Denver Star
Saturday, August 3, 1918
Denver, Colorado
Page text (machine-generated)
For Real Results: Subscribe, Read and Advertise in the Denver Star. A Progressive Race Paper.
The Denver Star ESTABLISHED 1888
The papers formerly known as The Statesman and The Independent, have been merged into The Denver Star Twenty-Ninth YEAR Number 49 DENVER, COLORADO, SATURDAY, Aug. 3, 1918 FIVE CENTS A CO
Prejudice or Justice--What?
Why Scholars Use Term 'Negro' With "N"
Prejudice is unchecked savagery. It is ruthless, inhuman beyond comprehension. Its basis is in ignorance. It violates the happy innocence of children. But children are the noble expression of life, new and wonderous. Theirs are the noblest memories of Yesterday and the fervid hopes of Tomorrow. They in their simple ignorance, laugh, unmindful of the laden weight of the dead air of these sorry times; they mock the apothegms of our ideals of racial superiority. Theirs is the world of God—the great lands of dreams What have they to do with the prejudice of men? Children, alike black and white, forget our mad jealousies; they are wills, sons, playmates, gods.
Barriers of race do not, can not touch the majesty of their simple faiths. Social repression has not, as yet, fallen with calm stoism; but we, who know and feel the pangs, are conscious of a fearful potent—the awakening.
We, then, adminster a rebuke to those who, consciously, embitter the intensity of hatred by petty insinuations. In doing this, let us say, we earnestly disclaim any invidious feelings. But we appeal to that fine Americanism which twelve millions of us help to preserve.
There are two paramount reasons why the word "negro" should be capitalized. On page 1760 of the "New International Dictionary," there is a definition stating that a race is a family, tribe or nation believed to belong to the same stock; a kind of individuals with common characteristics, and intrests. To such a group, belongs the Negro. On page 117 of Wooley's "Handbook of Composition," acknowledged as authority by criterions of English, there is this rule: "Capitalize nouns and adjectives of language or race." Therefore, in order for a newspaper, magazine, periodical, text book, or other published article to be correct in its English forms, it must capitalize "Negro."
A further reason for the capitalization of the word is to eliminate the humiliation caused by its non-capitalization, which is a badge of inferiority, an inference that the name "Negro" is less racial than descriptive. That it is a badge of contempt, is absolutely proved in the reading of various newspapers and magazines, where contempt for the Kaiser, and Germany as represented by the Kaiser, is shown by non-capitalization. Is it then, fair for the American press, undoubtedly the most powerful exponent of Democracy, to humiliate and insult twelve millions of the citizens who are helping in this nation's fight for world Democracy?
A casual observation of the attempt of certain individuals to disregard the accepted rules of English reveals a propaganda as direful as that of Pan-Germanism. No other racial group, be it Jew or Indian, is confronted by such a challenge. One city editor curtly explained her attitude in a few words lavished with the spirit of nonchalance. She protested that mere lack of capitalization was not meant as a discouragement nor a reflection upon the race; she sought to profess friendship; yet as we watched the tell tale colorings in her face, sensed the background of passion, fearing lest, we might betray our mistrust of her frightful analogies,—and wisdom, we stood immovable, suspressing our real feelings. "One does not capitialize "white man," she exclaimed glibly. She eyed us deliberately; "Then why the word 'Negro?' " " 'White is the name of a color, but Negro is not. Does it not refer to ethnological classification?' we rejoined.
One natural consequence of such a mental attitude is an accusation, which we view with unrelieved dismay, that there is an Anti-Negro propanganda, deadly and sinister. It seeks to throttle the ideals, the faith of the darker group, seek by implications and disillusionments to discourage, to oppress the rise of black men to heights of visisn. It would rob us of our glorious history, our gifts, our achievements. It would restrict us to depths. It would reveal us to the world in caricature, half souls, scarcely human, with no possibilities. This attitude is brutal, but lacks, to say the least, the support of a kindlier element which has access to moral vision.
The failure to capitalize the word effects the white American and the black American. It shows to the world that there still exists in the hearts of one race of Americas, hatred for and prejudice against another race of Americans.
DENVER, COLORADO, SATURDAY, Aug. 3, 1918
CAPTAIN ROWAN DISMISSED AS HE DREW COLOR LINE
LITTLE ROCK, ARK-- By virtue of a telegraphic communication from the war department recived at head quarters at Camp Pike, Captain Eugene C. Rowan, late of the 162nd Depot Brigade, was dissmissed from the service and Lieutenant Robert H. Hall, formerly of Brooklyn, N. Y., was dismissed and given a sentence at the military prison at Fort Leavenworth, Kan
Captain Rowan's case at tracted considerable attention while it was before a general court martial several months ago, because it was the first time the color line has figured in a national army court. Captian Rowan was charged with having refused to obey an order issued by the brigade commander calling for a troop formation, because it was asserted both colored and white soldiers were included in the formation. The officer is a native of Georgia, but has recently lived in Mississippi.
Lieutenant Hall, deserted his organization late in February. Several days after his desertion a check-up of the mess fund revealed shortages amounting to about $7.000. He was arrested in San Francisco and brought back to camp. Hall is a native of Brooklyn N. Y.
BATAVA, O. —William Carter, colored of Batavir, is the first one to enlist from this place, and entered the service Sunday. He left on Monday for Wilberforce College, Xenia where he will be given several weeks training before entering the service. He will make Uncle Sam a good and faithful soldier, one who his friends will be proud of.
It will make other nations question the spirit of Democracy of which America is so boastful. In the hearts of the Negroes rankles a smouldering resentment engendered by injustices of the past. They wounder why a man who is well-educated, strictly disciplined, and of natural courage, is not worthy of being acknowledged as a member of a race rather than one of a breed. They wounder why an American newspaper said, "An Italian, a negro, and Jew were among the first drafted men." They wounder why the Italian and a Jew have precedence over the ancestor of a member of a race who fought that this nation might live.
The following are a few of the most important organs of repute which capitalize the word "Negro" in every instance: (1) MAGAZINES—Annuals of American Academy of Political and Social Science. Atlantic Monthly, Art World and Crafts man, Current Opinion, The Crisis, The Forum, The New Republic, The Living Age, The Modern Review (Calcutta), Missionary Review, The Outlook, The Popular Science Monthly, The Survey, Poetry.
NEWSPAPERS—Boston Transcript, Christian Science Monitor, Chicago Tribune, New York Evening Post, Springfield Republican, Wichita Beacon, Wisconsin State Journal, (1 Footnote)—Webster's New International Dictionary, page 1446.
The present crisis challenges our entire program of social adjustments. The Negro's faith in America was never more manifest. In these drear times of unrest and clashing interst, he offers a silent protest. No other race, except the Negro has ever exchanged for race calumny its noblest services. His cause is hard beset, but he hopes and dreams, even as he fights, that the "world might be safe for Democracy."
We, then, have the hardihood to protest to the gods that are. We pray the unimpassioned ear of those whose highest ideals are not enemies to their better selves.
STANDING BY HIS COLORS
John W. Hardy, most efficient, capable and faithful employee of Mr. L. C. Phipps, candidate for U. S. Senate.
It happens to be our good fortune to present the likeness of Mr. J. W. Hardy, our own townsman and associate who has been given the honor of spreading the good news to make friends of our white brethern whose friendship we especially need at this critical time. A hide bound rock-ribbed Republican, yet alert after the interest of his race first. His steadiness and faithfulness to accomplish one thing, makes his selection all the more desirable to handle the responsibility of Mr. Phipps campaign among the colored people His long and close contract with Mr. Phipps easily assured Mr. Phipps who now seeks to honor and reward his faithfulness in small things, ought to be a very important deciding factor in Mr. Phipps favor. Mr. Phipps is really a big man and cannot be otherwise. How many men would thus reward their servant of twenty five or thirty years service with something uplifting when largely a chance of selection is at stake? Negroes, hold up J. W. Hardy's shinds, organe with him, work bru him and bring results to Mr. Phipps.
Why not make Hardy a big Continued on page 5
S
ONG STAND
ence Spells Oppor-
Negroes
White House, and it has elect
rified the entire country as it
has seldom been thrilled be
fore.
It will be remembered by those familiar with the proceedings of the conference at the New Interior Department Building that the full force of the leaders who spoke was marshaled in opposition to the lynchings, burning and in human mob violence practiced mainly against colored people in various sections of the country, and that this lack of respect for the common rights of citizens was given as the most potent cause for the unrest among Negroes. This was the underlying reason for bringing the conference to gether from far distant points. The proceedings of the Conference reached the Pres. through the Committee on Public Information of which Mr. Geo. Creel is Chairman.
The President's message is a wholesome rebuke to ruth less violators of the law, who almost invariably think they will be immune from punishment by the courts or by out raged public opinion. The Colored people are jubilant over the timely and straight forward pronouncement of the President of the United States and that such an utterance from the highest authority in the land will cause a wave of patriotic enthusiasm among them and in spire a keener impulse to assist in the many constructive war activities throughout the Republic cannot be doubted.
BISHOP H. B. PARK'S AT CAMPBELLS
Bishop H. B. Parks will preach at Campbell A. E. E. church Sunday night, 23rd and Lawrence street. Let every one go and pack Campbell.
Washington, D. C.—Already there are numerous evidences that the recent conference of Colored Editors and leaders held in this city in June, which was called by Emmett J. Scott Special Assistant to the Secretary of War, at the suggestion of the War Department and the Committee on Public Information, to consider the relations of the 12,000,000 Negroes in this country with the general government itself, and to discuss ways and means how each might cooperate most effectively in the work of winning the present world wide war, is bearing fruit. Three results of the most significant character have been worked out within the past fornight that fully justify the holding of the conference and other issues not less far reaching are well on their way toward a satisfactory conclusion.
The first in importance and human interest of the helpful results that may be said to have grown directly out of the recent conference of editors, and the cooperation of Negro leaders and friends of of the Negro people, is the frank, positive and unequivocal declaration of the President of the United States against the mob spirit, which has been to sent to the four corners of the earth by cable and through the newspapers of this country. President Wilson firm stand for law and order ranks with the finest of the great state papers that have emanated from the
FIVE CENTS A COPY.
2
A plate of puff pastry topped with blueberries.
FIGHTING
FOR
DEMOCRACY
FORD-SYSTEM
ST. LOUIS, MO.
THE FOREST
U.S. GOVENMENT
INSPECTION
Teach the Children Thrift
Don't hide away the baby's pennies in a toy bank. Put them to work. Invest in Thrift and War Savings Stamps, and watch the investment grow.
Baby Bonds are the best investment for the baby.
Let your children learn what it means to have money out at interest. Teach them patriotism. Make them feel that they, too, can do something for their government.
When their War Savings Stamps, bought from money they otherwise would have wasted, come due five years from now, the little folks, then grown larger, will thank their lucky stars that they had parents who taught them thrift.
This space paid for and donated by
Houses and Rooms
THE "ADS" APPEARING IN THESE COLUMNS ARE AT THE RATE OF TEN CENTS PER LINE IF RUN BY THE ISSUE, OR 50 CENTS MONTHLY, TO BE PAID IN "ADVANCE," AS WE HAVE NO COLLECTOR FOR THIS DEPARTMENT. NO "ADS" TAKEN OVER THE PHONE. THE GRAND THEATRE'S WEEKLY PROGRAM. CUT OUT AND PASTE UN WALL.
The Best List in the City to Choose From.
We take orders for new Suits and extra Trousers, also.
Slightly worn Clothes and Shoes bought and sold.
See us first and you are sure to be satisfied. Latest in Suits from $5.00 up.
THE MAYOR OF NEW YORK IS SHOWING A MUSICIAN AT A CONCERT. THE MUSICIAN IS SHOWING A MUSICIAN AT A CONCERT. THE MUSICIAN IS SHOWING A MUSICIAN AT A CONCERT.
Notify us of any change of address
DON'T OVERLOOK THE ADVERTISING COLUMNS, TRADE WITH THOSE WHO ADVERTISE IN THE STAR. IN THIS WAY THEY SHOW THEIR RESPECT AND FRIENDSHIP FOR THE PAPER.
TUESDAY
ONE MEAL
WHEATLESS
USE NO BREAK Crackers.
TASTY OR BREAKING FOODS
CONTAINING WHEAT.
FOR RENT—Furnished room. Hot and cold water at all hours. Mrs. Perkins, 2447 Tremont. Phone Champa 1856. To 6-19-18tf
HOTEL HILDRETH
Nice, clear, airy rooms, strictly
modern house, close in; rooms from
8.15 up. 2152 Arapahoe. Phone
Main 7007. Miss. Lillian Horn. Prep.
THE DE LUXE
Furnished apartments of two and three rooms; hot and cold water, gas and electric lights; modern conveniences; rates reasonable to desirable tenants. Mrs. R. M. Blakey, 2868 2358 Ogden St., phone York 6707 W.
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms in modern house; rates reasonable; on three car lines. 2208 Welton St. Main 5951. Mrs. Clara Mays.
Come, Workers, here was a teacher; and the lessons he taught was good: There are no classes or races, but one human brotherhood. There are no creeds to be outlawed, no colors of skin debarred; mankind is one in its rights and wrongs, one right, one hope and one guard—John Boyle O'Reilly and Wendell Phillips.
For Rent—Nicely furnished rooms,
near car line; modern; kitchen privileges; at 2324 Ogden street. Mrs. M. Skinner. tf-4-20-18c
FOR RENT—In a nicely furnished
home, rooms with board. First-class
home cooking, at 2609 Lafayette
mrs. J. C. Steele, York 7764W.
HOTEL HOLMES
Furnished rooms—Modern conveniences, nicely furnished. York 8771 J., at 2145 Champa Street. Mrs. L. P. Holmes, proprietor.
FOR RENT—Furnished room with bath; gentleman only. 1869 Mar 22 11-1-17
The Prince and Peace Tabernacle, No. 566, meeting nights are 2nd and 4th Fridays in each month at Old Colony hall.
FOR RENT—One nicely furnished room for nice lady or gentleman. Apply Mrs. Robert Hall, 2841 High St., Phone York 884M.
We take orders for new Suits and extra also.
Slightly worn Clothes and Shoes bought
See us first and you are sure to be satisfied in Suits from $5.00 up.
Shoes at prices to meet the smallest price
1834 ARAPAHOE STREET.
Phone Champa 2571.
G. W. Davis & G. C. Sample
Second Hand Dealers
For Rent:-Nice furnished rooms. Strictly modern house, 2435 Tremont. Phone Main 7290, Mrs. Howard Steele.
Dr. Thomas E. McClain, Dentist, office phone Main 7416. Pyrrhoea specialista. Residence 822 32nd Street, phone Main 8397. Sundays and nights by appointment. Office hours 9 a.m. to 12 m., 2 p. m. to 6 p. m. Suite 4 and 8 929 17th Street, near Curtis St., Denver, Colo.
or rent—Nice, clean, airy furnished rooms; modern house; furnace heat. Everything first-class; 2462 Glenarm Pl. Phone Champa 475. Mrs. E. L. Stone. tf-12-1-17
"THE NEW NEGRO"
Newspaper-Magazine-Review
Published in the interest of the New
Negro Manhood Movement, wants re-
liable AGENTS EVERYWHERE. 20
pages, sells readily at 5 cents each.
Send 25 cents for Agent's outfit,
including sample copies, circulars, etc.
TO THE CLARION AGENCY, 118
West 134th Street, New York City.
Dr. Westbrook is a member of the Physician's and Surgeon's telephone exchange and when you want: him and cannot get him over his phone, Main 5595, call up Main 1624. They will find him for you night or day.
JOB PRINTING
Cheer up our boys by sending all kinds of magazines and books, after reading them; also correspond with the boys often, girls, and cheer their hearts.
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms in modern house, with kitchen privileges on car line, at reasonable rates. Mrs. Addie Craig, 2537 Curtis street. Main Main 7872. 6-15-18.
FOR RENT—Cheap—One four-room and one three-room furnished house, modern convenience. Phone Champa 3297 or call at 2456 Tremont Place. 4t-7-19-18-Mrs. Franklin.
FOR RENT—One nicely furnished room and two very desirable unfurnished rooms. Call at 1505 E. 16th Ave. or phone York 8340. Only desirable parties need apply. Rates reasonable. 4t-7-8-18.
FOR RENT—Nicely furnished rooms or apartments; congenial home surroundings. 2355 Lafayette St. Phone York 7900 J. 6-16-18tF
For Rent —Nicely furnished rooms with modern conveniences; near car line; rates reasonable. Mrs. A. J Dorsey, 1737 Logan avenue. 4-5-6-18 FOR RENT — Furnished rooms strictly modern house with conveniences, near car line. 607 28th street. Champa 3312. Mrs. Nora Hathaway. 6-15-18—1 mo.
Frousera,
and sold.
ed. Lat-
ketbook.
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New Orchestra
[COLORED]
Up-to-date Music and Har
mony furnished for all
occasions
Phone Main 2707
2947 Stout St. Denver
Call on Mrs. Mary Bolden
2540
Mme. Walker's Scientific art of Shampooing and Growing the Hair Satisfaction Guaranteed Walker Preparations For Sale
Furnished Rooms
Convenient to two car lines To Desireable Persons Only
1415 East 22d Avenue
Free Thermometer to each Customer.
SOLES SAVED SATISFATORY A NEW WAY WHILE YOU WAIT
PHONE M^IN 3737
Subscription $ 1 50 per year in advance. The Star, 1026 19th
THE COLORED MAN'S OPPORTUNITY FOR SERVICE
Continue Your Trade and Serve Your Country.
Auto Chauffeur, Mechanics, Repair men, Tailors, Saddlers, Canvas men.
WANTED AT ONCE
In Mobile Ordinance Repair Shop.
Rapid Advancement — Non-compensated Officers to be made from those who qualify in any
Camp Funston, Kans., Feb. 1, 1918
the Division Ordinance Officer, 92nd
—Word has just been received from
Division, (all colored troops), of the
urgent) need for skilled colored men
for service in the divisional Mobile
Ordinance Repair Shop. An unparalleled opportunity is thereby provided
for the colored man to continue his
trade, even profit by government
instruction at the established schools
of instruction, and serve his country
in the capacity he is best fitted for.
As this is a war of machinery and
equipment, the vast preparations
which we are making will come to
naught unless it is maintained at full
efficiency. Behind the lines in France
the Mobile Ordinance Repair Shop will
be the means of performing this
important and huge task. The scope of
its work will range from canvas and
leather repairing to the trucks, tanks
and artillery.
The pay for enlisted men will vary from 30 a month for a Private to $81 a month for Ordnance Sergeant. Applications are now being received and those chosen will have the advantage of a course of instruction varying from 30 to 70 days at government expense, at the various schools established for that purpose. Those men who have the qualifications, no previous military experience necessary, will receive grades as Corporals, Sergeants and Ordnance Sergeants in the Mobile Repair Shop The special qualifications desired are as follows:
Foreman of good sized machine shops in civil life, possessing mechanical and executive ability. Foremen capable of supervising repairs on trucks, motors, etc.
Foremen capable of supervising repairs on guns, rifles, pistols, machine guns, etc.
First class all around machinist and auto mechanics.
Men with knowledge of small machinery and having special experience in saddlery, and the repair of leather and canvas goods.
Expert auto repair mechanics.
Men who have had machine shop training and helpers.
Cooks.
Stenographers and typists.
Clerks, capable of handling a type writer and keeping records.
All colored men of military age who wish to apply should write at once to Division Ordinance Officer, 92nd Division, Camp Funston, Kansas, stating the following information:
Full name, age, address, education training and qualifications.
Previous civil experience, with name or names of employers and address see.
Number and address of Local Board
The Denver Star
CHAS. S. MUSE, Editor.
G. G. ROSS, Associate Editor
PHONE CHAMPA 2962
1026 Nineteenth Street, Denver, Colorado
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SLOGAN—"STOP LYNCHING AND MOB VIOLENCE BY LAW."
OUR CRUSE OF OIL.
A QUARTER IS ONE CENT MORE
THAN A MARK.
THE YANK IS WORTH TWO OF
THE HUN;
BUT A WAR THRIFT STAMP
PUTS OIL IN THE LAMP
THAT WILL BURN AFTER VIC
TORY'S WON.
Buy service flags to honor the service of your relatives. Let every Negro display and wear in some form the colors of the United States as a token to honor our drafted boys. If we are going to be patriotic, let us be so. If we are going to do the thing let us do it with all our heart, mind and soul—just 100% American that's all. Attend the patriotic gatherings and follow the boys to the trains. Encourage and boost them.
THE DUBOIS MATTER.
We have been an ardent admirer of W. E. Dubois for his manly qualities and his punch of intellectualities in literary effort. We are still as ardent an admirer. We cannot bring our minds to the point that any man like him would, after years of struggle, contumely from the higher-ups, the equals and the lower-downs, ingratitude from friends, and designed misunderstanding of his purposes, alms and objects by others as well as petty jealousies by a few, sell out the race or sacrifice his manhood for a petty job in the government. We do not agree with our contemporaries even in their biting criticism of this truly great man who has fought his unpopular way to the top. Suppose the article in the Crisis was all that they could make out of it. why associate his appointment, his article and the selling out of the race? Would you be willing, after a life of struggle to the top to be judged by one single act? We will let James Waters close for us.
Wait a Minute. Folks.
In what is perhaps one of the most notable novels ever written upon the world-old struggle between capital and labor, Robert Marr, the distinguished English novelist and propagandist, lays down the proposition that you may stake your very life in an effort to help the masses of the people, and they will turn upon you and tear you to pieces at the very moment when you have won the victory for them and hold it in your hands ready to deliver it.
In looking for a case in point one would seem to find it in the torrent of vituperation and abuse which has been hurled against Dr. DuBols within the past few days, simply because word came that he had been considered for a commission in the intelligence department of the United States Army. We took no part in that abuse and do not intend to take any. We prefer to be calm, give the situation a careful examination, and with our mind open and unbiased, form our own judgment as to whether this man has done anything to justify his people at this juncture in turning violently against him. The mere fact that he is talked of for a commission in the army does not suffice to make us feel that he ought to be pulled down and stamped in the gutter.
Of Dr. DuBois at close range we have seen little, but that little was enough for us. Others who have seen quite a good deal of him and been in position to form a pretty fair estimate of just what he is from a purely personal standpoint, have told us that
AMPA 2962
et, Denver, Colorado
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DENVER STAR.
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at the postoffice in the city of Denver.
about him that leaves us convinced that he is not the type of man with whom we would care to waste much time in personal dealing. We say in this order that you may see that we hold no special brief for Dr. Du Bois and are not actuated upon this occasion by any personal love for the man himself. We can, however, and we do cheerfully testify that from the first time we ever heard of Dr. Du Bois to the present moment we have admired and applauded him in his capacity of champion of the rights, privileges and immunities of his people. From the time we first heard of him down to the present hour, whether on the rostrum or in the columns of the press, he has been a veritable young Lochinvar whose steed in all the wide border was positively the best. Not only he merited the confidence and applause of his own people, but by the sheer force of his own ability he has compelled the bitterest foes of the Negro race to meet him half way and he has wrung from them affirmative recognition of himself as a foeman worthy of his steel.
Dr. DuBois has spent practically his whole lifetime entrenched upon the firing line fighting for the Negro race; and we think you had better go slow, folks, before you damn a man like that.
Mr. Faun Dickerson, son-in-law of Mr. Victor B. Walker, who was shot recently is able to come to his home on Lafayette street.
N. A. A. C. P. BRINGS JIM CROW SIGNS DOWN.
City Officials, When Notified, Act At Once.
No sooner had the Star reached its readers Saturday morning, and the subscribers read about the attempted Jim Crowism at the City Park, than our local N. A. A. C. P. got real busy. There was some delay as the president was in Colorado Springs organizing another local there. However Monday found him on the job with the result that City Attorney James Marsh and Mayor Mills immediately had the signs removed. Some misunderstanding had been had by some of our colored men and women about putting up the signs "For Colored" and about a test case to be made, etc. We are gathering more facts and will inform you later. The officials tell an interesting story of the doings of some of our Colored race patriots.
Will you kindly note the difference in a newspaper that always "hollers" about its loyalty to race but will never take up a fight against anyone of the white race who makes the insult, especially when it might mean a few dollars sacrifice to uphold the race standard as against manhood. The Star is the newspaper to openly fight "Jim Crowism." Put a pIn in that. Others may "holler," but the Star
For the first time in our lives, was it that we saw Dearfield Settlement; also the townsite, standing upon a hill high above all else is the Jackson hotel, which beckons you onward with extended arms. This hotel is in the townsite and is a valuable adjunct to the townsite. The blacksmith shop also gives a valuable appearance to the looks of things. But what we wanted to see, know and learn about was the settlement. Leaving the Lincoln Highway opposite Master's, at the residence of the wealthy ranchers, we turn into a big gate upon which has the inscription "Dearfield." Here you encounter heavy sandy roads, mosquitoes and gates of adjoining settlers' fences. To the south the old Page ranch, now owned by L. H. Lightner and C. M. White, with its two lakes, looks fine; then comes Robinson's—Ford place, where the first evidence of real farming is seen. A little to the north is the extended ranch of O. T. Jackson, covering many miles in extent. When you proceed farther and reach Hazell-North place, you are nearly in the center of the settlement. From here you can see Danfort's lovely farm, McKeether's growing crops, Chapelton postoffice store and J. J. Houston's ranch, crop and stock. By the way, did you know that J. J. Houston surprised the colony by going to Cheyenne and capturing Mrs. Page, who now is the pleasing postmistress and saleslady of the Chapelton? The appearance of Mrs. Houston already has things change. Roy Smith, whose mother, Mrs. Florence Smith, lives in Denver, is the clerk and de-
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livery boy. Mrs. Fletcher conducts a dairy and sells cream in Denver. She is an energetic, progressive widow, a sister to Jonas Cooper, who has acquired nine cows and six head of horses and mules. Chapelton is proud of her. This issue would end incomplete without the mention of the "Beu Brummel" of Chapelton, Mr. George North, the smiling "Brownskin admirer." Some boy! (We hope to tell of the growing crops we found upon the Danforth, Price and Jones, J. F. Bruce, McKeether, Watler Griff fin, Stewart, Brown, Dr. Jones, Burells, Bailey J. N. B. Anderson, Hicks Holley, Cannon; Clarw Collier and Son, Fred Browhs and Miller places in the next issue.)
PORO CLUB ENTERTAINMENT
On Wednesday afternoon July 17, between the hours of 5 and 8, the beautiful home of Mine Lexie A. Brooks, 2220 Ogden St., the Poro Club was hostess to the following ladies of The National Association of Colorado Women's Clubs and visitors; Miss Mitte Foulks, head of the shipping department of Poro College, St. Louis, Mo.; Mrs. Mary B. Talbert, president of National Federation, Buffalo, N. Y.; Dr. Mary F. Waring, a trustee of the Douglass Home, Chicago; Mrs. Gertie N. Ross, president of the Colorado State Federation; Mrs. R. E. L. Bailey, chairman of the executive board of the Missouri State Federation, and Mrs. De Marge De Weese, chairman of program committee of Searchlight Club of Cheveneau, Wyo.
After spending the eveing pleasantly a very wholesome five-course chicken dinner was served. Miss Dimple Gatewood preceded at the piano throughout the evening and victoria selections were interspersed. Mrs. Jennie Bradshaw is president, Mrs. Sadie R. Greene, secretary, and Mine Lexie A. Brooks treasurer.
The Poro Clubs throughout the West are looking forward with much pride to the expected visit of Mrs. A. M. Pope Tumbo Malone, the sole maker of Poro, whom they hope will be able to come to them in the near future. They are overcrowded with work and are making Poro agents as rapidly as they can.
Mrs. F. C. Howard and Mrs. Clara Banks, Poro agents, have returned to their respective homes in Pueblo and Colorado Springs after a pleasant visit in the city.
Miss Nettie Foulks has returned to her work at Poro College after a pleasant and helpful stay with the Poro agents here.
Mrs. Peari L. Sams has returned to St. Louis after a very recreative fort nightly stay here.
PORO COLLEGE
A few of the many achievements of the proprietress, Mrs. Annie M. Pope Tumbo Malone, by Miss Mittle Foulks of Hinols and Missouri, head of the shipping department of the institution located at St. Louis, Mo., who was introduced to the National Association of Colored Women's Clubs in session July 8 to 13th, among other things said:
Madam President, Ladies of the North, South, East and West, like Mrs. C. H. Brown I feel assured that I must have brought the Lord along with me or I could never have gotten to Denver, much less into this splendid convention. I have been more than enthused by seeing this great array of talent and culture, second to none anywhere, in this great land of ours and these addresses, these most excellent programs and the achievements of these heroic women will furnish physical, mental and moral food for generations unborn, and I could no longer sit idle and let all of this history be made without at least a mention of one of the most modest, unselfish and one of the greatest bene factors of this age.
A young woman who is daily for furnishing employment to 17 girls and paying them every Saturday night for what they actually do—and at the same time giving them physical, mental, moral and religious training second to none in any institution of the country. A woman who has 13,000 active agents on her list and making agents every day, and sending out over 5,000 boxes of her eight different products to every state in the United States, Canada and the islands. A woman whose business last year required $10,000 worth of stamps to care for the parcel post alone and whose system of sending out this mail has been said by the best office office to be one of the best in the great city of St. Louis. A woman whose business is daily increasing—a woman whose charitable donations are boundless. She donated $5,000 to the N. M. C. A in their big campaign and has paid every dollar of it. Her war work is in keeping with her other great work: we are 100 per cent Red Cross and were it not for her required daily attention at her $300,000 plant which is nearing completion, she would be in about this magnificent building. It is four stories high, fire proof from attic to basement, occupies more than half of a block and takes two hours to go through the different departments. It is just one block from the Summer High School building in St. Louis, Mo. and will be the new home for Poro College Co. and its 100 employees within the next three months, and the woman I refer to is Mrs. Annie M. Pope Turnbo Malonie, its proprietress.
Mrs. R. E. L. Bailey is viting Mrs. Jennie Bradshaw of the Denver Beauty Parlor here indefinitely. Mrs. Lucy Reed, one of Denver's successful agents, has taken up the field in Casper, Wyoming. Mrs. De Marge De Weese is the house guest of Mme Lexie A. Brooks. She is a most active member of the Searchlight, Club of Cheyenne, Wyo.
There are 12 ladies belonging to the Denver Poro Club who are only too anxious to care for any lady who needs a treatment. Mrs. Jennie Bradshaw, at the Denver Poro Beauty Parlor, 2553 Washington, Mme. Lexie A. Brooks at Poro Hairdressing Parlors, 2220 Ogden St.
It also appears to me that when prejudices persist obstinately it is the fault of nobody so much as those who make a point of proclaiming them insuperable as an excuse for never joining in an attempt to remove them. Any prejudice whatever will be insurmountable if those who do not share in it themselves truckle to it and flatter it and accept it as a law of nature.—John Stuart Mills.
Never think of yourself as the victim of circumstances. To do so is to make yourself the victim of every adversity that you may encounter. Know that you have the power to change and control circumstances. Exercise that power and soon things will begin to change for the better.—Efficiency. "No other race, black or white, when bound as they were to the rack, so seldom stooped to grieving. No other race when free again forgot the past and proved them men so noble in forgiving." From the landing of Christopher Columbus to the Altruistic President, Woodrow Wilson, no Negro has been tried for treason or punished for disloyalty. What a sublime record! We are today a race of Abou Ben Adhems, in constant loyal service to our brother in white, even if ingratitude be our recompense and broken promises our reward.
It is a grand thing to live in Colorado among her snow-capped peaks, to open the eyes in the morning in her cool, refreshing and invigorating atmosphere and look out upon the world, to drink in deeply nature's rarest gems and then enjoy the sweet sunshine, to feel the pulse bound and being thrill with the consciousness of strength and power in every nerve: it is a good thing simply to be alive in Colorado and it is a good world to live in, in spite of the abuse we are fond of giving it.
DEARFIELD BRIEFLETS
Mesdames D. B. Holley, R. L. Robinson, Misses Jesse Ford and Carrie Hicks have returned from the national convention.
Prof. Geo. Morrison and wife were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Robinson.
Mrs. E. Murphy and daughter of Detroit, Mich., were the guests of Mrs. L. A. Ford.
Miss Plutta Anderson is visiting her aunt, Mrs. J. N. B. Anderson.
Monday evening Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Robinson entertained in honor of Prof. Geo. Morrison and wife.
Miss Vincent and Mrs. Le Gree are visiting Mrs. O. T. Jackson.
Miss Ivabelle Maury and Miss L. Black are visiting Mrs. Price.
New Has Third Officer Husband
Now Has Third Officer Mussallie.
To have lost two husbands and married a third during the war has been the experience of Lady Michael Wardell, one of London's recent brides. She is a daughter of Sir Daniel Cooper, an Australian millionaire. She married first the late Viscount Northland, who lost his life in active service in 1915, and left a will in which he expressed the hope that his widow would marry again. She fulfilled his hope when she was married to Capt. Geoffrey Mills, who was killed a year ago. Her third husband is also a British officer.
WAR HELPED ZINC INDUSTRY
Remarkable Impetus Given to the Mining and Refining of the Mineral in Japan.
The high-water mark in the development of zinc mining and refining in Japan has been reached since the outbreak of the present war. Zinc was first mined in a commercial way in 1897, but even as late at 1911 the output was still only about 10,000 tons. The refining of the ores was not started on a large scale until 1914. The rising quotations of the metal in all markets gave the industry great impetus in Japan, so that in 1915 21,000 tons of refined goods and in 1916 45,000 tons were produced. It is estimated that the production in 1917 totaled some 65,000 tons. It is said that the refineries can produce as high as 100,000 tons a year, but as this takes some 250,000 tons of zinc ore the problem before Japan is to obtain 200,000 tons of ore in foreign markets, as only 50,000 tons are mined in Japan. In the past Japan has bought ore from China, Australia and Russia, the greater part of the ore, however, coming from Australia. It has been reported that Great Britain plans a refinery in Australia in order to produce zinc in that portion of her empire. If true, this, it is said, may force Japan to seek her raw material in some other market.
Not for Me, but of Me.
Moses Sellg has been in business for a long time but never until recently he received a purely business letter from a small granddaughter. The letter was sent by his granddaughter, Evelyn Hahn, who formerly lived in Indianapolis, and was as follows:
"Dearest Grandpa: This is a business note. . . . I am selling Thrift Stamps and War Sayings Stamps. Please buy of me, not for me, and help me to receive a position in the army of thrift workers. Send me a check if you will, payable to cash, and I will send you the stamps. You will oblige and help me very much. Much love.
"EVELYN."
It is needless to say that Mr. Sellg regarded this as one of the most important business notes he ever received—Indianapolis News.
Carpenter and Contractor New and Repair Work. Second Hand Building Material For Sale
And solicits a portion of your patronage. Suits Made on short notice. Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing neatly done Ladies work a specialty. Prompt attention to all orders my hobby.
Goods Called for and Delivered
2640 Welton Street Denver, Colorado
Phone Champa 455
Patronize the TWO HENRY'S
THE DENVER PORO HAIR DRESSING PARLORS
Scientific and Sanitary Scalp and Hair Treatment
Massaging Manicuring
Toilet Articles Motto--"Efficiency"
Mme. Lexie A. Brooks
2220 Ogden Street Phone York 5997 W
Uncle Sam Needs Our Men, Let the PORO SYSTEM Take Care of You
FORMULATED, 1800
PORU
HAIR GROWER
MADE ONLY BY
Mrs Amel Pohlurubo
Malawi
ST. LOUIS
MISSOURI
FOR DANDRUFF, FALLING HAIR, ITCHING
SCALP; GIVING LIFE, BEAUTY, COLOR
AND ABUNDANT GROWTH
THIS STYLE OF GON ADOPTED JUNE 12, 1913
PRICE 50 CENTS
"PORO" COLLEGE-COMPANY ST. LOUIS, MO. Dept. D.
5 Points Cafe
All Kinds of Chop Suey ana Noodles Hot Chili Served SHORT ORDERS AT ALL HOURS 2721" Welton St. Phone Champa 4016
2745 Welton [Street, Denver, Colorado Stand Phone, Main 6123 Residence Phone, Champa 1219
BROWN HAT FACTORY
717 18TH STREET
Latest Style Hats Made To Order
GUARANTEED HATS $2.00 AND $2.50
Hats[Cleaned][and[Blocked]
ROY F. SMITH'S TAXI AUTO LIVERY
STANLER STEAMER Stand: Rice & Rice,* 2735 Welton Street Rates $ 1.50 to 2.00 per Hour
1021-21st St.
EARN
Carpenter
New and Repair W
PHONE CHAMPA
A. V. GAR
IS
1025 Tw
And solicits a portion
short notice. Cleani
Ladies work a special
Henry T. Cooper
ROCKY MOUNTAIN
Goods Co
2640 Welton
Pho
Patronize
THE DENVER PO
Scientific and San
Massaging
Toilet Articles
Mme. Lo
2220 Ogden Street
Uncle Sam
PORO
Ta
"PORO"
ST. LOU
5 Po
All Kinds of C
Hot
SHORT OR
2721" Welton S
PRIVATE PARTIES
A SPECIALTY.
MATTE
SEVEN PA
ALL
2745 ; Welton [S
Stand Phone, Main 6123
BROWN
717
Latest Style
CALLS RESPONDED TO
PROMPTLY
rae . Sa.) ?
Noa Share” a ae =
SBE aes Ayo aa as *
(RES FA 9 i Som roe
feet mn 5 am
fe City Ncws Sm
in oe ae
OS Raa ine
ee: ornare Ps orev
oe ane Pies SE
. —— Aire _
it |
ly a
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fs
She Is Talking About Coming
Events.
TO AVOID CONFLICTS, CONSULT
THIS COLUMN AND SEE WHAT
18 TO BE GIVEN.
July 26th—Lawn Fete at Mrs. W.
B. Franklin’s, 2301 Kearney. Benefit
Central Baptist Church Rally.
Aug. 15th—Church of Redeemer En-
Rertainment
August 8th—Miss Shaw, singer of
Portiand, Oregon, at Peoples Presby-
terian Church.
August 22—Grand Concert at Christ
M. E. Church, 22nd Avenue and Ogden
St., in aid of Scott's Rally.
_ Sept 12: Pond Lilly Art Club Grand
Tageant and Coronation,
August 8th—Miss Shaw, singer of
Portland, Oregon, at Peoples Presby-
terian Church.
Wanted—To rent small furnished
house or flat. At once. Address Star
Y, or call Champa 2962.
Rev. J. J. Salles, of Pueblo, Colo.,
was visiting hin son of a few days
enroute to Mason City, lowa.
LADIES! LET ME MAKE Your
CORSETS. STYLE, QUALITY AND
FIT GUARANTEED. PRICES MOD-
ERATE. PHONE YORK _6616w.
BEATRICE LEWIS, EXPERT COR.
SET MAKER. 2339 GILPIN STREET,
DENVER, COLO. tt.
Keep off Sept 12; it's Pond Lilly's
To THE PUBLIC
Dr. Machey’s wonderful rheumatic,
neuralgia, throat and asthma cure,
ask about its wonderful results. Tes-
timonials in next week's issue.
Also agent.
FLOYD T. SMITH, General Agent
Phone Champa 1962.
2851 Welton 8t.
The STAR Agent is coming
see YOU *
Miss Shaw, of Portland, Oregon,
assisted by the best local talent in a
concert at the Peoples Rresbyterian
Church, August 8, 1918. :
FIVE POINTS MOTOR AND CYCLE
co.
We repair and sell second-hand
wheels. Inspect our outfit. 725 E.
26th Ave. Give us atrial. Harry Sea-
man, Prop. 6-15-18
Grand Concert in aid of Scott Rally
by select voices. Christ M. E. Church
August 22nd, The best musical treat
of the season.
Persons receiving complimentary
copies of the Star are notified that the
government has ordered us to cease
giving such copies. After this daic
your paper will be stopped unless
Otherwise notified. This only means
those persons who receive free copies
To whom it may concern: The Mt.
Pleasant Baptist Church kindly aske
that any one ‘knowing of children In
the vicinity where you live that do
not attend any Sunday School cr,
church, please notify by droping a
card to No. 438 29th St. Mra C. A.
Bateu, Supt, 8. 8. or to 3158 Champa
St, to Mr. H. Jackson, Asst. Supt.
4 pa—7-2718.
NOTICE.
The Light House Club entertain-
ment was postponed until August 8th,
‘on account of the fall reception xiven
in honor of the soldier boys. Tickets
fold are good for August 8th.
Mra, Charles. Washington. of Kan-
nan City, Mo.. 1s the guost of Mr. and
Mrs, Jesse Shrower.
Mrs, N. Fairbanks gave « very elab-
orate reception in honor of Mra, Staf-
ford and Mrs. Brown, of Oakland,
Calif, and Mrs. Smith, of Omaba,
Nebr., her very distinguished house
guests, Forty guests were present
‘and all bad a very enjoyable time.
Remember our boys who left for
Camp Lewin yesterday. All kinds of
pennants, souvenirs, ornaments and
tobacco are welcome visitors at their
camp. Watch them bring home the
bacon, ‘eval
| Remember the Denver Star is only
$1. for 6 months, or $1.50 a year, cash
n advance.
CIVIL, SERVICE EXAMINATION
FOR RAILWAY SERVICE |
‘The public is notified that the Civil
Service Railway Mail Service Exami-
nations are set for August 10, 1918.
Applications can be had from C. L
Hincle, Local Secretary, P. O., Denver.
We close Saturdays at 1:00 p. m.
during the months of June, July and
August. Kindly take notice and gov-
ern yourselves accordingly. Open at
7:30 a. m.
A JOLLY PARTY.
Consisting of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse T.
Thrower, Mrs. James C. Cantey, Mrs,
Fred O'Neil, Mr. and Mrs. Luther
O'Nefl, of Oklahoma City; Miss Mary
G. Evans, Mrs. Harriet Kelley, of In
d{anapolis, motored up in the moun.
tains Tuesday on a cainping trip. ‘The
camp was pitched near the Barker
dam, between Tungston and Neder-
land, where they enjoyed beautiful
scenery. There they found three of
our Colored boys guarding the dam,
who spared no pains in making things
pleasant for the crowd. All returned
Saturday evening. Miss Evans and
Mrs. Kelley left Monday for Omaha,
Nebr.
A CLASS_IN BEAUTY CULTURE
STARTED—ANNOUNCEMENT.
Mme. M. E, Dishman, demonstrator
and Instructress, has started a class
to teach the DeNeal Modern Method
of Beauty Culture and Hair Growing
The method, together with The De
Neal Preparations, places you in a
class by yourself and your trade need
not be confined to any one class or
race. Be it understood that it can not
be learned over night. It takes six
weeks to learn the trade in all its
branches and the graduate ix able to
o into business for herself. We help
you to succeed.
We teach the following branches:
Facial Treatment, Manicuring. Hair
‘Dressing, including Hair Bleaching,
Hair Dyeing, Singeing, Shampooing.
Wet and Dry and the Famous DeNeal
Scalp Treatment with “DeNelo.” the
most Wonderful .&feir Grower on the
market today; Thé DeNeal Specta’
Scalp Treatment. The pupil learns the
correct inassage for stimulating the
glands to activity; to improve the cir
culation; sterilization, hot oil treat
ment, to cleanse the sealp and put i
in confition to receive the treatment
necessary in each particular caxe.
| Our graduate can fix and maintain
‘the price which expert, knowledge and
skillful work entitle her to, she may
remain in one location as long as she
‘pleases or open a parlér and in two or
Eicpenmeaee sha weil rave a)Uusinees
established that will net her a large
profit. The manufacturing of switches
‘and puffs can be included in the
course.
| These five subjects at moderate
prices. or they can be taken separate
ly for a reasonable sum, including a
diploma setting forth the different
branches mastered. Our diploma
stands for Efficiency of each individ
val. Come and talk over with me.
MEMORIAM.
In loving memory of our loving his
band and father, isaac George Gil
more, died, August Ist, 1010
MRS. ELIZA GILMORE,
CLAIRE G. SMITH
MARY LOUISE GILMORE
James pButler, secured a divorcee
from Minnie Butler last week thromsh
the county court
——
Lost between the Colored YN. C
A. and 2977 Stout a croquet baby
cover, Please return to Mrs. Geo
Morrix Morrison, 2947 Stout. « Reward
Aug. 6th, Scott M. E. Church.
“Breach of Promise Suit.”
FUNERAL NOTICE.
Mrs. Georgia Easley beloved wife of
Mr, John Easley. departed this. life
July 30th at Exkdale, Colo. Funera!
rervices were held ‘Thursday, Augus!
Ist, 3:30 p,m. at Douglas Chapel
Rey. C. A, Williams officiating. Inter
ment Riverside Cemetery.
CARD OF THANKS.
| Personally we wish to thank al!
‘Denver sitizens and friends for the
grand times shown us since our cal’
into service, .
GEO. |. ROBINSON,
EARL GEORGE.
Or. Huff'a office phone ia York 2313
and his residence phone York 8374J
When not reached at office or home.
call Atias Drug Co., Main 876,
Chureh of Redeemer Entertainment
August 15th. :
“What a plece of work fs a man!
How noble in reason! how infinite in
faculty! In form and moving how ex
press and admirable! In action how
\ke an angel! In apprehension hor
lik a God!"—Shakespeare.
BERT WILLIAMS IS BACK
WITH FOLLIES
NEW YOKK, N. Y.—Thru
the persistent demand of a
public which he has pleased
for years, Bert Williams, the
famous colored comedian, has
been recalled to the Follies
and resumes his work with
that popular organization this
week. This is just another
evidence of the possibility of
making one’s self inaispen-
sable. Itis,too,an ample re-
futation of the silly story that
this great comedian had gone
back. this genius of the
comedy stage had no longer
anything to offer the puble
as if Bert Williams could ever
fail to entertain and tickle the
risibles ofa fun-loving pecple!
Cape Town, South Africa—
The white women of South
Africa have responded toan
appeal of the colored wemen
and opened the Y. W. C. »
centers in Cape Town,
—————
Continued trom page t
man by making Mr. Phipps
a big man? Why cannot we
boast and help our own like
others? Here isourchance, av
pening opportunity for some
young boy orgitl who may
later desire to goto Washing-
ton D.C. to Howard Univerity
and work for the government
Nesroes, this big chance is
knocking at somebodys door,
will you organize and hejp
Hardy thru out the State? a»
SLOUCH HAT OUT OF FAVOR
Picturesque Headgear No Longer
Worn by American Soldiers on
the Fighting Fronts.
‘The slouch hat has for many years
been regarded in Europe as distinctive-
ly American, although for ys many
Years it hus been no more commonly
worn in the United States than in the
British isles, and over a considerable
part of the continent. Nevertheless,
the typical American Is almost invari-
ably pictured ina soft hat, and the soft
felts worn by the soldiers of the
American expeditionary forces to
France helped to sustain the tradition.
In the Civil war the soldiers of the
North wore cups. Soft felts were
chosen for soldiers operating ugainst
the Indians on the plains because they
were supposed to afford greater protec-
tion than caps from the glare, They be-
came a regulation head covering for
the army In the Spanish-American war,
and, because they matched the khaki
uniform, they have been In use ever
since. Now, however, General Per-
shing Is snid to have decidedghat these
hats must be discarded In favor of
brimless and peakless caps, and the
reason for the proposed change is
characteristic of the period that has
Introduced into war so many Innove-
tions. The rim of the soft felt hat
throws a shadow on the periscope
used In the trenches so’ as to Interfere
with sighting by the wearer; also,
when worn by tall men, the crown may
be seen above the parapets by the en-
my; also, 2 gas mask can be adjusted
much more quickly over a brimless and
peakless cap.
And the German Dropped.
An American aviator, forced to land
within the German lines and taken
prisoner, returned a few days after-
ward to American headquarters, sate
ani round, in his own, machine,
‘The commandigg German officer in-
formed him they Were after certatri
Information and had decided to send
him up tn his own machine ‘accompa-
Hed by a German officer, who would
shoot him if he deviated from orders.
He took bis machine up, hin German
companton altting beatde him with «
drawn revolver at hin riba.
He sald: “1 determined that the Ger-
man officer should never return, even
If tt coat me.my own life. T was think-
ing how I could do It, when I realized
that the man beside me was not
strapped in. I looped éhe loop.”
HERE’S ANOTHER FROG STORY
New Yorker's Experience Seems to
Corroborate Tale Told by the
Kaiser’s Press Agent.
‘This is the time of the year when
fish stories are permissible, so the kal-
ser’s press ngent cannot be blamed for
pulling that one about the frogs croak-
ing in such deafening fashion that
they enabled the Germans to bring up
thelr batteries without being dixcoy-
ered by the allies. Hank Newman, who
Invented the famous “snapper” elixir,
partly bears out the statement made
by the Hun war correspondent. He
knows all the habits of the Johnny
Crapauds and he declares that they can
make some noise when they begin to
croak. “I don't know anything about
those bloodthirsty frogs of the Chemin
des Dames, however,” explained Mr.
Newman. “But down in Ozone Park.
where I live, there is a frog pond, and
hundreds of them live a qulet, peace
ful life. In fact, the frogs down my
way are musical, for they lull the na-
tive to sleep. There is one big fellow,
however, who has a high pitched volce.
I named him Caruso because he war-
bles louder than any In the flock. For
some time Caruso and me were quite
chummy. As soon as he heard my
alarm clock go off at five In the morn-
Ing, he wonld come to my window and
sing 1 roundelay, which indicated that
he was hungry. That was when I
had daylight work. Now I'm on nights
and don't get to bed until three in the
morning. And for the past three weeks
‘Caruso and his entire chorus made
sleep impossible for me, so I found It
Tycessiry to move far from the frog
“pond.”—New York Sun.
JUST SIMPLE COMMON SENSE
Really Nothing to Be Alarmed About
When Speaker Uses Pretentious
Word “Psychology.”
One way to get an andience nowr-
days is to call the subject of one’s
talle “Psychology.” A Harvard pro-
fessor recently amazed a convention
of clothing manufacturers and deal-
ers by delivering an address upon this
topic. in which he Iaid down several
principles about the effect of clothing
upon the wearer, and the surprise of
his hearers was due to the discovery
that what the learned man had digni-
fled by a long word was nothing more
than what more commonly passes for
common sense. A good many of the
things he sald were already known to
them. if they had stopped to think.
When he placed them under the head
of psychology they sat up and took
notice. says The Oregoninn.
He said, for example, that the well-
rexsed man Is 10 per cent more eff
cient than the poorly dressed man. He
eatd.that clothes that do not fit pre-
xent the wearer from doing his best.
Cleantiness promotes self-respect. Self-
respect Ix contagions, like confidence.
The man who does not think well of
himeelf Is unlikely to win the good
opinion of others. Comfortable cloth-
Ing, made of good material. well brush-
ed, was the foundation of the super-
structure, he sald. He wns talking to
hard headed bnsiness men. and ther
helleved him, because thelr own expe-
rience showed his statemeny to be
true.
Hapless Claribel’s Encounter.
‘The sun was slowly sinking In the
usual place. Clarihel Skippenhop, over
whose yonthful head searce thirty-sev-
en summers had lightly flown, sat In a
reenlation-size hammock, idly swinging
her foot to the tune of “Keep the
Home Liars Sqnirming,.” played on a
Hottentot bagpipe 42 miles away.
Suddenly a thought seized her. She
tried to seream and break its hold. She
succeeded in beth, Probably éne and
fifteen eight-millionths of a eubie
second was allowed to elapse between
her scream and the time the thought
was cowering at her feet.
“Avaunt,” she cried. “Don't you
know this is my thoughtless day? Now,
doggone It, Tl have a headache.”
Then she went back to swing her
foot and the hammock.
First-Hand Earthquake News.
A _volcologist of the Curnegie
Geophysical laboratory reports that he
has nearly perfected apparatus for re-
cording upon wax cylinders the subter-
ranean sounds of earthquakes. says
the Sclentifie American, “The ordl-
nary commercial eylinders are unsuit-
ahle for this delicate work, and accord-
ingly the laboratory has secured a sup-
ply of eylinders of the old, pure wax
type. The microphone used In this con-
nection has also been greatly Improved
and a perfect little portable fleld outfit
welghing less than a pound has heen
evolved.”
Naughty Mamma’s Boy.
My husband, who is at Camp Sher
man, wrote home and told us this joke
the boys played on a “mamma's bos”
who was the goat of the whole com:
pany. One night while he was over to
the ¥. M. C. A. they fixed up the head
of Ais cot with sticks and tled « string
to them, then walted ustil he got sound
asleep and pulled the strings, out
came the sticks and down, went the
bed. He nearly exploded he was so mad
and my husband said had you been lis-
tening” you could have heard him
swearing clear home.—Chicago Trib-
une.
taNht ie @nuk e,
One day at a Southern carfip one of
the negro soldiers was showing me a
service pin with three stars which he
Aways carried in his pocket. I asked
itm who the relatives were and he re-
wed: “One ts fo’ maself an’ the athei
ctwo'ls fo’ ma brudders; one is going
to enlist an’ the other is in the next
draft.”—Exchange.
Oriental Restaurant
ALL KINDS OF SOFT DRINKS AND
' NEAR BEER
Chop Suey, Noodles and Short Orders
,848 ARAPAHOE ST. PHONE CHAMPA 2...
R. E. Norris
The Original Colored Coal Man
1024 23d Street
5 PHONE MAIN 3190
Res. Phone York 2079 W. 2331 Ogden Street
Job Printing of All Kinds
NOTICE OF THE EXECUTOR'S
SALE OF REAL ESTATE.
By virtue of an order issued out of
County Court of the City and County
of Denver. Colorado, | am directed to
sell the following real es’ate: Lot 24,
Block 180, Clements Addition to Den-
ver, known as No. 2231 Glenarm Place.
Lots 22, 23 and 24, Block 19, Deerfield,
46, Block 19, Deerfield, Weld County,
Colorado. Lots 41, 42 43, 844, Block 6,
Kenwood Park, Arapahoe County,
Colorado. being part of the estate of
the late Francis T. Bruce: said prop-
erty has been appraised at a very rea-
sonable value and will be sold at pri-
vate sale for cash.
SAMUEL A. BONDURANT,
Executor.
No. 6 East 11th Ave. Phone Main 3433.
SAW SOME GOOv IN GERMANS
Mark Twain Would Net Admit That
All Manhood in the Land of the
Hun Was Dead.
Probably no other foreigner has
ever been so popular in Germany as
the American philosopher. Mark
‘Twain; yet Mark understood his Ger-
many, just as he understood Russia,
although of the ezar's dominions he
had only the tripper's knowledge he
Picked up with the shipload of pre-
Cook's tourists that he immortalized
in “Innocents Abroad.”
In his “Connecticut Yankee In
King Arthur's Court,” Twain wrote:
“There it was, you see. A man Is
a man, at bottom. Whole ages of
abuse and oppression cannot crush
the manhood clear out of him. Who-
ever thinks It a mistake is himself
mistaken. Yes, there is plenty of
good enough material for a republic
In the most degraded people that ever
existed—even the Russiens: plenty of
manhood in them—even the Germans
—if one could but force it out of Its
timid and suspicious privacy; to over-
throw and trample in the mnd any
throne that ever was set up and any
nobility that ever supported it. We
should see certain things yet. let us
hope and believe. First, a modified
monarchy, till Arthur's days were
done, then the destruction of the
throne, nobility abolish@l, every mem-
her of it hound out to some useful
trade. universal suffrage instituted,
and the whole government placed In
the hands ef men and women of the
nation. there to remain, Yes, there
was no oceaston to give up my dream
yet a while.”
COAL PYRITE IN EXPLOSIVES
lowa Geologists Investigate Coal Fields
for Needed Mineral, With
Excelent Results.
An Investigation of pyrite, an essen-
tinl material in the manufacture of
high explosives, is being made in the
coal fields of Iowa under the direction
of Dean George F. Kay of the Uni-
versity of Iowa, who Is director of the
Town geological survey. High explo-
sives are made with the aid af sul-
phuric acid, which in turn fx made
chiefly by roasting pyrite, popularly
known as “fool's gold.” Hence the
mineral is in great demand.
For many years pyrite for acid pro-
duction has been imported from Spain,
states Docfor Kay. But in order to save
the ships for more urgent uses, the
shipping board has sharply reduced the
Import of pyrite. ‘The domestic produc-
tion of the mineral must then be un-
usually large, he declares.
New York, Virginia, Georgia, South
Carolina and Alabama have pyrite
mines, and Miinols and several other
states are producing a small tonnage
from coal mines. Many hundred thou-
sand tons are quickly available from
coal mines, says the state geologist, If
the government's explosive program re-
quires it.
‘The method of preparing coal pyrite
for shipment to acid plants Is simple
and cheap. The “sutphur balls” must
be separated from adhering coal, and
be crushed, washed and screened Into
lump and fine sizes. Coal miners are
willing to load pyrite, and the opera-
tors te holst and ship it, if war Indus-
tries demand it.
5
MEMORY THAT WILL LAST
es Gratitude to America Is
Deeply Engraved on the Hearts
of Her People.
Kathleen Norris, writing in the
Woman's Home Companion, gives an
imaginary conversation with a young
French girl> describing the coming of
the American soldiers to France as she
is supposed to remember it:
“‘And men—to stand beside our
men—from America! I remember
standing at the chateau gateway on a@
bright November afternoon and seeing
them come up the read. Soldiers! We
were used to soldiers! But these were
different. Grandmere was with me,
we had been here all the time.
“"They came along,,in the stream-
ing afternoon sunlight, and they smiled
and waved at me. “They are the
Americans!” grandmere sald, and she
began to cry softly. “God bless them
—God bless them!” she whispered,
over and over. And that night, as you
know, we had their officers at the
chateau, and one of them told me he
also had a daughter, not much younger
than I, and that her name was Vir-
ginie—
| “I don't know why — for, God
knows, there were hard times, and
dark times, ahead. But from that mo-
ment I felt—hope. Child that I was,
I seemed to see, behind those march-
Ing men, the big and generous nation
that was dedicating {teelfto their serv-
Ice, the women everywhere, with their
| sewing and cooking, saving and plan:
ning, thelr letters and their prayers—
all one in thelr work for an Ideal be-
side which the comfort and the ease of
‘this generation was as nothing!”
Just One More Question.
“Do you happen to be going far, sir?”
said the ingulsitive traveler to the man
in the corner, after having reduced ev-
eryone else in the compartment to si-
lent frenzy.
“Oh, no, only to Scotland,” replied
the other, sarcastically. “I am a com-
mercial traveler. My age ts forty-six.
Iam married. My name is Thomas
Brown. I have a son of nineteen. He
{s in the Blankshire Buffs. My father
died lust July. He was on the stock
exchange. My mother is still living.
Thave a niece with red hair. Our char-
lady’s name is Jane Briggs. Is there
anything else.”
‘The inquisitive man hesitated.
“What oil de you use for your
tongue?” he inquired stowly.—Londen
Times.
An Awful Disease.
A friend of mine in one of the camps
is a corporal. The occupants of the
bartacks across the road had been in
quarantine for measles. Occasionally
one of the men was moved to the hos-
pital. My friend was stricken with a
Severe case of tonsilitis and one morn-
Ing the ambulance stopped to take him
to the base hospital.
As he entered the ambulance one
soldier suid, “Has he. got the
measles?”
A second one, “No, he’s a corporal.”
‘The first one answered with a groan,
“Good Lord, that just as bad !"—Chi-
cago ‘Tribune.
Verbal.
“It was a quiet Fourth.”
“Decidedly.” Ss
“don't think I heard a single explo-
sion all day.”
“L heard one.”
“Cannon cracker?”
“No. T passed a motorist who had
just had a breakdown. He was ad-
dressing a few remarks to his car.”—
Birmingham Age-Herald. |
Hash.
War has not changed the American
darkey. A dusky cook of an American
regiment now in France was being:
quizzed by an officer about the cleanti-
hess of that, free-for-all army product
known as hash.
“How do you make your hash?’ duti-
fully inquired thé officer.
“We don't make it, boss,” was the
answer. “It Just accunulates.”
Honest Bones.
Bones Jones always was a sport.
Before Bones came into the navy an
@ ship's cook he won many a rel
with the old ivories. One day a judge
fined him $5 for some chickens Benes
stole en Monday night, whereupon
Bones replied, “Make It $30, Jedge.
and that'll be up to and including
Saturday night, sub.”"—Our Navy.
Church News
---
MT. PLEASANT BAPTIST CHURCH
No. 22 Arapahoe Street
Rev. C. A. Miller, Pastor
Phone Champa 3493
CENTRAL PAPTIST CHURCH
Rev. P. J. Price, Pastor.
2414 California St.
Phone Champa 1059.
Y. W. C. A. NOTES.
Last Monday evening the members of the Y. W. C. A. through Mrs. Mary Clinkscale, presented Miss Chapman, treasurer of the club a purse as an expression of their love for her and their appreciation of her loyalty and faithfulness to the club.
Miss Martin has been appointed chairman of the program committee. Splendid programs are in store for
CAMPBELL CHAPEL A. M. E.
Bishop H. B. Parks will preach at Campbell Chapel African M. E. church 23rd and Lawrence streets, Sunday August 4th at 8 p. m.
Rev. T. H. Wiseman, pastor of Avery Chapel, Oklahoma City, Okla., delivered a great sermon to a large audience upon "The End of a Perfect Day," last Sunday evening.
Pastor A. M. Ward and the good people of Campbell Chapel are busy with preparations for the entertainment of the Colorado Annual Conference which convenes Thursday a. m. September 12, 1918.
Rev, and Mrs. T. H. Wiseman, their daughter Katherine of three and one-half years and the mother of Mrs. Wiseman, Mrs. A. E. Jenkins, the latter a prominent business woman in Kansas City, Mo., left Denver after delightful visits to their many friends in Denver this week for Colorado Springs, Pueblo, etc. These friends were dinner guests at the home of Rev, and Mrs. A. M. Ward and many others numbered among their choice friends.
SCOTT'S M. E. CHURCH
We solicit your patronage for the next few weeks in assisting our people at Scott's M. E. Church. We are struggling to pay off our mortgage within the 60 or 90 days. We trust no club will come short of their one hundred dollars on the 25th of August, which will embrace the fourth Sunday.
The Rev. Mr. A. F. Ragatz, D.D., who represented the American Bible Society at the Y. M. C. A., will preach for our people at Scott's M. E. Church Sunday, August 4, 1918, at 11 o'clock a. m. He is an ex-pastor of Christs M. E. Church situated on Ogden street. A high day is anticipated. Let all our friends come out to the sacrament in the morning and night.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday School. 9:45. Lesson subject: "Growing Stronger," Luke 2:32-52; H Peter 1:5-8
11:00 a. m. Preaching, subject, "The Cid Gospel or the New."
7:00 p. m. B. Y. P. U., Topic: "All For Christ, II Our Ambitions." Phil. 3:4-11. (Consecration Meeting.)
The meeting last Sunday was very interesting. It was a missionary meeting led by Miss B. M. Battle. Mrs. V. Mason and J. R. Hanger spoke on the topic and all present enjoyed the meeting.
8:00 p. m., reaching and administering of the Lord's supper. Mr. Samuel S. Williams, president of the Gideon bau, of Cleveland, Ohio, was the speaker at the morning service, and brought us a spirit filled mesage.
Sunday will be our closing day for the rally: The names of each member will be called and the amount given at the close of the service.
Mrs. Lucy Turner has been elected president of our Missionary Society, and Miss Myrtle Hughes, secretary.
Our Sunday School keeps up to the standard that it began the first of the spring and we are looking forward to winning a pennant this year.
An open door awaits you at all our services.
We are planning an all day wom
and a meeting for the last Sunday in
August.
NEW LODGE DIRECTORY FOR
THE STATE.
Will you send into our office the
meeting nights and places of your
lodge together with the list of your
grand officers and the names of your
presiding officer and secretary. We
will correct our lodge directory with
your assistance.
COLORED NURSES TO BE USED IN
ARMY CAMPS.
Orders issued by War Department Makes Opening for Hundreds at Six Base Hospitals in This Country. Many May go Overseas.
Washington, D. C., July 22, 1918. The War Department authorizes the following statement from Emmett J. Scott, special assistant to the Secretary of War:
Orders were issued today by the War Department to the office of the Surgeon General, which will enable colored nurses who have been registered by the American Red Cross Society, to render service for their own race in the Army. Colored nurses will be assigned to the base hospitals now established at Camp Funston, Fort Ritley, Kansas; Camp Grant, Rockford, Illinois; Camp Dodge, Des Moines, Iowa; Camp Taylor, Louisville, Ky.; Camp Sherman, Chillicothe, Ohio and Camp Div, Wrightstown, N. J. At these camps a total of about 38,000 colored troops are stationed. General Pershing has been asked by cable whether the services of colored nurses can be utilized to advantage among the American Expeditionary Forces.
To the Public:
---
Y. W. C. A. NOTES.
Last Monday evening the members of the Y, W. C. A. through Mrs. Mary Clinkscale, presented Miss Chapman, treasurer of the club a purse as an expression of their love for her and their appreciation of her loyalty and faithfulness to the club.
Miss Martin has been appointed chairman of the program committee. Splendid programs are in store for the club.
Sunday afternoon Miss James Pope will lead the Vesper services. All women and girls are invited.
Monday evening the social committee will give a party. Miss Nelsine Howard, who enters the Y. W. C. A. War Work between the 10th and 15th of August, will be our guest of honor. Miss Howard will begin her work in the hostess house at Camp Funston, and is the first Colored girl of Colorado to enter the Y. W. C. A. war work. Every member should be out to let Miss Howard know you are standing behind her with your sympathy, prayers and best wishes for success.
The Pansy Girls meet Tuesday afternoon at 3:00 o'clock.
All members of the high school girls club are requested to be present Wednesday afternoon to arrange for the big mass meeting of girls and women.
Thursday afternoon the Violet Club meets at 3:00 o'clock.
Y. M. C. A. NOTES
The Y. M. C. A. felt proud of the privilege of being in and a aprt of the great citizens patriotic meeting last Sunday afternoon which met in Zion Baptist Church to do honor to the young men who have been called to the colors. In obedience to the call the membership turned out almost to a man and marched in the great parade to the church, thus demonstrating the fact that they can "put a thing over" when they take a notion. Croquet is all the rage at the "Y just now. Seldom does an evening pass which does not witness a large number of players on the court engaging the exciting sport. The court is laid off and the game played absolutely according to the latest rules. Plans are now on foot for a regular tournament which may extend over quite a period of time.
Secretary Bell was again selected by the War Work Council of the Y. M. C. A. as a special escort for the drafted men who left for Camp Lewis yesterday afternoon. On account of the great distance and the excessive railroad rates now prevailing the secretary will accompany the men only a part of the way, perhaps through the state of Wyoming, and will then return to Denver. Through some error on the part of the program committee there will be no program at the "Y" tomorrow afternoon. On Sunday the 11th, however, Secretary Bell will speak on "Seeing the Soldier Boys Off-How They Started and How I Left Them." Full arrangements for the meeting will be announced through the NOTES of next week.
BLOOD or BREAD
Others are going their blood
You will shorten the war
on life if you treat what
you need and ways nothing
Mrs. Nellie Washington and Mrs. Thelma Woods were guests of Ogden last week.
Cecil Corbett and wife have returned from Wyoming to spend a few weeks with L. C. Jones.
Mrs. Knight writes a lovely trip from Chicago.
Bill Smith returned from Idaho Falls visiting his wife and her mother who were both taken suddenly ill. He reports them both doing gleefly.
The boys for Camp Lewis left Friday in charge of Captain W. H. Weakley. May they all return safe and sound.
The lady Elks gave them a farewell reception, saying remember the Star and Stripes.
The social given last Thursday night at Mrs. J. Roberson was a grand success.
Wasatch Lodge of Elks has got seven bills protecting the flag.
Learn to Do Without
One of the arts of life is to learn how to do without. Few of us have everything we consider desirable and if we grumble at every little deprivation we make ourselves miserable and our associates uncomfortable. To learn to do without and yet be cheery and happy, goes far toward making life a success.
UTAH NEWS.
SUGAR SHORTAGE IS BROUGHT TO AMERICA BY CHANCES OF WAR
SUGAR SHORTAGE IS BROUGHT TO AMERICA BY CHANCES OF WAR
Since the pinch of the sugar shortage pressed in upon the sweets-loving American populace, every one who has had a part of his regular sugar rations cut down has asked, either himself or some one else "Why!" In the past France, Italy and the Low countries raised their own sugar. England received over one-half of her supply from the Teutonic Empires, imported largely from Java. One-half of America's sugar supply is obtained from Cuba, one-seventh from the sugar beet production of the United States, one-eighth from Hawaii, one-twentieth from Louisiana, and the rest from Porto Rico, and the Philippines.
Because of the destruction of the greater part of their factories, the production of both Italy and France has been cut down to one-third. The Central Powers—their regular source of supply—has been cut off. They must, therefore, depend almost entirely upon America.
There is vast quantities of sugar stored in Java, but neither time nor ships can be spared while sugar can be obtained elsewhere by one-third the haul.
Why Save?
Why are Americans urged to save sugar?
They must meet the Allied shortage; they must release ships formerly used in the sugar trade to carry soldiers and supplies to Europe; they must make up the loss of beet sugar lands and factories captured or destroyed by the Germans in Northern France and Italy. Ships which would have kept up the flow of sugar have been sunk. Twenty-six thousand tons of sugar were lost recently in submarine raids upon America's Atlantic coast. Fifty thousand tons of sugar carrying shipping were transferred to meet the requirements of Belgian relief.
Glvil War Price
In spite of the shortage, sugar is selling all over the United States at 8½ cents to 10 cents a pound. During the Civil War, when no shortage threatened, sugar sold for 35 cents a pound owing to speculation which was rampant and which, in this war, has been checked by the United States Food Administration regulations. Therefore Americans are asked to save sugar because others need it; not to hoard it because hoarding is selfish, cowardly and unpatriotic and because the Food Control act provides fines of not more than $5,000 and imprisonment for hoarders.
COLORADOANS ARE ASKED TO SAVE SUGAR SO THAT:
The people of England may have two pounds per person per month;;
The people of France 1½ pounds per person per month;
The people of Italy one pound per person per month.
These amounts are not guaranteed by the allied governments to their people, but they are the maximum amounts that will be furnished if supplies can be obtained.
LESS SUGAR IS ALLOTTED STATE FOR NEW MONTH
Skulking submarines, a great merchant fleet transformed into a gigantic ocean bridge over which America's khaki clad army has marched into the battlefield of Europe, have combined to put the people of the United States once more to the test. This time the nation faces a shortage of sugar. This time, instead of the national passion for flakey white wheat bread and fluffy cakes the national sweet tooth has to be combated and educated and made to sacrifice its share to the Altar of Liberty.
New allotment of sugar to consumers, according to recent dispatches from Washington., will be two pounds per person per month, instead of three pounds as formerly allowed. Colorado's entire sugar allotment for July was 4,482,000 pounds. In August the state will be allowed only 2,298,000 pounds of sugar which is a decrease of 1,484,000 pounds for this state alone.
According to present calculations, housewives will be able to obtain canning sugar up to a limited extent depending entirely upon the supply. Food Administration officials urge all housewives, to use discretion in their canning and avoid canning heavy jams and preserves which take much more sugar than the canned whole fruits. Officials also urge that wherever possible fruits and vegetables be dried instead of canned as this process takes no sugar whatever.
Never forget that the sugar situation is serious and every Coloradoan should bend every effort to the saving of sugar.
DENVER FIRMS CLOSED FOR FOOD VIOLATIONS
For violation of the milling regulations, the Keystone Milling and Warehouse Company, and J. D. Best and Company were ordered, by the United States Food Administration for Colorado, to suspend operation from July 23 to August 1, and were allowed to contribute $200 each to the American Red Cross. Both companies were found guilty of dealing with other wholesalers and thereby creating a double profit, and of selling mill feeds and flour on a greater margin of profit than is allowed by the government.
CAMPBELL CHAPEL AFRICAN
M. E. CHURCH
23rd and Lawrence Sts.
A. M. WARD, Minister
9:45 a. m. Sunday School, Older N
Jackson, Supt.
SCOTT METHODIST EPISCOPAL
CHURCH.
Clarkson and East 26th Avenue.
Rev. T. S. McMorris, D. D., Pastor.
Phone Champa 4180.
MT. PLEASANT BAPTIST CHURCH,
Rev. C. A. Miller, Pastor.
2201 Arapahoe Street.
Sunday preaching at 11 a. m. and
8 p. m.
Sunday School at 1 o'clock.
B. Y. P. U. at 6 p. m.
Prayer Meeting Wednesday Night.
THE ZION BAPTIST CHURCH
David E. Over, D.D., Minister,
SUBSCRIBERS, TAKE NOTICE!
In accordance with our annual custom we are sending out statements showing when you are paid up to, and what you will owe in 1918. If there are any dates which do not agree with ours, please form us at once, so that correction can be made and adjusted. All those who are delinquent are urged to pay up at once as the government forbids us carrying delinquent subscribers. Please take notice
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST CHURCH.
CAMPBELL CHAPEL AFRICAN
M. E. CHURCH.
23rd and Lawrence Streets
A. M. Ward, Minister,
Residence 1218 23rd St.
Phone Main 5474
Sunday School, 9:45 a.m.
Presaching, 11:00 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Class Meeting, 12:30 p.m.
Allen Christian Endeavor League.
Allen Christian Endeavor League
:30 p. m.
Prayer and Class meeting. Wednesday, 8:00 p. m.
All people are invited to worship with us.
CENTRAL BAPTIST CHURCH
Phone Champa 1059.
Rev. P. J. Price, Pastor.
24th and California Sts.
PEOPLE'S PRESSBYTERIAN.
E. 23rd Ave. and Washington St.
PRESBYTER, J. THOS. HAZELL
B. T. B.
WOMEN DO YOUR BIT AT HOME
—LEARN A TRADE. NOW IS THE
TIME. Earn $3.00 to $5.00 a day or
evening at home in spare time. Learn
Hairdressing and Beauty Culture by
mai in 30 days. Learn artistic Hairdressing, Manicuring, Hairstraightening, Facial Massage, Scalp Treatment, How to Cultivate and Grow Hair; How to make up Combing, manufacture different kind of fine Hair Goods; how to make Toilet Preparations and formula given. Learn the French and American system of Hairdressing and Beauty Culture, the quickest and best, by Mme. DeCarroll. All work guaranteed first class and up to date. Diploma awarded. This complete course will be sent to you for only $3.00 for a limited time only. Send a money order to The Ideal Co., Box 70, Station G, N, Y. City.
6-1-18-tfc
EAT CORN SAVE WHEAT
HAGER'S REMEDIES
I am Denver's representative for the famous Hager's Medicines. Each remedy is especially prepared by leading medical specialists in various diseases. Call or write for full information.
Mail orders promptly filled. Mme. Gleaves, 2443 Gilpin St. Phone York 4039J. Denver, Colo.
Costly Law Proceedings
The folly of rushing to the law to settle every little dispute is demonstrated by an action between two potters for a sum of £2. After being in court for 11 years, it was put an end to by being referred to arbitrators who decided in favor of the defendant in the case, and ordered the plaintiff to pay all the costs incurred in the proceedings, which were assessed at $1,000.—London Tit-Bits.
The Spirit of MK
Coworkers
food
Culture
---
PLEASANT GREEN BAPTIST
MISSION.
3131 Walnut St.
W. W. Ryann, Pastor.
Service every Sunday, 1. a. m.
Service, 2:30 p. m.
Service, 7:30 p. m.
MISSION WORK AND SUNDAY
SCHOOL AT THIRTY-FIRST
AND BLAKE STREETS.
Sunday School at 1:30 p. m.
Frenching at 3 o'clock.
Bible Training Class, 7:30 each Friday evening.
Elder R J. Clark, teacher.
You are cordially invited to each of these services.
P. W. COLEMAN, Sec'y.
R J. GATLITT, Supt.
GOTT NETHUDIST EPISCOPAL
CHURCH, 600 20TH AVE.
Sunday school, 9:45 a.m.
Preaching, 11 a.m. and 8 p.m.
Bpworth League, 6:45 p.m.
Midweek services, 8 p.m. Wednes
REV. T. S. McMORRIS, PASTOR.
Shorter A. M. E. Church
Cor. 23rd and Washington Sts.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST CHURCH
3148 Lafayette street. Phone York
7647. A. B Reynolds, pastor.
Phone York 7647.
Zion Baptist Church
Cor. 24th and Ogden Streets.
COME TO BETHEL, THE CHURCH
OF GOD, IN FIVE POINTS,
2835 Washington St.
Sunday School, 10 a. m. Presaching at 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Come to the Bible Study Tuesday evenings at 7:30. Come to the Prayer Meetings Thursday evenings at 7:30. The Spirit and the Bride say COME. Let him that heareth, say COME. Let him that is athirst, COME. Whosoever will let him, COME!
CENTRAL BAPTIST CHURCH
24th St., between California and Stout St.
PEOPLES' PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH.
Cor. Washington and 23rd Ave.
Cor. 23rd St. and Washington Ave.
Phone York 2194.
CENTRAL BAPTIST CHURCH
REV. P. J. PRICE, PASTOR.
SCOTT M. E. CHURCH
Phone Champs 4180.
MT. PLEASANT BAPTIST MISSION
REV. C. A. MILLER, Pastor
2201 Arapahoe St.
MT. OLIVE BAPTIST MISSION,
80th and Blake streets, L. J. JONES,
PASTOR, PHONE CHAMPA 108.
SHILOH BAPTIST MISSION.
Corner Thirty-first and Walnut Sts.
MISSION WORK AND SUNDAY
SCHOOL AT THIRTY-FIRST
AND BLAKE STREETS.
THIRD SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST
CHURCH,
1917 GLENARN PLACE.
Schedule for Week.
Sunday afternoon, 3:30. Vespers...
Monday evening, 5 p. m., members'
meeting.
Thursday evening, 8 p. m., Bible
class.
Saturday evening, 8 p. m., Gym.
class.
Day Nursery and Club Home, 2357
Clarkson St.
Y M C A BRANCH
2800 Glenarm Place
Phone 5639, Y. M. C. A.
Church of the Redeemer
22nd Ave. and Humboldt St.
Lodge Directory
S. S. A. M. AND ITS AUXILIARIES
Titus S. Rector, G. M.
8716 Welton St.
Wm. Sprague, G. Sect.
144 Gilpin St.
Rocky Mt. Lodge No. 1.
1st and 3rd Weddays of each month
260J Welton St.
Hiram Commandery
-3rd Tuesday of each month.
only)
1834 Arapahoe St.
Masonic Consistory. (1st and 3rd
Tuesdays + 32 Goode Bldg.)
Evergreen Chapter No. 36, O. E. B. 1st and 3rd Tuesday of each month. (Afternoon) 2630 Welton St
Lone Star Chapter W. F. S.
First and Third Fridays in each week month. (Afternoon) 2630 Welton St
Centennial Lodge No. 4.
2nd and 4th Monday of each month 1824 Arapahoe St
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS AND ITS AUXILIARIES.
Grand Officers
W. H. Bess, Grand Chancellor, Colorado Springs, Colorado.
Floyd F. Smith, G. K. of R. & S.
2851 Welton.
Smith Lodge No. 15, K. of P., meets the second and fourth Thursday nights of each month, at Mk' Hall, 46th and Washington.
FLOYD T. SMITH, C. C.
W. R. RHODES, K. of R. 8.
OLIVER ROYAL HOUSE NO. 2
meets first Tuesday in each
at old Colony Hall.
MRS. OLIVER, Queen.
Pythias Lodge No. 11,
1st and 3rd Wednesday of each month.
1834 Arapahoe St.
Damon Lodge No. 5,
1st and 3rd Fridays of each month
Delumbine Calanthe (K. of P.)
2nd and 4th Tuesdays of each month
3600 Welton St.
Rocky Mt. Court of Calanthe, No.
3, second and Fourth Fridays of each
Welton Fern Hall.
G. U. G. OF C. F. AND ITS
AUXILIARIES.
Dr. Paul E. Spratlin, D. G. M.
82 Goode Bldg.
Gee. B. Contee, D. G. Bck.
3612 Welton St.
Rocky Mt. Lodge 2320,
1st and 8rd Thurdays of each month
3620 Welton St.
Arapahoe Lodge No. 2986.
1st and 3rd Monday of each month
1824 Arapahoe St.
Denver Lodge No. 8646.
2nd and 4th Thurdays of each month
1834 Arapahoe St.
P. G. M. Council no. 118.
(4th Tuesday only.)
1834 Arapahoe.
Denver Patriarchy No. 67.
Fourth Tuesday of each month
3630 Welton St.
Survivales No. 871 (Odd Fellows).
1st and 3rd Saturday of each month at 2 p. m., 2630 Welton.
U. B. F. AND ITS AUXILIARIES.
Speed Lodge U. B. F. Meets first and third Tuesdays of each month at Elks' Hall. Main 5639.
Queen of West Temple meets first and third Thursday of each month at Old Colony Hall.
Webster Temple (3 p. m.)
Webster Temple, 2nd and 4th Wednesday of each month.
1836 Arapahoe St.
Queen Vashti, Royal House No. 1.
S. M. T., meets second Friday night of each month at 1832 Arapahoe.
Speed Lodge No. 6
First and third Saturday of each month
1630 Wetton St.
Western Star Lodge No. 1
1st and 3rd Tuesdays of each month
1834 Arapahoe St.
Captella Temple (S. M. T.).
Meets 1st and 3rd Saturday evenings of each month.
1834 Arapahoe St.
Golden Gate Juveniles No. 1 (S. M. T.)
2nd and 4th Saturdays of each month at 2 p. m.
Howard Juveniles No. 3 (B. M. T.)
2nd and 4th Saturday of each month at 2 p. m.
2630 Welton St.
Queen Elizabeth Temple No. 8
Second and fourth Thursday of each month at 2 p. m.
2630 Welton St.
Naomi Temple No. 12
2nd and 4th Fridays of each month
2630 Welton St.
Columbine Temple (B. M. T.).
2nd and 4th Mondays of each month
2630 Welton St.
Mountain Lodge Elks No. 30.
2nd and 4th Wednesdays of each month.
Do Molay Consistory meets first and third Thursday nights at Nippon Hall, 2049 Champa St.
Mystic Shrine meets second and fourth Thursday nights at Nippon Hall, 2049 Champa St.
DAUGHTERS OF TABERNACLE
Prince of Peace Tabernacle No. 566 meets 1st and 3rd Fridays in each month at Old Colony Hall.
KNIGHTS OF TABOR
St. James Temple No. 457 meets 1st and 3rd Tuesdays of each month.
BOYKINS TABERNACLE.
The Boykins Tabernacle, 333-777, Grand Order 12 No. 461, meets the first and third Saturday of each month, Farn Hall, 2711 Welton.
The Oliver Royal House meets 3rd Monday in each month at 2307 Welton
Progress Court No. 6, meets 1st and third Fridays of each month at 2140 Washington St.
Rice Pure Gold Tabernacle No. 568 meets 1st and 3rd Mondays at 2540 Washington.
Panama Temple No. 450 meets 2nd and 4th Thursdays at 2540 Washington.
Dunbar Chapter No. 16, Ancient Sons and Daughters of Jerusalem, meets first and third Mondays of each month, Elk Hall, 26th and Washington.
C. M. White, Supreme Commander
L. M. Lightner, Supreme Clark
Romas 44-51. Arapahoe Blds
.Denver Camp No. 1, American
Woodman, meets the second and
fourth Fridays of each month at Old
Colony Hall, 28th and Downing Sts.
C. N. Pitt, Commander
Tent No. 1, of the Juvenile Department, will meet at Old Colby hall, 28th and Downing, on the second and fourth Saturday afternoons at three o'clock.
The Best Meat Market in Denver. Only the highest quality of meat sold at downtown prices.
In our grocery, fruit and vegetable departments we offer you the best to be had at prices that our competitors have to pay.
NOW HOW CAN WE SELL AT SUCH LOW PRICES?
SIMPLY BECAUSE THE WHOLE FAMILY ARE THE CORPORATION. WE DO NOT PAY THEM SALARIES OR DIVIDENDS.
A Few of Our Saturday Bargains
All 10c bread 9c, 18c leaves 13c.
Meadow Gold butter 43c lb.
Creamy butter 40c lb.
Wedding Breakfast coffee 27c lb.
Our special coffee 23c lb., ground
fresh while you wait.
Water White soap 5c.
Matches 5c a box.
EVERYTHING ELSE, LEFT
CALL MAIN 59
Every Customer w
along will re
Motto: "Not slow bu
Rate Per Hour $2
THING ELSE REDUCED. NO LEFT TO LIST
MAIN 5943 for Real
Customer who brings the long will receive 5c Cd
Not slow but sure"
e Per Hour $2.50 New CO
EVERYTHING ELSE REDUCED. NO SPACE LEFT TO LIST CALL MAIN 5943 for Real Service Every Customer who brings this 'ad' along will receive 5c Cash
Motto: "Not slow but sure" Cash only
Rate Per Hour $2.50 New COLE 8
PHONE CHAMPA 5431
Bean Auto Livery
n Auto Liv
Bean Auto Livery
Stand: Night and Day Cafe
Street De
OWN ND
MONTHLY TOT
Brand New Latest M
OLIVER
Church, Society, and Individual one for your children. It is a particulars see Oliver Typewriter Live Building
PHONE CHAMPA 5343
1865-67 Curtis Street
$3 DOWN
$3 MONTH
Buys a Brand New
OLI
Every Lodge, Church, Society
one. Buy one for your o
For Particulars see Oli
335 Empire Building
PHONE CH
$3DOWN ND
$3 MONTHLY TOTAL COST $49
Buys a Brand New Latest Model NO. 9
OLIVER
Every Lodge, Church, Society, and Individual should own one. Buy one for your children. It is a necessity For Particulars see Oliver Typewriter Agency 335 Empive Building Denver Colorado
Decker Light & Fixture
Company
1432 CURTIS ST.
We Rent and Sell
Gas Arc Lights
Mantles, Gas Plates and
Glass Ware
PHONE CHAMPA 944
RAYS
Room Mrs. ELLA RAY
Preprietress
2602 Welton Street
Breakfast, 6 to 10:30 a.m.; Dinner,
11 to 6 p.m. Once served, we have
your patronage. Well season Chitter-
lings served daily. Big chicken din-
ner Sundaya, 25c. Ice cream, chili,
sandwiches, etc. Phone 4839
COAL CONSUMERS MUST
BUY WINTER SUPPLY NOW
Consumers must buy their
Winter supply of Coal during
the Spring and Summer for
storage if Production is to be
maintained at a maximum and the
country entitled to avoid a serious
Coal shortage this Winter
N.A. Llyartfield
U.S. FUEL ADMINISTRATION
DR. JUSTINA L. FORD
OFFICE HOURS:
10 to 12 s. m., 2 to 4 p. m., 7 to 8 p. m.
OFFICE AND RESIDENCE,
2235 Arapahoe Street, Denver.
---
Phone Main 8625
REDUCED. NO SPACE
TO LIST
43 for Real Service
who brings this 'ad'
receive 5c Cash
at sure" Cash only
.50 New COLE 8
AMPA 5431
to Livery
ND
HILLY TOTAL COST $499
New Latest Model NO. 9
VER
city, and Individual should own
children. It is a necessity
ver Typewriter Agency
Denver Colorado
AMPA 5343
Artistic Furnal Designs on Short Notions, FLOWERS For
All Occasions, Courtroom Treatment
DENNIS J. SULLIVAN
Sullivan's Bird Store
PRACTICAL FLORIST
First Class Treatment to all
All Work Guaranteed
We Serve the Best
Flower and Garden Seeds of
All Kinds
534 Fifteenth St. Denver, Colo.
Phone Main 2488
Wheel Chairs For Sale or Rent
WM. JONES
Maker of all kinds of Orthopedic Appliances, Trusses Abdominal Support, Elastic Hogiery, Crutches, etc. 808 14th St. Phone Main 170
We desire your Job Printing. Hurry up work we are making a specialty of. Have us do your work. Star, 1026 10th street
THE GRAND THEATRE CON-
TINUES TO PLEASE.
Everybody who visits Larimer St
knows that their visit is not complete
until they have stopped in and been
enttained by the high class pictures
of the Grand theatre. They just try
to satisfy and please everybody.
OVER 86 YEARS
EXPERIENCE
PATENTS
TRADE MARKS
DESIGNS
COPYRIGHTS & C.
Anyone sending a sketch and description may
thankly assert our opinion free whether all
invention is probably patentable. Communications
strictly consider WARNING. Patents
surely offer Giftes upon receipt of patent.
Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive
special notice, without charge, in the
Scientific American.
A magazine devoted to the scientific journal. Terms can
constitute four months. $2.00 by all newadvertisers.
MUNN & Co. 304 Broadway. New York
---
Denver, Colorado
ROOT BEER DEALER BREAKS SUGAR RULE
ROOT BEER DEALER BREAKS SUGAR RULE
For refusing to declare the stock of sugar he had on hand on July 1, and for making a later report which covered only half of his supply, Charles Gordon, of 1122 Seventeenth street, Denver, has been ordered to close his root beer establishment for thirty days by J. N. Bundick, chairman of the Sugar Division, and Thomas B. Stearns, head of the United" States Food Administration.
Gordon was given a hearing before food officials who not only ordered him to suspend business for thirty days, but also confiscated 800 pounds of sugar he had hidden away in an unused cask. The confiscated sugar will be sold by the food administration and the money obtained from the sale will be turned over to the Denver chapter of American Red Cross. The proceeds, in this case, will amount to about $70.00.
The soft drink brewer admitted his guilt, and the only excuse he offered was that he was saving the sugar "for a rainy day."
NEW BEEF RULES MEET APPROVAL
"The new meat regulations are not only the most successful ones we have had up to the present time, but hotel and restaurant men of the state seem to find them very satisfactory," declared E. E. Lucas, head of the hotel and restaurant division of the U. S. Food Administration.
Though the new regulations have been in effect less than two weeks, it is estimated that practically all of the public eating places in Colorado have designated to the hotel division their choice of mid-day or evening meal.
The prohibition of service of beef does not extend to beef by-products, such as sweetbreads, brains, tongue, liver, heart, and so forth. Neither is it a violation to serve mutton, veal or pork at any meal any day.
The definite amount of meat saved under the new regime will not be determined until after August 1, when the July consumption for 1918 will be compared with that of July, 1917.
NEW SUGAR RESTRICTIONS IN ENGLAND
Radical restrictions in the use of sugar during the year beginning June 1, 1918, have been announced by the British Ministry of Food, with respect to manufacturers other than the makers of jam, condensed milk and beer. The total quantity of sugar which may be used during the whole year ending May 31, 1919, is 25 per cent of the quantity used by these manufacturers in 1915. The order applies to manufacturers of sugar confectionery and chocolate, pastries, biscuits, candied peel and preserved and crystallised fruits, drugs and medicinal preparations, mineral waters, other beverages (except beer and stout), or any other product requiring sugar.
ITALIAN FOOD SITUATION
GRAVE.
The food situation in Italy continues to be very grave. The shortage most conspicuous at present is that of meat. In order to cope with this shortage there have been in effect since May 15 three meatless days a week, and on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday of each week meat can neither be served in public eating places nor bought for home consumption. The price of meat rose tremendously the past spring, and beef is now ranging from 72 to 89 cents per pound, with veal 79 to 79 cents a pound.
Proverba Circulate
Proverbs undoubtedly have a tendency to travel. They are carried from one land to another by emigrants, tourists, missionaries, tradesmen and seamen; but many which are closely similar doubtless owe their origin to no common stock, but to the common experience of mankind.
Origin of One Proverb
One obtains historical glimpses in proverbs. The familiar "robbing Peter to pay Paul" is said to derive its origin from the fact that in the reign of Edward VI the lands of St. Peter at Westminster were appropriated to raise money, for the repair of St. Paul's.
Original Source
Examiner—"You are quite sure that this is a purely original composition you have handed in? I must say the wording sounds strangely familiar." Plagiarist—"Possibly you have run across some of the words in the dictionary."—Judge.
European Rec Superstition
A prevalent superstition in parts of Europe is that bees will either fly away or die on the occasion of a death in the family unless someone knocks at their hive and tells them about it.
Just a Business Deal
Dorothy said to her mother: "I went three errands yesterday, and you promised me two cents, but if you haven't any change today we'll settle it for one cent."
AKE PHOTOGRAPHS AT NIGHT
Handicaps of Fog and Darkness Have Been Overcome by Development of New Process.
Neither fog nor darkness handicaps the superneys of the war department signal corps' cameras, according to Edward Hungerford, who describes the remarkable progress of wartime aerial photography in Everybody's. He gives some interesting examples:
"I have seen a photograph of a waning moon over Rome—taken by the new process. It is the first real picture of the moon that I have ever seen, although I formerly attempted the thing myself. Most of the moonlight pictures that one sees are 'fakes,' made by photographing the sun in various unusual and artistic phases. But this was real. One could see the tiny pools of water standing in the uneven places of the flagging, the flickering street lamps at the corner. A picture whose reality almost makes it uncanny. And the photographer who took the picture in the rain was arrested by a gendarme as being mentally unsound. He was only released when he took a picture of the lieutenant at the police station and proved beyond a question that he could make good portraits by artificial light.
"I have seen photographs made by this new process from the front row of a theater balcony during the progress of the play; others made in church during vespers and illumined entirely by the candles upon the high altar. The process is very new and it is very wonderful. Moreover, it is susceptible of adaptation to night observation, both from airplanes and upon the land."
SPIRIT OF AMERICA TODAY
Veteran's Pathetic Gift Showed That His Heart Still Beat High With Patriotic Fervor.
An old man, thin and bent with the years of hardships plainly marking his wrinkled face, stood on a station platform at an Indiana town recently as a train bearing a party of young men registrants to Camp Taylor stopped. The old man wore a faded blue uniform, the badge of the Civil war. He had a message for the young men who were to be enrolled in Uncle Sam's great army, and soon he was surrounded by a group of young fellows.
"I wasn't counting on getting to talk to so many of you boys," he told them tremulously. "I just came down to give something to one of Uncle Sam's new soldiers."
He drew a parcel from under his coat and opening it displayed a pair of almost perfectly knitted socks. "They ain't much for my country," he apologized, "but they will help some young fellow to fight better. These don't look like much for a soldier to give, but I knitte, them myself and I bought the yarn out of my pension money."
A thin fellow got the socks because the old soldier thought he would need them most. The train pulled out and the little old soldier went back home to knit another pair of socks for another young soldier.
Then the Eight Started.
Then the Fight Started.
Three men emerged from a Sixth avenue wet goods establishment last night. They were apparently the best of friends. One said: "Well, Doyle, I'm glad we are all Irish. But let me tell yer, the best men come from Limerick." Doyle said he didn't know about that. "I'm from Kerry—" And immediately a fight started. The third man declared he was from Kilkenny. "And no Kilkenny man stood by when there was any fighting to be done, begorra." And when the three were pulled apart by three cops they were a sight to behold. It was hard to tell from the appearance of the three which county in Ireland produced the best men.—New York Times.
Margery Disapproved.
Margery's mother took her to a cottage prayer meeting. The meeting was led by a returned missionary who believed strongly in the efficacy of prayer. And she believed in prayer not only from the heart but from the knees, as well.
When Margery's father returned that night he began to question her regarding her experience. "I understand you went to your first prayer meeting today, daughter," he said. "How did you enjoy it?"
The youngster's answer came in a flash. "I didn't like it at all, daddy, not at all," she said. "They didn't do a thing but just sing and turn over!"
Shipbuilding in a Dry Dock.
It has been proposed that concrete ships be built in a floating dry dock, the principal advantage being that the forms could be retained in the dock so they could be used immediately after launching, for another ship. The launching would be effected by withdrawing the outer forms slightly and sinking the dry dock until the ship floated on its own bottom. This would avoid severe launching strains, and would permit of launching the boat while the concrete was still "green." Hence there would be a reduction in the period of construction.—Scientific American.
Before and After.
My brother has just reached France. On being moved from one village to another he wished to thank the kind old Frenchwoman with whom he had been billeted and thought he was saying. "We thank you for your kindness to us while we were here." The girls standing near laughed so heartily that he repeated his sentence later to an interpreter and found "but he had said, "before we were here."—Exchange.
AFTER THE SHOW VISIT
Dearfield Hotel Cafe
FIRST CLASS LUNCHES
We have opened a First Class Cafe and Pool Room in connection with the
..Remember we serve the best Sunday dinner to order and sent to all parts of the city by mail a call. Once served we have your patronage. Dies. Pollite service, courteous treatment to all served from 6 a. m. to 2 a.
2130 Arapahoe street
Phone Main 5011
REMEMBER THE
SUNDAY ONE MEAL WHEATLESS THURSDAY ALL MEALS WHEATLESS FRIDAY ONE MEAL WHEATLESS SATURDAY ONE MEAL WHEATLESS WEDNESDAY ALL MEALS WHEATLESS
Mrs. Clara Smith, is the collector. She will call on you shall appreciate all courtesies
The Denver Poro Bea
Scientific and Sanitary S
Hair Treatment
Toilet Articles a Spe
MRS. JENNIE BRADSH
2553 WASHINGTON ST.
Your Job Printing
Class Cafe, Soft Drink Parlour
on with the Dearfield Hotel
day dinner in the city. Meals served
city by messenger service. Give us
patronage. Private rest room for la-
ment to all. Give us a call. Meals
m. to 2 a. m.
P. P. Pearson, M'g'r
ain 5011
THE DAYS
THURSDAY ONE MEAL
WHEATLESS
FRIDAY ONE MEAL
WHEATLESS
SATURDAY ONE MEAL
WHEATLESS
the Star's agent and
all on you soon. We
ertesies extended.
To Beauty Parlors
Nutritary Scalp and
treatment
is a Specialty
RADSHAW. Prop.
Phone Mtl
7412
Printing Solicited
We have opened a First Class Cafe, Soft Drink Parlor and Pool Room in connection with the Dearfield Hotel ... Remember we serve the best Sun-day dinner in the city. Meals served to order and sent to all parts of the city by messenger service. Give us a call. Once served we have your patronage. Private rest room for ladies. Polite service, courteous treatment to all. Give us a call. Meals served from 6 a. m. to 2 a. m.
2130 Arapahoe street P. P. Pearson, M'g'r
Phone Main 5011
Mrs. Clara Smith, is the Star's agent and collector. She will call on you soon. We shall appreciate all courtesies extended.
The Denver Poro Beauty Parlors
Scientific and Sanitary Scalp and
Hair Treatment
Toilet Articles a Specialty
MRS. JENNIE BRADSHAW. Prop.
2553 WASHINGTON ST.
Phone M11
7412
Your Job Printing Solicited
YOUR EYES
Tell the story of the care you give them. : Don't take chances; those headaches, that nervousness, and many other complaints, all come from eye strain. : A scientific examination and good glasses will bring relief.
Try Us
DEVOTED EXCLUSIVELY TO THE EXAMINATION OF THE EYES, THE FITTING AND MANUFACTURING OF GLASSES
The Swigert Bros. Optical Co.
DEVONERS REALABLE OPTICIANS
1530 CALIFORNIA ST.
WEEK SIXTEENTH ST.
An aerial tank has been invented and put into practical use by Italian soldiers who have astounded the world by their extraordinary feats in mountain warfare. An Austrian machine gun emplacement was so situated on a mountain side that it poured a harassing fire into an Italian post. The Austrian position was unassailable by ordinary means, but it was necessary that it be wiped out. A "Teleferica" car, many of which are operated by the Italians across chasms and up mountain sides, was armored and equipped with machine guns. Volunteers were called for, and from the many who responded two were chosen to man the guns. This improvised aerial dreadnaught was then swung out across the valley. After one or two exploration trips at a dizzy height, the men in the car finally located the Austrian post and quickly put it out of action.
Residence 2344 Tremont Pl. Olive 6R1 before 8 A. M GEORGE G. ROSS
The following letter was written by the wife of a man fighting overseas to a member of the Salvage club, an official organization for preventing war waste:
"Dear Sir: I called at your office on Wednesday at one o'clock, but was told you were engaged on salvage, and that I could not see you. I wanted to ask you about Bert's teeth what he lost at the front in the mud—do I still have to keep up the payments of them on the installment plan? I feel quite sure that your Salvage club what they talks about would have the matter put right if you would only mention it. Yourrespectfully——."—London Tit-Bits.
929 Seventeenth St.
Main 6782 Denver, Colo
REAL JOB, THAT OF THE "UMP"
Man Who Holds Indicator in Professional Ball Game Surely Has No "Soft Snap."
Speed Indicators.
A useful instrument, especially in clouds, is the air speed indicator. This tells the pilot his speed through the air. It also helps him to know whether he is rising or descending. For instance, if the speed of the machine flying level is 100, miles an hour, any speed registered above that will show that the machine is coming down, and anything below it that the machine is climbing. The difference in speeds will show to what extent the craft is descending or climbing. There is also a proper fore-and-aft level to indicate climb and descend, but for various technical reasons the pilot usually depends on the air speed indicator.
There are those who will scott at the idea that umpiring a ball game is work, but let these, just once, stand out in the broiling sun of July or August and judge a two-hour game, while watched intently every moment by two keen-eyed managers, thirty or forty players, as familiar with the rules as the indicator holders, and several thousand excited, restless and shouting spectators, every one of whom is anxious to detect some slip in judgment upon the part of the man in blue. Let them labor for that length of time without encouragement, but with shouts of disapproval ringing in their ears at frequent intervals, or have several players step on their toes with their spiked shoes, while making threats and referring in slighting terms to every one connected with them from their remotest ancestry down to the present period, and they will be ready not only to admit but to make amidavit that the umpire actually works—Leslie's Magazine.
Jerusalem Enloys "Movies."
The moving picture has acquired a sudden and enormous popularity in Jerusalem, particularly among the native population, according to letters from soldiers there. It is impossible to accommodate the crowds that try to attend the theater. People almost fought to get into a big theater when the film depicting the occupation of Beersheba was shown.
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Salvage.
Attorney and Counsellor At Law
FOR THE HAIR
LONG.
AFTER USING 2 YEARS 18 NOW
22 INCHES LONG.
WHY NOT GROW YOUR HAIR?
Mme Jessie
Science
LEARN
The DeNeal Mme
BEAUTY CULTURE A
Your success assured with either
PLOMA. Madam Dish
Send 3 cents S
Combings made Up
“Denelo,” a real Hair Grower
nourishes the roots, increases cir-
giving an abundant growth.
NO STRAIGHTENING O
straightener and grower all in one
MME. D
Phone York 1377 J
If Its In The Hair Line See Me
MME. GENEVIE
Scalp Specialist, practicing the
Shampooing, Scalp Dressing
Boston, Mass. Electrical
Remedies for all diseases
itch. Guaranteed to cure.
articles sold. Combings m
Mail Orders
EFFICIENT
Real Modern Me
MENTURE AND HAIR
with either Race with the
Dam Dishman, Authorized
3 cents Stamp for Reply
Special Offer
Hair Grower, stops itchy scalp
increases circulation, refreshs
growth.
OPENING OIL needed with
or all in one.
ME. DISHMAN
J 2439 C
Me P
GENEVIEVE CHAN
Pricing the Johnson System
Hair Dressing and Hair Cut
Electrical Massages given
all diseases of the scalp--died to cure. Face powders,
bombings made up. Hair Oil Orders Promptly Filled.
LEARN EFFICIENCY The DeNeal Modern Method of BEAUTY CULTURE AND HAIR GROWING
Your success assured with either Race with the DeNEAL DIPLOMA. Madam Dishman, Authorized Instructress
"Denelo," a real Hair Grower, stops itchy scalp and falling hair, nourishes the roots, increases circulation, refreshes and invigorates, giving an abundant growth. NO STRAIGHTENING OIL needed with "Denelo"—the straightener and grower all in one.
Scalp Specialist, practicing the Johnson System of Hair Dressing, Shampooing, Scalp Dressing and Hair Cultivation, learned at Boston, Mass. Electrical Massages given for Scalp and Face Remedies for all diseases of the scalp--dandruff, eczema and itch. Guaranteed to cure. Face powders, Creams and Toilet articles sold. Combings made up. Hair for sale Mail Orders Promptly Filled
SUNSHINE
CLEANERS & DYERS
TO THE TRADE
We Call for and Deliver
PHONE MAIN 2091
2001-03
SCARABOUE
GT
Cigars and Tobacco Phone Main 8428
Comfort Pool and
J. F. CLARK, Manage
St. D
S. A. Bondurant
Trial Realty
V. H. PRITCHETTE, M'g'r
RENTALS, AND INV
East 26th Avenue
531
EMMETT WILLIAMS, Prop.
J. F. CL
2801 Welton St.
W. H. Pritchett S. A. L
Industrial
W. H. PRITCHETT
SALES, RENTALS,
716 East 2
Phone York 4561
J. F. CLARK, Manager
2801 Welton St. Denver, Colo
W. H. Pritchette S. A. Bondurant Charles Troiter Industrial Realty Co. W. H. PRITCHETTE, M'g'r SALES, RENTALS, AND INVESTMENTS
2741 Welton
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2443 GILPIN STREET
CP & BP
O
We have BUSTED the Cleaning Trust. Have your work done at the place that made possible for you to reduce the price of YOUR CLEANING.
Men's Suits Cleaned.....$1.00
Men's Suits Pressed.....35
Ladies' Suits, Cleaned.....1.25
Dresses Cleaned, Plain.....1.00
Dresses Cleaned, Fancy or Plea
ed.....$1.25 up
We Clean Furs, Feathers Gloves
Hats, etc.
We Call for and Deliver
Comfort Pool and Billiard Parlor
CLARK, Manager
Denver, Colo
A. Bondarant Charles Troiter
Real Realty Co.
RITCHETTE, M'g'r
C, AND INVESTMENTS
t 26th Avenue
Denver, Colorado
BAMETT WILLIAMS, Prop. Phone Champa 5360
The Golden West Cafe
FISH AND GAME IN SEASON
First Class in Every Respect
741 Welton Denver
DENVER, COLORADO
CITY NEWS
Give us your Printing. We want to do your work
LOST! One lady's watch while going from 2508 Tremont Place to 530 18th St., or from 530 18th St. to 1507 Welton St. Please return and receive reward at 2508 Tremont Place.
NOTICE
Stock for Harris-Caldwell Engineering & Airnautical Company will be withdrawn from market after Sept. 1. By order of Board of Directors.
E. ETHEL CALDWELL, Sec'y York 4753J.
Want to learn French? Speak it as a nation. For information call York 6995, 956 Emerson St.
Thursday, August 1st, was Colorado Day, a half holiday which caused us to go to press earlier this week.
Mrs. Ida Holley, one of Denver's popular musical artists and social favorites has returned after her three year visit in Chicago and Michigan. She is the wife of Dr. R. G. Holley, of Chicago.
J. A. Whittaker, who for years has been a tonsorial artist, left Thursday for Pocatello, Idaho, where he will engage in a lucrative business.
Every day and every night of this week the drafted soldier boys have been wined and dined, entertained and made jolly until few of them have had their cup of joy to run over.
DOUGLAS UNDERTABING CO. FUNERAL NOTICE.
Lorenzo D. Jones, 52 years, beloved husband of Mrs. Annie Jones, 708 Utica street, departed this life, Friday, July 26th. Funeral services were held Monday, July 29th, 2:00 p. m., from Zion Baptist Church, under auspices of Rocky Mountain Lodge No. 2330 G. U. O. of O. F., Rev. D. E. Over officiated. Interment Fairmount cemetery. Helen Brassfield, 15 years, beloved niece of Mrs. Jessie Madison, 2525 Curtis street, departed this life July 25th. Remains were accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Madison, July 26th to Weston, Mo., for interment
Carl J. Harris, infant of Mr. and Mrs. George Harris, 2755 Shelton street departed this life Tuesday, July 30th. Services were held from Douglass Chapel, 2:00 p. m. Thursday, August 1st. Rev. A. E. Reynolds officiated. Interment Fairmont Cemetery.
Wm. H. Rice received his divorce from Nellie H. Rice in the county court in Greeley, Saturday. Lawyer George G. Ross represented Mr. Rice who visited Eaton and Denver. Lawyer Ross spent Sunday in Dearfield, riding 45 miles in a buckboard over-land.
Greeley can only boast of a few Negroes who seem to do well, Mr. Owens is of the most thrifty class. Miss Vinita Westfield's grandmother also lives in Greeley.
IN ARTISTIC SOCIETY.
A very pretty tea was given by Mme. Dishman Monday, July 22, in honor of Mme DeNeal, president of the DeNeal Modern Method of Beauty Culture and Hair Growing, Inc. with headquarters in Sattle, Wash. and Miss Georgia Nugent, of Louisville, Ky., chairman of the Executive Board of the N. A. C. W. C. After meeting he guests and being served with refreshments in the house while listening to the sweet strains of music by Mrs. Jessie Andrews Zachery, tea was served on the lawn by Misses Colla Gross and Thelma Thomas. Mme. DeNeal is leaving for Colorado Springs, Pueblo, Rouse, Colo., New Mexico, returning to Seattle by the way of Chicago, St. Paul and points in Montana. Poth left having spent a delightful time with old friends.
Mr. Geo. G. Ross of the Denver Star desires to secure the names of all girls or women or boys who have any knowledge of printing and press feeding or who would like to learn the trade. Address him "personally" at the Denver Star. The draft will deplete our working force.
Will all those who have had cuts made and have taken some part in the Special Edition kindly remit, as our increased expense demands immediate attention? The Star did its best, now will you respond at once?
Mrs. Sue Hutchens, an estimable teacher in Kansas City, Mo., public schools, is the pleasant guest of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Holmes, 2139 Curtis street, for a few weeks.
Miss Pearl Jones, the pleasing daughter of Mr. Harry Jones, tonsorial artist of 19th street, left Tuesday for home in Oakland, Calif., after a pleasant stay of sixty days.
Mrs. T. S. Walker, of Raton, New Mexico, formerly of this city, is in Los Angeles for health improvements, and would be glad to have her Denver friends write her at 1205½ Central Ave., the Anita Hotel, or phone Pace 1611 Los Angeles.
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS GRAND
LODGE.
Never in the history of the Grand Lodge have so many delegates met to conduct the Grand Lodge business with such an unanimous voice and actually go through the session without the characteristic bickering and disturbances which generally accompany such bodies, as the Grand Lodge which convened last week in Denver. More real progress, harmony and substantial business was done than ever heretofore. Men seemed to have realized the object and purpose for which they assembled and did not swerve until the purpose was accomplished. The election of officers resulted as follows: Grand Chancellor, Chas. S. Muse, Denver; Vice Grand Chancellor, Percy Lawrence, Pueblo; Grand Prelate, Wm. Gudgell, Colorado Springs; G. Master of E., J. A. Weddington, of Pueblo; G. Secretary of Endowment Board, Dr. T. E. McClain, Denver; G. Keeper of R. and S., Floyd T. Smith, Denver; G. Master of Arms, A. Jackson, Pueblo; G. Marshal, Ben Hatcher, Pueblo; G. Fast Chancellor, A. Prukleton, Pueblo; G. Inner Guard, J. Anderson, Denver; G. Outer Guard, J. Howard, Denver; Supreme Representative, W. H. Bess, and Major A. R. Butler, Chairman Finance Committee.
If you want a big laugh with a side splitting effect come to that funny, funny "Breach of Promise Suit" at Scott M. E. Church, August 6th. Browning Allen and J. A. Whittaker will be the lawyers. Some fun. Small admission at the door.
NOTICE
The International Order of 12, will celebrate their 46th anniversary Aug. 12th, at Campbell A. M. E. Church. The public is invited. Good programs.
Joy and brilliancy reigned supreme last Tuesday night at the residence of Mrs. Cedell Norris and mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Norris, when the former entertained in honor of Mr. James Walker, of Lincoln, Nebr. Quite an enjoyable time was had.
The Bracelet belonging to Mme. C. J. Walker, which was lost at the reception of Mrs. Givens, of 2515 Curtis, was found by Mrs. Givens and returned to Mme. Walker, who immediately forwarded Mrs. Givens a reward of $50.
ST. JAMES TEMPLE NO. 457.
International Order of Twelve Knights of Tabor meets second and fourth Monday nights of each month at Elk's Hall, 26th and Washington, Wm. R. Rhodes, Chief Mentor; Rev.
A. E. Reynolds; Chief Scribe.
Fraternal Order Ancient Sons and Daughters of Jerusalem meets first and third Monday nights of each Queen; Ethel Bovdston, Chief Scribe, month. Elk's Hall, 26th and Washington. Mary Logan, Most Excellent
All interested in organized and systematic work of the Red Cross are cordially invited to be present at Shorters A. M. E. Church, corner 23rd and Washington Ave. Thursday, August 5th, 1918, at 8:30 p. m. Business of importance. Mable Falling, Chr.; Arlene Lawson, Sec'y.
Denver, Colo., July 29, 1918. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Bowers a bouncing girl. 8½ pounds. Mother and baby doing fine, dad tickled over it. 2360 Tremont.
HAIR
Mms. J. L. Broussard, scientific
scalp specialist and hair grower, will
serve you at your home or at her office, 526 Galapago. Prices reasonable,
satisfaction guaranteed. Phone South
4293W. 7-27-18.
For Sale—8-room red press brick,
1600 block Franklin street; fully modern. If you have $400 call Colored American Loan & Realty, Champa 455 talk to Waller.
For Sale—5-room press brick on 1½
lots, modern, 2400 block Williams.
Beauty. Call The Colored Am. L. &
Reality, Champa 455, talk to Waller.
To Trade—K. Cs property, $3,500.00
value to trade for Denver property.
Call Colored Am. L. & Reality,
Champa 455.
BEAT GERMANY
Support EVERY FLAG
that opposes Prussianism
Eat less of air food Fighters need
DENY yourself something
WASTE NOTHING
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MME
Scientific Alte
2642 C
The Hami
MME JEFFERSON,
fic Alterer and Ladies Tailor
2642 California Street
Hamilton National Bank
MME JEFFERSON, Scientific Alterer and Ladies Tailor 2642 California Street
17th and,Champa Streets PAYS 4 PER CENT ON SAVINGS DEPOSITS
Member Federal
No. 10, under su
Poro Sc
Graduate Po
SIX YEA
{MRS. SA
241
FOR APPOINTMENT
C. H. SHIRLEY
President
R. RAMST
The A
Federal Reserve Bank District
under supervision U.S. Government
Oro Scalp Treatment
Graduate Poio College, St. Louis, Mo.
SIX YEARS' EXPERIENCEI
RS. SARAH FRANKLIN
2415 Washington St.
APPOINTMENT, CALL MAIN 6544.
HARLEY W. A. RAMSTETTER
ent Vice-President
R. RAMSTETTER, Sec. and Treas.
The Atlas Drug Co.
Incorporated
Leaders in Prescriptions
Member Federal Reserve Bank District No.10, under supervision U.S. Government
Poro Scalp Treatment
Graduate Poio College, St. Louis, Mo.
SIX YEARS' EXPERIENCEI
[MRS. SARAH FRANKLIN
2415 Washington St.
FOR APPOINTMENT, CALL MAIN 6544.
C. H. SHIRLEY W. A. RAMSTETTER President Vice-President R. RAMSTETTER. Sec. and Treas.
PHONE MAIN 875
HARRY L. McCLAIN announces his readiness to supply first class cars with careful courteous and efficient chauffers at reasonable TO THE LAST LETTER IN SERVICE
Stand Phone Champa 5960
Golden West Cafe, 2741 Welton street
ence 2933 Welton streat—Phone Main 7752
Mme. M. L. Elliston
CHIROPODIST
1505 E. 16th Avenue
For Ingrowing Nails Removed at Your Home
phone for Appointment. York 8340
AUTO HA
LIVERY real
coun
rates TO THE
Stand
Golden W
Residence 2933 V
Mme.
C
1505
Corns or Ingrowin
Phone for A
AUTO LIVERY HARRY L. McCLAIN announces his readiness to supply first class cars with careful courteous and efficient chauffers at reasonable rates TO THE LAST LETTER IN SERVICE Stand Phone Champa 5960 Golden West Cafe, 2741 Welton street Residence 2933 Welton streat-Phone Main 7752
Corns or Ingrowing Nails Removed at Your Home Phone for Appointment. York 8340
A. A. WALLER, Manager Notary Public The Colored American Loan and Realty Company
Mme. C. J. Walker's Wonderful Hair Grower ER SCALP TREATMENTS given by Mrs. B.G. the only Walker Graduate of years' experience in work done by appointment. 'Phone York 4716 J 2345 Ogden Street
Mme. Wonder
The WALKER SCAL
BROOKS, the only W
Denver. Work done by
2345
The WALKER SCALP TREATMENTS given by Mrs. B.G. BROOKS, the only Walker Graduate of years' experience in Denver. Work done by appointment. 'Phone York 4716 J 2345 Ogden Street
PETER H. BURGESS
J. R. CONTRE
President and Manager
Peone York 7992
FRANK S. REED
Licensed Embalmer
and Director
NOTARY PUBLIC
Parlors
V'. A. Jones, M. D.
President
CONFIDENTIAL PROPERTY
SATIENT PROFESSOR
PHONE MAIN 6123
DAY OR NIGHT
The Douglass
Undertaking Co.
Incorporated and Bonded to the City
Polite Services
To All
Lady
Assistant
2745 Welton St.
CALL Main 5 03 7
2701 WELTON ST.
H. J. M. Brown Treasurer
Office, 2636 Welton Street Phone Champa 455