Denver Star

Saturday, October 12, 1918

Denver, Colorado

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For Real Results: Subscribe, Read and Advertise in the Denver Star. A Progressiveace Paper. THIRTIETH YEAR Number 7 OUR COLORED TROOPS Had it occurred to you, the universal loyalty of our colored citziens? Have you ever met a colored man in this country who was a pro-German? Do you even know any one who thinks he has actually seen one? I have personally made this inquiry in the South, in New England, on the Pacific coast, and here at home in the Central West, and have arrived at the firm conviction "There ain't no such animal" as pro-German American colored man. When the big war started and Bernstoff let loose his long and carefully prepared plans of arsons, bombs, strikes, and general confusion in this country, one of the most dastardly schemes on which his boss depended, was an uprising of the nine million colored people in the South. The effort was well organized, bountifully supplied with money, was operated with great secrecy, and at first was carried on outside the larger southern cities. All sorts of impossible rewards were promised; the blacks were to own and rule the South; every sort of poison lie was used to tempt the colored people into revolt against the whites. It was expected and hoped this revolution would keep this country busy for the duration of the war. Of all this people in the North heard very little. To the everlasting credit of the colored people they refused to be led into the trap, and like the proposed revolution in India and Egypt and some other counties, the plot miserably failed. At last we entered the war. What then of the colored man? When voluntary enlistment was offered, he responded promptly and in large numbers. During the Civil War, it was no infrequent part of a northern General's report of a battle that "the colored troops fought bravely." The The reports which are reaching us of the colored troops in France include more than "fought bravely"—they fight magnificently. A letter from an officer describing such a regiment going "over the top" is a picture worth painting. Bareheaded, shirts unbuttoned or no shirts at all, with the most unearthly yells as demons let loose, they went at enemy like a cage fight of wild lions released. These boys from the cotton and cane fields like best to fight with a bayonet, which Fritz enjoys least of all, but in hand-to-hand combat they fall back on their trusty razor or knife, in the use of which they are more than proficient. The stanchest Hun is said to quail and run before one of these dusky giants bent on carving a map of Florida on a fat German face or a delta of the Mississippi on his throat. Yes the colored troops are still "fighting bravely." The Denver Star ESTABLISHED 1888 PROTEST DISCRIMINATION IN PLANT AT HOG ISLAND Philadelphia, Pa.—A letter of complaint against alleged race discrimination at Hog Island was sent on Monday to President Frederic Holbrook of the American International Shipbuilding Company by the Colored Protective Association. Race men have taken training in the school at the yard with the understanding that they would be employed as skilled workmen at the end of their training, only to learn that the policy of the corporation is to limit the Race men to the jobs for common labor. It is said that the influence of "The Dixie club" is such that it will not allow the race man to work as a mechanic on the ships. This association has taken affidavits from fifteen skilled Race men who claim that discrimination has been made against them. These affidavits will be sent to Washington. CHANGE GERMAN NAMES Solomon says "A good name is rather to be chosen than great riches," to which we may well add, "and a bad name is a liability, net." The good work of removing German name of places is going on with increasing fervor. Individuals even who have no choice in the German name they bear are going into court daily and coming out with good American names. From all parts of the country comes the news of German having been banished as a public school study. In fourteen states it has been eliminated entirely. The German name propaganda, which has flourished for years, is being rudely swept away. There is still opportunity for further reform. Many towns and cities bear names distinctly German, and the loyal citizens of these places should loose no time in changing to something better. Not long ago a California city of 5,000 inhabitants changed its name and found the process not hard to accomplish, and the new name a great improvement. There's a bad spot thru on the map, namely Bismark, N.D. This town started in 1872 with the good name of Edwinton. Then German pro panganda got in its work, and on the promise of German money (which never came) its name was changed to Bismark. When the cornerstone of the capitol building was laid the German ambassador was present, and Bismark himself wrote the town a letter commending the "intelligence of the citizens." That letter still in the archives, would make a good occasion for a public meeting and a patriotic bonfire. Over two thousand colored nurses have been enrolled in teh Red Cross. DENVER COLORADO SATURDAY October 12, 1918 BATTLING THE HUN WITHOUT AND WITHIN Once more we desire to state for those who are absolutely ignorant of our political position or true mission or real function of the Denver Star, that it is neither Democratic nor Republican; that it is strictly independent in politics, that it never has in the past asked; it never will in the future knowingly support any candidate for a public office who is unfriendly toward our race, it makes not the slighest difference to us to what party he belongs. We will support our friends whose friendship has been proven and all those who are true Americans and lovers of all the sons and daughters of humanity. Colorado must elect one senator and her congressmen this fall and she is entitled to and must have her best to go We must search records, which either recommend or condemn the possessor. Does not the record of Ben Hillard and Senator Shafroth, condemn? The greatest black eye given to the simon-pure, sectional democratic party of democracy was delivered by the Southern Democrats and a few Repubpublicans who voted averse to Woman suffrage amendment. The Star says that no party can make things or a people "safe" for democracy when that party is against equal rights to all men before the law. Democrat Senator Sharp Williams of Miss., said "when the President said it was essential to give the Nigger women a vote to win the war, I was compelled to refuse to follow him." Southern chivalry takes another direction when you consider that 12 states and Alaska have given women unrestricted ballot. These Southern states, Kentucky, Louisiana and Mississippi allow women to vote on bonds issues, schools and taxation. SECTIONALISM, SUFFRAGE AND CHIVALRY "I tell you very plainly, as the commander-in-chief of our armies and of the gallant men in our fleet, as the present spokesman for the people in dealings with men and women throughout the world who are now our partners **** I tell you plainly that this measure (the Anthony suffrage amendment) which I urge upon you is vital to the winning of the war and to the energies alike of preparation and of battle."—The President's message to congress delivered Monday, Sept. 30, 1918. On the following day, which was yesterday, the United States senate defeated the measure. The senate is Democratic and dominated by Southern Democracy. It is therefore sectional. If we were to be partisan we would assert, in view of the President assertion to congress, that the senate is unpatriotic in defeating the appeal. It placed sectionalism—state rights—before the great undertaking of winning the war. The issue has gone to the people this election. Those who believe in woman's right to vote, those who feel as the national executive does regarding its relation to the war, will vote against the party responsible for the defeat of suffrage, vote against the party as a party and as a whole without respect to the vote of an individual member of that party. We will let Senator Sheppard of Texas close with these words in a recent speech in the senate: "With what consistency may we proclaim our devotion to the people's rule if we refuse to permit the American people to consider a change in their own organic law? With what consistency may we announce our love of freedom if we continue to deny political liberty to half our own population? Have not women earned the right to a place by the side of man in determining the policies of government? She is at his side on the battlefields of Europe. She is filling the places in industry left vacant by his departure for the front. In the vital task of conserving every resource of his republic she is taking a vital part. Without her the war for democracy and humanity would long ago have been lost. Shall she have no voice in the government she has saved? Her hand is skillful enough to wield the surgeon's knife. It is powerful enough to till the fields, to fashion guns and shells, to guide an ambulance or drive a truck. It is magical enough to soften agony, to soothe distress, to temper pain. Is it too feeble or too unworthy to hold the ballot?" HUN AND HUNISM We quote a report from the September Crisis: of a lynch- ing in Brooks and Lowndes county, Georgia. "The murder of the Negro men was deplorable enough in itself, but the method by which Mrs. Mary Turner was put to death was so revolting and the details are so horrible that it is with reluctance that the account is given. It might be mentioned that each detail given is not the statement of a single person but each phase is related only after careful investigation and corroboration. Mrs. Turner made the remark that the killing of her husband on Saturday was unjust and that if she knew the names of the persons who were in the mob that lynched her husband, she would have warrants sworn out against them and have them punished in the courts. This news determined the mob to "teach her a lesson," and altho she attempted to flee when she heard that they were after her, she was captured at noon on Sunday. The grief-stricken and terrified woman was taken to a lonely and secluded spot down a narrow road over which the trees touch at their tops, which with the thick under wood on either side of the road made a gloomy and appropriate spot for the lynching. Near Folsone's bridge over the Little River a tree was selected for her execution—a small oak tree extending over the road. At the time she was lynched Mary Turne was in her eighth month of pregnancy. The delicate state of her health, one month less previous to deliver may be imagined, but this had no effect on the tender feelings of the mob. Her ankles were tied together and she was hung to the tree downward. Gasoline and oil from the auto-mobiles were thrown on her clothing and while she writhed in agony and the mob howled in glee, a match was applied and her clothes burned from her person. When this had been done and while she was yet alive, a knife, evidently one such as is used in splitting hogs, was taken and the woman's abdomen was cut open the unborn babe falling from her person to the ground. The infant prematurely born, gave two feeble cries and then its head was crushed by a member of the mob with his heel. Hundreds of bullets were then fired into the body of the woman, now mercifully dead and the work was over. This is the kind of Southern democracy which flies up against our president and opposes women suffrage, because forsooth, a Negro woman citizen might vote. The South is in the saddle at Washington, will Colorado stand this kind of democracy which makes it "safe" for only the Hun and Hunism? Is this the democracy our boys and girls are fighting for, bleeding and dying for in France that the Hun in the Capitol might be more hellish and his Hunism might become more widespread? Colorado wake up! Northern Democrats have no committee chairmanship in Congress and a little voice in their party's congressional deliberations, so there is only one way to change this condition and that is to elect Republicans to congress. Any attempt however to cover up vital economic issues or mistakes or to keep the control of every committee or chair men in the House or Senate by the South, on the plea that "the war is on" will not mislead those who pay the bills, which are growing into many billions of dollars annually. When the t. Louis massacre happened the local N. A. A. C. P. wired Senators Shafroth and Thomas to protest and they were answered by their dignified silence. With COL. FRANKLIN A. DENISON AT CAMP DODGE Col. Franklin A Denison of Chicago, of the old Illinois Eight Regiment, now the 370th Infantry in France, has arrived at Fort Des Moines from the front to recuperate from illness. Col. Denison has the distinction of being the Colonel of the only Negro regiment officered entirely by Negroes. He was temporary chairman of the Republican Convention that nominated Col. Roosevelt for the Presidency. The Colonel speaks in highest praise of the splendid work being accomplished abroad by the U.S. and allied troops. Private Wm. Haggins, member Co., E. 370th Inf., who is back from France, having been wounded at the front, spoke at the Park Street Branch, Army Y. M. C. A. Sunday FIVE CENTS A COPY. INVENTS GLASS BOMB Charles Stevenson, a young colored man of Amarillo, Tex., has invented a glass bomb to be used in underground work for assisting the United States in winning the war. It was sent to Secretary Baker for inspection. He pronounced it a success, and the government has offered the young man $5000 for patient and rights. THREE NEW NEGRO ARMY DIVISIONS Washington, D.C.—The Ninety fifth division has been ordered formed at Camp Sherman. Ohio, according to an announcement by General March. The new division here will be one of the three to be organized at once by order of the War Department. Camp Wadsworth, South Carolina, will organize the Ninety sixth Division and Camp Cody New Mexico, the Ninety-seventh Division. Church News --- CENTRAL BAPTIST CHURCH NOTES. Rev. P. J. Price, Pastor. 2414 California St., Phone Champa 1059 The health authorities closed all churches last Sabbath, on account of Spanish Influenza. We trust the disease will not take serious effect in our city. We wish to say that all papers concerning opening day for members are requested to watch the churches, schools, etc. The Old Folks' Committee prepared for the older people very ably last week. The closing on account of influenza prohibited the general activities of our church. President's of each auxiliary will please keep in touch with their work in a way that will stimulate the work of the church. PENDLETON, OREGON. Miss Lela Andrews is in Portland for a few days. Mrs. Barber is in Pendleton; her stay is indefinite. OGDEN NEWS. Mr. Ben Givens of Denver, is much improved after a few weeks' sickness and able to return back to work the O. S. L. Mrs. R. Frazier is visiting in S Lake with her sister, Mrs. Eastlin; Mrs. Ben Givens is much in love with the city and people of Ogden. Mrs. J. Robinson is expected home from Omaha this week, where she has been on a visit. Miss Hazel Chinn left last week for school in Kansas. Mrs. Dyer left for her home in Oma There is no serious illness among the members at present. All things were called off preceding the closing of the churches will be carried out when the ban is lifted. The general trend of things are moving on nicely. Let us not forget to pray often for our soldiers and our country. The September issue of The Crisis is one of serious nature. Good thinking people will not forget it early. THE UNION PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF CHAPELTON, COLORADO. Rev. O. J. McLeod, Pastor. Sunday School 1 p. m. Supt. W. T. Fields. Services every Sunday at 11:30 a.m. Order of services: Prelude, Biblical Recitation, Hymn, Invocation, Decalogue-chant, Responsive Reading. New Testament Reading, Toning of the Apostles' Creed, General Prayer, (Chanting of the Lord's Prayer), Interlude, Offertory, Prayer, Notices, Selection, Sermon, Selection, Gloria Patri, Benediction, Postlude. Mrs. R. Haskins, Organist. Mrs. H. Robinson, Asst. Organist. BARBER WANTED—At E. E. Pondezters Barber Shop, 134 S. First Ave. A good first class shop, a good locality and a splendid trade. Write or Wire E. E. Pondezter, Prop. 1t. All kinds of sewing and embroidery done at 442 E. Fremont St., Pocatello, Idaho. Go to 443 N. 4th Ave. for good home cooking, dinner and short orders. Mrs. Anna Brown, Pocatello, Idaho. CAMPBELL CHAPEL, AFRICAN M. E. CHURCH, 23rd and Lawrence Sts. A. MILTON WARD, Minister. MT. PLEASANT BAPTIST CHURCH No. 22 Arapahoe Street Rev. C. A. Miller, Pastor Phone Champa 3493 Sunday School 9:30 a. m. Preaching 11:00 a. m. and 8:00 p. m. m. B. Y. P. U., 7:00 p. m. Sunday School 9:30 a. m. Preaching 11:00 a. m. and 8:00 p. m. B. Y. P. U. 7:00 p. m. PLEASANT GREEN BAPTIST MISSION. Prayer meeting Wednesday night, 7:30 p. m. Preaching Sunday evening, 2:30 p. m., 8:00 p. m. All invited. 3131 Wal- nut street. Parsonage, 3119 Larimer street. WHAT YOUR LIBERTY BOND WILL DO. One Hundred and Seventy-Five $1000 Bonds WILL PROVIDE: One 16-Inch Sea Coast Gun 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 Riley, Kansas; Camp Grant, Rockford, Illinois; Camp Dodge, Des Moines, Iowa; Camp Taylor, Louisville, Ky.; Camp Sherman, Chillicothe, Ohio and Camp Dix, Wrighttown, 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. WHAT YOUR LIBERTY BOND WILL DO THREE $100 AND ONE $50 BOND Will provide: Five hundred trench knives PENDLETON, OREGON. Miss Lela Andrews is in Portland for a few days. Mrs. Barber is in Pendleton; her stay is indefinite. OGDEN NEWS. Mr. Ben Givens of Denver, is much improved after a few weeks' sickness and able to return back to work on the O. S. L. Mrs. R. Frazier is visiting in Salt Lake with her sister, Mrs. Eastlin. Mrs. Ben Givens is much in love with the city and people of Ogden. Mrs. J. Robinson is expected home from Omaha this week, where she has been on a visit. Miss Hazel Chinn left last week for school in Kansas. Mrs. Dyer left for her home in Omaha last Saturday, having spent a few weeks with her friends here. Both lodges of the S. B. P. O. Elks are still branding each meeting. All visitors in good standing are welcome. All Race papers and magazines are for sale at the Colored News stand in Ogden's fine reading room. Bill Smith, Mgr. Rev. Marque has been reappointed to the A. M. E. Church for another year. We wish him success. Mr. Sam McConnell and Mrs. L. Davenport are on the sick list. John Smith, Reporter. DEARFIELD BRIEFLETS. Mrs. Barnes of the Barnes Hotel, was the guest of Dr. and Mrs. W. H. Jones. Mrs. Emma Gee of Colorado Spgs., is the guest of Mrs. L. B. Ford. Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Holley entertained at dinner for Mrs. E. Gee. Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Goodall entertained at dinner in honor of Mesdames Gee and Barnes. Mrs. Bruce gave a dinner in honor of Mrs. E. Gee. of Mrs. E. Gee. Mrs. L. B. Ford gave a delightful dinner in honor of Mrs. Gee. Covers were laid for eight. Mrs. King of Kansas City, is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Aaron Bell. Mrs. Annie Hicks has returned home. Smoking TOBACCO Chewing 2 years old ! Hickory cured WHY NOT SMOKE AND CHEW ! REAL TOBACCO? WE want you to try some of our genuine Kentucky Tobacco aged by us in the heart of America's biggest tobacco growing district. We have 20,000,000 pounds to select from annually, and get the best for you. Per Pound 50c. Postage Paid SMOKING Mild ..... Ibs. Med..... Ibs. Strong ..... Ibs. CHEWING Mild ..... Ibs. Med..... Ibs. Strong ..... Ibs. Sample Free on Application Robbins Tobacco Company BOX 136, Dept. A. Mayfield, - Kentucky BEAN FIGURES WANTED Threshermen are asked by the Food Administration to make complete reports not only on grain threshed but on BEANS THRESHED; to get from the farmers, for whom they thresh, figures on BEANS HULLED, when the beans are not put through the thresher; and to include these figures in their regular threshing reports to the States Administration division of the U. S. Food Administration. Farmers should keep a record of their bean yield. ACCURATE BEAN PRODUCTION STATISTICS MUST BE OBTAINED. THEIR HEARTS NOT BURIED Many Instances of Celebrated Men Who Have Had Chief Organ of Life Preserved. A recently proved will contained the clause that the deceased "wished his heart to be separated from his body and preserved in spirits." The request, though a singular one, is not without precedent. In 1000 Lord Burton made a similar request, and nine years earlier the Marquess of Bute ordered that his heart should be conveyed to the Mount of Olives for burial. This was done by his widow. Robert Bruce enjoined a similar duty on his retainer Douglas, who may or may not have acceded to the demand. Shelly's heart is supposed to have been rescued by Trelawney during the cremation of the poet, but there is insufficient evidence on the point. David Livingstone's body rests in Westminster abbey, but his heart lies under a tree in Africa, and the exact spot is marked by a tall obelisk surmounted by a cross, raised by the Royal Geographical society. SEVEN WAR WORK RELIEF AGENCIES JOIN IN DRIVE Recognized Great Organizations Representing All Creeds and Elements Welded Into One. $170,500,000 IS THE GOAL Plan of War Department to Avoid Waste of Energy and Duplication of Effort Enthusiastically Adopted and Unity is Achieved. "Give me nine men who have a hut and I will have a more effective fighting force than if I had ten men without it." On November 11 the American people will start a one week's drive to raise the largest amount of money ever given outright by any people in the history of the world. The drive will be a new thing under the sun. For the first time Protestants, Catholics and Jews, forgetting all their differences, will line up shoulder to shoulder, welding their individual organizations together in their common devotion to the boys in the cantonments and over there. This amalgamation of the seven great agencies engaged in war work is one of the fine developments which have been brought about by the war and under the wise guidance of President Wilson. The seven organizations which together will make this united appeal are the Y. M. C. A., Y. W. C. A., National Catholic War Council and K. of C., the Jewish Welfare Board, the War Camp Community Service, the American Library Association and the Salvation Army. Each of them will need funds this Fall; each had planned a separate campaign for support. Now, acting on the suggestion of the President's letter of September 5, the seven campaigns will be rolled into one. The American people will be spared the burden of seven separate appeals, and the nation will have an opportunity to demonstrate splendidly that men and women of all creeds at home can work together, as men of all creeds over there are fighting and dying together. Dr. John R. Mott, whom President Wilson has spoken of as one of the ablest and most useful men of his generation, has been selected Director General of the drive. It is interesting to note that Dr. Mott's name was placed in nomination by John G. Agar of the National Catholic War Council and seconded by Mortimer L. Schiff of the Jewish Welfare Board. The general committee having the campaign in charge contains such well known names as Raymond B. Fosdick, Chairman of the Commission on Training Camp Activities; George W. Perkins, Chairman of the Finance Committee of the U. S. Steel Corporation; James F. Phelan of Hornblower and Weeks; Honorable Myron T. Herrick, former ambassador to France; Cleveland H. Dodge, George Gordon Battle, Mrs. Henry P. Davison and Frank A. Vanderlip, president of the National City Bank. In every city, county and town the campaign will be in charge of the biggest men of the community. Together these seven organizations represent a work that is staggering in its proportions. They have more than 15,000 uniformed workers, standing shoulder to shoulder with the boys every step of the way from home to the front line trenches. They operate more than 8,600 buildings and ship 500 tons of supplies to the boys in France every week. Fifteen miles of film set sail for the other side each week under their direction, and the regular weekly attendance of soldiers and sailors at their motion picture shows is more than 2,500,000. The Bibles furnished to the boys since the war broke out would, if piled one on another, make a pile more than twenty miles high. "Morale," said Napoleon, "is an other factors in war as three to one." By which he meant that one man who is kept contented and happy is better than three men who are discouraged and homesick. It is the business of these seven great agencies to help maintain morale. They are keeping up the fine fighting edge of our boys, and by their ministrations, helping to put added power into our army and navy and so hasten the hour of victory when they will bring our boys home again. It is predicted by national leaders that this great victory drive will "go over the top" in a larger way than any campaign that has preceded it. 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. Notice, Subscribers, Notice Notify us of any change of address DON'T OVERLOOK THE ADVERTISING COLUMNS. TRADE WITH THOSE WHO ADVERTIZE IN THE STAR. IN THIS WAY THEY SHOW THEIR RESPECT AND FRIENDSHIP FOR THE PA PER. FOR RENT—Neatly furnished rooms, with use of kitchen; 2445 Tremont Place. Phone Main 7290. Mrs Howard Steele. 10-10-18-46 Nice, clear, airy rooms, strictly modern house, close in; rooms from $1.89 up. 2152 Arapahoe. Phone Main 7607. Mrs. Lillian Horn, Prop. FOR RENT—2 unurnished rooms for light housekeeping. 2408 Washington. Phone York 8168W. THE DE LUXE Furnished apartments of two and three rooms; hot and cold water, gas and electric lights; modern conven- ences; rates reasonable to desirable tenants. Mrs. R. M. Blakey, 2852 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. 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 7764 W. Furnished rooms—Modern conveniences, nicely furnished. York 8771 at 2443 Tremont Place. Mrs. L. P. Holmes, proprietor. FOR RENT—Furnished room with bath; gentleman only 1869 Mar on 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—Nice, clean, airy furnished rooms; modern house; furnace heat. Everything first-class; 2462 Glenarm Pl. Phone Champa 475. Mrs. E. L. Stone. ff-12-1-17 FOR RENT: Furnace heated furnished rooms to rent. 2426 Lafayette FOR RENT—Neatly furnished room all conveniences, on car line. Mrs Katherine, Edwards, 2346 Curtis St Phone Champa 5665. 10-12-18-48 "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. 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. Dr. Thomas E. McClain, Dentist, of office phone Main 7416. Pyorrhea spe- cialists. 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 9 829 17th Street, near Curtis St., Denver, Colo. Dr. Westbrook is a member of the Physicians' and Surgeons' telephone exchange and when you want him and cannot get him over his phone, Main 6595, call up Main 1624. They will find him for you night or day. 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. We take orders for new Suits and else. Slightly worn Clothes and Shoes box See us first and you are sure to be best in Suits from $5.00 up. Shoes at prices to meet the smallc 1834 ARAPAHOE STREET Phone Champa 2571. G. W. Davis & G. C. Sam FOR RENT—1424 Court Place, 8 room house; right in the heart of the city; modern except furnace; has been remodeled and is in excellent condition. Rent $20.00. 1428 COURT PLACE—6 room modern in every respect; remodeled; in first class shape; rent $20.00. McEnery Clothing Co., cor. 23rd and Larkimer.. Phone Main 2834. Furnished Rooms for rent and light housekeeping. 1617 Clarkson. Call after 8:00 p. m. Joe Craig. 4t $19-18 Subscription $1.50 per yr DEFINITION OF DOG DAYS May Not Be Strictly Orthodox, But It Surely Covers the Ground Most Thoroughly. We don't know whether there are dog days, according to the almanac, that is, or not. Several years have passed since we had in the house one of those little books with a disemboweled gentleman on the front cover, so there is no means of finding out. A hot and muggy day is not a dog day, technically, unless the dog star, Sirius, the original Skye terrier presumably, is in evidence, or opposition, or something. Life is serious enough without delving into astronomy for useless information. Dog star or no dog star, dog days are days when one does nothing more worth while all afternoon than write doggerel and goes home wearier than he has been in a dog's age, to sleep like a dog and get up in the morning dog tired. Dogged around by the necessity to labor one would, did happy opportunity beckon, start off on a dog trot for the nearest beach or sylvan lake, there to camp out in a dog tent until autumn's crisp days, occasionally swimming around dog fashion in the clear and cooling waters, offering fervent praise in dog Latin. In the city dog days are just one doggone thing after another.—Newark News. Secret of Book of Revelation. The number 606 used in the Bible as symbolizing the beast is a constant source of speculation as to what personage the mystic numeral indicates. According to Prof. S. E. Slocum of the University of Cincinnati, the key to the riddle lies in the fact that in the case of the Greek form of the name of Nero, written in Hebrew characters, the letters of the name have each a numerical significance according to the number notation of the Hebrews, and the sum of the numbers is 606. The apostle in excoriating the emperor would have sound it unsafe to mention him outright, or in some obvious symbolism, such as in Latin or Greek numbers, while using Hebrew characters would be fair concealment to Roman eyes. The other imagery of the Book of Revelation works out strikingly in accordance with the assumption that John was writing discreetly about the persecuting Roman emperor. Women and the Movies I believe the next generation of women will be more interesting in every way, because of the stimulus given to their lives by the motion pictures. I notice so much difference in the women I meet since the pictures have become popular. The entire world has been visualized for them; it has been like a universal education. Not merely for the women who have lacked advantages, mind you, but more especially for the type of women whose outlook has been limited by their intellectual concepts—who could not be made to believe that there was anything worth while outside of their special circle of culture.—Margarita Fischer, in Film Fun. JOB PRINTING Trousers, and sold. led. Lat- cketbook. Geo. Morrison's New Orchestra [COLORED] Up-to-date Music and Harmony furnished for all occasions 2947 Stout St. Denver HOME Kulturized Food will win the War "carless seems the great Avenger; history's pages, but record One death-grapple in the darkness Truth forever on the scaffold 'twixt old systems and the Word. Wrong for ever on the throne— Yet that scaffold sways the future, and, behind the dim known. Standeth God within the shadow, keeping watch above His own." Free Thermometer to each Customer. SOLES SAVED SATISFATORY A NEW WAY WHILE YOU WAIT 1855 CHAMPA ST. PHONE MAIN 2727 PHONE MAIN 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-commis sloned Officers to be made from those who qualify in any Camp Funston, Kans., Feb. 1, 1918 the Division Ordinance Officer, $2nd —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 nugel 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 Privatey to $51 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 Retail 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. 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, 82nd 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 addresses. Number and address of Local Board Painting, Paper Hanging and Cleaning Printing Our Specialty Goes to the MPA PHARMACY Bath and Champa Streets Drugs, Chemicals, Patent Medi- Prescriptions Our Specialty. Cold Drinks Served 25 JAMES E. THRALL, Prop Is Delivered to all Parts of the City PLENTIFUL SUPPLY OF BEAUTIFUL HAIR Grower, Real Hair Grower Tonic and Shampoo. Own that this treatment will grow the shortest hair, litting hair, eradicate dandruff and prevents gray- ghly tried, no further inducement needed. Scalp ed, electric massage and hair dressing. I guarantee case of scalp disease. Six weeks treatment, $1.50. Given. Job Printing Everybody Goes to the CHAMPA P 20th and Cham For the Best Drugs, Ch cines. Prescription Cold Drink Phone Main 2425 Goods Delivered to a HAVE A PLENTI BEAUTIF Use Real Hair Grower, Real It is positively known that this treat stop falling and splitting hair, erac ness. Once thoroughly tried, no f scientifically treated, electric massa to cure the worst case of scalp dis Home treatments given. 20th and Champa Streets For the Best Drugs, Chemicals, Patent Medicines. Prescriptions Our Specialty. Cold Drinks Served Phone Main 2425 JAMES E. THRALL, Prop Goods Delivered to all Parts of the City HAVE A PLENTIFUL SUPPLY BEAUTIFUL HAIR Use Real Hair Grower, Real Hair Grower Tonic and Shampoo. It is positively known that this treatment will grow the shortest hair, stop falling and splitting hair, eradicate dandruff and prevents grayness. Once thoroughly tried, no further inducement needed. Scalp scientifically treated, electric massage and hair dressing. I guarantee to cure the worst case of scalp disease. Six weeks treatment, $1.50. Home treatments given. ARDRESSING The Real Hair Grower manufact- ry Mrs. E. Williams and will create your patronage. Electric Treatments, Waving lightening the Hair and all kinds treatments. Results Guaranteed PRICE 50 CENTS and Combings made up in any ches, Transformations, Puffs, etc. S. M. MORRISON, 4695 2558 WELTON STREET HAIRDR I use the Real Hair tured by Mrs. E. W appreciate your pa Shampooing, Electric and Straightening t of Scalp treatments PRICE Raw (Hair) and Combi form. Switches, Trans MRS. M. M PHONE CHANPA'4695 HAIRDRESSING HAIRDRESSING I use the Real Hair Grower manufactured by Mrs. E. Williams and will appreciate your patronage. Shampooing, Electric Treatments, Waving and Straightening the Hair and all kinds of Scalp treatments. Results Guaranteed PRICE 50 CENTS Raw (Hair) and Combings made up in any form. Switches, Transformations, Puffs, etc. MRS. M. MORRISON, PHONE CHANPA'4695 2558 WELTON STREET When You Want The heads, feet, bones or chitterlin part of the hog ex go to East's heads, feet, tails, snouts, neck or chitterlings, or any other the hog except the squeal, East's Market The heads, feet, tails, snouts, neckbones or chitterlings, or any other part of the hog except the squeal, go to East's Market 2300-06 Larimer St. Phone Main 1 Phone York 9068 Help the Blind O. Marshall & Son Dealers in CORN BROOMS All kinds of Corn Brooms and Barn Brooms 2541 Clarkson St. Denver GRINDING OF EVERY DESCRIPTION MUG DECORATING WHOLESALE AND RETAIL THE DENVER BARBERS' SUPPLY COMPANY LOTZ & KAHRHOFF 1527 GLENARM ST. DENVER PHONE MAIN 7221 Cutlery, Tailor Preparations, Manicure Articles Perfumes, HAIR POMADE BARBER FURNITURE and BARBER SUPPLIE Main 6171 Opposite Eas 718 St. Denver High School Decorating,Painting, Paperhanging Kalsomining When FRARY Does It, You KNOW It Is Done Right Watchmaker and Jeweler Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Silverware, Etc. Fine Repairing of all Kinds 611 27th St., Near Welton Denver, Colo. --- --- All Work Promptly Done E. WILLIAMS 2802 Welton Street 2248 Clarkston St., Denver Phone Main 1461 HATS CLO THING SHOES McEnery's Cor. Larimer and 23rd St. Phone Main 2834 Five Points Hardware Co. and Tinshop Everything in Hardware, Paints Oils, and Glass at right prices Also Furnace work, Gutting and all kinds of Tin and Sheet Metal work at Reasonable prices. 2643 Walton St Phone Champa 2078. WHAT YOUR LIBERTY BOND WILL DO Will Provide: Five Hundred Position Lights or Two Hundred Canteens and Covers Give us your Printing. We want to do your work Job Printing of all kinds Shorter A. M. E. Cor. 23rd Street and Washington Avenue, Rev. C. A. Williams, Pastor; Phone Main 4877. Parsonage 220 23rd Street. Campbell A. M. E. Cor. 23rd and Lawrence Streets. Rev. A. M. Ward, Minister, Parsonage 1218 23rd Street. Phone Main 5474. Scott M. E. 26th Avenue and Clarkson Street. Rev. T S. McMorris, D.D., Pastor. Phone Champa 4180. Parsonage 803 E. 26th Avenue. Episcopal. Church of the Holy Redeemer. 22nd Avenue and Humboldt Street. Rev. Henry B. Brown, B.D., Vicar. Parsonage same. Phone 970 5700. Baptist Zion Baptist. Cor. East 24th Avenue and Ogden Street. Rev. D. E. Over, D.D., Pastor. Phone, residence York 6007, study York 9377. Central Baptist. Cor. 24th and California Streets. Rev. P. J. Price, Pastor, Parsonage 2408 California St. Phone Champa 1059. Bethlehem Baptist. Cor. 32nd Ave. and Lafayette St. Rev. A. E. Reyolds, Pastor, Parsonage 3146 Lafayette St. Phone York 7647. Mt. Olive Baptist Mission. 28th and Blake Streets. L. J. Jones, Pastor. Pleasant Green Baptist. 22nd and Arapaho Streets. Rev. C. A. Miller, Pastor, Parsonage 2710 California St. Phone Champa 3493. Presbyterian. People's Presbyterian. Cor. Washington and 23rd Avenues. Rev. J. Thos. Hazell, Pastor. Phone York 2194. Seventh Day Adventist. Seventh Day Adventists Seventh Day Adventists'. 2917 Glen arm Place. Rev. Chas. S. Lightner Minister. Y. M. C. A. Branch. 2800 Glenarm Place. Phone Main 5639. J. S. Bell. Secretary. Y. W. C. A. Branch. 318 25th St. Day Nursery and Club House. 2357 Clarkson Street. Phone York 7379. S. P. R. S. A. A. Scottish Rite, Demolay Consistory No. 33. Geo. A. Dery, C. C. E. M. Neil, G. S., 1226 Champa St. (Call meetings only.) A. E. A. O. N. Mystic Shrine, Syrian Temple No. 49, Thos. Douglass, Ill. P. E. M. Neil, Ths. Rec., 1226 Champa St. (Call meetings only.) N. A. A. C. P. Executive Committee meets on second Tuesday in each month at their headquarters. 25 Good Block, Corner 16th and Larimer, 2nd Floor. All members are welcome. Lodge Directory Evergreen Chapter No. 36, O. E. S. 1st and 3rd Tuesday of each month. (Afternoon) 2630 Welton St. Lone Star Chapter 11, E. S. First and Third Fridays in each week. month. (Afternoon) 2630 Welton St. Centenial Lodge No. 4. 2nd and 4th Monday of each month. 1834 Arapahoe St. OLIVER ROYAL HOUSE NO. 2 meets first Tuesday in each at old Colony Hall. MRS. OLIVER, Queen. Smith Lodge No. 15, K. of P., meets the second and fourth Thursday nights of each month, at Elk Hall, 16th and Washington. The Pythians have opened an instruction school at Elk's Hall, 2588 Washington St. Meets first and third Tuesdays in each month. 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 Columbine Calanthe (K. of P.) 2nd and 4th Tuesdays of each month 2630 Welton St. Rocky Mt. Court of Calanthe, No. 3, second and Fourth Fridays of each Welton Fera Hall. Q. U. O. OF O. F. AND ITS AUXILIARIES. Rocky Mt. Lodge 2220. 1st and 3rd Thursdays of each month 2630 Welton St. Denver Lodge No. 8646, 2nd and 4th Thursdays of each month 1884 Arapahoe St P. G. M. Council No. 118 (4th Tuesday only.) 1884 Arapahoe. Denver Patriarchy No. 87. Fourth Tuesday of each month 2630 Welton St Furwallee No. 871 (Odd Pellows). 1st and 3rd Saturday of each month at 2 p. m., 2630 Welton. SUPREME CAMP C. M. White, Supreme Commander L. H. Lightner, Supreme Clerk Rooms 44-51. Arapahee Bidg ...Denver Camp No. 1, American Woodmen, meets the second and fourth Fridays of each month at Old Colony Hall, 28th and Downing Sts. C. N. Pitt, Commander, Carrie McClain, Clerk. Tent No. 1, of the Juvenile Department, will meet at Old Colony hall, 28th and Downing, on the second and fourth Saturday afternoons at three o'clock. U. B. F. AND ITS AUXILIARIES Speed Lodge U. B. F. Meets firm 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 (2 p. m.) Webster Temple 2nd and 4th Wednesday day of each month. 1824 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. 2630 Welton St. Western Star Lodge No. 1 1st and 3rd Tuesdays of each month. 1834 Arapahoe St. Captolia Temple (S. M. T.). Meets 1st and 3rd Saturday evenings of each month. 1834 Arapahoe St. Golden Gate Juveniles No. 1 (B. M. T.) 2nd and 4th Saturdays of each month at 2 p. m. 1834 Arapahoe St. 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 (S. M. T.) 2nd and 4th Mondays of each month 2630 Welton St. Mountain Lodge Elks No. 39. 2nd and 4th Wednesdays of each month. Spanish War Veteran. 2nd and 4th Friday of each month. De 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, Fern Hall. 2711 Welton. Progress Court No. 6, meets 1st and third Fridays of each month at 21:40 Washington St. Rice Pure Gold Tabernacle No. 565 meets 1st and 3rd Mondays at 2540 Washington. Panama Temple No. 450 meets 2nd and 4th Thursdays at 2540 Washington. Dunbar Chapter No. 26. Ancient Sons and Daughters of Jerusalem meets first and third Mondays of each month, Elk Hall, 26th and Washington. 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 Boydston, Chief Scribe, month, Elk's Hall, 26th and Washing- WILL PROVIDE Two sets of artillery wheel harness. WHAT YOUR LIBERTY BOND WILL DO. ONE $100 BOND Will Provide: Bursting charge of T. N. T. for one 14-inch high- explosive shell, —or five incendiary bombs. or condiment (salt, pepper, vinegar, etc.) cans for three companies of soldiers. Phone Champa 5431 Private Booths for Ladies COLD DRINKS AND ICE CREAM NIGHT AND DAY LUNCH ROOM Phone Main 6699 BOB CARRUTH, Prop. A Full Line of Fresh Fish in Season Oysters and Lobsters Save Sugar, Children! "Good bye till after the war" FOR THE CHILDREN IN BELGIUM AND FRANCE Bonbons TAFFY A Penny here means a Burn Over there Eat Corn meal mush- Oatmeal-Corn flakes- Hominy and rice with milk. Eat no wheat cereals. Leave nothing on your plate. 1712 me. J. M. MASON tailoring and Dress Neatly Done Satisfaction G n Street De S SUBSCRIPTION BLANK AND ER STAR $1 Mme. J. M. MA Ladies' Tailoring and Remodelling Neatly Done Satis 2 5 3 6 Welton Street CUT OUT THIS SUBSCRIPTION N BLA THE DENVER STAR Mme. J. M. MASON Ladies' Tailoring and Dress Making Remodelling Neatly Done Satisfaction Guaranteed CUT OUT THIS SUBSCRIPTION BLANK AND MAIL IT TO THE DENVER STAR $2.00 PER YEAR $1.00 FOR 6 MONTHS 1026 19TH ST., DENVER, COLO. Please enter my name as a subscriber to THE DENVER STAR. I enclose herewith One Dollar and a Half, the annual cash subscription in advance to same, or One Dollar for six months. Name..... Town..... Date ..... 191.... State.... name as a subscriber to THE DEN dollar and a Half, the annual cash the Dollar for six months. n. 191.... State.... Subscriber to THE DENVER STAR. I en- half, the annual cash subscription in ad- d six months. State. Please enter my name as a subscriber to THE DENVER STAR. I enclose herewith One Dollar and a Half, the annual cash subscription in ad vance to same, or One Dollar for six months. Phone Champa 2077 Day or Night THE MAYOR OF BROOKLYN Cammel & Co HOME FUNERAL PARLORS First aid to the bereaved Modern in everyparticular We take your cares and sorrow Relieve Your Bur E. V. Cammel, Mgr H. H. Mrs. E. V. Cammel, Lac C. M. Harris, Funeral Director Office and Parlors cares and sorrows to our Relieve Your Burdens el, Mgr H. H. Martin E. V. Cammel, Lady Atten general Director Jesse Do Parlors 2418 We take your cares and sorrows to ourselves an Relieve Your Burdens E. V. Cammel, Mgr H. H. Martin, Asst. Mgr Mrs. E. V. Cammel, Lady Attendant C. M. Harris, Funeral Director Jesse Douglas, Lic. LmD Office and Parlors 2418 Welton st Souvenir Ornaments, and OUR SAM Souvenir Ornaments, and Tobacco to OUR SAMMIES Phone Champa 1712 ```markdown ``` The Denver Star CHAS. S. MUSE, Editor. G. G. ROSS, Associate Editor PHONE CHAMPA 2962 1020 Nineteenth Street, Denver, Colorado SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year Six Months Three Months To get advantage of the $1.50 cash rate, all subscriptions must within 30 days after date of expiration. One Year ..... $2.00 Six Months ..... 1.00 Three Months ..... 50 To get advantage of the $1.50 cash rate, all subscriptions must be paid within 30 days after date of expiration. ADVERTISING RATES. Reading notices, memorials, condolences, card of thanks, social write-ups containing names of city people, 10 lines or less, 75. Liner advertisement, 10c per line. Display advertisement, $1.00 per inch. These prices subject to change without notice. Long time and large space displays, with cuts, electros, etc., special rate given. Reading notices, memorials, condone containing names of city people, 10 10c per line. Display advertisement, change without notice. Long time electros, etc., special rate given. It occasionally happens that paper in case you do not receive any number and we will cheerfully forward a duplicate. Remittances should be made by Order, Registered Letter or Bank Draft same as cash for the fractional part of taken. Send all remittances to THE I Communications to receive attentive acts, plainly written only upon one turned unless stamps are sent for post. Entered as second class matter in Colorado. It occasionally happens that papers sent to subscribers are lost or stolen in case you do not receive any number when due, inform us by postal care and we will cheerfully forward a duplicate of the missing number. Remittances should be made by Express Money Order, Postoffice Money Order, Registered Letter or Bank Draft. Postage stamps will be received the same as cash for the fractional part of a dollar. Only 1-cent and 2-cent stamps taken. Send all remittances to THE DENVER STAR. Communications to receive attention must be neway, upon important subjects, plainly written only upon one side of the paper. No manuscript returned unless stamps are sent for postage. Entered as second class matter at the postoffice in the city of Denver Colorado. READERS MUST PAY IN ADVANCE BY NOV. 1ST OR BE CUT OFF. New Order Just Issued by the War Industries Board. The paper mills of the United States have been placed on the essential list and all newspapers must comply with several defined regulations just issued by the War Industries Board, in order to continue the publications. One of the most important refers to subscriptions. All subscriptions must be paid in advance and no papers are to be sent to persons who fail to comply with the rule. You must not get three months in arrears, if you do, your paper will be cut by order of the government. The publisher must make sworn statements of this fact. Pay up! Pay up! Bring or send your money into the office. Do not wait for the collector to call. We must obey the government or stop publishing the Star. This applies to everybody, see Government's order published in this issue. November 1st is our limit. Pay up! Collectors wanted. The Star don't really know, but we hear it will be a marriage soon of a prominent business man. Don't have the headache guessing. The Star has often wondered why there was not any Negro judges of the election and why there were no clerks? We know we are qualified. Why don't somebody try and cinch one of these positions? Try it, ladies. You are entitled to it. The main people of Denver, especially the majority of our leading women voters, have welcomed the opportunity for our own to handle our affairs. There may be a few holding out yet, but the headquarters have told them individually and their friends were told the same thing, both at the State and County headquarters. The Star is curious to find out the next move. We hope to keep you informed. NEGROES, REGISTER OCT. 10TH (THURSDAY), AND OCT. 17TH, AT YOUR PRECINCTS, DON'T DELAY, YOUR VOTS MIGHT DECIDE YOUR LIBERTY AND THAT OF YOUR SON FIGHTING IN FRANCE. ANY NEGRO, MAN OR WOMAN, WHO IS ELIGIBLE TO VOTE AND WILL NOT REGISTER OUGHT TO BE FORCED TO LIVE IN THE SOUTH. FOR YOUR SAKE, OUR RACE'S SAKE AND FOR GOD'S OPPORTUNITY TO SPREAD REAL DEMOCRACY AMONG ALL PEOPLES—"REGISTER." There is a way that seemeth right, but it is all wrong. To the victor belongs the spoils and he who wins his spurs should wear them. "Nuff sed." Negroes in this fall campaign, we shall face cowardice, treachery, opposition and everything which might reflect upon our race, but with your help, encouragement and prayers, we shall make a fight for decency, democracy and a square deal for Negroes. WHAT YOUR LIBERTY BOND WILL DO Two $100 Bonds WILL PROVIDE Five thousand machine gun rifle cartridges. HE WHO CAN VOTE, AND IS UN-REGISTERED IS A RACE SLACKER. WE HAVE ONLY TWO KINDS OF PEOPLE AMONG US — TRAITORS AND SLACKERS AND TRUE BLUE LOYALISTS. WHICH ARE YOU? IF YOU ARE NOT RIGHT, GET RIGHT. WE MUST ELECT OUR FRIENDS. WE BUST BUSY, ASK YOUR NEIGHBOR. DO IT NOW. SEE THAT THEY ARE REGISTERED. --- $2.00 1.00 .50 each rate, all subscriptions must be paid . bilences, card of thanks, social write-up mines or less, 75. Liner advertisement 1.10 per inch. These prices subject to and large space displays, with cuts, is sent to subscribers are lost or stolen when due, inform us by postal card cate of the missing number. Express Money Order, Postoffice Money t. Postage stamps will be received the a dollar. Only 1-cent and 2-cent stamp. DENVER STAR. On must be newsy, upon important sub side of the paper. No manuscript re- age. at the postoffice in the city of Denver KYLE'S EDITORIAL REFLECTIONS The largest waste of any nation is the result of ignorance Some women remain faithful to their husbands and some to their ideals. Fortune makes friends, misfortune tries them. Ill-will never spoke well. A good conscience is a flowing spring of assurance. The most effective work is not always attended with the greatest demonstration. Rarely is. The real and fundamental preservers of a nation are the men who till the fields. The foundation builders of every cause are usually those who work out of sight. Men with oily speech make the road to ruin easier to travel over. A beautiful behavior is better than a beautiful form. "Be good and you will be lonesome." Who was it that said this to you? Mark it down, he is certainly the man not to be trusted. It is good to be lonely sometimes. When it costs a little bit of manhood to have a good time, better go quietly away and sit down alone until you have recovered and then start up the hill of life with a better knowledge of life's conflicts. ALONE? Never! The young person who holds fast to his integrity will never be alone, no matter where he may go. Close by his side will walk the angel of light who stayed the flames from lapping the three bodies in the furnace of fire and held his hand on the leash of the lions which were turned out to tear the limbs of Daniel asunder! Alone? Blessed loneliness which comes from putting away evil! That is the loneliness which brings God, himself, nearer and makes life purer, sweeter and grander. It is the loneliness which wins even those who sneer, for in their very heart of hearts, those who thus challenge you to join them on the pathway to sin, honor and respect you because you say, "I would rather walk with him out yonder, all alone, than to tread the primrose way of evil with all the rest of the world." WHAT YOUR LIBERTY BOND WILL DO FIFTEEN $100 BONDS WILL PROVIDE: ONE 37 MM. GUN. THE BIG FIGHT FOR OUR FRIENDS IS ON. LINE UP AND SHOW YOUR COLORS, EVERY-BODY, NO MATTER WHO YOU ARE, IF YOU VOTE, LAY DOWN YOUR PARTY AND STAND BY OUR FRIENDS WHOM WE KNOW ARE RIGHT. WHAT YOUR LIBERTY BOND WILL DO Ten $1000 Bonds WILL PROVIDE: Twenty Thousand Rifle Grenades 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. 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 --- THE WESTERN FRONT AT HOME Earn and give. For a year the young people of America have been coached in thrift. firstend of the old problem in the arithmetic book, "If Mary's mother gave her three apples, Jane gave her two, and she ate one, how many would she have?" the third grade girl is now sent to the blackboard to solve, "How many Thrift stamps at 5 cents apiece will Mary own at the end of 12 months if she saves 10 cents a week?" The girl in the grade above her is earning in her arithmetic lesson how many Thrift stamps it takes to buy the earn for 500 helmets for the soldiers in France. Still farther on the eighth grader is told to figure in terms of War Savings stamps how much it costs to supply a regiment of Uncle Sam's men and shelter tents. And now the Earn and Give club of the younger girls of the Young Women's Christian association is organized to turn those Thrift lessons into giving. The children of America have been turning in pennies and nickels and pasting a green stamp on their Thrift card. The Earn and Give club can now use some of those cards and War Savings stamps in their campaign among the younger people for the united war fund. This fall when the war council of the Y. W. C. A. made plans for the 1918 war drive, it included in its program the rule that no young girls under eighteen can do any soliciting on the streets or otherwise. They can give, but they can only give by earning. Consequently in order to co-ordinate the efforts of the girls in all the districts over the country, the Earn and Give club is enrolling members and has given out an estimate of $4 apiece to be earned for the war fund campaign by the American girls who still count their age in 'teens. Five dollars apiece from the younger girls of the country will mean that the nation as a whole will fill its charitable organizations' war chest. Some high school girl in New York city is going to earn her $5 by shining her own shoes instead of stopping at the Greek stand on her way to school and by making her own sandwiches for her noon lunch. Out in Iowa the girl who has been spending 15 cents plus war tax for a movie three nights a week is going to draw a line through the movie habit except when there is an especially good bill. More than one girl plans to clean all her own gloves this winter and to salvage all the paper and collections of junk about the house which should be sold to the junk man to be worked over into some productive industry. The girls in their 'teens are going to earn instead of ask others for the money. They are to sacrifice and give in their own names and older women will make the public requests for money elsewhere. Many of the girls who are waiting to join the Earn and Give club are already Patriotic leaguers, and they have learned several practical lessons in the thrift that will make them effective members of the new club by their conservation of fruits and vegetables. They have canned and pickled. Now when the end of summer brings the beginning of school they will change their thrift into winter thrift and begin saving their $5 for the Y. W. C. A. war fund. "Wherever You Are Is the Western Front" is the slogan which the Earn and Give club has adopted. Anna, one wiry thirteen-year-old daughter of New York's East side, who was one of the first and youngest members to join the campaign at a New York settlement house, had to have it explained to her that instead of western front meaning fight and fight meaning fists, the western front means work and work means save in order to give. The girl who joins the Earn and g club will discover that in con- junction with her working and saving in order that her club will furnish its quota of the money that is going to help the girls like herself in France and Belgium, she will also find numerous ways in the community to help the war that she had never dreamed of. She will see that all the fruit pits and stones that can be saved from her own dining table and from those of her neighbors, are dropped into the little red barrel at the corner, in order that the carbon which the seeds contain can be used in making charcoal for the American soldiers' gas masks. She will save all the tin foll that she sees for the Red Cross. She will help collect clothing for the French and Belgium orphans and perhaps send them some of her own. School girls in India, children from squidal, dingy homes, with absolutely no spending money, gave last year to Belgian and Armenian relief when they themselves were not getting enough to eat. They gave up their meant once a week for the Belgians, though they only had it twice a week themselves, and for the Armenians they set aside the handful of fresh grain that otherwise each girl would have ground in her own little stone mill. Both contributions, from all the girls in one missionary's school, amounted only to $5 a month. "But it was a 'tremendous sacrifice,' their teacher writes, "although a joyous one, It actually meant less bread each day, and once a week a meal of dry bread and water. This was done by 80 girls from the meanest homes in the world—children between the ages of five and fifteen." Four hundred thousand girls in 47 states have become Patriotic Lenguers since America declared war. If as many school girls and working girls from all classes pledge to earn and give, the united war fund campaigners will have $2,000,000 of their $170,500,000. LOOK! WHAT THE GOVERNMENT HAS GIVEN US, GOVERN YOUR SELVES ACCORDINGLY. 1. No publisher of a weekly, semi-weekly, or tri-weekly newspaper shall use in its production any paper except newsprint. 2. No publisher may continue subscriptions after three months after date of expiration, unless subscriptions are renewed and paid for. 3. No publisher may give free copies of his paper; except for actual service rendered; except to camp libraries and huts or canteens of organizations recognized by the Government, such as the Red Cross, Y. M. C. A., or K. of C.; except to the Library of Congress, and other libraries which will agree to bind for permanent keeping; except to Government departmental libraries which use said publications in their work; and except for similar reasons. 10. No publisher shall offer premiums with his publication unless a price is put upon the premium for sale separately, and the combined price is at least 75 per cent of the sum of the individual prices. 11. No publisher shall conduct voting or other contests for the purpose of obtaining subscriptions; subscriptions obtained in this way will not be considered bona fide subscriptions. 12. No publisher may issue holiday industrial or other special editions. industrial or other special editions. 13. Publishers shall, so far as possible, procure paper and all other materials from the nearest available source of supply, provided it is consistent with price, quality and service. 14. Publishers of papers of more than 8 pages in size will reduce the pages in excess of 8 pages 25 per cent. This reduction shall be an average reduction over one month's period. 15. Any publisher of a 4 or 8 page paper will be considered to have fulfilled the requirements of this order if he immediately puts into effect paragraphs numbered 1 to 13 inclusive, and in addition thereto reduces to the lowest possible point all press room waste. No newspaper may be established during the period of the war, except those for which arrangements had been made and plants purchased previous to the issuing of this order, or unless it can be shown that a new newspaper is 'a necessity. A sworn statement will be required from each publisher on November 1 as to how many of these rules have been put into effect by him, and what results in the matter of reducing paper consumption have been obtained. Yours very truly. THOMAS E. DONNELLEY, Chief Pulp and Paper Section. August 22, 1918. OVER HERE. Over here—over here— We will serve, we will serve—over here. While our boys are fighting, are bleeding, dying. We'll be striving—over here. So prepare—say a prayer. Do our BEST—do our BEST and beware. We'll be faithful and we'll be hopeful. And we won't give up 'till there's FREEDOM EVERYWHERE. —Words by Frank Bristol. 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 VICTORY'S WON. 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 1021-21st St. Phone Champa 752 Carpenter and Contractor New and Repair Work. . Second Hand Building Material For Sale PHONE CHAMPA 1019 A. V. GARDNER, THE TAILOR 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 Race Business 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 FIGHTING FOR DEMOCRACY PORO SYSTEM ST. LOUIS, MO. "PORO" COLLEGE-COMPANY ST. LOUIS, MO. Dept. D. 5 Points Cafe All Kinds of Chop Suey and Noodles Hot Chili Served SHORT ORDERS AT ALL HOURS 2721 Welton St. [Phone Champa 4016 PRIVATE PARTIES A SPECIALTY. CALLS RESPONDED TO PROMPTLY MATTHEW DELANO SEVENT PASSENGER CAR FOR ALL OCCASIONS 2745 Welton Street, Denver, Colorado Stand Phone, Main 6123 Residence Phone, Champa 1734 BROWN HAT FACTORY 717 18TH STREET Latest Style Hats Made To Order GUARANTEED HATS $2.00 AND $2.50 [Hats Cleaned and]Blocked Phone Main 7182 Denver, Colo Job Printing of All Kinds THE MUSEUM OF THE WORLD'S LITERATURE TO AVOID CONFLICTS, CONBULT THIS COLUMN AND SEE WHAT IS TO BE GIVEN. LADIES! LET ME MAKE YOUR CORSETS, STYLE, QUALITY AND FIT GUARANTEED. PRICES MOD- ERATE. PHONE YORK 66161W, BEATRICE LEWIS, EXPERT COR- SET MAKER. 2339 GILPIN STREET, DENVER, COLO. tf. The STAR Agent is coming see YOU ★ FIVE POINTS MOTOR AND CYCLE CO. We repair and sell second-hand wheels. Inspect our outfit. 725 E. 26th Ave. Give us a trial. Harry Seaman, Prop. 6-15-18c Dr. Huff's office phone is York 2313, and his residence phone York 8374-J. When not reached at office or home, call Atias Drug Co., Main 875. Mrs. Joseph Peach and her three children are leaving Oct. 16th, for a visit in New York City and other eastern points. We have received another price list from the paper company increasing their prices about 15 to 20 per cent, which will make all kinds of printing higher. The public will kindly take notice. Miss Dollie Scott and Mr. Silas Mills were married on the evening of Oct. 2nd, at the home of the bride's parents on Humboldt St. Mr. and Mrs. Mills have a large circle of friends who wish them a world of happiness. Hear the "Songbirds," presented by Shorter's Usher Club., Oct. 24th, 1918, at Shorter Church. Everybody come; it's a grand treat. Big surprise ahead. Her many friends will regret to hear of the illness of Mrs. Lucy Turner, at 3826 Short Larmer. Have you sent our boys any papers, letters, or cards to cheer them this week? If not, why not? They are yearning for home news. DO IT NOW. Send a postal weekly. FOR RENT OR LEASE to man and wife, one 7-room house with large yard and barn; must have knowledge to run motorcycle. Good place for right person. Edward Smith, 2391 So. Galapago St. See me. 9-13-18pd-4t Your last time to register is Thursday, Oct. 17th, at your voting place. Let the advisory board of the Flying Squadron get busy and register every unregistered voter. Mrs. Don Reeves of 2621 Clarkson St. has been ill for the past week. A speedy recovery is hoped for. Mrs. E. Williams, Denver's favorite business woman of vigorous activity, is now in Kansas City, Mo., after spending a successful trip East. She leaves the last of the month for the South, to be gone until Spring. Remember the Denver Star is only $1. for 6 months, or $1.50 a year, cash in advance. One furnished room and use of house and kitchen for good man and wife; need not apply unless in good standing. Inquire at 2526 Lafayette St., between 7 and 8 o'clock in even- ings. NOTICE. Get your Xwas presents ready now for the boys in camp, and especially the boys "Over There." Their presents must be sent by November 1st. Keep the Home Fires Burning: the test is now here, will you falter and fall or make good by generously re sponding. If your business is not worth advertising, advertise it for sale in the Denver Star. Mrs. James D. Diamond, who has been stopping at Hotel West, 711 28th St. left Wednesday for 1512 N. 12th St. Portland, Orggon, where she will make her permanent home. Mrs. Diamond has been in Denver quite one year. --- City News NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT AND DETERMINATION OF HEIRSHIP Estate of George D. Hall, Deceased No. 20653 Notice is hereby given that on the 21st Lay October, Monday, 1918. I will present to the County Court of the City and County of Denver, Colorado, my accounts for final settlement of administration of said estate, when and where all persons in interest may appear and object to them, if they so desire. Notice is also hereby given that in the matter of said estate George W. Hall, claiming to be an heir at law of said deceased, has filed an said Court his duly verified petition, asking for a judicial ascertainment and determination of the heirs of such deceased; and setting forth that the names, postoffice addresses and relationship of all other persons, who are or claim to be heirs of said deceased so far as known to the petitioner, are as follows, to wit: Grace Hall Gehm, daughter, 4268 Acoma St., Denver, Colo.; George W. Hall, son, 2527 Welton St., Denver, Colo. Accordingly, notice is also hereby given that upon said 21st day of October, 1918, or the day to which the hearing may be continued, the Court will proceed to receive and hear proofs concerning the heirs of such deceased, and will, upon the proofs submitted, enter a decree in said estate determining who are the heirs of such deceased person and the descent of the lands, tenements and hereditaments of such deceased, at which hearing all persons claiming to be heirs at law of such deceased may appear and present their proofs. LUCAS M. STAMPS. Administrator. Date first published, Sept. 21, 1918. Date last published, Oct. 19, 1918. GEORGE G. ROSS. MME. LEXIE BROOKS LEADS TAKAS. At the recent regular meeting of the Taka Art and Ltterary Club, the following persons were elected to office: Lexie Brooks, Pres.; George Contee, Vice-Pres.; Myrtle Moore, Secretary; Ethel Mallard, Asst.-Secretary; Lottie Cowell, Treas.; Lillian Bondurant, Critic and Beatrice Lewis, Chaplain. The principal work this year will be Red Cross and War_work, which will be done with their characteristic vim and push. Mesdames Dora Derry, Mae Bydd and Alice Mason surprised the Takas by turning over to them a neat sum of money from their recent entertainment. DOUGLASS UNDERTAKING CO. FUNERAL NOTICE Charles Henry Montgomery, late of 2549 Franklin St., passed away Monday, Oct. 7th, at the farmyard home at the age of 71 years. Death was due from a long illness. He was born in Lexington, Mo., came to Colorado 37 years ago; was married and reared a family in Denver. Was widely known and much thought of by those who knew him. He leaves to mourn his demise a devoted wife, Mrs. Mary Montgomery, two sons and three daughters. George of Chicago, Charles E. of Denver, Mrs. Tennis Talbert, Mrs. Grace Wright of Chicago and Mrs. Ruth Jones of Denver. Funeral services were held Thursday, Oct. 10. 2 p. m., in the opening on the beautiful lawn of her home. Interment, Fairmount. Rev. Williams officiating. Mary Jones Chiles, who departed this life Oct. 7th, at her late residence, 2335 Walnut St., the remains were sent from the Douglass Undertaking Co. Chapel to Omaha, Neb. for interment. When ordering Ice Cream, order from RICE & RICE, the only Colorcd Ice Cream factory in the city. Patronize your own. Special rates to churches and lodges. 2514 Washington, Phone York 9173J. tf. The Post Office Civil Service wants male at $60 per month and female at $25 plus 30 per cent. per month. Unskilled labor. Hear the "Songbirds," presented by Shorter's Usher Club., Oct. 24th, 1918, at Shorter Church. Everybody come! it's a grand treat. Big surprise ahead. WILL SAY GOODBYE*TO THEIR FRIENDS. Mrs. Ida Carrie, who goes to Portland, Oregon, and Mrs. Ida Holley, who goes to Milwaukee, Wis., were royalty dined by a coterie of their friends this week, preliminary to their departure to join their respective husbands in the above named places. A longing farewell given them will always be remember by all those present. MARRIAGE SURPRISES FRIENDS Mr. Joseph E. Payne surprised his many friends by taking unto himself a wife, in the person of Miss Colla M. Gross, daughter of Mr. Geo. W. Gross. Father H. B. Brown of the Church of the Redeemer, performed the ceremony, while Miss Carrie L. Gross was bridesmaid and her brother, James, was the best man. Her father gave her away. Their many friends wish them all the joy and sunshine possible to any young couple and extend their sincerest congratulations to them. The Modern Girls of 76 Knitting Club will meet at the home of their president, Mrs. Claribel Parker, 277 King St., Oct. 10, 1918. All members are requested to be present. Mrs. Otis Wilson and mother, Mrs. Jackson, also their guest. Miss Inez White, are all on the sick list this week. WANTED—Two furnished rooms in a nice Christian home with housekeeping privileges. Call York 7759. Mrs. Jones or Mrs. Horne. Must be located above Welton St. (11) AN OLD RESPECTED CITIZEN PASSED INTO THE GREAT BEYOND Mr. Charles Montgomery, one of Denver's most respected pioneers, died at his home, 2549 Franklin St., Tuesday night, at 10:30 o'clock, after an illness of ten months. He is survived by a widow, Mrs. Mary Montgomery, a prominent church worker, two daughters, Mrs. Wright and Mrs. Talbert of Chicago, and Mrs. Ruth Jones of Denver; two sons, George Montgomery of Chicago, and Eugene Montgomery of Denver, a member of the famous Morrison orchestra. Miss Mable Mollisson, an esteemed member of St. Joe Hospital, where she underwent a dangerous operation, but under the skilful hands of Dr. S. A. Huff, she is improving rapidly. POCATELLO NEWS BRIEFS. Mrs. G. Springer, Salt Lake, Utah Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Duncan, Missola, Mont. Mr. and Mrs. John R. Louis, Los Angeles, Calif. Married: Mr. Charles Vencia of Denver, Colo., and Miss Cleo Crosby were married at the residence of Mrs. Hattie West, 429 N. 4th Ave., Tuesday, Oct. 1st, by Rev. J. A. Duncan. Mr. John R. Louis and Miss Albert Roberts of Idaho Falls, were quietly married Oct. 5th, at the residence of her sister, 403 E. Clark St., and left Sunday, Oct. 6th, for Los Angeles, Cal., to spend their honeymoon. Mrs. Hattie West is a Denver Star reader. Mr. and Mrs. Washington and family have returned from Texas where they have been visiting their old home. Mr. Herbert Reynolds of 446 East Fremont St., is on the sick list, having laid off the dining care for several weeks. Mr. Daniel Lewis is second cook now at Bannock Hotel. All clubs were closed last week and several rooming houses, by order of the Chief of Police. What will come next? Miss Millie Caldwell is on the sick list this week. The new pastor will arrive to take charge of the A. M. E. Church in a few days. Mrs. Brooks says that she has been a widow for 12 years and is not anyways lonesome yet. Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Thomas have moved from 327 3rd St., to 318 N. 3rd St., where they have bought for their future home. Mr. O. D. Dennie of 333 No 3rd St., is also stopping with them. Mrs. Nina Elmore will return from Portland and open a Beauty Parlor here, planning to make this her future home. Mr. O. D. D. Dennie will become, on next meeting night, a member of one of the greatest lodges in the West — Free Masons — and he expects to make good. MILWAUKEE, WIS. Likes Columbia Orchestra Scores in Classic Concert. An enthusiastic audience of music lovers assembled at Calvary Baptist church to hear Jim Like and his wonderful orchestra render what was considered the best musical program ever produced in Milwaukee. The orchestra was under the direction of Dr. Rankford G. Holley, who electrified the audience with his skill on the violin as well as masterful directing. The delicate pianissimo in "Butterflies" and the ponderous forte in Calvary Charge were depicted with exactness and one was impressed with the possibilities of an orchestra of greater size under his baton. The soloists were excellent. Mr. Massengale gave an original and pleasing rendition, "Sunshine of Your Smiles," while Mr. Gossett's interpretation of "Pollinise Militaire" with orchestra accompaniment, was an unusual demonstration of technic, brilliance and taste. Earnest Smith sang with his usual clarity and sweetness which was especially noticeable in his higher register and Miss Cora Scott sang a very pleasing war ballad. To this feast of music was added the Old Time Darkies Quartet. Their song, "Comrades in Arms," was a fitting vehicle in which to display their matchless harmonies. The audience showed their appreciation of this number by prolonged applause and forced them to respond again and again. Sam Arnold roused the patriotism of the audience with "My Dream of the U. S. A.," and then touched their jocular vein with "Your Up Today and Down Tomorrow." The entire program was so well received that Mr. Like has been offered the Auditorium for its reittion where he will probably augment his orchestra to sixty pieces and add a large chorus under Dr. Holley's direction in the near future. NOTICE, SUBSCRIBERS WHO ARE DELINQUENT. GOVERNMENT'S LATEST ORDERS. Pay up your subscription to 1918, or we shall be compelled to stop your paper. The Government has ordered a reduction in print paper and has or ordered us to stop all delinquent papers. We hate to lose anybody, but please pay up. Mrs. H. B. Brown, whose many friends know her better as Mrs. M. E. Riley, is ill at her home at 1884 Marion St. OPPORTUNITY SCHOOL OPENS TUESDAY. The public opportunity school at 13th and Welton opens Tuesday, September 3rd. This school is open day and night and you may enter at any time during the year. This is your chance to learn a useful industry or to get an education bit by bit. Four thousand persons attended last year. This is for you boys, girls, men and women, if you desire a chance to prepare for better positions or to run your own business more successfully. And for the benefit of those who are new in the city we add that this is a free school and opened to all. We urge you to take advantage of these privileges Will furnish man and wife or single lady with comfortable bed room, for a few hours work during the day, or for company some evenings during the week. Cail Star office. 4t—9-28-18. PUT "BAD LUCK" IN DISCARD When the Game of Life Is Analyzed, There Is No Such Thing to Be Found. There is no such thing as "bad luck." The belief in it is a gross superstition. It is claimed that there is a lot of luck in poker. My observation has been that the man who wins at poker consistently is merely the best player of poker. There are some who have a "run of luck." But if the "run" lasts three minutes the opposite "run" generally lasts equally long. If the good luck holds up for a year, the bad luck appears during the next year. Any habitual card-player, unless he is a very poor player or an unusually good one, will tell you that his winnings and losses just al-ut counterbalance. In poker, as in life, the final determining factor is skill, knowledge of the game, patience, taking advantage of opportunities. If you have a premonition that you are going to fall in an undertaking you are promising yourself disaster in advance, you are merely saying to yourself: "I know I am not equal to that. I'll fall down on it, sure." Dismiss the premonition. Throw away the "charms" and tallis-mans. Get on the job—James Hay, Jr., in McClure's Magazine. Sign of Coincidence. Some folk are plastered with gobs of hard luck, others have it suddenly thrust upon them, but to have it staring one in the face is enough to get anyone's "nanny." That is what happened to a joyrider on the outskirts of the city last evening. He was bowling along, with a heavy foot on the gas, when suddenly there was a loud report like that of a French .75 and the fliver came to a standstill. The chaufeur muttered something, then jumped out to learn which tire had blown out. Before he had done so there was a merry chuckle from the young woman seated in the automobile. She pointed a finger at a sign on the front of the building where they had come to a standstill. "Look, Billy," she called to him. The sign read, "William Hardluckt, carpenter." What Billy thought he said aloud and the maid held her ears so as to avoid registering his temperament.—New York Sun. Elephant's Legs. The legs of the elephant differ from those of the more familiar large animals in the fact that the ankle and the wrist—the so-called knee of the horse's foreleg—are not far above the sole of the hind foot and the forefoot—resembling man's joints in that respect—while the true knee-joint, called the "stifle" in horse's, instead of being, as in horses, high up, close against the body, strongly flexed even when at rest, and obscured by the skin, is far below the body, free and obvious enough. In fact, the elephant keeps the thigh and the upper arm perpendicular, and in line with the lower segment of the limb when he is standing, so that the legs are pillarlike. But he beends the joints amply when in quick movement. The hind legs seen in action, resemble, in the proportions of thigh, foreleg and foot, and the bending at the knee and ankle, very closely those of a man walking "on all fours." United States Admirals. The first rear admirals in the United States navy were commissioned in 1862 when that rank was created by act of congress. David Farragut, for his valor in the Civil war, was made vice admiral in 1864, and two years later the rank of admiral in the United States navy was established for the purpose of honoring him. The grade of admiral was revived in 1890 and conferred upon George Dewey, the hero of Manila. The highest rank of American naval officers in active service was, up to a short time ago, that of rear admiral. The title of admiral was first used in France, and the first French admiral was appointed in 1284. A few years later the title was adopted by the English, and the rank of admiral of the English seas was first given to William de Leybourne by Edward I in 1297. Mile High Photo Company Denver's largest and best equipped Commercial Photographers Automobile Service Kodaks, Supplies and Wholesale Kodak Finishing MAIL ORDERS OUR SPECIALTY Roll Film Developed 10c---Prints 3c and up COPYING AND ENLARGING Kodak work left before 9 a. m. ready to deliver the same day 320-22 17th St., Denver PHCNES MAIN 7413 7414 Authorized Agents Eastman Kodak Company Oriental Restaurant Chop Suey, Noodles and Short Orders 1848 ARAPAHOE ST. PHONE CHAMPA 1. The Original Colored Coal Man 1024 23d Street PHONE MAIN 3190 Res. Phone York 2079 W. 2331 Ogden Street Show Your Race Loyalty E. L. LAWSON Buys at Market Prices JUNK, PAPER, BOTTLES AND OLD METALS CALL OR WRITE Phone]Champa]1176 1360 Hazel Court WANTED 500 LADIES For the next 60 days we will teach a $35.00 Course in Hair Culture by mail, and issue Diplomas when the course is completed for only $10.00, or installment terms.. On writing for information send stamps for reply Act at once and take advantage of our Special Offer. SUPERIOR CHEMICAL COMPANY 350 Beale Ave., Dept. W 2nd floor, Memphis, Tenn. SHORTER A. M. E. CHURCH To October 24th, 1918 Owing to the illness of one of the "Songbirds" who was to appear in Concert at Shorter A. M. E. Church Oct. 3rd, entertainment has been postponed until Oct. 24th, 1918, People holding tickets for Oct, 3rd will be good on Oct. 24th. Follow the crowd to Shorter A. M. E. Church October 24th, 1918. PROGRAM BEGINS 8:30 SHARP. Established 1905 H. Schwartz, Jr., Manager The High Ph Company and best equipped Commercial Graph Anything A Automobile Service Supplies and Wholesale Kodak ORDERS OUR SPECIAL Developed 10c---Prints 3 PYING AND ENLARGING Kodak work left before 9 a. dry to deliver the same d St., Denver Authorized Agents Eastman Kedak Company Eriental Restaurant BANDS OF SOFT DRINK NEAR BEER Tuey, Noodles and Sho AHOE ST. PHONE C High Photo Company Red Commercial Photographers Anything Anywhere The Service Wholesale Kodak Finishing OUR SPECIALTY c---Prints 3c and up ENLARGING before 9 a. m. the same day PHCNES MAIN 7413 man Kodak Company Restaurant SOFT DRINKS AND BEER es and Short Orders PHONE CHAMPA 1. R. E. Norris Original Colored C 1024 23d Street PHONE MAIN 3190 Nored Coal Man 3d Street MAIN 3190 5 CRUSH THE KAISER WITH YOUR CASH! What Do You Mean "Afford"? ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` We come to another big task. This time we need not call for helpers. The volunteer workers stream in myriad hosts along the main highway leading to victory and vindication. All patriots, by confession. The grumblers are awed into silence. If the taint of disloyalty remains anywhere it is hidden as a shameful secret. The heads are wagging and we hear many bold assurances: "I'll do all I can." "I'll go as far as the next fellow." "I'll take all I can afford to take." We are speaking, of course, of the Fourth Liberty Loan and the willingness of the war-backers to subscribe. This time we do not explain a Liberty Loan and how it works, or why we battle with Germany or that a war costs money. It will just about require a search-warrant to find a man who does not say that he will take all of the bonds he can "afford" to take. But, O my countrymen, we need night schools and correspondence schools, private tutors and Chautauquas and special information bureaus to enlighten Mr. A. and Mr. B. and Mr. C. as to the real meaning of the word "afford." Are you penciling around to find out how much money you can set aside without the slightest inconvenience to any of your pet private projects? Are you trying to decide how many bonds you will have to take in order to escape the charge of being a slacker? Are you getting ready to answer in hundreds a country that has endowed you with thousands? As you squint your eyes and try to decide upon the sum which will fairly represent your individual quota, are you acting as attorney for the United States of America or have you gone in for technicalities in order to protect special interests? In reasoning with your conscience, are you trying to be generous or trying to play safe? It is up to you. The buck cannot be passed. It is for each man to decide whether he is going to be a thoroughbred or a squeezer of 50-cent pieces. For the sake of your own self-respect, come through to the limit. If you live to be a thousand years old you never will have another chance to start your iron dollars upon such a noble mission. Do you wish to deepen the wrinkles upon the brows in Potsdam? Would you fortify the courage of every soldier in France? Shall we set in such a stack that the kaiser can't see over the top of it? All right! You are appointed a Special Agent. Don't wait for a committee to hunt you up or run you down. Hurry to the bank and break through the line and order so many Liberty Bonds that the man inside will be dazed and all of the neighbors surprised and all of your relatives proud. ★★ ✩ ✩ This Space Contributed to Winning the War by Welton Market 2625 Welton Street 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. 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 Livery Bean Auto Livery Stand: Night and Day Cafe DOWN AND MONTHLY TOTAL COST $49 Grand New Latest Model NO. 9 OLIVER Church, Society, and Individual should own one for your children. It is a necessity circulars see Oliver Typewriter Agency see Building Denver Colorado PHONE CHAMPA 5343 $3DOWN $3 MONTH Buys a Brand New OLI Every Lodge, Church, Societ one. Buy one for your o For Particulars see Oli 335 Empire Building PHONE CH $3DOWN AND $3MONTHLY 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 Empire 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 Quick Lunch Room Mrs. ELLA RAY Proprietress 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 Sundays, 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 county enabled to avoid a serious Coal shortage this Winter M. G. Garrison W. G. FUEL ADMINISTRATION DR. JUSTINA L. FORD OFFICE HOURS: 10 to 12 a.m., 2 to 4 p.m., 7 to 8 p.m. OFFICE AND RESIDENCE, 2008 Arapahoe Street, Denver. street, Denver. --- 1865-67 Curtis Street Phone Main 8628 Denver, Colorado 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; New York Wheel Chairs For Sale or Rent WM. JONES Maker of all kinds of Orthopedic Appliances, Trusses Abdominal Support, Elastic Hosierv, Crutches, etc. We desire your Job Printing. Hurry up work we are making a specialty of. Have us do your work. Star, 1026 9oth 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 entrained by the high class pictures of the Grand theatre. They just try to satisfy and please everybody. OVER 65 YEARS' EXPERIENCE PATENTS TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS & C. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free, a further an investment in possibly patentable. Comple- tions strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents suit free. Oldest agency for securing patents, before taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handmade illustrated weekly. Largest current year; four months. $2. Sold by all new publishers. MUNN & Co. 384 Broadway, New York Broadway Union, 5th Floor, W. Washington St. "THE YANKS ARE COMING!" Fargo. Jnr Censor. Copyright 1918. Here is the long, lean, lanky Yank, the most typical picture yet published of one of the American fighting men in action. Each Yank, delivered F. Q. B. France, costs the proceeds of forty-one $50 Liberty Bonds. "It's against all precedent. It's simply not done, you know." An American and an Allied officer crouched behind a precarious shelter near Bois de Belleau during a short bombardment preparatory to an attack. It was the man experienced in years of trench warfare who made the remark. The American laughed. "These fellows will break something else beside precedent before they are through. It may not 'be done,' but look, they are doing it!" trench. They astonish the Allies, but they astonish the Germans still more. They still follow the old set rules of trench warfare where necessary, as at Cantigny, but once in the open the Yank is individuality itself. It costs forty-one $50 bonds to put one of these long, lean fighting boys on the front. His living expenses will have cost nine bonds and his personal equipment, six. It takes thirteen $50 bonds to buy his service equipment. His pay up to the time he is trained. Several platoon waves of long, lean, lanky Yanks had emerged from shelter and were advancing in a typically American style. There was no barrage, no slow, methodical walk behind artillery protection, which has long been the proper thing on the Front. They dashed forward, took cover, dashed forward again in short, rushing charges, cheerfully wiped out a few impeding machine gun nests and mopped up a sector of Hun DREADED ENEMY OF AVIATOR Most Expert Airman, Caught in Fog, Is Practically at Mercy of Circumstances. Nothing connected with the history of aviation is more remarkable than the way in which the weather difficulties and dangers of a few years ago have been reduced to the level of minor inconveniences by the increased skill of aviators and especially by improvements in airplanes. It is hardly an exaggeration to say that at the present time the only serious outstanding meteorological problem of the aviator is fog. There is no means of keeping one's bearings when flying in or over a fog, and the same is, of course, true of low-lying clouds. The compass tells which way the machine is pointing at any moment, but not the direction in which it is flying, except when traveling exactly with or against the wind. There are no landmarks in the air. Even more serious is the problem of landing in a fog. The chances are always considerable of striking dangerous obstacles, such as trees, buildings, or telegraph wires, or of alighting in bodies of water, swamps, etc. Moreover, as one veteran flyer has stated, "what is distressing to the airmen in fog is the impossibility of knowing whether he be slightly climbing or slightly descending full tilt into hills, trees or houses without time to save the situation." And They Did Mrs. Robert Nelson, chairman of food conservation for Las Animas county, recently attended a Tea-Party. Along with the Hot Ocolong the Hostess trudded in a Creamer and that obsolete article of furniture, the Sugar-Bowl. All eyes were turned to the Sugar-Bowl. The First Guest lifted the lid with Visions of Helping Herself. But there in the Sugar-Bowl was not a vexile of Sugar—just a little AMERICAN FLAG. "Help yourself to the Cream," smiled the Hostess, "And Salute your FLAG." They astonish the Allies, but they astonish the Germans still more. They still follow the old set rules of trench warfare where necessary, as at Cantigny, but once in the open the Yank is individuality itself. It costs forty-one $50 bonds to put one of these long, lean fighting boys on the front. His living expenses will have cost nine bonds and his personal equipment, six. It takes thirteen $50 bonds to buy his service equipment. His pay up to the time he is trained and in the fighting takes the proceeds of another nine. His housing and final transportation to France takes four bonds more We must have millions more of him Every advantage in numbers means a quicker, less costly finish to the war, and it is a proud American who can say that he has a representative equipped and trained with his money, "breaking precedents" somewhere in France. MORE WHEAT IN BIN LESS ON THE GROUND That any wheat-grower can save enough wheat to pay for a new team of horses a year simply by putting tin strips over the knotholes in the floor of his wheat "barge" and by fastening a canvas strip three inches wide all around the sides of the barge next to the floor, is the belief of L. H. Rust, prominent insurance man and rancher of Weld county, who has himself tried out the wheat-saving scheme. As the header moves along the wheat field and the grain is thrown into the barge, considerable of the grain heads sift through the loose lattice-work of the barges' sides and sift out also through knot holes in the floor of the barge, Mr. Rust declares, the "leaky" barge commonly leaving a trail of wheat behind it as it moves along. The canvas strip fastened firmly to the floor of the barge and extending from three to six inches up the sides would hold all the wheat heads in- NUT SHELLS vs. GAS SHELLS The lives of hundreds of soldiers in the Allied Armies will depend on Nut Shells this winter. With the passing of the fruit season the carbon-producing fruit pits which the whole country has been saving for use in gas mask manufacture will no longer be had. From NOW ON, therefore, don't throw away a single Brasil nut, walnut, hickory nut, butternut, or cocoa nut shell. Olive, date and prune seeds are still available. Save them. The shells collected by the Red Cross in the Western states are sent to the Gas Defense Division of the Army, Potero Station, San Francisco. There expert chemists heat the snails in retorts under terrific temperature till the shells are reduced to pure carbon of unusually high absorbent qualities. "Mustard gas," all the lachrymators, and the yellow and green "cough gases" are all neutralized by this carbon. Denver collected enough pits and shells in ONE WEEK to save the lives of ONE HUNORED TWENTY-ONE Your Job Printing Solicited Your Job Printing Solicited look after my niece. God is not the creator of our evil (Spooks) Wm. Goff (at Union Station) mind. OUR DENVER BOYS' FAREWELL APPEAL. My Creed. I believe in the United States of America as a government of the people, by the people, for the people whose just powers are derived from the consent of the governed; a democracy in a republic; a sovereign Nation of many sovereign states; a perfect Union, one and inseparable, established upon those principles of freedom, equality, justice and humanity for which American patriots sacrificed their lives and fortunes. I therefore believe it is my duty to my country to love it; to support its Constitution; to obey its laws; to respect its flag; and to defend it against all enemies. I go to fight for my country and I trust that those who remain behind will be as true as we who have gone. If I do not return look after my niece. M Don't Pay a Premium for Tailored Apparel WHEN you view the volume of values in the Globe woolen line and then get down to dollars and cents you will appreciate the real economy of "NEEDLE MOLDED CLOTHES THE GLOBE TAILORING CO., CINCINNATI You will discover that you can obtain genuine custom-made clothes, fashioned and fitted to your intimate inches at prices so higher than for ready-mades. The Fabrics will delight the young man of fashion and make the business man look the part. Frank Elliott 2248 CLARKSON Phone:York 4269 J / LIBERTY BOND WILL DO N. FIVE HUNDRED $1000 BONDS An Amount of Powder Equal to the Output for One Day of One of the Government Powder Plants. 7 Phone Mui 7412 Good Bye—Good Luck. I go to put into execution what I have learned in the public schools of Denver. I go to learn how to fight and be fought. Whatever my fate, soon or late, uphold the standard of our race. Wipe all discriminations from the City of Denver and State of Colorado. My folks feel bad; visit them often; cheer them up and encourage the relatives and friends of all of your "drafted boys." I bid Old Denver Good Bye. Good Luck and hope I will safely return. Remember my family. Claude F. Davis, Denver Star Pressman. A DEMOCRACY IS FOUNDED UP ON EQUAL RIGHTS, EQUAL DUTIES AND EQUAL RESPONSIBILITIES FOR ALL CITIZENS—EQUAL RIGHTS TO ALL; SPECIAL PRIVILEGES TO NONE. THAT IS REAL DEMOCRACY. God is not the creator of our evil mind. 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 INCLUSIVELY TO THE EXAMINATION OF THE EYES, THE FITTING AND MANUFACTURING OF GLASSES The Swigert Broa. Optical Co. DEVENERS AVAILABLE OPTICAMS 1550 CALIFORNIA ST. HEAR SIXTEENTH ST. Four $100 Bonds Will Provide: TEN CAVALRY SADDLES Residence 2344 Tremont Pl. Olive 6K1 before 8 A. M. GEORGE G. ROSS Attorney and Counsellor At Law; 929 Seventeenth St. Main 6782 Denver, Colo LIBERTY BOND One $50 Bend Will Send 1,000 3-inch trench mortar shells on their way, -or provide bursting charge for 100 3-inch trench mortar shells, -or provide three fragmentation drop bombs, -or 110 hand grenades, -or fifty 37mm. shells, -or two rifles, -or knives, forks and spoons for a company of soldiers. WHAT YOUR LIBERTY BOND WILL DO One $100 and One $50 Bond Will Provide or enough T. N. T. for burating twenty 155mm, howitzer shells. or three hundred hand axes. FOR THE HAIR WHY NOT GROW YOUR HAIR? FORE USING WAS 6 INCHES LONG. A AFTER USING 2 YEARS 18 NOW 22 INCHES LONG. Mme Jessie Sclen 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 curl, 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. GENEVIL Scalp Specialist, practicing the Shampooing, Scalp Dressing Boston, Mass. Electrical M Remedies for all diseases o itch. Guaranteed to cure. articles sold. Combings ma Mail Orders Phone Me Jessie Cart Scientific Scalp EFFICI Neal Modern M CULTURE AND HAIR d with either Race with a Madam Dishman, Authoriz and 3 cents Stamp for Repo p Special I Hair Grower, stops itchy se increases circulation, refresh growth. TENING OIL needed w ever all in one. IME. DISHMAN Y J 2439 C See Me H GENEVIEVE CHAP acticing the Johnson System scalp Dressing and Hair Cut Electrical Massages given all diseases of the scalp--d need to cure. Face powders Combings made up. Hair ail Orders Promptly Filled Mme Jessie Carter Scientific Scalp Specialist 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 Send 3 cents Stamp for Reply "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. If Its In The Hair Line See Me PHONE YORK 7992-M MME. GENEVIEVE CHAPMAN 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 ADAGAHOR ST Cigars and Tobacco Phone Main 8428 J. F. CLARK, Manager St. De S. A. Bondurant trial Realty W. H. PRITGHETTE, M'g'r J. F. CLAR 2801 Welton St. W. H. Pritchette S. A. B Industrial W. H. PRITO SALES, RENTALS, 716 East 2 J. F. CLARK, Manager 2801 Welton St. Denver, Colo LEARN HAIR Weaving and making; up attention given to the so Use the REAL HAIR C will grow short hair long out and breaking off; no scalp; makes the hair Massaging, Shampooing WORK DONE BY WINNIE A Phone York 9127-W LEARN HAIR DRESSING Weaving and making up hair in any form. Special attention given to the scalp. Learn it all for $10. Use the REAL HAIR GROWER. It positively will grow short hair long, stop hair from falling out and breaking off; no more dandruff or itching scalp; makes the hair thick, long and glossy. Massaging, Shampooing and straightening 50cts. WORK DONE BY APPOINTMENT WINNIE ANDERSON Phone York 9127-W 2237 Washington 2443 GILPIN STREET Whist Tables PEB Phone York 4561 MADAM JESSIE CARTER'S WONDERFUL GROWING OIL Prices Growing Oil .50c Pressing Oil .50c Temple Oil .50c Sold at Elite Drug Store, 23rd and Washington streets, 21st and Arapahoe streets, Atlas Drug Store, 27th and Welton streets. AGENTS WANTED Enclose 3c stamp for reply to letters. 2761 Glenarm Street, Denver, Colo. Jessie Carter Scientific Scalp Specialist EFFICIENCY In Modern Method of HAIR AND HAIR GROWING with either Race with the DeNEAL DI- Dishman, Authorized Instructress Events Stamp for Reply Special Scalp Treatment Grower, stops itchy scalp and falling hair, uses circulation, refreshes and invigorates, h. NG OIL needed with “Denelo”—the in one. E. DISHMAN 2439 GILPIN STREET PHONE YORK 7992-M REVIEVE CHAPMAN Using the Johnson System of Hair Dressing, Dressing and Hair Cultivation, learned at Atlical Massages given for Scalp and Face leases of the scalp--dandruff, eczema and cure. Face powders, Creams and Toilet ings made up. Hair for sale orders Promptly Filled 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 Pleated . $1.25 up We Clean Furs, Feathers Gloves Hats, etc. We Call for and Deliver Comfort Pool and Billiard Parlor CLARK, Manager Denver, Colo S. A. Bondurant Charles Trette al Realty Co. Sold at Phone Champa 865 DENVER. COLORADO CITY NEWS STATEMENT OF THE OWNERSHIP MANAGEMENT, CIRCULATION, ETC., REQUIRED BY THE ACT OF CONGRESS OF AUGUST 24, 1912, Of The Denver Star, published weekly at Denver, Colorado, for Oct. 1st, 1918. State of Colorado, County of Denver, ss. Before me, a Notary Public, in and for the State and county aforesaid, personally appeared George G. Ross, who, having been duly sworn according to law, deposes and says that he is the Manager of the Denver Star, and that the following is, to the best of his knowledge and belief, a true statement of the ownership, management (and if a daily paper, the circulation), etc., of the aforesaid publication for the date shown in the above caption, required by the Act of August 24, 1912, embodied in section 443, Postal Laws and Regulations, printed on the reverse of this form, to-wit: 1. That the names and addresses of the publisher, editor, managing editor, and business managers are: Publisher, Charles Trotter, 2139 Cur tis, Denver, Colo. Editor, Chas. S. Muse, 1221 Gaylord St. Associate Editor and Business Manager, George G. Ross, 2344 Tremont Place, Denver, Colo. 2. That the owners are: (Give names and addresses of individual owners, or, if a corporation, give its name and the names and addresses of stockholders owning or holding 1 per cent or more of the total amount of stock.) Charles Trotter, 2139 Curtis St., Denver, Colo. 3. That the known bondholders, mortgagees, and other security holders owning or holding 1 per cent or more of total amount of bonds, mortgages, or other securities are: (if there are none, so state.) ALEXANDER A. WALLER. My commission expires Aug. 9, 1920. Mrs. M. D. Davis the Mother of Mrs. Emma L. Jones of 2938 Welton, has moved here from Pueblo, having been a resident of that city for the past 25 years. We welcome her to our city. Hear the "Songbirds," presented by Shorter's Usher Club., Oct. 24th, 1918, at Shorter Church. Everybody come; it's a grand treat. Big surprise ahead. NOTICE! Miss Helen Dobbs of Evergreen, Colo., has returned to Fort Collins to take up her last year of college studies. She will complete her course in Red Cross work. Mr. Harry Polk of 335 Adams, is reported very ill this week. Frederick, his son, who has been ill, is able to be out. Have you sent our boys any papers, letters, or cards to cheer them this week? If not, why not? They are yearning for home news. DO IT NOW. Send a postal weekly. THREE chair Barber Shop for sale; for particulars call at 1021 19th St (2t) Miss Marguerite Barbour has supplanted Mrs. Claire Smith, who resigned two weeks ago, as our city collector. Any courtesy shown her will be appreciated by the Star. HAIR UNDER MME. JESSIE CARTER'S SYSTEM. Mme. 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. Mr. Maddox, who for several months has held a prominent place in Denver social circles, left last Tuesday for Detroit, Michigan. The little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. B. Parker has been ill for the past week. FOR SALE. For Sale—5-room press brick on 1½ lots, modern, 2400 block Williams. Beauty, Call The Colored Am. L. & Realty, Champa 455, talk to Waller. Deerfield Hotel—16 rooms for rent. 2130 Arapahoe St., call Colored-American Realty Co., Champa 455. An 8-room, pressed brick, fully modern, near city, between Colfax and 17th Ave., $3,500. Colored-American Loan & Realty Co., Champa 455. 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. 160-acre ranch in the Dearfield Colony. Price attractive for quick action. The Colored-American Loan & Realty Co. Champa 455. To Trade—K. C. property, $3,500.00 value to trade for Denver property. Call Colored Am. L. & Realty, Champa 455. HELP OUR DENVER BOYS. Send the News, Times or Post to our drafted boys in Caamp Lewis, they re dying for Denver news. A very reasonable rate can be secured. We are furnishing them with the Star. Don't forget our boys, as we don't know how soon we will be in their places. Mothers, sweethearts and sisters, get busy. This is our country! We have worked for it, we have suffered for it, we have fought for it; we have made its music, we have tinged its ideals, its poetry, its religion, its dreams; we have reached in this land our highest modern development and nothing, humanly speaking, can prevent us from eventually reaching here the full stature of our manhood. Our country is at war. The war is crithis is OUR COUNTRY, this is OUR WAR. We must fight it with every ounce of blood and treasure.—Crisis. our people burned, lynched and imprisoned in the South, has not Coloado one manly man whose conscience is clear enough, whose heart is big enough and whose soul is broad and christian enough to cry out against these hellish horrors only duplicated by Huns over the sea? The Star thinks we have in the person of Hon. Lawrence C. Phipps whom we believe will fully represent Colorado at Washington and who will not be seen at a dinner with Randolph Hearts, whose pro-German associates are connected with crimes against U. S. Senator Shafroth can find time and opportunity to as sociate with a man, alleged to be Pro German, but cannot find time nor opportunity to protest against horrors done the loyal Negro in the U. S. A. Senator Shafroth and Representative Keating, with all their preserving the life, liberty and hap-powerful party influence completely failed to exert one bit in behalf of piness of black humanity. So why elect them again. Colorado needs and must have a change. Phipps and Valle will do the work. John W. Hardy has been selected to bring the glad tidings to the various communities of this state, organizing clubs, forming flying squadrons of the women, and pressing into service 10-minute-interview speakers of our most prominent and representative people. Negroes, the time is critical and ever present when every Negro must go "over the top." We all must elect our friends and battle the Hun within and without our lines. Colorado needs a change in Congress. Help us to put her on the map. Boy Scout Note3 With only 4 boys working in the 4th Liberty Loan, Troop 50 raised over $27,000. They Wish to thank the citizens of Denver for helping them to make such a splendid record. James Brickler and Harry Polk got 25 subscribers each, which entitles them to a Liberty Loan Medal, which is issued by the President. The other two boys who worked so faithfully and deserve special mention are Henry Gale and Frank Brickler. Fred Polk has been doing great work at the Red Cross Headquarters. Henry Gale, James Brickler, Fred Polk and Frank Brickler were special messengers for the Liberty Loan Committee on Wednesday. The American Woodmen subscribed $20,000, while the two individuals subscribed one thousand each. Y. W. C. A. NOTES. On account of the Spanish Influenz (the club has been closed this week and no meetings have been held. Twenty-four of our patriotic league girls took part in the Liberty Loan parade Monday. The Patriotic league drill team is being instructed by Mr. William Robinson of the Spanish War Veterans. Drills will be held Saturday afternoon. Register for the Bible class and gymnasium. WHAT YOUR LIBERTY BOND WILL DO Two $1000 and One $500 Bond Forty 155 mm. shells or a dozen sets of artillery lead harness. T MME JEFFERSON, flc Alterer and Ladies Tailor Scientific Alterer and Ladies Tailor 2642 California Street The Hamilton National Bank The Hamilton National Bank 17th and Champa Streets PAYS 4 PER CENT ON SAVINGS DEPOSITS or Federal Reserve Bank District under supervision U. S. Government by a full line of Plough's Black and White Toilet Articles the Atlas Drug Co. Incorporated Member Federal Reserve Bank District No.10, under supervision U.S. Government We carry a full line of Plough's Black and White Toilet Articles The Atlas Drug Co. Loaders in Prescriptions HARRY L. McCLAIN announces his readiness to supply first class cars with careful, courteous and efficient chauff- onable rates to the LAST LETTER in Service. Stand Phone Champa 5960 Golden West Cafe, 2741 Welton St. 933 Welton St. Phone Main 7752 AUTO LIVERY HARRY L. McCLAIN announces his readiness to supply first class cars with careful, courteous and efficient chauffeurs at reasonable rates to the LAST LETTER in Service. Stand Phone Champa 5960 Golden West Cafe, 2741 Welton St. Residence 2933 Welton St. Phone Main 7752 Mme. M. L. Elliston CHIROPODIST 1505 East 16th Avenue For Ingrowing Nails Removed at Your Home me for Appointment. York 8340 Corns or Ingrowing Nails Removed at Your Home Phone for Appointment. York 8340 A. A. WALLER. Manager Notary Public J. Walker's Paul Hair Grower Walker Scalp Treatments given by Mrs. Brooks, the only Walker Graduate of experience in Denver. Work done by ment. Phone York 4716-J. 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. ERN SPECIALTY MFG. CO. ERT HAIR STRAIGHTENING TATISFACTION GUARANTEED PLASCLASCOVITE, J. KING & COMPANY mer St. Denver, Colo. are requested to notify us if their s to come promptly. MODERN SPECIALTY MFG. CO. EXPERT HAIR STRAIGHTENING SATISFACTION GUARANTEED SIDNEY PLASCLASCOVITE, J. KING & COMPANY 2105 Larimer St. Denver, Colo. Patrons are requested to notify us if their paper fails to come promptly. J. R. CONTEE, Pres. & Mgr. Phone York 7992 FRANK S. REED Licensed Embalmer and Director Notary Public Parlors MM Scientific A 2642 The Ham Member Federal No. 10, under We carry a full li The A PHONE MAIN 875 AUTO LIVERY feurs at reasonable rate Stand Golden W Residence 2933 Well Corns or Ingrow Phone for A W. A JONES, M. D. President CONSTRUCTION TRADE ROYALTY PROPRIETARY Mme. C. J. Wa Wonderful Hair The Walker S B. G. Brooks, years' experie appointment. PHONE MAIN 6123 DAY OR NIGHT The Douglass Undertaking Co. Incorporated and Bonded to the City Polite Service To All Lady Assistant 2745 Welton St CALL Main 5 0 3 7 Incorporated 2701 WELTON ST. H. J. M. BROWN Treasurer The Colored American Loan and Realty Co. Office, 2636 Welton Street Phone Champa 455 2345 Ogden Street