Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 07, 1917, Page 4, Image 4

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THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY. JUNE 7, 1917.
MEDICAL CORPS AT "
' SUMMER SCHOOLS
Removable Physical Defects to
Be Barred by the Publio
School Authorities
in Omaha.
"Let no school child be hampered
by removable physical defects," will
be the slogan which will be observed
by the public school authorities dur
ing the summer vacation at medical
inspection centers to be maintained
at Long, Cass, Lincoln, Mason, South
Central and West Side schools.
Charlotte Townsend, supervisor,
will have general charge. Dr. E. T.
Manning will attend one of the cen
ters each morning from 8 to 9 o'clock,
making the circuit once each week.
The regular staff of school nurses v. ill
have patients ready for the doctor
when he arrives. Treatment of skin
diseases and minor operations will
be offered without charge to those
unable to pay. Cases will be diag
nozed and referred to dispensaries.
Follow-up work in homes will be
done by nurses.
Another feature of the work will be
talks on hygiene.' ' ' i
Seventh and eighth grade boysnd
Elrls who have joined the hygiene
clubs of .the schools will report to
these centers the number of times
they have1 taken baths and cleaned
their heads and teeth.
The purpose of these summer med
ical inspection centers is to keep the
school medical situation well in hand
during the summer vacation and to
stimulate among the children an in
terest in health and cleanliness.
The centers' will be opened oh
Monday. June 18.
Red Cross Notes
Mra. Belmont Tiffany, formerly
chairman ot the Red Cross hospital
supply work rooms in New York City,
has written O. W.
Wattles, chair
man of the com
mittee on military
relief and chair
man of the
finance commit
tee, volunteering
to come to Omaha
to speak on the
work of the Red
Cross.
"It is possible
that she may be
asked to come a
said Mr. Wattles.
ii fli
5?.
little later on,"
Mrs. Wllhelm Goes to Chicago
Mm. C. M. Wlllialm, chairman ot the
committee on civilian rellet or the
Omaha Red Cross chapter, has gone to
Chicago tor the purpose of gaining
more enlightenment from Red Cross
experts on the work. That this branch
ot the Red Cross activities is to be
come one of the most important is
tne Belief or local omciaia, aa re
quests have already come for assist
ance from dependent families' of soldiers.
Although the committee Is as yet In
complete, the following women will
serve under Mrs. Wllhelm: Mesdames
P. W.'Judson, W. R. McKeen, Wil
son Low, J. B. Bummers, Walter T.
Page, -ueorae A. Josiyn, Ham Cald
well,- Louis Nash, Carles Offut, Low
rle Child's, Herbert Rogers, M. T. Bar
low, Barton Millard, Kdward Porter
Peck and William Archibald Smith.
A course of study is being planned
by Mrs. Wllhelm and definite work
will begin as soon as she returns from
Chicago.
It i possible that Charles BflUman.
national director of the civilian relief
work Irt the Red Cross society, will
return to assist the organisation in the
work here;
LIKE THE
LCJIISSDOCTOn
L'l
YOUR dentist weald ptrtu to to
paid lor ktepioj you wlL
8m hiss eltea sad yoa will sot aaly
Bar ssoasy but ward of essay ditsusa
dimity das to ialestioa riiiattinj la
tooth oavitiss.
Soo too dntlrt oftsa sad ho woa'l
Bart yo Hs eta fill too osvitiss while ;
tbey are assail, bsfors to tssla aro
badly lajurad. Hs eaa alto adrits yon
ODOsraiol the of tooth brain,
dsatifries sad dental loss whleh keep'
your maata ia soaditioa to muf tooth
dssay. ' :,t , . '' ;" ,
Tha faaettoaof a dtotilrioolt to sbanta
to Bslp the tooth bnlih rsmovofood
dspotlts, Bo-eallsd "ftrmieidsl" daa.
tUriac, sro likely to iajuro the moots
sad attack the teeth. Tha mouth liquids
are ooattaatly ahaaliad and tha direct
shots oi aa aatiteptio otnnot pottibly last lonf.r Ihaa30 miautea, 1
Ask yoor dsatitt ii this Ita't so. Ask him alto about S.S. Whits
Tooth Pasts, which is made by the world's bait kaowa mtnu.
(tataror of dtatal equipment aad supplies! and embodies la,
latoat lading, oi dsaul seism. ,
' Yoar dra(iit hsa it. 8i(a and mail no eoupos btlow forewpy
ol oar booklet "Good Teathl How They Crow Aad How To
Keep Them." - ; ; ., . ..
.' THE S. S. WHITE DENTAL MFG.' COMPANY
MOUTH AND TOILET PatKFAStATIONfll
xttafeatftlttk Street - rklladalpMa
I
t -.
coupon
riMM ttas a. a Ms t "Q4 TmAe Nm
tknGmiM HiTl(mTlial'ili
a Hawk- It w W t. I. Wkut Tmu fit!,
Asatmt.
IS2Z2Z2Z22222Z222ZZZR
: Vflark near Jackson Boulevard
The Hotel Success
; .: . . i ... ,vsv
'The hotel's excellent service,
. its convenience for the quick'
' transaction of business, its
; .. " proximity; to theatres shops
and public buildings make it
, the ideal headquarters for a
crowded day..
1
v 450 Rooms
$1.50 up
With Bath
$2.00 up
111
P jiiiiiiniriiiim.ti. ar'tWlWrg-l rat
Omaha Girl Fights Requisition
To Return Her to St, Louis Courts
Hearing on a writ of habeas cor
pus, filed in district court by attor
neys for ' 'argarct Holton, 23 years
old, wanted in St. Louis as a witness
at the trial of Paul O. Sommer, promi
nent Mound City club man, bank di
rector and manufacturer, charged with
embezzlement, will be held Thursday
morning before Judge Scars.
Deputy County Attorney O'Sulli
van, representing the state, asked that
the hearing be set over one day to
enable him to get further details of
the case from the St. Louis authori
ties. Miss Holton's attorneya are
Arthur Mullen and Dank! Horrigan.
Miss Holton, formerly Sommer's
secretary, was arrested last Saturday
by Omaha pulicc officials following
advices that she be held here for St
Louis authorities o.i a charge of "for
gery in the third degree."
The young woman and her mother,
Mrs. Josephine Holton, who came to
Omaha to aid her daughter in the
court fight against being returned to
St Louis, are living at the Alsatian
apartments. '
She ia out en bond pending the
habeas corpus hearing. Her attorneys
said they would fight the case to the
6nish.
l7
MARGARET HOLTOT
Photographer Fined for
Hitting Fellow Craftsman
Hans Mortensen, photographer, 309
South Fifteenth street, was fined $1
and costs for assault on Pat McAn
drews, another photographer. McAn
drews, while taking a picture, was ap
proached by Mortensen, who in
formed him that it was necessary to
have a permit to take pictures on the
street. McAndrews told him that it
would be all right and started walking
away when Mortensen hit him in the
back of the head.
George Stoney Now Buys
Government Supplies Here
Colonel G. S. Bingham, depot quar
termaster, has placed George J. Sto
ney, clerk of the quartermaster corps,
in charge of purchasing and supply
desk to fill the vacancy caused by
transfer of C L. Gyger. for service
abroad. Mr, Stoney is welt known to
the merchants of Omaha, as he held
the same position before going to
the Mexican border for duty in 1911.
Brothers Join the Navy, v
Enlisting from Omaha
Bert and Paul Jacobson, brothers,
have enlisted in the navy. Both boys
originally came to Omaha from
Louisville, Neb., where their parents
live. Paul was office manager for
Traver- Bros, and Bert was office
manager for the German-American
Life Insurance company. Both are
university men.
Warning
The makers of genuine
Aspirin caution you to
see that every package
and every tablet of
Aspirin bears
"Tha
Bayer Cross
Your
ot Purity"
XalamiridfapodntWM.f U The trade mark "AsDirin"eU.S.!t.O
' ..-r ftoninaiMaadlOO is a guarantee thtt the nnoetWcartrtWr
BaswCtpaalMaf AapMa told la c ttlicylkacid in theae tthltts and csptaksia
' adrisHbiaolUufH ol tha reliable Barer mtniitarmre.
Bee Want Ads Are Business Boosters
They Bring Results
t-JI ammaasMaam-mmmmmmmmiimaaBaiaaammmmmmaMmmmaammmmammaimmiaaa
Story of the Lusitania
On of thm CautM of America'.
Declaration of War
A llttl over two years afo todays to hm
nut, Mar 7. 1916. tha clviliitd world wu
hoeked aa navar Iwfora when tha first
nawa of tha world' grcatsst arhna earn
ovar tha eahlaa from England. Gtrmanjr,
that wholeaala mtrrdcrar of tnnoeenti. that
arrogant dictator to tha world, had tor
ptdoad the mia-hty Lmttanla and sent ovtr
thoiMand souls to thtir wstary srava.
Hark baek two years and raoall tha In
eldants of that tarribla ttvgsdy. The vreat
ship had ittamed out of a neutral port with
Its thousand-fold human cargo. It carried
no armament; Its mission was a, peaceful
one. By all tha laws of custom1 and hu
manity that ship wss Inviolate, her passen
ejars were entitled to every right of travel
nd protection on the high seas.
Little did the passengers dream thai Ger
many would make good her threat to sink
the ship and murder tha passengers. The
very enormity of tha proposed crime made
it inconceivable; they rested, secure (n their
belief that no nation, civilised or barbarian,
would execute what the Prussian government
rashly swore to do. Although advance no
tice of her intention was given by advertise
mcnts In tha New York papers and anony
mous letters to those who had booked pas
sage, hundreds of Americans were not de
terred from making the trip. They went,
and three-fourths of the passengers and
erew were murdered by a U-boat.
Tha laughter of innocent children was
wafted out over the wevrs. The ary of a
fretful baby, but recently come Into the,
world and soon to go out, came floating
over the water. Mother's lullaby song at
bedtime that night was to be her last, Tha
German aubsea was to forever end their
Joys and sorrows. Under orders from his
govemont tha captain of the Ubost had
lain in wait for the ship. At dawn ha lo
cated his quarry, under tha protection of the
waves he maneuvered to a more advantage
ous position and waited for his prey. The
big ship cam an, tha word was given and
the slimy-nosed, murderous torpedo was sent
hurtling through the water on its mission
of death and destruction. Tha laughter
of tha children was heard again, then came
the explosion. A minute of incomprehension
aboard, than tha realisation, the terror, tha
horror, tha butchery and tha wantonness
of it
Like a thief In the night tha commander
of the U-boat dealt the- ehip Its death blow.
In defiance of all the laws of humanity
the shin was blown up without warning,
struck from behind, as tt were. Tha ship
rolled and wallowed in Its death agony,
settling lower and lower and lower. The
frrave-cold water reaching up and up grasp
ng the innocent women and children. Death
and desolation everywhere, The toll of the
U-boat that night was Mil dead, neutrals,
non combatants, with never a chance. '
There must never aa another Lusitania
horror, aevar anything like It agJ You
eaa help pnvamt it by buying a Liberty
Bond.
Blood-mad Frusslanlsm mtfst be wiped
out, The tragedy of the Lusitania epito
mised the ideals of Germany today, the
Ideals of Bismarck, the Iron Man, and Von
Bernhardt tha instigator of ruthless sea
murder. Today Germany stands unified to
commit murder on a vaster scale than ever
They are a people mad with Prussian fan
atleum, a people whose hymn is a hymn of
hate. Hera you have a concrete example of
what this nation will do, you know Its
Ideals, yon know It will stop at nothing.
This nation, this It the people we are
fighting today. Until Prussian autocracy
la enwh ed peace will be a myth and a mem
ory. America needs your help to defeat this
foa of mankind and the easiest way to five
It, the leaat you can do Is to help.
1 MBlr7
Lf In
Buy a "Liberty Bond"
Make Good the Pledge
"Never Another Lusitania"
America is fighting for the freedom of the
sea. You can help make the ocean safe. You can
help put. down a monarchy that does not recognize
the rights of an individual. ;
It Is a Privilege to Buy Bonds
You enjoy the privileges of a free country.
When you buy a bond you emphatically protest
against the sinking of the Lusitania or any act by
which innocent women and children are drowned,
or their lives put in jeopardy.
m& MOST WIN
This is a war for Humanity and Every American, man,
woman, or child, should share the burden and be proud
of the privilege. 1
INVEST OR ENLIST
You can arrange with any Bank, Building
' - and Loan Association
many large corporations and businesshouses for, a
bond on weekly payment plan $50 bond, $1 down
and $1 weekly; $100 bond, $2 down and $2 weekly;
.;;."" $500 bond, $10 down and $10 weekly.
To Own a Bond Is Practical Patriotism
.' . .- .,-'... . -
Liberty Loan Citizens' Committee
MH E
ii n:zzrirz.: '