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i ff‘-‘ "AND CHEESE ~HAKE 00D s Choese Snggested “Washington, D. C., June 27.—Corn Bay be used with chieese in place of 2 specialists of the United =3 Department of Agriculture point:out, for the preparation of a de- e and nutritive ‘combination The following recipe has been sd _out hy the department spec- o} the samp in the salted water tender. Drain and combine with | - sauce: : ‘skim milk. fimely cut chéese. sDooRs, flour. : sslt, 1-¢ teaspodn mus- z or other seasoning, seasoning with the dry form into remainder ‘s stewpan, thick. Add is all <used. oyer the top A crumbs product Is used, it heat it until it is it the butter in a saucepan. into it the flour and seasonipgs. the anilk and heat, stirring gdn- fitly until the sauce becomes thick M’ smopth. * ‘Addthe [cheesé ‘dnd stir 1t \1s inelted. 8 Colonel Theodore Roosevelt in a speech delivered in the interest of the Red Cross at Oyster Bay made public the fact that two. ¢f his sons had al- ready gone to France and that ‘“the others are to folléw.” The two who have gone are Major Theodore Roose- velt, Jr.,"(No. 1 in the pictures), and Lieutenant Archie Roosevelt (No, 2 in the pictures), both of whom it s un- derstood will ‘be attached to General Pershing’s ‘headquarters, The an- nouncement that they had been de- tailed to special duty was. recently made in an army order. is is the first installment of the colonel’s famous pledge that he and his four sons and at least one of his sons-in-law. would be ready to join the country’s forces whenever the occa- {slon arese. The, other sons are al- ready in the service, and Dr. Richard Derby, the colonel’s son-inlaw, is a SENATE LESS HARSH |ON PROHIBITION ACT Favors Giving President Power to . Decide “Bone Dry” Law. Washington, June 27.—The admin- istration food control bill passed by the house was rewritten lats yester- day by a Senate Agricultural sub- committee s¢ as to. give to President ‘Wilson the power, and responsibility of deciding whether the nation shall be “bone dry” during the war and to place iron and steel and many oth- er products in addition to food and fuel under government “control. These and other changes are so satisfactory to many senators who have been opposing the original draft | of the legislation that both advocates and opponents predicted passage in the senate by Saturday. As a substitute for the house pro- hibition sections, which without quali- fication forbid the manufacture of foodstuffs into /lifuor, the sub-com-'| mittee adopted provisions ~ which would prohibit manufacture, during the w4r, of all intoxicating beverages, and empower the president to gom- mandeer ‘existing supplies of lled spirits, but would authorize the ex- ecutive in his discretion to permit manufacture of malted, fermented and and vinous beverages, and fix their alcoholic content. Senators Gore, Smith, of George, and others prominent in the bitter fight against the legislation have an- nounced their support for the ' re- drafted measure. - Other signs of waning opposition and prompt senate action came in the debate on the senate floor, opposition senators leading recent - discussion yielding to Senators ‘Knute Neleon, republican, and Thomas, democrat, for speeches strongly supporting the control legislation. TFuture debate promised to center upon the prohibi- tion question, with leaders predicting an extremely close final vote. ) For the house prohibition plan, the/ sub-committee substitute provides: That from and after thirty days from the date of the ap- proval of this act it shall be un- lawful for any person, firm or corporation to use in the manu- ‘facture of any intoxicating liquors x B SR TAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDA |ALL FOUR OF ROOSEVELT'S SONS ARE CLARK GRIFFITH OF WASHINGTON “DOING THEIR BIT” AGAINST GERMANY| SAID TO BE AFTER GREAT LAJOIE CANNING NEEDED T0 CONSERVE OUR FOOD Houston Adfises Housewives io | Save Fruits and Vegstables major in the army reserve medicul corps. Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., and Archie Roosevelt were both among the mem- bers of the original Plattsburg train- ing camp in 1915, and Theodore was one of the group of Hgrvard men from whose deciston, on the day after the -Lusitania as sunk, that some- thing wouid have to be done to help get the country into a state of better preparedness for war, the Plattsburg movement originated. No. 4 in the pictures is Kermjt, second son of-Colonel Roosevelt, 0 has also received training at Platts- burg. Archie, the calonel’s third son, has served in the ~Massachusetts naval militia, has received training at Plattsburg and is now a second lieu- tenant in the infantry rederve. Quen- tin Roosevelt (No. 8) is being trained at Meneola for the aviation service and is showing great skill as a flier. Colonel Roosevelt's other, son-ii law, Nicholas . Longworth, is a mem- ber *of the house of representatives from Ohio. for beverage purposes any perish- able or non-perishable = feeds, foods or food materials. ‘Whenever the president shall find it necessary to conserve the perishable products named he is empowered to_permit the use of such § ictsiin' the manufacture ot *Hqtiors. never in the judgment of £ the public ingérest bé conserved thereby he is empowered. to permit the' limitéd use of the materials mentioned in the manufacture of malt or fer- mented liquors and to ' prescribe the alcoholic contents thereof. Another section adopted would au- orige the president to take over any ‘all distilled spirits now in bond, upon payment of ‘& reasonable and just price to distillers, for' redistil- lation or other non-beverage purposes; The thirty-day provision #s designed to give that time to the president to decide whether further manufacture of beer, wines and .light beverages shall be permitted, and for consumers and manufacturers to prepare far what the ;president may decide. Should ‘the president ‘not exert his authority so as to exempt malt, fer- mented and vinous bgverages from the sweeping. prohibitory provisions and should commandeer distilled spirits in bond, “bone-ary” mational prohibi- tion—of both manufacturer and con- sumption—would result, entailing a loss of federal revenue estimated be- tween four and five hundred million of dollars and new taxation measures, as well as local revenue reductions. 0 e iy BROKER'S WIFE A’ SUICIDE. Found Dead n Apartment With Bul let i Head. . New York, June 27—Mrs- Henry G. Campbell Jr, known well in society, was found dead in the bedroom of her apartment at: No. 43 Gramercy park at 5:30 o’clock yesterday afternoon. A bullet from an automatic pistol, which lay near her right hand, had penetrated the right temple. The body was. discovered by maid, who, -with her husband, butler, were the only occupants of the apartment at the time of Mrs. Camp- bell’s death. Mr. Campbell, & broker at No. 11 Wall street, had left his wife at 9 o’clock in the morning, after planning to go out with her in the evening. She was cheerful and he impressed upon her. the fact that it would be well for her to get out among friends as she had been ailing for months. The coroner learned she had dropped weight from 150 to ninety-five pounds. a the Washington, D. C., June 27.— “Every housewife this year should re- Store to her home the often over- looked home industries of canning, preserving, picklihg and drying of perishable fruits or vegetfibles,” said David FNouston, secretary of agri- culture, tod®y. “The large number of new. back-yard gardens which have been planted this year shortly will begin to yleld their extra harvest of beans, peas, carrots, beets, sweet corn, and tomatoes. The regular supplies also will reach the markets and, as happens each summer, the local sup- Ply -at times will exceed immediate consumptive capacity. Not to ocon- serve much of this surplusage of val- uable food would be sinful waste. “The present food and labor situa- tlons are such' that no- household is justified in looking to others to. ye- lease ‘it wholly from individual ‘Te- sponsibility and constructive action in saving and conserving food. All any home should expect of others is is to supply those foods which cannot be- produced effectively by its own members. ‘The railroads will be bur- dened with the transportation of sta- ple foods and civil and military neces- saries from localities of production and manufacture to’ districts incapa- ble of supplying their own needs. It follows that all locally produced foods, conserved by home methods, lesson the winter pressure on transportation agencies and al release similar prod- ucts of factories for other purposes. \“I urge every household, therefore, to can -all surplus perishable prod- ucts for which they have tainers and to dry and keep.in paper any ad- ditional surplus suitable for such preservation. No Special Skill Required. “Canning calls for no'special skill and for little equipment beyond = wash boller and jars. Fresh prod- ucts, ‘cleanMness and heat are the chief requirements, as even .sugar is not essential for canning. fruits under modern procedure. Fruits and vege- tables, moreover, can be dried eM- ciently in the sun, over a range or gas stove, or before an ‘electric fan. Homemade shallow trays of wood or heavy wire screen are the chief equip- ment required. Drying is & time- trid home industry; conservation of food by drying is largely a matter of restoring to the home great-grand- mother’s method of seeing that her family had good food in winter as a rellef from & monotonous ' diet of root vegetables. Canning and drying can be practiced as effectively in a city house or apartment as on a farm or in a suburban dwelling. “Canning, of course; already is a ‘profitable industry for women and children’in thousands of homes and I ‘trust will become almost universal tl n. To aid the home conserv- ation vement, the department of agriculture has issued a new farmers’ bulletin on home canning and an- other on home drying of fruits and vegetables. These free pamphlets should be read and followed in every household which wishes to translate patriotic impulse into concrete serv- ice.” 3 DUTCH SHIPS TO BE RELEASED. London, June 27.—A despatch from Amsterdam says that several Dutch newspapers approve the agreement between the Dutch and German gov- ernments with regard to the seven Dutch merchantmen which were tor- pedoed off the English - coast last February. Holland is to pay Ger- many a sum equal to the amount paid for insurance on the merchant- men while. Germany undertakes to replace the lost vessels by the ces- gion of a number of German ships now in.the Dutch East Indies. PLANNING. ELKS' CONVENTION. Boston, June | 27.—A tic demonstration on Boston Common preceded by a military parade will be the chief public feature of: the national convention of Elks held in this city next month. Toronto, June l'!.—Aowrun‘\ to local baseball reports, the Washing- ton American league club is endeav- oring to obtain the release by pur- chase of Napoleon Lajole, at present playing second base for the los In- ternational league team. Clark /Grif- fith, manager of the Washington team, is said to have entered into negotiations with the Toronto man- EX-OZAR'S FAVORITE SUES. Dancer Asks $1,000;000 for Seizure of Palace- Petrograd, June 27.—Mille. Kshes- inska, the dancer and favorite of the former emperor, has instituted suit the Provisional Government for $1,000,000 owing to its fallure to eject the followers of Nikolai Lenine, the radical socialist leader, from her palace, which they occupled during the revolution, and the refusal of the military authorities to send troops to evict them.” The legal period for the evacuation of the villa expired today, but the inites declined to leave. A despatch from Petrograd May 29 sald that after a long process in the courts, the keys of the palace had been delivered to Mille Kshe- sinska. At that time Kshesinska com- plained that furs to the value: of 227,000 rubles were missing from the palace. 500,000 FOR FRANOCE. This Force Comsldered Minimum by \ War Dept. ‘Washington, June - 2%.-—According to officials of the war department, Elfhu Root spoke advisely in predict- ing before the Russian War Industrial committee that the United States soon would-have 500,000 fighting men in Europe. [ Mr. Root’s statements affecting the military preparations of the United States were based, it was stated upon intelligence he has received from ‘Major General Hugh L. Scott, chief of staff of the army, who is Presi- dent Wilson’s military representative on the mission to Russia. Until Mr. Root spoke, it was not known here to what extent the War Department had prepared to transport froops io France: It indicated that the mini- mum number set by military esti- mates as constituting a reasonably ef- fective force was 500,000. Even that number is no more than the smaller nations, such'as Serbia, employs {un war. DISCUSS SOCIAL PROBLEMS. Sagamore Beach, Mass, June 37.— Socidl problems arising from the war | will be discussed at the tenth annual ! session of the Sagamore Sociological i conterence, which opened here today. | Buy an Indiana ‘truck—advt. HORLICK’S | MALTED MILK agement, and If satsitactory terms can be reached Lajoie may be seen playing second in a Washington uni- form in the near future. For 31 years Lajole was a baseball phenom- enon. He was a wonderful infielder, and as & batsman he had few equals. He reached the pinnacle of his career in 1901, when he batted the tre- mendous average of .405. COMPETITION STIFF AFTER WAR Springfleld, Masa, June 27.—HEx- port. prospects after the war with especial reference to leather and rub- ber goods, were considered by speak- ers at the Leather and Rubber Goods day session of the export conference here today. Henry H. Morse of Bon- ton’ indicat the difficuities to be encountered’ in the export of boots and shoes. He expressed the belief that after the war foreign competi- tion would be bitter and to the Hilt. be tolerated. He may \not.in the least contagious, people areafraid, theyavoid E must make for a man with a healthy skin, Ointment and Resina] Soap stop ltching and clear away eczema and similar . humors, loquic{lylfldullly? WATERW | Famons Spot 'Y Easily o This season will see th the public of an Atherican | tacle of: such extraord and beauty that its ev wide celebrity seems an e ‘The Waterwheel falls of ¢ national park have probably by less than a thousand p told, since their discovery. meti; no doubt they were & sight to the Indians of early considered the Tuolumne of the eafest of their The Tuolumne river is o finest of the many’ 44 streaths which flow h nollows of the High Sierrs., and rodrs by turns its sint from the high places down: through the celebrated He 3 valley to rest eventually in Its rush of several thousand the depths of the Hetch Hy | valley, by the way, its waters' carved in the living granite, one of the most remarkebl in the remarkable Sierra." . The Tuolumne canyon M beyond description. The 74 slants sharply for several mil ing with gathering power, the leaps over precipices ‘and f£o long, sharply . tiited granite Here are found the Wal sWwift current, striking tions lying across the grani rises fifty feet in the air-and long sweeping arcs of foam: again joining the rushing spectacle is one that fills holder no less with ‘aston! with enthusiastic admiration. larger Waterwheels are ext pressive. The reason so few psi seen the Waterwheels is. passage down the Tuolumi is one of extremee di hardy ¢ampers of the who for years have. mah camp at>Soda Springs ‘in umne Meadows have béen t cipal visitors; it is they | made known their junique the world. - One motion has been made of them. Last year the Derg Interior built a. trall Cascades in the Tu far as the top of the ing the most stren: climb without & trali. gfifl Eiis 1 15 & i § 56 il £ i g E] %b & E,ai § i £ ' § I a3 fig; -3 i by 8 ef HERE AT LAST THE SUMMER DAY ONE HAS WANTED ! Now ‘showing airy frocks, charming blouses, mefle-.l ‘wash skirts, and. the indispensable sweater. . in pretty models from $3.98 t0 $11,00 each. ‘WASH SKIRTS Every desired style and size is here! ures. i tions of colors. Also Showing a Large Variety Stzes 250k 38 watst i Every woman and girl needs her” light weight Sweater. We are showing many styles in solid colors and of Novel Modes in Neo Monday, July 2, $3.50 models will be advanced to $4.00. TO OLOSE’ OUT S All Children’s.Coats from 2 to 6 years. AT $1.98--All Chilarén’s Colored Coats,