THE " BEE : OMAHA; THURSDAY,- JUNE . - 19r 1919. i a r . i DEPORTATION OF WINNIPEG STRIKE LEADERS, PLAN , Proceeding Looking to This . ' End Will Be Started by .Special Board of Inquiry Sent From Ottawa. Winnipeg, June ( 18. Deportation - proceedings will be started Thurs day against the 10 strike leaders ar- - rested Tuesday and whisked off to Stony Mountain penitentiary. Their trial will be by a special board of t inquiry appointed under the imrr.i ; gration act. The board is now on its way from Ottawa. l "Under the amended order in council, the board will have power I to deport the accused men immet'i' t ately, said A. J. Andrews, crown prosecutor. "If they "do not con e under this amendment, they can be dealt with under the criminal code." For the first time In nearly five weeks, a limited stre'et car service was in operation Wednesday. Retr- ulAr employes of the company, who returned to work in response to an ultimatum issued by Manager A. W. McLimont, manned 13 cars. Despite the presence of a strong force of pickets about the Main street barn, no aggressive action was taken when the cars came out, nd there was no disturbance throughout the day. Settlement Is Urged. Striking railway car me"n have lent a formal communication to the :entral strike committee, urging set ilemSnt of the sympathetic strike. The car Nmen indicated their in y tention to "take such action as they deem advisable," if the sympathetic trike continues. Canadian Pacific special excursion trains to the phsasure resort of Win nipeg Beach have resumed opera tion. No more firemen, enginemen or switchmen have left their posts and railway officials declare traffic is nearly normal. Speakers at a Victoria park labor meeting' intimated efforts would be made to organize a Dominion-wide strike with a view to' forcing the re lease of the iniprisqned leaders. , Returned soldier-constables were on duty Wednesday for the first time since the serious riots of last -week. Would Exclude German Periodicals From U. S. Washington, June 18. Bills pro posing that periodicals in German nr other foreign languages be barred r from the mails were introduced by Senator Myers, democrat, of Mon tana. He also presented a bill to f prohibit all immigration for 20 years and that from Germany. Austria fHungary, Bulgaria, and Turkey for v 50 years. PHOTOPLAYS tiViiiiji'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"iii'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiii Presents 1 I i 9 "MY LITTLE 1 I I ' I SISTER." 1 . j X ptcturization of Elizabeth Robbins' Story of the Menace 'J of a Big City. . f ! Today Friday -Saturday. i ' iiiMliniiiiiiiniiiil;ininiiiiiiniiiil'H'ii!iiii;iiiiiini(ii Marguerite Clark IN ?StuT Waters" TODAY TO SATURDAY MARY PICKFORD "DADDY LONGLEGS" . Children's Special Show Saturday Montiaf at $:15. Admission 10c LOTHROP 24th and Lothrop LAST TIMES TODAY TOM MOORE la -A MAN AND HIS MONEY." . AMUSEMENTS. L l i a 1 1 Jm st.JtwW v MEW SHOW TODAY. HODGE PODGE SEXTETTE A WhhHfif of Words and Music HaUlc tistes Cx. !') Burch. Smith'! aaimels. I'autopUy Attraction Blllte Bbodse tn "la Scroll of Arcadr." BUI West Comedy. 1 "PHOTO PIAY. OFFERING J FOR TODAY MARY MACLAREN has at last the role which gives her op portunity of being really Mary. In "The Unpainted Woman," which opens a three-day engage ment at the Brandeis today, Miss MacLaren, in the character of Gud run Trygaveson, portrays a whole some, normal, healthy girl with' brims and the typical American woman's resourcefulness to take care of herself under the most diffi cult circumstances. The scene of "The Unpainted Woman" is laid in a small town and the action centers about so-called smalltown aristocracy and its bitter class barriers. - A man's fight with himself for mastery and control of his arch en emy, drink, is one of the strong punches in the story. Thurston Hall supports Mips Mac Laren as leading man. LitfTe Mick ey Moore is in the kiddie role. Oth ers in the cast are David Butler, Laura Lavarnie. Fritzie Ridtrewav. Willard Louis. Carl Stockdale andJ Lydta Yeamans litus. A circus, a canal and a canal boat form the settings for Mar guerite Clark's beauty and talent in "Still Waters," which will be shown at the Muse theater Thursday. "Still Waters," which is a rare com bination of pastoral romance, rural comedy and thrilling drama, was written especially for Miss Clark by Edith Barnard Delano, the well known novelist. In it the diminu tive star has abundant opportunities for the disolav of her remarkable versatility. High prices for stars is not the only thing entering into the cost of the making of "Daddy Longlegs," the Mary Pickford picture now at the Strand. Miss Pickford has a canceled check for $40,000, the price she paid for the picture rights to the story. Some time ago Evelyn Nesbit, ob serving the trouble directors experi enced in getting the proper kind of furniture for certain sets, took up the study of period furniture so she could aid in this matter. As a re sult, most of the period furniture used in "My Little Sister," now .t the bun theater, was chosen by Miss Nesbit. A beautiful American heiress dis guised as a gypsy fortune teller, a real English earl who takes to the highway as a peddler, a cuthroat gypsy with his band of nomadic ad venturers, an educated donkey, a ::toplays Sf Scene PromAuction of Souls" TODAY AT THE The film version of the book, "RAVISHED ARME NIA," on the Martyrdom of Christian Xrmenia, which i& Aurora Mardiganian's own story, substantiated by facts from the official reports of Viscount Bryce, the British invetigator; Henry Morgenthau, the American ambas. - sador, and the American Board of Foreign Missions. Prices 35c, 50c; Matinees 25c Full Orchestra y Matinees commence at 1:15, 3:15 and 5:15 and run continuously Evening performance at 7:15 and 9:15, and run continuously ' v AMC8EMENTS. yjJfSM? JUTRjaiHAT Today 4:15 Fiz Dancing Rides Entertainment 2, , FOR YOUNG AND OLD ADMISSION-Adults, 10c; War Ta lc , Children Admitted FREE at All Times ) At Neighborhood Homes SrBntBAN 24tfi and Amu J. WARREN KERRIGAN la "THE END OF THE GAME." OKPHErM South Side Mth tod M FRANK KEEN AN In "THE MASTER MAN." GRAND 16th and Binney BESSIE BARRISCALE In "JOSSELTN'S JVIFE." HAMILTON 40th and Hamilton PEGGY HYLAND In MAR RIAGES ARE MADE. "SUNSHINE COMEDY. 10THKOP J4th and Lothrop TOM MOORE In "MAN AND HIS MON EY." APOLLO 29th and Leavenworth HARRY MOREY In "BEATING TH EODDS." ' goat with a "taste" for spring bon nets; all rambling through country lanes and sylvan scenes, "In Search of Arcady," Billie Rhodes' latest pic ture, which is being shown at the Empress todajyjo Saturday. Love scenes in photoplays have 'become very much a matter of "Three steps forward, two to the side, meet, clinch, kiss for three feet and fade out," and the variation is largely in the length of the kiss and the number of steps. So the announcement of a new love scene, in the David Wark Grif fith picture, "The Girl Who Stayed at Home," is refreshing if nothing else. Mr. Griffith is a master at do ingold things in new ways, so it is not surprising that he should piny a love scene in a way no one ehe has ever thought of. "The Girl Who Stayed at Home" is to be at the Rialto the remainder of this week. Pearl White, famous for her roles in serial photoplays during the pact four years, has just signed a long term contract with the Fox com pany, to be starred in feature screen dramas, the first one to be released next September. Release of the first film in which David Belasco has ever appeared, "A Star Overnight," is announced by Universal. Mr. Belasco made the film as a part of the work for the Stage Women's War Relief corps. ' t Operate on Northcliff e. ' London, June 18. Viscount Northcliffe, newspaper owner at.d former head of the British missicn to the United States, underwent an operation Wednesday. A bulletin issued by his physicians says that the viscount's condition is satisfac tory. ' PAfl Hi THE- AtRo'HI! Tonight 9:15 mm POSTAL COMPANY MAKES MOVE TO END KEY STRIKE Striking Employes Informed They Can Return to Work 'Without Losing Their Service Record. Chicago, June 18.-:The Postal Telegraph eempany with a view to ending the telegraphers' stride, so far as that Company is concerned, today sent a notice throughout the country that strikers would be per mitted to return "with continuity of service" up to end including June 20. The order was prepared by New York officials of the company and distributed over the signatures of district superintendents. "We feel that many of the old vim Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday employes merely have been misled and we want to treat them with the utmost fairness by permitting them to return and resume work with their former .standings," said E. W. Collins, general superintendent of the company in Chicago. N . - He added that many workers al ready had returned and that the company was operating on a normal basis. , After a conference union officials stated that the action of the Postal Telegraph company will have no bearing on the strike. "We are fighting for the right of collective bargaining, the same right that the postmaster general extend ed to electrical workers," said S. J. Konenkamp, president of the Teleg raphers' union. He added latest re ports showed more workers were idle than at any time since the strike started. Telegraph company officials as serted th"it business was not being delayed noticeably in any district. Adair Wins Over Metrie. . Des Moines, la., June 18, Barney Adair of New York won a news paper verdfet over Charlie .Me'trie of Milwaukee in 12 rounds tonight. i SOCIETY FOR THE FRIENDLESS TO ASK NEW LAWS Report Shows Total of 362 ' Persons Were Given Cloth ing; Judge Frost Is Elected President. Recommendations were made, the annual report read and officers elected at the meeting of the So ciety for the Friendless held yester day afternoon. Judge Lincoln Frost was elected president. E. A. Benson vice president, E. L. Perkins treasurer and H. T. Dobbins -and E. P. Siveley secretaries. D. E. Jen kins, Henry Kieser, Joseph Fblcar, Judge Howard Kennedy.- Robert Cowell of Omaha, W. T. Elmore of Lincoln and Judge Arthur Wray of York were named directors. V A partial report of the work done PHOTOPLAYS Ihe . GM'Wlaq Stayed at Home An AOTCBAFT Picture IN FRANCE? Can the Parisienne, famed for hei frivolity, face her poilu when he comes back with a story of what SHE did that will bring joy to his heart? IN AMERICA? What sort of a story will Cutie Beautiful, the cabaret girl, tell HIM to make him love,' her more than the day he left? D. W. Griffith's great story of the home-coming fells it all. It takes you through trenches defended by wom en's souls and answers the question of the moment, "Did they win the great fight against temptation while HE was gone?" CHRISTIE COMEDY during the past year shpws that clothing to the value of $639.65 was distributed among 362 persons, 313 persons were given food and 25 persons were helped in othe, ways. A total of 24 families was aided. Addresses made during the year number 212, 16,01 persons attending the meetings and 1,722 calls were made. 4 Tf-- $everal imporftmt humane meas ures introduced bjy the society were passed by'the last state legislature, chief, among, which was the custo dial farm for women. This insti tution, it is believed, will mark the beginning of a new era in penal legislation. The proposed new city jajl am. in for a share of attention, and Supt. J. A. Lenit, who as asked to make a report on the plans, finds two serious drawbacks, the first of which is the lack of ventilation, and the secorld- the absence 'jf any as sembly room where the prisoners may be allowed to gather foT com panionship or instruction. .' It was-decided by the society to start a move for a. home for epilep tics, as at the present time there is no suitable place for this class of unfortunates.: It was also decided to ask the next legislature for one What Did SHE RIALTO NEWS mmmmmmwmmmmmmmimmmmmmmwmmmmmmmm Jj or more juvenile officers for the 90 counties of the state not already provided for. This action was taken in view of the increasing number of juvenile delinquents and the present way of dealing with them. s Nuiatfd Iron increases strength and endurance of delieate, nervous, run. down people in two weeks' time in many instances. It has been used and en dorsed by such men as former United States Senator and Vice-Presidential Nominee, Charles A. Towne; U. S. Com missioner of Immigraion Uon. Anthony Caminetti: also United States Judge G. W. Atkinson of the Court of Claims of Washington, am) others. Ask your doe tor or druggist about it. Do r1 June 18, 19, 20, 21 - J A -