Tulsa Daily World (Tulsa, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 350, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 4, 1917 Page: 3 of 12
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TULSA DAILY WORLD TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 4 1917
V ' '
ROOT WARNS BAR
TO SOUND ALARM
Successful Prosecution of War
la Urged Upon Members of
Lawyers' Profession.
FIGHT IS ON FOR LIBERTY
Plan Adopted to Give Free
Legal Aid to Those Enter-
ing Nation's Service.
SARATOGA pl'UING!. N. Y.. Sept.
S. Lawyers of America were tirjeil to
sound a "cry of uluriu" t.hruuut the
nation for u ucceHful prosecution of
the war In an address delivered today
by Klihu Uoot before the conference
of bur us.soclu.tlon delegates un or-
ganization allied with the American
l.r association. Ho uriced that each
member of the bar "exert every In-
fluence and every power he possessed
over his clients friends and associate
In every community in tnut direction.
"It lias become perfectly evident"
ho mild "that this Is a conflict be-
tween two opposed and Inevitably op-
posed systems of government of pol-
icy of politics of human society. It
ha become perfectly evident that our
war was brought on with a purpose to
establish a military aul'M-racy. It has
become perfectly evident that more
than a geenration of careful prepara
tion had been niado for this very
thing and that the democracies of the
world rejoicing In pea.ee and prosper-
ity in political freedom and In indi-
vidual liberty were In great measure
and in differing dcgTee unprepared to
meet this attack upon them.
Must Throttle Milluirlin.
"Slowly they have gathered to itup-
port of tho principle of their lives the
principle upon which thoy live
BgaJnK the adverse attack on this
principle the domination of which
nutans the death of democracy and
the everlasting destruction of the sys-
THE YOUNG LADY
ACROSS THE WAY
The young lady across the way says
that at first she didn't believe the
story that the Germans had been Bell-
ing poisoned court-plaster in this
country but she guesses it must be
true after all as she overheard the
doctor say that there are many active
germ agents right here in this city.
teiu of Individual liborty of which we
are tho hlirti prloHts of the bar.
"So long as there exists a great and
powerful military authority which has
the purpose to secure domination by
military force so long as republics
democracies countries which pre-
serve individual freedom and Individ-
ual rights countries which subordin-
ate government to freedom must bo at
Don't Say: "Dandruff Can't
Be Stopped." .
Are you one of the hundred who
have tried many different tonic and now
say "Dandruff can't be stopped"?
If so remember. Pompeian HAIR
Massage is not only a tonic it is a treat'
ment This treatment is carefully described
in a leaflet. The Hair and lu Care"
enclosed in every package.
Pompeian
HAIR
Massage
is a clear amber liquid (not
cream). Not oily. Not sticky. Very
pleasant to use. 25c 50c and $1
bottles at the stores.
Don't hesitate to use Pompeian
HAIR Massage. It is made by the
old and reliable makers of
Pompeian MASSAGE Cream and
Pompeian NIGHT Cream.
The massaging (rubbing) of the scalp
wakes up the roots of the hair to new life.
This massaging also opens the pore
of the scalp to the wonderfully stimulating
liquids in Pompeian HAIR Massage.
Dandruff goes. Your hair will become
and stay healthy vigorous and attractive.
IS X
1
1 1 it
-5"?
Sold and
Recommended
"J
Druggists
ft J Barbers .
the mercy of autocracy As wH go to
Meep with a burglar sitting in your
front IikII an to talk ai'out the ponce
and FOCJrlty ef a democracy vlth Oer-
muny Mill competent to pur. -mo its
career uf dnit.limthin.
"We are in the fight and tho stake
for which we fight Is liberty 'and it Is
our bur which o.ands ut the door thru
which oppretrion would cuter. It Is
not so easy for tho farmer to see
there will be a difference In his crops
or In the sale of them for the man-
ufacturer to Kee that anyone will stop
wearing clothes or hoes or using ma-
chinery; but It Is eu.'y for ns to see
that with the domination of that mili-
t it y nxem that subordinates ! law
that n'tikc the bar liul n cog to an
administrative system of uo eminent
and leaves to the bench no independ-
er.re it l a: y for tin lawyer to i.m
that everything h hn contended for
of individual liberty ami tile suprem-
acy of the law over executive power
will be attacked and .lei-t'ovcd if we
do not "ucceed in this war."
To ;lve Wiirtiiii" Aid.
Mr Loot spoke after he had IWn
eluKd chairman of the eoiilerenre.
He was Interrupted by applause many
times during the nddrefs.
Tho delegn'es endor-i"d a plan for
giving wanline a-al.Mtanee. which-
pledges the lawyers to give legal uid
to those entering tho federal or state
service and the local exemption
boards; to conserve the practice of
lawyers entering such service; to co-
perato In relief work including
gratuitous as.ilftunee In piob.ting the
(states of tho"e who have died while
in the iiervice; and arHstlmr the fed-
eral and state authorities In ait ac
tivities In connection with tho war In-
eliiillnir providing public speakers for
the pre motion of patriotism Mid pat
rlotlc endeavors.
IL-v Qou were right')
Ke
healed my eczema completely
"It certainly ii a joy to be rid of all that ugly
Itching humor so quickly I I wa ashamed
to be teen while my handi and arms were
covered with it and some nights I simply
-o7Vsleepit itched and burned so. Thank
goodness you thought of ResinoltV
Rcilnol Ointment la to Marie
tlnlKolored thatilctn b uttd oo
tht iace neck or hitidi without it.
tractinf undue anenrion Rtainol
Soap i escelltnt for tht complta-
ton and for fcaby'e dtlicaic eki.
Rctinol Ointment and Rntaol
Soap araaold by ill drotfiili.
A Man's Drink That Won't Hurt Your Boy I
BAKING OF BREAD
IS GIRL'S HOBBY
Kansas Girl Labors Long; in
Laboratory on Problem
of War Bread.
At Fountains
5c
Tastes like A
vcm FIZZ
ml BlflaV. M aTAlaUll flafl aral
At Fountain
5c
NON-MLCOHOUO
Tho Girl Like It Tool
Taslea Uk A
CIN FU3
A Kansas farm girl exi-hanged
green fields this Bummer for ratiot'c
labor at bread making In a college
laboratory.
Rver day was baking d.iv for V!b.
Kthel I.oflln of Kills. From sunup
to sundown for weeks she has been
setting her sponge kneading her
dough letting It rise and molding
her loaves letting them rlsn aarnin
and popping them Into the oven to
bane all for her country.
Some days she combined rye with
her wheat some doy barley oaten
flour corn flour kaflr or rice. Al
ways the proportions were different
and each time that the young bread
maker succeeded In obtaining light
bread with a large percentage of
grains otner than wheat she smiled
with satisfaction to think of the
v-beat that could in consequence be
saved for the flghteni In France.
Then she would set another batch
of bread this time v rth a larger nro
portion of oat flour or rye or barley
or k:iflr.
The experiments have been made
in the domestic science department
of the University of KansriB where
an audience of women gathered one
day lust week to learn the results.
They saw many kiinds of breud and
many colore. They examined the
textures and tuMtes said this would
do and that .wouldn't hearkened to
tt e slim young priestess of the range
v hen she told them about the "pa-
triotic waistline" and left the labora
tory determined to eat war brend
from now until the kaiser Is con
quered.
The conservation of wheat said
Miss Lnflin must not begin on buking
day. It must begin long before that
In the harvest fields where the
' hands" and often the farmer are
polity of leaving putchea of full-
heudvd grain stalks standing in field
corners. They shove it hurriedly thru
the threshing machine regardless of
the fact thwt this crowding causes a
high percentage of tho grain to go
thru the machine Into the straw
stack from where 11 finds its w uy
with the .ftraw to the live Block or is
bu rned.
The second Mop In conservation is
takon at the mill. At present 72 per
cent of the wheat that goes into the
mill conies out In the form of flour.
The remainder is bran or stock feed.
With the fighters In France in
tore need of wheat bread that 2 per
cent ii grudiyed to tho cattle and
sheep and hog.i. Any lurm girl knows
that cattle and sheep and hogs and
I chickens can be Ted and even fat-
i tend on any number of other kind
'f food. It is true they are welcome
to the bran because they are t;.uch
better able to usHlmllute it than are
''e. Hut there is not 28 per cent of
ran In the wheat. Numerous ex-
periments have shown that millers
are sacrificing at leant 8 per cent of
the wheat taking It out of the
mouth of the soldier and handing it
over to the American cow v hose
nose is buried right now in gross to
her knees.
"SclontisU say 80 per cent is as
high as we may go In extracting the
flo jr from the wheat" &aid Mini Lot-
Un. Slice It at Uio Table.
"Wutch youiuelvos" she told the
housewives "leave a clean bread
board. Save the crumbs while they
nre still in the form of flour. Don't
spatter it about. Don't wasto a grain
of it.
"And remombor. It Isn't a matter of
comparative cost. We must save
wheat at all costs. Use corn starch
to thicken your soups and stews. Use
no breakfast cereal. 1 hate to ask
you to stop using macaroni and
spaghetti because it Is bo good but
1 is made of wheat flour and comes
lntr our wheat economy plan. I
would recommend the substitution of
rico but it Is needed abroad too so
we must think twice before ve sac-
rifice kernel of it to our own pam-
pered appetites.
"Another thing you can do" snld
Miss I..ioflin "is to conserve the slice.
Guard that precious loaf. Carry It
right onto the table along with the
bread knife ami cut each member of
the family an many slices as they ac-
tually want to eat but not one slice
extra to dry out arterward.
The audience was enlightened on
ways of retrieving' the dry slice and
crumb. It might be further dried in
the oven to make It brittle and sterile
and afterward rolled or pounded and
mado Into any number of good things
to eat among them bread biscuits
muffins cake.
"And please" coaxed the spoaker
"don't eat any more than you need.
Think of tho patriotic waistline and
stop tills Hide of treason."
When the bread samples were
passed around and a murmur of ap-
proval followed the tasting of the
bread that was 25 per cent oaten
flour Miss Loflln conceded the low
price of oata and consequent econ-
omy in the use of oat flour.
"Hut" she added "an entire sub-
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Write for booklet.
Write Department T-14
1230 Walnut Street
Kansas City.
York Boatoo. Providence Wor enter. Philadelphia. Harriaburah Newark .Wllkeabarrs Baltimore. Waihlnaton. Richmond. Albany. 8yracuaa Rocheater
h Cleveland Detroit. Grand Rapid. lndian.polie Cincinnati. Atlanta fairminiham. NewOrleana. Milwaukee. Minneapolis St. Paul
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Buffalo Pitteburih
Dt. laOUM.
stitutiin ennnot be mado until Home-
one has found a way to chnnKe tlie
protein In oat In.Vi something na
elastic as the gluten In wheat."
To prove the elasticity of the Rluten
the demonBtrator Bent a Hample
around the hall.. It was Just a piece
of the 'wheat Bum" which every
country child has made over Hnd
over particularly at harvest time
when wheat kernels are fresh and
soft and It Is easy to chew out all the
Ktarch and keep only the rubbery
gluten between the teeth.
Then Miss Loflln explained how
this Rluten in the wheat stretches ln
elastic bubbles as the bread rises due
to the action of the yenst. Hut the
oats with all Its good nourlshlnK
qualities is short on Rluten and as a
result all the tiny hubbies created by
tho yeast burst and 'ko-flump" Roes
tho oat bread and with It the spirits
of the housewife. Hye and barley
Ibave similar ehortcomlnRS tho In less
deRree.
"I could hear the little bubbles
bursting; In the loaves as I buked
them" mourned Miss lyoflln "and
you can see how soddon they arc."
ruiil Her Own Hour.
In order to procure the oat and
rye and barley flour which mllllntr
companies will not grind In small
quantities the demonatrator Rround
her own grist In a mill with Its half
horsepower motor used In the chem
ical department for grinding; pow
ders.
Following Is the formula upon
v-hlch Miss Loliin finally fixed as tho
most likely to have a successful out-
come: Cereal flour 72 grams; wheat
flour 218 grams; sugar 12.5 grams;
lard 14 grams; potato water 148.6
grams; yeast 1.75 grams salt 3
grams.
"Multiply grams by four and you
havo calories." suid the bread maker
"and a slice of bread will average
about a hundred calories. 8o you see
caloric values are neither difficult
I nor mysterious ust like any other
simple unit.
Financial values were carefully
figured. A pound loaf of wheat
bread could be produced at prevail
ing prices for .0666; rye .0668; oats
.A42; rice. .0739; corn meal .076;
gruhum .075; barley 054V.
"If our millers only would take up
this problem of war flours they could
make It possible to save much wheat
for the armies In Franoe." said Misa
Loflln. "Hetter bread than 1 have
been able to make would douhtlosa
result from a finer niilllu of tho
flour. Where I used a forty mesh
tnv would use a hundred mesh for
bolting."
Hire rtrcail Uko Wheat.
Those who tasted the samples pro-
rnunced the rlre bread much like the
v heat except that It is finer in tex-
ture and whiter. Opinion was di-
vided on the corn and kafir but on
the oats rye barley and rye It was
favorably united.
The bread maker reported that a
half cake of yeast luul been found as
efficient as a whole cake that potato
water was about as efficient as po-
tato that the dough was conslderuuly
longer in rising without potato or
potato water than with It. Of "start-
ers" and yeasts she had a good deal
to fey. acknowledging the purumount
Importance of good ycasi. in pro-
ducing which Miss Jessie Hell Wood-
worth of Simla Col. has been ex-
perimenting all summer in an ad-
joining laboratory.
Out In Kills Miss Loflln cooked for
harvest hands Iact year eighteen das
In succession. She has baked rread
fr.r home eonumptinn and she ha3
bought It. but she U emphatic in ex-
pre;"ing hor belief that It costs moie
to buy bread than to bake it your-
self. A GOOD SPORTING "EVENT"
Zbjwko and Ills OpponeiH do Thru
Several Staucs of Manly Art.
TUnMINGHAM. Ala.. Sept. 3. The
wrestling match here tonight betwceii
Zbysko and Lewis was declared a
draw on the ground that both inn
bad fouled Zbysr.ko by striking his
opponent In tho face with his fist to
force him to break a toe-hold ana
Lewis by gaining a strangle hold oil
Zbyszki that ho held until tho latter
was uTiconsolous. The mn had
wrestled until midnight without either
gaining a fall before the referee
atopped the match. After the specta-
tors left the two wrestlers met and
engaged In a fist fight. Hoth were
badly battered before they wero sep-
arated. IS NO LONGER A PACIFIST
Woubl-Ho TraHor Ho Says If He did
Not l'rg Follow? to Action.
ICHIK. Pa. Sept 3 fiamuel Oomp-
ers. president of the American Feder-
ation of iJthor during an address to-
day declared that persons unwilling
to do their full dutw in this hour of
national peril nre nol entitled to the
protection of the reouhllc.
f am a pacifist that Is 1 was
until eo!dent Wilson asked con-
irr.M to declare war." said Mr. Uonp-
ers. "Now I would betray the great
body of worklngmen which I repre-
sent if I do not urge them to give
thir last full measure of iVevotion to
the cause of world freedom."
T"iu (iibbons Wlitl.
DAYTON Ohio Kept. 3. Tommy
Gibbons of Ht. 1'aul won the decision
hero tonight In the 15-round bout
with Oils Christie having ihe better
of tho contest all the way thru. There
were no knockdowns.
In the Drink.
She I am Just crazy about surf
bathing.
lie A dipsomaniac then!
SLANG "SISTER OF POETRY"
An Acknowledged Itrlatloaslilp unit
What Can Ik- Said for It.
Hlang Oelett Hurgess once said Is
"the Illegitimate sister of poetry that
makes with her common caus
agulnst the utilitarian economy or
proso." Their common ground Is the
reulm of metaphor as we are quics
to recognizo for we llko to think of
our ready idiom as the stuff that
poetry is made of. "Good night!" we
exclaim to express tho finality of a
lost cause and it makes us feel that
we are poets or that .Shakespeare was
an every-day American to find it In
the same sen so In "Henry IV" part
I. "If he fall In good night! or sink
or swlr.i." t'luiucer uses "come off"
and "go sit clown." jshakespoare has
"not In It." iSheridan huh "cut. it
out." The last mUht bo prolonged;
and when u II examples are put to-
gether one bogliin to doubt whether
all new slang is not old poetry writ
large. In deed slang Is poetry in
Just so far us It seeks the emotions
tl.ru the freshly-i'flged metaphor. It
ib the opposite of poo-try in that it
consciously seeks to be in bad taste.
Tho ('ifforenco is in the nature of the
emotion it seeks to rouse. Its humor
is Falstaffiun; It speaks to us not In
fun only. If It Is not grotesque if It
Is funny merely because It is new Its
career us slang Is dhort; It either
parishes or becomes plain Kngllsh.
Tho Hang metaphor too os the
ephemerid of poetry has a short cycle
of lite with startling power of eelf-
renenal. It Ib like evolution afflicted
with tho speed mania type succeeding
type so fast that one losvs the sense
of continuity in the process. When
a careless collegian of George Ado's
says "Father you talk like a hod
of ashes" the figure Is not hard to
recognize It Is ut leust true to type.
TRAIN SOLDIERS IN OVERALLS
organizations marched in today's
u:iur ciuy purauu line. it jb muu lu
ha.'o been the most pretentious of Its
kind !n the history of Kansas City.
In the line of niajch wire two
thousand workers at the nationul
army cantonment at Fort l.llcy Kun.
who canvj here In special trains to
participate in the day's celebration.
LABORERS WILL PLEDGE AID
Kamiicl Jumpers Will Preside at
Mooting to lio Held In Minneapolis.
MINNKAPOLIS. Sept S. Repre-
sentatives of northwest labor organi
sations had completed arrangements
I tonight to receive delegates from all
parts of the country to big loyalty
meeting under the auspices of the
American Alliance for Labor and
Democracy.
Oik of the chief ot. lefts of the con-
ference which will be addressed by
Samuel Gompers president of tha
American Federation of Labor Is to
pledge to the government the hearty
support of organized labor In the war.
Gov rtiment Will Savo Thousands of
Dollar iiml CoiiM-no (Supply.
CAMP KL'NSTON. FOKT KILEY.
Kan. 8eWt. 3. Oruftod men from
Missouri Kansas and Colorado In the
fourteenth division cantonment at
Cump Funston here will dig trenches
and drill in blue overalls. If a burx ca-
non made to the war deportment by
Major Genoral Leonard Wood Is
adopted.
Not only will the government save
hundreds of thousands of dollars i
General Wood declares but the use of
overalls will help conserve the supply
of uniforms which is far from udo-
quate now according to officers here.
SUNNYSIDE
HOSPITAL
TRAIMNG SCHOOL lor NURSES
Young ladlaa prepare for Red Ooee
work br eomplttine; a eourae of training
at the Suonyelde hoapital.
X-RAY ROOM
Our new X-Ray It now ready for
operation. We are now prepared te
photograph aonea etoniach. kidaeva
aiaaioida ate. 8ee ua peraonally for
ratea.
Rouleau Sisters
PHONE 5454
K. C. LABOR MEN IN PARADE
Fort lUley Workmen at Cuiitoneineiit
Wero Pntt-iotlc In Ihe Man h.
KANSAS CITY Kept. 3. Thirteen
thousand men representing S7 union
EMPTY
HOUSES
PHONES 117-117.876. NICHOLS
TRANSFER STORAGE CO.
Iron lockers for household goods.
Automatic sprinkler system Just
Installed makes fires Impossible.
We have the largoat Moving
Vans In tha city and can stora
goods cheaper because we pay no
rent
rUOXES 117-118-875
1t;n.'iHiii.;i''M.(s..;uiiV
' 4
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Lorton, Eugene. Tulsa Daily World (Tulsa, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 350, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 4, 1917, newspaper, September 4, 1917; Tulsa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc134494/m1/3/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.