Denver Star
Saturday, February 20, 1909
Denver, Colorado
Page text (machine-generated)
Y.M.C.B. Soon to Have a Home
TWENTIETH YEAR
Y. M. C. B.
to Hav
HURRAH FOR Y. M. C. B.
Shorter chapel was crowded Sunday last to listen to the magnificent Lincoln-Douglass Day program given by the Y. M. C. B. The exercises began with music by the choir, followed by an invocation by Rev. Ward. After "America" had been sung heartily by the entire audience, Dr. P. E. Sprattlin, master of ceremonies, introduced Hon. A. W. Lewis, a most brilliant and promising young lawyer from Colorado University, who delivered a masterly address upon Abraham Lincoln and his great achievements. The Glee Club made another hit by singing in a very natural way one of the old plantation melodies with banjo accompaniment.
Rev. A. C. Murphy showed us Frederick Douglass' place in history in a most eloquent address. He clearly proved that his memory should be revered along with those of Washington, Lincoln and others who died struggling for the betterment of mankind.
After the program the captains in the $500 rally were called to report. Altho all were not able to complete their returns, the five hundred dollar mark was passed, and the old thermometer took a great rise that made everyone feel happy.
Now that the Y. M. C. A. is assured and is gaining in influence, the various clubs of the city are getting interested. On Sunday, Feb. 28th, all the women's clubs of the city will turn out in their respective organizations and give us a special Ladies' Day program. Every club will have representatives on the program. At that time the ladies propose to raise $100 toward the Y. M. C. A. building fund, and most of the clubs already have passed resolutions drawing sums from their treasuries. The captains who were not able to report in full last Sunday are requested to report on this date.
A. W. WARD.
DENVER, COLORADO, SATURDAY FEBRUARY 20 1909
THURSDAY EVENING PATRIOTICALLY CELEBRATED AT WESTERN UNIVERSITY—MAGNIFICENT PROGRAM—COLORADO STUDENTS PROMINENT.
The Twentieth Century Business Society of the Business Course Department of Western University conducted one of the most patriotic meetings ever held within the confines of Western University. The colors were pink and white, the refreshments were make the "Lemon-aid" white. Every person sang the following:
"Turn failure into victory
Don't let your courage fade.
And if you get a lemon
Just make the lemon-aid.
Out of 17 numbers on the program five were taken part in by the following Colorado students: Vocal solo, E. S. Plummer; band quartette, Harry Lyle; instrumental duet, Eva B. Jones, and ladies' quartette had the representatives, Misses Lawson and Allen. Their motto is, "Uplifting as we climb," while the roster of members from Colorado are Misses Beulah Allen, Tinsa Lawson, Philetus Fitzpatrick, Lou Ada Moore, Eula Fitzpatrick and Harry Lyle, the officers being Miss Eva B. Jones and Mr. E. S. Plummer on the executive committee. The graduates were (1906) Messrs. Orna Skinner, teaching now in Boyue, Kan., and Dink Todd, employed in Kansas City; (1907) George K. Williams, secretary to Western University; Misses Edith Lamb (deceased), Killa Glenn Mable Vaughan, Mettie Mallory, Gertrude Elam, Olva Ellison and Messrs. Locy Clay and Eugene Vaughan; (1908) Sophia P. Fine, Nora L. Hampton, Anna Vanderford, Alberta Kerr and Dean Fleming. The record shows everywhere and in every department Colorado students are showing up in the first ranks. Next year Colorado expects to send down a very large delegation. Of the "None Such Boys," Mr. Harry Gilmore contemplates joining.
The Negro in His Destined Home
ALLIANCE ALIVE WITH PATRIOTISM—REV. CONTEE MAKES MEMORIAL SPEECH ON DOUGLASS.
With the Negro being forced into the Jap question, in fact into every question where the Caucasian is involved, with Collector Crum's confirmation being held up by the senate because he is colored, with the Negro losing his rights on every side and with a large audience inspired by patriotic music, is the scene that greeted Rev. Contee Sunday. He was practical, racy, witty, pathetic, patriotic and spiritual, and above all, an American citizen, a thing he so often reminded the audience. Your heart would have felt for Zion's pastor as he told his personal reminiscences of Douglass as he personally knew them and as he, along with Douglass, saved many Negroes by means of the underground railway. He scoffed at the idea of deportation because the Negro had a special invitation to come and his fare provided for him to come, besides places already prepared after he got off the ships. So full of history was he that every listener was completely won by his eloquence and fervor in narrating the exciting events during the war period and reconstruction days. He was a believer in God, in humanity and a strong urge for Negroes to protect their manhood and womanhood. He believed in Negroes being American citizens and Negroes at the same time and proclaimed that the Negro was to stay here until God called him home.
The paper by Mr. Buford on "Lincoln," was exceedingly good. The orchestra played as never before. "Uncle Sammy" and "Stars and Stripes Forever" was royally played and received by the audience.
Miss Margaret Willis; tion, Mr. Carsey Morris; rection, Azalia Hackley paper (by special re. B. Beckham; solo, Miss
in His ined Home
Frankie Buchannan, and Holley's ett.
Feb. 28—Instrumental duett, Misses Rice and Louise Harris; vocal solo, Miss Ida Cox; literary selection, Mr. Cornelius Rice; cornet solo, Mr. Clyde Andrews; address, "My Experience in Africa," J. L. Branch; vocal solo, Mrs. Lillian Jones.
The board of directors will meet Feb. 23, at 7:30 p. m., at Dr. Jones' office. The Alliance meets at 1712 Curtis, at 4 p. m. Everybody is invited to come.
THE BEST THING THIS SIDE OF EASTER
is the entertainment to be given at Dania hall, Twenty-seventh and Arapahoe streets, next Tuesday evening. Feb. 23, by the United Brothers of Friendship. The men of Western Star lodge bear a well deserved reputation for thorough going hospitality and will give their patrons a hearty welcome on this occasion. Good music. Prizes. A good time. All for 35 cents.
WESTERN UNIVERSITY HONORED
Eureka Literary Crowded.
Beyond all expectation was the literary society surprised when so many of the old familiar faces were seen in their places Tuesday night highly elated over the magnificent program rendered by the young men. The solo by Harry Gilmore, the oration by J. D. Rice, the recitation by Mr. Brown, were all very well rendered, but the story by Mr. Lloyd Hall, in which the heroine was a girl from Western University, completely captured the audience. Every rush, every scrimmage and the high tension of feelings were portrayed just as has happened so many times at Western University. Mr. Hall showed how Western University was one of the most enthusiastic schools for athletics in the entire West. The society adjourned for two weeks to accommodate the coming revival.
---
Successful Business Man Must Have Attribute of Courage.
Many a man fails because he does not dare to take risks, to take the initiative.
When do you expect to do anything distinctive in life? When do you expect to get out of the ranks of mediocrity? The men who do original things are fearless. There is a lot of dare in their make-up, a great deal of boldness. They are not afraid to take chances, to shoulder responsibility, to endure inconvenience and privation.
There never was a time when the quality of courage was so absolutely indispensable in the business world as it is to-day. It does not matter how many success qualities you possess, young man, if you lack courage you will never get anywhere. Not even honesty or perseverance will take its place. There is no substitute for courage.
It does not matter how well educated you may be, or how good a training you may have had for your vocation, if you are a hesitator, if you lack that courage which dares to risk all on your judgment, you will never get above mediocrity.
The men who stand at the top of their line of endeavor stand there because they have the courage of their convictions. They had the courage to climb, had the nerve to undertake even against the advice of others. Success Magazine.
TOOK UMBRAGE AT ASPERSION.
Citizens Resented Being Voted for as Town's "Meanest Man."
Old Scrooge might be a philanthropic Carnegie alongside certain tightwads in Mount Vernon, but William Friedberg has no license to determine publicly who are the men who would squeeze a dollar until the eagle yelled: "Help! I'm melting!" For conducting a voting contest to determine the meanest man in Mount Vernon Friedberg, who keeps a cigar store there, was fined five dollars by Judge Platt here. A warning went with the fine.
Friedberg lives in Astoria, but does business in Mount Vernon. He placed in his window a placard: "Come in and vote for the meanest man in Mount Vernon!" This was followed by a list of names. Conspicuous in the lot were the mayor and chief of police. Then came many solid and staid citizens. After every name was a number signifying the votes the owner of the name had received so far
Great was the wrath of the so-called "meanest men." Friedberg was or dered to take the sign out of the window, but he refused to do so. His indictment for libel followed. In court he pleaded guilty, but asserted he did not know he was violating any law. White Plains Cor. New York Sun.
The Power of Enthusiasm.
Enthusiasm is one magnet of power. You must fire every event with it touch thoughts and acts with it; it will transmute dross into gold, drudgery into delight. What matters if the soul which lives beside you is cold and selfish. Set him a good example! Joy is sunshine and he will feel it. Every irksome task is a chance for power. For the qualities which they bring out are God's gifts which fit us to enjoy better things. Easy things will come if you have spent your heart's blood on gaining strength, for the very go
THE STATESMAN. DENVER. COLORADO.
strength. We laugh at things and people who used to cow or annoy us, we do gracefully and swiftly the tasks once so hard. One by one, we have unriveded our chains, we are free!—Nautilus.
Sensation in "Mystery Ship."
Sydney, Australia, has had a novelty in the shape of a "mystery ship." An American steamer, the Coronet arrived by night in the harbor unsignaled and unannounced. It was people by a strange-looking crowd of men, women and children. The officers were dressed in clerical attire long coats and white ties. Nobody was allowed on board save the government medical officer and the harbor master. The Sydney reporters ascertained that the ship is connected with the newest American sect, the "Holy Ghost and Us," whose head, a man named Stanford, claiming to be the reincarnated Elijah, is on board. The Coronet has been cruising for some months among the Pacific islands.
Rats!
A captain on an ocean liner tells the following story: Coming from the old country was a very nervous old lady who complained that she was sure there was a rat in her stateroom.
"Keep it there, madam," said the captain.
"But do you like rats?" asked she.
"I've got a nest in my cabin," retorted the brusque seaman, "and I never disturb them. When they leave the ship I do."
"Why, you must be superstitious," urged the dame.
"No, I am,' wound up the captain. 'I'm not, but the rats are."
Teaching Girls to Ride Horses.
Almost all the little girls who are taught to ride horses these days are put on cross saddles. They may or may not ride astride when they get bigger, but they all learn that way. It is a safer position in the first place and it gives confidence never acquired by a youngster in a side saddle. As a rule the small equestrienne is clad in bloomers and the briefest of skirts. Often she discards the skirt when the lessons are given in the country. The instructor holds her pony by a leading strap and, of course, he rides a horse easily able to overtake her mount in the event of a bolt. Only for the first few lessons is the child's belt buckled to the pommel of her saddle. Until she acquires a firm seat she is kept close enough to the instructor to be caught by him if she starts to fall.
The Ameer's Grim Hum...
Although in every way milder than his father, Hibib Ullah occasionally manifests a humor no less grim as was lately disclosed by his chief body servant, Ahmed Rashid. This worthy, whose duty it is to take care of the royal wardrobe, was becoming neglectful, when one morning Habib Ullah noticed a black scorpion, whose sting is unusually agonizing, in a boot that he had been about to put on. Summoning Ahmed to his side, the Ameer complained that the boot pinched his foot, and ordered the servant to stretch it by drawing it on his foot. The pain of the bite was not the more readily forgotten from the fact that nothing of much consequence could be done to relieve it.
Bobby's Unfortunate Delay.
He was five years old. On this particular day mother had dressed him with unusual care and was very much displeased to have him come in with clothing dirty and torn. She had so often told him he must take his own part in the boys' scraps—fight, should the occasion demand it. This he would not do. And now she intended to punish him.
Bob became very indignant and said: "Well, mamma, I jus. told the boy I wasn't ready to fight, and when I got ready he was settin' on me."—Delinat
Her Criticism.
The five-year-old daughter of a Brooklyn man has had such a large experience of dolls that she feels herself to be something of a connoisseur in children, relates Lippincott's. Recently there came a real baby into the house. When it was put into her arms the five-year-old surveyed it with critical eye.
"Isn't it a nice baby?" asked the nurse.
"Yes, it's nice," answered the youngster hesitatingly. "It's nice, but it's head's loose."
The New England Spirit.
In every crisis that has come to this country the "New England spirit" has risen to the top. It may have been dormant for a time, but whenever the necessity arose it manifested itself. In the great internecine struggle it predominated; in more recent times it has asserted itself. The pilgrim blood and the pilgrim spirit have overcome all difficulties. Without them the west would be a wilderness. The pioneers of the western states were actuated by the spirit that settled New England.—Denver Republican.
Choate's Humorous Comparison.
Chief Justice Shaw of Massachusetts, one of the greatest lawyers of his time, was a plain, practical man, and looked in his old age, as he sat on the bench, somewhat like a Chinese idol, and he used frequently to cut off Mr. Chwate's eloquence by calling him back to the plain facts. At a bar dinner Choate was called upon to toast the chief justice, and what he said was this: "We regard our chief justice as the heathen regards his idol. We know that he is ugly, but we feel at he is great."
Water Power Development.
The development of the water power of small streams is just beginning, but the movement is general all through this and foreign countries. Nearly 75 per cent. of the 5,737,372 farms in the United States boast of a small creek or two rioting boisterously through the bushy glens and rocky ravines or singing and playing through the daisy-spangled meadows. Nearly every one of these streams is available for horsepower.—American Review of Reviews.
Girl's Bell-Ringing Feat.
Miss Lillian Wilson, a Leicester (Eng). girl of 16, has just accomplished a remarkable ringing feat by taking part in a peal of 5,072 bob major on St. John's church bells. Although the task occupied three hours and 15 minutes she accomplished it with comparative ease, and is the first lady to achieve such a performance in the Midlands.
PAGE. 10.
Her Indoor Vegetable Garden.
The West Philadelphia woman who was the envy of her neighbors last summer by virtue of her vegetable garden in her small back yard, which kept her table well supplied for a month, has again stepped into the limelight. This clever woman has succeeded in raising several kinds of vegetables in flower pots of earth inside her house. Already she has raised several stalks of asparagus from roots, and her family is enjoying the luxury of green asparagus, while their friends and neighbors are eating canned goods. Radishes, too, have grown indoors for this amateur trucker, and now, made ambitious by her successes, this woman is going to plant some lima beans and peas. The care of her indoor vegetable garden is not wearing, for the West Philadelphia woman, to gain time, has simply cut down her usual list of potted plants and devoted her time to more practical growing things. —Philadelphia Record.
Models' Earning
Nowadays all the leading firms of modistes employ living models. A good model can earn five to six pounds a week, the minimum wage for a "show lady" being two pounds a week. There are some models in London who are paid as much as £10 a week, and in Paris the salary of a good model in some of the best establishments runs to £12 a week. As long as a model is young and attractive her position as such is secure enough, and often very well paid, but at 30, and sometimes before, she is generally regarded as too old for the particular work required of her—that is, showing the effect of dresses when made; but if she has acquired a good knowledge of a modiste's business she is almost certain to obtain further and far more permanent employment with her own firm or elsewhere.—London Tit-Bits.
Pipe Lines for Oil.
The first pipe line used for oil in the United States was a small affair an inch in diameter. This was in 1865. By 1879 there were lines five inches in diameter and 100 miles long. To-day the line from Oklahoma to New York, by way of Chicago, measures nearly 1,500 miles, and our enormous annual production of petroleum is transported chiefly through these lines. The price of this transportation, from the oil fields to the Atlantic coast, is only about three cents a barrel, or, if interest and cost of replacement every 14 years be taken into account, 11 cents a barrel. Pipe lines are now common in other petroleum producing countries, notably in the neighborhood of Baku, where one line across the Caucasus range is nearly 600 miles long.
Education in America.
Boardly speaking, the educational systems and institutions of the United States, public and private, enrolled in 1906-07 in the neighborhood of 19,000,000 pupils of all grades and classes. About 20 per cent. of the total population attended the common schools for a longer or a shorter period. This percentage had been pretty nearly stationary for 30 years. In the meantime, however, the average length of the common school year had advanced from 130 days to a little over 150 days, and the percentage of those enrolled who were on the average in actual attendance each day of this longer school year had advanced from 62 per cent. to 70 per cent. Report of the Commissioner of Education.
F THE STATESMAN, DENVER, COLORADO.
Owing her rise from the position of
slave girl to that of an empress ruling
the destinies of some 400,000,000 sub
jects to her beauty, it is scarcely sur-
prising to learn thal, up to the time
of her death, the dowager empress of
China was extremely vain of her good
looks. Nine ladies of the imperial
suite were employed every morning
to “make up” the empress. Her
majesty was rouged regularly every
morning until her cheeks flamed deli-
cately against the creamy composi-
tion with which the resi of her face
had been treated. The lips were
carmined and a stubborn growth of
hair on the chin and upper Hp was
obliterated by the application of paint.
A slightly double chin caused her
much trouble, but she found con-
solation in the size of her feet, which,
although they were never bound in the
peculiar Chinese fashion, were the
enyy of all ladies who were privileged
fo see them.—Exchange.
Sicily’s Wheat and Fruits.
Sicily was the “granary of Rome” in
former days. Wheat grows to an enor
mous height, and the ears seldom con-
tain less than 60 grains. The rice is
the finest on earth I buy it at ten
cents a pound to make that famous
dish—“riso el buterro e fromagio.”
No other rice answers the purpose
The most bountiful crops of Ger
many and France, of England and
Austria-Hungary, present to the Sicil
jan the image of sterility. A Sicilian
watermelon is a dream. It was the
original nectar of the gods. No Geor
sia ratlesnake variety is in its class
indian figs and aloes are wonderful,
the former serving as food for the
poor, The pomegranate reaches its
highest perfection along the seuthern
coast, and is shipped to all parts of
the world under the name of “punica.”
in honor of the Punic war; it was
brought from Carthage into Italy by
the Romans.—New York Press.
Substitute for Small Change.
A souvenir of the civil war came
into the hands of a delicatessen mer
chant in New York a few days ago
which showed how scarce small
change must have been in those days
It was a green threevent postage
stainp, encased in a thin metal frame
the size of an old copper cent. The
face of the stamp was protected by
a disk of mica. On the reverse side
the improvised coin was stamped
“Good for three cents.” This queer
substitute for money was given along
with other small change by a woman
who said it was the last of a number
of similar pieces which she had owned
for many years, and the man who
took the combination stamp, mica and
tin fer three cents In speaking of it,
said: “The woman looked as if she
Ws prosperous once and was sorry to
give up the piece.” =
Want to Wear Mustaches.
At a meeting of the domestic serv
ants in Paris to discuss their griev
ances one, and not the least impor
tant, question was whether domestic
servants should not be allowed, like
their fellow-Frenchmen, to cultivate
the mustache. It was suggested that
to give the movement some sort of en
couragement nothing would be better
than that the servants at the Elysee
should be the first to agitate for the
privilege. The Gaulois says that this
has been done, the employes at the
président’s residence having trans
mitted to M. Fallieres a request that
hépceforth they shall le allowed to
wear mustaches, tips: Genus
BAD NOTES EASILY DETECTED.
Almost Impossible to Impose Upon
Handlers of Money.
Incidentally it is interesting to note
that the skiil which enables one to de
lect a counterfeit comes not from a
study of counterfeits, but from a thor-
ough and unconscious familiarity with
the genuine. If a man were pointed
out to you and you were told that some
day another who much resembled him
would try to impose upon you, you
would be pretty apt to fix his features
in your mind; you would not spend
any time looking at other people who
looked something like him, would you?
And the moment the impostor ap-
peared you would note that in this,
that or the other particular he failed
to meet the details of the other man’s
face and figure. Just so it is in the
detection of counterfeits. A skillful
teller in a bank, counting money rap
idly, will involuntarily throw out a
note which in the slightest degree de
parts from the well-known pattern
which is so strongly impressed on his
mental vision. That involuntary ac!
will nearly always prove to have been
justified, for the bill in 19 cases out of
20 will prove to be a counterfeit. It is
because of this fact that when a re-
quest is received from some one [to
loan him a collection of counterfeits
for the instruction of his cashiers, he
is advised to have the young men
study the genuine carefully, and there
will be no trouble in detecting the bad
notes.—National Magazine.
BUY ROSE TO THE SIYUATION
Quick Wit and Intelligence Dispiaye:
by Youngster.
His parents ure convinced that Clar
ence will be a great man; the only
doubt is whether it will be as a states
man or scientist. He is only four
years old, and their confidence ts
based largely on one incident. The
boy never told of it, and it would have
been lost to history if a neighbor had
not been a chance witness
Clarence lives in the suburbs, and
bas a cat and kittens. One day he
went into the yard next door with one
of the litle ones to play. There was a
big pile of brushwood here, and he
shoved his pet into a hole in this
She crawled so far back that all his ef
forts to get her out were vain
Had he been a man he would have
pulled the pile of brush apart, but
lacking strength for this he resorted
to cunning. Running home, he soon
returned with the mother cat. lle
shoved her into the hole after her off
spring, and she soon came out with
the little one between her teeth, Clar
ence bore them both home in triumph
A Queen's Will.
Queen Adelaide, the wife of William
IV.. was a woman of great piety and
exceptional humility, which was shown
in the directions for her funeral.
“| die in all humitity,” she wrote,
“knowing well we are all alike before
the throne of God, and request, there-
fore, that my mortal remains be con
veyed to the grave without any pomp
or ceremony. They are to be moved
to St. George's chapel, Windsor, where
I request to have a quiet funeral
“I particularly desire not to be laid
cut in state, and the funeral to take
place by daylight; no procession, the
cottin to be carried by sailors to the
chapel. I die in peace, and wish to
be carried to the tomb in peace, and
tree from the vanities and the pomp
of the world.”"—Home Notes,
Reside ice Phone No. 15. Office Phone No. 1423.
Western Uni it
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ACTINS PRESIDENT OF WESTERN UNIVERSITY, QUINDARO, KANS.
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Se Nee
“I se that a New York professor re
forms | ad boys with pieno music.” “i
hope bh» bears in mind that some
pianos need reforming quite 9, ~uucl
as bad boys do.”
Flaw in Glass
New: comes from Pasadena that the
creat 00-inch glass for the Mount
Wiison Solar observatory is defective
After tae first grinding began, a large
flaw ws found, so that a new casting
will hare to be made. This will delay
yor meay months the construction of
the gr at eight-foot reflecting mirro:
on the peak. The casting of the great
glass lisk was done in Gobiain
France and the cost was $50,000,
—_— ’
Smothered in Ordera,
The high military officials m Ger
many ire equally highly decorated.
Accom ing to # Paris contemporary,
the ei tht adjutafits of Frederick 111
posses ed but 35 decorations between
them. Count Hulsen Huessler had
34 an) his successor, Gen. von Ples:
stn, hi S already && The five personal
afjuta its of the kaiser possess to.
ether 109. Marshal Eluch could boast
afgul 15 in all,
Miss M. COWDEN
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A Thought for To-Day.
Observe thyself as thy greatest
enemy would do; so shalt thou be thy
greatest friend—Jeremy Taylor
In a Questionable Enterprise.
There are occasions when it is un-
doubtedly better to incur loss than to
make gain. —Plautus.
Not Uncertain.
“Do you believe in metetapsyche-
sis?” “I don't know. Is it one of these
new mind cures?”
PAGE. 12, THE STATESMAN, DENVER, COLORADO.
———————
\.evs ceeesE GOOD BEHAVIOR. | HIGH IN CIVILIZATION’S SCALE. | “Hum!” commented the other wom-
| ‘ an, enviously. “If I had a $50 corset
Terms on Which Strangers May Enter | Unknown Peoples of America Who I'd wear it on the outside. I really
British House of Commons. | Have Perished Utterly. ee ty
One of the most important altera-
tiors which members of the British
house of commons will notice when
they reassemble will be a strangers’
bureau. Its construction, which is now
in progress, is the sequel to the scenes
created by the suffragettes in the
house during last session. In the
last month of the autumn session as
the result of their conduct no stranger
wats seen within the house of com-
moas,
A committee was appointed to draw
up new rules for admission of
Strangers. The members recommend:
ed the passing of an act making it a
criminal offense for strangers to brawl
within the chamber, and they also
recommended that strangers should
be made responsible for their own
good behavior and should sign a pa-
per accepting that responsibility. That
being done the committee saw no reo-
son why women, as well as men,
should not be admitted to the
strangers’ gallery.
Jt is in preparation for the change
that the new bureau is being made. As
heretofore, tickets for the gallery will
be balloted for by members in ad-
vatce,
LEAD THE IDEAL SIMPLE LIFE.
Firns Devote Summer Months to En-
joyment and Pursuit of Health.
In Finland everybody lives the sim-
ple life in summer time. They camp
out on islands, in the forests and al-
ways somewhere near the water, for
everybody swims and bathes. Almost
all ¢lasses sleep and eat al fresco at
this time of year, and the town coun-
cils of the towns in this progressive
and altogether delightful little country
provide public fireplaces and public
bathing sheds in all places where the
working classes go in search of fresh
air.
But the simple life is by no means
dull with the frisky Finns. They com
bine it with a surprising amount of
Bayety. They eat, drink and are merry
in their picturesque little log cabime
outside the cities.
When they are tired of bathing and
splashing they dance, they sing, they
watch fireworks and practice gymnas-
tics, they all become like children and
are the happiest, merriest, most good
natured, most easily pleased and most
healthy holiday makers in the world.
We might take many leaves from the
Finns’ book.—Ladies’ Pictorial.
“tenes of the Zambesi.
Two important collections of fishes
recently received at the London Nat
ural History museum will permit for
the first time a complete study of the
ichthyology of the Zambesi region of
Africa. Among the 168 specimens of
the two collections, 19 new species
are represented, and they give a total
of 140 species of the Zambesi. Among
the most interesting species of the re
gion are fresh water representatives
of two essentially marine genera, the
pipe-fish and the shark.
Will the gentleman who took Wm.
Knight’s overcoat at the mask ball
given at East Turner hall, Feb. 15th,
please return bunch of keys to Wm.
Knight, 2010 Curtis street? You may
have the overcoat, but please don't
let me catch you with it on,
HIGH IN CIVILIZATION’S SCALE.
Unknown Peoples of America Who
Have Perished Utterly.
Between the region occupied of old
by the Aztecs and the realm far to the
south over which the Incas ruled lies
an immense stretch of territury, a
thousand miles long and 800 wide,
where the remains of unknown and
wonderful civilizations are being dis-
covered, says a writer in Van Nor-
den’s Magazine. This region extends
from the northern boundaries of Peru
to the southern mits of Costa Rica.
In one section alone along the coast
of Ecuador six entirely unknown civili-
cations were recently brought to light
by Prof. Marshall H. Saville, and a
vast collection of relics has been
Drought to New York. This collection
is to be the nucleus of a great Amer-
ican museum, which will represent
the history of ancient peoples who at-
tained an extraordinar‘ly high degree
of civilization, yet whose very exist-
ence has been hitherto lost in an-
tiquity.
The famed marble chairs of Rome
at its zenith were not more symmet-
rical o1 beautifully carved than those
of one of these unknown civilizations.
No pottery of any other ancient race
was moré delicately patterned that
that found in vast quantities, as
numerous almost as pebbles, on the
sites where these extinct peoples
dwelt. Their cloth was of truly mar-
velous weave; in beauty of design
richness of color and fineness of tex-
ture no fabrie of to-day surpasses it.
MAKES KNOTTY PCINT IN LAW.
Owners of Property Have Right to Fu.
bid Flight of Airships.
A law framed thousands of years
ago by the ancient Romans, and th:
only one bearing on the subject, may
have to be amended or wholly nullified
before airships go shooting about
through space at their own sweet wil!
This impostant fact was brought out
at a meeting of aeronauts in London
At present nobody has the right to fly
across occupied land. The world is
governed by the ancient Roman law
“Usque ad Coelum.” It means tha
every landowner has a right to the aii
above his head as far up as he
chooses to go, and can get an injunc
tion to restrain anyone from fiying
through it. So far nobody has attempt
ed to put the law in force. It would
be most uncomfortable, not to say dis-
astrous, for a farmer suddenly to
emerge from his barn or smokehouse
and pepper one’s airship with bullets
The fact that the aeronaut from his
lofty perch could not be expected to
see the “No Trespass” sign might not!
prove a mitigating circumstance with
the rural magistrate.
Where She'd Wear It.
Somebody sent this to the society
editor of the Cleveland Plain Dealer
and made affidavit that it really hap
pened.
Here it is: They were out at ar
afternoon card party. A stout womar
dropped a card to the floor. “Woulc
you be so kind as to pick up tha
card for me?” she inauired of the lit
tle woman at her right.
“Certainly,” sa'd the accommodat
Ing woman at. the right, picking uy
the card.
“You see,” explained the stout wom
an, “I’ve got on a brand new $50 cor
3et, and I'm afraid J'll strain jt if 1
lean over.”
“Hum!” commented the other wom-
an, enviously. “If I had a $50 corset
I'd wear it on the outside. I really
would.”
Strength of Money.
When we consider the amount of
wear and tear to which a bank note
is subjected, we ought to be able to
realize its physical strength. In a re-
cent experiment sheets were drawn
at random from piles of paper weigh-
ing 14 pounds to the ream. Each
sheet was halved and weighed, and
each half was folded double when
tested. One, offering 61 square inch-
es, stood a strain of 100 pounds. The
same-sized sheet, 16 pounds to the
ream, stood a strain of over 300
pounds. The average results of Crane
paper, 14 pounds to the ream, with
sizing, were a perpendicular strain
of 3 1-3 pounds to the square inch
and a transverse strain of 4% pounds
Pretty nearly as toughas shoe leather.
How to Get Thin.
When one has just begun to acquire
superfluous flesh complete abs-inence
from sweets and starches, a moderate
amount of food at all times, and daily
exercise either indoors or out will ef-
fect a cure. The effort, however, must
be persistent, and the watchfulness
must continue even after the desired
weight has been reached. Spasmodic
efforts either at diet or exercise wil!
be absolutely without lasting results
When one's weight has crept far be
yond the normal Amount the restraint
in diet must be more strenuous and
the exercise more violent.—Harper'’s
Weekly.
Some Singular Wills.
One of the most singular wills ever
recorded was that of a British sailor.
who requested his executors to give
his wife a shilling to buy hazelnuts, as
she had always preferred cracking
them to mending his stockings. More
subtle, however, was the sarcasm of a
will proved in 1830, in which a wife
was left $2,500, but was only to enjoy
it after her death in order that “she
may be buried suitably as my widow.”
A French merchant bequeathed a
large fortune to a woman of his ac
quaintance to show his gratiHude for
her refusal to marry him 20 years be
fora
Comfort in.the Palatial Hotels.
Residential suites in the best New
York hotels contain all the provisions
for the comfort of those who make
the hotel their home, such as private
dining-rooms, with special furniture,
shina closets and sideboards. There
are private pantries, with cold storage
‘upboards, where fruit and milk may
be stored, and refrigerator boxes,
vhere the temperature of wines may
be regulated, besides which there are
lectric heaters, where food sent uj
m the dumb walters from the kitch
ns may be kept piping hot; there are
gas ranges, and all the water in pan
ries, baths and dressing rooms is spe
tially filtered directly it flows through
he mammoth pipes into the hotel in
the great filter in the basement, al
though most people have the bottled
water habit.
Substitute for English «vy.
The climbing euonymus (Buonymus
Japonica, var. radicans) {8 a plant that
ought to be better known as a vine. [1
is often seen in masses, used as a low
shrub for covering bare spots, and for
“his it is very well adapted, but it is
also of great merit ag a true vine for
walls, trees, rocks, etc. It clings as
tenaciously to a rough surface as does
the English ivy. Its leaves are small,
and growth is slow, two attributes
which fit the plant well for use on a
low wall. Besides the green form,
there is also a variegated leaved one
that is extremely decorative. Both are
perfectly hardy. Their small, beauti-
ful shiny green leaves, about an inch
across, are evergreen. It is quite easy
to establish either as a vine on a wail
or as a ground cover. Plant in early
spring in a rich soil.
Progress That May Be Opposed.
One of the latest indications of the
progress of Japan in Occidental ideas
is the project now on foot to illuminate
the summit of the celebrated mountain
Fujiyama, which figures in almost all
Japanese pictures, and ewhich is one of
the loftiest and most beautiful volcanic
peaks in the world, with a gigantic
electric light. Already the pilgrim sta-
tions on the way up the peak are heat-
ed and lighted with electricity. Since
the Japanese are an artistic people.
one wonders whether some of them
may not oppose this startling innova-
tion, as the people of Venice recently
expressed their disapprobation of the
scheme to light the Venetian canals
with electric lamps.—Youth’s Com-
panion.
Hunting the Hippopotamus.
A dead hippopotamus invariably
sinks to the bottom of the river if
shot while swimming, and it is only
after an Interval which varies be-
tween two and eight hours that the
body rises and floats on the surface.
For this reason if you kill a hippopota-
mus in a river the current of which is
at all rapid, you must, in nine cases
out of ten, give up all hope of ever
recovering your quarry. The carcass
may be carried a great distance under
the water where {t furnishes a provi-
dential feast to the native inhabitants
on the banks who call down fronical
blessings upon the Infallible rifle of
the white man.—Wide World Maga-
aine.
Boys as Giass Breakers.
“It's about time,” declared the in-
lignant citizen, “that something was
lone with boys who smash the glass
iround the street lights. Again and
again | have seen them throwing rocks
at it for ten or fifteen minutes until
ne was successful in smashing ft.
When they play ball, it seems to be
tor the purpose of hitting and break-
ing the glass of a lamp either on the
curb or at the steps of an apartment
house. If a house is vacant, you will
notice that the basement windows are
broken half the time. It is all done
by boys, wht apparently take great
delight in the sound of a good, hard
smash.”
a
A Colorado Woman.
That women should display enter-
prise in Colorado is not to be won-
dered at, since they have been for
man years fully qualified voters
there, A good specimen of the ad-
vanced woman in the Centennial state
is Mrs. Nellle Upham, who is the vice-
president of a mining company, and
who personally supervises the running
of fifty gold and silver mines, boss.
ing three hundred workmen. Mrs.
Upham had studied mining and min-
erals for a long time, and some five
years ago she drifted into her pres-
ent business. It js stated that sie
manases affairs with great ability. —
Lesle’s Weekly,
CRIPPLE CREEK NEWS.
Mrs. Minnie Geesman, who has been at the hospital for two weeks, is at home getting on nicely.
Rev. Harris of Canon City preached at Bethel Baptist church Sunday night
The Excelsior Literary society of Handy chapel, A. M. E. church, is doing nicely.
Tuesday night the society had a short session of modern court. T. Allen, the barber, was prosecuted in the court for embezzlement of $100. Plaintiffs, Mrs. Hopkins and Charles Simpson. A. C. Carr was attorney for defendant and K. G. Johnson was attorney for plaintiffs. After the examination of witnesses the case was argued by able counsel on both sides. The case went to the jury about 10 p. m., who found a verdict of not guilty at 10:30 p. m. The officers and members of the society all aspire to make things lively for the district.
The Allen quartet was in great demand at the Baptist church Thursday night at the big supper.
Rev.J. H. Brown took dinner with Rev. Thomas Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Richardson. The feast was one that preachers always enjoy, for what about that chicken?
The stewardesses will give a supper at Handy chapel on the 23rd inst.
The board of trustees of the A. M. E. church were duly elected on the 8th inst., the following gentlemen elected: A. C. Karr, K. G. Jahnson, F. Hopkins, Chas. Simpson, T. Allen.
Mrs. Estella Green, who has been visiting in Victor, has returned to her home in Texas.
Mrs. John Harkless left this week for Pueblo.
Mrs. Carol Riddle is in charge of her sister's business in time of the illness of Mrs. Geesman.
D. N. Nelson, W. E. Scott, Mr. Thurston and Mamie Dean joined the Excelsior Literary society.
Mrs. F. Hopkins read an instructive paper before the society Tuesday night
LA JUNTA NEWS.
The revival meetings have closed. We feel that God has blessed us in the return of the wandering and the reclaiming of lost souls.
Mrs. Luther Clemens, who has been on the sick list, is very much improved.
Little Johnnie Lane, who is in the hospital with a fractured limb, is able to get around on crutches.
Miss Susie Starkey has resigned her position as matron of the Old Folks' home and orphanage, and is with us again. We welcome her home.
The ladies of the N. U. G. club celebrated Lincoln's centenary by appropriate programs Friday afternoon and night. Hon. Geo. Gross and Judge
THE STATESMAN. DENVER. COLORADO.
Finity were the principal speakers in the afternoon. Mr. McKinney presented a good paper on the life of Lincoln, and at night the program was by the club ladies alone, the most important feature being Mrs. Katherine Lo. Williams' drama, "Heirs of Slavery." A neat little sum was realized, which was presented to the church.
Mr. Arthur McKinney spent Sunday in Pueblo.
Mrs. McAllister is contemplating moving to Denver.
Mrs. Kiowa and little daughter, Bessie, of Sterling, Kan., visited in La Junta last week. Mr. Kiowa is employed here and they talk of making this their home.
Mrs. L. V. Greer, who has been suffering with a sprained ankle, is able to be out again.
Mrs. Spencer Green is on the sick list.
Mrs. Emma Davis is visiting relatives and friends in Kansas.
The revival services closed at Bethlehem Baptist church on the 12th There were 48 persons who professed saving faith in Christ, together with the number of backsliders who were reclaimed. The pastor and members are now engaged in a revival meeting with the Central Baptist church. There are a number of candidates of the Bethlehem church who were not baptized .ast Sunday, but will be baptized next Sunday, Feb. 21st, in the afternoon at 3 o'clock, at the Central Baptist church.
Denver. Locals
B. Hill has purchased a ten-room modern house at 2041 Stout Street.
The Berkley Art Club was entertained yesterday afternoon by Mrs. Wm. Barnes of 2761 Glenarm Place.
Mr. Carl Smith of Cheyenne was in the city during the week.
Mr. Hanson of Dodson, Texas, will be buried Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock from Lawhorn's undertaking parlors. Damon Lodge No. 5 K. of P. will have charge of the services.
Mrs. Mollie Brooks, who has been ill for some time, died Tuesday after an operation.
McDaniel and Brown, the gold dust twins, are back from doing some vaudeville stunts in Colorado towns.
Mrs. Lizzie Fisher has gone home from the hospital.
Many persons who know entertaining from the least to the greatest particular call the party given by James Cartwright and Arthur Carper last Monday night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Banks the best ever. There were just enough persons, 30 in all, and they were so congenial that it only remained for the hosts to provide suitable entertainment to complete a perfect evening. Cards were the order of the evening, topped off by a spread served by the incomparable Owen Caswell of Bauer Catering Co. No wonder it was the owl car that carried the merrymakers home.
DON'T MISS THE
Grand reception in honor of Madame Slisserata Jones (Black Patti) and company, given by Wm. Knight, Feb. 26th, at Olympic hall, 1944 Curtis street, also prize waltz.
Q. J. GILMORE Undertaker and Embalmer
Carriages Furnished for all Occasions Open Day and Night 1921 Arapahoe St Denver's Leading Undertaker
Automobile for Hire
J. H. GANNAWAY Phone Main 776
MISS BEATRICE LEWIS
1219 W. EIGHTH AVE. Has completed a course In Professor De La Morton's School of Scientific Dress Making, having received a Diploma, and is prepared to do
Ladies Tailoring & Gowns
Square and Tape Line Methods Reasonable Prices
Denver Barber Supply Company
Is the best place for Good Razors, Shears, Pocket, Knives, Combs, Brushes, Pomades and all Toilet Articles at 1008 15th STREET Phone Main 7221 Denver, Cole.
TROUTMAN & SONS
Carpenters and Builders
```markdown
```
MRS. J. TURNER CHILE PARLOR AND LUNCH ROOM
253 Washington Ave. Denver, Colo
7
Licensed Emba!mer No. 234.
LMORE
nd Embalmer
d for all Occasions
1921 Arapahoe St
ng Undertaker
e for Hire
CALUMET CLUB
2149 Curtis Street
Headquarters for Porters
Waiters, and Railroad Men.
Phone Main 8232
Henry Pinn, Manager
Established More than a Quarter of
a Century.
Transactions Confidential
Phone Main 8252
The Original "No Name" Clothing House
Buy and Sell Good Clothing. Full
Dress Suits For Rent.
417 Fifteenth Street.
The Old Reliable
J. N. B. Anderson COAL AND KINDLING
ALL KINDS, ALL QUANTITIES
2100 Arapahoe St. Denver, Colo
Carpentry and Job Work Job Work a Specialty.
Phone Main 3 30
Residence 353 W. Warren Ave.
Phone Brown 2129.
PAGE.18
« oi ae 2 a Aice Ss of
Lodges ings -——e| Mccling
a cae pe eS o ;
PAGE. 14.
Sy a
. <M
yy )
ef yy
~~ ges fi
es se ——
M. W. 67.425 LODGE, A. F. & A. M.,
For Colorado and jurisdiction, meets
Colorado Springs, Colo., in Aug., 1909
E. C. TUMLIN, G. M.
WILLIAM SPRAGUE,
Grand Secretary, P. O. Box 1545, Den-
ver, Colorado.
ROCKY MOUNTAIN LODGE NO. 1
A. F.& A.M.
Meets the first and third Monday
aights in the month at 1712 Curtis St.
C. A. FRANKLIN, W. M.
WM. SPRAGUE, Secretary,
& P. O. Box 1645.
CENTENNIAL LODGE NO. 4, A F.
&A.M.
Meets the second and fourth Monday
nights in the month at 1712 Curtis
Btreet. All Masons in good standing
are invited to attend.
WM. RUSS, W. M.
ERNEST HOWARD,
Secretary.
353 West Warren street.
EUREKA LODGE NO. 13,
Adbuquerque, N. M., meets sfirst oad
wird Tuesdays in the month Ali _«
seus in good standing invited.
H. BRAMLETT, W. M.
@QIMPSON REST LODGE.
@impson Rest Lodge, No. 10, A. F.
& A. ‘n., Trinidad, meets the first ana
(aird Tuesday nights in the month.
Members im good standing are wel-
yome
J. W. BOOKER, W. M.
W. A. JORDAN, Sec.,
& 117 N. Walnut.
PINION MESA LODGE
No 20, A. F. & A. M., Grand Junc-
tion, meets the first and third Wed-
nesdays in the month.
J. HARRIS, W. M.
T. P. LANGDON, Sec., 139 Chipeta. |
THE STATESMAN, DENVER, COLORADO.
KEYSTONE LODGE. |
Keystone Lodge, A. F. & A. M., Han-
aa, Wyo., meets the first and third
Tuesdays in the mouth. All members
in good standing are invited.
HENRY ANDERSON.
. QOS 4
Ps Sap SE |
1 Sere A201
PIES 4,
| =a eS ral
Hae SS!
4 Oe RS
y PTI
HIRAM COMMANDERY NO. 20.
A. F.& A.M.
Hiram Commandery Knights Tem-
plar meets the second and -fourth
Tuesdays in each month at 1832 Arap-
ahoe street. B. HILL, E. C.
T. W. RICHMOND,
Recorder,
2350 Curtis St.
FAR WEST CHAPTER NO. 6, R. A.
M.,,
Meets the second Wednesday.
W. H. FINLBY, H. P.
WM. SPRAGUE, Secretary,
P. O. Box 145.
Lone Star Chapter No. 15, O. E. 8.,
meets the first and third Friday in
each month at 2:30 p. m., at 1712
Curtis street.
CORA O'BRYANT, W. M.
SUSID CLINGMAN, Sec'y.
1124 So. 13th St.
D>
ARAPAHOE LODGE N®, 9936,
G. U. 0. OF O. F.
Meets the nrst and thira Mendsy
nights in the month at Odd Fellows
Hall, 1832 Arapahoe Street.
GHO. D. HALL, P. 8,
P. O. bex 896.
ROCKY MOUNTAIN LODGE wKO.
2320, G. U. O. OF O. F.
Meets every Thursday in the meath
at 1712 Curtis Street.
GEO. 8. CONTEZ, P. 8,
2612 Welton Street, |
DENVER PATRIARCHY, NO. 67.
month at Odd Fellows’ Hall, 1832
Arapahoe street.
C. A. BURTON, W. P. R.
HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH, NO. 367,
G. U. O. of O. F.
Meets the first and third Tuesdays in
each month at Odd Fellows’ Hall, 1833
Arapahoe street.
Mrs Clarence Holmes 2139 Curtis 8t
Worthy Recorder.
PAST GRAND MASTERS’ COUNCIL
NO. 138, G. J. O. OF O. F.
Meets ‘the second Friday in each
month at Odd Fellows’ Hall, 1832 Arap-
aboe street.
| WALTER SCOTT, Q. 8.
AS
7s
Cara
Western Star Lodge No. 128, U. B.
of F., meets the first and third Tues-
day evenings of each month at 188%
Arapehoe street.
H. B. BROWN, W. M.
R. GRIGSBY, Sec.
CAPTOLIA TEMPLE NO. <88, 8. M. T.
nesdays im each month at 1833 Arapa-
hee Street. Members in good standing
are invited to attend.
MATTIE HOLLY, W. P.
JENNIE JONES, Secretary.
—_——.
Webster Temple No. 6, 8. M. ‘1,
meets the second and fourth Wednes-
afternoon in each month at 1832 Arap-
ahoe street. Mrs. B. A. Carter, W. P.,
Mrs. Callie V. Campbell, Sec.
PHYTHIAS LODGE NO. 11.
Meets the first and third Wednes
day nights, 1883 Arapahoe Street.
Geo. W, Davis, C. C., 1348 S. 12th st.
J. M. Martenia, K. of R. and S.,
1223 19th st.
DAMON LODGE NO. 6.
K. of P. meets at 1713 Curtis street
the first and third Friday of each
menth.
D. H. WILLIAME, C. C.
W, A. Rice, K. of R. & 8.;
ABTNA CAMP NO. —, U. R. K. OF P.
Meets at 1712 Curtis street the second
end fourth Friday nights in the moath
G. B. PASH, Captain.
A. 2. LYLES, Recorder.
EURENA COMPANY NO. 4
Meets the first and fourth Tuesdays.
R. BUTLER Captain
¥. L. VOORBB, Recorder.
1823 19th Street.
COLUMBINE COURT NO. 278,
1. 0. 0. C.
Meets the second and fourth Tues
day evenings at 1718 Curtis Street.
All visiting members are invited te
attend.
LIZZIB WILLIAMS, W. C.
ELIZA BETH SCOTT, R. D.
Rocky Mountain Court No. 3, I. O.
O. C., meets the second and fourth
Friday afternoons at 1712 Curtis
street. All visiting members are cor-
dially welcomed.
MRS. W. A. JONES, W. C.,
MRS CASEY, Secretary,
ROYAL TEMPLE NO. 23, I. B. P. O.
BE. of W. meets second and fourth
Wednesdays in each month at 1712
Curtis street.
LIZZIE COOK, D. R.
MRS. NETTIB M. KELLY, Secy,
2222 Arapahoe Street.
GAINES TEwr i, Ne. 4, 8. M. T.
Of Trinidaa, meets the frst and
third Monday afternoons at 3 o'clock
at Marble ball, 111 First street.
4. BE. SUTTON, W. P.
M. B. WILSON, Sec.
QUEEN OF THE WEST NO. 1,
Moots first and third Thursdays is
each month, 1834 Aarne Strest.
MRS. HENRIETTB GHT, W. P.,
MRS. FLORENCH w ALTON, Sec.
RICB LODGBR NO. 29.
L B. O. B of W. meets fret ane
third Wednesday night im each mont)
at 1712 Curtis street. All visiting Ey
are welcome.
CARL WILSON,
Exalted Ruler.
L. J. MANLEY, Sec’y,
TABERNACLE NO. 629,
Tabernacle No. 629 meet the Srst
and third Thursday in the moata a
4712 Curtis atreet. All members is
g00d standing are invited.
LAUF... CARSON, H. P.
NANNIB WHLIS, Recorder.
TRUE REFORMERG.
True Reformers No. 1621 Coloraée
Enterprise Fountain, meet frst end
third Monday at 1832 Arapaboe étreet.
C. M. Hughes Master. Mr. MB
Riley, Secretary, Cooper building.
C. H. CLARK, Master.
C. M. HUGHES, Secretary.
CAUGHTERS OF TABERNACLE.
Pride of Denver No. 531 meééts at
1718 Curtis every fret and thire
Thersday. 4
SARAH THREST, H. P.,
ESTELLA J. JONES, CR
GOLDEN GATE JUVENILES,
Meets the second and fourth Satin
day afternoon at 2:30, at 1882 Arapa
hoe St. All members in goed stand
ing are invited.
OGLESVILLE LAWSON, Y. 8.
WILLA MAY, M. P.
18863 Hage] Court
Queen of the West Temple No. 1
holds regular monthly meeting nrst
and third Thursdays in each month.
M. EB RILBY, W. P.
ELLA McKINZIE, W. Secretary.
VICTORIA TEMPLE, NO. 6, S. M.
T. of Colorado Springs, meets the sec.
ond and fourth Friday night in the
month.
MRS. JENNID HENDERSON,
W. Princess.
MRS. COLLINS;
Secretary.
@tlver Star Council No. 70, Sons and
Daughters of Jerusalem, meets the
second and fourth Monday in the
wonth at 1712 Curtis street.
ALICE JONES, Queen.
KasB LEVELL, Sec.
Denver Military Club -Mc:.. very
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.
Sunday services at Zion Baptist
Church begins at 10:45 a m. Sunday
echool at9:45a.m. At 6:30 p.m. the B.
Y. P. U. meets for praise and devo
tlonal service, meeting lasting one
hour. Evening service begins at 7:30
ebarp. A special invitation is ex-
teafied to the sinner and backslider.
2716 Larimer Street.
Sunday School, 9:45 a. m.
Preaching at 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m
B. Y. P. U., 6:30 p. m.
The public is cordially invited.
REV. A. E. REYNOLDS,
2828 California Street.
People’s Presbyterian Church, Twen-
ty-third and Washington avenues—
Preaching at 11 a. m. and 8 p. m. Sun-
day schoo! 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
CENTRAL BAPTIST CHURCH.
Corner of Twentyfourth and Call-
fornia street.
Sunday Services.
On every first Sunday in the month
Covenant meeting at 11 a. m. At
7:30 p. m. preaching and communion
service. On each of the other Sun-
days preaching at 11 a. m. Sunday
school at 9:45 a. m., Mr. Chas. nose,
superintendent. B. Y. P. U. at 6:30
p. m., Mr. Coleman, president. Junior
Lights at 5:30 p. m., Mrs. Kelly, pres-
ident. 7:30, preaching.
Mid-week Services—Deacon board
meets Tuesday before the first Sun-
day of each month at 7:30 p. m., John
Little, chairman. Deaconess board
meets Monday before the first Sun-
day of each month. Trustee board
meets on Monday before the first Sun-
day of each month at 7:30 p.m. The
Woman's Home and Foreign Mission-
ary Circle meets the second and
fourth Fridays at 3 p. m., Mrs. Jacobs
president. Sunday school teachers’
meeting every Thursday at 7:30 yp, in.
REV. J. B. BECKHAM,
——~ Pustor, 2414 California Street.
THE STATESMAN, DENVER, COLORADO.
PAGE. 10.
SHORTER CHAPEL AFRICAN M.
EE. CHURCH.
AND UPWARD
Anyone may have s Piano delivered at their heme
for $2.00 per week payments.
‘(SOLUMBINE MUSIC CO.
Ground Floor Charles Building
Corner Twenty-third. and Washing:
ton streets. Sunday and mid-week
meetings, from October, 1908, to
April, 1909.
Sunday Services.
Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. Mrs.
Effie Waldron, superintendent.
Preaching at 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m.
m. Monthly communion the first
Sunday at 12 m. Classes one and six
meet at 12:45 p. m.
Allen C. E. League at 6:30 p. m.
Miss Gertrude Nichols, president.
A sacr deconcert the first Sunday
evening of each month under the di-
rection of the League at 7 p. m. Ser-
mon omitted.
Mid-Week Meetings.
The trustees meet the first Tues:
day at 8 p. m. Official board meets
the second and fourth Tuesday at
7:30 p. m.
Eureka Literary Society cvery
Tuesday night at 8 p. m. Raymond
Clark, president.
Prayer meeting every Wednesday
at § p. m.
The Sewing Circle meets the first
and third Thursday afternoons at
2:30. Mrs. Ella Leniza, president.
The W. M. M. S. meets the sec-
ond and fourth Thursday afternvuns
at 2:30. Mrs. E. N. Ward, president.
The Stewardess’ board meets the
first and third Friday afternoon at
2:30. Mrs. Unity Hall, president.
Teachers meet every Friday at
7:00 p. m.
Class meeting every Friday at 5:00
p. m.
A cordial welcome is extended to
all who enter our doors.
A. MILTON WARD, Pastor.
Residence 119 23rd St.
ONLY COMPLETE OF ACCURATE POCKET REFERENCE OF DENVER
THE BROWNELL INDEX
5 “Green Book with Red Edge—They’re Everywhere.”
Issued Quarterly—Always Up-to-Date.
Contains: City, County, State and Automobile Maps.
For Sale by ALL Denver Newsdealers.
Office 133 15th St, Phone Main 6471.
SEE SP RS TE
@
c=) WM. EHMKE
ed La 24 mT MANAGER
ie eaemk| EAST TURNER HALL
eo niaruridl 2132-2148 Arapahoe St.
=s REE Phone 2449 Denver
SCOTT'S METHODIST EPISCOPAL
CHURCH.
me a a ee
Lat to write for our big FREE BICYCLE catalogue
Bicithak itiscl GbR Palos
4 an an at
ir BELOW any other manufacturer or dealer in the world.
48 DO NOT BUY A BICYCLE 2737
WR or On any kind of terms, until Joa bave receiver our complete Free tres
hh logues illustrating and describing every kind of high-grade and low-grade
: MVE bicycles, old ‘patterns and latest models, and learn of our remarkable LOW
\ Ree PRICES and wonderful new offers made possible by selling from factory
Wen a0 direct to rider with no middiemen's profits.
ey (im WE SHIP OR APPROVAL without a cent deposit, Pay the Freight and
t RN# allow 10 Days Free Trial and make other liberal terms which no other
4\ \ i nN} house in the world willdo. ‘You will learn everything and get much valu-
¢} i i, able information by simply writing us a postal.
a We needs Rider Apont in cvery town ind can offer an opportunity
, 4 x to make money to suitable young men who apply at once.
7 $8.50 PUNCTURE-PROOF TIRES 2," LY
. 80
$30 price $ Ace Fea Fa
per pair. Se =
'o (Introduce 7) _——_—. carers ea:
We Will Sell MAILS, TACKS Risen - SPREE SEN
You a OR GL: iS oe Pee
WONT ET esac
Pele for ly OUT THE AR a PS SSN
~ (CASH WITH ORDER $4.65) nea AST Et f Ss y
MO MRE TROUBLE FROM PUACTURES. ad ff Lf)
Re: alt of 15 years e: periens THORNS, CAC: = e/
maki: g. No danger from TH! f ;
TUS PINS, NAILS, TACKS or GLASS. Uj Soice, the thick mebper tread
Serio is punctures, like intentional knife cuts, can and “D," also tina ‘stele “Ht
be vo canized like any other tire. me to prevent rim cutting. ‘This
Twi Hundred Thousand pairs new in actual use, Over Ee
Seven y-five Thousand pairs sold tast year. EASY RIDING.
ORIPTION: Made in all sizes. It is lively and easy riding, very durable and lined inside
son special quality of rubber, which never Nee PORDUY ABkjie ict Gloscax pacialUpeoerares
witho t allowing the air to escape. We have hundreds of letters from satisfied customers stating
thatt) cirtires haveoaly been pumped uponceor twice ina wholeseason. They Mae no more than
an or amacy See the puncture peeeone ralities being given by several layers of thin, speciall
prepa ed fabricon the tread. That “Holding Back" sensation commonly felt when riding on asphalt
or sof roads is overcome by the patent “Basket Weave" tread which prevents all air from being
squee ed out pea ere the road ra er es ane regular ne = eee
tiresi so per pair, but for advertising purposes we are making a factory price to the rider
of on! So pera All orders shipped same day letter is nest Ge ship © 3D, on approval,
You ¢ ) not Ry acent until you have examined and found them strictly as Wecctented.
We rillallowa cash discount of s per cent (thereby making the price $4. 5. Pe pair) if you send
FUL). CASH WITH ORI-Rit and enclose this advertisement. We will also send one nickel
plate brass hand pomp. anc two Sampson metal puncture closers on full paid orders (these meta}
Punct ire closers to be used in case of intentional knife cuts or heavy nee) Tires to be retur ied
at Ol R expense if for any reason thy are not satisfactory on examina!
‘We ire perfectly reliable and money sent to us is as safe as in a bank. Ask your Postmaster,
Bank 1, Hupress or Freight Agent or the Editor of this PAPE about us. If you order a pair ot
these tires, you will find that they will ride easier, run faster, wear better, last longer and look
finer han any tire you have ever used or seen at any price. We know that you will be so well pleased
that: hen you want a bicycle you will give us your order, We want you to send ua a smail triad
ORS) Ne Bocey este sat aie Ue oie sa sakel pavhban poaala (partsTaed ec eine
a reneira, yt!
oO ASTER- BRAKES, crerining in the big pe eel by wat bl the us ¢)
Price charged ers an repair men. ‘rite for our cal
ry but write us a postal today. DO NOT Tuk or BUYING, s
DO NOT WAIT Dicycle or a pair of tires from anyone until you know the new-und
won erfulgeers we are making, Tt only cogts a postal to learn everything. Write it NOW.!
Gang
WEAN CYCLE COMPANY, Dept. “JL” SHINAGO, ILL.
Sunday Service.
11:00 a. m.—Preaching.
12:30 m.—Sunday school.
§:00 p. m,—Preaching.
Mid-week Wednesday.
8:00 p. m.—Class and prayer meet-
ing.
First Monday $:00 p. m.—Official
Board.
C. W. HOLMES, Pastor.
The Greeks of Manhattan.
“One generally connects the Idea
of a Greek,” mused the melancholy
man, “with Marathon sports, bare
knees, robes, togas, large eyes, per-
fect features, magnificent ruins, and
crumbling marble pillars, but a New
York Greek is generally a man who
keepr a candy store.”
Bullet-Proof Corsete.
Corsets made of steel rings, weigh-
ing eight pounds, and which are said
to be bullet-proof, are being tested by
the German army. They are the in-
vention of a Munich engineer who re-
fused an offer from Russia until his
own country had a chance to try them.
Babies and Safety Pins.
The average house is run pretty
well without a safety pin in it until
the first baby appears, and after that
safety pins are used for everything,
even for the man’s clothes—Atchison
Globe.
Navy Chaplains.
A navy lieutenant, recently returned
from the far east, said: “Maybe you
did not know that neither Japan nor
Italy had chaplains in the navy; and
many British chaplains are naval in-
structors.” =
PAGE.16 THE STATESMAN, DENVER, COLORADO.
Se ae NOTICE. aS COTARRrAR A,asrnir ay
A. J. Riley, Mack Wright and Rich-
ard Tate and John Hayes purchased
80 acres of land this week at a cost
off $3,200. The gentlemen will start a
ranch consisting of hogs and other
live stock. Mack Wright acting as
general manager.
Mr. Chas. Jones is convalescing
from a severe attack of scarlet fever.
Mr. Laffaette Riley acting as trained
nurse,
Mr. A. J. Riley is holding a position
at the D. & R. G. shops.
Good opening for capable men of
our race.
Mr. Chas. Piillips is the latest ac-
quisition to Alamosa.
Kindly stay away from the date
Easter Monday night.
Wann abtstha total nee aR eTiLA:
LADIES, ATTENTION!
H. B. Erown, who is the state or-
ganizer of the United Brothers of
Friendship and the Sisters of the Mys-
terious Tens, is actively engaged in
the formation of clubs to bet set up
into Temples of the latter and wishes
to get into communication with all
women who desire the benefits of this
society. He can be reached after 6
o'clock each evening by ‘phone, Olive
2153.
A joining fee for charter members
will be charged. Ladies who are pre-
pared to pay now at this time or who
wish further information about the
order should do so at once for this
grand offer closes March 15. Remem-
ber the protection comes not only
from the local lodge, but from the
grand lodge as well.
THE SICK MADE WELL WITH
MAGNET‘C HEALING,
Kind Friends:—
A Magnetic Healer has arrived in
the city, and invites the sick and af-
flicted to make no delay in calling to
see him.
Precious Life and Health can be
Saved by this that would be Hope-
less
Under the Old Methods. The Nature of
The Disease makes no Difference.
It is no longer necessary to suffer
the pangs of pain and disease, or die
prematurely. The time is now at hand
when it is as easy to get well as it is
to get sick.
Those who are suffering with
Stomach Troubles, bad cases of Rheu-
matism, or any other Lingering Dis-
ease, take one treatment of Magnetic
stealing from the Healer and you
snall be convinced that your disease
nd pains will be turned into health
and joy.
All this is simply the operation of
natural law, and it is not half as won-
aerful as the fact that you can send
your voice along a little wire for thou-
sands of miles, yet no one doubts the
telephone, or is astonished at what it
accomplishes. Is it strange, then, that
a new discovery should be made in
the line of physical science as an-
plied to the healing art.
PROF. H. G. H. BUTLER,
1123 Welton Street. |
Phone Mais 8762. %
NOTICE.
Mrs. R. Simpson of 1050 lLwegan
evenue, is agent for the Eureka
comb, which can be had for $1.50.
You do not have to go East to learn
hairdressing in all its branches. En-
q4ire terms of the Moler System of
Colleges, 1229 17th street, Denver,
Colo.
After spending three and a half
months with Daniels & Fisher, Miss
fBya Carter has opened a dressmaking
shop at home, 2111 Arapahoe street,
‘phone Main 8625.
LADIES’ TAILORING.
Fashionable dressmaking, designing.
Mrs. I. M. McGuire, 2516 Curtis st.
NOTICE TO WEBSTER TEMPLE,
S. M. T.
All members are hereby notified to
meet at Odd Fellows’ hall, 1835 Arap-
ahoe street, Wednesday, Feb. 24th.
By order of State Grand Master.
L. L. DUNCAN.
WHEN YOU GO TO LEADVILLE
You can get first-class rooms witb
Mrs. S. J. Motley at 206 West Sixth.
street. First-class table board alse
Write or eall. 10-96
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms at
2055 California street. Phone Olive
1689.
FOR RENT — Nicely furnished
roorooms for rent in a strictly modern
house, 2255 Arapahoe street. Mrs. R.
M. Blakey.
A gentleman and wife can get a
neatly furnished room at 2445 Welton
street. Mrs. John Nelson.
FOR RENT—Furnished front room,
strictly modern. Apply Mrs. ‘I. 8.
Clinkscale, 2508 Tremont Place.
FOR RENT—Five-room brick house
in fine location. Apply 2215 Pennsyl-
vania avenue.
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms at
2215 Arapahoe street.
FOR RENT—Newly-furnished rooms
at 2938 Welton street, upstairs. New
house, thoroughly modern.
FOR RENT—Unfurnished rooms in
modern house, half block from car
line. Call phone Galiup 876. 4524
Vrain street.
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms at
2615 Welton street. Very convenient.
Mrs. Smith. 2
FOR RENT—First class rooms with
all conveniences and comfort at 2438
Emerson st. Mrs. I C. McKenzie.
FOR RENT—One room at 1050 Lo-
gan avenue.
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms in
modern house. 2421 Ogden street,
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms at
2424 Glenarm Place.
FOR RENT--Nicely furnished rooms
Withor without board, 440 Tremont
Place. Mrs. Franklin.
THE COLORED AMERICAN LOAN & REALTY CO.
913 TWENTY-FIRST ST.
Want your Property For Sale and For
Rent. Also your Fire Insurance and a>
Short Loan Business. Shall we have it? gf ri
PHONE MAIN 5554. Gx *)
We have a Notary Public for the ack- 3 WN
nowlodgment of yonr Legal Instruments — =
A. A. WALLER, Secretary and Manager
THE A. M. LAWHORN CO.
Undertakers and Funeral Directors
Up-to-Date Undertaking and Shipping
Phone alts a stage . @oLonava
FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms
in a modern house at 1235 Welton
street.
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms in
modern house. 2851 Welton street.
Furnace heat, no children.
For Rent—Neatly furnished rooms
at 3214 Arapahoe street. Phone Mais
FOR RENT—Furnished room in
modern house at 2955 Glenarm Place.
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms for
ladies at 2215 Humboldt street. Mrs.
Whizard.
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms, one
front and one back, at 2248 Law-
rence street. Mrs. C. D. Hagood.
FOR RENT—Furnished or unfur-
nished rooms at 2421 Welton street.
For Rent.—Furnished rooms in
modern house. 2918 Welton street.
Mrs. Mamie Cole.
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms in
modern house at 629 22nd _ street.
Phone Main 6851.
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms at
1839 Lawrence street for gentlemen.
Miss Effie Jackson.
FOR RENT—Furnished room at
2431 Arapahoe street. Mrs. A. J.
Taylor.
FOR RENT--Several nicely fur-
nished rooms in modern house in
walking distaace. Mrs. Howard, 2301
Lawrence street.
FOR RENT—Front room and side
bed room at 1735 Logan avenue, Mrs.
Hattie Johnson,
FOR RENT—Room in modern
house, with use of kitchen, 2449 Glen-
arm Place.
FOR SALE or exchange—For Den-
ver property, the Perkins home, 418
East Cucharras. Lee Lawyer Ross.
207 Kittredge.
Ce ee ae ee ae hee reeewe BO
ROOMS TO RENT--To gentlemen,
at 2319 Champa street. Mrs. B. A.
Scott. Everything modern and rates
reasonable, Phone Main 8034.
800s.
FOR RENT—Furnjshed room, extra
nice, to lady or quiet gentleman. No
other roomers. 1946 Pennsylvania
st. Mrs. Reese.
FOR RENT—Furuished rooms at
2121 Arapahoe street.
Phone Olive 1755. Mr. L. P.
Holmes.
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms in
moder: house. Bath and gas. Mrs.
H. W. Wade, 222; Lincoln avenue.
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms ia
modern house. 3437 Gilpin street.
Gentlemen preferred. Reasonable
rates.
FOR RENT—One large front room
and rear room in modern house, 2344
Tremont Place. Phone Olive 1414.
FOR RENT—One nice froat room,
will rent cheap to right party. 1630
Pennsylvania.
FOR RENT—Furnished room io
modern house. 32539 Glenarm place.
Phone Main 6931.
FOR RENT—Furnizhed rooms at
2515 Curtis street, in a modern house.
"Phone Olive 1472.
SPECrAL ACCOMMODATIONS {is
rooms, gentlemen preferred. Rates
reasonable. Phone Purple 33. 281@
Arapahoe street. Mrs. R. Lindsay.
BEE HIVE ROOMING HOUSE
At 1929-1931 Lawrence street, with
18 neatly furnished rooms. Kitchen
special for roomers who want to cook.
Bath prepared at any time. Call and
see the proprietor, Mrs, Anna Bobo.
Phone Main 2869. Transient rooms for
BE SURB TO ROOM with Mrs. &
J. Bunker when you go to Maafteu,
(Cela Waders haeese vesrw amveetesnt
PAGE 2
LIKE NOTHING ELSE ON EARTH.
Night Lights of New York Are a Vision of Magnificence.
The sky line of New York is always changing. So, too, the night lights shift and grow in wonderful magnificence, creeping continually further upward toward the stars, until the lower city, grouped around the Singer tower, has become a veritable Chimborazo of glitter and glow. The little lamps that mark the dark wharves barely show. Above them the scant candles of the older city twinkle here and there, but not enough to mar the dark foreground beyond which come the palaces more goregous than any ever coaxed from genii land by slaves of Aladdin's lamp. From the platform towers of the great bridge the picture sets to the best advantage. It begins with the sinking sun. The murky view beyond the bay betcomes dull and dark. The torch in Liberty's hand suddenly gleams starlike in the night and then, like the twinkling in a kaleidoscope, the palaces begin to glitter in the gloom. There is no vision like it elsewhere in the world, yet only now and then does a bridge pedestrian pause in his hurried, walk to give the spectacle a momentary glance. The usual New Yorker cares little for the splendor of his town.—N. Y. World.
SHOW HATRED OF FOREIGNERS
Chinese Historical Plays That Keep Alive Race Prejudice.
Historical plays are acted everywhere in China. They are popular in the quiet villages, the homes of the rich, in the crowded cities, and in the busy market towns. These plays are written with the object of intensifying the bitterness and contempt of the people against the foreigner. The story of plunderings and massacres of their forefathers is vividly portrayed, with all the dramatic power that the actors possess. The foreigner is represented as a monster in appearance. His face is dragged out of shape and his mouth is made to appear near his ear. His beard on one side is red and on the other blue. His eyes are fierce and staring, and murder is stamped upon his hideous features. The people of the interior, who have never come into actual contact with the foreigner, have this conception of the hated barbarian. To their minds Americans, French, English, Germans are all alike, barbarians to be destroyed.
The Quaint Belluga.
Caviare can be made of the roe of any fish; but the principal supply comes from the sturgeon and the belluga. The latter is about the most curious fish in the world. It weighs up to 1,000 pounds and inhabits the waters of the swift-flowing Volga. It is so abundant that the natives of Astracan throw away the flesh—which is whiter than veal and very dainty—and preserve only the spawn, of which they sometimes take as much as 200 pounds out of one fish. This belluga lies on the bottom of the river at certain seasons and swallows many large pebbles of great weight to ballast itself against the force of the stream; that is, the pebbles act as an anchor. When the flood subsides and the waters are less violent the belluga disgorges itself; that is, it unballasts, hauls in its anchor and swims about for provender.
THE STATESMAN, DENVER, COLORAD
Electric Plant for Tokyo.
A large power station is being built in Japan to furnish current for Tokyo, Yokohama and adjacent cities and towns. The capacity of this station will be 60,000 horse-power. The power will be derived from a 600-foot head of water on the Oi river. Six generators directly coupled to vertical waterwheels will be installed. The generators will be of the three-phase, 25-cycle type. The waterwheels will develop 13,500 horse-power. The 6,600-volt transmission line will be carried on steel towers 50 feet high and spaced 450 feet apart, over a distance of 105 miles.
An IOU at Auction.
An IOU for 200,000 marks was put up to public auction a few days ago at Wiesbaden, and fetched the handsome sum of 700 marks. The signatory to the interesting document is a well-known German prince, and there was an idea, which proved to be ill-founded, that his relatives would honor the signature in order to avoid any publicity.
Peculiar African Rac.
There is a peculiar sort of people living in northwest Rhodesia. These natives are small of stature, with large horns on their heads. The horn springs from the scalp, consists of the native's hair mixed with fat and flesh, and is sometimes as much as 18 inches long. For the most part these Kaffirs live on the great open flats to be found on both sides of the Kafue river. They build their huts on the great ant heaps which appear like hills scattered over the flats. When the Kafue is in flood and the flats are changed into great lakes these people are safe in their huts on the ant heaps. Their cattle also take refuge on the ant heaps on which corn and mealies are likewise grown.
Send for the S. P. C. 2.
A "Young Mother" asks our opinion of "the alleged injurious effects of rocking on babies."
We must frankly say that we consider it a brutal practice. As the father of a great many babies, of all ages, we never rocked on any of them intentionally, and we would probably be arrested if we expressed our full opinion of any woman who would presume to do so.—Lippincott's Magazine.
Flattery in Lieu of Tip.
How to avoid tipping the waiter at a restaurant: When the bill comes, pay it exactly. A certain involuntary expression of astonishment will be visible on the waiter's face, well trained though it may be. You should then rise, saying to him: "I have made an excellent dinner; you manage the establishment much better than the preceding proprietor did." During his rapture at being mistaken for the owner of the restaurant you escape.
Getting Ahead of One's Self.
"If I have anything to do that I particularly dislike, I start to work on it the first thing after breakfast, subordinating all routine work to that task," said a successful housekeeper recently. "One can expend enough nervous energy thinking about and worrying over an unpleasant duty to accomplish it. When it is finished and off one's mind early in the day, one gets ahead of one's self, so to speak."
PHONE 1461 2300-2306 Larimer St.
Groceries, Vegetables, Fruits, Meats, Delicatessen 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 Apples, Oranges, Lemons, Bananas, etc.
Also Canned Goods
DELICA
In this Department everything
Chitterlings, Chine Bones, Snoots, P
thing about a h
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 equestal.
WALTER EAST
Phone:1461
Electricity as a Carrier.
Does an electric current when passing through a metal conductor cause any transportation of particles? It is well known that it does so in the liquid conductors known as electrolytes; in fact, such a common operation as electroplating depends entirely upon this action. To test the matter a recent experimenter passed an electric current continuously for a whole year through a conductor composed partly of copper and partly of aluminum, the sections being pressed firmly together. At the end of the year they were taken apart and examined, but not the slightest trace of either metal was found in the other.
Telephone in the Alps.
The telephon has robbed the Alpine heights of some of their terrors. Two Alpestrians lately lost their way on the great St. Bernard mountain. Wandering for hours in a fierce snowstorm they at last reached one of the newlybuilt shelters erected by the monks. There they found not only food and a lamp but also a telephone connected with the hospice. They called up the monks and soon one of the brothers appeared accompanied by two St. Bernard dogs and conducted the men to the hospice where they received the proper care. Many huts have been built in exposed places and a number of lives have thus been saved.
Put New Blood into Your Business.
The up-to-date professional adviser or business doctor, when called to examine a shrinking, declining business, often finds the patient barely alive; the circulation being so sluggish that he can hardly find the pulse. In a desperate case like this he says to the proprietor: "You must put new blood into this business. There is no life in it. There is no energy, no push, no enterprise here. When a patient gets as low as this one, there are only two things to do, let him die, or infuse new blood into his veins and try to resuscitate him."—Success Magazine.
---
VEGETABLES
FRUITS
In this Department there is nothing lacking: Beaf, 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-
but the equestal.
2300-6 Larimer St.
Ring in Offertory.
After having taken the collection in the Cullompton (Eng.) parish church the church warden noticed a gentle man's gold ring in the offertory box.
At the conclusion of the service the vicar announced that a gold ring had been either accidentally dropped into the box or given as a thank offering, and would be restored to its owner if put in by mistake. No one claimed the ring.
JUMPED AT NATURE'S BIDDING.
Would-Be Suicide Not Completely Nerved for Final Parting.
With a groan of despair he made up his mind to die. Ruined financially, and with not a particle of hope for getting on his feet again, he realized that the only chance for his family escaping pauperism and its attendant miseries was to obtain immediate use of his heavy life insurance. Furthermore, if he lingered on he would be unable to pay the premiums on his policies, which unfortunately were not old enough to carry themselves, so that they would forthwith lapse.
Death, therefore, was the only solution to the problem. It was a decision the bitterness of which can only be understood by these forced by circum stances to confront it.
He put on his hat and overcoat and went out of the house, lest the expression on his telltale countenance should betray to his loved ones his fell intention. While he was traversing the crowded streets he would consider the best and least suspicious modes of consummating his purpose. If he could encompass it so that the thing looked to the world like an accident, so much the better. There would then be no scandal.
As he stepped from the curb to cross the street an automobile, driven by a reckless joy-riding chauffeur, came tearing around the corner at terrifying speed.
And the energetic leap which the would-be suicide made back to the sidewalk out of harm's way was a caution.
MEATS
ROVISIONS
Also Bakery Goode
Ring in Offertory.
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.
Office hours: 8 a. m. to 6 p. m.
and by appointment.
Phone Main 7416.
Dr. T. Ernest McClain
DENTAL SURGEON,
Plate, Crown and Bridge Work
a Specialty
2130 Curtis St., DENVER, COLO.
OFFICE HOURS:
9 to 11 am. m.
3 to 5 p. m.
7 to 8 p. m.
Sundays by appointment.
DR. W. A. JONES
911 TWENTY-FIRST STREET.
Office Phone Main 5554.
Res. 2205 Marion St. Phone York 4370.
Dr. Westbrook.
Dr. Harper
8 to 12 m.
1 to 5 p. m.
All Other Hours and
Sunday by Appointment.
'Phone Main 1144.
DR. WESTBROOK
Residence 1505 East 16th Avenue
Phone York 4014
Physician and Surgeon.
DR. HARPER
Dentist.
915-817 Twenty-First Street
Phone Main 8625 After hours 3230
DR. JUSTINA L. FORD
OFFICE HOURS:
10 to 12 a. m., 2 to 4 p. m., . to 8 p.
OFFICE AND RESIDENCE.
2111 Araphoe Street, Denver.
JOS. H. STUART
LAWYER
PRACTICES IN ALL COURTS.
Office 329 Kittredge Bldg.
Cor. 16th and Glenarm.
Residence 2562 Lincoln avenue.
Phone Olive 2294.
Examining abstracts of title, and drawing up legal documents given careful attention.
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GEORGE G. ROSS
ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR-AT-
Abstracts of title, wills, deeds and all
legal matters pertaining to real and
personal property carefully looked
after.
Room 207 Kittredge Building.
Residence, 2344 Tremont Place. After
6:00 Phone Olive 1414.
Orange Punch.
This can be made from equal portions of orange and lemon juice with sugar, chopped ice, soda water and fruit.
To Take Out Machine Grease.
Cold water, a little ammonia and soap will take out machine grease.
THE STATESMAN, DENVER, COLORADO.
Proud Owners of Pets, Listen to This from Flatbush, N. Y.
Zip, a son of Bluff, the big bull terrier, is the most respected dog in Flatbush, N. Y., says a correspondent. He requires every other dog within 40 blocks to walk a chalk line and bow to him as he passes by. He can lick everything on four feet up to twice his size, yet is as mild as Devery-at-the-Pump. His master attributes Zip's prowess to his fondness for the pipe. Like Old King Cole:
He calls for his pipe,
He calls for his glass,
"That is the most remarkable dog in the world," says his master. "He takes my pipe out of my mouth and smokes it, standing on his hind feet. See! The stem is all chewed up! If the tobacco doesn't burn well, Zip will get down on his fours and chase all over the house to create a draught. When the fire is well started again he finishes his smoke and returns me the pipe. Strong? He ought to be named Samson. Why, we have a piano that weighs 600 pounds. Tie Zip to it with a rope and he will pull it all over the room."
Antiquity of the Sausage.
The sausage dates back to the year 897. It has been asserted that the Greeks in the days of Homer manufactured sausages, but this prehistoric mixture had nothing in common with our modern product. The ancient so-called sausage was composed of the same materials which enter into the make-up of the boudin of the French market and the blood pudding of the French-Canadian. The ancient sausage was enveloped in the stomachs of goats. Not until the tenth century did the sausage made of hashed pork become known. It was in or near the year 1500 that, thanks to the introduction into Germany of cinnamon and saffron, the sausages of Frankfort and Strassburg acquired a universal reputation.
A Knowing Dog.
"Now," said the narrator, "I've got a dog here I would not take $100 for. You can believe me or not, but what I am going to tell you is the gospel truth. In the early part of last spring I lost about a score of very valuable sheep, until one day as I was looking across from my house to the edge of the range opposite, about two miles away. I noticed some sheep. I got my telescope, and assured myself that they were mine. I placed the telescope in a suitable position, and made Bob, our best collie, look through it. After about a minute the dog wagged his tail and made off. In less than two hours he brought the sheep home safe and sound."
Women's Sweet Laughter
A woman has no natural grace more bewitching than a sweet laugh. It is like the sound of flutes on the water; it leaps from her heart in a clear sparkling rill, and the heart that hears it feels as if bathed in the cool exhilarating spring. How much we owe to that sweet laugh! It turns the prose of our life into poetry; it flings showers of sunshine over the darksome wood in which we are traveling; it touches with light our sleep which is no more the image of death, but gemmed with dreams that are the shadow of immortality.—Exchange.
HELP US BE PROMPT.
Many changes are occurring in
requiring new arrangement of our m
reach you on Saturday, notify us at e
be corrected by notification. No pape
ing the subscriber.
L. L. McM
...Prescription
FINE LINE OF TOILET ART
Fresh, pure drugs, courteous treat
freshest and purest drugs in our pro
— PRESCRIPTION
is as complete as any in the city
— PRESCRIPTION
Goods delivered free. Phone Mail
GIVE ME A
are occurring in the districts of the
management of our mailing galleys. If you
day, notify us at once. Do not delzy.
notification. No paper should be as late a
L. McMAHAN
description Pharm
OF TOILET ARTI-CLES, PERFUME
drugs, courteous treatment. Remember
best drugs in our prescriptions. In fact
— PRESCRIPTION DEPARTMENT
is any in the city. Prices right.
— PRESCRIPTIONS A SPECIALTY.
free. Phone Main 4956. Cor. 19th and
GIVE ME A CALL.
Many changes are occurring in the districts of the Denver postoffice, requiring new arrangement of our mailing galleys. If your paper does not reach you on Saturday, notify us at once. Do not delizy. The fault can only be corrected by notification. No paper should be as late as Monday in reaching the subscriber.
FINE LINE OF TOILET ARTI-CLES, PERFUMES, CIGARS, ETC. Fresh, pure drugs, courteous treatment. Remember we always use the freshest and purest drugs in our prescriptions. In fact our
L. L. McMAHAN
FIRSTCLASS MEAL GO TO
MAY HONOR
RESTAURA
1841 Arapahoe Street
Orders, Chilli, Chop Suey, N
All American Dishes
Phone Main 6835
oms for Ladies Open Day
THE OLD RELIABLE
mas Cling
Willard and Pool Parlour
e St. Phon
FOR A FIRSTCLASS
MAY
...YIP REST
1841 Arap
Short Orders, Chillin
All Ameri
Phone
Private Rooms for Ladies
THE OLD
Thomas
Billiard and
FOR A FIRSTCLASS MEAL GO TO THE
MAY HONG
...YIP RESTAURANT...
1841 Arapahoe Street
Short Orders, Chilli, Chop Suey, Noodles
All American Dishes
Phone Main 6835
Private Rooms for Ladies Open Day and Night
Thomas Clingman Billiard and Pool Parlors
"I am sorry for the Italian sufferers," said the woman. "I am sorry for any sufferers, having suffered much myself, but we have had an earthquake ourselves, haven't we? That panic! And did any of the nations of the earth come to our rescue? I should think not. On the contrary, they deserted us, Italy particularly. I don't know how Ellis island is now, but I do know that the panic rendered it for a time a deserted village. We were like a sinking ship forsaken by the rats. I don't say we shouldn't help Italy all we can, but I do say that we should think a little of our poor of the East side and elsewhere, of the pitiful spectacle of our breadlines, of our own dark nights and our hollow streets through which our own poor wander from twilight till dawn."—New York Press
---
---
1129 10th St.
1855 Ars pahoe St.
the districts of the Denver postoffice, calling galleys. If your paper does not ce. Do not delizy. The fault can only should be as late as Monday in reach.
MAHAN'S Pharmacy...
CLES, PERFUMES, CIGARS, ETC. ment. Remember we always use the descriptions. In fact our DEPARTMENT -
Prices right.
IS A SPECIALTY.
4956. Cor. 19th and Arapahoe Sts.
ALL.
MEAL GO TO THE
HONG
TAURANT...
Shoe Street
Chop Suey, Noodles
an Dishes
ain 6835
Open Day and Night
RELIABLE
Clingman
Pool Parlors
While pruning a grape vine the shears slipped and, cutting through a thick buckskin glove, nearly cut my thumb off. The blood spurted out as I ripped off the covering. The aged gardener, picking up the glove, remarked, with deep feeling: "It war a great pity, sor, to spile sich a foine bit o' leather. Still, I guess we might mend it for a trifle."
Barbarism has no horrors so horrible as the bestial squalor and sheer misery of civilized poverty. Poverty is a great evil in any state, but the world has not known any poverty so foul, so brutal and so utterly loathsome as the poverty of the city slum, the sweating den, the pawnshop and the gin palace.—London Chronicle.
PAGE. 3
Denver, Colo
Phone Main 5154
Poverty.
PAGE.4.
THE BEST THING THIS SIDE OF EASTER
is the entertainment to be given at Dania hall, Twenty-seventh and Arapahoe streets next Tuesday evening, Feb. 23, by the United Brothers of Friendship. The men of Western Star lodge bear a well deserved reputation for thorough going hospitality and will give their patrons a hearty welcome on this occasion. Good music. Prizes. A good time. All for 35 cents.
FOR RENT IN CHEYENNE.
One nice room for quiet man and wife or for two nice men at Mrs. Pierson's, 622 W. 20th street.
A. M. Lawhorn is somewhat improved from his illness.
Mrs. Milton Fore is now visiting friends in Paris, Texas. She will return to the city in March. Friday of last week, on the occasion of her husband's birthday, she remembered him with a beautiful and costly gold watch.
Remember that the Sunday dinner at the Gem Cafe last all day.
FOR RENT—Two large front rooms, elegantly furnished in modern house. Phone purple 1796. Mrsfl Callie Howard, 2418 Champa street.
The Bon Vivants will give a private dance in April.
The Two Jims' club has taken on the freshness of spring preparatory to caring for the comforts of its members during the coming season.
The Red Devil are coming! Thursday March 11, at East Turner hall.
Mrs. E. Azalia Hackley is issuing a book on voice culture which will be advertised and circulated widely.
Mr. and Mrs. A. Vanders are the happy parents of a twelve-pound girl born Tuesday. Mother and child are doing well.
The Red Devils are coming! Thursday March 11, at East Turner hall.
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Cash have issued invitations for the celebration of the twentieth anniversary of their marriage next Friday evening at 1712 Curtis street.
Mrs. Dollie Hamilton entertained friends Sunday afternoon at her home on Welton street on the occasion of
---
THE STATESMAN, DENVER, COLORADO.
Remember that there is something date.
LICENSE SECURED Matinee Skating This Afternoon FEB. 20
City News
her birthday. A delicious collation was served.
Kindly stay away from the date Easter Monday night.
SHIRT WAISTS and PLAIN SEWING by Miss L. E. Williams, 314 14th st., rear. Phone Main 3192.
There is going to be big things doing at Zion church from the 22nd to the 26th of this month, that being the time of the choir fair. The choir bears an enviable reputation for good music, and says it will stand even higher for the good time it will furnish and the good goods it will sell. Remember when and then go!
The next big thing in dancing is Will Knight's masquerade ball February 15 at East Turner hall.
Remember that there is something
big coming on April 1. Keep off that date.
Dr. J. C. Garvey will fill the pulpit of the People's Presbyterian church until the arrival of the new pastor, who has been called. On Monday evening there was a Valentine entertainment given at the church for the benefit of the parsonage. It was a success and the friends are thanked for their patronage.
Mrs. Gibson of Harmon, who has been ill, is improved.
Mrs. Julia Giggs of 1884 Marion street has been bequeathed a considerable sum of money.
Remember that there is something big coming on April 1. Keep off that date.
The Capitolia Temple, S. M. T., No. 133, will give a grand entertainment at Dania hall on Thursday evening, March 18th. Two prizes will be given to best waltzers. Keep note of the date.
A council was called together to consider the propiety of setting Bro. B. J. Cattelle apart for the gospel ministry. The meeting was opened by reading II Car. 8 Chapter by Rev. A. E. Reynolds, prayer by Bro. B. J. Catletle. After singing from Baptist hymnal No. 324, the council was organized as follows: Rev. A. E. Reynolds of Bethleham Baptist church was elected chairman; Dr. R. N. Contee of Zion Baptist church was elected catechizer, and Rev. J. B. Beckham, secretary. After the council had examined Bro. Catletle, and after having carefully considered the answers given to the questions asked, the council advised Bro. Catletle to spend six months in better preparing himself for the work of the ministry. The name of the members of the council are as follows: R. N. Contee, D. D.; Rev. A. E. Reynolds, Rev. S. M. Adkins, Rev. I. H. Harper, Rev. E. Roy, Rev. A. C. Jackson, J. B. Beckham, D. D. deacon; Thomas Dickerson, deacon; T. J. Riley, Rev. A. E. Reynolds, moderator; J. B. Beckham, secretary.
The Woman's Guild of the Church of the Reedemer will give an oyster supper at the residence of Mrs. Clarence Holmes, 2139 Curtis street, Tuesday, February 23. You are welcome. Remember to look out for our Easter entertainment.
Remember that there is something big coming on April 1. Keep off that date.
Miss Lula Williams, secretary of Capitol Hill Fountain No. 2538, N. O. T. R., was suddenly called to her home in Iowa because of the untimely death of her sister. Miss Williams is one of Central Baptist church's prominent workers and has a wide acquaintance among the young people of this city. She is also a member of the current literature committee of the People's Sunday Alliance. We extend our heartfelt sympathy to her during her sad trip home. She may not return to Denver.
Clinton H. Douglass is ill.
The Christian Endeavor gave a Valentine social at the parsonage. A large crowd was out and a jolly good time was the talk of all who were there. They had valentines to let.
Mr. McWilliams, one of Tuskegee graduates, who is seizing the real things at his hands, addressed the Alliance last Sunday. Mr. McWilliams is engaged in raising chickens just at the outskirts of our city.
Prof. Will Taylor, corns, bunions and ingrowing nails specialist. Guaranteed cure. Painless, no cutting. Phone Main 8358, 911 Eighteenth street. Clip this advertisement, as it may not appear again.
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IN A UNITED EFFORT
Arapahoe Lodge No. 2936
AND
ROCKY MOUNTAIN LODGE No. 2320
Grand United
Order of Odd
Fellows
WILL GIVE A
GRAND
Inaugural
ENTERTAINMENT
AT
THE NEW RINK
1942 CURTIS STREET
Thursday, March 4th, 1909
Admission Adults 35c Children 15c
GOON MUSIC
All male descendants of veterans of the late civil war are invited to meet at Bethlehem Baptist church, 2716 Larimer street, March 8th, 1909, at 8 o'clock p. m., for the purpose of considering the advisability of organizing a camp of the Sons of Veterans of the Civil War. Speakers: Col. N. W. Ferguson, Rev. J. C. C. Owens and Charles Stewart. (Signed) I. H. HARPER.
JOSHUA LODGE NO. 2, U. B. F.
Meets every first and fourth Monday evening at 105 South Tejon street. E. V. CAMMEL, W. M. J. M'KINNIE. W. Sec.
There were two visitors up from Colorado Springs last week, L. L. Duncan of 1114 High street, grand master of the United Brothers of Friendship, and E. V. Cammell, the grand secretary. They were here on work of the order. Its reports at this time are of the best. Fraternal relationships are pleasant, and finance and membership are growing rapidly.
Keep off the date of April 1.
Word has been received of the death of Bernice Howard, formerly Bernice Lindsey, daughter of Anna and Zeke Lindsey. Mrs. Howard died Feb. 12th, at Everett, Wash.
The next big thing in dancing is Will Knight's masquerade ball February 15 at East Turner hall.
Mrs. Clara Herndon entertained in honor of her nephew, Mr. Hubert Hayden, on Friday evening. The evening was spent in cards and music. The guests were: Mrs. Samuel Hobson and daughter, Mrs. Julia N. Banks of Cheyenne, Miss Edna Bell, Miss Mabel Crith, Miss Hattie White.
THE STATESMAN, DENVER, COLORADO
Mrs. Amanda Serite, Mr. Ben Hally, Mr. Franklin Jennings. Mr. Earl Jones, Mr. Hayden and his grandmother left Sunday evening for their home in Springfield, Mo.
LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY PARTY.
The 100th birthday of Abraham Lincoln was celebrated with a party by the Sweet Pea L. T. L. They rendered a program which was very pleasing and appropriate for this occasion: Instrumental solo...Mrs. Vera Finney A very interesting talk on the work of the L. T. L. by the president.Master Howard McGiness Instrumental solo...Mrs. H. W. Hinkle Abstract of Lincoln's Life..... Miss Zenobia Fisher Vocal duet
...Miss Philiminia Von Dickersohn
Piano solo.....Miss Zenobia Fisher
Paper—"Life of Abraham Lincoln".....Theodore Von Dickersohn
Remarks.....Miss Gussie Treen
Refreshments were served. The
children had a very social time and
retired early.
WANTED—A partner in a good pay-
ing business. Call at 1812 Champa
street. Little money required.
James Mosby of 1326 Twenty-fourth
street is very sick with pneumonia.
Harvey Groves and family have moved to the city from Manitou.
The entertainment Tuesday evening will be complimentary to the Black Patti Troubadours. Go to Dania hall and meet the members of the troupe.
FOR RENT—Two nicely furnished rooms at 2027 Stout street.
E. R. Page has returned from Kansas City, where he went to attend the funeral of his grandmother.
Chas. Jackson is again the hospital for an abdominal operation. ED EFFORT lodge No. 2936
The Time The Place The Girl
OLYMPIC HALL
1942 CURTIS STREET
Friday, Feb. 26
FIRST GRAND
PRIZE WALTZ
Of the Season at Our Own New Hall
6 GRAND PRIZES 6 Fancy Two Step Contest--2 Prizes
This Entertainment will be more on the order of a Grand Reception. A Grand Cotilion, Favors presented to all
PHONE MAIN 3044 IT'S SO DIFFERENT
SYL STEWART & RICHARD PORTER, Props.
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1821 Arapahoe Street
Take four calf's feet, properly dressed and cleansed. Put a gallon of water into a saucepan, add feet, and let them boil very gently but continuously until the liquid is reduced to half. Strain it and let it stand until stiff. Then remove from it every bit of fat, pouring a cupful of boiling water over it and placing a piece of plotting paper on the top after you have take it off to insure it being free from grease. Leave the sediment behind when you use stock. Boil the eet six or seven hours.
Farner's Cake.
Sift together four teacupfuls of flour and two teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Beat to cream one teacupful of butter and the same quantity of sugar, add two beaten eggs, one teacupful milk, and mix to a batter with the flour prepared as indicated above. Soak over night, drain, and stew in a cup of molasses two teacupfuls sour apples; mix in the batter with one teaspoonful each of cloves and allspice. Two teaspoonfuls of cin-
Denver, Colorado
MAGIC SHAMPOO DRIER.
Ladies! You need no longer dread washing the hair. For the use of the magic shampoo drier makes the task a pleasure. Every particular woman should add one to her toilet table. A trial will convince you. For full particulars call Mrs. M. B. Lee, 3333 Williams St., 'phone Olive 1188.
Surgeon, Chiropodist,
MADAM WALKER Manicuring and Facial Massage
Scalp Treatment. Hair Dressing and Bust Development.
I will give Lessons at the above address in all branches of the work, including Special Swedish Movements. Salt Baths.
A Passion for Old Hats.
The group of islands known as the Nicobars, about one hundred and fifty miles south of the Andamans, has been but little explored, though the manners and customs of the inhabitants offer very interesting peculiarities to the ethnologist. One of the most noticeable of these is the passion for old hats. Young and old, chief and subject alike, endeavor to outvie one another in the singularity of shape no less than in the number of old hats they can acquire during their lifetime. On a fine morning at the Nicobars it is no unusual thing to see the surface of the ocean in the vicinity of the islands dotted over with canoes, in each of which the noble savage, with nothing on but the conventional slip of cloth and a tall white hat with a black band, may be watched catching fish for his daily meal. Second-hand hats are in most request, new ones being looked upon with suspicion and disfavor.—Wide World Magazine.
Worthily Won Record.
Brig. Gen. George H. Torney, the new surgeon general of the army, is a Baltimorean by birth, the Sun of that city says of him: "He achieved his principal distinction, perhaps, in the work of sanitation following the San Francisco earthquake and fire calamity in April, 1906. He was then in command of the hospital at the Presidio, and all the details of the army's medical relief work fell to him. The sanitary conditions of San Francisco were made safe within one week after the disaster. This work won for the new surgeon general enthusiastic public praise from the mayor of San Francisco, the governor of the state, the officials of the citizens' relief committee, the Red Cross authorities, Surgeon Gen. O'Reilly and even Secretary of War Taft. Mr. Taft has borne this record in his memory ever since."
An Absurd Expression.
Dr. W. J. Garnett writes to the London Saturday Review protesting against the phrase "By the skin of my teeth," as recently used by a well-known court official in one of his public addresses. Dr. Garnett points out that "these words so generally used are not only a misquotation, but a perversion of the meaning conveyed in the poem by the true text. Reference to the Book of Job, 19:20, will show the protagonist as made to say, not, 'I am escaped by the skin of my teeth,' but 'with the skin,' meaning, not 'I have escaped with great difficulty,' but 'destitute of everything I possessed, just as the teeth are destitute of skin.'" Dr. Garnett concludes: "The latter is appropriate and forcible, the former an absurd metaphor, and it is high time it were relegated to the same category as 'creating a Frankenstein,' and similar corrupt texts."
Famous Women Linguist.
Martelina Kramers of Rotterdam ranks among the first of women linguists. She can read and speak 13 languages, and there are few men in the world who can equal that record. Besides, she has sufficient knowledge of seven other languages to converse in them, and she has planned to add a new language to her list every six months for several years. Miss Kramers also ranks as one of the most influential suffragettes in Europe. She is editor of Jus Suffragil, the official organ of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance, which has several branches in
THE STATESMAN, DENVER, COLORADO.
is country. Miss Kramers is one of the most optimistic of the workers. she believes that within ten years America and all the countries in Europe will extend suffrage to women on equality with men.
Sensing the Unlocked Door.
"When I come home in the early morning," he said, "I have to get my key ready for the outside door. If it is cold this is a bother. Therefore I wait until I can get a look at the door. The hallboy sometimes leaves it unlocked. I have learned to tell whether the door is open without trying the handle.
"It is an odd thing, too, that after practicing it a time I now can tell the moment I look at the door whether or not it is unlocked. The moment I get in front of the apartment house I look in through the glass of the vestibule and I feel instinctively whether I shall have to get out my key or not. It is a new sort of training. I don't know any one else who tries it."
Ruined Fire Alarm System.
For many years the residents of Murray, Ky., were notified of fire within the confines of their town by the discharging of guns, and this rather novel system proved so satisfactory that it was still in vogue up to within a few months ago. Then, however, came the night rider disturbances, and the discharge of guns became so frequent and misleading that in a number of instances the alarms for fire were disregarded. The mayor found it necessary to issue a circular, changing the alarm system from gun firing to the ringing of bells and blowing of whistles.
Orderly Wine Drinkers
"They let us play cards in our wine room," said the New York wine merchant. "It is not against the law. It would be if we sold whiskies, but not wine. The reason? Why, one man out of ten gets ugly and quarrelsome when he drinks whisky, but no man who drinks wine shows his true nature in the same way. If those men over there at that table were drinking whisky instead of fine Rhine wine, there would be a fight every ten minutes with the oops called in."
Hard Life of Arctic Sealer.
The Arctic sealer endures a hard life. Sealing does not consist only of hurried scrambling over ice, and fierce breathless battling afterwards. There are many hardships to endure. The most common type of Arctic weather is a dense, lung clogging fog, with a rasp of cold that is enough to freeze a glowing furnace. This fog may be diversified with cruel blizzards of pelting snow, borne on the wings of the constant gales. Once the snow passes come sleet and rain—rain that is as cold as ice. Misery prevails greatly among the crews of Arctic sealers, for the dampness and the cold soon sap the stoutest constitutions.
Whistling Sign of Contempt.
A Moroccan shows his contempt of anything by whistling. A conflict between tribesmen and a battalion of French troops was recently precipitated by the whistling of a locomotive on a railway being constructed near Casablanca. "The giaours are laughing at us," said a chieftain, when the construction engine gave a toot to warn the natives at work on the line to look out. The Arabs went wild, mounted their horses, and rode on the whistling enemy. They had to be calmed with the whistling of rifle
"This is white hair you are drinking," said the Chinese under secretary. "White hair? Nonsense! It is delicious tea."
The under secretary laughed in his lilac brocade sleeve. "No, white hair," he insisted. "White hair, that is, in my language. For Pekoe means white hair. This tea is called Pekoe because its leaves were gathered so young that the downy hairs still grew on them."
Phone Main 2275
TWO JIMS' SOCIAL CLUB
Denver's Favorite
Pleasure Resort
White pool, chess checkers
and other pastime games
1859 Champa Street
MURRAY AND EDWARDS, Props.
THE PULLMAN
W. WRIGH
A Convenient Place
Direct
The Finest equipped Pool art
sippi River. Drop in and see us.
Union I depot.
1628 Wax
ED EDWARDS, Props.
THE PULLMAN POOL ROOM
W. WRIGHT, Manager
Convenient Place to have your
Directed
nest equipped Pool and Club Rooms west of
Drop in and see us. Just around the corn
t.
PHONE MAIN 61
1628 Wazee Street
The Finest equipped Pool and Club Rooms west of the Mississippi River. Drop in and see us. Just around the corner from the Union I epot. PHONE MAIN 6128
FRANKLIN'S PAPER THE STATESMAN
Firstclass
stclass Job Print
Firstclass Job Printing
"A Firstclass Resort for Gentlemen"
THE NEWPORT S
DICK FRAZIER AND TOM LEWIS, PR
THE ONLY COLORED SALOON IN DENVER.
NEWLY OPENED WITH ALL
Telephone Main 741
NEWPORT SALON
FRAZIER AND TOM LEWIS, PROPRIETOR
COLORED SALOON IN DENVER.
NEWLY OPENED WITH ALL ACCOMM
Telephone Main 7418
DICK FRAZIER AND TOM LEWIS, PROPRIETORS
THE ONLY COLORED SALOON IN DENVER
NEWLY OPENED WITH ALL ACCOMMODATIONS
Telephone Main 7418
1845 Arnpahoe Denver, Colorado
Art is not, as the metaphysicians say, the manifestation of some mysterious idea of beauty, or good; it is not, as the aesthetical physiologists say, a game in which man lets off his excess of stored-up energy; it is not the expression of man's emotions by external signs; it is not the production of pleasing objects; and, above all, it is not pleasure; but it is a means of union among men, joining them together in the same feelings, and indispensible for the life and progress, towards well-being of individuals and of humanity.—Count Tolstoy.
P. A.
POOL ROOM
T. Manager
to have your Mail
ected
Club Rooms west of the Missis-
ust around the corner from the
PHONE MAIN 6128
kee Street
ob Printing
ORT SALOON LEWIS, PROPRIETORS. DENVER. WITH ALL ACCOMMODATIONS. Main 7418
PAG2...
JA& F. CLARK.
PAGES 0) STN int STATESMAN, DENVER, COLORADO:
e Statesman
Published Every Saturday at Denver, Colorado.
1026 19th Street
C. A. FRANKLIN, Editor.
, TERMS.
One year ... ......$2.00 Six months .....$1.00 Three months ...$ .60
Entered at the postoffice at Denver, Colorado, as second class mailmatter. ;
———.—00— oo |
PHONE MAIN 7905. |
Notwithstanding the fervent hopes
and pleasant predictions of our Demo-
cratic friends that the bill providing
for separate schools had met an early
death, it is on its way through the
legislative mill and the prophets need
now to get busy. The race has its
eyes on the leaders and demands re
sults,
While iegisiators are so much
aroused over the association of the
races in the public schools, they are
singuarly oblivious to the intolerable
conditions of the Larimer street bar.
rel house.
It is a shame that any civilization is
so indifferent as to permit a poor race
to be preyed upon as is the negro in
the typical Larimer street booze em
porium. We would welcome separa-
tion or anything that will end this
kind of race contact.
The latest songs now out this week,
“Down Among the Sugar Cane,” sung
by George Walker, while his wife sings
“fm Just Crazy About You.”
Cole and Johnson's latest in “Red
Moon” is “Love Me Baby Mine.”
Mrs. Azalia Hackley has published
a book on voice culture. She has an
agency in Philadelphia for it.
Harry T. Burleigh, whe sang before
Mr. and Mrs. Martin and Lady Paget
of England, has been invited to sing
again before King Edward.
T-wo Negroes took first prize at the
poultry show held at Cape May, N. J.,
last week.
The “Brownsville” case will be
voted on Feb. 23rd in the senate.
Cardinal Gibbons has come out flat
footed against disfranchisement of Ne-
groes on the account of color or race.
Miss Moon, the Los Angeles violin-
ist, appeared in Boston Thursday of
last week. She will pass through Den-
ver en route home.
Theo. Dury will give “Cavaleria
Rusticana” in Boston this month.
NO POSTPONEMENT HERE.
Everybody is coming out next Fri.
day night to hear Black Patti sing
her favorite song, “Swanee River.’
Billy Knight's reception Feb. 26th
1944 Curtis street.
Felt, Opera, ‘Panama, Silk and
Straw Hats Cleaned and Re-Blocked
and Made Equal to Néw at The Hat
Sox, 1832 Welton stréét, expert hat
ters, from the Connécticut -hat fac
fories. All our work guaranteed.
Phone Main 2924,
Why help pay big
rent? We save
you 2O per cent
on uptown prices
CLEMENTS
: ae
1523 16TH ST. Near Biake |
SPECIAL NOTICE TO CLUBS OF
THE STATE FEDERATION.
All delegates must be elected by
March 1st and their names sent to
the corresponding secretary, Mrs. EB.
Goens, 2230 Curtis street, Denver, who
will furnish the same with credential
blanks.
All state dues should be sent to the
treasurer, Mrs. Hargrove, Colored
Orphanage, Pueblo, who will send re-
ceipt to sender.
The ‘following chairmen of depart-
ments will be expected to make re-
ports at the annual meeting:
Music——Mrs. May Byrd.
Business—Mrs. Anna Proeter.
Literature—Mrs. B. Lenox.
Temperance—Mrs, Francis Hill.
Rescue Work—Mrs. Lucy Hall.
Domestic Science — Mrs. Isabelle
Contee.
Philanthropy—Mrs. Lyle.
Juvenile Court—Mrs. Isabella Stew-
art.
Home and Education—Mrs. Powell.
Art—Mrs. Christina Green.
By order of president.
MRS. L. M. FROMAN,
OQ OO DEE IESE EEE IFO SOD
t OPEN DAY AND NIGHT
J. B. MOORE, Preprietor BASIL HILL, Manager
The Best and Neatest in the City
2552 WASHINGTON AVENUE
Phone York 1710
DENVER, - COLORADO
Sunday Dinner Lasts All Day
OFOED 4.91. 4-6 6S -DI- > OOO} DIO} ON-O OOD OAD AOAOAGAD,
WHERE THE BIG SHOWS ARE.
Bandanna Land—Great Northerrn
Theater, Chicago, Ill.
Red Moon—Folly Theater, Brooklyn,
N.Y.
Smart Set—Imperial Theater, St.
Louis, Mo.
Black Patti Troubadours—Seymour,
Texas.
In Old Kentucky—Holliday Street
Theater, Baltimore, Md.
Georgia Troubadour Minstrels—Wy-
ocena, Wis.
Lowery and Morgan's Minstrels—
Litchfield, Tl.
THE
QUALITY CLOTHES SHOP
1015 16TH STREET
OPPOSITE TABOR GRAND
. GOOD CLOTHES AT MODERATE PRICES...
JOHNSON’S TRAINER SAYS “SOME.
BODY HAS LIED.”
To Sporting Editor.
I read with great interest the ac-
count in your paper, also the daily pa-
pers, contained the marriage of Jack
Johnson in England. I wish to say in
Mr. Johnson's defense that I have been
with him for the past eight years and
know more of his personal business
than any one else. Jack Johnson was
never married to either a white or
colored woman in this country, and I
am prepared to prove it, and I do not
believe that he has married over in
London. In my opinion, Tom Cahill
of St. Louis, is trying to kill Jack’s
popularity, as all other Southern white
men try to do when a colored man
endeavors to advance. If the Asso-
ciated Press believes Mr. Cahill’s
story, let them find a record of his
marriage.
Yours truly,
HERBERT FUREY,
Jack Johneon’s Trainer.
1619 South Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
February 4, 1909.
50 Rooms, Reception Room and Rates:
Restaurant in Connection chars or N
The only First-Class Hotel in the uity 50 ,Cenks per Night
‘for accommodation of Colored People $2.50 Up per Week.
| and Trade A. Y. P. Your Headquarters wy
'M HERE
1
2207: FIRST AVE., SEATTLE, WASH
| FOUR BLOCKS FROM SECOND AND Center of the Retail District.
PIKE STREETS B. R. OREY, Proprietor.
also Pres. Queen City Social Glub, PHONE
211 Wash. Place, vor) gopbh inde burly T A 2770
THE STATESMAN, DENVcR, “ULORADO. =>). 1 Paaes, 5
PUNE oe ea tin lle A AT Oe EERE YES EES :
QD DE EF OF OF OF OPO FOFO4O4OF
THE BEST THING THIS SIDE OF —
EASTER Kindly stay away from the dat
is the entertainment to be given at
Dania hall, Twenty-seventh and Arap-
ahoe streets, next Tuesday evening,
Feb. 23, by the United Brothers of
Friendship. The men of Western
Star lodge bear a well deserved repu-
tation for thorough going hospitality
and will give their patrons a hearty
welcome on this occasion. Good music.
Prizes. A good time. All for 35 cents.
ILLUSTRATED SERMON.
Sunday, Feb. 28, the public will be
favored with another one of Pastor
W. C. Williams’ {lustested sermons,
at Campbell chapel, coraer Twenty-
third and Lawrence streets. In order
that we may not be disturbed after
wards with a public collection every
one Is asked to give a siiver offering
at the door. Services begin at § o'clock
om
W. C. WILLIAMS, Pastor.
GEORGE C, SAMPLE, Secy.
Take yout time. You won't need
money, Easter Monday at East Turner
Hall. The Colored American Amuse-
ment Co. Harris Orchestra.
The Red Devils are coming! Thurs-
day March 11, at East Turner hall.
Kindly stay away from the dat
Easter Monday night.
The Lucey Thurman W. C. T. U. will
meet at Zion Baptist church next Fri.
day afternoon at 2:30. At this time
Rey. Ward will be with us and speak
upon the subject, “How We May In.
terest Our Yourg Men in Temperance
Work.”
Mrs, Adlianna Hungerford, the state
president, will also be present to or
ganize the “Y," the young women’s
branch of this organization. All single
women over fourteen are invited to
Join.
The Taka Art club met last week
with Miss Wilson and this week with
Mrs, Burt. At the former meeting the
following delegates to the state feder-
ation were elected: Mrs. Lyda Burt
and Mrs, Mabel Fallings, with Mrs.
Lizzie Williams and Rhoda Cargyle as
alternates.
Mrs. Anna Hawkins was ill during
this week with a severe cold.
SPECIAL NOTICE.
Church of the Redeemer.
Tho new pastor, Rev. Thos. &.
Brown, will commence his work (D.
V.) “n Ash Wednesday, the 24th inst.,
at the 8 o'clock evening service.
Begin your Lent well and show your
intdrest by being there to greet him.
VEN, -VLUNRAVU. PR sy ees PAGE.8. \
SSS SS
AND
F { t {
4 BAPTIST
"+A CHURCH
Under the Auspices of
= ZION CHOIR
= e
MONDAY NIGHT, Bio sipperbegive ate sents:
Program by the Children at 8.15
ee ea
TUESIDAY NIGHT, *:rreraid,tvo act nlas, entitled
Director.
a
WEDNESDAY NIGHT, pravaricet Contest between
the city for a Prize.
pe ee eee Oe ee
i b
THURSDAY NIGHT, Mice preg conducted, by
All young ladies on program.
FRIDAY NIGHT, Wit te'in section torthe bovsaese
its friends and admirers. Don’t
miss it. By the entire Choir.
ESN te tS Sears tay eee en
Kindly stay away from the date
Easter Monday night.
SHORTER READY FOR REVIVAL
Interest in the coming revival to be
held at Shorter chapel, beginning Sun-
day, Feb. 21, and continuing until the
quarterly meeting on March 7, is run-
ning high. Bach Sunday brings g great
crowd hungry for the gospel. The
work already seems to be going on
for each Sunday sees someone coming
forward for prayer and spiritual help.
In both services Sunday the pastor
will speak upon the Importance of the
Revival. This will be the first gun
fired in the big battle with sin which
is to continue for two weeks. In order
to stir the martial spirit of the war-
riors a chorus of fifty voices have been
organized and is Practicing songs that
will stir the hearts of all who hear
them. Those who have friends whom
they wish to see saved will please get
slips from the ushers and hand their
names to the pastor. Everyone is in-
Vited to attend the services and take
an active part,
Sunday last, the 149th birthday an-
niversary of Bishop Richard Allen,
the founder of the A. M. E. church,
was celebrated. The pastor spoke
upon Richard Allen's Place in History,
and of the history of his great chureh
The choir rendered special music
written for the event. After the reg-
Wlar collection an offering of $25 was
taken toward the establishing of a
home at Colorado Springs for the
aged and retired ministers.
The public fs welcome to all serv-
ices,
rr — ~
Mrs. Tucker, a member of the
Mothers’ Congress of the U. O. T. R,
gave a valentine social at 1843 Marion
Funny Jobn Rucker was at the
Crystal theater this week, while an-
other couple graced the boards of the
Curtis, Black Patti is here next week
at the Curtis.
WATCH THIS SPACE.
Learn This Chorus, Come and Help
Sing it Easter Monday Night
at East Turner Halil.
Baby dear, O listen here, you won't
have to go home in the dark, at East
Turner hall Easter Monday nighr,
come out looking like a iark. Hatris
will play until dright lay light, and
Will please your -heart. There's no
music like Harris’ and yon won't have
to go home in the dark.
THE COLORED AMERICAN AMUER.
MENT CO.