VOL. LVIII NO. 11. ; EdtfrMl M WMHt-ttaM May IS. iSM, at Oouht P. 0. Mt4u u tl Mare S. IV OMAHA, MONDAY MORNING, JULY 1, X918. By Mill (I Mt? Dlty. M M: , 12. Ml Dally iM Sot- Mi outildt Nik. otiM nu TWO CENTS ' . h r ii M U :J LOJiriL IK TWO DIE mmsm I UP- OF AUTO Ed "Gabe" Switzer and Agnes Mullen Killed When Car at High Speed Crashes - Into Curb. Two more deaths are charg- fn ' the ftrtivitips of the pootegger, 'according to the statement of the police regard- ng an automobile accident at Chirty-fourth and Dodge streets shortly after midnight Sunday. Ed "Gabe" Switzer, 1624 Burt street, and Agnes iMulIen were instantly killed. D. Hozbin, 825 South Thirty- sixth street, the only eyewit- less of the accident, told the police that the ill-fated car and another car were racing down Dodge street when the acci dent happened. The other car speeded away from the scene. The f wreckcu car was driven oy fames 'Ward, 1411 Chicago street From the -story told by Hozbin to bolice he evidently lost control of the it which crashed Into the curb. The ntire back end of the car collapsed. fwo. telephone poles were snapped ff before the car came to a stop. ' Man and Woman Arrested. In the front seat with Ward were Ed Wilkinson, 1718 Cuming street, nd Lola Allen; 601 North Sixteenth tret Miss Allen disappeared from the scene of the accident before the arrival of the police. She was arrested later at her home and is being held for investigation. Ward was found by ' passing auto parties about a iblock from the scene of the accident and taken to the police station where lie' ""fiT btirtsf held 'for investigation. Wilkinson received a badly sprained shoulder: Liquor in Car. Switzer and Miss Mullen were rid ing jh the back seat and were thrown worn the caf. The other three, rid ing in the front seat, escaped without injury except Wilkinson. Switzer's neck was broken and the base of bis skull fractured. Practi cally, every bone in Miss Mullen's 'head-was broken and the entire rear r i -i-.il j 01 inc SKuu cavcu w. Ward L, Griffin and wife, 4120 Sara- iOjra 'Street, returning from brand Island, were stopped by Wilkinson and removed Switzer to the Lister hospital, but he was dead before reaching there. They then returned tor Miss Mullen, who was Kiuea in stantly. . , Police allege the car was reeking with the smell of whisky and a large viuantity was spilled over the icar. (Both Wilkinson and Ward admitted thati, liquor was in the car, but re fused to' tell where it had been pur-chased,-; i . Thecaf had been rented for the 'evening from the Nebraska Service garage, ; Nineteenth ana 1-arnam streets.-' Ward, Wilkinson and Miss Allen were all held for investigation pendr mg a coroners inqst. Thrilling Lijiase. "W. LyDtckcrson -of. the Prince Auto company and Officer Hans Bough lw' a thrilling chase from Twenty-fourth street to Fortieth I street on Cuming to capture P. H. Mi11r 251 1 PVnnL-li'ii etroof Pr.1iV W - Wl.Wt... allege that Miller, traveling at a high rate . of speed at Twenty-fourth and i . i ... 1 1 1 1 ii- j-wning Mtcei, BirucK viuiam waw- Azynkiewiz, 4626 South Thirty-third I street,-''who was crossing the street. 1 jj ....... t .i.. was captured afterta chase.. Waw Synkiewiz, badly bruised .about the body and legs, was taken home. Mil der was arrested and charged with .ast and reckless driving. The Weather For Iowa, Nebraska and Kansas .Fair v.Monday. and Tuesday, with rising temperature . Temperature! at Omaha Yesterday. S a. m S 7 a. m.. I a. m.. 9 a. m.. 10 a. m. . It a. m. . 12 m.' i.. 1 p. m.. 2 P. m.. 3 p. m.. 4 p. m.. 5 p. in.. 6 p. m.. 7 p. m.. . - V Comparative Loral Record. " - 1918. 1917. 191. 1915. Highest yeaterdav .. 7 100 92 80 fewest yesterday .. li 74 72 1 lean temperature .. . 65 87 82 70 Precipitation ..... .00 .09 .09 .28 ' Temperature and precipitation departure! Tom the normal: formal temperature 75 Hficlency for the day 10 Total excese since March 1 680 "formal precipitation 15 inch "Hsfielency for the day .15 inch Total' rainfall since March 1.. 7.56 Inches flclencr since March 1 .3 inches ixeesa for cor. period. 1817 1.31 Inches Vefielency for aor. period, 3916.. 1.73 Inches v T A. WELSH. Meteorologist. U. S. Senator Tillman Stricken by Paralysis; Recovery Is Doubtful WWM(B1S?S" i Washington, June 30. Benjamin R. Tillman, democratic senator from South Carolina, is seriously ill at his home here. t His recovery is re garded as doubtful. His left side is completely paralyzed and he has been suffering from cerebral hem orrhage since Thursday. CHAIRMAN HAYS TO ATTEND G.O.P. STATE METING E. D. Beach of Republican Cerv tral Committee Makes An nouncement on Return From Chicago. Chaiman E. D. Beach, of the re publican state central committee, whose home is in Lincoln, was m Omaha Sunday between trains, on his way back from a conference in Chi cago with Chairman Will xl. Hays, of the republican national committee. Mr. Beach has the positive assur ance of Chairman Hays of his at tendance at the state convention of the republican party at Lincoln on lulv 30. SL--.! .--....'v.- Mr, Hays', who has attracted con siderable attention throughout the country because of his aggressive and unique personality as evidenced by his accomplishments both in patriotic and republican party matters, expect ed to be present at the loyalty con ference in Lincoln last month when Senator Lenroot spoke, but was pre vented from doing so. His attend ance, therefore, at the state conven tion is expected to increase the num ber of party leaders who would or dinarily be present Mr. Beach said that all of the state chairmen and national committeemen at the Chicago conference brought the most encouraging reports to Mr. Hays, who has himself spent consid erable time recently in touring the country. Twenty Survivors of Troop Ship Dwinsk Reach Hampton Roads Washington, June 30. Arrival at Hampton Roads, Va.( of 20 more sur vivors ,of the British troop ship Dwinsk, torpedoed and sunk 700 miles east of the Delaware capes last June 18, was reported today to the Navy department. Among them was Lt. Ross P. Whitemarsh, U. S. N. Twenty-three members of the crew of 148 still are missing. The twenty men were picked up at sea by naval vessels June 28, after they had been for 10 days in an open boat in' which they left the Dwinsk. The transport's crew got away in seven boats, all of which except one have been accounted for. Paris Bombed Again. Paris. Tune 30. German airnlanes made two attempts to raid Tans be tween 11:50 o'clock Sunday night and 2:20 o'clock this morning. The first attempt was unsuccessful. On the second occasion the raiders dropped several bombs on the outer suburbs. KAISER TELLS HIS GUNNERS Emperor Concerned for Safety of Mjbnk Who Knows Burial Place of Prince fvlax TO SPARE MONT DEfi CATS With the British Army in France, June 30. There is an interesting de velopment in connection with the hos tile shelling or the territory around Mont Des Cats, where the famous Trappist monastery is located. For weeks the Germans have been bombarding this Flemish elevation heavily. Recently the German emperor wrote a letter to the i German com mander asking that Mont Des Cats be spared because the aged prior of the monastery was the only living person who knew where the emperor's relative, Prince Max of Hesse, had been buried after his death in the monastery in October, 1914. The prince was attached to the cavalry which occupied Mont Des Cats in Oc tober after the outbreak of the war. During an engagement with British cavalry Prince Max was mortally wounded and taken to the monastery. SCHWAB IN OMAHA BOUND FOR PACIFIC World's First' Shipbuilder De clares Middle West Always Stimulates His Energy and Patriotism. "It is the enthusiasm, the energy and the patriotism of the middle west which .always stimulates me whenever I pass through this part of the country," said Charles M. Schwab, director general of the Emergency Fleet corporation and steel king, as he spent 20 minutes in Omaha Sunday morning between trains. He was on the way to make his first tour of inspection of the build ing of merchant ships on the Pa cific coast. "I never come to the middle west without being tremendously inspired by the spirit of your people," he said. "And in this critical period of the nation's history, the west, all parts of it, is doing more than its share. The Pacific coast is nobly respond ing to its share of the shipbuilding work." Mr. Schw'ab gave his per sonal confirmation to Washington dispatches that 100 ships would be launched on July 4. Launch 500,000 Tons Thursday. Over 500,000 tons will be launched next Thursday," he said. "This will be more tonnage than the United CHARLES M. SCHWAB. States has launched in a whole year before this." v The man who began his career as a stake driver for a surveying gang of the Carnegie Steel company and who rose to become president of the United States Steel corporation and president and chairman of the Beth lehem Steel company, gave the im pression of being extremely enthu siastic over the shipbuilding program, the general management of which has been entrusted to him by the gov ernment. Dressed in a gray suit, with cap and soft collar, he strolled about the Union station and in a genial fashion answered 'questions addressed to him by ntwspaper men. Port of Omiha. He laughed heartily when he was asked why the government did not take advantage of Onaha's facilities as a shipbuilding center. "We have a port here, a fleet lof barges and a (Continued on rage Thfee, Column Three.) While he waslbeing nursed by the monks his comFades were driven from the hill andthe British occupied it. The prince died and was buried in a certain plaice, the location of which was not disclosed to the world. The German emperor wrote a letter to' the pope, in which lie asked for in formation as to where the prince was buried and requested the return of the body. Tlie pontiff forwarded the let ter to th ; monastery, and it was then that the :mperor received the famous reply n it until he had evacuated Bel gium an 1 made just restitution would he Icar i - the whereabouts of the prince's grave. The e nperor now appears to be worried that his guns may kill the only mail able to give him the desired information, but his request to spare the pla?e seems to have met with small response thus far,' for big shells continue to break on the monastery. 0f W 'A Four Times Candidate For Presidency Arrested ' On Charge of Sedition I ! f tf 1 fa Clevelu.u, O-, June 30. iiugene V. Debs, four times socialist candi date for the presidency of the United States, was arrested here today by United States Marshal Charles W. Lapp and Deputy Mar shal Charles Boehme as he was about to deliver a speech. The arrest was made on a secret indict ment returned yesterday in connec tion with his speech at the socialist state convention in Canton, O., June 16 last. , It is said the indictment con tains ten counts under the espion age act which provides a penalty of 20 years in the penitentiary and a fine of $10,000 and costs' for each violation. Debs was arrested when entering the garden where the meeting was held. No commotion was caused as few persons were aware of what was transpiring until after Mr. Debs was taken to the federal building. RAIDS PRECEDE 'WORK OR FIGHT' ENFORCEMENT Forty Rounded Up by Police Preliminary to Making Omaha 100 Per Cent in Indus trial Activity. "Work or fight." Every man within the draft age today must engage him self in some productive occupation or join the colors. The order issued by Provost Marshal Crowder became ef fective today and preparations are made to fully enforce the provisions' in Omaha. , "Omaha will be but slightly af fected," said Chief of Police M. F. Dempsey. "We have been conduct ing a campaign for several months against loafers, and there are very few now in the city who are not em ployed. Those who are not employed at productive occupations will be ar rested on sight. This is no time for leniency with this class and we will see thae Omaha is 100 per cent workers." Police Saturday night raided two places wrere young men are alleged to have been idling. About 40 young men were arretted and charged with being inmates of an ill-governed house. Sedition charges were filed against two of the inmates, who po lice allege are not working. Seeking Other Employment. Men employed in nonproductive labor have been making arrange ments to go to work in approved businesses. Several have besieged the police asking to continue in the present employment until the July draft quota is called. They allege that it will work a hardship on them to change at this time as they will have trouble in securing work for the short time remaining before they are called to the colors. Little complaint is heard by men affected wha as a rule will start work this morning in other industries. The railroads apparently have the prefer ence, although many men will leave the city and seek employment on farms. Packing houses and smelters will be sought for employment by many of the men. High wages paid laborers on new buildings being con structed will' lure the balance of the men. Waiters and Taxi Drivers. Waiters in night cafes and taxi drivers will be replaced largely by men over the draft age and men dis charged from the army for physical disability. Women will replace many of the men employed on day shifts! In several instances longer hours have been started by employers who have been unable to secure competent help to replace men ordered to other em ployment. Scarcity of help in Omaha has lured many workmen from other cities. As a rule they have reported at the po lice station and informed officers that they were in the city to seek work and had no intention of attempting to evade the "work or fight" order. Cardinal Celebrates. Baltimore, June 30. Cardinal Gib bons celebrated today the beginning of his 33d year as the cardinal arch bishop and the anniversary of his or dination to the, priesthood. 30 BODIES FOUND A Death Toll of Building Collapse and Fire in Sioux City May Reach 50; Victims Are Burned Alive. Sioux City, la., June 30. Burrowing deep under tons of wreckage, firemen and volun teers today removed 30 mere bodies, from the wreckage of the Ruff building, which col lapsed yesterday afternoon at Fourth and Douglas streets, and announced that the toll of the disaster may reach 50. It is probable several per sons were completely inciner ated judging from tne condi tion of most of the bodies re moved this afternoon. Tailing fiendishly, some of them so weak they wobbled after their 22 hours' work, workers could see parts of charred bodies still deep under the smouldering timbers and so burned they could not be sure whether they were men or women. Burned Alive in Wreckage. . The opening of the Chain grocery store, which was crushed under the walls of the Ruff building, revealed the extent of the disaster. Thirty five volunteer motor trucks removed debris so rapidly this morning the ruins of the crowded grocery were entered six hours ahead of schedule. Men found in the ruins were burned alive, pinned down by wreckage. Cause of the disaster has not been determined. Some of the persons ivho were in the wrecked buildings at the time of he collapse asserted that it was due to an ammonia explosion inthe Chain grocery or the Beau mont market, while others asserted it was due to reconstruction work which was going on in the Ruff build-ing.'--'- I"-. -r r- W. J. Becker, vice president of the Ruff company, said that the first floor of the building had been low ered eight to ten inches, but that this work had been completed three days ago. The walls of the building we're not touched, Mr. Becker asserted. List of Known Dead. Following is the death roll? Alfred J. Hanson. Joe Awe. Ole K. Roisum. Ole E. Running, tailor. John Lovine. Irs. Mabel Chavens, colored. Ben G. Wood. Mrs. Hester C. English. Walter C. Nelson, 13-year-old son of H. W. Nelson. Charles Kugel. Merlie Kugel. . Myrtle Hongslo. John- Stolz. iames Harp. Irs. Margaret Haley. Helen Koehler, daughter of Mrs. Koehler, South Sioux City. Herman Federn. . Charles Nordstrom. J. Rohr. Roy- Ostrander. Roy Schueller, aged iMrs. F. A. Lofliss. Louis Soiset. J. P. Schriever. John Simeon. Seven unidentified women, one thought to be Mrs. Koehler of South Sioux City. Seven unidentified men. Former Russian Crown Prince Now Reported Seriously III London, June 30. The former Crown Prince Alexis of Russia, ac cording to German papers, is in To bolsk, sever!y ill and unable to un dertake his journey to Ekaterinburg, where he planned to join his parents. His sister, Tatiana, is caring for him. WRECKAGE VON SCHILLER, GERMAN POET, Statue of Distinguished Teuton Visited in the Night by Artists of Brush and Pot IS GIVEN COATING OF YELLOW Because he was a German poet, who died 113 years ago, Johan Christoph Friedrich Von Schiller was given a coat of yellow paint. This was not the real Johan Schiller, nor yet his shade, which holds ghostly vigil in the lonely graveyard of Mar- bach, Wurtembcrg, Germany, who was decorated with the pigment ot con tumely. It was the statue of the poet, which, perched on a pedestal of granite, overlooks a sweep of the Missouri river with the Iowa hinter land in perspective, from a command ing knoll in Riverview park. The mobile profile of the poet, in bronze, is covered with . a smear of the yellow paint, as is also the sym bolic lyre and wreath of bay leave? on the pedestal and the pedestal it self. It is the eastern side of the face that has been colored, the side pre sented to the sun and it gives the poet a peculiarly jaundiced appearance. The coat of paint was applied by a FIGHT CARRIED TO FOE IN MOUNTAINS! BY GENERAL DIAZ Strong Positions Gained at Vital Points and Enemy' Pre" parations for Offensive Broken Up; German Artil- . lery Hammering British Lines Before Amiens, , Near Albert and Northwest of Lens.' ' By Associated Press. ? - ' Attacking the Austro-Hungarian lines on - the Asiago plateau the Italians have taken Monte Di Valbella and captured 809 prisoners and have held the position against repeated counterattacks. "( : , !- - , ' This turn to the offensive came as' a surprise to the laymen of the allied world, for it was believed that General Diaz would be content to hold his lines in the mountains against a new, offensive, intended by the Austrian, and Germans. ' ' . - V J ! The Italian attack was not limited to Monte Di Valbelli. On the left bank of the Brenta, they captured the height of Sasso Rosso, just north of the village of Valstagna. t V , , j O These actions may 1 explain . the WHEAT PRICES; INCREASED BY FOODDIRECTOR Value at Omaha' Fixed at $2.18; Change . .in Scale Necessitated by Advance in Freight Rates. New York, June 30. New wheat prices, necessitated by advanced freight rates, were announced here to night by the food administration grain corporation. It was stated that a minimum price of $2 a bushel for No. 1 wheat aboard cars' in the inter mountain territory will be made ef fective; Details of the plan will be made publir. sooni, f :.! ' The ' corporation's' BnAouncement said that No. 1 wheat of the northern spring hard winter, red winter, durum and white grades will be sold in the various markets at the following basic prices:' ' . ' New York, $2.39; Philadelphia, $2.39; Baltimore and Newport News, $2.38.1$; Duluth and Minneapolis, $2.2 lj.; Chicago, $2.26; St. Louis, $2.24; Kansas City and Omaha,$2.18; New Orleans and Galveston, $2.28; Tacoma, Seattle, Portland, Ore., As toria, San Francisco and Los Angeles, $2.20. The price basis for No. 2 wheat will be three cents bejow No. 1, and for No. 3 four cents below No. 2. Grades below No. 3 will be dealt in on sam ple. Special classes fcf wheat, the com mission said, will be sold on the fol lowing sched-lc: Dark hard winter, two cents above hard winter; dark northern spring, tw cents above northern spring; amber durum, two cents above durum; yel low hard winter, two cents under hard winter; red spring, five cents under northern spring; red wall, seven cents under red winter; red durum, seven cents under durum; soft white, two cents tinder hard white; white club, four cents under hard white. Changes in federal grading stand ards previously filed with the trade, it was declared, are expected to result in production of more high grade wheat than in 1917. Princess Theresa Given Three-Year Sentence Honolulu, June 30. A three-year sentence was imposed yesterday upon Princess Theresa Belliveau, found guilty Monday by a jury in the terri torial court of a charge of conspiracy to commit forgery in connection with the filing of an alleged will of the late Queen Liliuokalani. Her attorneys gave notice of their intention to ap peal the case. ' . mysterious vigilance committee which invaded the prk during the night, unobserved, except by the same moon which looked down on, the ruined towns, cathedrals and historic places of France, ravaged by the vandal Huns. It meant nothing to those who ap plied the paint that Schiller rebelled against militarism and military edu cation in his youth and that he reck lessly assailed Duke Karl, of Wurtem burg, originator of the "Karl-schule," with its rigid, soulless discipline. - It imeant nothing to them that Carlyle, said of Schiller: "He was a high ministering servant at truth's altar and bore him worthily in the office he held." The vigilance committee wanted to express its feelings against the Ger man, and had the members known of the existence of the Linden tree inside the iron fence a short distance north of the bust of Schiller, they might have torn it up, root and branch. failure of the Italians to pursue the Austrians across the Piave when on June 23, the enemy fled from the" west bank with a haste that indicated something of demoralization. :' Cain Vital Positions, k General Diaz probably has expected the heaviest enemy blow along the mountain . front, which is tll kev ' to the Italian situation," In. attacking h has carried the fight to the foe, gained strong positions a vital points and broken up some of the preparations made by the enemy for an offensive. . It is not believed General' Diaz plans to go further than local ob jectives,' but if he should make much progress ,on ' the Asiago plateau h would be able , to take under his ar tillery fire the railroad paralleling tho ' battle line and running along the Brenta river east of Lake Caldonazzo, This line is the connecting link be tween the Piave and Adige fronts -and-if the Italians could dominate it, the Austrian system of communica-. tions would bo. seriously impaired. 1 French Continue "KibbUng.' , ' . The French are ,'ofjtinuiug their "nibbling"- north of the ,MarnKri-- -day they swept the Germans from tho" environs, of Villers-Cottereti: forest, southwest; of. Soissons. .1 Saturday . night they attacked the German lines . a-little to the north of, .the, Clignan" river and just to the. left of positions ; held by Americans. ,A long ridge be tween the .villages of . Mosloy, and Passy-En-Valois was , occupied ' and 265 prisoners taken. Near St. Pierre'.! Aigle, the French .positions were im-'. ' proved by a local attack ' ' v The. British repulsed an enemy assault near Merris, near where the Germans were driven back east of Nieppe forest: Friday: ;The' British official "statement mentions heavy German' artillery fire before Amiens, near Albert; north of the Scarpe, near Arras, and in the region of Festubert, northwest of Lens. ;';:-' , . The official" statement issued at Berlin says that artillery firing has -increased between the Yser and the Marne, which includes virtually all ' of the active battle zone. . i C'. There is a report Alexis Romanoff, son of the former Russian emperor, is aljve,- notwithstanding dispatches I telling of his recent death. Germans Beginning . To Learn Vital Part. U.S.layinWar .Atlantic City, N. J.,!June 30. The vital part which America is playing in the world war has at last begun to dawn upon the people of Germany; despite the efforts of. the German government to conceal ft, Lord Read ing, British ambassador, declared in ; a speech tonight before the Maryland state bar association. ;, "I observe that in the reicjistag and throughout Germany," he said, "it is ' now known that a new, vital dom inant force has not only entered into this war, but is determined to throw all it possesses into the scale for the ideals upon which its political sys tem is based and which are the only principles for which America has ever been drawn into war." . ' Victory Depends Upon Thrift; S. W. Straus Tells teachers Pittsburgh, June 30. Declaring the United States has reached the time when all economic problems must be solved by thrift, Sf W. Straus, presi dent of the American Society for Thrift, told delegates to the prelim inary session of the National Educa tion association that victory for this country in the war depends upon systematic saving and conservation of every resource. The association's 56th annual convention will open here Monday afternoon. - s . ; Mother of Herman Peters ; ? Dies flear Grand. Island Herman H. Peters, former prpprie-. tor of the Merchants hotel, .was" called to Grand Island Friday by.the serious illness of his mother, who was 88 years old. He reached the bedside in time to see her alive as she died Saturday ttoon. - Mrs. Peters' Is survived by four sons, Peter, Herman B Henry and Fred, and by one daughter, witii whom she lived on a farm near Su Labori, north of Grand Island. '