED SCOTT'S OFFICIAL AMERICA THE WORLD EMMETT J. SPECIAL ASSISTANT A complete and authentic narration of soldiers of the Negro race in the great with official and personal photographs this work offers delightful reading of middle-aged and the old, and each home our race and country by being provided work. A very desirable gift in and out of the fifteen thousand homes of our people in Denver, a copy of Special History of the American Negro and the World War SCOTT'S OFFICIAL HISTORY of the AMERICAN NEGRO IN THE WORLD WAR MMETT J. SCOTT SPECIAL ASSISTANT TO SECRETARY OF WAR authentic narration of the participation of American negro race in the great fight for democracy. Illustrated personal photographs of over two hundred in number, delightful reading of its 600 pages for the youth, the old, and each home will add dignity and loyalty to entry by being provided with a copy of this commendable writable gift in and out of season. This book is being to place in each of the fifteen thousand homes of our people in Denver, a copy of Scott's Official History of the American Negro and the World War SCOTTS OFFICIAL HISTORY of the AMERICAN NEGRO IN THE WORLD WAR EMMETT J. SCOTT SPECIAL ASSISTANT TO SECRETARY OF WAR A complete and authentic narration of the participation of American soldiers of the Negro race in the great fight for democracy. Illustrated with official and personal photographs of over two hundred in number, this work offers delightful reading of its 600 pages for the youth, the middle-aged and the old, and each home will add dignity and loyalty to our race and country by being provided with a copy of this commendable work. A very desirable gift in and out of season. This book is being offered at the very reasonable price of $3.00 at the office THE COLORADO P. O. Box 116 Arrangements can also be made PRESS COMMENT: No library History of "The American Negro in legacy could be left to posterity th heroism and patriotism. BUY YOUR H We will secure yo the lowest prices a terms. The May Phone Main 7517 The INDIAN Groceries, Soft Drinks and 1305 E. 22nd Ave. Frank Du $3.00 nt the office of COLORADO STATESMAN P. O. Box 116 Room 25, 1824 Curtis its can also be made over phone. Call Main 7417 COMMENT: No library is complete without Scott's the American Negro in the World War." and no better he left to posterity than this great work of Negro atriotism. YOUR HOME NOW will secure you the best for lowest prices and on the best s. May Realty Co. main 7517 725 E. 26th Ave. INDIANA GROCERY AND NOTION STORE ess, Soft Drinks and Notions of All Kinds. Love. Frank Dunn, Prop. Denver, Colo. PRESS COMMENT: No library is complete without Scott's History of "The American Negro in the World War," and no better legacy could be left to posterity than this great work of Negro heroism and patriotism. We will secure you the best for the lowest prices and on the best terms. The May Realty Co. Phone Main 7517 725 E. 26th Ave. Groceries, Soft Drinks and Notions of All Kinds. 1305 E. 22nd Ave. Frank Dunn, Prop. Denver, Colo. Moon Can Produce Rainbows The Naval Observatory says that the moon can produce rainbows in the same manner as the sun. The colors are much fainter, and the lunar rainbow is probably seen only near the time of the full moon. --- AGENTS OUTFIT 1 Hair Grower, 1 Temple Oil, 1 Shampoo, 1 Press- and Directions for Selling Oil, 1 Face Cream Postage. 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 S. D. LYONS 316 N .Central Dept. B. Oklahoma City, Okla. Must Ask Her Husband Under the laws of the province of Quebec a married woman is legally incapable of performing almost any civil actions without the authorization of her husband or that of the court. Exquisite Boudoir Apparel; Simply Trimmed and Beltless WHAT an exquisite role color is playing throughout the galaxy of beautiful boudorl apparel which lures womankind to spend and spend and then long for more to spend. A strictly conservative order of dress maintained in the away-from-home daytime hours is almost a sure sign when it comes to one's boudorl apparel to result in a complete reac- ```markdown ``` 1 THE FASHION OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY Charming Boudoir Costume. tion toward the most frivolous and loveliest of garments one's imagination may picture. This is as it should be, according to the psychologists, who tell us that the clothes we wear have much to do with our pulse and well-being. Lace, color and sheer caressing silken fabric—what power there is in this trio of loveliness to quiet "nerves" and coax sensory of mind. An unfailing antidote to one's vexation of spirit is a beauteous chiffonobe of filmy georgette, orchid the shade, or peach pink, if you prefer, plaited for the underslip as the picture shows, velled with a slippower of lace and chiffon, which is nothing more nor less than a circle with an opening in the center. The lace alternates with rows of fine net puffing, and a chiffon tie confines this Greek-like drapery to the form. Rainbow treatment imparts fascination to many a fashionable negligee. Forms a P THE FILM IS A NEW FILM. THE LITTLE GIRL Forms a Pretty Picture. Rose over yellow over orchid—thus does diaphanous chiffon produce a color symphony. Summer breakfast coats choose sat-back crepe for their making in such delectable shades as coral, lavished with diapens and motifs of ochre-tinted lace, white crepe edged with plaitings gal edging which are dyed in sev- --- eral of the popular pastel tones. As spontaneous and as unaffected as childhood itself are the frocks designed for wee daughter this season. The beltless mode accents childish grace and it is this type which fashion favors most for little girls. Simplicity is also emphasized throughout all trimming and this also lends fascination to youthful summer models. 10 It is a pleasing sight to see, at summertime juvenile gatherings, little girls of airy-fairy grace flitting about in quaintly beruffled frocks of dotted swiss or pastel-tinted volle, which fall straight from the shoulder in unbroken line. Dotted red swiss is a favorite material for children's costumes this summer. In fact red and white in combination lead in color schemes. Very charming, and preserving the beltless contour, is a dainty model fashioned of daffodil yellow swiss with white pln dots. It has a round yoke, and, by the way, many of the beltless dresses boast yokes either square or round. The unique detail in the above mentioned yellow swiss frock is the method of applying vertical rows of white footing, beginning at the yoke-line and extending to the hem. It is a very practical idea to include at least one dark silk or crepe dress in little daughter's vacation-time wardrobe. The model in the picture is sug A gested as being a valuable acquisition, possessing as it does, style, charm and practicality. It is of navy crepe-setin, the crepe side used for the body, the satin for the ruffles. The ribbon tie with streamers extending to the bottom of the dress is plotted with rea. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. (@. 1924, Western Newspaper Union.) DOUGLASS UNDERTAKING CO. INCORPORATED AND BONDED NOTARY PUBLIC 1910 MEN IMPROVE YOU Have wonderful, soft, straight, bea- Why use hot towels and lions, why order to dress it in the position that Satin Top will straighten the worst k if nature did the work itself. Satin Top is harmless. It will not turn the hair red or lea- It will not smart or harm the scalp It will thicken your hair and make It will cleanse the scalp and remove Satin Top straightens your hair to s Men it is a wonderful product and equal it. Call for your jar today, used to ship parcel post paid. LARGE SIZE Nature intended that every man sh make bad hair good and good hair Mary Bolden. 19th St., aver. Please send me a jar of your Satin me. RESS MAKE YOUR APPOINT- MENTS AT ELSIE L. ANDERSON'S BEAUTY PARLOR IMPROVE YOUR APPEARANCE wonderful, soft, straight, beautiful hair in twenty-foot towels and lions, why worry pressing and combs it in the position that you desire. Will straighten the worst kind of hair and give it the work itself. Is harmless. Turn the hair red or leave it colorless. Smart or burn the scalp. Make your hair and make it soft and beautiful. Anse the scalp and remove dandruff. Straightens your hair to stay straight. A wonderful product and there is nothing on the Call for your jar today, or mail the coupon parcel post paid. LARGE SIZE JAR $1.25 ended that every man should have straight hair good and good hair better. Phone d me a jar of your Satin Top. I have inclosed MEN IMPROVE YOUR APPEARANCE THE BARBER SHOP Have wonderful, soft, straight, beautiful hair in twenty minutes. Why use hot towels and lions, when washing and combing your hair in a microwave? You will do that, you desist. in order to give it a smile. To will straighten the worst kind of hair and give it the appearance as if nature did the work itself. Men it is a wonderful product and there is nothing on the market that can equal it. Call for your jar today, or mail 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. Mrs. Mary Bolden.....Phone Champa 9051W 926 19th St. Denver. Please send me a jar of your Satin Top. I have inclosed $1.25 to cover same. Name Address SCIENTIFIC SCALP AND FACIAL MASSAGE 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 Treatment for Dandruff, Falling MARCEL WAVING, HAIRDRE ALL HAIR GOODS I Hytone Hair Grower, Tetter S Combs for Sale. EVERYTHING STRE All Work G Phone York 7714 J. at for Dandruff, Falling Hair and Baldness and WAVING, HAIRDRESSING AND MANY ALL HAIR GOODS MADE TO ORDER the Hair Grower, Tetter Salve, Pressing Qil Combs for Sale. Agents Wanted. EVERYTHING STRICTLY SANITARY All Work Guaranteed York 7714 J. 1521 East 22n The First Clearance in Our New Store for Men and Boys 3-PIECE SPR 20% 3-PIECE SPRING SUITS 20% Off $27.60 $30 $34 $38 $42 $46 Unrestricted choice of three-piece Wool Su The following sale prices are 20 per cent less than Store for Men—Separate Entrance on 16th THE DENVER DRY GOODS restricted choice of three-piece Wool Suiting sale prices are 20 per cent less than store for Men—Separate Entrance on 16th F DENVER DRY GOODS Unrestricted choice of three-piece Wool Suits The following sale prices are 20 per cent less than regular. Store for Men—Separate Entrance on 16th St. THE DENVER DRY GOODS CO. 16th to 15th St., on California Midwest Cafe UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT Midwest Cafe UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT Polk & Polk, Proprietors Short Orders at All Times Home Cooked Food. Best of Service. --- Licensed Embalmer and Directer Phone F414W Lady Assistant. Polite Services to all. Parlors, 2745 Welton Street. DENVER, COLORADO. OUR APPEARANCE beautiful hair in twenty minutes. worry pressing and combing your hair you desire. kind of hair and give it the appearance give it colorless. it soft and beautiful. dandruff. stay straight. there is nothing on the market to or mall the coupon and we will JAR $1.25 should have straight hair. Satin or better. Phone Champa 905 Top. I have inclosed $1.25 to co ```markdown ``` Hair and Baldness a Specialty PRESSING AND MANICURING MADE TO ORDER Salve, Pressing Qil for Sale Agents Wanted. OCTLY SANITARY guaranteed 1521 East 22nd Avenue ING SUITS Off uree-piece Wool Suits 00 per cent less than regular. Entrance on 16th St. RY GOODS CO on California st Cafe MANAGEMENT Meals Served from 6 A. M. to 8 P. M. 924 19th St. Denver, Colo.