Denver Star

Friday, October 11, 1907

Denver, Colorado

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FRANKLIN'S PAPER THE STATESMAN INSURE IN THE Commonwealth Life Now SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS REV. DYETT LEAVES DENVER NINETEENTH YEAR INSURE IN THE COM REV. DYET LEAVE When Rev. W. W. S. Dyett first came to Colorado 12 years ago, little did he think that when he left he would have been exalted from a plain pastor to the dignity of a Reverend, an elected member of the Board of Church Extension Society, a delegate to the general conference next year and held by his warm friends as a prospective candidate for the position of manager of the Book Concern in Philadelphia. For any young man to even live in a community for years without a blemish upon his character is a just tribute, but for a young man, touching daily the spiritual, moral and financial part of the lives and without the slightest reproach to pastor, a large congregation of men, women and children for years, marry, raise a family and then depart leaving an enviable record, the worst of which could be said is that he is a scholar, financier and a Christian gentleman at all times and places, is such a rare honor that many hardly appreciate it. In Colorado Springs under his wise supervision and skillful financing hand and guidance, Payne's Chapel flourished as never before; the King's Daughters, a literary society, was alive with young students and young talented visitors who made the church a recluse for their advancement and intellectual attainments. It was there when he received such a signal honor, a fateful gift of God, who has been the most pronounced factor in his later life, an impelling force for his unrivalled success—the marriage to Miss Ninerva Peck. Naturally he does and must always feel dear towards Colorado Springs for that boon, as a worthy, loving and attractive companion. After staying four years there and above the protests he was sent to St. --- DENVER, COLORADO, FRIDAY OCTOBER 11, 1907 Joseph, Mo., where he ingratiated himself into the hearts of the people that he remained four years and only by telling them that he desired to go because of the heavy pressure brought about by the bishop's demand that he come to Shorter. So, loyal even then, were they, so well was he loved, and so devoted did they seem, that they voted him a standing invitation to return whenever convenient. At Shorter his four years of work of itself has loudly proclaimed and even now sings its own praises. Having received over 300 persons, leaving money in every treasury of the different organizations of the church, and being successful in raising this year $368.50 dollar-money, the largest in some years since Phil Hubbard's time, and organizing the largest and strongest literary society in this state, the Eureka, an organization that is recognized by the Interstate Literaries of the West, and equipping the church with the latest dipping pool for the aspirants of complete immersion, also paying a $1,500 indebtedness off in his second year together with the improvement expenditure of nearly $4,000 on the pastor's handsome dwelling and the up-to-date modern church edifice with its beautiful interior so well protected by the most improved roofings and on the outside so carefully and strongly preserved by a fresh coat of waterproof paint, makes one to easily see not only the spiritual growth and moral uplife, but with what complete studied perspicacity, increasing financial thought and persistent efforts of business methods along the line of welfare and progress of the church the reverend was guilty of. So fresh is NO RACE Hon. C. C. Hamlin addresses the Sunday Forum at Colorado Springs, on the problem of the whole human race. Mr. President, Ladies and Gentlemen: It is no small pleasure which I feel at being permitted to address the Sunday Forum this afternoon, not that I hope to be able to throw any new light on those questions which are of primary and vital interest to you, but because it affords me an opportunity to voice my deep interest in the work which you are doing and to express my views on certain subjects which, while of paramount importance to your peo- O HON. C. C. HAMLIN, Colorado Springs. ple, are of scarcely less importance to the nation as a whole. Any matter which affects ten per cent of the citizens of our common country must necessarily affect and interest all. I have been requested to direct my remarks to the constitutional rights of the Negro. I do not apprehend that it was intended or desired that I should enter upon a review of the decisions of our higher courts through which the civil rights of your people have been declared and established under the thirteenth, fourteenth and fifteenth amendments to the Constitution of the United States. Those amendments were of as great importance to our colored population as was the Magna Charta to the people of England or FIVE CENTS A COPY SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS PROBLEM the Declaration of Independence to our Revolutionary forefathers and their descendants. Through them the colored man was not only endowed with those inalienable rights of "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness," which he at the very foundation of our institutions, but he was elevated to the estate of full and complete citizenship. In view of the acrimony engendered and aroused by the Civil War it was no more than natural that these enactments were the subjects of bitter controversy within and outside of the Courts but the Supreme Court of the United States have dealt with the questions arising out of these amendments in the same broad spirit with which it has always dealt with all great questions, and has interpreted them with a view to making effective the will and intention of the people when they voted to embody them as a part of our fundamental law, until today your rights and the rights of your people under the Constitution are clear and well defined, and they are the same rights, the same privileges and the same immunities as those enjoyed by every other citizen of the Republic. When asked to define your Constitutional rights I could not better do it than to attempt to tell you what I conceive my own to be, for they are identical and equal. So were I to attempt to confine myself literally to the subject assigned to me it would involve a review of the entire Constitution with its effect upon and control over each and every citizen. This would be neither practicable or desirable, and so I shall take the liberty of fitting my subject to that which I have to say, and instead of considering the legal questions which have arisen under the constitution and which pertain to the colored race in the United States, shall rather consider the questions which affect the progress and happiness of our colored people as citizens under the constitution, and shall attempt to give you my views as to what has most made for the splendid progress in the past and what I conceive to be the principles on which you must build in the future. Citizenship is the highest privilege which government can bestow on those who are subject to it and to protect that citizenship and to make himself worthy of it is the first duty of us all. (Continued on page 13.) WILL COME BACK FOR CUP. French Rider Determined to Win Automobile Trophy. Albert Clement, the French rider, who participated in the Vanderbilt automobile cup race, has sailed for Paris. A few days after his arrival there he will enter upon three years of military duty. While in the French army he will act as special automobile driver to the general in chief, driving him on all military inspections, army maneuvers, etc. During these three years he is in the army young Clement will be allowed to indulge in automobile racing to his heart's content. He will be allowed time to prepare his machine for any race he may enter—in short, his army service will in no way interfere with his racing. He has definitely announced that he will come over and drive in next year's Vanderbilt cup race, and in his broken English added: "Next time I get it." Dreams of You. You'll live by the western sea, love, and the hills of azure blue; Leagues will separate us, dear, but I'll be true to you. When I sit by my lonely fire, on some dreary winter's night. And the flickering of the blazing hearts is all I have for light. I'll call up days that are gone, then, dear old summer days— Days that have gone forever, dear, and live only in the blaze. To close my eyes and dream, dear, when you and I were young. When brightness lighted up your eye, and love was on your tongue; That is the way I'll dream, dear, as I sit beside my hearth. While the snowflakes fall in feathery haze upon the darkened earth. I'll dream and dream of you, love, with your lovely eyes and hair. And pray to God to keep you safe, if I be here or there. —Thomas Colin Evans in Los Angeles Times. Advocated Beauty on Stage. The late John Hollingshead, noted in London as journalist, magazine writer and theatrical manager, especially in the last named capacity, had notions of his own as to what constituted attractions for the stage. For instance, he bluntly maintained that the selection of all ladies on the stage, except for the chorus singers, where vocal accomplishments were paramount, should be governed by a desire to put pleasing forms and faces before the public. His view of the stage was that, however it might be judged from lofty heights, it was not a platform for the exhibition of grandmothers and maiden aunts. If physical beauty could be got with brains and talent, so much the better. The free choice was physical beauty. Flower Weather Prophet. The marigold is a very reliable weather prophet. If the day is going to be fine the flower opens about five or six o'clock in the morning; but when wet weather is in prospect the marigold does not open at all. Old Lady's Pious Hope. "There are some people who believe that the whole human race will be saved," said an old lady, "but for my part, I hope for better things."—Success Magazine. Humane Law of the Desert. One of the oddest humane laws in this country is in force in Nevada. In that section of the American desert which lies in Nevada, travelers in distress may flag the limited passenger trains and compel the train crew to give them water to drink. The law makes it a felony to refuse to comply with the traveler's request. THE STATESMAN. DENVER. COLORADO. Charles West is on the streets again with his new automobile done in red. He made a big success last year and is starting out early this season catering to all classes of transportation for passengers in automobiles. Service by the hour or by the trip. FOR SALE—A BARGAIN. Eight-room modern brick, fine location. Can be used for one or two families. For particulars see the Great Western Realty Co., 1525 Welton St. Phone 5.4). Established More than a Quarter of a Century. Transactions Confidential Phone Main 8252 The Original "No Name" Clothing House Ladies and Gents Clothing Buy and Sell Good Clothing. Full Dress Suits for Rent 417 Fifteenth St. Denver Colorado STANDARD TRUST DENVER, COLORADO, J. R. HANGER, Agent, 1223 19th St. Investigate the Liberal Offer of the STANDARD TRUST COMPANY They Will Build You $1,000 $2,000 A $3,000 HOME $4,000 $5,000 You pay only 5 per cent. Interest. Send for Prospectus Containing Full Particulars. Read the Sample Contract which is furnished to all Agents representing this Company. Phone Main 3725. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT. Q.J. GILMORE Undertaker and Embalmer Carriages furnished for all occa- salena. 1921 Arapahoe St. Denver's Leading Colored Undertaker E. V. GILL CAPITOL HILL FERTILIZING COMPANY ManureFurnished in Any Amount EXPRESS 402 Stand Nineteenth and Downing Aves. Phone York 340 Residence 1766 Race Street Phone White 2432 DENVER, COLORADO PLAIN SEWING 2214 Arapahoe St. Phone Main 8003 Denver L, D. Richey, Proprietor. THE UNION UNION TRUNK FACT THE UNION TRUNK FACTORY Manufacturers of Trunks 1957 THEMATCH- 1957 Champa Street Phone Purple 1861. TCH-IT-IF-YOU-CAN No More Ready-to- Clothes Tailor-Made Su as low as $15.00 SCHRADSKY, THETA 1601 Larimer St THE HOTEL Dick Frazier Frazier and; Tom Lewis, Proprietor Dick Frazier and; Tom Lewis, Proprietors "A first-class resort for gentlemen." The only colored sa NEWPORT SALOON colored saloon in Denver. Newly opened with all acco The only colored saloon in Denver. Newly opened with all accomodations. 15 Arapahoe Street Tel. Main 7418 REPAIRING A SPECIALTY ```markdown ``` N TRUNK FACTORY 壬申 T-IF-YOU-CAN STORE More Ready-to-wear Clothes Tailor-Made Suits as low as $15.00 HRADSKY, THETALIOR, 1601 Larimer Street SCHRADSKY, THETALIOR 1601 Larimer Street WM. EHMKE MANAGER EAST TURNER HALL 2132-2148 Arapahoe St. Phone 2449 Denver and; Tom Lewis, Proprietors NEWPORT SALOON oon in Denver. Newly opened with all accomodations. TRUNKS MADE TO ORDER TRUNKS TAKEN IN EXCHANGE Guard Was Satisfied. Walter B. Stevens, secretary of the Louisiana Purchase exposition, was down for an address of welcome before the congress of deaf and dumb held at the World's Fair. Usually punctual, he was a few moments late, and by way of preface apologized for his tardiness, his explanation being interpreted to his "audience" in the sign language by an instructor on the platform. "When I reached the door," said Mr. Stevens, "I was stopped by a Jefferson guard, who told me that no one was admitted except deaf and dump persons. I told him that I was deaf and dumb and had a right to enter. "Oh, if that's the case, sir, pass right in,' the guard replied."—Minneapolis Journal. Her Original Scheme. She was very proud of her first bank book, and determined to make none of the silly mistakes she had read about in the joke columns of newspapers. There was no danger of overdrawing her account. Every check was duly recorded on the stub, and after every four checks a balance was correctly struck. "But how is it?" asked the man one day when looking over the book; "how is it that your checks always come out in even dollars? Do you never have a sum like $5.11 to pay?" "Yes, often; but I have a famous scheme," she explained, gleefully. "It's such a bother to add up the cents that I just make the check out for five dollars, and send the 11 cents in postage stamps." Treasure In Sea's Depths. The Spanish frigate San Pedro, with seven and a half millions of treasure, blew up and sank in Camana bay. The Boston Diving company recovered some of the guns and a part of the treasure, but there is a huge sum left. Sunday Magazine. How Chinese Use Opium. The Chinese on the Rand were allowed so much opium, the maximum a month being two pounds. This would suffice to stock an ordinary chemist's shop for a year. Two pounds of opium represent 27,963 average medicinal doses. Philanthropist's Good Work. William P. Letchworth, the donor of Glen Iris, the magnificent 1,000-acre estate that has been given to New York, is the originator of what is commonly known as the New York system of almshouse construction. It provides different buildings for the sexes, with an administration building in the center, a service building behind it, all joined by a connecting corridor. Because of his friendship for the Indian cause, he was adopted into the Seneca nation and given the name of "Hei-Wa ye-l-tah," meaning "the man who all ways does the right thing." many Fish in Lake Erie. It is said that Lake Erie produces more fish to the square mile than any other body of water in the world. Man's Inhumanity. Man's Inhumanity. We hand folks over to God's mercy and show none ourselves.—Elliot. When the Telephone Was New. In 1877 there were just 780 tele phones in the United States. THE STATESMAN. DENVER. COLORADO. Ancient "Cure" for Madness. In the "Dictionarium Domesticum, Being a New and Compleat Household Dictionary for the Use Both of City and Country" (1736), is this sure cure for a malady which has in modern times been regarded as rather obstinate: "For lunacy and madness—Boil three large handfuls of ground ivy, shred small, in two quarts of wine till there is but one-third part remaining; then strain it and add to it six ounces of the best salad oil; boil it up to an ointment, shave the patient's head, warm the ointment and chafe his head with it. This is Dr. Wadenfield's remedy, with which a person is said to have cured 60 lunatick persons." CHOSE A DIFFERENT DAY. Homilies of Bishop Polk Had Good Effect, but— Bishop Folk of Louisiana, the "Fighting Bishop" of the civil war, had a neighbor who was an unbeliever. All the year round the work on his sugar plantation went on without a break for Sunday. The bishop, finding that religious appeal failed to move the man, brought to bear arguments from the utilitarian standpoint. He emphasized the laborers' gain from a day of rest, and cited the grievous results of unremitting toil, as shown in the impaired powers of men and animals that were apparent in France after the revolution. At last the neighbor came to him one day and said: "Bishop, I believe you're right about the advantage of a day of rest. I feel sure that the negroes and the mules both will be better for it, and so hereafter I'm going to knock off work—" "Good, good," interrupted the Bishop approvingly. "every Wednesday." Check on Scorchers Cycilists in Roumania, to facilitate identification, are compelled by law to have their names on the lamp glasses of their machines, so as to be legible at night. Misquided Man. A Pennsylvania man asserts that his wife hasn't spoken to him in seven years. Yet the misguided man is suing for a divorce.—N. O. Times-Democrat. So Many So. "What is all that excitement up at the hotel, Rudolph?" "Why, a man just jumped——" "Out of the window?" "No; they wouldn't mind that. He jumped his board bill." Prolific Paderewski. Paderewski has already composed more than eighty vocal works, besides piano pieces, a concerto and a suite. King's Signature. Trifling as the actual work of signing his name may seem, yet when the number of times King Edward affixes his signature to documents is considered the work assumes something of the nature of hard, or at least confining, labor. It is estimated that his royal name is signed to not fewer than 60,000 official documents yearly, and in addition to these there are several hundred signatures affixed to his private correspondence. Pictures of Eminent Negroes Actual photo-post cards of such leaders as WASHINGTON, DOUG LAS, DUNBAR and DUBOIS; COLLEGES and HISTORIC PLACES. Send fifty cents ($0.50) for an assort ment of 12 cards. WESTMORELAND COMPANY. 23 Harwich St. COTTRELL 2100 ARA PHONE DR. W. J. COT BOTTLED GOOD PURE DRUGS, HOT AN Prompt del COSMOP COTTRELL'S PHARMACY 2100 ARAPAHOE STREET. PHONE 3230 MAIN. DR. W. J. COTTRELL, Physician and Surgeon BOTTLED GOODS A SPECIALTY—WINES, ETC. PURE DRUGS, HOT AND COLD DRINKS, CIGARS, TOILET ARTICLES, ETC. Prompt delivery to any part of the city. COSMOPOLITAN CAFE JACK SHELBUN Proprietor Superior Service 1922 Lawre 1922 Lawrence street, Denver, Colo. Superior Service Private Dining Room 1922 Lawrence street, Denver, Colo. 1. THE UNIVERSITY WESTER The great Educational WESTERN UNIVERSITY. WESTERN UNIVERSITY. The great Educational Institution for Kansas and the West DEPARTMENTS: Theological, College, Academic, Normal, Sub-Norma and State Industrial. COURSES: Classical, College-preparatory, Academic, Normal, Sub-Normal, Musical, (Instrumental and Vocal), including piano, organ and harmony, Drawing (Fine art and Mechanical), Carpentry, Printing and Book-binding, Business Course, Stenography and Typewriting, Tailoring Dressmaking and Plain Sewing, Cooking, Laundering Farming and Gardening ADVANTAGES: Splendid Location, Healthful Climate, Good Influences and Thorough Teachers from the leading schools of America including Lincoln, University of Kansas, Wilberforce, Tuskegee and Hampton. INFORMATION: For terms, prices and all inducements offered, write to WILLIAM T. VERNON, A.M., D.D., Pres. Quindaro, Kansas. Open Day and Night. S PHARMACY AHOE STREET. 8230 MAIN. L, Physician and Surgeon SPECIALTY—WINES, ETC. OLD DRINKS, CIGARS, TOILET ART- LES, ETC. to any part of the city. LITAN CAFE Private Dining Room reet, Denver, Colo. ____ Miss M. COWDER. Hair Dressing PARLORS. Shampooing, cutting and curling. All hair work made to order. Hair tonics, scalp treatments, manicuring; stage wigs for rent for theatrical use or mask balls. Cheapest switches, 50 cents. Goods delivered out of the city. 1219 21st street. Denver, Colo. Phone 1797 Olive UNIVERSITY. uction for Kansas and the West PAGE 11. Boston, Mass. 'Phone Main 3231. PAGE 12, ———————_—— FOR RENT—Furnished rooms, two front, 2550 Glenarm place. Mrs. A. Goodwin. Mrs, Pearl Bland, of 2753 Lincoln, is convalescent from a bad spell of tonsilitis, She is highly pleased with the payments from the Commonwealth Life as some of the sick benefits bar this disease from payment. A tremendous gathering greeted the speakers at the public reception given by the local building laborers at East Turner hall by the orchestra and the Azalla Hackley Choral club and solo- ists and speeches by some of labor's prominent men. Tilford McAllister made a graceful chairman and every: The Lincoln Republican Club is be- ginning to arouse the enthusiasm of its members and to the end that the cause of the party may be advanced will hold a meeting on the 24th of this month to which every one is invited. It will be an old time Republican ex- perience meeting. No fandangoes about “new thought” or any of the other mushroom ideas, but good old doctrine of success to the party and confusion to Vardaman, Tillman and their pals, The Progressive club of Central Baptist church has organized a liter- ary club and will have its first meet- ing next Monday night at the church. After that time the night of meeting will be Thursday. The introductory program will be featured by a debate on the advisability of African immi- gration. The speakers will be Messrs. Nash Walker and Roy Handy for the affirmative and C. W. Buford and H. Franklin Bryant for the negative. The Tapa Art club has opened for the winter with a membership of sev- enteen active workers. They met at the nome of Mrs. Lottie Spatts Wed- neaday, Oct. 9. The following officers were elected: Mrs. Eliza Gowens, president; Mrs, Nannie Finley, vice president; Mrs. Effie Waldon, secre: tary; Mrs, Alice Wason, assistant sec- retary; Miss Nettle Gibson, treasurer; Mrs. Lizzie Williams, chaplain. The club will meet at the home of Mrs. Anderson, 429 Twenty-fourth street, Wednesday, Oct. 16, A, CROSWHITE, Pres. E. WALDON, Sec. 0. C, Goens’ barber shop at 1226 Fighteenth street, is bright and cherry in new interior decorations. Every: thing about it speaks of the success which the business is having. Care. ful attention to the details of the bus- {ness tells and the genial proprietor is to be praised for splendid showing. Silver Star Council No. 70, Sons ang Daughters of Jerusalem, meets the second and fourth Monday in the month at 1712 Curtis street ALICE JONES, Queen, KaikE LEVELL, Sec. Rey. A. E. Reynolds and family were very pleasantly surprised at their home, 2828 California street, Tuesday by the following named mem- bers and friends: Bros. A. C. Jack- son and Mosby and wife, C. B, Hill and wife, P. W. Walker and wife, J. M. Mason and wife, Sister Rollie, M. THE STATESMAN, DENVER, COLORADO. S. Dickson, Mary Payne, Buchanan Lee, Dickerson, Bailey, Taylor, M. E. Cromwell, Green, Willis, M. BE. Riley, Carl Wilson A. Parrot, Frank Jones, Anderson Steward, Johnson and Susie Brown, Miss Dean and Messrs Robin- son and Brown. They were heavily laden with all the luxuries of the season. Dainty refreshments were served, for which they thank them very much, and extend them and oth- ers call frequently. Mrs. D. E, Hughes, of 2510 Clark. son street, is prepared to do dress: making and plain sewing at reason. able prices. The opening of the Skating Acad emy was blessed with a surprisingly good attendance, The management will continue to entertain each Mon. day and Wednesday and Friday even: ing at East Turner Hall. Admission, 15 cents. Skates, 25 cents. C. R. McFarland, manager, Good music in attendance. The Rhine Cafe, which is now un- der new management, gave it patrons and the public a pleasurable evening of music and light refreshments Wednesday in token of its changed condition. A large crowd was pres- ent and enjoyed itself thoroughly. T. R. Herron, who has been away from the city for some time, has re- turned and is running a lunch coun ter at 1225 Nineteenth street. He is already doing a good business in quick lunches, THE COMMONWEALTH I!S BEST. A letter came to the offices of the Commonwealth Life this week that was very flattering to the manager. It was from Mr. and Mrs. Smith, for merly of Denver, but now of Salida. In this letter Mr. Smith informs the Commonwealth that he and his wife are now carrying in one of the Den ver companies which poses as being very strong, but he is not altogether satisfied with the way that they treat their members when sick or hurt. After perusing the literature sent him by the Association he sends ! his own and his wife’s applica‘ions for membership and advises the Com monwealth that he has cancelled sis policies with the other company. There is no question but what tse Commonwealth's treatment of their members has caused their great suc- ess, They are now taking in more than 300 new members each month in Denver alone. This {s a pretty good recommendation for them right here at home. BAKER'S THEATER. Cards are seen in many places an- nouncing the opening of a first-class play house, under the above name, Baker's Theater. Mr. Baker has so changed the old Empire Theater that it’s old and familiar appearance to its many patrons will scarcely be recog: nized, Thousands of dollars have been expended in making these alter- ations in order to make it more pleas- ant for the public. Many will re- member the high-class productions and from present indications the Baker Company will prove a great success. There can be but one re- sult; if the people who want a first- class theater will patronize the house. A great success. Mr, Baker and his assistant, Mr. Reed, express great confidence in Denver theater people. One Good Investment is Worth a Lifetime of Work FOR THE FIRST TIME IN THE HISTORY OF THE RACE NEGROES ARE GIVEN OPPORTUNITY TO INVEST IN THE SAME KIND OF EN. TERPRISES IN WHICH THE LEADING FINANCIERS OF THIS COUN. TRY INVEST. A SUM AS SMALL AS FIFTY DOLLARS MAY BE _ IN. VESTED IN A WAY TO YIELD AT LEAST TEN PER CENT. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION ADDRESS ROBERT W. TAYLOR INVESTMEN T SECURITIES, 35 Broad Street, New York City. “IN THE HEART OF THE WALL STREET DISTRICT.” eS TIES | REV. DYETT’S GOOD-BYE { mid-night when the crowd reluctantly TO DENVER the memory of the recent annua! con- ference of Colorado, that a mere men- tion of the gift of a broadcloth suit and that handsome, expensive, elab- by all the societies of the church as a slight momento of their heartfelt appreciation will recall how the Life ‘Line and the Sunshine clubs, both outside societies, assisted so willing: ly and effectively in the entertain- ment of the city’s guests. Mrs. Dyett, whose sweet disposition and amiabil- ity completely cemented the love of all the children to eagerly assist in the Sunday school and little enter. tainments to help their own soul's salvation, has been a silent, tireless and active worker for this success in spiritual and musical associations. As president of the Mite Missionary So- ciety, she has doubled her last year’s report and made an unknown record. As a musician, the children who ap- peared in the last children’s musicale where the wee boys and girls had to be assisted to the rostrum, will be her signals of glory and honor in this community and upon whose lit- tle light countenances she indelibly impressed her loving personality. Sunday night a crowded house, complete and full to the door, includ- ing the balcony, witnessed Rev. Dy- tt's last message to his people. As he spoke his heart to heart convie- tions of the people whose weaknesses he had observed, a Biblical scholar could have compared him to Moses as he delivered his last sermon to the Israelites. Fifty dollars was given him as a small token of re- spect and recognition of his long and valued service. It would be impos- stole to tell all the true, good, lov: ing and well deserving things sadd about him Monday night, yet it had the ring of earnestness and sincerity that it seemed one spontaneous ut- terance. F. T. Bruce, represented the ste- wards; H. F. Smith, the trustees; N. G. Brown, the Christian Endeavors: J. C. Porter, the Sunday school; Mes- dames Mary Montgomery, of the stew- ardesses; Hattie Pope, the Sewing Cir- cle; Maude Savage, the Eureka Liter- ary; Mary Wade, the iMte Missionary, and Mrs. D. H. Williams, the Trustee Aid, while Lawyer J. H. Suart, on be- while Lawyer J. H. Stuart, on be- half of the professional men; Rev, J. S. Payne, the ministers, all of which was fitly and briefly responded to by Miss Tenia Peck, solo; response Rev. Dyett and solo, “Where He Leads I'll Follow;"” Mrs. Dyett. It was nearly mid-night when the crowd reluctantly bade him and his family adieu, yet truly wished them God's blessings. in their going the community loses ene of its prominent religious lights, a fraternal brother and an honorabie citizen. The Statesman in bidding farewell extends to the departing family its best wishes and sincerely hopes a happy sojourn in our sister state and honestly believing that the great A. M. E. convention will sub- sequently recognize and reward the highly merited reputation of Rev. Dyett by some general office in the Book Concern which honor is justly due him. ANNOUNCEMENT EXTRAORDINARY Grand Complimentary Benefit and Eighty-cighth Anniversary Banauet. In honor of Father S. Rice, of Colu rado Springs, a committee consiating of the A. M. E. clergy of Denver and Pueblo will cooperate with the pas- tor and local committee of Payne chapel, Colorado Springs, to give Father Rice the greatest tribute ot love and respect he has even sven in the long years of a useful life de- voted to his race. He has served his generation as minister, soldier, and civilian and in each and all of these positions his life has been a benedic- tion to his people. Now, if one grand effort on our part can make him teel that a Godly life and fatherly counsel! is appreciated by the younger men among us, and if such appreciation transmitted in tangible form can so relieve his mind and Inspire him that he will live to round out 100 years, then we expect to see him enter his centennial year. A banquet will be served in Payne chapel, Colorado Springs, Nov, 20, 1907, at 8 p. m. Some of the leading ministers and laymen of the Colorado conference will make speeches on that occasion, and the public is generally invited, See nrogram later REV, H. F. BRAY, REV. A. M. WARD, REV. J. 8, PAYNE, REV. J. P. WATSON, REV. G. M. TILLMAN, REV. J. C. C. OWENS, REV. J. W. SANDERS, NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior. Land Office at Denver, Colo. October 9, 1907, Notice is hereby give nthat Ebert B. Woodruff, of Bennett, Colo., has filed notice of his intention to make final commutation proof In support of his claim, viz: Homestead Entry No. 23,603, made April 7, 1906, for the northwest quarter of Section 32, Township 4 S., Range 62 W., 6 P.M, and that said proof will be made be- fore the Register or Receiver at Den- ver, Colo., on Dec. 4, 1907. He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon, and cultivation of, the land, viz; Henry Bilznett, of Bennett, Colo.; Daniel Michell, of Bennett, Colo.; P. FE. Vandenburg, of Bennett. Colo.; H. G. Klore, of Byers. Colo. C, D. FORD, Register. NO RACE | PROBLEM matte teas me eae de | eee eee eee ean be applied to any one race as against any other. such principles are universal and not racial, The rosd which your people are traveling in their efforts to overcome the handicap entailed by a century of slavery in ths country ix the same road whieh the Anglo-Saxon race has traveled from the depths of barbarism and serfdora to Its present position in the world and Jet us not deceive ourselves into belleving that any pearls or any indi vidual has yet reached the end of that road, for perfection In human affairs is for the centuries to come. In consid- ering the future welfare and happiness of our colored people we have come tr look upon it and to call it the Negro Peoples. This so called problem has een the subject of endless discussion in the press, on the platform and in our serious thoughts and even in our Iitera- ture. Societies have been formed for its solution. Mistaken jhilanthropy has directed its attention to it. Legislation has attempted to deal with it. I take tanue with the whole idea, for to con- sider it a race problem and treet it xo ix to close our eyes to those prin- ciples mpon which human progress de- pends; it is to ignore the fact that is kradual and not spasmodic; that the moral, physical and intellectual de- Velopment of an Individual or of a race of individuals must come from within and not from without. No race can be Ufted; it must rise. To call It a Ne- KrO question and to treat it as such Ls searcely less than an insult to our colored population for sf it is a prob- Jem at al] it is a problem of the whole human race and not of any particular branch of it. The things that make for your welfare and happiness are controlled by the same laws that af- feet mine. As 1 view the matter the question with you and your people to- day ix pot how you will attain the po- sition in the world’s affairs to which you aspire and which you are destined to attain, for thix is attained through the oes of fundamental, immut- able laws. he question Is how to ac- celerate and hasten this much desired end. Tome who has chserved the pro- Kress which your people have made and are making and have noted with more than passing Interest their advance in all lines through their own efforts and unassisted endeavors It is a matter of no little surprise that there are stil those who believe that water can be made to run up hill and that a monu ment can be constructed from the top down. Immediately following the close of the Civil War, when the country was torn and wasted by that dire struggle and before your people, Just freed from the yoke of slavery and having had no opportunity to “demonstrate their ability to care for thomselves and their own affairs it is not surprising that well meaning, but mistaken persons should have come forward with plans to solve the whole question at ieue in a day, Conditiens then existing made such plans not only excusable, but commendable, for they came from those who had the welfare of our col- ored population at heart, and thelr miktakes were of Sudement and not of intention. One plan which I will men- tion, as it hax some bearing op what I shall have to say later, was that of transporting our entire colored popu lation back to the country from which its race had originally perane Impos- sible and unwise as we now know such a course would have been tt received the mepeers of many well intentioned men. joking backward we now know that such a program would not only have been An pepet te of execution, but that it would have been the greatest ealamity that could have befallen our emored race and would have been hardly leax of a calamity to the country ana whole In the light of today we wonder not why some such plan was not adopted, but why it should have been suggested at all sirerising as it may seem that such a solution should have ever been sugested, it ix a mat- ter of Infinitely greater surprise that today, when we have before ux the marvelous results which your people have attained in working out their own salvation, that any one should be found advocating a kindred proposal, for such is the penetra brought for- ward and seriously advocated by some which Involves the colonization of large numbers of our colored popu- lation. As IT understand the question it is proposed to set aside a portion of the public domain and there locate such of opt people as mav desire, under government supervision, In the first place the impracticability of such a plan in manifest, but this is not the THE STATESMAN, DENVER, COLORADO. Oi ae ae aa ee ee ee i ee ee dowed with every attribute of citizen- ship, who are one thelr way up- ward through the development and utilization of those attributes with which God has endowed them, on a plane with the blanket Indian main- talned on a reservation and supported by the bounty of government. I am firm in the belief that this scheme, or any scheme directed toward the betterment of our colored pcpula- tion, which seeks to act upon them as a class instead of acting upon the indi- viduals comprising the class is aoomed to failure in advance; first because it ignores the fundamental principles on which the progress of the human race has been based since its beginning; and second because it will receive and rightfully receive the opposition of the most progressive and intellectual por- tion of the colored people themselves. All such plans have their foundation upon dependence and they discourage that independence, both of thought and action, through which alone substan- tial and permanent progress is at all possible. They involve a step back- wards toward the state from which your people have soe recently emerged. Those who are accomplishing the most in the advancement and uplift of our colored population are of your own numbers and their work is effec- ve because they realize that to @ large degree our colored people must work out their own salvation. They know that the laws of evolution which are moving humanity forward act from within and not from without; that it ts through the individual alone that the race as 4 whole can be reached. They realize that their people can not be lifted, but must rise, and what they demand is not charity, but assistance; the assistance that brother owes to brother; man to man, This feeling is not the result of theoretical reasoning, but has been brought about by exper- lence and observation, and ,it has guided them in the direction of their work. And so any program which treats your people as dependent; as the wards of the nation: as suppliants for government bounty will meet and should meet with indignant protest from your best manhood and woman- hood, for It must of necessity insult your intelligence and wound your pride. In_the days immediately following the Civil War, when your people, after generations of enforced servitude and \ dependance, were suddenly given thelr freedom and thrown on their own re- sources, and before they had time to gain their balance and take up their tives under the new conditions it is not surprising that their ears should have been open to the sophistry of the demagogues who sought to ride on their backs. That the cry “twenty acres of land a mule” should have become a slogan to rally them about the Irre- sponsible political trickster who sought through them to gain his own ends During generations they had been taught to look upon dependence ax their natural lot and to believe that they had to rely on the bounty of the master and to accept without murmur the little which he might see fit to give Self betterment was eliminated from the equation for even though one might have Unusual attainments, unusual strength, unusual aptitude for the work assigned to him {t was of no in- dividual advantage, but added only to the pleasure and profit of the master. So It was not surprising that the first impulse of our colored people upon being released from bondage was to look about for some one on whom they might lean: some plan which would re- Neve them from the necessity of pro- viding for themselves. Some authority which would take them in charge; re- lieve them from the responsibilities of life and provide for them as they had been provided for under the old regime, and naturally they looked to the gov- ernment itself, anxious to have the paternalism of the state substituted for the paternalism of the master. For- tunately this bounty was not forth- coming and soon the colored man found that his future must depend upon himself and that through his own en- deavors and individual efforts alone would he be able to sustain life and take up a forward march, While he may not have realized it at the time by these facts he had won half the bat- tle which he was to fight on his pro- gressive march. Searcely more than half a century has ore since the close of the Civil War. his is a short period—a period insuMctent to make the average fite of a man. A period which is as a day when compared with the cénturies nee amen eres ren Gna eace fer em eee es eee a eres own brains, their own hearts, They desired to run before they had learned to walk. The first and hardest lesson which they had to learn was how to progress, and having long been kept in ignorance through no fault of their own, the experience of others who had travelled the same road was a closed book to them. The question then is, as I view it, has the colored man learned to pro- gress? Is he takink advantage of his knowledge, and are his methods such as will secure to his pape the re- sults which they are striving to attain. I am firm in the belief that all these questions must be answered in the af- fifmative. In watching the work which is being done by our colored popula- tion totlay, one is forced to the con- clusion that those of their people who are giving to this question the most thought and attention have conscious- ly or unconsciously discovered the key which will open the door to the future. They are directing their attention to the individual, realizing that in this way only can permanent progress be made. This work is going on turough- out the length and breadth of our coun- try. Probably the most conspicuous exponent of this principle is Dr. T. Washington and his great institution at Tuskegee, through his genius and devotion to his people, and their wel- fare always occupies a place in the foreground when these matter are under consideration, but the leaven in the loaf is working everywhere and what is being done at Tuskegee is be- ing done perhaps in a less conspicuous manner in hundreds of other places. This society which it fs my privilege to address today and hundreds of others organized on like principles and de- voted to like purposes are occupying a large place in this work, You meet here together, you exchange ideas, You invite the ideas of others, and as re- sult each ix brought to a considera- tion of these questions and to view them sanely for his own benefit and that of his people. At the close of the war, the colored man worked only with hands. In half a century since that time he has fought his way into the professions, he has be- come to a large degree the teacher of his own people. He has shown his ability as s servant of the government in positions of responsibility. In bank- ing, in trade and in manufacture he ts forging to the front. He is leaving his impress on our literature. What then do those people want who are seeking for some new panacea for this pone which exists only in the imagination! what do they expect? Let them look at the history of their own race in its struggle for freedom and for moral and material uplift and see If during the days when the results of servitude and dependence hung heavily upon them their people made as much pro- gress as has yours in the same lengt! of time. Yes, Ladies and Gentlemen, I believe that you and your people are working on the right line; upon the lines along which alone substantial and lasting re- sults can be achieved What you have already accomplished is almost be- yond belief when viewed in the light of the handicap under which you have been compelled to work, and it should give you every encouragement in push- ing forward to your manifest destiny What our colored people need, and what I believe they know they need. is to be let alone save insofar as others can help them to help them- selves and I am absolutely satisfied in my own mind that your people have no worse enemy than those who, no mat- ter how laudable their motive, would lead you back over the road they have been traveling, and seek to teach them that the government can do for them that which the experience of all time tells us they can only do for them- selves. The whole theory of colonization is based upon the supposition that the eolored race is by nature dependent. That they are incapable of caring for themselves and their own, That their happiness and future depends upon the guardianship and protection which the Government shall extend to them, That they are children who need a parent who shall guide their footsteps that they may be prevented from falling. These were the arguments which were advanced in atempting to justify slav- ery, These reasons were urged when it was attempted to withhold the priv- eleges of complete citizenship. 1 trust the day may never come when the in- telligence of the colored race will as- sent, either by word or by action, to the PAGE 13. INSEL OS AS SEES AS tS Awe Ve Beye tion. If this is true how much more true is it with a people in whom the instinct of self reliance was smothered for over a century of enforced servi- tude. It took many years of freedom before these seeds of self reliance and self assertiveness began even to ape and will you cut the plant down in its bloom and just as\it is to bear its best fruit? I believe that the intelligence and manhood of your people will ans- wer such a Pa oeel with an indignant protest. I believe you will say “help us to help ourselves, but do not do vio- lence to our manhood and our woman- hood by looking upon us and treating us as dependants. All we ask is the same opportunity that your people had in their struggle for advancement and we can then be depended upon to take care of ourselves.” I may express my- self too strongly upon this question; I may carry my views of individualism too far, but if there is one thing which my own experience and my own ob- servation has made me to see and be- Neve more clearly than another it is that personal initiative is the main- spring of human progress and that races advance only through and by virtue of the advancement and devel- opment of the individuals composing them, Another reason why I am opposed to any scheme which is directed to the mass of your people rather than to the individual ts that experience has shown that your people progress, develop and become independent more readily when thrown in close contact with the white race. I think this is evidenced by the fact (and I feel it to be a fact) that the condition of the colored race is much better in the north than it is in the south I believe this is because your people are here met with more consideration; their rights are re- spected and protected: you have con- stantly before you the encouragement and example of a people which has overcome the handicap under which you hare been working. In our churches, in our schools and in our universities no odious discriminations are indulged in against you. The whole environment is beter suited to inflame your ambition and inspire your energies. Here you are free moral agents in the full sense of that term; here you are citizens endowed in fact as well as in name with all the privil- eges and all the responsibilities which that term implies. The more isolated any portion of your people shall be- come the less chance will these ele- ments have to exercise their beneficial influence. To bring endeavor every person must have before him some- thing to which he aspires. It is always the example set for us by others that Inspires us to climb. There {s no man who can not learn from others and to have before us an inspiring model is an Infinite help in our struggle for those things to which our ambition leads us, It has never been thought necessary to bring forward coloniza- tion or other kindred plan for the aid and betterment of the Negro in the North. The reason for this is that he has broken away from the influences which are holding his brother back and has worked out his own salvation. He bas worked it out as all his people must work it out; in the one way by which {t can be worked out at all. By application, by work and by individual effort. The same influences which have brought about his moral, intellectual and mental uvbullding are at = work among his brothers in the South, and while the conditions there are not as favorable as here. and as a conse- quence, there progress will be slower than with you, still in both places a natural law is working to a certain end; this law may be retarded by hu- man agencies, but it can not be stopped. Involuntary servitude was not new at the time of the Clyil War: it is not a creature of a century or of two cen- turies. It is as old as the human race. No people have been wholly free from its baneful influences. The slavery of the villein or serf under the early Saxon and Norman kings in England was not less real nor less hopeless than that of your neople prior to the eman- cipation. Men were bound to the land and sold with the land, and not only their substance and thelr welfare, but even their fives depended upon the ca- price of the over-lord and master. It took centuries of struggle; centuries of unrequited toil; centuries of sacri- fice and patience; centuries of self as- sertion before they were able to gain for themselves the independence, the opportunities and the privileges of free- men. When they commenced to assert ier cec «THE Jessic Nickens Reese Modern Vaudeville AND »@haritv Ball. Odd Fellows. Building Fund Thursday October 17 | is ” Rast Turner Hall . Admission 35c VICTORIA TEMPLE, NO. 6, 8. M. T. of Colorado Springs, meets the sec- ond and fourth Friday night in the month. MRS. JENNID HENDERSON, W. Princess. MRS. COLLINS, Secretary. Denver Military Club—Meets every Sunday at 8:30 p. m. at 2524 Walnut street. Peyton Peterson, president; John Clifton, vice-president and gen- eral manager; Herbert White, secre tary, 1958 Arapahoe street. Solomoa Temple No. 419, K T., meets the second and fourth Thursday at 1712 Curtis street. All Knights im good standing are invited. D. D. COLE, C. M., C. P. M’KENZIE, C. P.. 31740 Arapahoe street. PAYNE CHAPEL NOTES, Sunday school 3 p. m. Women's Mite Missionary society at 4 p. m. Do not fail to be present and enjoy the program and assist im this good work. CENTRAL BAPTIST CHURCH. Cor. 24th and California streets Preaching at 11 a. m. and 8 p. m. Sunday schoe! at 12 o'clock. Young people’s meeting at 6:30 p. m. THE STATESMAN, DENVER, COLORADO. PAGE 15. PITCH TAYLOR, Prop. CHAS. COX, Mixologist. THE NEW ELK CLUB . ——————————————————— UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT. First-Class Pleasure Resort for Those Seeking Pleasure. PHONE MAIN 5154. 1855 Arapahoe St., DENVER, COLO. Se ee ee ee a a ee eee ee een ee Pes ee ase - Bunday services at Zion Baptist Church begins at 10:45 a.m. Sunday echool at 1 p.m. At 6:30 p. m. the B. ‘YY. P. U. meets for praise and devo tional service, meeting lasting one hour. Evening service begins at 7:30 sbarp. A special invitation is ex- teed to the sinner and backslider. af A. WALLER, Church Clerk. | Sunday sevices of Bethelehem Bap ‘st Church: Sunday school, 10:30 a. m.; preaching at 3 p. m.; night ser- ees 7:20 p.m. Rev. C. A. Edwards, pastor. Everybody is cordially invited ue church, 2814 Larimer. aa aan nan ann a danannnnde nnn nnnnnnndanadann An Excellent Resort for After Theatre Parties ? UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT ——————— , | NHE RHINE CAFE : 1129-1131 Nineteenth Street | NORWOOD & NORWOOD | Invite you to try our Unsurpassed Service | Your Satisfaction Qur Aim Regular Dinner 12 to 2:30 : Phone Main 7039 Short Orders People’s Presbyterian Church, Twes: ty-third and Washington avenues— Preaching at 11 a. m. and 8 p. m. Sun- day school at 9:30 p. m. Christian En- deavor at 7 p. m. Praise meeting Wednesday at 8 p.m. Covenant meet- ing Friday at 8 p.m. Welcome to all D. D. COLE, Pastor. COMMONWEALTH LIFE. Assembly No. 102, Commorwealth Life Association, meets second and fourth Friday at 1712 Curtis st., 8 p. m. All members are requested to be pres- ent. WHEN YOU GO TO LEADVILLE RS IS ALL IT WILL COST You oe See eer com: Re \s BICYCLES TIRES and SUNDRIBS at £ CES fi \ : BELO‘? any other manufacturer or dealer in the world. f Ni 00 NOT BUY A BICYCLE =~: i NY $f on any hind of terse until o have receive! our complete Free Cats? Np 4 Jorves illusirating a: deacriting every kind of high-grade and low-grade i (Nae bicycles, rs and latest models, and learn of our remarkable LOW Vi Mee PICKS a: wonderful new offers made possible by selling from factery y eres ae. aa = ey 4 4 Nn RE On premowal make other lilcral terms which no ocber | | ry Bouse in the world will do. You will learn everything and get much vale i} be saocion x nianly Briteg usa postal.” We need a Mider Agent in every town Opportunity {i 'to make money to suitable young men who apply at ones $8.50 PUNCTURE-PROOF TIRES 0." LY - rine $4.80 $8-50 pet Daits e ee PER Pal ‘o ee mone: . You © Sammie Gta ecttt are, Pale tor Only OUT THE AIR eee ¢ (CASH WITH ORDER 84.66) ry } 0 MORE TROUBLE FROM PUNCTURES. ae a Result as eee eee CAC- making. No danger from THORNS, CA if i TUS, PINS, NAILS, TACKS or GLASS. Avena came emacone Serious punctures, like intentional knife cuts, can and “D,” also Hen cre -E be vulcanized like any other tire. s pe Prevent rim cutting. This Two Hundred Thousand pairs new in actual use. Over Sa RnR RTO en ‘Seventy-five Thousand pairs sold last year. EASY RIDING. —oPESORIPTION: Made in all sires. ft is lively and easy riding, very durable and lined inside ith a special quality of rubber, which never becomes porous and which closes up small puncture: without allowing the air to escape. ¥'¢ have hundreds of letters from satisfied customers stating that theirtires have only been pumped uponce or twice ina whole season. They meee Bo more than an ordinary tire, the puncture resisting qtalities being given by several layers of thin, specialty prepared fabricon the tread. That “Hol Mding Back" sensation commonly felt when riding on asphalt Or soft roads is overcome by the patent “Basket Weave" tread which prevents all air from being seas out pe wee ee eae road thus: Serene all pate a regular ghee: 0 ir, but for advertisis rposes mak: factory rider ot only Sib per pais: All essere shipped cane day ntieris recinct mean Cotes ‘approval. You do not pay acent until you have examined and found them strictly as poets, We will allow a cash discount asec (thereby making the price 84. Per bait) if you send FULL CASH WITH ORDER and enclose this advertisement. We will also send one nickel plated brass hand pomp and two Sampson metal puncture closers om full paid orders oo metal puncture closers to be used in case of intentional knife cuts or heavy eae to be returned et OUR expense if for any reason they are not satisfactory on exami We are perfectly reliable and money sent to us is as safe as in a bank. Ask your Postmaster, Banker, xpress or Freight Agent or the Editor of this paper about us. If yeu order a pair of these tires, you will find that they will ride easier, rum faster, wear better, last longer and look Siner than any tire you have ever used or scen at any price. We know that you will be so well pleased that when you want a bicycle ‘will give us your order. We want you to send us a small trial order at cace, hence this remarkable tire offer, aa ae a anddles, OOASTER-BRAKES, erervinfog inte bore ware adore ‘bail the usual prices charged dealers repair men. rite for our AIT bo write us @ postal today. DO NOT THINK OF BUYING a DO NOT Wi bicycle or a pair of tires from anyone until you know the new and eee en neee nee Tt oaly costs a postal to learn everything. Write it NOW. stan MEAR CYCLE COMPANY, Dept. “JL” CHICAGO, ILL ee ee ee ee ES In Touch with more Lecal Transactions involving New Business than any other Medhen yet Devieed aa - - -@ al eb ls Se’ 2 | You can get first-class rooms witb Mrs. 8. J. Motley at 207 West Sixth street. First-class table board also. Write or call. 10-36 8 we Brownell Guides 1 LOCATE AND DISTRIBUTE NEW BUSINESS PAGE 2 SALIDA, COLO. There was an entertainment given at the A. M. E. Mission to raise money to pay for the church lots. A real nice time was had and they raised $10.35. The church kindly thanks each one for their kindness. Mrs. C. R. Hamlet and children have returned home after a three weeks visit in Denver. Mrs. J. J. Bates is on the sick list again. Mrs. E. B. Walker is back in Salida and is busy getting ready to house-keep. We are glad to see her home. Mrs. J. D. Garner passed through Salida Friday. Dr. C. M. Howe is home again. He is looking well. Mr. W. B. Holland has gone to Fort Worth, Texas, and will attend the Dallas fair. Mrs. Boyer is home at Coaldale after spending some time in Denver. Mr. and Mrs. Brown spent a few days in Salida and are now visiting in Coaldale. Mr. Joe Boyer is a regular visitor in Salida. IDAHO SPRINGS, COLO. Mrs. John Galbreath and Mrs. Jack Boneaport, of Idaho Springs, were guests of Mrs. Greenleaf Saturday evening and stayed over Sunday to attend the Shorter church, where Rev. W. W. Dyett preached his farewell sermon. Mr. Reader Galbreath has not yet returned from his visit to Chicago where he went to visit his mother. Mr. Willie Britton has left for a two-weeks' visit to the east to see his grandmother, whom he has not seen since he was three years old. NOTICE NOTICE Pastors of the Denver District, please take notice: Your quarterly meetings for the first quarter of this conference year will be as follows: Grand Junction, Colo., Oct. 13, 1907. Salt Lake, Utah, Oct. 20, 1907. Butte, Mont., Oct. 27, 1907. Anaconda, Mont., Nov. 3, 1907. Helena, Mont., Nov. 10, 1907. Billings, Mont., Nov. 24, 1907. Cheyenne, Wyo., Dec. 1, 1907. Shorter, Colo., Dec. 8, 1907. Great Falls, Mont., Nov. 17, 1907. Campbell, Colo., Dec. 15, 1907. Ward, Chapel, Colo., Dec. 22, 1907. Boulder, Colc., Dec. 29, 1907. Yours in His name, JAS. H. HUBBARD, P. E. Headquarters 2953 Stout Street, Denver, Colo. Wooden FlywhseI. After an accident to the flywheel in a large European electric station the superintendent designed and had constructed a flywheel of wood which has a diameter of 65 feet and a rim width of ten feet. The thickness of the rim is about 12 inches and it is made up of 44 thicknesses of beech planks with staggered joints. The boards were glued together and then bolted. The inside consists of a double wheel, the 24 spokes of which are fastened to two hubs. Spokes and hubs are operated at 76 revolutions a minute, which corresponds to a peripheral speed at the rio of 139 feet a second. --- THE STATESMAN. DENVER. COLORAD Gear Tricks Resorted To to Make the Brain Active. "Fenimore Cooper couldn't write unless he had gum drops to chew," said a librarian. "He bought gum drops in ten-pound and twenty-pound lots. As some men are the slaves of tobacco, wine or opium, so poor Cooper was the gum drop's slave. Without it he couldn't write a line. "Chateaubriand dictated his works in his bare feet. Elegantly attired down to the ankles, he padded softly up and down the floor, his thin white extremities very conspicuous on the dark rugs. "Gluck could only compose in the open air. When the spirit of composition took hold of him he dragged his piano out upon the lawn, and then, in rain or shine, in snow or hail, in August or December, the master evolved his beautiful harmonies. "Bossuet worked with a hot cloth bound round his head. Balzac in a monk's hood, Gautier in a scarlet cloak and Milton in a brown robe. Lord Derby when he wrote ate brandied cherries. Byn, writing, ate truffea. "This collection of facts," concluded the librarian, "goes to prove that men of genius, like the rest of us, are silly in some things." Avoid the Mountains. "You never saw a cat bathing in the sea. You never saw a tramp in a mountainous country. Each spectacle is of equal rarity." The speaker, a geologist, smiled. "I know what I am talking about." he said. "In quest of geological truths I have traveled the country over many times, and I have yet to find a tramp among the mountains Tramps avoid mountains as they avoid soap. "Hence New Hampshire, Vermont and the other mountainous states are singularly free from petty thieving and from all such troubles as hobos cause. And hence, in those states it is never necessary to lock the doors or the windows. "Tramps avoid mountainous districts because the walking is all uphill there and because the farms are few and far between. A fertile and flat country with the roads good and the farms close together suits the tramp." Diminishing Scale. Grandma had an open hearth Equipped with crane and spit. And there she turned her banquets out For kings and princes fit. Mother had a cookstove big To satisfy your wish. And Stella feeds the inner man Upon a chafing dish. And so we think, if this keeps up, A toothsome mess to hatch. The generation yet to come Will seek upon a match. -McLandburgh Wilson No More a Wandering Minstrel I am racing homeward with this letter, and I am not going away any more.—John Temple Graves in the Atlanta Georgian. Italian Proverb. When the sun shines on thee thou needst not care for the moon.—From the Italian. States Banished from Schools. States are no longer used in London schools. The exercises are written on washable paper with lead pen-dia. The Ideal Drug Store, SOFT DRINKS OF ALL KINDS. PURE DRUGS CAREFULLY COMPOUNDED E. F. CANTEY, PHARMACIST. Corner of Nineteenth and Arapahoe Street. Denver, Colo. VISITORS TO DENVER Will appreciate the cleanliness the expert workship and most of all the artesian water used exclusively in ORAN C. GOENS' BARBER SHOP 1226 EIGHTEENTH ST. Newly Fitted Out. Fine Line of Cigars 2300 ALTER EAS getables, Fruits, Meats SPECIALTIES FOR THE COMING BLES WALTE Groceries, Vegetables, OUR SPECIALTIES FO OUR SPECIALTIES FOR THE COMING WEEK A Fresh line of Vegetables received daily: Radishes, Potatoes, Lettuce, Onions, Cabbage, Turnips, Spinach, Tomatoes etc. Also Canned Goods We handle nothing but the best of Apples, Oranges, Lemons, Bananas, etc. Also Canned Goods DELICA In this Department everything Chitterlings, Chine Bones, Snoots, P thing about a he DELICATESEN ment everything is complete, up-to Bones, Snoots, Pig Feet, Ears, T a thing about a hog but the squeal. In this Department everything is complete, up-to-date and fresh Chitterlings, Chine Bones, Snoots, Pig Feet, Ears, Tails, Hocks. Everything about a hog but the squeal. WALTER EAST CINEMA FILMHOUSE CITY LALLIAN CENTER CENTRAL LITERATURE HALL The colored orphanage and old folks' home, city location 446 to 452 South First street, Jerome Park. Our suburban property, 160 acres, sixteen miles northeast of Denver and 105 feet higher than Denver, where nature smiles. Incorporated October, 1905. Our executive board is undenominational. We receive any child or aged cautiously. Anyone desiring information of any kind relative to this charitable work among our people or any other nationality will find any of the --- --- PHONE 1461 VEGETABLES FRUITS Phone 1461 E R E A S T ruits, Meats, Delicatessen R THE COMING WEEK MEATS In this Department there is nothing lacking: Beef, Mutton and Pork Try our Roasts and Steaks Also Canned Meats Here you can get Flour, Crackers Meal, Salted Meats, Sugar, Coffees Teas, Spices and anything needed for the Kitchen Also Bakery Goods TESSEN is complete, up-to-date and fresh Feet, Ears, Tails, Hocks. Every- g but the squeal. 2300-6 Larimer St. LUZLIT following officers ready and willing to explain the work and its needs: Robert Gray, president; Mrs. J. A. Smith, vice president; Mrs. J. P. Blackwell, second vice president; Mrs. Lavenia Knight, matron; Mrs. Hattie Shelton, assistant matron; Mrs. Hattie Overman, chairman building fund; Mrs. M. E. Morrison, solicitor, 834 South 12th street; William R. Rhones, secretary and treasurer, 2535 East 5th avenue. "Not looking each of you to his own things, but each of you also to the things of others." --- Hot and Cold Baths* 2300-2306 Larimer St. MEATS PROVISIONS : THE STATESMAN, DENVER, COLORADO. FAAS: NOW THE BRACELET COCKTAIL Another Fascinating Vision of Metro- politan Life. The cocktail bracelet is the latest for women. There are fashionable women of this city who wear circlets on their wrists which sometimes con- tain a Martini dry or a Manhattan, Gays a New York correspondent. The bracelets have one drawback, it 1s said, and that is they will not accom- modate the cherry that goes with the fairy cocktail. The other night a Pittsburg attorney observed a woman of fashion place her lips to her brace let. He thought that she was paying tribute to her own loveliness, but learned later she was merely ref:esh- ing her {oner self with a mixture of cordials, The nip contained .» a@ bracelet cocktail is so small tha It cannot be called a drink, but a cock- tail it Is, nevertheless. Of course, the bracelet !s hollow. If large enough it bolds three thimblefuls of ready-made cocktail, and pressure on an almost in- visible spring permits the full to trickle through a tiny hole in the cold shell, which is almost too small ') be seen. With one of those graceful Movements which appear to be rat- eral with @ woman the drink may de imbibed wit,.out fear of detection. A Broadway goldsmith sells numbers of the bracelets every week, and as most of the purchasers prefer secrecy in connection with the transaction “hey pay a pretty penny for the dubjourly woeful trinkets. Buying by Moonlight. “1 made a queer trip one nigh! not long ago,” sald the agent of » ceme tery company. “I went out to the cemetery after dark wits a& prospect ive customer, so she couid see how the burial lot under consideration looked by moonlight. ‘The Indy was of a romantic turn of mind. She had taken a fancy toa plot on a little knoll overlooking a lake, but before closing the deal she insisted upon see. ing the effect of the moonbeams on the water and surrounding landscape IT had sold many lots under peculiar eireumstances, but that poetic phase of our business was something new. The lady seemed to derive considera. ble satisfaction from it. Anyway, she bought the lot.” Wliterate French Conscripts. Among the conscripts that aris Ie sending to the French regiments are 160 illiterates, of whom 9) can peither read nor write. Who could Suppose that la ville lumiere could contain so many ignorant people after & quarter of a century's compulsory education?—Paris Figaro. Young Weman's Pretty Tribute. One young woman has named the Deautiful teacups on her table after some characteristic of the donor of each. One she calls Loyalty, one Gincerity, one Sweetness, There is also a Jealousy, a Youth, a Hope, an Ambition and Luck. Bride’e Leap for Luck. At a recent wedding at Holy Island the bride leaped “for luck” over an ancient stone that formed the socket of St. Culbert’s Cross, erected in the ninth century, Had she failed to do this it would bave been considered ap (l-omes fer her future Uta Thought Ride Sufficient Reward. An oficial of the Brooklyn street eer lines tells the following story: “There was a new conductor put on hurriedly one Monday morning, with- out beimg tnformed fully as to details. Om Saturday afternuon as he was sit- time ia the baru, a fellow conductor said to him, ‘Why don't re go up to the office an get your pay? The new man looked up in surprise. “What, do they pay you wages too? he asked.” Went Long Without Food. ow long can an animal live with: out eating? Last year a dog was im. prisoned for 29 days in a rabbit war- ren at Guiliford, England, yet was @ug out alive. During the siege of Mets, in the Franco-Prussian war, a Gog was confined without food or water for 39 days; while Dover rec: ords have the story of a pig wtich, buried alive by a fall of cliff, cane out all right at the end of 160 -s Orydock Cut Out of Rock. ee ea Racket MS rg oe a re At Port Florence, on the shore of the great lake Victoria Nyanza, which ie the chief source of the Nile there {s a drydock cut out of solid rock by natives who had never before cone much serious work. The dock is 250 feet long, 48 feet wide and 14 feet Geep. It is 3,700 feet above the level of the sea, or nearly three times the altitude of Lake Chautauqua Where Paris Is Behind. Despite all modern !.aprovements Paris still heats its houses and its Romes to a large extent with wood. {ts bakers and confectioners use hard- ly anything elee for fual. It burns ep whole forests of timber every year, aad extensive forests in several re Gions of France are reserved for sup plying it w.th fuel. The Law. Thou shalt worship the Almighty Dollar with all thy heart, with ali thy soul and with all thy might. This fe the first and great commandment; and the second is like unto it: Thou shalt love thy neighbor less than his money. On these two command ments bang all the “law” and its proits.—Lifs+ Bew Wrasd Opera Glegtried Wagner ts just putting the Qniehing touches to a new three-act pera, a grand opera, upon a serious @ubject, it is said, amd it will be pro faced in the course of April before the rehearsals for Bayreuth begin. The Wdretto is by the composer himself, and ft has already been translated inte Frenob, as there is a chance that ft @ay be heard almost simu!taneously fm Parts ané Germany, An Unprogreesive Inetitution. One of the most successful clergy: men in Philadelphia,” remarked a col- lege professor, “was proud of the fact that he was always addressed as plain ‘mister,’ and that he possessed no de gree which entitled him to the honor able name of ‘doctor.’ “An elder entered the clergyman's study one morning and handed him a marked paper. The item stated that the minister had been bonored by his old college and that now he could at- tach. D. D. to his name. “‘Well, well, muttered the pastor, pet without feeling, for he loved his eellege, ‘my old school is a little be hind the times, aud still belleves in engital punishment.’” HELLO BILL! Those Kings of Entertainers WILL GIVE A HALLOWE'EN BALL Thursday Evening Oct. 31 on{that Great Dancing Floor at | East Turner Hall ia 7 | t= | Yo = & =a z. Nt (te oO Ss ; ‘aed a7 \\ 2 | Av a | = = (oe) \ re S&S = \ ht ” o AS 3 - = Rice Lodge No. 39 As this is the first time this season that you have had a chance to enjoy yourself, come out and we'll see that 11 o'clock never comes COMMITTEE: J. B. Moore, Chm., Geo. Lewis, C. Hilsman, J. Conway Geo. Brushwood, E. H. Parker, Geo. Thomas, J. Owens W. Baker, P. Mason, J. Ellison and Hudson WE WILL DO YOUR JOB PRINTING char. iA THE NEEDMORE CLUB ef Cigars and Poolege PAGE 4 NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC. The correct statement of the condition and solidity of The Colorado Mutual Benefit Association is on page 5 of this edition.—Adv. Mrs. Irving Williams was confined to bed last week. A. G. Falling is the newly elected president of the Sunday Alliance. P. Spencer has been taken to the sanitorium in Pueblo. Prof. Wm. Mackey is about after a few days' illness. Henry Jett of Alabama is visiting Walter Loveoy. King Hayes has suffered an injury to his hand. Ed. Hayden is in the city from Alamosa en route East for a visit. The Buckingham club will give a ball November 26 at Bourner's hall. "Nuf sed." Miss Mattie Singleton came home from Colorado Springs much improved in health by her trip. Miss Susie McCleldon of Kansas City, sister of Mrs. J. W. Morris, was married to J. C. Cooper of Omaha in Cheyenne last Thursday. Wednesday evening, just before her return to her home in Coaldale, a surprise party was given on Miss Mattie Boyer, by a number of her friends. Mrs. Bruce of Salida, who has been in Wyoming attending upon her sick son, passed through the city this week en route home. Dr. Douglass of Pueblo is in the city and is crossing the sands of the desert under the guidance of the local shriners. Mrs. H. C. Dunn and children of Butte are in the city visiting her mother, Mrs. Williams of the West side. Mrs. N. McCormick and children of Garden City, who have been visiting her sister, Miss Maggie Johnson, have returned home. Mr. and Mrs. Harper of Manitou stopped over in this city en route to Omaha for the winter. They have purchased property there and are doing nicely. Isaac Drake, wife and daughter of Kansas City, have been here visiting his brother, William. --- THE STATESMAN, DENVER, COLORADO. City News ..A graded night school will be opened on November 1. For particulars call or write Mrs. Laura Hill, 1742 Glenarm street, or iMss Carrie Carper, 1722 Logan avenue. Thos. Quoin of Edgewater entertained a number of his friends Monday evening in honor of his birthday. Mrs. J. W. McAdow leaves Sunday for Canada where she will spend the winter with relatives. Mrs. Alice Caper, of 1722 Logan, is out again after beink laid up a week by a nail which ran into her foot. She drew benefits from the Commonwealth Life. Dr. C. W. Raines and wife of Clarksdale, Miss., were in the city a few days last week visiting their brother, Harry Raines, at 2045 Arapahoe. They are on their way to Mexico and California and other points West. Keep off date, Nov. 19th. Pythians Lodge No. 11, K. of P., out for an other good time. East Turner. The marriage of Miss Ollie Henry and Geo. Thornton was solomnized last Saturday afternoon by Justice Carlon. The Statesman wishes the happy couple success and happiness. FOR SALE—One credit memorandum, good for $50 on the Columbine Music Co. Can be used as part payment on piano. Call on Sam Finklestein at J. S. Appel's store. Cheap. Mrs. Peggie Gordon, of 2227 Champa street, who fell from the Montclair car the other night, was highly pleased when Mr. Harris, of the Commonwealth Life, called on her and paid her the first week's benefit. "Isn't that nice?" she said, "I thought I'd have to go down to the office when I got well to get my money like the other sick and accident companies make you do. Benefits paid every week are best." Mrs. Walter Cooper of 1609 Clarkson street, and Miss Mary Williams, entertained Sunday at 3 p. m. dinner in honor of Mrs. Louisa Armstead. The table was laid in white with a pink and white carnation center piece. The menu was served in three courses which were very elaborate. Those present were Mrs. Louisa Armstead, Mrs. C. P. McKinzie, Mrs. N. J. Welch, Mrs. M. Nicles and Master R. Cooper. The ladies report the hostesses grand entertainers. --- KEEP OFF! BECAUSE IT'S HOT. OCTOBER 23. Look out for "The Grand Old Flag," as sung by Miss Virgie Webster. No reserved seats, but enough seats will be on sale at East Turner hall, Oct. 17. S. R. O. may be hung up. Everyone knows that the Denver girl is a winner, but Oct. 17 you will see more pretty girls than you ever saw at one time. Jessie Nickens Reese and her young ladies have for a long time given their services free to the churches, the women's clubs, the Alliance, the Eureka literary and to others. They have received many a time a "note of thanks." Now they expect all of these "thanks" voters to do something more substantial and come out October 17 at East Turner Hall. The "Rein Dance" will be the grand finale. A dozen pretty maidens harnessed up will do the pretties and most unique dance by amateur talent ever seen on a Denver stage. Oct. 17. Don't forget, Thursday, Oct. 17- Opening of the Eureka Dancing Academy at Bourner's Hall, corner Twenty-seventh and Arapahoe streets, and continues every Thursday night, at 8 o'clock. First class in every respect. All are invited to attend. Don't forget, Thursday, October 17 —Opening of the Eureka Dancing Academy, at Bourned's Hall, corner of Twenty-seventh and Arapahoe streets, and continues every Thursday night at 8 o'clock. First class in every respect. All are invited to attend. Miss Anjetta Breidlove is out after a month's illness from typhoid. She drew benefits every week from the Commonwealth Life and speaks in high praise of them. The program for the People's Sunday Alliance is as follows: Vocal duet and instrumental solo, by Messrs. Willlam Morris and Samuel Savage. Paper, by Q. J. Gilmore. Discussion, "remarks," President A. G. Fallings. Any one wishing dressmaking or sewing of any kind call Mrs. Geo. Ellgin, Jr., 2929 High street, phone York 2174. THE ONLY COMPANY THAT HAS COMPLIED. The Union Health and Accident Company is the only home institution that has complied with the new law by depositing with the State of Colorado ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS as a guarantee that the rights of the policy holders will be protected. There are many companies soliciting business whose resources are less than three hundred dollars, and more than twenty of them have failed during the past few years. It would appear that there is no chance of their success, in view of the fact that the people have their choice of a strong or weak concern, the cost of insuring being the same. STATESMAN-Oct. 11 Mc Union Health & Accident Co. Gentlemen:—I am today in receipt of your check for $32.15 in payment of my recent claim for illness. I desire to thank you for your promptness and liberality in the adjustment, and most heartily recommend you to all desiring reliable insurance. Respectfully, FLORENCE WALTER. 162 Filmore St. The Union Health & Accident Co. Dear Sirs:—I desire to thank you for your prompt payment of my claim for illness. The amount I received, $24.00, was a great help to me. It pays to be insured with a company that has the money to meet the constant demands for indemnities. Very respectfully, MAY ANDERSON. RELIABLE INSURANCE. If you want good insurance in a big, reliable company, we are interested. If you are looking for an inferior article, then we can't do anything for you. The Union Health has nothing but the best to sell, and the One Hundred Thousand Dollars deposited with the state is a guarantee to the people that we have the courage of our convictions to protect their interest by the deposit. HOSPITAL! HOSPITAL!! The population of Denver is increasing daily with sick as well as strong. The hospitals are so overcrowded that the managers of these institutions have decided that some persons must be turned away. So what did they decide to do? Why, close the doors to the black man, of course. What should we do to resent their actions? We, the Life Line club, say "No, don't lose time that way; just get one of our own." The members of the Life Line club have unanimously agreed to take the initiative. We are going to open a hospital here in Denver and we want the generous assistance of the public. Our first venture will be a real charity ball, given at East Turner Hall, Dec. 12, and we wish everybody to respond on that date and don't let's have anything else that night, but everybody come and help make this an overwhelming success. A full account will be published later. Watch for it. Mrs. Ophelia N. Harris of 1116 Campbell street, Oakland, Cal., is perhaps the wealthiest colored woman in this country, is expected to arrive in Denver next month. Mrs. Harris has won several beauty prizes in Chicago and the old country. Mrs. Esther Morris crowded a host of ladies in her parlors last Thursday afternoon at her fall opening of millinery. She displayed a large line of hats of various designs and prices and disposed of a flattering number of them. Her goods have the chic appearance of the Eastern designers and are "taking." Don't forget, Thursday, Oct. 17- Opening of the Eureka Dancing Academy, at Boumes Hall, corner Twenty-seventh and Arapahoe streets, and continues every Thursday night at 8 o'clock. First class in every respect. All are invited to attend. The city has been greatly honored by the presence of the Building Labor delegates, who came here to assemble in convention to improve labor conditions. There were men of ability to be found in those organizations, men of integrity and of wealth as some of the delegates have already shown. There were no riots, no disturbances at the convention and a great mass of business was transacted, all to the honor of those black sons of toil, whose slogan has been, and now is, "We must hang together or we hang apart, in the former we have all the world to gain and nothing to lose." Denver certainly feels proud of the men whose influence was responsible for the convention coming here. She bids them come again. DON'T BE DECEIVED. Your friends all carry with the Commonwealth Life and so should you. They are getting 300 new members in Denver each month because all their members boost for them and because they get treated right. The Good Books says. "Prove all things and hold fast to that which is good." The Commonwealth is proven by our four years' experience and today they have more Denver members than any other three companies. They pay full time for all acute diseases (a thing which no other Denver insurance company does), and also pays for death and part time for rheumatism, consumption, paralysis, etc. If you drop any other company benefits are good immediately. Ask your friends. The Commonwealth Life has over $23,000 assets. The Pleasant Hour Club, composed of the choir of the People's Presbyterian church, meet at its usual hour after practice on Saturday evening. We are glad to say that this club is progressing nicely under the president, Mr. Fields. After the routine of business lunch was served and all enjoyed themselves to the utmost. ARULA COLE. Secretary. ALLIE HENDERSON. Treasurer. THE STATESMAN. DENVER. COLORADO. I was in Alamosa, Colo., Sunday, Sept. 29, 1907, organized a church of ten members, and started a very hopeful movement to secure a church! One good thing in our favor is that the mayor of the city and other prominent citizens stand pledged to do all they can to secure a church. Mr. Ed Hayden, our popular chair car porter, did us good service. Alamosa is a coming town. Five young men recently from Pueblo, went up and bought some ranch lands. Mr. Mark Wright is doing good work in building himself a home. Mrs. Perkins, Smith and others are doing well. On Sunday, Oct. 6, I preached in Walsenburg and organized a church with ten members. The people of this town are loud in their praises of this place. I think I am safe in saying that we have here the wealthiest colored man in the state in the person of Mr. A. J. Steele. He is said to be worth $50,000, runs a livery barn, and has also much city property. The men of means in these towns are active in securing an A. M. E. church. Mr. Steele is one of our trustees. But our people in Walsenburg are for the most part old church people, hence we look for great things from them. There are Willis, Gooderts, York, Dance and others who are making an effort to secure a lot at once. J. W. SANDERS NOTICE To my patrons and the public-J have moved my residence to 3020 Welton street. Phone Main 6791. Dr. Westbrook. Miss Norah Finley will open your eyes and please your fancy when you hear her sing the latest Pekin theater success, "Wid de Moon." East Turner hass, Oct. 17. Our Polish dance with Miss Arlena Burns as solo dancer will be well worth the price of admission. Misses Josephine Allyn and Geraldine Troutman are sure to meet all expectations Oct.17 at East Turner hall. Everybody that has had any experience in "riding the goat" of any secret order will enjoy the song stunts and characterization of the well-known Jno. Leon Pryor and Willie Burns, Oct.17. East Turner hall. Two of our youngest actresses, Misses Gracie Burns and Genevie Marks, will do some excellent team work. Denver's sweetest soprano Miss Jessie Andrews, will lend her voice to the Odd Fellows' benefit and sing the popular air, "Lonesome Tonight." The Arapahoe Odd Fellows are going to have an enlarged photograph of The Jessie Nickens Reese and hung in their hall as a testimonial for of The Jessie Nickens Reese young ladies framed and hung in their hall as a testimonial for their assistance Oct. 17 at East Turner Hall. The Colorado Mutual Just take your time and come to the FIRST GRA MASK IRST GRAND PRIZE ASK BA FIRST GRAND PRIZE MASK BALL A East Tu Wednes. O Don't Forget the Date. Come early, eat p Harris' Full Orch st Turner Ines. Oct. 23, Forget the Date. Admission 35 Come early, eat plenty and stay late s' Full Orchestra-10 P East Turner Hall Wednes. Oct. 23, '07 Don't Forget the Date. Admission 35 cents Come early, eat plenty and stay late Why not Patronize Home Industry Climax Laundry WATKINS AND JOHNSON, PROPS. Johnnie Watkins, max Laundry ND JOHNSON, PROPS. Johnnie Watkins, WATKINS AND JOHNSON, PROPS. Johnnie Watkins, Manager. Low Prices Goods called for and delivere 1454 Lawrence St. Phon e3434 A LEMON Oct.23'07 Mutual Credit Association obligations held for the protection or must claims: Stock $8,700.00 3,000.00 3,200.00 3,000.00 $17,900.00 who can show securities for the pro- der the laws of Colorado. BALL Of the Season Given by Wm. Knight Five Grand Prizes Awarded by popular vote. Full Set of Parlor Furniture given to the finest costumed lady rner Hall ct. 23, '07 Admission 35 cents enty and stay late estra-10 Pieces undry Co. Johnnie Watkins, Manager. PAGE 5. A LEMON Oct.23'07 PAGE & Office hours: 7 a. m. to 7 p. m. and by appointment. Phone Main 7416. Dr. T. Ernest McClain DENTAL SURGEON, Latest Styles of Crown and Bridge Work. 2139 Curtis St. DENVER, COLO. Rooms—31-2 Good Block. Office Phone Main 5595. Hours: 9 to 11 a. m., 1 to 4 p. m., 7 to 8 p. m. DR. P. E. SPRATLIN. Residence, 2230 Clarkson Street. Telephone York 123. Hours, 9 to 11 a. m. 3 to 5 and 7 to 8 p. m. Sundays 9 to 10 a. m. and by appointment. DR. W. A. JONES 911 TWENTY-FIRST STREET. Near Champa Phone Main 5554. OFFICE HOURS: Dr. Westbrook. Dr. Harper. 10 to 11 a. m. 8 to 12 m.. 3 to 5 p. m. 1 to 5 p. m. All Other Hours and Sunday by Appointment. 'Phone Main 1144. DR. WESTBROOK Physician and Surgeon Residence, 3020 Welton Street. Phone 6791. DR. HARPER Dentist 915-917 Twenty-First Street. Dr. Justina L. Ford Telephone Main 3230. OFFICE HOURS: 10 to 12 a. m., 2 to 4 p. m., 7 to 8 p. m. OFFICE AND RESIDENCE. 2026 Araphoe Street, Denver. OFFICE HOURS:—9 to 10 a. m. 2 to 4 p. m. 8 to 9 p. m. Sundays 10 to 11 a. m. 7 to 8 p. m. Other hours at residence. 1539 E. 30th Ave. Dr. E. L. FAULKNER 1023 Nineteenth Street. TELEPHONES:Office, Main 463. Residence, York 3868. DENVER, COLO. Abstracts of title, wills, deeds and all legal matters pertaining to real and personal property carefully looked GEO. G. ROSS ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR-ATLAW Collections a Specialty. For persons in and out of the city. Room 207 Kittredge Building. Residence, 2344 Tremont Place. After 6:00 Phone Olive 1414. DENVER, COLORADO. JOS. H. STUART PRACTICES IN ALL COURTS Office 329 Kittredge Bldg., Cer. 16th and Glenarm. Examining abstracts of title, and drawing up legal documents given careful attention. PHONE OLIVE 2294. THE STATESMAN. DENVER. COLORADO. Bagpipe Music. Except to Scotchmen the sounds usually evoked from a bagpipe are not highly musical. A humorist in the Clarion attempts an analysis of them: Big flies on windows—seventy-two per cent; cats on midnight tiles—eleven and one-half per cent; voices of infant puppies—six per cent; grunting of hungry pigs in the morning—five per cent; steam whistles—three per cent; chant of cricket—two per cent. Playing for Safety. A few weeks ago a negro, of Alabama, entering the witness box, said he thought he wouldn't swear. He thought he would just affirm. "Erastus," said the judge, "how is this? A month ago, when you appeared before me you consented readily enough to be sworn. Why is it you will only be affirmed now?" "Well, yo' honah," said Erastus, "de reason am dat I specks I ain't quite so sure about de facks o' dis case as I was o' de odder." Artificial Birds for Hats. A bird of paradise that never was hatched and never flew, and against which the Audoubon society will never make a protest, may now decorate women's hats. Humming birds, toucans, and sun birds, as well can now be made by artists, who construct these gorgeous creatures out of chickens feathers and coal tar dyes. Cannibalism Must Stop. With a quivering hand we off from an Irish paper the following transcript of an official notice in Dublin government office: "Under no circumstances must government messengers be used for luncheon."—London Daily News. Tremendous! A man who can inherit one fortune, and marry another, and not be absolutely extinguished, is a tremendous fellow.—Puck. Land of Many Tongues. The Russian empire holds the record of having under its sway 65 separate and distinct racial groups. Many Arrivals in New York. An average of 3,000 persons land in New York city from ocean going vessels each day. Guernsey a Flower Mart. As many as 12,000 boxes of flowers are shipped from the island of Guernsey at Easter. This was something over 60 tons. Some of the flowers go to France, which is Guernsey's nearest neighbor, but the majority go to London. First Rate Ratio Hojack—Can you give me a good rule for playing poker? Tamdik—Jian. "Go ahead." "Don't pohe." Louvilleville Courier-Journal Diminish Scale. Grandma had an open hearth Equipped with crane and spit. And there she turned her banquets out For kings and princes fit. Mother had a cookstove big To satisfy your wish, And Stella feeds the inner man Upon a chafing dish. And so we think, if this keeps up, A toothsome mess to hatch, The generation yet to come Will cook upon a match. -McLandburgh Wilson. There is a growing demand at lucrative salaries in all sections of the country, and especially in the South, for young men train in agriculture. The demand for the graduates from this department of the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute is so far in excess of the supply that we are offering special inducements to graduates of other schools, and persons sufficiently advanced in the academic branches to come here and pursue the courses in agriculture, including practical farm work, dairying, livestock raising, etc. An opportunity will be given a few earnest young men to work out all of their board while taking a course. Those interested can secure full information by addressing BOOKER T. WASHINGTON. Principal The Leader We are now pleased to announce to the public that we are now locating at 20571/2 Larimer street with all kinds of hair goods and ornamental goods of all kinds, and we also announce we have a full line of millinery in the latest Parisian style in hats and bonnets of all kinds. MRS. A. M. POPE. MRS. L. L. 4 years ago my hair was only a finger-length, and my temples were bald half way up my head. When we first began our wonderfulities, all lengths, and all conditions on bald places of the head, many thing was possible; but we have achieving success. The proof of the ing imitated and largely by personal grown and the further fact that they when trying to sell their goods (said as good") or referred to "PORO." Hair Grower, (the oldest and best of RO" is on every box, not genuine with M. POPE. BEWARE OF Miss Genevieve Hallowell, prop. Mrs. J. R. Hallowell, Mgr. THE WOMEN'S HAIR CARE 4 years ago my hair was only a 4 years ago my hair just covered finger-length, and my temples my shoulders. were bald half way up my head. When we first began our wonderful work of growing all kinds, all qualities, all lengths, and all conditions of hair, even to the growing of hair on bald places of the head, many persons scorned the idea that such a thing was possible; but we have grown the hair for hundreds, rapidly achieving success. The proof of the value of our work is that we are being imitated and largely by persons whose own hair we have actually grown and the further fact that they have very frequently mentioned us when trying to sell their goods (saying that "theirs is the same" or "just as good") or referred to "PORO." We advise you to use only "PORO" Hair Grower, (the oldest and best of its kind). See that the name "PORO" is on every box, not genuine without it. Prepared only by MRS. A. M. POPE. MRS. A. 2223 Market St. St. Louis, Mo. BRANCH OFFICE Conduct MRS. M. A phone Olive 1984. 2223 Market St. St. Louis, Mo. Bell Phone Bomont 3109. BRANCH OFFICE IN DENVER . Call, or Address Mail to RETIRING FROM BUSINESS. Madame C. J. Walker and Miss McWilliams, her successor, wish to announce to their customers, old and new, that they have decided to open up business elsewhere and close up their business in Denver. All who wish following articles will find them at Miss McWilliams, 2310 Lawrence street: Letter of instruction, irons, pressing oil, soap and hair grower; also they have a new and very handy invention for care of hair and would like to take your order for one. It is something that most women will be very pleased with. --- ROBERTS. The Original Hair Growers We Grew Our Hair Now Let Us Grow Yours with "PORO" hair just covered moulders. I work of growing all kinds, all qualif hair, even to the growing of hair persons scorned the idea that such a crown the hair for hundreds, rapidly the value of our work is that we are be- TRADE MARK (Registered) PORTER'S SHINING PARLOR. Strictly first-class. A nice place for ladies to have their shoes dressed or wait while you have your dressed. We carry a full line of shoe laces, all styles. If you are wearing tan shoes and wish to change them to black call on us. We guarantee all work. We call for shoes that are within a reasonable distance. Open 7:30 to 9 p. m. Phone Main 5639. WILL TAYLOR, Prop., 911 Eighteenth street. NOTIFY US AT ONCE Subscribers to this paper will please bear in mind that they will confer a favor on us by notifying us at once whenever the paper is irregular in delivery or is late. It is our fault that it does not leave this office, but the is ours or not, it can be corrected only by our being told. All Denver subscribers should receive the paper Sat office system, and whether the fault urday. All Colorado subscribers by Saturday or Monday at the latest. If your paper is all right we are pleased, if it is late or irregular, kick!! We are in receipt of unsigned notices from time to time which are emitted for lack of signature. Other contributors get economical and write their news on such small pieces of paper that they become lost among the larger sheets on which such matter is usually written. It is not often that matter is intentionally omitted where some good reason does not exist. Therefore persons will do well to conform to the easy regulations which govern matter for newspapers. Don't cuse the editor. Just look and see if you are not at fault. The Conley Employment and Real Estate Co. A big real estate firm going out of business has turned their business over to us. Give us a call at our office. THE CONLEY REAL ESTATE CO Room 29, Pioneer Building, corner Fifteenth and Larimer streets, Denver, Colo. Phone Main 8004. MRS. M. A. HOLLEY Graduate of Mrs. M. A. Pope in Scalp & Hair Treatment She is now prepared to do the same work as is done in the originator's parlors. She is the sole agent for the famed preparation, "Poro." Address her at 2118 Arapahoe street, or phone Olive 1984. GIVE HER A CALL THE STATESMAN. DENVER. COLORADO. NOT ALL A COMPLIMENT. Wife's Pride in Husband's Success Had a Tinge of Regret. The doctor and his wife had lived together four years. She was a widow when he met her. He was a physician of note. Their life together was a happy one and no quibbling had entered the home to set a bad example for their hopeful. But the wife had a reputation as a wit. Her witticisms and little sarcastic remarks were known far and wide. Her friends had all heard of them. They had all felt the sting of them. The physician had been working with a hard case. He had spent day and night at the home of his patient and had won the fight for life. And he was accordingly well satisfied with himself. On his arrival home one evening he turned to his wife, saying: "You see, wifey dear? I have pulled my patient through. He is now well on the road to recovery." "Yes, hubby, dear," returned the wife. "But you are such a perfect master of your profession. You are so successful. Ah, I wish that I had met you five years sooner than I did. Then my poor, dear Billy would never have died." The New York Spirit. ▲ pew in a New York church recently sold for $5,500. The next thing will be the listing of church pews on the New York stock exchange. Vicarious Burdena. Everybody can bear troubles easily enough when they happen to belong to somebody else. The theater green room is so called because its floor, in the time of Shakespeare, was always covered with green rushes. Her Plaint. She-What horrid seats we have, Tom, right in the middle of the cheering section! I can't see a single hat or dress. To Him That Waits. From the Persian: God rights the man that keeps silence. Sport of the infant Japanese Girl. Little girls make a play of one thing that in after years becomes labor, labor of love though it is. So soon as a girl is old enough, pernaps three or four, her dolly is tied to her back in the same way that she was fastened to her nurse's back when she was a baby. She carries this about while at play, and as she grows older a larger doll is used until she has grown accustomed to the weight and is able to carry her baby brother or sister, thus relieving her mother, who perhaps works in the rice fields or in a tea garden.—Laura B. Starr, in the Circle. Tea as a Libation. The Chinese have a curious way of worshiping the statue of Buddha, with their favorite beverage. Into a great bowl of sweetened tea, a statue of the god is placed; women bring their offerings, then taking up some of the tea with a ladle, pour it over the defenseless head of the placid god. From the same ladleful they help themselves, giving a sip to each of their little ones. --- THE CALUMET SOCIAL CLUB Lawrence Stephen, Mgr. A FIRSTCLASS RESORT Come and Have a Quiet Smoke. Phone Main 8232 2149 Curtis Street Denver A. B. N. B. ANDERSC J. N. B. J. N. B. ANDERSON ICE 2626 LARIMER ST. --- REGISTER HERE Inquiries for help es for help and for work are Inquiries for help and for work are continually coming to us and frequently we cannot give satisfactory answers. Inquiries also come to us for accommodations of all kinds, furnished and unfurnished rooms with and with out board. Persons who have such, should also register with us. In case this practice becomes general it will greatly aid us in our endeavors to further the public's welfare in these two particulars. Either call, write or phone us. PIANOS $100. Anyone may have a Plane delivered at once in 82.00 per week payments. COLUMBINE MUSIC CO. Ground Floor Charles Building. JAS. F. CLARK. FUEL TWO JIMS' SOCIAL CLUB Denver's Favorite Pleasure Resort Whist, pool, chess checkers and other pastime games 1859 Champa Street NDERSON --- for work are continually Dealer in PAGE 7. Phone Main 2275 FEED PONE 7994 ‘seiuina , THE STATESMAN, DENVER, COLORADO. The Statesman ACROSS THE BRINY DEEP FOR 18 CENTS—REV. FORD'S EX- CELLENT LECTURE. men picked it up in a huge bony-lxe iron cask. Then passing beneath the colossal, gigantic Gibraltar that com mands the opening to the Mediterran ean sea our ship looked like a beetle in a pond. Then the pleasure of visit ing Spain, seeing all nations and un derstanding none except those of your own country, makes one indeed 9 stranger in a strange land. Their characteristic shrewdness in the market places, and untrustworth- iness as carriers of your luggage, their extreme willingness to serve you and at the same time to rob you, makes one very careful and observ- ing. Then visiting Rome, Naples, af- ter having crossed the Bay of Biscay ‘and passed Corsica, the home of Na- ‘poleon, and Pompey'’s prey of the robbing pirate in his time, going over j Tunis, Algeria and Morroeco, and being on the Swarthy shores of Af- rica, returning to Italy only to’ be rushed 300 miles on the ltest im- proved railway in 8 hours in the cars in which the conductors lock you and seeing how polite, how courteous, how considerate the native works for Ups will make you feel like you hate your native home and wish to stay in these parts forever. In Paris a visit to the colony of American Ne- groes composed of Mme. Hackley, Henry O. Tanner, Mr. and Mrs, Fur niss, et. al., will show you what aris- tocratic, intelligent and deserving people of color ean do. It was here that Mme. Hackley announced she would come to Denver in her series of national engagements an} nake a special call upon the club tha‘ pears her name. It would take books to ‘publish what we saw and heard in Rome, the founding of Rome, Cater lus, Cicero, Cataline, Brutus and Jul- jus Caesar, the appian way, the Ro- man forum, the view of the city on Seven Hills, the dungeon in which Paul was imprisoned, the colossal an@ enduring temples built in the Doris, lonie and Corinthiap styles, the sight of the buried city of Herculean and Pompey just directly beneath sum. bling Vesuvius, all these and mere would fill veiumes, To taink that 15 cents could make such a trip seems almost incredible. The audience was sreatly indebted to the Reverend for his stop while en route to other cities “Wf Wveded pus uunjas uoos 0) nue A0AON O41 paqsym aavq Kuvur pue saa “Hod Ut Uaay# Jada saunide, aqudot “Ho Isom! at) Jo aud #BM auMD—a| A WY, ‘MO UULO;U, aQun[va puw tnjasn jo Wud ivaid t dbar 0 Paley ‘adudoa v Yous eXUU OF ‘ainqde] B YONs say 0} Partys oym esoqy, isan PIPPIW 9q) UY When the congregations of all the various churches, assisted by their pastors, were helping Rev. Ford to make this trip across the deep, some never expected to reap any returns for the money invested, while others seemed skeptical. But last Thursday night when a crowded house gave the Reverend a grand ovation they, with him, left the Union Depot at Denver and hurriedly returned in the same night from that long voyage without becoming seasick or even dizzy. No other person could have told so much in such a way with such a flow- ing style as did the Reverend except it was he in his own peculiar manner. Leaving New York for Boston, from where the Sunday school party was to sail, they arrived just In good sea- son, although previous arrangements had been made for their stations, ete., to find out that first class equip- ments could not be secured to colored persons on any of the lines, With him, we felt humiliated, disgracea chagrined, but all the more deter- mined to go, despite the ship leaving the next day. So we returned to New York and saw the international sec retary of the World's Missions, who advised us how to purchase our tick- ets and make a point on the discrim- inating companies, but urged us, after we had given him the money to pur- chase our passage, not to show up on the platform until fifteen minutes be- fore leaving time, which orders we carefully followed. We got ou the Nner bound for Naples, Italy, with first-class staterooms, etc., as our as- set and convenience and the leaving of the shore, the ringing of the gonas the pulling of the ropes, the loosening of the anchors, the bidding of fare- well to thousands on the shore to thousands upon the ship, the sbift- ing and turning of the ship by the little tugs pulling her in deep wa'er and each of the bands, one on the shore responding to the one on the ship, making such a lively scene as a far Westerner never before wit: nessed, all these and many more we experienced as the land became to grow as & mere dot in the far horizon: Such an experience of 11 days’ noth- tng but water, seasickness and the horrid smell of well cooked and de Heious foods, Cape Verde (stands received the 11 day's mall from the steamer 5 milow distant. The fisior: Why help pay big rent? We save you 20 per cent on uptown prices CLEMENTS — TAILOR $1523 16TH ST. Near Blake Herron’s Waffle House Biggest and Best 10c Meal 1225 19th St. i seit Sigh, Ps ey men NOOO i 1 tn oe SS a6 a . " ‘ tied Ee ‘ ee e Sy ei Feet %y Sai eee a. be le. 60 ga ‘Ae ex iy ae te gai" eens} re ee Ve, , yt ae ' PS aie CE ceed ry TR OF Bee Nae s e s e MRS. T. D.PERKINS SCIENTIFIC SCALP TREATMENT For beautifying and growth of the hair, falling hair stopped, dandruff cured, scalp scurf removed. First treatment shows wonderful results, Treat- ments given by mail all over United States, Mail orders Promptly at- tended to. BERKELEY-ELITCH CAR TO WEST 35TH AVE. AND TENNYSON 87. 4630 W. 35TH AVE. PHONE GALLUP 149, PHILADELPHIA ADDRESS, TEL. NOVE 15, 1757 WaeT WOODSTOCK, THE GIRLS The charming young ladies who will delight the eye and please the ear next Thursday evening at East Turner Hall in the latest songs and steps of the stage, in the grand benefit entertainment for the Odd Fellows building fund. COLORADO SPRINGS LOCALS Last week the W. C. T. U. met at the home of Mother Fairbanks on East Cucharrast street. An interesting business meeting was held. Mrs. Young of Pueblo and Mrs. Dorcas Watson were present and gave helpful talks. The following officers were elected: Mrs. E. Butler, president; Mrs. J. Henderson, first vice president; Mrs. Holmes and Mrs. A. King, second and third vice presidents; Mrs. L. Watson, financial secretary; Mrs. A. Whittaker, assistant secretary; Mrs. C. Fleming, recording secretary; Mrs. Alexander, treasurer. The meeting was well attended and the reports fro msuperintendents of departments were encouraging indeed. The first Sunday in the month, which is ladies' day at the Men's Sunday Forum, accounts for the large enthusiastic audience which greeted the speakers this past Sunday. The committee having the program in charge feel greatly encouraged in their undertaking. District Attorney C. C. Hamlin delivered an interesting address on Constitutional Rights of the Negro. Mr. D. B. Farr's remarks were of interest. He discussed with logic and vigor the faulty, the mistakes, the calamitous, hurtful reins prevailing and accepted on come very grave issues. Gà, Dear! Oh, Dear! Were you at the theater Monday night? The show did not arrive in town until 8:30 o'clock, and you know we were there promptly at 8:15. We sat there until 10 o'clock before the curtains went up. Oh, the fashionables were out. About everybody you knew were scattered through the audience. Some were very nervous and some of them enjoyed waiting the two hours. Oh, but the show was fine. Oh, yes, we walked home, but somehow, do you know, I didn't care much. I rather enjoyed it. What was the name of the play? The Royal Chef—as the reporter received it. The W. C. T. U. will meet at Mrs. A. L. Whittaker's next Wednesday, 510 East Huerfano street. Mrs. Nellie Earl Childers entertained at dinner Sunday as a courtesy to Mrs. Marshall and Mrs. Ritter, who THE STATESMAN, DENVER, COLORADO. left Wednesday for their home in Kentucky. The clever hostess departed from the custom of using cut flowers as a table adornment and an immense large pot fern lent its charm to the attractive board. It was an exquisitely arranged dinner. The members of the dinner party were Mrs. Marshall, Mrs. Ritter, Mrs. Whittaker and Misses Crowles, Piper and Mr. P. S. Simpson. Mr. John Crawford of Americas, Georgia, is here health seeking. He is stopping at Mrs. Henderson's, 516 East Huerfano street. Mrs. Susas Powell leaves tomorrow for a two weeks' stay in Denver. MANITOU. COLO. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Harper have returned to Omaha for the winter. Mr. Robert Lincoln is spending a few days in Denver prior to his departure for Kansas City. Mr. and Mrs. McAllister. Misses Melvina and Elsie Euper of Denver, will winter in Manitou. They are located with Mrs. Jerry Stone. Messrs. Ed Watson and Ed Louis are spending a few days in the capital city. Mrs. Stella Patton, of Wichita Cottage, of Colorado Springs, spent the week with Mrs. Weston. Mrs. Dorcas, of Pueblo, was 1 v.sf tor last week. LA JUNTA. COLO. Mr. W. H. Walker, of Denver, was the guest of Mr. H. Badget last week. Master Hurbert Tyler is seriously ill at the City hospital. Mr Lewis Greenlee and wife, of Mustatine, Iowa, are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Zach Badget. Mrs. Hillory Moore, of Las Animas, Colo., and Mrs. Sales, of Pueblo, were the guests of Mrs. Armstrong last Thursday. The little daughters of Mrs. Houston are still confined to their beds with typhoid fever, and the oldest one is reported very seriously ill. Mr. Fred Houston is also on the sick list. The most brilliant affair connected with the social interest of the A. M. E. church was the apron and necktie social given by Mrs. Zach Badget, the district stewardess, at Hubbard chapel for the purpose of raising the presiding elder's claim. Mrs. Badget was assisted at the tables by Mrs. Mary Green and Miss Susie Starkey while Mrs. Emma Davis presided at the neck-tie booth. Weinerwurst sandwiches and coffee and ice cream and cake were served. Soon the ties were all purchased and just as the social event seemed to have reached its zenith, the program was instantly changed to a literary contest, for which Mr. A. W. Vernon, L. Livingston and L. J. Starkey were appointed judges. Prizes were awarded to the three persons reciting the most witty quotations in the judgment of the judges. Many were the quotations recited and according the decision of the judges the first prize was won by Miss Bessie Vernon, of this city. The second prize went to Mr. John T. North, representative of the World's Manufacturing Co., of Philadelphia, Penn., and the third and last was awarded to Mrs. Prince, wife of Rev. Prince, of present pastor. Every feature of the affair was strictly second none and a neat sum wes realized. Rev. R. Wagner ,the newly appointed presiding elder of the Colorado Springs district, arrived in our city Saturday and was entertained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Tyler. Sunday marked the beginning of a new epoch in the history of Hubbard Chapel, A. M. E. church. It was the first quarter in this conference and also the beginning of the presiding eldership of the Rev. R. Wagner. Rev. Wagner filled the pulpit Sunday at 11 o'clock a. m., and also Sunday evening at 7:30. At each service Rev. Wagner delivered an able and feeling sermon. The people showed their appreciation by a crowed house. One member was added to the church and quite a number communed. The following is an extract from the report of the stewards' report made in the quarterly conference Monday evening, Oct. 7: We, the stewards' board of Hubbard PAGE 9. chapel, beg leave to make our first quarterly report for the years 1907 and 1908. We closed our yearly report of 1907 under the pioneer and venerable father, Rev. John Turner, with gratifying results and since in the Godly judgment of the bishop he has been transferred from us to other quarters we heartily commend him to the sympathy and co-operation of the lowers of Christ, to whom he has given the best part of his life. May he live long and prosper and reach the goal in the world to come. The church and community at large is much delighted with the appointment of Presiding Elder Rev. R. Wagner, who succeeds our beloved Rev. Watson. We hope for him great success in his new work. By his appointment new life is given the church, which means untold blessings for us all. And lastly, but not least, comes the Rev. W. H. Prince, successor to the venerable Father Turner. Rev. Prince is a man well equipped for the great and much needed work here. The church and community at large welcomes him and may he enter on his new duties with untold energy and we, the stewards, voice the membership of the whole church in saying we stand ever ready to hold up his hands. To that end that many may be added to the church. La Junta being a central point of the Colorado Springs district the quarterly conference extends a welcome invitation to the new presiding elder, Rev. R. Wagner to make La Junta his headquarters during the time he be on the presiding elder's field in this district. With the Rev. Prince, our pastor, and Rev. R. Wagner, as presiding elder, we hope to accomplish a great work. Rev. Wagner left Thursday for Trinidad, where he will hold the quarterly meeting at that point. GUNNISON. COLO. Mrs. Susan Bryant and granddaughter, Lila Bryant, returned home Sunday from Grand Junction. Dr. Howe, of Salida, is running in Mr. Holland's place. Mr. William Bryant has entered the High school. Mrs. Hester Bryant and children are on the sick list. Mr. Edward Dickson went to Ohio City Wednesday. Mr. J. P. Holland, porter on the parlor car of the D. & R. G. railroad, has taken a lay-off for two months and has gone to Fort Worth, Texas, on a visit. The Messrs. W. A. Hamm, A. S. Snaver, Richard Warren, Arthur Williams, A. E. Sheppard and the Misses Anna Rhodes and Carolyn Dixon, colored Jubilee singers of Des Monies, Iowa, Passed through our city Tuesday on their way to Hotchkiss, Colo. Ladies, we teach hair dressing, manicuring and massage. For particulars apply at Moler System of Colleges, 1229 17th st., Denver, Colo.