Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 27, 1917, EDITORIAL, Image 11

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    v r
PART TWO
EDITORIAL
PAGES 11 TO 20
m-rr-
Omaha-
Daily
Bee
The Cry for Help is
Quickly Answered'
Through Bee Want-Ads
VOL. XLVIINO. 113.
OMAHA, SATURDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 27, 1917.
Nr SUndi. Et. 5.
SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS
HOOVER PLEASED
WITH OMAHA MEET
TO BOOST SAVING
Food Administrator Sends Tel
egram of Congratulation on
Conservation Meeting at
Boyd Theater.
Food Administrator Hoover has
telegraphed to G. W. Wattles con
gratulations- on the big conservation
pledge. Card meeting held at the Boyd
theater Thursday as follows:
"It is with pleasure that I have
learned, of the meeting held in Omaha
liy your splendid organization to fur
ther the work of enrollment cam
paign for food conservation. The im
portance of food substitution to in
sure a sufficient supply of fats, sugar
and wheat to meet the needs of our
army and otir allies cannot be over
estimated. There is a world shortage
in these vital necessities that can be
met only through the elimination of
waste and the intelligent substitution
of other articles of diet so far as sub
stitution is possible. The willingness
of your organization to. engage in the
educational campaign for food conser
vation 9 generally evidence that our
citizens are prepared to meet the per
plexing problems of war through the
volunteer ' agencies ot democracy.
There should be no anxiety in the
minds of our loyal soldiers at the
front with reference to the ability of
those at home to insure an adequate
supply of food for their comfort and
fighting efficiency. xThe same holds
true with reference to our allies, who
must be sustained by us until our sol
diers are properly trained to meet the
Vigors of war. Unless we meet the
food problem as becomes the citizens
of a great democracy our failure may
be responsible -for the unnecessary
sacrifice of our heroic soldiers, to
whom we owe our loyal support. It
is my earnest hope that through your
perfected organization and other vol
unteer agencies the enrollment cam
paign in Nebraska may be a great suc
cess" ' .
Wives of Absent
Soldiers Taken In
Baids on Cabarets
Chicago, Oct 26. The probfcm of
protecting the wives of men in the
military service of the United States J
from the influence of the carbarets
confronts federal authorities today.
Seventy per cent of 'the women
arrested in raids, according to Judge
Uhlir of the morals court, are married
and many are wives of soldiers who
hav gone to the front. Because of
these conditions the government has
been asked to assist in. devising some
way by which soldiers may be guar
anteed that their wives will be pro
tected from these influences while
away. .
Promises Relief
From Sugar Famine
In Next 15 Days
CAMP CODY SOON TO
HAYE TARGET RANGE
Miles of ; Trenches to Be Dug
When Actual War Practice
Begins; Mile Firing
Line.
Camp Cody, Deming, N. M., Oct. 26.
A bulletin has been issued by Colo
nel E. H. Schultzej divisionengineer,
outlining plans to be (followed in
building thq targets on tUe range here,
preparatory to beginning the school of
fire.
The target range will be located
northwest of the camp and will be ar
ranged for the simultaneous fire of
about 250 men at ranges varying from
250 to :,000 yards. There will also be
machine gun and pistol targets. The
range will be in almost constant use,
so that the whole division may have
ample practice. There will also be
maneuvers' in troop firing at simulated
targets. The entire front of the firing
line will be well over a mile.
' A system of trenches will be 4aid
out in the reservation north ot uem
inar. Such a system will involve fir
ing, approach, and other trenches, with
shelters, dugouts, machine gun post
tions and other features, all well pro
tected and revetted. The work will
involve many miles of trench digging
toeether with wire entanglements,
The troops will work in turn on the
trenches.
Artillery practice will be held in the
vicinity and the trenches tested for
shrapnel and high explosives.
Since, Major rl. 1. Marries o
Omaha has taken charge of the mili
tary police a vigorous campaign has
begun, with the aid ot Uemmg police
to rid the city and vicinity of the
camp of objectionable women and
bootleeeers. All roads into the town
are watched and vehicles searched for
intoxicants. The Deming jail is filled
Cipriano Castro
Is Requested to '
Leave Trinidad
c
Port of Spain, Trinidad, Oct. 26.
Cipriano Castro, former president o
Venezuela, has been requested by the
government to leave Trinidad. The
general declared his residence here
had no political significance and pro
tested against being compelled to sail
at this season of the year, but is pre
paring depart. He attributes his
expulsion to American miervuion.
General Castro has been traveling
fronone land to atvother for years,
finding many ports closed against
him. Recent accounts of his travels
said he was accompanied by 'American
secret service agents. Last month
the former dictator of Venezuela,
after a short stay in New York, sailed
for" Trinidad.
New York, Oct. 26: Relief from
the acute sugar shortage in New York
within the next 15 days is promised
by B. A. Rolph, chairman of the sugar
division of the federal food division.
Mr., Rolph said the price of granu
lated sugar would be to 9 cents
a pound.
Coincident with Mr. Rolph's an
nouncement, Henry Moskowitz, com
missioner of markets, said that po
tatoes at 3 cents a pound retail would
be offered for sale today by the New
f York City food aid committee. The
retail prices yesterday were from 4
to 6 cents a pound.
French Radicals Demand
Alsace-Lorraine Restored
Psfh, Thursday, Oct. 26. The na
tional convention of the national radi
cals and radical socialists, the strong
est political organization in Frane,
opened today with 1,321 delegates
present
Louis J. Malvy, former minister of
the interior, who was charged re
cently with having dealings with the
enemy, was cheered loudly when he
. entered the convention hall.
N A resolution demanding the restora
tion of Alsace-Lorraine "without com
promise and without a plebiscite" was
adopted.
Clinical, Congress Unable
To Find Cause of Cancer
Chicago, Oct. 26. The causation of
cancer is lyet unknown to medical
science, according to a statement
made before the. 3,000 surgeons who
for the past week have been in Chi
cago attending the eighth annual con
vention of the Clinical Congress of
Surgeons, which yesterday merged
with the American College of Sur
geons and is'now known as the Clini
cal Congress of the American College
of Surgeons. Dr. William T. Mayo of
Rochester, Minn., president-elect of
the new body, in discussing the ad
vances made in the treatment of can
cer, asserMd that while physicians
cannot ascribe exactly the causes of
that disease, it is known that hot
foods taken into the stomach often
result in cancerous growths in that
organ.
Clean food, coupled with food at
normal temperatures might go a long
way in removing one of the first
causes of cancer, Dr. Mayo said, and
subsequent speakers agreed to this.
Sir Berkley Moynihan of Leeds,
England, member of the British army
staff, who has made daily addresses
to the physicians, declared that in no
one line of surgery had such strides
been made' as in lung and pleura sur
gery. He advised surgeons con
templating war service to be pre
pared to go about .the lung surgery
resolutely and without misgivings as
to severity. He said that the lung
could be cleansed of slivers of shells
j'ust as one would cleanse a new
sponge.
Persistent Advertising Is the Roadl
Do You Uant the Best Drugs
for the Least Money?
Beatons Have Them
PERFUMES.
$2.60 Mary Garden Ex-
, tract, per oz. $1.59
$2.25 Houbigants Ideal
Extract, per oz $1.59
75c and $1.00 Extracts,
all odors, -per oz 39c
CANDY
Fresh shipment daily.
80c Melba Chocolate
, Creams, per pound 49c
We are -agents for Original
Allegretti Chocolates, Huyler's
Bon Bona and Chocolates, Low
ney's Assorted Chocolates.
EDISON MAZDA LAMPS
25, 40 and 50. Watt Lamps. Ze
60 Watt Lamps 36e
We deliver and install free of
charge.
MAIL ORDERS RECEIVE
$1 Liberty Lawn Emblem
Stationery .... 59c
$1 Lambert's Listerine. . . .74c
25c -lb. Peroxide Hydo-
gen .-...7e
60c 1-lb. Peroxide Hydro
gen 23c
$1 S. S. S. ....68c
25c Nature's Remedy 16c
25c Carter's Liver Pills... 16c
35c Castoria 24c
Mentholatum 16c
Syrup Figs.......... 34c
30c
50c
RUBBER GOODS
Complete line of everything
in Rubber Good line.
$1 2-qt. Fountain Syringe. 49c
75c Atomizers 49c
$2.25 LeGrands 2-qt. Wa
ter Bottle and Fountain
Syringe $1.40
$3.50 DeMar Whirling .
Spray Syringe $1.98
OUR PROMPT ATTENTION.
BEATON DRUG COMPANY
15th and Farnam
French Artillery
Vastly Superior .
To German Guns
(By Amoelated FreM.)
American Training Camp in France,
Oct 2(5. Major General Sibert, re
turning from around Soissons, where
he witnessed part of the French of
fensive on the Aisne, said that the
French losses had been extremely
small because of the effectiveness of
the artillery preparation. He and the
other American officers were en
thusiastic over the importance of the
French victory, especially as to the
amount of material and number of
prisoners taken. The American of
ficers were impressed greatly with the
preponderance of the French ar
tillery over the Germans.
The French forced a crossing on
two rivers, wading through water up
to their shoulders.
On the Aisne front the ground new
ly won is being consolidated and no
important fighting occurred during
the night.
The Germans renewed their attacks
in the Verdun sector and were again
beaten back, suffering large losses.
Captain Von Horn is
Arrested and Interned
New York, , Oct. 26. Jacob von
Horn, who was an officer on the Ger
man cruiser Geier, which steamed
into Honolulu harbor before the
United States entered the war to es
cape British and Japanese warships,
and was interned there, was arrested
last night and taken to Ellis Island
for internment. . Von Horn is be
lieved to have conic to the United
States before this country declared
war against Germany.
OFFICERS PAY HIGH
RENTALSiT DEMING
Army Men Disgusted With
Greed of Landlords; Captain
Magett Found "Guilty" by
"Kangaroo" Court. .
Camp Cody, Deming, N. M., Oct.
25. (Special.) Since . Major Arthur
M. Nelson, adjutant of the Sixty
eighth brigade, the Minnesotans, with
a sprinkling of Troop C, Iowa cav
alry; machine gun company, Fourth
Nebraska infantry, and Companies I,
K, L and M Second Iowa infantry,
thrown in, has -mentioned the sub
jest in the ."Reveille," the weekly pa
per of the Minnesota bunch that is
waking up things hereabout, it is no
doubt official to print the following
"lead editorial" that appeared in the
last issue of the little, but spicy,
quarto:
"The property owners of Deming
are sharpening the ax preparatory to
killing the goose which was to lay the
golden egg. They are bringing this
about by the terrific rentals charged
officers for living rooms in which to
house their families. At present offi
cers are compelled to pay as high as
$50 a month for a single furnished
room, and $150 a month for three and
four-room cottages. Highway rob
bery is respectable in comparison.
"This brings to mind the assertion
made by an Iowan several days ago
that Captain G. W. Dulany, jr., com
manding F battery, from Des Moines,
was paying $175 ii month, for a resi
dence for his family. A Drilling paper
notes the advent of the Dulanys in
town and says that 'although they
are accustomed to all the luxuries
that wealth can acquire, they are
very much delighted with Deming.'"
Captain John P. Magett, Hastings,
NTeb banker, was the victim at the
"kangaroo" court-martial, in which
Lieutenant J. B. Cain of Falls City
was "prosecutor" and "judge advo
cate" and Captain C. A. Beaver pre
sided. Captain C. B. Fletcher, Schuy
ler, Neb, lawyer, defended the ac
cused. On 57 counts Magett was
found guilty and fined a box of cigars
and made to take a cold shower bath.
Express Companies to
Aid Food Commission
Washington, Oct. 26. Co-operation
of express companies in expediting
the transportation of perishable food
stuffs was promised the food ad
ministration today by express com
pany representatives. Directions will
be issued tha. prefe.cnce be, given
such products whenever necessary.
Bee Want Ads Produce Results.
J
One-Minute
Store Talk
"The 50 dividend 1 take
today in these great clothes
values will be a 100 divi
dend before the year is
over," said a banker buying
clothes here.
The more men know about
values, the more they realize
that Greater Nebraska is
passing on to its patrons the
dividends of foresight and
judgment provided months
ago, when we made tremend
ous contracts for merchan
dise at the old prices.
Get Your Share!
'JOHN A. SWANSON, Tres."
"WM. L. IIOLZMAN, Troas.'
.He Supreme Overcoat Store
Not only the largest, most wonderful selections
in Nebraska, but in all the west at
5 -$20 -$25 -$30
DON'T limit your choice in overcoat buying your overcoat
satisfaction calls for unlimited variety. We've opened up en
tirely new possibilities for you. Assortments so vast and so
varied that it would take every page of this newspaper to describe
what you'll see here. One entire floor of the best overcoats
a score of America s finest overcoat makers have produced
await your inspection. In justice to yourself visit overcoat
headquarters Saturday. ;
Belted "Trench" Coats,
The Style of the Hour
, We're meeting the overwhelming demand for full belted coats,
'Trench Coats" with a vast exposition of these striking new
models. Hundreds of distinctive patterns and colors. Plaids in
every "range of visibility." Luxurious weaves, from Scotland and
, Ireland. Many genuine London-made Overcoats. Entirely differ
ent and distinctive styles nothing like if elsewhere, at
$15, $20, $25, $30, $35, $40, $50, $60
' Fur Collar Overcoats
i
Dressy Models a Feature
ENTIRELY new creations in single and, double-breasted Kersey, Meltpn, Vicuna and
Hockanum overcoats, including form-fitting, full-belted, Chesterfield and full .cut
motor and storm coats, choice of fur collars, includes Beaver, i Nutria, Hudson .-Seal,
Muskrat, Persian Lamb and Astrakhan. Luxurious garments at
$25 $30 $35 $40 $50 $60 $75 $100
I WVnM
y 'ty TV
tip' i lVk
vv I!
T 1 hM i
It if ft in
jli 0 v fjfh
(if'i M 2 Ml
K"' ' ?M1
Ii winaowt erf i Il
I View our metropolitan . W0i f il 1 J'-j
I show windows tly M l f : .11 I I
mere mm 01 wnt tnu wi i I I ti I s j
greater store now if ttn. I"' M 11 I '1
Silk Lined Chesterfields, Great Coats, Motor Coats, Ulsters, Ulsterettes, Belt
Back, Full Belt, Utility Coats, Single or Double Breasted Overcoats A vast
selection at every price
$10, $15, $20, $25, $30, $35, $40
Men's Newest Fall'and Winter Suits
LL the wanted autumn colorings, in all the dashing new military models. Eng
lish Sacks, single or double breasted styles. Semi-conservative or conservative
models. The clothes "young men and men who stay young" want, or any modifica
tion your fancy dictates. Rich, lustrous woolens fabric values unequaled. The fin
est ready-for-service suits made $15, $20, $25, $30, $35, $40'
Men's Union Suits
-The World's Best
MAME your favorite' or ask to see the
best underwear suited to your needs.
You'll find it in our vast selection of
Union Suits and two-piece garments, at
$1.00 to $750
Vassar, Superior, Duofold union suits
AH the better underwear i here. ,
Warm Sweater Coats
for Men, Women and Boys
T NTRODUCING a lot of new styles this
fall. Everybody wants a sweater. So
many different taste! to suitand. we're
ready to suit you. . . ...
Men's Sweater, $2.00 to 88.50
Women' Sweater., 82.95 to $10.50
Boy' Sweater, 81.50 to 84.00 '
Girl.' Sweater., 81.50 to' 85.95
Most Comprehensive Neckwear Display in Omaha . . 50 $2.00
See the New Shirt Store for Men
Give the "Once Over" to our beautiful new Shirt Department, with its
thousands of new shirts, under glass, in plain view, $1.00 to.$7.50.
Headquarters for Manhattan, Bates Street and Yorke Shirts.
Men's
Shoes
Hurley and Arnold
Glove-Grip, America's
finest shoes. High cut
shoes for men, boys
and youths, at
$3.50 to $9.00
MEN'S
MACKINAW COATS,
$7.50 to $15.00
- The Ever-New Hat Shop for Men
T IKE a style panorama, our men's hat display is ever changing. Now come
the most attractive styles of the year. New ideas in rough finish hats, new
soft felts, new derbies all from finest hat makers.
Stetson Headquarters, $4 ' to $10
Famous Borsalino Hats, at $6.00
Crofut and Knapp Hats, $4 to $5
Neb. Superior. $3.50; De Luxe $3
Cloth Hats and Caps, $1, $1.50, $ New Swagger Sticks, 50 75S $1
Traveling
Goods
Trunks, Bags, Suit
Cases. Lowe3t-in-the-city
prices. Visit pur
great basement
traveling goods sec
tion a store in itself.
wMNA SWANSON.MC. ill 111 Ml llllliii. il W
m
ILMOUI
CORRECT APPAREL FOR MEN AND WOMEN.
BOYS'
MACKINAW COATS,
$4.50 to $10.00