Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 01, 1917, NEWS SECTION, Image 8

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THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: JULY 1, 1917.
OLIN LINGERS ON
BED IHHOSPITAt
Deaf Mute Shot by Mother,
Who Killed Herself, Will
i Be Paralyzed if He
- (" ' Becovers.
The life of Gerald Olin, the young
deaf mute who wai shot in the head
by hit mother, Mra. Mamie Olih, 2610
Harney afreet, who then committed
suicide, Friday morning, hangs by a
thread, according to physiciani at St.
Joseph hospital, where the wounded
,man was taken alter the tragedy.
He remains in a comatose condi
tion. When visited today by Rev. Pe
ters he smiled wanly in recognition
and then relapsed into semi-consciousness.
To many of his friends
he was known as Gerald Brandt, that
being the name of his father.
The bullet entered his head just
above the right ear, plowed a down
ward course and lodged in the back
of the neck. The motory nerves
were affected and doctors say that
even if he recovers, which is doubt
ful, he will be partially paralyzed
for life. He has lost control of his
hands.
The funeral of Mrs. Mamie Olin
will be held from the Crosby under
taking parlors Monday morning at
10 o'clock. The services will be con
ducted by Rev. George L. Peters,
pastor of the North Side Christian
church.
Quebec House in England
Preserved as Landmark
(Corraapondanea of The Aaaoclatvd Pfeaa.)
Westerham, England, June 10.
Quebec House, the home of General
Wolfe, hero of Quebec, which, be
fore the war, was one of the show
places about London for American
and Canadian tourists, has passed
from control of the Canadian govern
ment to the National Trust, a semi
official body which aims to preserve
historic landmarks.
The home was purchased in 1913
bv the late T. B. Learmont of Mon
treal, who wanted to maintain it as
a public monument. He died before
his plans could be completed, but his
Heirs conveyed to ine Canadian gov
ernment. Owing to the difficulty of
administering a trust so distant, that
government preferred that the prop
erty should be vested in an English
body.
The house contains a collection of
specimens of the native work of Ca
nadian Indians and of pictures and
prints illustrating the progress of the
Dominion. Wolfe was not born in the
house, but at a house close by which
still exists. He spent most of his
childhood days at Quebec House.
Mexico Puts High Tax on
i Everything' Except Beer
(OrrMpondsnnt of Th Aaaoclatad Preaa.)
Mexico City, June 20. New taxes
will go into effect July 1 on articles
not previously subject to taxation.
Telephones in residences will be taxed
50 centavos a month and office tele
phones one peso a month after that
date. This is a stamp tax and will be
collected by the telephone companies.
A tax has been imDOsed throuih-
out the republic on all forms of ad
vertisements. Newspaper' advertise
ments are taxed 10 per cent of the
amount received. Each electric light
globe is taxed 10 centavos monthly.
All bottles containing alcoholic
drinks of foreign production are taxed
A) centavos eacn, except Deer, wnicn
is taxed 10 cents a bottle. Native
liquors and beers are taxed about SO
per cent of the rates on foreign goods,
i i,
Japs Invest War Profits
! In Purchase of Jewelry
(Corrmnondtiict of Tho Aaaaclatad Preaa.)
Tokia. lune 10. Enormous Dur
chases of jewels and jewelry indicates
the wealth that has come to Japan on
account of the war. Dealera report
countless sales at high prices to the
families ot people who are quickly DC'
coming wealthy.
Another indication of Japan's pros
perity was furnished by the public
; sale of the heirlooms of the house
hold of the late Viscount Akimoto, a
peer, which brought about $750,000. An
old album of landscape pictures sold
for $70,000,' said to be the highest
price ever paid in Japan.
Omaha Housewives Are Ready
For Food Conservation Week
When Food Administrator Hoover
presses the button today and sets the
machinery in motion for the conser
vation of food and elimination of
waste in every household in the
United States, Omaha housewives will
be found prepared to respond to the
nation's call.
So ooou ar has the movement De-
come that on every hand one hears
discussions of new and original pet
economies.
The kitchen apron has indeed De-
come as much a badge of patriotic
service as the nurse's cap or the sol
dier's khaki. Every man, woman and
child in Omaha is asked today to do
his cart in saving approximately $2,-
000,000,000 a year by nonwaste of
food.
The Nebraska Council of Defense,
which met in Lincoln Saturday for the
purpose of mobilizing and correlating
the woman power of Nebraska, will
start a definite drive for co-operation
with Mr. Hoover a food conservation
campaign which will continue stead
fastly during'the period of the war.
few Slackers Here.
When asked by workers to sign the
pledge there will be found few, if
any slackers, among Omaha house
wives.
Here is what some of our best
known Omaha women are doing to
help prevent a food crisis and in
cidentally help win the' war.
Mrs. James C. uamman, wne oi
Mayor Dahlman, said: "Ever since I
visited mv sister in the Canadian
provinces, a year ago and realized the
immcuuic uciiibuu lur iviisci vauuii v
food, I have reduced the consumption
of bread in my household by cutting
the loaf at the table on a carved Swiss
bread board, which custom is ob
served quite generally in Canada. I
bought mine at the Omaha exposition,
little realizing that it would play a
part in the national food conservation
campaign. The loaf is cut as it is
needed with a carved knife to match.
This eliminates the left over slices
which dry before the next meal.
"Do not feel that it is necessary
to have different food every day on
your table. Eat all food while it is
fresh, even If the family does become
weary of seeing it on the table two
days in succession. I have also elimi
nated sweets from my menus and am
watching the waste as never before."
Eat What Cannot Be Shipped.
Mrs. I. T. Lindsey, in charge of
the woman's work of the Red Cross
in the state of Nebraska, says:.
Mv advice ij to save for ourselves
out of the abundance of food raised
in this country that food which can
not be sent abroad. For example, I
use auantities of milk, but eliminate
meat almost entirely. Starchy foods,
such as rice and macaroni, are sub
stituted for potatoes, 'which can be
sent to Europe. I endeavor to make
y substitutes as palatable ana nu
tritious as possible.
Mrs. A. L. Fernald, president of the.
Omaha Woman's club, said: "All do
not realize the vital need for conser
vation of fkod because of the appar
ent abundance of it here in the middle
west. It is every housewife s duty
to sign the conservation pledge when
asked.
Plain, nutritious "foods should be
the order of the day and extravagant
dainties should - be eliminated from
the menus. I substitute cornmeal for
wheat and can or dry all vegetables
as thev are in season.
Mrs. Frank Odell avors 'spice cakes
with bacon grease instead of spices
and avoring.
Doea Her Own Marketing.
Doing her own marketing and mak
ing her own bread is Mrs. William
Archibald Smith's particular way of
cutting down the grocery bill. I have
proved that 1 can save one-third
bv baking mv own bread, which is al
ways of the whole wheat variety. I
use rcipes for oatmeal cookies and
raisin Dread which the Canadian
women use to take the place of more
expensive cakes.
"Although busy many' mornings
and unable to go marketting, I post-
?one it until late in the afternoon, but
always do it myself. Inise meat to
the last scrap, even making soup out
of the bones."
Mrs. H. C. Sumney said: "I will
continue to do what I always have
done. Born of Yankee parents, thrifty
pioneers of Maine and New Hamp
shire, I was reared with the idea that
it was wicked to waste a thing and
wrong to say I did not like every
kind of food. I was never allowed
to have anything on my plate that I
did not eat. To this day, I observe
the rule, even in company. I never
waste a bit of fat. All my piecrust
is made of white suet. Black grease is
always used for making soap. Sausage
grease and the white grease from
roast beef makes the finest kind of
piecrust. I have not bought a can of
lard for five years. I always can by
the cold process and believe veryone
should have a cellar full of canned
vegetables and fruit. So carefully do
I watch the waste that there is not
enough good food left for the dog,
who has a special meal cooked for
him." '
Eleminates White Bread.
Mrs. John Welch has eliminated
white bread from her table and uses
corn and whole wheat breads. Ber
ries turned out of the box conserve
the juice while meat taken out of the
wrapper has the same effect," she
said. "I am not an advocate of an
economic hysteria, for X believe we
should do everything to prevent busi
ness from being paralyzed. Eat
meat once a day but do not buy
flour and other staples in great quan
tities; thus tying up the supply."
Mrs. C. W. Russell is a firm advo
cate of the kitchen garden. "Although
wc hire a man to attend to the gar
den and it probably cots us as much
in the end as it would to buy the food
direct from the store, which really
would be less trouble, I believe every
family should produce their own veg
etables, and not draw upon the food
supply when such an abundance is
needed in turope, any ot us can do
to produce our own supply, we
will have sufficient vegetables from
our own garden last throughout
the winter.
Mrs. Henry Yates said I believe
that we should all live within our
own home production and give what
we have to spare to others who have
less than we." Mrs. Yates has a
large garden and shares its products
with the needy.
Mrs. ueorge Joslyn, one ot
Omaha's wealthiest women said, "I
feel that we should all begin to
economize so that our food supplies
will hold out until the war is over.
In my household, we serve meat four
times a week and potatoes thrte times
a week, and substitute whole wheat
and graham bread for the white to
conserve the white flour.
MEMBER OF BEE STAFF AT
OFFICERS' TRAINING CAMP.
ROBERT P. KIMBALL.
Robert P. Kimball, formerly of The
Bee advertising department and now
attending the officers' reserve training
camp at Fort Snelling, writes that he
is enjoying every minute of the time
spent in drill and other .maneuvers.
"You ought to see me now; I'm
as tanned as an Indian."
He is shown in the picture in his
service uniform.
BRITONS BUILDING
HIGHWAYS! FRANCE
Finest Roads in World Being
Made of Broken Stone and
Brick from the Shell
Torn Houses.
better than today. The only com
plaint travelers had against' them in
the old dava was the paved strip in
the center was too narrow. That
complaint cannot be made after the
British highway plans have been com
pleted, for all the main highways will
be macadamed to a width permitting
three broad-guage lorries to run
abreast, and even the byways will
allow traffic to pass easily at any :
point. . , ...
Excessive dustiness is the only fault
of the roads today, for war economics
will not permit the use of precious oil
on roadways.
There is little need anywhere in this
district for straightening roads or
altering routes, because the roads of
northern e ranee mostly run waigni
have a paved surface wide enough to M an arrow's flight.
Correapondanca of Tha Aaaoclated Praaa.)
ttemna me oruisn iines m rums.
June 17. Hundreds of miles of the
smooth white macadam roads of
northern France will remain for many
years after the war as a real memorial
to the devastated towns which the
Germans left in ruins after their
retreat this spring.
All over northern France the roads
are being widened and resurfaced with
stone and rubble from the wrecked
houses of Peronne, Albert, Arras, and
countless other ruined towns and vil
lages. As fast as the British soldiers
clear away the debris of the towns, it
is piled into lorries and distributed
in heaps along the main roads., There
German prisoners toil the day long
pounding it into level patches which
the great steam rollers, many of them
bearing familiar American names,
?;rind quickly into smooth macadam
or the business of transport.
The brick and stone of these old
buildings makes as good road ma
terial as could be obtained anywhere,
and the work of the German dyna
miter has been so thorough that much
of it is crushed fine enough to need
no further preparation.
The roads of northern France were
always excellent, but they were never i
Stomach Trouble Cured
Could Not Eat-Peruna Made
Me a Well Man
M
. Three
Months'
Treatment
Cured me of
Catarrh of
the Stomach
Those wha object to liquid medi
cines can now procure Parana Tablets.
' Mr. George W. Close, No. 12 hi Ne
vada Bldg., Denver, Colo., writes: "I
have all the faith in the world in your
madicine, as it cured me of catarrh
of the stomach. I was in a most
distressing condition, and life looked
dark indeed. I could not eat My
food did not do ma any good. I
gradually lost flesh and was thin and
emaciated. I was glad indeed to find
that the first battle of Parana was
doing ma good, and so I kept on us
ing it with a gradual increase of ap
petite and strength. Three months
after I first began using it I was a
wall man, and all the credit is due to
Parana. I recommend it to all who
are in need of a medicine for
catarrh."
in stock on which they will charge
the new duty to consumers without
having paid it themselves.
TEUTON SEA FORCE
MUSTRULEPACIFIC
Without Control Germany Will
Miss Opportunity in World
Trade, Says Noted
Professor.
ENGLISH TOBACCO
DEALERS SCORED
Are Accused of Boosting Prices
of "Soldiers' Luxury" Far
Above Fair Average of
Profit,
(Corraapondanca of fha Aaaoclatad Praia.)
London. May 20. The most unpop
ular persons in England at the pres
ent day are the retail tobacco dealers.
They are accused of the most brazen
f I'l ! iL.. 1
siroKC oi war promcenug inai na
yet been achieved. The budget intro
duced recently raised the tax on to
bacco by 44 cents a pound. Thereupon
almost all of the dealers announced a
raise in prices averaging on all forms
of tobacco about 64 cents a pound.
The dealers take advantage of an' ex
tra tax to charge the consumer the
tax and also an extra profit of 20
cents a pound. The consumers are
indignant, but as the dealers gener
ally hang together, the consumers
have no remedy except to stop using
tobacco. There is an additional
grievance in that a large proportion
of the tobacco used in England i;
consumed by the soldiers in training,
on leave or in hospitals and purchased
by home people to send to their sol
diers at the front.
The profits resulting from this in
creased tax really work out at more
than 20 cents a pound, because both
the tax and profit are charaed on all
the tobacco now in stock which paid
duty at the old rate. So that, on the
stocks in hand when the duty was
raised, the dealers are making a new
profit of 64 cents a pound.
The tobacco trade will make about
$55,000,000 a year for collecting the
new duty which is expected to yield
$30,000,000 revenue, according to the
estimates of a correspondent of the
Daily Mail. He figures also that the
traders have about 44,UUU,UUU pounds
(Correapondanca of Tho Aaaoclated Praia.)
Copenhagen, May 20. Germany
must re-establish itself in the Pacfic,
in order not to miss its last oppor
tunity to prevent a final settlement of
Japanese, American and British, espe
cially Australian, interests, in the
opinion of Prof. Paul Preuss in an
article in the Hamburger Nachrichten
of Hamburg. J"
A selt-contained Central Africa,
he writes, "stretching as far as possi-
Die ro ine wesi, ana me possiDiiuy oi
a land connection of Central Africa
with Constantinople bv way of Eevot
makes the scheme seem particularly
1 . . . Ti . . ij : i
attractive. ui wuriu ciunuuiiis uu
world politics cannot be pursued
with Central Africa alone. We need
other bases also for our world trade
and sea traffic. In the far east, in the
Pacific ocean we have for three de
cades possessed a rising little colonial
empire, and it would be an unforgiv
able and irreparable mistake if we
were" to abandon our South sea
colonies and to withdraw ffom the
Pacific, merely because the great set
tlement of interests has begun among
the three great powers Japan, North
America and xngland-Australia, and
because we shall have to fear that at
some later date we should come into
contact with these powers.
"If the three powers were to arrive
at a perfect and permanent agreement
about the f acme ocean and China our
case would be hopeless. But as long
as Japan and America oppose one an
other in more or less open' hostility,
and as long as Australia sees in
laoan. whom England has summoned
to the protection of its interests in the
east, its most dangerous competitor
and oooonent as long as these things
are so, Germany has no occasion to
budge from' the facihc.
"A temporary occupation of our
colonies by our enemies is of no de
cisive importance. The disappearance
of the German flag from New Guinea
and the group ot islands in tne ra
cific would mean an irreparable loss
of prestige and world power for the
German empire all over the east. If
we lose our naval bases there we fall
back to the rank of mere carriers and
traders, in whose face the door can
always be slammed."
Cool Clothes for the Fourth!
And Wonderful Values, Too
A particularly fortunate purchase of highest
grade Suits for Men, at a decided concession, frorn
some of the best manufacturers, enables us to
quote
for Suits that are worth $25, $30, $35 attd some
even $40.
Materials, tailoring, fit and finish all of the
very highest standard.
Sizes for everyone short men, tall men, slim
men, stout men ALL MEN.
Plaids, Checks, Stripes, Mixtures, Cool Cloths
unending variety.
Pinch Back, Belted All Around and Consent
ative Models.
Hart Schaffner & Marx
Summer Suits
Dixie Weaves, Mohairs and Silks
$15.00 to $25.00
Palm Beach, Mohair and Cool Cloth Suits, $10 to $15.
Pants at $3.50 and $5.00
White Flannels, White Serges, Silk Striped White
Serges, etc., for the Fourth of July, Outing and Vacation
wear.
Golf Suits to swo.uu
Gblf Pants $3.50 to $7.50
Second Floor, Men's Bldg. Ride Up on the Escalator.
biandeis Stores
PUT)
Be Here Early Monday and Tuesday
ATI
0URT
H 01
TP TTTTTI
F JUI
SHOE SA
Big Girls' White Mary
Jane Pumps, rubber soles,
Sale Price. . .'.
-AT-
V"
98c PANOR'S BIG SHOE STORE
1 1512 DOUGLAS STREET
White Boots White Pumps
Barefoot Sandals, all
sizes up to 2.
Sale Price
$123
1
White Canvas Boots
That We Sold for $5.00.
Beautiful Whit C a n v a. s
Boots, high wood covered
heels. The - coolest of all
Boots, go in this sale, at
$Q48
White Canvas Pumps
Low Heels .'
Thia fine Pump with the new
low Louis wood covered heel
a real bargain, will be sold
in this sale, for
Every Thing in Summer Shoes Must Go
White Slippers
$298
YV,
Ladies' Fine Plain Pumps
Soft Patent or Dull Kidfhigh
leather heels, very plain and
stylish; sale price
$048
3
White Plain Pumps
For Ladies (Like Cut)
This Pump, hand turned,
high covered heels, special,
in this big sale
Men's Canvas Oxfords
White or Palm Beach, new
English Toes, all size
One Big Attraction of This Sale is Our Children's Department
Misses' Mary Jane Pumps
Patent or Dull $1 AO
WillGoat.. , V1"0
White Canvas Children's Shoes
Sizes Up tq 8. Button Q Q
styles. While they last. P V
White Tennis Slippers
For Boys or Girls. 5 9C
Rubber Soles, Go at .......... .
Girls' White Mary Jane Pumps
Leather Soles and $1 QQ
Heels, Go in this sale V.. Y1,t'